Questions

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

identifier question
13893But should such a step be now taken, when it is apparent that a hopeful change has supervened in the policy of Spain toward Cuba?
11943Letter to the Chief"Cornstalk"( Corntassel?
10815Are their rights alone not to be guaranteed by the application of those great principles upon which all our constitutions are founded?
10815Are there, indeed, citizens of any of our States who have dreamed_ of their subjects_ in the District of Columbia?
11944Brack(?)
11944Hannah help mentioning him as when all his men were killed wounded and Scatered except four Got a(?)
11942We are the first people that ever lived on this land; it is ours, and why will our elder brother take it from us?
11942We have done nothing to offend our elder brother since the last treaty, and why should our elder brother want to quarrel with us?
11942but"where are they?"
12953And,enquires a writer in the"University Magazine,"of North Carolina,"why was this?"
12953Are there any who doubt man''s capacity for self- government?
12953Is there no hand on high to shield the brave?
12953Shall I see North Carolina represented there?
12953Upon seeing him Major Forney exclaimed,"is that you, Simon?"
12953Who can tell how many hearts were touched and benefitted by the gospel truths proclaimed by the youthful preacher on that solemn occasion?
11941Ar''n''t you afraid of being in the woods by yourself?"
11941But what nation ever has done all that was possible with the chances offered it?
11941It ran as follows:"CAPTAIN CRESAP:"What did you kill my people on Yellow Creek for?
11941What is your name?
11941Who is there to mourn for Logan?
11941Why did they not whistle now?
11818ELLIS, KENNETH M. Dolores Divine, guilty or innocent?
11818GOLDWATER, S. S. Should the hospital tell?
11818How''s business?
11818How''s business?
11818Leading ladies; should n''t we name another bridge?, malice domestic.
11818SEE Wells, H. G. What are we to do with our lives?
11818SEE Wells, H. G. What are we to do with our lives?
11818Should the hospital tell?
11818What are we to do with our lives?
11818What dare I think?
11818What would you have done?
11818When is a playwright?
11818Why do we need music, anyway?
13047And what did you do with yours, Ezekiel?
13047What can I say of what regards myself? 13047 But in his final speech in this debate Mr. Webster came back to his original ground, and said, in conclusion,Shall we have a general government?
13047Did I not commit myself in 1837 to the whole doctrine, fully, entirely?
13047Didst thou not hear a noise?"
13047If I choose to remain in the President''s councils, do these gentlemen mean to say that I cease to be a Massachusetts Whig?
13047Shall we continue the union of States under a_ government_ instead of a league?
13047What is it but to tarnish the proud fame of the country?
13047What, then, was New England to do?...
13047Will not this be sufficient for our present purposes?
10146How is your memory?
10146***** Does any one remember that St. Paul had a paper called the Daily North Star?
10146Grand Commander,"In case of an invasion of the island, would you lie awake nights and steal into the enemy''s camp?"
10146Mr. Marshall stepped to the front of the sidewalk and held up his hand and said:"Do you think Douglas will ever be president?
10146Ramsey''s picture of the ravages of these outlaws in his message to the legislature?
10146What is the news from the Charleston convention?"
10146What left the judge?
10146Who has not heard of David Ramaley?
10146Who knows?
10146Will she ever pay the rest?
10879As yet no symptom?
10879Is it not by bearing them in affectionate remembrance?
10879The Secretary of War directs that the same funeral honors be paid by the Army to the memory of the deceased as by the order of the 7th( 11th?)
10879To how many thousands of our countrymen has it proved a benefit?
10879To what single individual has it ever proved an injury?
14458Call:_ Q._ You want something better to eat and to wear, and better houses to live in?
14458Have we not seen the democratic form of government lend itself to ill- concealed plutocracy in Europe and America?
14458If the bourgeoisie itself will not fight for a democracy, reasoned the revolutionary socialists, why have such a democracy at all?
14458What of the Reconstruction program of American labor?
14458Why first admit the capitalists into the inner circle and then spend time and effort in preventing them from coming to the top?
14458Why run at all the risk of corruption of the post- revolutionary government at the hands of the capitalists?
11812Are petting parties dangerous?
11812Are petting parties dangerous?
11812Are you happy?
11812KELLOGG, IRWIN, JR. Why breathe?
11812KELLOGG, PHILIP M. Why breathe?
11812Laddie, whither away?
11812Laddie, whither away?
11812MEARS, NEAL F. What is up in your family tree?
11812ROBINSON, GEORGE L. Where did we get our Bible?
11812SEE Meredith, I. H. Laddie, whither away?
11812Where was Bobby?
11812Where was Bobby?
11812Where was Bobby?
11812Where, grave, thy victory?
11812Where, grave, thy victory?
11812Why breathe?
11812Why breathe?
11822< pb id=''369.png''/> SIMNETT, MRS. W. E. What books shall I read?
11822An infant industry?
11822BABB, JAMES C. To whom shall we go?
11822DRURY, CORNELIA W. School, home& co. SEE Drury, Samuel S. DRURY, FRANCIS K. W. What books shall I read?
11822Do you play the ponies?
11822HODGKIN, HENRY T. Can Quakerism speak to this generation?
11822Is that in the Bible?
11822Macbeth has murdered sleep?
11822Poisonous mushrooms; are we at the crossroads?
11822SIMNETT, W. E. What books shall I read?
11822STOCKWELL, HERBERT G. Where are the dead?
11822To whom shall we go?
11822What about Paul Revere''s wife?
11822Where, grave, thy victory?
11822Who''s afraid of the Big Bad Wolf?
11822Why did Helen of Troy create such a stir?
11822Why should we care what this absurd child does?
11822Will you brace up or will I come over there?
13009Among so many aspirants-- and not all have been mentioned-- how should the people make up their minds?
13009But what of Jackson?
13009But who shall say that the battle was not one of the most momentous in American history?
13009But, again, how could the many discordant groups be rallied to the support of any single leader?
13009Could frontiersmen who had never fought together before, who had never seen the face of a civilized foe, withstand the conquerors of Napoleon?
13009Could it hope to win?
13009National Republicans, anti- Masons, converted Jacksonians, state rights men-- upon what broad and constructive platform could they hope to unite?
13009Reaching out his long arm, the General said in his most cordial manner:"How do you do, Mr. Adams?
13009Should he continue to be chosen by a combination of Congressmen, or should the people take matters into their own hands?
13009Was this charge of a"corrupt bargain"well founded?
13009Were the States sovereign?
13009What remedy had a State against unconstitutional measures of the National Government?
13009What was the true character of the Constitution and of the Union established under it?
13009Who should determine the limits of state and federal powers?
13009Who should say when an act was unconstitutional?
11816< pb id=''324.png''/> What are the glad bells ringing?
11816Did she fall?
11816Did she fall?
11816Did she fall?
11816Do you know how ignorant you are?
11816Do you know how ignorant you are?
11816Has religion made useful contributions to civilization?
11816How shall I learn to teach religion?
11816Laquelle?
11816SEE Barrows, Harlan H. PARKER, GEORGE S. Camelot: How do I open the game?
11816SEE Graham, Evart?
11816To what green altar?
11816To what green altar?
11816To what green altar?
11816What are the glad bells ringing?
11816What are the glad bells ringing?
11816What is a good first move?
11816Where did you get that hat?
11809Can you solve it?
11809How could I be forgetting?
11809How could I be forgetting?
11809How could I be forgetting?
11809LENNES, HARRIET G. Whither democracy?
11809What can a free man worship?
11809What can a free man worship?
11809What can a free man worship?
11809What do you know?
11809What do you know?
11809What''s the use?
11809What''s the use?
11809Wherefore art thou, Romeo?
11809Wherefore art thou, Romeo?
11809Whither democracy?
11809Who, when, where and what?
11809Who, when, where and what?
11809Worry?
11809or pray?
14009***** CAN WE SEPARATE ANIMALS FROM PLANTS?
14009And who can prognosticate but that in the next decade an entire revolution in the ætiology and treatment of many diseases may take place?
14009But how much is the spurious resistance during that time?
14009How does the need for rapid working, and the question of time constant, affect the best mode of grouping the battery cells?
14009Is there any danger of confusing a bird with the tree amid the foliage of which it builds its nest, or of mistaking a cow for the grass it eats?
14009It becomes necessary then for us to inquire: If bacteria cause disease, in what manner do they produce it?
14009Now suppose I take a little round rod of iron, about an inch long, and put it into the end of the tube, what will happen when I turn on my current?
14009The question then arises, What function shall the national department perform?
14009What are we to say of a sponge, or a sea anemone, of corals, of zoophytes growing rooted from oyster shells, of sea squirts, and of sea mats?
14009What can this wonder glass do in the way of drawing boundary lines betwixt the living worlds?
14009What fraction of a second do you require your signal to be given in?
14009What has been gained as to practical application in the treatment of disease?
14009What is the rate of the vibrator of your electric bell?
14009Why should we have for action at a distance the greater advantage from placing the armature flatway to the poles?
11832After 1903, what?
11832Are we movie made?
11832BARRY, F. R. What has Christianity to say?
11832BENCHLEY, ROBERT C. After 1903, what?
11832CAMPBELL, JOHN W., JR. Who goes there?
11832Full recovery or stagnation?
11832GOEDSCHE, C. R. Wie geht''s?
11832May I ask who''s been doing your repair work?
11832Quo vadis, Freemasonry?
11832Quo vadis, Freemasonry?
11832Were we guinea pigs?
11832What did you say?
11832What did you say?
11832What hath a man?
11832What makes Sammy run?
11832Where is Ann?
11832Who are you today, Ronald Colman?
11832Who controls industry?
11832Why do you keep raising me when you know I''m bluffing?
11832Your father and I think he''s very nice, dear, but he''s awfully short, is n''t he?
14675All kinds of rumors and talk: What the house is for?
14675I asked,"Is''nt Lateinos"the right name?
14675What they will do?
14675Which are"the remote and recent causes of the war in Europe?"
14675Why did they not build so as the Hall could be seen?
14675are we not as much devoted to the truth, as they are to the lie?
11843& What is our destiny?
11843After the war-- what?
11843BRICKNER, RICHARD M. Is Germany incurable?
11843How did it happen?
11843How do we know God?
11843How new will the better world be?
11843Is fresh air poison?
11843RUCH, FLOYD L. Do you know yourself and others?
11843Remember me, darling?
11843SCHMITT, BERNADOTTE E. What shall we do with Germany?
11843SEE BROOKS, WALTER R. BROOKS, WALTER R. Do yen ken Wilbur Pope?
11843SEE DEAN, LEON W. CHILD, IRVIN L. Italian or American?
11843What is our destiny?
11843What is religion doing to our consciences?
11843What of the night?
11843Where''s my baby?
11843Which way ahead?
11843Which way ahead?
11843Which way ahead?
11843Which way ahead?
11843Who owns your letters?
11843Who''s in charge here?
11843Why do Christians suffer?
11843caused or uncaused?
11920''Ai n''t that awful, Miss Mat?''
11920Another ad in this paper ways[TR: says?]
11920Another slave, George McVodie, belonging to the Poage family, of Boyd Co., escaped and went to Canada, no[ TR: missing word?]
11920Do you blame me?
11920For instance from the diary of Mrs. Wliza[TR: Eliza?]
11920How would you like to have me whoop you det way?"
11920I asked,"Why"?
11920If I got behind or out o''sight somebody was sure to say,''Where''s George''?
11920If they did come, whe[TR: she?]
11920Old master would call us about 4 o''clock, and everybody had to get up and go to"Starring"[TR:?].
11920One song we would always sing was"Who ting- a- long?
11920Or do you believe in dreams?
11920Ques: Annie did you ever have a dream to come true?
11920The negroes in about one hour after the services start being[TR: begin?]
11920The negroes leave out their R''s use an''t han''t gwin, su''for sir, yea for yes, dah for there and such expressions as,"I''s Ye?"
11920The worms had eaten his face[HW:?]
11920The[TR:?]
11920What was to be done?
11920Who ting- a- long?
11920Who''s been here since I''ve been gone?
11920Williams said,"Why did n''t you shoot?"
11920Yes, we got ter de prayer meeting en den we went back home de same way en did us niggers run?
10857How many ponies can he pay for her?
10857And has he not good cause to rejoice and be contented with his lot?
10857Are not his gleeful children, who are enjoying a romp on the huge sand hills, obedient and reverential in his presence?
10857Arriving at Richmond he asked the usual question:"Is not the negro idle, thriftless and thievish?"
10857Do you like me?
10857Do you think me pretty?
10857Does Prohibition prohibit?
10857Does civilization civilize?
10857Has he not a faithful and charming wife?
10857He drew his pistol and started for the nearest man on the station platform, shouting:"You''ll take care of us, will you?
10857How do I affect you?"
10857In this room the couple begin to dance, making signs to each other, the meaning of which may be:"Well, what do you think of me?
10857Or were they some of the followers of Votan or Zamna, who had wandered north and founded a colony of the Aztecs?
10857She was both to leave that place and said:''How long shall I stay here?
10857The question is often asked, Will this hieroglyphic writing ever be deciphered?
10857Well, when we got there, what do you think we saw?
10857What did he?
10857What saw he?
10857What white man or boy would think of catching blackbirds in such a way?
10857Who were these people who formed a great nation here in the obscurity of the remote past?
11853Are the children in your school safe from fire?
11853Are you sure?
11853Church union-- why not?
11853How long will it stand?
11853How many does it-- er-- sleep?
11853If Jesus was to come today?
11853Is God evident?
11853Is Jesus God?
11853Is economics a science?
11853Mister Carmichael?
11853Secular illusion or Christian realism?
11853Shall he live again?
11853The Country that can feed the world?
11853To win or to lose?
11853Trapped?
11853Was it for me?
11853What am I?
11853What book is that?
11853What good is high school?
11853What is psychoanalysis?
11853What''s right with America?
11853Where''s Mister Chumley?
11853Where''s the fire, McGarry?
11853Who is your judge?
11853Why stay in school?
11853Will you have your tedium rare or medium?
12463And for what cause would we endanger our glorious Union?
12463As we extend its blessings over new regions, shall we be so unwise as to endanger its existence by geographical divisions and dissensions?
12463Does he expect to find among the ruins of this Union a happier abode for our swarming millions than they now have under it?
12463Has the sword of despots proved to be a safer or surer instrument of reform in government than enlightened reason?
12463Is it to be conceived that such immense powers would have been left by the framers of the Constitution to mere inferences and doubtful constructions?
12463Is it, then, an incidental power necessary and proper for the execution of any of the granted powers?
12463Ought we now to disturb the Missouri and Texas compromises?
12463Shall the dissimilarity of the domestic institutions in the different States prevent us from providing for them suitable governments?
12463Where shall the exercise of the power, if it be assumed, stop?
12463Who can calculate the value of our glorious Union?
12463Who shall assign limits to the achievements of free minds and free hands under the protection of this glorious Union?
11702''No,''said he,''you have not: what is your answer?'' 11702 I ask,"said Benson,"whether he would take advantage of the law against me, and refuse to give me authority to take it up in his name?"
11702Was Maryland like South Carolina constantly grappling with the enemy during the whole war? 11702 And how much easier will it be to disperse the factions, which are rushing to this catastrophe, than to subdue them after they shall appear in arms? 11702 And if we can, what use will it be to them?
11702Did not his engagements fall with his head?
11702Did not the United States have a treaty with France?
11702Have not express charges, as well as vague rumors, been brought against him at the bar of the public?
11702How far was that treaty now binding?
11702If it is, what shall be the particular object of such a call?"
11702May they either renounce them, or hold them suspended till the government of France shall be established?"
11702Ought not then those two republican interests to work together to expel Spain and to seize Louisiana?
11702Shall it contain a declaration of neutrality or not?
11702The rejoinder was obvious: what if he should not be able to withstand military influence?
11702Was it to be wondered at, if this swarm should raise a buzz about him?"
11702What if, in spite of him, the government should be given a dangerous character that would develop after he passed away?
11702What shall it contain?
11702What should I do with my soldiers?
11825< pb id=''181.png''n=''1962_h1/ A/0915''/> Do you people mind if I take off some of these hot clothes?
11825ALDRICH, CHARLES S. How far is it to Hollywood?
11825ALDRICH, ROBERT S. How far is it to Hollywood?
11825BEVANS, MARGARET VAN DOREN What is American literature?
11825CHURCH, FRANCIS P. Is there a Santa Claus?
11825COMPTON, CHARLES H. Who reads what?
11825Can prayer be answered?
11825Can prayer be answered?
11825Do you people mind if I take off some of these hot clothes?
11825Do you people mind if I take off some of these hot clothes?
11825Do you really love me?
11825Europe between wars?
11825Five years; what have they done to us?
11825How far is it to Hollywood?
11825How far is it to Hollywood?
11825How far is it to Hollywood?
11825May I leave the room?
11825Negro Americans, what now?
11825Negro Americans, what now?
11825T.11: Le sabbat a- t- il existe?
11825The magic has gone out of my marriage; has the magic gone out of your marriage?
11825Was Europe a success?
11825Was the corpse dead?
11825What is American literature?
11825What is American literature?
11825What is American literature?
11825What is a story?
11825Whither Latin America?
11825Who reads what?
15006And how could the two sections be wholly fraternal?
15006And what of our beautiful, our historic southland about which the halo of poesy so lovingly lingers?
15006Are your feelings too narrow to make concessions and deal justly by the whole country?
15006But who has been, and who is now, the friend of the erstwhile slave?
15006Have you formed a fixed determination to carry your measures by numerical strength, and then enforce them by the bayonet?
15006If he felt bitterness towards the whites, what was to prevent his rising in insurrection and slaying them all?
15006Is not the whole land before thee?
15006The Northerner or the Southerner?
15006What is he?
15006What is it that we demand?
15006Where is the laborer of to- day who is furnished his house, clothing, doctors, medicine, and not a little pocket money on occasions?
15006or"Are you secesh?"
11848Avez vous lu Char?
11848Can these bones live?
11848Christian Science-- what is it?
11848Closeup of a nerve?
11848Did Chedwick err?
11848Do our mental hospitals hurt case for socialized medicine?
11848Does baby feel all right?
11848Friendship or death?
11848How do you do it?
11848How does it feel?
11848Is spring a good thing?
11848Is your city safe?
11848Looking for gold?
11848Otfrid VonWeissenburg: narrator or commentator?
11848The Bible, is it true?
11848The One in six?
11848Their future?
11848Walt Whitman: poet of America?
11848What do you do?
11848What is Tarzan''s plan?
11848What''s in the trunk?
11848When is your birthday?
11848Where are you going?
11848Whose boy is this?
11848Why do they fence me in?
11848Why scold?
11848Why smash atoms?
11848Will Jane save Tikar?
11848Women understand these things-- or do they?
11848should be 30Nov73?
12342);"Hamlet,"1602,"Measure for Measure,"1603;"Troilus and Cressida,"1603- 1607(?
12342);"Richard II.,"1594;"King John,"1595;"Merchant of Venice,"1596; 1 and 2"Henry IV.,"1597- 1598;"Henry V.,"1599;"Taming of the Shrew,"1597(?
12342; is the hero of the Cornish ballad,"And shall Trelawney die?"
12342Black?"
12342CLIFFORD, JOHN, D.D., Baptist minister in London, author of"Is Life Worth Living?"
12342COLLINS, MORTIMER, a versatile genius, born at Plymouth; wrote poems, novels, and essays; was the author of"Who was the Heir?"
12342EST- IL- POSSIBLE?
12342How?
12342In such a case the challenge of Goethe is_ apropos_,"What have I to do with names when it is a work of the spirit I am considering?"
12342Johnnie Cowp, are ye wauken yet?"
12342MANNA, the food with which the Israelites were miraculously fed in the wilderness, a term which means"What is this?"
12342Saved or Lost?
12342Sure enough, I am; and lately was not; but Whence?
12342Whereto?"
12342got for answer the counter- challenge"Who made you king?"
13761But how is all this great work for young men carried on?
13761But why shall every quarrel on the other side the Atlantic interest us in its issue?
13761Can any one give any information as to the life and death of a son, John Rogers, Jr., of Roxbury?
13761Can you be blind to its value?
13761Did chance or the unassisted powers of man discover coal, when wood was becoming scarce?
13761How can this be done?
13761Is it necessary to call the attention of business men to the importance to themselves of this work?
13761Is it not patent?
13761Must it not be equal mockery in them to pretend to represent and act for the United Protestant States?"
13761Shall we pronounce the sad valediction to freedom, and immolate liberty on the altars our fathers have raised to her?
13761Shall we, their descendants, now basely disgrace our lineage, and pusilanimously disclaim the legacy bequeathed us?
13761Was this continent designed as a mere satellite to the other?--Has not nature here wrought all her operations on her broadest scale?
13761What are its characteristics?
13761What has been effected by this fact?
13761Where are the Missisippis and the Amazons, the Alleganies and the Andes of Europe, Asia or Africa?
13761Why shall the rife, or depression of every party there, produce here a corresponding vibration?
13761With hearts penetrated by unutterable grief, we are at length constrained to ask, where is our WASHINGTON?
13761and oil and gas from coal, when the whale was failing?
13761is thy political saviour?
13761thy favorite son?
13761where the hero, who led us to victory-- where the man, who gave us freedom?
118502443)( In United feature comics, June 13, 194?)
11850Am I not your Rosalind?
11850Are the Mahars doomed?
11850Bowlers are people?
11850Calculations amiss?
11850Do you hope he gets away with it?
11850Do you want your children to be tolerant?
11850Does Turkey''s end mean the fall of Great Britain?
11850Does world government mean more government?
11850Drawing entitled How old are you?
11850Education for what?
11850Great Northern?
11850Have you considered him?
11850How can mankind find the Christ again?
11850How do we know?
11850How do we know?
11850Into the frying pan?
11850NM: foreword&"If it is n''t fun, what is it?"
11850Rescue in sight?
11850We all want to save money, but where?
11850What am I doing here?
11850What happened at Hazelwood?
11850What must the church do?
11850What next?
11850What''s your diploma worth?
11850Where is truth?
11850Who am I?
11850Who''ll buy my sentimental value?
11850Will Russia conquer Turkey?
11850Will there be another world war?
11850World wars, why has a merciful God permitted them?
11850Your numbers: which, what, how, why are they?
11313Build a railroad to Oregon?
11313/ face value?
11313But by what route?
11313But in what manner should it be acquired?
11313But the decision to have representation according to population at once raised the question, Shall slaves be counted as population?
11313But when the antislavery legislature met soon after, they ordered the question, Will you, or will you not, have this constitution?
11313But when the question arose, How shall he be chosen?
11313Could a negro whose ancestors had been sold as slaves become a citizen of one of the states in the Union?
11313Dashing down the line, Sheridan shouted,"What troops are these?"
11313Did Congress have power to enact the Missouri Compromise?
11313During the long embargo and the war, manufactures had arisen, and one question now became,"Shall home manufactures be encouraged?"
11313How shall the paper money be disposed of and"specie payment"resumed?
11313Now, what were some of the results of this movement of population into the Mississippi valley?
11313Pray where is Annapolis?
11313Resumption of Specie Payments.%--What shall be done with the currency?
11313Shall state sovereignty be recognized?
11313The English and the Indians.%--How, meantime, did the English act toward the Indians?
11313The Great American Desert.%--But how came Frémont to be in California in 1846?
11313The States.%--What sort of a country, and what sort of people, was Washington thus chosen to rule over?
11313The Surplus Revenue.%--What caused this surplus revenue?
11313The payment of the bonds brought up the question, Shall the 5- 20''s be paid in coin or greenbacks?
11313The political question of the time thus became, Shall, or shall not, slavery exist in New Mexico and California?
11313The question was not, Shall America support an army?
11313The questions to be decided were: Shall there be one or two republics on the soil of the United States?
11313The real question of the campaign thus became, Will the people of Illinois have Stephen A. Douglas or Abraham Lincoln for senator?
11313Were reinforcements coming?
11313What shall be done with the national bonded debt?
11313Why did the States secede?%--Why did the Southern slave states secede?
11313Why not divide the country west of the great river in the same way?
11313[ 1] Then came the question, Is there not a shorter route?
11313[ 1][ Footnote 1: The question is often asked, When did the Constitution go into force?
11313but, Shall Parliament tax America?
11313they submitted the question, Will you have this constitution with or without slavery?
11313| value?
121111728), Thomas Frye( 1710- 1762), Edward Fisher( 1722- 1785?
121111816?
12111And what of the women of Ireland today?
12111And when that"next rebellion"came, the great uprising of the outraged race in 1641, what do we find?
12111But, we may lawfully ask, will not this peace bring with it a special danger, against which we ought to take precautions?
12111Could there be more striking proof of the natural bent and aptitude of the Irish mind for journalism?
12111Did they keep before the Norsemen to America too?
12111From our point of view, what would be the result of that arrangement?
12111If it be further asked:"Does this statement stand the test of strict investigation?"
12111If it is a question of languages, why not learn one of the more useful ones?
12111Oh, whose shall be the potent hand To give that touch informing, And make thee rise, O Southern Land, To life and poesy warming?"
12111On our side, what shall we say of it?
12111Shall they come short of the high ideal of the past, falter and fail, if devotion and sacrifice are required of them?
12111To what element in the Irish nature are we to attribute this joyous and illuminating gift?
12111We can do it if we wish it: the question is, shall we wish it?
12111What did learning bring him?
12111What of the sister of Henry Joy McCracken, Mary, the friend and fellow- worker with the Belfast United Irishmen?
12111When did this language begin to be used in literature?
12111Who does not know of his brilliant performances on the track?
12111Who has not heard of the great music school of San Gallen, founded by St. Gall,"the wonder and delight of Europe,"whither flocked German students?
12111Who has not heard of the wondrous little Thomas Conneff from the short- grass county of Kildare?
12111Who would ask anything racier in its kind than the former''s"Father O''Flynn"?
12111Why was he so eager to bear for its sake"all the thousand aches That patient merit of the unworthy takes"?
12111With such workmen, having such instincts and training, what of the housing and surroundings to contain them and give them a fit and suitable setting?
11830Almost a what?
11830Are American teachers free?
11830BATTLE, GERALD N. What is in your Bible?
11830BATTLE, RICHARD S. What is in your Bible?
11830Balance what budget?
11830Can you imagine?
11830China and Japan, what is going to happen?
11830China at the crossroads, what''s to come?
11830DUNN, THEODORA F. What is in your Bible?
11830Did you see the coronation?
11830Do our colonies pay?
11830Do our colonies pay?
11830Do our colonies pay?
11830Do our colonies pay?
11830Do you want to write?
11830Doncha love me no mo''?
11830FARGO, LUCILLE F. How shall we educate teachers and librarians for library service in the school?
11830Going to make a speech?
11830Going to make a speech?
11830How shall I punctuate it?
11830How shall we educate teachers and librarians for library service In the school?
11830MAY, ALICE K. What is in your Bible?
11830Must we go to war?
11830Must we go to war?
11830SEE BEALE, HOWARD K. BEALE, HOWARD K. Are American teachers free?
11830SEE GOODE, KENNETH M. GOODE, KENNETH M. What about radio?
11830Sweets?
11830The Supreme Court, independent or controlled?
11830VAILLE, REBECCA W. How shall I punctuate It?
11830WATKINS, MYRON W. Oil; stabilization or conservation?
11830Well, if I called the wrong number, why did you answer the phone?
11830What about radio?
11830What about survey courses?
11830What ever became of the Socialist Party?
11830What is a living church?
11830What is in your Bible?
11830Why not enjoy life?
11034And why should we expect it to be otherwise?
11034Could not all the objects of graduation be accomplished in this way, and the objections which have hitherto been urged against it avoided?
11034Does not this speak volumes to the patriot?
11034If so, in what light are we to regard the continued acts of jurisdiction now exercised by him in the Madawaska settlement?
11034If they were neither St. Lawrence nor Atlantic, why were they not excepted?
11034Is not redress urgently called for?
11034May it not be said, in the language of another,"Maine has not been treated as she endeavored to deserve"?
11034May not all reasonable desires upon this subject be satisfied without encountering any of these objections?
11034Must not this unoffending citizen be immediately released?
11034Now, how are the facts?
11034We ask, nay we demand, in the name of justice, HOW LONG we are to be thus trampled down by a foreign people?
11034We would ask why, in what justice, if we can not find the object in the route prescribed, are we to be thus trammeled?
11034What can be more gratifying than such a retrospect as this?
11034What, then, has the Federal Government done for this State?
11034Where is the_ reciprocity_ of such a proposition, so degrading to the dignity and insulting to the rights and liberties of this State?
11034Why should such a line not be agreed to likewise for the boundary eastward from the river Connecticut?
11034Will the public money when in their hands be necessarily exposed to any improper interference on the part of the Executive?
11034Would any single measure be so effective in removing all plausible grounds for these intrusions as the graduation of price already suggested?
11836< pb id=''511.png''n=''1967_h2/ A/2657''/> What college, and why?
11836But what can he do?
11836But who wakes the bugler?
11836But who wakes the bugler?
11836Can Christianity save civilization?
11836Can he make it?
11836Do n''t you want to greet the rosy fingered dawn?
11836Do n''t you want to greet the rosy fingered dawn?
11836Do you remember me?
11836Good light is cheap, good sight is priceless, can you solve this puzzle?
11836HORTON, MARIE R. Can Christianity save civilization?
11836Have you a reservation?
11836Have you a reservation?
11836Have you a reservation?
11836How can he save her?
11836How long?
11836Is God emeritus?
11836MATHEWS, ROBERT E. Is God emeritus?
11836MUSIC CORP. Porque te apartas de mi?
11836NM: A bit of shock; Reminias?
11836Our favorite sentence of our belated congratulations?
11836Porque te apartas de mi?
11836RICHARDS, LAURA E. What shall the children read?
11836SEE Elliott, Harrison S. ELLIOTT, HARRISON S. Can religious education be Christian?
11836Shall I decide now?
11836They''re censoring everything now?
11836WARBURG, JAMES P. Peace in our time?
11836What shall the children read?
11836What''s ahead for rural America?
11836What''s ahead for rural America?
11836Where do we go from here?
11836Where do we go from here?
11836Whither Europe?
11836Why not?
11836Why war?
11836Why war?
11836Will he pay the price?
14584In this case shall a secure port be stipulated and the pecuniary and honorary considerations granted?
14584But if all offers should fail to induce the Creeks to make the desired cessions to Georgia, shall the commissioners make it an ultimatum?
14584If not, shall a temporary boundary be marked making the Oconee the line, and the other parts of the treaty be concluded?
14584If not, what proportion?"
14584If not, what proportion?"
14584In other general objects shall the treaties formed at Hopewell with the Cherokees, Chickesaws, and Choctaws be the basis of a treaty with the Creeks?
14584In this case shall a secure port be stipulated and the pecuniary and honorary considerations granted?
14584In this the hour of our calamity and peril to whom shall we resort for relief but to the God of our fathers?
14584Shall the commissioners be instructed to pursue any other measures respecting the Chickesaws and Choctaws than those herein suggested?
14584Shall the sum of$ 20,000 appropriated to Indian expenses and treaties be wholly applied, if necessary, to a treaty with the Creeks?
14584The remainder, viz:"If not, shall a temporary boundary be marked making the Oconee the line, and the other parts of the treaty be concluded?"
14584Was the propriety of convening the Legislature at an earlier day than that on which it is to assemble by law considered yesterday?
11837ALLEN, HARLAND H. Whither interest rates?
11837Am I blue?
11837America''s dilemma: alone or allied?
11837CAMPBELL, KATHERINE R. Why smash atoms?
11837Did Shakespeare translate The Decameron?
11837Did you ever?
11837Do n''t you want to greet the rosy fingered dawn?
11837Do these bones live?
11837Do you remember?
11837GOODSPEED, STEPHEN S. How came the Bible?
11837Have you met these women?
11837Help or handicap?
11837How came the Bible?
11837How came the Bible?
11837I give up, where are you from?
11837Interior with figures; or, Why is this goddam thing hurting me so?
11837Is the kingdom of God realism?
11837Marxism, is it science?
11837May I borrow a cup of cyanide?
11837Nemesis?
11837Nemesis?
11837Say, is this the U.S.A?
11837Schenley swallows sing: Schenley whiskey''s unexcelled, reason?
11837Schenley swallows sing: Why Journey to some polar spot?
11837TOPPING, DONALD G. Who is this girl?
11837Tell me, where is fancy bred?
11837The first American novelist?
11837The first American novelist?
11837Well, who made the magic go out of our marriage, you or me?
11837What Is It?
11837What do you want to be inscrutable for, Marcia?
11837What is Christianity?
11837What makes Sammy run?
11837What will become of Europe?
11837What will become of Europe?
11837What''s he up to?
11837What''s their game?
11837Who are Catholics?
11837Who is this girl?
11837Who is this girl?
11837Whose surprise?
11837Whose surprise?
11837Why ca n''t I fly?
11837Why smash atoms?
11837You ever fought an Injun?
11837abroad as Nemesis?
14104Can Congress Tax the Income from State and Municipal Bonds?
14104Our Changing Constitutionand"Is the Federal Corporation Tax Constitutional?"
14104Are the states to be submerged and virtually obliterated in the drift toward centralization?
14104Assuming, then, that this is the real nature of the tax, is it constitutional?
14104CAN CONGRESS TAX THE INCOME FROM STATE AND MUNICIPAL BONDS?
14104Can Congress impose a tax on the exercise of that privilege or franchise?
14104Does Congress possess such a power?
14104How will the women voters meet this test?
14104IS THE FEDERAL CORPORATION TAX CONSTITUTIONAL?
14104IX CAN CONGRESS TAX THE INCOME FROM STATE AND MUNICIPAL BONDS?
14104Is the Constitution hopelessly out of date?
14104Shall the conduct of citizens of Mississippi be prescribed by vote of congressmen from New York, or supervised at the expense of New York taxpayers?
14104Someone may ask,"What effect will the granting of votes to women have on the problem of preserving the constitutional equilibrium?"
14104WHAT OF THE FUTURE?
14104What is the reaction of women voters likely to be toward questions of political theory?
14104What then of the future?
14104What, then, is the privilege with respect to which the tax is imposed?
14104What, then, is this common- law rule which President Taft found so clear?
14104Whatever legal uncertainties have arisen have been chiefly owing to two questions: first, What is_ interstate_ trade within the meaning of the act?
14104Wherein, then, did the novelty and greatness of the Constitution lie?
14104Will an abstract proposition hold its own in their minds against a concrete appeal?
14104Will an educational system suitable for Massachusetts necessarily fit the young of Georgia?
14104Will the people see these things in time?
14104X IS THE FEDERAL CORPORATION TAX CONSTITUTIONAL?
14104XIII WHAT OF THE FUTURE?
14104and second, Did the act enlarge the common- law rule as to what restraints were unlawful?
13579Did your family rejoice when they were set free?
13579Do you believe in witchcraft?
13579Do you think President Jackson is in heaven?
13579Does yohall remembah, Granpap,his daughter prompted,"Yoh mahstah-- did he treat you mean?"
13579There are many beautiful spots near the Green River and our home was situated near Greensburgh, the county seat of Dreen[ TR: Green?] 13579 Whar Jane?"
13579What did the roust- about have to do?
13579What did you all want to see me about?
13579What is your political viewpoint?
13579Why are you called George Fordman when your name is Ford George?
13579Why is the negro?
13579''Do n''t take him''said the other boy,''Do nt you see he is drunk?''
13579''What do you call this child?''
13579Col. Bob offered what he thought was a fair price for my father and a"nigger- trader"raised his bid"25[ TR:$ 25?].
13579Farmer[TR:?].
13579George''s mistress received$ 15,00[ TR:$ 15.00?]
13579He say,''What yoh all doin''heah?''
13579His first efforts to procure knowledge consisted of reciting A.B.S.s[ TR: A.B.C.s?]
13579How could I escape this awful presence?
13579I crept very quiet- like, put my hand in where they was and grabbed, and what do you suppose I had?
13579I say,''Yoh don''know me?''
13579One rode up to the fence and when my mother came to the end of the furrow, he said to her,"Lady, could you tell me where Jim Downs''still house is?"
13579Or am I going to tell it?"
13579She can not remember her father as he was soon sold after Mrs. Jackson''s death[ TR: birth?].
13579She come up to me and I put my arms around her, but I could n''t feel nothin''( another sniff from the second wife) and I says,"Babe, what you want?"
13579She said Scott, in freeing(?)
13579She was four[ HW:?]
13579The boss came in and tried to do something for our relief but John said,''Oh, George?
13579The other said,"What are you going to do?"
13579Then grief took possession of the little slave, he could not bear the sight of little Dick''s toys nor books not[ TR: nor?]
13579They[ TR: Then?]
13579We knew we could run away, but what then?
13579We''ed cut the pigeon wing, and buck the wind[ HW: wing?
13579We''s different in every way and can never be spected to think oe[ TR: or?]
13579What could I do?
13579What greater hope can be given to the mortal than the hope cherished by Adah Isabelle Suggs?
13579What yoh all doin''heah?''
13579When I cm back from d''ahmy, I go home to mothah and say''don''y''know me?''
13579While I was having this interview, a colored lady passed and this conversation followed:"Good morning Granny, how are you this morning?"
13579cabin?
13579from the McGuffy''s[ HW:?]
13579what an awful thing we have done?
11089Aye,said I,"and what things were they?"
11089Do you understand, friend, as well as read this book? 11089 I am glad,"replied I,"to hear you say so; and pray what is the good book you read?"
11089Again, who is it that teaches your slaves to read?
11089And do they give those that are young such an education as becomes Christians; and are the others encouraged in a religious and virtuous life?
11089And who taught you to read it?
11089Are all set at liberty that are of age, capacity, and ability suitable for freedom?"
11089CHAPTER IV ACTUAL EDUCATION Would these professions of interest in the mental development of the blacks be translated into action?
11089Doomed then to be half- fed, poorly clad, and driven to death in this cotton kingdom, what need had the slaves for education?
11089Has one susceptibilities of improvement, mentally, socially, and morally?
11089Here is something_ practical_; where are the whites and where are the blacks that will respond to it?
11089I asked him likewise, how he got comfort under all his trials?
11089I know him; he is a very good man; but what does he say to your leaving his work to read your book in the field?
11089Is one bound by the laws of God to improve the talents he has received from the Creator''s hands?
11089Is one embraced in the command''Search the Scriptures''?
11089Now the question which naturally arises here is, to what extent were such efforts general?
11089Now, colored men, what do you mean to do, for you must do something?
11089So I see you have been reading, my lad?
11089Supposing however the funds raised for such an institution, where are the professors to come from?
11089The Bible!--Pray when did you get this book?
11089They_ must_ be educated in this country; and how can that be done without establishing an institution specially for young colored men?
11089Was interest in the education of this class so widely manifested thereafter as to cause the movement to endure?
11089Well did you do so?
11089Well, I have a great curiosity to see what you were reading so earnestly; will you show me the book?
11089Well, what does that book teach you?
11089Were these beginnings sufficiently extensive to secure adequate enlightenment to a large number of colored people?
11089What Boss anti- slavery mechanic will take a black boy into his wheelwright''s shop, his blacksmith''s shop, his joiner''s shop, his cabinet shop?
11089What can be done in order to instruct poor children, white and black to read?
11089What directions shall we give for the promotion of the spiritual welfare of the colored people?
11089Where are the antislavery milliners and seamstresses that will take colored girls and teach them trades, by which they can obtain an honorable living?
11089Who is your master?
11089Who would tolerate an indictment against his son or daughter for teaching a slave to read?
11089Would the whites permit the blacks to continue as their competitors after labor had been elevated above drudgery?
11089Would they secure to Negroes the educational privileges guaranteed other elements of society?
11089[ 3] Answering these inconsistent persons, John Wesley inquired:"Allowing them to be as stupid as you say, to whom is that stupidity owing?
11089_ How_ shall this be done?
12464And why should not this be done?
12464And why should our difference on this alone be pushed to extremes?
12464But why not have limited the provision to that effect?
12464Can anything be more fatal to the merchant or manufacturer than such an alliance?
12464Can the Government be generous and munificent to others when every dollar it can command is necessary to supply its own wants?
12464Do its provisions contradict its title?
12464Does it violate the Constitution by creating a national bank to operate_ per se_ over the Union?
12464If such is not meant, why postpone at all?
12464In case of the seizure of such a vessel by a foreign cruiser, and of her being brought into a port of the United States, what is to be done with her?
12464Is it for the accommodation of the Treasury?
12464Is it objected that it is proposed to authorize the agencies to deal in bills of exchange?
12464Is it such a bill as calls for the exercise of the negative power under the Constitution?
12464Is the manufacturer prepared to stake himself and his interests upon such an issue?
12464Is the measure now under consideration of the objectionable character to which I have alluded?
12464Is this bill now presented for my approval or disapproval such a bill as I have already declared could not receive my sanction?
12464Nay, is it not fairly to be presumed that this proviso was introduced for the sole purpose of meeting the contingency referred to?
12464Shall she be libeled, prosecuted, and condemned as if arrested by a cruiser of the United States?
12464Shall there be no discretionary authority permitted to refuse to become the instruments of such malevolence?
12464V. What is to be considered as the northwestern head of Connecticut River?
12464What can the local discounts of the bank have to do with the collecting, safe- keeping, and disbursing of the revenue?
12464What influence have local discounts granted by any form of bank in the regulating of the currency and the exchanges?
12464What interest of hers was affected by the treaty?
12464What is the position of the northwest angle of Nova Scotia?
12464What principle of good faith, then, was violated?
12464What rule of political morals trampled under foot?
12464What stream is to be understood by the name of the river St. Croix?
12464Why else should it have been introduced?
12464Why is a proceeding of this sort adopted at this time?
12464Why not let the distribution take place on the 1st of July if the law so directs( which, however, is regarded as questionable)?
12464Why should it be on this?
12464Why urge matters to an extremity?
11125And for what is five millions appropriated?
11125And if either extreme carry its point, what is that so far forth but dissolution of the Union?
11125Are we not too prone to forget that the Federal Union is the creature of the States, not they of the Federal Union?
11125Between whom was the compact?
11125But how should that convenient time be ascertained?
11125But how?
11125But if it had moral authority over men''s consciences, to whom did this authority attach?
11125But in what sense can it be asserted that the enactment in question was invested with perpetuity and entitled to the respect of a solemn compact?
11125But where does Congress get the power to purchase?
11125Can it be claimed that any of these functions of local administration and legislation are vested in the Federal Government by any implication?
11125Could a more decisive indication of the true construction and the spirit of the Constitution in regard to all matters of this nature have been given?
11125Disunion for what?
11125Do my countrymen need any assurance that such a catastrophe is not to overtake them while I possess the power to stay it?
11125Does the spirit which has produced such results need to be stimulated or checked?
11125In all this, if any aggression there were, any innovation upon preexisting rights, to which portion of the Union are they justly chargeable?
11125Is it not the better rule to leave all these works to private enterprise, regulated and, when expedient, aided by the cooperation of States?
11125Needful for any possible purpose within the whole range of the business of society and of Government?
11125What does it embrace and what exclude?
11125What is intended by the phrase"internal improvements"?
11125What is the voice of history?
11125What remains?
11125When sectional agitators shall have succeeded in forcing on this issue, can their pretensions fail to be met by counter pretensions?
11125Where will you begin and where end?
11125Wherefore needful?
11125Who does not appreciate the incalculable benefits of the acquisition of Louisiana?
11125Who would rejoice to hail Texas as a lone star instead of one in the galaxy of States?
11125Who would wish to see Florida still a European colony?
11125Will not different States be compelled, respectively, to meet extremes with extremes?
11125Without it what are we individually or collectively?
12217How will it affect the general interests?
12217# Moral judgments of competition and monopoly.# What should be the attitude of society toward monopoly?
12217# Some lessons from our tariff history.# Can we draw from the checkered course of tariff history in America clear lessons of wisdom for the future?
12217At what point will this movement stop?
12217But what kind of labor is to be taken, that of the lender or that of the borrower or that of some one else?
12217But why should the cycle begin or end at one point of time rather than at another; and what determines the length of the cycle?
12217Can it safely be assumed that every trade with a foreigner is less advantageous than one with a fellow- citizen?
12217Fairchild, in"American Economic Review"( March, 1916),"The standard of living- up or down?"]
12217First the question properly is raised; just what is meant by"natural"?
12217Industrial trusts,--a natural evolution?
12217Is it good or bad as compared with competition?
12217Might it not just as truly, if not more truly, be said that the cause is_ over- confidence_ in the period preceding the crisis?
12217Must we believe that, but for immigration, the native birthrate would not have declined at all?
12217That of the lender, who may be rich, or that of the borrower, who may be poor?
12217The ethical and patriotic thought is not,"How will this affect my interests?"
12217The important question is, Who bears the burden of the higher prices that result from a tariff?
12217The law determines the limits of property, but what determines the limits of the law?
12217The question is raised in many minds: If private property is not an absolute right, what shall be its limits?
12217We are now prepared to take up the question: What determines the ratio at which money exchanges for other goods?
12217What changes should be made in it?
12217What if all the increase went into the industrial arts?
12217What practical or social justification is there for passing and continuing such law?
12217What then are our politico- economic problems in America?
12217What, then, as to individual size and aggregate amount of the profits?
12217What, then, shall be done about it?
12217Which is the better economic situation?
12217Who is to receive the benefits and upon whom and how shall new taxes be levied to pay the cost?
12217Whose sacrifice?
12217Why are not such matters as we have been discussing safely left to individuals?
12217Why may the railway exercise the sovereign power of government as against the private property rights of others?
12217Why then has the fractional coinage a monetary value equal to the standard money, dollar for dollar?
12217Why?
13266But what did you mean to take?
13266Then you mean that we shall construe it our own way?
13266; if so, to what extent; what is their value?
13266And if nothing was said by us evidencing such an abandonment of the demand, what answer have you ever made to such a demand?
13266And who can be assured that by continually increasing in our colonies they will not one day become formidable enemies?
13266And who is not?
13266Can the mind of man conceive a more resplendent territory?
13266Can we depend upon slaves who are only attached to us by fear and for whom the very land where they are born has not the dear name of mother country?"
13266Can you advise me how long you expect to remain in Washington?
13266Can you give an approximate estimate of the proportional number of exhibits by women contained in these classes?
13266Have any steps been taken to indicate on which of these committees you are to make appointments?
13266He asked,"Did they not call you up?"
13266He said to me,"Mr. Krug, your bid is very satisfactory, but why have you not submitted a bid on all the buildings shown in the specifications?"
13266He was, therefore, greatly surprised by a question from Talleyrand, in which he was asked"What we would give for the whole tract?"
13266I stood up then and spoke to President Francis and said,"President Francis, how do you know but that this bid of Mr. Evans may be a dummy?"
13266If so, how?
13266In what way did their work( or exhibits) differ from their work( or exhibits) of the past?
13266Now, then, have you any notice of on which juries you are to be allowed to name a juror?
13266On April 11 Talleyrand asked Livingston"whether he wished to have the whole of Louisiana?"
13266Should it be hired labor of freemen or the compulsory labor of the imported negro?
13266Was the work of women as well appreciated when placed by the side of that of men?
13266Were any of the exhibits of women developments of original inventions, or an improvement on the work of some prior inventor?
13266Were they shown in such manner as to indicate in any way, or to enable you to distinguish, which part had been performed by women, which by men?
13266What advancement did they show in the progress of women in any special industry, art, science, etc.?
13266What can you say of the skill and ingenuity displayed in the invention, construction, or application?
13266What of the merits of the installation as to the ingenuity and taste displayed, and its value as an exposition attraction?
13266What proportion of women received awards in your group or classes?
13266What proportion, or, approximately, what number, of exhibits were installed by foreign women?
13266What service will the Commission require from the board between the opening and closing of the exposition?
13266What special work does the Commission desire the board to perform before the opening of the exposition?
13266Which, in your opinion, were the most striking exhibits by women in your department?
13266Who can estimate the good done by this noble army?
13266Who knows?
13266Why, then, were not the bids opened in public, thus securing the largest amount for the exposition and for the stockholders?
13266Would the results have been better if their work had been separately exhibited?
12864A Senior Optime?
12864A what?
12864Are you aware who the learned author is?
12864Have the_ passmen_ done their paper work yet?
12864Have you_ wet_ that new coat yet?
12864How much Euclid did you do? 12864 How the_ goney_ swallowed it all, did n''t he?"
12864Lord bless you, master,says she,"who I reading?
12864Mr.----, what is logic?
12864What is the meaning of this noise?
12864What will you drink?
12864When you go into Cheshire, and upon your ramble, may I trouble you with a commission? 12864 Who would not place this precious boon Above the Greek Oration?
12864Why, what was he then?
12864_ Gonus_,echoed I,"what''s that mean?"
12864_ Ques._ What is the name of this University? 12864 _ Ques._ Who was your father?
12864And has the Bursch his cash expended?
12864And what shall I say of Morse?
12864And who asks for a richer heritage, or a more enduring epitaph, than that he too is a Brother in Unity?"
12864But if they, capricious through long indulgence, did not choose to get up, what then?
12864But who are those three by- standers, that have such an air of submission and awe in their countenances?
12864But yearneth not thy laboring heart, O Tom, For those dear hours of simple_ Freshmanhood_?
12864Did not the_ Præses_ himself most kindly and oft reprimand me?
12864Did not thy starting eyeballs think to see Some goblin_ pariètal_ grin at thee?
12864Fifteen?"
12864Hast spent the livelong night In smoking Esculapios,--in getting jolly_ tight_?
12864Have I been screwed, yea,_ deaded_ morn and eve, Some dozen moons of this collegiate life, And not yet taught me to philosophize?
12864Have I been_ screwed_, yea, deaded morn and eve, Some dozen moons of this collegiate life?
12864How now, ye secret, dark, and tuneless chanters, What is''t ye do?
12864I asked her what she was reading?
12864Of what_ standing_ are you?
12864Or men"_ get high_"by drinking abstract toddies?
12864She says,"What makes you look so very pale?"
12864The following is a translated specimen:--"_ Ques._ What is your, name?
12864Then an anthem,''The voice of my beloved sounds,''& c. Then a forensic dispute,_ Whether Christ died for all men_?
12864Then,"How do you know them?"
12864Univ._ Of this word, De Quincey says:"But what is the meaning of a lecture in Oxford and elsewhere?
12864Were there any_ Goodies_ when you were in college, father?
12864What are parietals, parts,_ privates_ now, To the still calmness of that placid brow?
12864Who can tell what eagerness fills its ranks on an exhibition- day?
12864Who would not brave the heat, the dust, the rain, To march the leader of that valiant train?"
12864Who would not choose the wooden spoon Before a dissertation?
12864are they?
12864can ye surpass these enormous piles?
12864the stern_ pariètal_ monitions?
12864wert ever beset by a dun?
12864with what exultation they mark their banner, as it comes floating on the breeze from Holworthy?
12864with what spirit and bounding step the glorious phalanx wheels into the College yard?
12911A star? 12911 It is; what will you take?"
12911No sight? 12911 What are sail- needles?"
12911What do you think of it?
12911Whom shall we name?
12911Yes; but is he also able? 12911 After the lecture, a few days later, he turned to me and asked,Is she here?"
12911And until we have made our own churches fully free and fruitful in spiritual life are we absolved from the call to service?
12911And what course can we pursue to get the most and the best out of it?
12911Boylike I would say,"Father, what shall I do?"
12911But what_ is_ best in life?
12911Can you wonder that I have kept this from you?
12911Do you know I believe work with boys is about the only hope?
12911Finally I mentioned, casually like, that I was_ Tom_, whereat he feigned surprise, and remarked in his pleasant voice,"Was that you?
12911HAVE WE DONE OUR WORK?
12911Have we earned our discharge from the army of life?
12911Have we not done our work?"
12911He smilingly replied,"You see its place?
12911How passed the night through thy long waking?"
12911I arose well at the side of the chamber, while the leader stood directly in front, but the Speaker happened(?)
12911I asked,"Who do you think we have in mind?"
12911I said,"What''s the idea?"
12911If an Indian wishes to ask where you are going, he will say,"Ta hunt tow ingya?"
12911If he is not read, whose fault is it?
12911In all innocence I asked the somewhat leading question:"What did Jesus charge them?"
12911Is it possible that after a separation of nearly six years I have at last met my father?
12911Is it?--and if not, why not?
12911Langdon would suggest some procedure:"How will this do, Jim?"
12911My own sister asked in indignation:"Who is that old man making eyes at me?"
12911OUR FATHER Is God our Father?
12911On every hand was heard the question,"What shall we do with our boys?"
12911One of the members later cornered him and asked"Where is the watershed?"
12911Shall human will succumb to fate, Crushed by the happenings of a day?
12911Shall we retreat?
12911The brother lingered and finally drawled,"Deacon, it''s customary, is n''t it, to_ treat_ a buyer?"
12911The elder, looking up, said,"Why did n''t the pesky fool bring her with him?"
12911The fifth line of the seventh verse originally read:"Or is civilization a failure?"
12911Then of Perkins he asked,"By the way, Senator, how is Brady doing?"
12911There are those who say,"Why should we keep it up?
12911WHY THE CHURCH?
12911We met one of his friends, who said,"How are you, Ames?"
12911What is the most important thing in life?
12911What is their testimony in this particular case?
12911Where are the sellers of lottery tickets, where the horse- races and the open gambling?
12911Who are we that we should complain that life is hard, or conclude that it is not better so?
12911Why do we covet other opportunities instead of doing the best with those we have?
12911no sound?"
15925Again, a query: Is the rise of the Brahmo- Somaj a step toward the practical extension of Christianity into the domain of Buddhism?
15925Did the weird prophet- orator who spoke of"carrying the flag and keeping step to the music of the Union"ever dream of such a strange combination?
15925Do I believe in the teachings of this book?
15925How forcible and full of noble example is the picture exhibited by these records?
15925How has he obtained his knowledge?
15925If, as Sinnett asserts, the true Chinese belong to the fourth root- race, as appears not improbable, did not the system come into India from China?
15925Query: Does this account for their apparent inability to develop their language beyond the monosyllable?
15925Query: Is a fifth race now in the throes of nativity?
15925Query: Is the famous click of the Zulu a remainder of the gradual passage from animal noise to human articulation in speech?
15925What is the practical use of all this study?
15925Why should one lose patience with this boy''s inability to learn, more than at the inanimate obstacle in one''s pathway?
15925Why, then, should it be thought heretical to maintain that the future world of_ rewards_ is_ also_ not eternal?
13911And would you advise, then, that married couples live apart one- third of the time, in the interests of domestic peace?
13911And, Zeke, what did you do with your dollar?
13911Do you know why their love was so very steadfast, and why they stimulated the mental and spiritual natures of each other so?
13911For God''s sake, Walter,whispered Payn,"you are not going to explain to''em how you do it, are you?"
13911How long have you studied law?
13911It''s not Bill Spear who keeps a secondhand- shop, you want, mebbe?
13911No, why was it?
13911The which?
13911Well, Dan,said the father,"did you spend your money?"
13911What can all this fuss be about?
13911What''s it about?
13911You know those suits against you in the Admiralty Court?
13911*****"Are n''t we staying in this room a good while?"
13911After a little pause my inquiring mind caused me to ask,"Who made Judge Davis?"
13911And how did Richard Henry Lee like it, and George Wythe, and the Randolphs?
13911And is all this worry the penalty that Nature exacts for dreaming dreams that can not in their very nature come true?
13911And is your sleep disturbed by dreams of British redcoats or hissing flintlocks?
13911And what have you heard or observed of his character or merits?
13911And whether, think you, it lies in the power of the Junto to oblige him, or encourage him as he deserves?
13911As Pendleton handed his pistol to Hamilton he asked,"Shall I set the hair- trigger?"
13911Did Patrick Henry wax eloquent that afternoon in a barroom, and did Jefferson do more than smile grimly, biding his time?
13911Did Washington forget his usual poise and break out into one of those swearing fits where everybody wisely made way?
13911Do you know of any deserving young beginner, lately set up, whom it lies in the power of the Junto in any way to encourage?
13911For sin is only perverted power, and the man without capacity to sin neither has ability to do good-- isn''t that so?
13911Hath any deserving stranger arrived in town since last meeting that you have heard of?
13911Have you any weighty affair on hand in which you think the advice of the Junto may be of service?
13911Have you lately observed any defect in the laws of your country, of which it would be proper to move the legislature for an amendment?
13911Have you lately observed any encroachment on the just liberties of the people?
13911Have you read over these queries this morning, in order to consider what you might have to offer the Junto, touching any one of them?
13911He reminded us boys several times when we kicked, that he had a good claim on it-- for did n''t he furnish the door and the window- frames?
13911I was feeling quite useless and asked,"Ca n''t I do something to help?"
13911In what manner can the Junto, or any of its members, assist you in any of your honorable designs?
13911Is there any difficulty in matters of opinion, of justice and injustice, which you would gladly have discussed at this time?
13911Jefferson''s experience seems to settle that mooted question,"Can a man love two women at the same time?"
13911Merchant- prince and agitator, horse and rider-- where are you now?
13911One fine day, one of his schoolmates put the question to him flatly:"In case of war, on which side will you fight?"
13911Or do you know of any beneficial law that is wanting?
13911Spear, the antiquarian?"
13911The non- slaveholding North was rubbing its sleepy eyes, and asking, Who is this man Seward, anyway?
13911The question at issue was,"Is a bequest for founding a college a charitable bequest?"
13911Then did the boy ask the question, What moral right has England to govern us, anyway?
13911They look at me out of wistful eyes, and sometimes one calls to me as she goes by and asks,"Why have you done so little since I saw you last?"
13911Were we talking of the seasons?
13911Wha-- what''s that you said?"
13911What benefits have you lately received from any man not present?
13911What happy effects of temperance, of prudence, of moderation, or of any other virtue?
13911What unhappy effects of intemperance have you lately observed or heard; of imprudence, of passion, or of any other vice or folly?
13911What was it?
13911Where is the man who in a strange land has not suffered rather than reveal his ignorance before a shopkeeper?
13911Who is there who can not sympathize with that groan?
13911do you understand the situation?
13911how has Samuel managed to get himself so enormously in debt?"
15984''But how am I to do it?'' 15984 ''Fear not,''said the student,''I have in my eye the very priest and damsel you describe; but how am I to regain admission to this tower?''
15984And what will they do with him?
15984Sir,cried Mr. Irving, in a burst of indignation that overcame his habitual shyness,"do you seize upon such a disaster only for a sneer?
15984Why, my dear, do n''t you know?
15984Dost thou desire fortune?''
15984May I ask what corps you belong to?''
15984The daughter said,"Mother, who was Washington?"
15984What can compare with the vase of yon alabaster fountain filled with crystal water?
15984Who can do justice to a moonlight night in such a climate and such a place?
15984Why should I come back to Dresden?
15984Yet how much superior is our comedy of to- day?
15984said he, good humoredly;''how can Campbell mistake the matter so much?
10642: is our present system of education adequate to the sufficient development of character, and if not, how should it be modified?
10642And here it was not things that failed, but_ men._ What of the world since the Peace of Versailles?
10642And what did he leave behind him?
10642And yet, had we this right?
10642Are not children the true artists?
10642Are the two so very far apart?
10642Assuming that this is so, two questions arise: what is to take the place of imperial industry, and how is this substitution to be brought about?
10642Certainly this is possible; greater miracles have happened in history but, failing this, what?
10642Do we not speak of the call of a missionary from an unshepherded flock to a large city parish as a call to"a wider sphere of usefulness"?
10642Does it manifest itself with power today in the dealings between class and class, between interest and interest, between nation and nation?
10642For those who can go with me so far, the question will arise: How then are we so to reorganize society that we may gain the end in view?
10642How has this been possible, what has been the sequence of events that has brought us to this pass?
10642How is this to be accomplished?
10642How, humanly speaking, is the redemption of society to be achieved?
10642I would not exchange Kit Marlowe''s_"Is this the face that launched a thousand ships And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
10642In our prayer- life today do we recognize sufficiently the need for_ listening_ to God?
10642Is it due to the viciousness of the worker, to his natural selfishness, greed and cruelty?
10642Is there any one who would confess that character and intelligence are now a helpless minority in this nation?
10642Is there any value in an estate where status is heritable?
10642Is this supernatural gift of charity a mark of contemporary civilization?
10642Is this"chimerical and irrational"?
10642May it not be infinitely complex, as the ripple rises on the wave that lifts on the swell of the underlying tide?
10642On this assumption what are these enduring principles that will control the guild system of industry in the new State, however may be its form?
10642Shall I put the whole thing in a phrase and say that the object of teaching English is to get young people to like good things?
10642The man asks of God:_ O when did I give Thee drink erewhile, Or when embrace Thine unseen feet?
10642The rise and fall of the line of civilization; showing also the nodal points at the Christian Era and at the years 500, 1000, 1500 and 2000(?)]
10642These are hard sayings and strong doctrine, but will any one say they are not true?
10642Today, when we accept the necessity of labour, and even worship activity for its own sake, do we not need to be reminded that to pray is to labour?
10642What if this all did fade in the miasma of Versailles and the cynicism of trade fighting to get back to"normalcy,"and the red anarchy out of the East?
10642What is spirit?
10642What is the reason for this?
10642What is the reason for this?
10642What is their source?
10642What then is matter and what is spirit?
10642What then, in the premises, can we do?
10642What, after all, does this imply, so far as the social organism is concerned?
10642What, precisely has taken place?
10642When you or I conceive of any piece of work as"important"is it not because it involves either great numbers or great sums of money?
10642Which shall we choose,_ if_ we choose, and do not content ourselves with an easier inertia that allows nature to take its course?
10642Why did these things come, and how?
10642Why is it that this is so?
10642but the kingdom of heaven is_ within you._ Why a second birth?
11202And can we justify ourselves to the people by longer lending to it the money and power of the Government to be employed for such purposes?
11202And does it allow him to direct what particular notes shall or shall not be received for lands or for duties?
11202And what is the occasion upon which other principles have been first officially asserted?
11202But in what condition would he find that tribunal?
11202But what was the result?
11202Can it now be said that the question of a recharter of the bank was not decided at the election which ensued?
11202Could he have said less in this branch of his message?
11202Does France desire only a declaration that we had no intention to obtain our rights by an address to her fears rather than to her justice?
11202Has the country been ruined, or even distressed?
11202Has the warning voice of Washington been forgotten, or have designs already been formed to sever the Union?
11202If such was its power in a time of peace, what would it not have been in a season of war, with an enemy at your doors?
11202If the measure to which I alluded should be adopted and submitted to, what would His Majesty''s Government require?
11202In fact, sir, what were those objections?
11202In such a case what would be the character of the directors?
11202In what respect does it differ from and how far will it change the joint resolution of April 30, 1816?
11202Is a fiscal agent of the Government which thus seeks to enrich itself at the expense of the public worthy of further trust?
11202Might he not be asked whether there was any such limitation to his obligations prescribed in the Constitution?
11202The disavowal of any intent to influence the councils of France by threats?
11202Was it ever more prosperous than since that act?
11202Was it their duty to remain silent while abuses of the most injurious and dangerous character were daily practiced?
11202Were they bound to disregard the call?
11202What have you to gain by division and dissension?
11202What was the cause of this desire to bring the business before the Chambers at an early day?
11202What would be the sworn duty of the President?
11202What, in fact, were they?
11202What, then, was this engagement?
11202What, then, were they?
11202When shall it be commenced?
10919And what has been the effect?
10919Are not the latter clearly and evidently comprised in the former?
10919At what time and in what manner would a new negotiation terminate?
10919But it may be asked, If such was the intention, why were not all the other terms of the grant transferred with it?
10919By what means shall we contribute most to cement the Union and give the greatest support to our most excellent Constitution?
10919Can it be presumed that all these circumstances were so nicely adjusted by mere accident?
10919Can they be punished?
10919For what purpose?
10919From whence do these pressures come?
10919Have Congress a right to raise and appropriate the money to any and to every purpose according to their will and pleasure?
10919Have such, or any, burthens been imposed to advance the system to its present state?
10919Have they a right to exercise jurisdiction within those buildings?
10919How carry it into effect?
10919How did we accomplish the Revolution?
10919How sustain and pass with glory through the late war?
10919How, then, shall this revenue be applied?
10919If that were done, to what consequences might it not lead?
10919In explaining my sentiments on this subject it may be asked, What raised us to the present happy state?
10919Is it contemplated to open a new negotiation respecting any of the articles or conditions of the treaty?
10919Is it not more just to conclude that they were the result of due deliberation and design?
10919Is this the time to make the pressure?
10919On whom has oppression fallen in any quarter of our Union?
10919Ought we not, then, to adopt every measure which may be necessary to perpetuate them?
10919Shall we act by taking the ceded territory and proceeding to execute the other conditions of the treaty before this minister arrives and is heard?
10919Should it be idle in the Treasury?
10919Should war break out in any of those countries, who can foretell the extent to which it may be carried or the desolation which it may spread?
10919The points on which you will have to decide are, What is fairly due for the services which were actually rendered?
10919The question therefore is, What power is granted by that word?
10919These great powers, embracing the whole scope of our foreign relations, being granted, on what principle can it be said that the minor are withheld?
10919To what, then, do we owe these blessings?
10919To whom were the charters granted, to the people of each colony or to the people of all the colonies as a single community?
10919What are the dangers which menace us?
10919What has been the progress since that time?
10919What is the just import of these words and the extent of the grant?
10919What produced the Revolution?
10919What rights?
10919Wherein consists the danger of giving a liberal construction to the right of Congress to raise and appropriate the public money?
10919Who has been deprived of any right of person or property?
10919Who restrained from offering his vows in the mode which he prefers to the Divine Author of his being?
12193Are you aware,said he, savagely,"that the rules direct that all fruit shall be gathered by the head gardener, and by him alone?"
12193Brothers,said the Governor,"shall we order the troops and police in every city to fire?
12193But how about the stuffing?
12193But, how happens it,said he, in astonishment,"that you speak my language?"
12193Dearest,cried Henry,"when can we meet again?"
12193Did you expect any?
12193Do yer''spect dere may be soon, sah?
12193Do you think,shrieked the irate virago,"that I will allow my daughter who is studying French, Latin, Greek, and German to wash your dirty dishes?"
12193Father,cried the Governor,"will the 9th Regiment kill their own brothers if ordered to shoot?"
12193How did you do it?
12193Just as you please, gentlemen, peace or war?
12193May I know your name?
12193Passing out of the shadow Into eternal day-- Why do we call it dying, This sweet going away?
12193Sherman,said I, to my stroke oarsman, as we landed on our island,"why did n''t you throw me overboard?"
12193Well,said the little imp,"how do ye know but what that feller lied?"
12193What for you dune dar?
12193What for you here?
12193What you laughing at?
12193What, you be a minister?
12193Who you be?
12193Yes,said the dunce,"are we not commanded in the holy book to preach the gospel to every critter?"
12193You''ll hold your employers out in the cold, will you? 12193 ''The shoo- fly-- the shoo- fly,''said he;''why did n''t we think of that? 12193 ''What on airth, father, you doin''?'' 12193 ''What you laughing at?'' 12193 ''Where? 12193 --Boys,"I said, turning to the darkies,"what''s the matter?"
12193Are we craven crows to be scared by such windy effigies?"
12193At last, the Judge, in despair, said:"Foss, will you go?"
12193But what is that?
12193Do you want any more such times?"
12193Do you want that kind of provender again?
12193Had our spirits been wandering through the universe millions of years seeking each the other, nor finding rest until we met?
12193Had we lived and loved on some fairer shore?
12193His pastoral calls were appalling; arm extended like a pump handle to shake hands, one up and down motion, a"how do you do?"
12193Is it strange that I and many others lost all faith in a religion that brought forth such bitter fruit?
12193Little Blue Bell, one of the medium''s cabinet spirits, them came, pointing to the door, saying:"See that little fat snoozer?"
12193My life seemed a failure; I reflected long upon the question of the Psalmist,"What is man?"
12193One would step to the window and in an exasperatingly in- no- hurry way, say:"Anything for Andrew Jackson, sah?"
12193Shall they be satisfied, the spirit''s yearning, For sweet communion with kindred minds?
12193Shall we ever forget the feeding of the pigs?
12193Sunbeam, at this my first glance, I love you; can you sometime love me?"
12193The millions of dollars, now worse than wasted by our selfish millionaires?
12193The owners who have plenty of money, or you who are dependent upon the work they give you for every cent you get?
12193The silent love that here meets no returning, The inspiration, which no language finds?
12193Well, who''ll freeze to death first if you stop the factories?
12193What de hell you do on de doo''?"
12193What is death but a journey home?
12193What wonder that our country now has in Washington over five hundred millions of gold dollars; the richest treasury ever known on earth?
12193Whence came that vital spark blending our souls in one?
12193Where are the Injuns?"
12193Who can tell?
12193no corn juice pison nor nuthin''?
12193where?''
12845Am not I happy to have such a son to leave behind me?
12845Do you call that nothing?
12845How much blood will it require to wash out our own?
12845President of assassins,he cried,"for the last time, will you let me speak?"
12845What shall we be doing to- morrow at this time?
12845What, Valazé, are you losing your courage?
12845And Abbé Sieyès has come to Paris to ask three questions, and answer them:_ What is the Third Estate?
12845And if Mirabeau is the greatest, who of these six hundred may be the meanest?
12845And though Dissenters appeared to be allowed relief, what guarantee was there for the sincerity of the Court?
12845And to his servants:"Why do you weep?
12845And to whom should these be returned, since the college and the schoolhouse no longer exist?
12845And why did it display certain characteristics which have appeared nowhere else, or, at least, have appeared only in part?
12845And yet, what was the Emperor Charles to the inhabitants of the Netherlands that they should weep for him?
12845Are we breaking down, then, into the horrors of national bankruptcy?
12845Austria is now sure to invade Silesia; will Frederick not block the passes against Prince Karl, now having no Traun under his cloak?
12845But Pitt at last has hold of the reins in England, and Ferdinand of Brunswick gets nominated to succeed Cumberland-- Pitt''s selection?
12845But how to form it?
12845But if the Parlement of Paris refuse to register them?
12845But why, we may ask, did this revolution, which was imminent throughout Europe, break out in France rather than elsewhere?
12845But, what to do with the finances, having no Fortunatus purse?
12845Can we carry your country away on the sole of our shoe?"
12845Canada and Louisiana mean all America west of the Alleghanies?
12845Did you think I was immortal?"
12845For what precise reason was it made, and what did it effect?
12845From our own traitors?
12845From which springs a new idea:"Why all France has not one federation and universal oath of brotherhood once for all?"
12845Have we not a virtuous Pétion, Mayor of Paris, a wholly patriotic municipality?
12845He with the thick black locks, shaggy beetle- brows and rough- hewn face?
12845How does it come to be able to govern at all?
12845In effect, will he choose English or French alliance?
12845In which we observe a clear ground for Anglo- Spanish War, and Austro- Prussian War; but what were the rest doing?
12845Is Frederick, then, not secure of Silesia?
12845Is it the healthy peace or the ominous unhealthy, that rests on France for the next ten years?
12845Is it wise so to change all our rulers?
12845Is there not on record a trial of Charles I.?
12845Of massacring, altar- robbing, Hébertism, is there beginning to be a sickening?
12845Other troops, then?
12845Our revenue is assignats, our army wrecked disobedient, disorganised; what, then, shall we do?
12845Peace of a father restored to his children?
12845Surely the true reign of Fraternity is now not far?
12845What apparition, then, could be welcomer than that of M. de Calonne?
12845What do the movements of Russian and Austrian troops mean?
12845What does it want?
12845What does this mean?
12845What has it hitherto been in our form of government?
12845What is kaisership without Silesia?
12845What is the service which the public power renders to the public?
12845What was its peculiar character?
12845What was the real object of the revolution?
12845When he heard that Churchill and Grafton had forsaken him, he exclaimed,"Est- il possible?"
12845When man offers himself a victim to Heaven, what more can he give?"
12845Which of these six hundred individuals in plain white cravat might one guess would become their king?
12845Why then?
12845Will England get him what will satisfy him from Austria?
12845Will he be more fortunate than ourselves?
12845Will the hold be maintained?
12845Words?
12845_ III.--The Silesian Wars_ Shall we, then, have the philosopher- king, as Europe dimly seems to half expect?
15648''Ah,''said he,''what can you do? 15648 ''Any other officers?''
15648''Is Mr. Greely alive?'' 15648 ''What is the ship''s name?''
15648''Where are they?'' 15648 ''Who all are there left?''
15648''Who are you?'' 15648 ''Who are you?''
15648''Who are you?'' 15648 At this moment there was a confused murmur within the tent, and a voice said:''Who''s there?''
15648Colwell crawled in and took him by the hand, saying:''Greely, is this you?'' 15648 The Triton crieth,''Who cometh now from shore?''
15648Think you can climb it?
15648What luck, cap''n?
15648But why continue the pitiful chronicle?
15648But will ever these great liners, these huge masses of steel, guided by electricity and sped by steam, build up anew the race of American sailors?
15648But will the American sailor share in the new life of the American ship?
15648Could a boat laden with a heavy engine be made of so light a draught as to pass over the shallows of the Ohio?
15648Could a boat laden with thousands of pounds of machinery make her way northward against that swift current?
15648Could it run the falls at Louisville, or be dragged around them as the flatboats often were?
15648For was it not on the Banks and in a fog that the blow was struck which sent"La Bourgogne"to the bottom with more than four hundred souls?
15648Only thirty- four saved themselves-- and for what?
15648What canal could it be?
15648What good will come to the world with its discovery?
15648What then?
15648What was the natural result?
15648What you got there?"
15648Whence come you?''
15648Where are the fish?''
15648Who shall say now?
15648Would it be seriously asserted that a steamer owned by New Jersey citizens could not land passengers at a New York port?
12887''What''s the idea?'' 12887 Do you think that a good thing?
12887How about that?
12887How do you like the movies as compared to the speaking drama? 12887 Is n''t it a pity,"we hear people say,"that, with all his brains, he has n''t sense enough to make himself presentable?"
12887To thine own self be true,says the great Shakespeare and how can we be true to our own selves if we train with inferiors?
12887What do you want me to do now?
12887What doth it profit a man to win the whole world if he_ loseth_ his own soul?
12887What effect is the movie going to have on the speaking drama?
12887What in the name of mischief have you been doing now?
12887-- Do you ever laugh?
12887--"Have you credentials?"
12887--"Why did you leave there?"
12887A friend once said to a banker:"How do you know when to lend money?"
12887A"Close- Up"of Douglas Fairbanks LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Laugh and Live Do You Ever Laugh?
12887After an awkward pause the youngster inquired:"Where can I find him?"
12887And if cleanliness is fundamental in their case why not in our own?
12887And what has this to do with energy?
12887Are they gloomy, morose and irritable?
12887Artistry?
12887But what''s to hinder practising?
12887But where does this come from?
12887Could we blame others if they passed us up as a companion?
12887Could we go to him with the secrets of our heart?
12887Could we trust him?
12887Does n''t it mean the substitution of feeling for thinking?"
12887Dull in the Mohave desert?
12887Good looks?
12887Have n''t we often read of the brave fireman who sprang forward and by doing the right thing instantly, saved a multitude of lives?
12887Have we allowed ourselves to be discouraged by cowardly"ifs"?
12887Have we fallen by the wayside of carelessness?
12887He is in_ check- rein_--how can he laugh when his_ pep_ is all gone and the_ sand in his craw_ is n''t there any more?
12887How do the great minds generate this glorious means of self- propulsion?
12887How many times has this happened to us?
12887If this is true with the dullard, the weakling, then what must it mean_ when possessed by the great_?
12887If we are untrue to ourselves how can we be true to others?
12887Now the point is, how shall we guard and keep fresh this element in ourselves?
12887Perhaps you did n''t realize that laughing automatically re- oxygenates the blood--_your_ blood-- and keeps it red?
12887Perhaps you had n''t thought of that?
12887Questions are asked--"Where were you last?"
12887So, why not charge them up to"profit and loss"at the start and kick them off into the gutter where they belong?
12887So- and- so?"
12887That''s the idea--_but how shall we feed it_?
12887The world''s greatest men have been readers-- would they have cared for books unless they were inspiring?
12887Then the question is, why should we allow ourselves to be satisfied with an imperfect personality?
12887Then why should n''t youthfulness be made a permanent asset?
12887These little ungainly volumes which we purchase on the stands may be the classics of tomorrow... who knows?
12887We all have a certain amount of energy..._ why should n''t we all be successes_?
12887We go to the man who does things and say to him:"Here is my little idea-- do you want to help me put it over?"
12887We should not ask him how old he is... we should ask:"_ What can he do_?"
12887What does it matter if disappointments follow one after the other if we can_ laugh and try again_?
12887What has been the result?
12887What would the world do without these men?
12887When the night comes down and the lights go up, is n''t there a blue minute now and then?"
12887When we say:"Why should n''t we all be successes?"
12887Wherein lies this magic of laughter?
12887Why not stick along?
12887Why not?
12887Would we trust anyone who might turn traitor?
12887[ Illustration:_ Do You Ever Laugh?_(_ White Studio_)] And, mind you, physical training does n''t necessarily mean going to an expert for advice.
12887_ Did we lack the sand_?
12887_ Then, why not a man and wife?_ Needless to say they can, and do.
15926A theme to crowds that knew them not, Lamented by admiring foes, Who would not share their glorious lot? 15926 By the way,"continued he,"are you aware that the correct etymology of the name Chicago is not generally known?"
15926Do you know that this year is the two hundredth anniversary of a remarkable event for this lake?
15926How long has the boat to wait?
15926The Indians took the place by stratagem, did they not?
15926Were there any such at Mackinaw?
15926What do you say to a trip on the Great Lakes?
15926And Thare is Now Setled in those Lines here after mentioned is about the Number of Seventy families all Redy And may[ many?]
15926Do n''t you know how in walking the shady places are always behind us?"
15926Has he been true or false to his political convictions?
15926Have a cigar, Montague?"
15926How came you to think of it, Vincent?"
15926How could it be different if we told them the truth?
15926Saratoga?
15926Say, Montague,"to me,"you are agreed?"
15926The mountains?
15926The seaside?
15926What does the record show in these directions?
15926What is this story, thus redolent of praise?
15926Where shall we go this year?
15926Who would not die the death they chose?"
15926Why challenge Liberty herself to lend her voice?
15926Why must ye hallelujah anthems raise, And bid the world in plaudits loud rejoice?
15926exclaimed the Historian;"who cares anything about that?
11351Breast''s a- blazin'', is it, Sonny?
11351How do I_ know_?
11351''Member when you tried ter lick me?
11351''Till a Blackbird whistled:"I say, you know, What_ is_ the trouble down there below?
11351*****[ Illustration]"JIM"Want to see me, hey, old chap?
11351And, amongst them days of gladness, ai n''t there one that stands alone, When yer had yer first fire- crackers-- jest one bunch, but all yer own?
11351Are her thoughts so far amiss As to stray, like mine, to bliss?
11351Are you in sorrow, or pain, or what?"
11351Brush from the brow the lines of care, Scoff at the touch of Time?
11351Ca n''t yer see the big, red flashes, if yer only shut yer eyes, And jest smell the burnin''powder, sweeter''n breaths from paradise?
11351Ca n''t you see''em?
11351Did some sister, wife, or mother, Mourn a husband, son, or brother?
11351Did some sweetheart look with longing for a love who never came?
11351Do n''t yer''member how yer envied bigger chaps their fuss and noise,''Cause yer Ma had said that crackers was n''t good fer_ little_ boys?
11351Do n''t you know that Grandma''s makin''Loads of mince and pun''kin pies?
11351Do n''t you smell those goodies cookin''?
11351Do yer''member how yer bought''em, weeks and weeks ahead of time, After savin''all yer pennies till they footed up a dime?
11351Do yer''member what they looked like?
11351Do''n''t it seem like each was louder than the grandest sort of gun?
11351Dusky locks and lashes had he?
11351ENVOY Heart''s dearest, what though the storms may brew, And earth''s ways darken for you and me?
11351From New England''s fields of daisies, Or from Dixie''s bowered mazes, Rode he proudly forth to conflict?
11351From their azure depths askance, When the hymn- book gave the chance, Did I get one laughing glance?
11351Hark, a heavy step advancing,--list, a father''s angry cry,"He hain''t shucked a single nubbin; where''s that good- fer- nothin''Hi?"
11351He''ll walk in kinder stately- like and say,"How do, Miss Brown?"
11351His NEW BROTHER,"Why''d they buy a baby brother, When they know I''d_ good_ deal ruther Have a dog?"
11351How much would yer spend ter gain it-- that light- hearted, joyous glow That come with yer fust fire- crackers, when yer bought''em long ago?
11351I says,"My sakes, is_ that_ him?
11351Miss her dreadful, do n''t we, boy?
11351OUR FIRST FIRE- CRACKERS,"Do yer''member how yer fired''em, slow and careful, one by one?"
11351Or was he some Northern laddie, Fresh and fair, with cheeks of roses, and with eyes and coat of blue?
11351Or"Why_ do n''t_ yer sit up straight?"
11351Say, I''d run and hide, I bet you, And I''d leave off eatin''some, Else the choppin''-block''ll get you,-- Do n''t you know November''s come?
11351Says I"D''jer ever travel, Dan?"
11351Says I,"D''jer ever hear''em, Dan?"
11351Says I,"D''jer ever read it, Dan?"
11351Says I,"How d''yer know you''re right?"
11351See him sit and purr and blink, Do n''t yer bet he knows I think Lots of him?
11351See him sit and purr and blink-- Do n''t yer bet he knows I think Lots of him?
11351See?
11351Seems as if my heart would break, But I love yer for her sake, Do n''t I, Jim?
11351Shall I tell you the way, little boy, little boy, To get to this country, bright?
11351Tea?
11351That sets all the women goin'', and they say,"How_ can_ you make Such_ delicious_ pies and biscuits, and such_ lovely_ choc''late cake?"
11351They said,"Yes,"and,"Ai n''t he cunnin''?"
11351Want to curl up in my lap, Do yer, Jim?
11351Was he some proud Southern stripling, tall and straight and brave and true?
11351What, I wonder, was his name?
11351When Mother first viewed it she fainted-- she ai n''t up in Art, do n''t yer see?
11351Where''s your eyes?
11351Who, I wonder, was its wearer, Was its stricken soldier bearer?
11351Would ye haste to the banquet rare, Taste of the feast sublime?
11351[ Illustration] Do yer''member how yer fired''em, slow and careful, one by one?
11351_ Ai n''t_ you glad November''s come?
11351them new plaid pants; well, wa''n''t I something grand When I come up the walk with some fresh posies in my hand?
11351what was that text about?
11351when at last she said yer might?
12216All well,said the mate,"get the lights over the side;"but spying the second boat, he asked what boat that was?
12216Are there not fishermen''s dories upon the beach? 12216 How can I get away?"
12216Paou.--''Thou hast committed some crime and comest to me for protection?''
12216Paou.--''Who is bold enough to compare me with O- po- tae?''
12216Paou.--''You will then know how it stands concerning the report about our submission, if it is true or false?''
12216Very true,cried the delighted chief,"how came I not to think of that before?"
12216When Fei- heung- Chow came to Paou, he said:''Friend Paou, do you know why I come to you?''
12216--At this moment seeing David''s grave--"are they dead then?
12216And_ Costa_, the cabin boy, only fifteen years of age when this crime was committed-- shall he die?
12216Bracket was somewhat dejected, and asked him in a low voice, what his opinion was with respects to our fate?
12216Ca n''t you take one of them?"
12216Coming alongside of her, Roberts ordered the prisoner to ask,"How Seignior Captain did?"
12216Does fiercely brandish a sharp scourge within; Severe decrees may keep our tongues in awe, But to our minds what edicts can give law?
12216Gentlemen of the Jury, have you agreed upon your verdict?
12216He asked, upon what account?
12216He inquired, saying,"What is the matter with the ship?
12216He said,"Captain Americana, never mind, go and take some dinner-- which are your men?"
12216How could he be a pirate who could not help himself?
12216How often may she have stretched forth her hands in supplication, and asked, even the winds of heaven, to bring her tidings of him who was away?
12216How say you, Gentlemen, is the prisoner at the bar, Pedro Gilbert, guilty or not guilty?
12216How shall I alone be able to fight the Government forces?
12216I asked"which way they intended to go?"
12216If O- po- tae could before vanquish you quite alone, how much more can he now when he is united with Government?
12216Is there no Christian in this land?)
12216Nickola asked him"why he did it?"
12216Now will you make misfortune pay the penalty of guilt?
12216Paou addressed himself in an angry tone to Shih- Url, and said:''I advise you to submit: will you not follow my advice?
12216Paou:--"Why then do you not obey the orders of the wife of Ching- yih and my own?
12216Shall the sword fall upon his neck?
12216She proved leaky, for we had no carpenter''s yard, or smith''s shop to go to.--And now the question was,"who should go, and how many?"
12216Stay here if you are so squeamish?"
12216The Panda sailed from the Havana on the night of the 20th of August; and upon passing the Moro Castle, she was hailed, and asked,"where bound?"
12216The first question they asked was, where was Mr. Lafitte?
12216The public prosecutor now moves for judgment on that verdict; have you any thing to say, why the sentence of the law should not be passed upon you?
12216These Roberts swore at as cowards, who meant to dishearten the men, asking them, if it were so, whether they were afraid to fight or not?
12216They are literally like madmen, who cast firebrands, arrows and death, and say,"Are not we in sport?"
12216Turning to my fellow- sufferers, Nickola asked--"Are these all that are left of you?
12216Upon this he hailed him in his own rude style,"D-- n you for villains, who are you, and from whence come you?"
12216What are you in comparison with O- po- tae?''"
12216What is this else than separation, that you do not come to assist me, when I am surrounded by the enemy?
12216What offence had Thornby or Roberts committed against you?
12216When the boats were moving from the shore, on recovering myself a little, I asked Bolidar,"If he was going to leave us so?"
12216Where then was my friend Bracket and those who went with him?
12216Who shall speak for you?
12216_ It was Nickola_!--saying,"Do you now believe Nickola is your friend?
12216buenos Christianos, me amparen, ampara me, ampara me, no hay Christiano en asta, tiara?"
12216does she drive?
12216said Vane,"would you have me steal a dory then?"
12216said the captain:"how can that be?"
12216what have you to say?''
12216what weather is it?"
12216where are the others?"
16948Can you make out a well- marked point on the leading edge?
16948What is the royalty to be?
16948***** SHALL WE HAVE A NATIONAL HORSE?
16948Are we a nation of idiots to be influenced by such nonsense?
16948Can America show any kind of a horse to tempt her brush?
16948Does our government want breeding farms upon which to nurse these admitted"defects,"including the"confirmed roarer,"for cavalry horses?
16948How is it with electricity?
16948How is it with mechanical systems?
16948I dare say that it will be uppermost in your minds, Whence comes the increased yield of salts?
16948Scientists have reasoned and explored, trying to prove to the contrary, but what have they proved?
16948What could be a more perfect illustration than the horse railroad system?
16948What did?
16948What standard?
16948Why should we prefer electricity as the propelling agent of our street cars over all other known methods?
10858And for what, mistaken men?
10858And if they were so disposed would it be the duty of this Government to protect them in the attempt?
10858And is it supposed that the wandering savage has a stronger attachment to his home than the settled, civilized Christian?
10858And unless they did would it not be the duty of the General Government to support them in resisting such a measure?
10858And was the prosecution of such hostilities an usurpation in each case by the Executive which conducted them of the constitutional power of Congress?
10858Are you free from the apprehension of civil discord, with all its fearful consequences?
10858Are you really ready to incur its guilt?
10858Are you united at home?
10858Assuming these suggestions to be correct, will not our constituents require the observance of a course by which they can be effected?
10858But if you were assembled in general convention, which would you think the safest depository of this discretionary power in the last resort?
10858But will there ever be a time when this reason will be less powerful?
10858Can the States who magnanimously surrendered their title to the territories of the West recall the grant?
10858Can those sacrifices be recalled?
10858Could the Indians establish a separate republic on each of their reservations in Ohio?
10858Did the name of Washington sanction, did the States deliberately ratify, such an anomaly in the history of fundamental legislation?
10858Did we pledge ourselves to the support of an airy nothing-- a bubble that must be blown away by the first breath of disaffection?
10858Do our neighboring republics, every day suffering some new revolution or contending with some new insurrection, do they excite your envy?
10858Does Humanity weep at these painful separations from everything, animate and inanimate, with which the young heart has become entwined?
10858Does any such exist?
10858Doubtless it will be painful to leave the graves of their fathers; but what do they more than our ancestors did or than our children are now doing?
10858For how is that purpose to be ascertained?
10858For what do you throw away these inestimable blessings?
10858For what would you exchange your share in the advantages and honor of the Union?
10858If it be a bad one, why is it suffered to exist?
10858If not, what further alteration or modification will the Senate propose?
10858If the States feel themselves competent to these objects, why should this Government wish to assume the power?
10858If the existing system be a good one, why should it not be extended?
10858If your leaders could succeed in establishing a separation, what would be your situation?
10858Is it more afflicting to him to leave the graves of his fathers than it is to our brothers and children?
10858Is it national and conducive to the benefit of the whole, or local and operating only to the advantage of a portion of the Union?
10858Is the unconstitutionality of these laws of that description?
10858Is there no danger to our liberty and independence in a bank that in its nature has so little to bind it to our country?
10858May he not be tempted to name his reward?
10858Or will the Senate advise the conclusion of a treaty with that tribe as modified by the alterations suggested by me?
10858Ought they not to require it?
10858Shall there be a free port in one State and onerous duties in another?
10858Was our devotion paid to the wretched, inefficient, clumsy contrivance which this new doctrine would make it?
10858Were we mistaken, my countrymen, in attaching this importance to the Constitution of our country?
10858What are they?
10858What is the meaning of the word_ palpable_ in the sense in which it is here used?
10858What, then, shall be done?
10858Which is the most discreet disposition of the power?
10858Which is the supreme law of the land?
10858Who is to make the scrutiny?
10858Why is it that they have been called upon to assist in our wars without the privilege of exercising their own discretion?
10858Would the people of Maine permit the Penobscot tribe to erect an independent government within their State?
10858Would you add a clause giving it to each of the States, or would you sanction the wise provisions already made by your Constitution?
16508Do n''t you agree,he was asked,"that tailors are a conscienceless and extortionate class?"
16508Have you struck?
16508How long have you studied law?
16508No,he answered, still smiling;"how could I?
16508Shall I hoist it, boys?
16508The general is tough, is n''t he?
16508What time is it, Rees?
16508What''s the matter there?
16508Born at the Waxham settlement, North Carolina(?
16508But have you ever thought what a story is?
16508For what other class of men was fitted to direct it?
16508Franklin?"
16508Have n''t you, more than once, made up your mind that you would n''t like a thing, just from the look of it, without ever having tasted it?
16508Have we had any great statesmen since?
16508How were they to get back to Spain, with the wind always against them?
16508I wonder if any one foresaw that day, even in the dimmest fashion, what immortality of fame was to come to that tall, quiet, dignified man?
16508Now why is it that everyone likes to read these make- believe biographies?
16508The compass varied strangely, and what hope for them was there if this, their only guide, proved faithless?
16508What chance, then, had this little force of backwoodsmen, commanded by an ignorant and untrained general?
16508What was the meaning of a sea as smooth as their own Guadalquiver?
16508Where are your landmarks, your boundaries of colonies?
16508Will he be a Democrat or Republican-- or of some new party yet to be born?
16274Are you really a good pilot, or are you lost?
16274I say, stranger, are you Kit Carson?
16274Addressing the traveler he asked,"What part of the world, pray sir, do you come from?"
16274Broadway, New York-- James Mordaunt, Esq., at his Office in Wall street-- Is he a Married Man?
16274Fort- Hill Cemetery--"Who is there to Mourn for Logan?"
16274He had some faults;( who has not?)
16274He was asked whether he ever saw there anything in the shape of gold which in any way aroused his suspicions?
16274In the course of the conversation which ensued, Johnston was asked, by the officer in charge of the recruits, what was the service he was engaged on?
16274Jones,"said the greenhorn,"you do n''t expect I''ll swallow all that yarn?"
16274Jones?"
16274L. Death of a New York City Policeman-- A Trial, Sentence, and Execution-- Ought Governors hold the Pardoning Power?
16274Occasionally his memory would not solve the question, what is the next course?
16274One of them quietly asked him--"Is that the way, youngster, you''se bin eddicated in perliteniss of manners?
16274The first question asked by the head chief was,"How do your white people get gunpowder?"
16274The trappers present all confirmed the truth of this statement by a solemn nod of assent to the query,"Ai n''t that true, gentlemen?"
16274This takes precedence over the commonplace question,"What''s the news?"
16274What was the bright thought which made the bold, the ardent, the energetic Kit Carson accept this menial office?
16274Where were the charts indicating the eligible camping grounds with their springs of pure water?
16274Where, then, were the published guides?
16274While upon the road, he accidentally fell in with a friend; and, in reply to the question, where have you been?
16274Who should perform the office of surgeon, was the knotty question?
16274Why did he aim at Kit Carson''s breast?
16274are you the famous Kit Carson, who knows this country so well?"
16274who''d believe a Mexican priest?
17253Are her guns loaded and is there much ammunition aboard?
17253I am inclined to think as you do, Commodore, but--"But_ what_?
17253Were you ever wounded in battle?
17253What ship is that?
17253But what of the ketch itself?
17253Have you read it?
17253In the lull that followed, when each expected his antagonist to board, Captain Pearson called out:"Have you struck?"
17253Let me see, what_ is_ your age?"
17253Still, what could we do but keep up a semblance at least of animation?
17253Suddenly from the gloom came the voice of the captain of the_ Serapis_:"What ship is that?"
17253The daring conduct of this officer brought a tribute from one of our poets, which contains the stanzas:"Who has not heard of the dauntless_ Varuna_?
17253What earthly chance was there under such conditions of any possible harm coming to her?
17253What''s the matter with me?
17253Where did they come from and what gave rise to the ocean nuisances?
17253Who shall not hear of the deeds she has done?
17253Who shall not hear while the brown Mississippi Rushes along from the snow to the sun?
17253_ In His Steps; Or, What Would Jesus Do?_ By Rev.
10647What,said the leaders of public opinion,"can not the lowest subjects of the Czar or the Shah appeal to ultimate authority?
10647Who wrote that?
10647Am I to be an American no longer,--a sectional man, a local man, a separatist, with no country in common?
10647And even suppose he sought to conciliate the South when the South was preparing for rebellion,--is peace- making such a dreadful thing?
10647And why not?
10647And why not?
10647Are all his services to be forgotten because he did not lift up his trumpet voice in favor of immediate emancipation?
10647Because he opposed the public sentiments of his constituents on one point, when perhaps they were right, is he to be hurled from his lofty pedestal?
10647Both parties had now alike appealed to reason and Scripture, and where were the judges who could settle conflicting opinions?
10647But what was he doing all this while, when he was not in his log- office and in the log- court- room, sixteen feet square?
10647But what was incendiary matter?
10647Can any Union sentiments be stronger?
10647Can anything be more decided or more patriotic?
10647Can it be necessary for me to show what must be the inevitable consequences?...
10647Did not Caesar and Cyrus, Louis and Napoleon receive petitions?
10647Do they sound like bidding for Southern votes?
10647Does a man fall hopelessly because he stumbles?
10647Had he not rendered great services?
10647Has there ever been an empire so despotic as to deny so obvious a right?
10647He probably made mistakes, but who could have done better on the whole?
10647How can a young man, however gifted, be infallible?
10647How is each of the thirty States to defend itself?
10647In other words, in matters of national importance, which should rule?
10647Is a man to be dethroned because he is not perfect?
10647Is it desirable to cut off that great arm of national strength?
10647Is it right, is it generous, is it patriotic to drive us to such an alternative?
10647Is this not fame enough for a modest man, who felt his inferiority, in many respects, to those to whom he himself intrusted power?
10647It was entitled"Shall we Compromise?"
10647Now, what is the real gist and spirit of that speech?
10647Shall we march on to our destiny, blind and lame and halt?
10647Should the majority yield to the minority, or the minority to the majority?
10647Should they be direct or indirect?
10647Should they be imposed for a revenue only, or to stimulate and protect infant manufactures?
10647The country was expanding; should there be national provision for internal improvements,--roads, canals, etc.?
10647There had been active and even acrimonious opposition, but who could compete with him?
10647Was he not able and patriotic?
10647Was he not universally admired for his genius and experience and wisdom?
10647Was he pondering the principles or precedents of law, and storing his mind with the knowledge gained from books?
10647Was it not natural that he should have aspired to be one of the successors of Washington and Adams and Jefferson?
10647What States are to secede?
10647What am I to be?
10647What are men sent to Congress for, except to advance the interests intrusted to them by their constituents?
10647What audiences were ever more enthusiastic than those that gathered to hear his wisdom and eloquence in public halls or in the open air?
10647What could the Abolitionists do now with their Northern societies to show that slavery was a wrong and a sin?
10647What general would Lincoln select to succeed McClellan?
10647What had been the history?
10647What if he did, in straitened circumstances, accept their aid?
10647What is more marked in our history than the extravagance and speculation attending the expansion of paper money irredeemable in gold and silver?
10647What is to become of the army?
10647What is to become of the navy?
10647What is to become of the public lands?
10647What is to remain American?
10647What means that cheering on the left?
10647What then?
10647What would England be if it were only an agricultural country?
10647What would be the result?
10647When are these to be merged in national considerations?
10647When was Webster''s vote ever bought and sold?
10647Where is the eagle still to tower?
10647Where is the flag of the Union to remain?
10647Where is the line to be drawn?
10647Where would the towns of Lowell, Manchester, and Lawrence have been without the aid extended to manufacturing interests?
10647Who ever sat with more dignity in the councils of the nation?
10647Who has proved a greater benefactor to this nation, on the floor of Congress, than he?
10647Who in the nation was more eminent than he?
10647Who should determine that point?
10647Who was more prominent than he, among the statesmen of the country, or more thoroughly fitted to fulfil the duties of that high office?
10647Will you cut the Mississippi in two, leaving free States on its branches and slave States at its mouth?
10647Would he have bought a seat in the Senate, even if he had been as rich as a bonanza king?
10647Would he have voted for"back pay"?
17415And,he continued,"was that a true story you told about it?"
17415Boys,Mr. Landstone called out, as we were sailing over the narrow stretches of water toward the island,"how do you feel?"
17415Well, Henry,I said, taking my seat also on the box,"did you really ever dig for money?"
17415What about the sand already thrown out?
17415What is Uncle Henry telling you, Jamesby?
17415What is?
17415Do you see the game?"
17415I remember that, after a long pause, I asked, to reassure myself,"Mr. Landstone, do you really believe that story?"
17415Is everything satisfactory, Redfield?"
17415Is it agreeable, Captain?"
17415It is not to be denied that he has secreted treasure along the coast, but where?
17415What was to be done?
17415Why have you kept so reticent on that subject all these years?"
15488[ 10] And again, what mother could be certain that punishment for her own petty errors might not be wreaked upon her innocent child? 15488 [ 113] And what of old Judge Sewall of the previous century-- he of a number of wives and innumerable children?
15488[ 233] And then, if the young gallant( may we dare call a Puritan beau that?) 15488 [ 310] Who can estimate the quiet aid such women gave the patriots in those years of sore trial?
15488[ 46] And what did girls of Puritan days learn in thedame schools"?
15488''What do you expect to find there?''
15488''Who are you, whence come you, where going, what is your business, and what your religion?''
15488*****"But why should I complain That have so good a God, That doth mine heart with comfort fill Ev''n whilst I feel his rod?
15488And alone, mention''d to me the hainous faults of my wife, who the very first word ask''d my daughter why she married my Son except she lov''d him?
15488And staying at home, she read out of Mr. Cotton Mather-- Why hath Satan filled thy Heart?
15488And what became of this first woman leader in America?
15488And what of women''s originality and daring in other fields of activity?
15488And who performed the marriage ceremony in those old days?
15488Are we at our boards?
15488Are we in our shops?
15488Between 7 and 8 Lechus( Lynchs?
15488But was not this characteristic of so many of those better class colonial women?
15488Causes of Display and Frivolity_ What else could be expected, for the time being at least?
15488Did she not possess essentially the same strengths and weaknesses as she does to- day?
15488Did they indeed?
15488Do you feel no pity in your gentle bosom for the man who would die to make you happy?...
15488Do you think you come here for your pleasure?''"
15488Dress Regulation by Law_ Who would think of writing a book on woman without including some description of dress?
15488If the condition was so bad among those prosperous enough to own property, what must it have been among the poor and so- called lower classes?
15488If you are not well& happy, how can I be so?
15488In conclusion, what may we say as to the general status of the colonial woman in the church?
15488Is it not evident that woman was charmingly feminine, even in colonial days?
15488One puffs and sweats, the other mutters why Ca n''t you promove your work so fast as I?
15488Pointing out that it was Adam who ate of the tree and that they were innocent, they ask:"O great Creator, why was our nature depraved and forlorn?
15488Raillery and Scolding_ Of course, the colonial man found woman''s dress a subject for jest; what man has not?
15488Shall I expect no return to the most sincere, ardent, and disinterested passion?
15488The Chief Judge asked the prisoner who he thought hindered these witnesses from giving their testimonies?
15488What else could the women do?
15488What man, soldier or statesman, could have written more courageous words than these by Abigail Adams?
15488What more pleasing romance could one want?
15488What woman could tell whether she or her daughter might not be the next victim of the bloody harvest?
15488When shall I hear from you?
15488When will''New Woman''do more for her country?
15488Who bewitches you?
15488Whoever heard her call an ill name?
15488Why so defil''d, and made so vil''d, whilst we were yet unborn?
15488Will any one dare to deny this fact?
15488Would not this cause anguish to the heart of any mother?
15488Yet, who can say what rebellion unconsciously arose sometimes in the hearts of the women?
15488beds?
15488or detract from anybody?
12462And as it is to so go at all events, may we not agree that the sooner the better?
12462And can it be that good policy does not equally enjoin it?
12462And if A and B should agree, how can they know but that the General Government here will reject their plan?
12462And in any event, can not the North decide for itself whether to receive them?
12462And should anyone in any case be content that his oath shall go unkept on a merely unsubstantial controversy as to_ how_ it shall be kept?
12462And why may we not continue that ratio far beyond that period?
12462Are they not already in the land?
12462But why any proclamation now upon this subject?
12462But why should emancipation South send the free people North?
12462But why tender the benefits of this provision only to a State government set up in this particular way?
12462Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
12462Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
12462Can it be that Providence has not connected the permanent felicity of a nation with its virtue?
12462Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
12462Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
12462Can we, can they, by any other means so certainly or so speedily assure these vital objects?
12462Could the one in any way greatly disturb the seven?
12462Did we notify them of this sage view of ours when we borrowed their money?
12462Has it more waste surface by mountains, rivers, lakes, deserts, or other causes?
12462If, then, for a common object this property is to be sacrificed, is it not just that it be done at a common charge?
12462If, then, we are at some time to be as populous as Europe, how soon?
12462In our present differences, is either party without faith of being in the right?
12462Is it doubted that it would restore the national authority and national prosperity and perpetuate both indefinitely?
12462Is it doubted that we here-- Congress and Executive-- can secure its adoption?
12462Is it doubted, then, that the plan I propose, if adopted, would shorten the war, and thus lessen its expenditure of money and of blood?
12462Is it inferior to Europe in any natural advantage?
12462Is it just either that creditors shall go unpaid or the remaining States pay the whole?
12462Is it just that she shall leave and pay no part of this herself?
12462Is it just that she shall now be off without consent or without making any return?
12462Is it just that they shall go off without leave and without refunding?
12462Is it less fertile?
12462Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory_ after_ separation than_ before_?
12462Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory_ after_ separation than_ before_?
12462Is it true, then, that any right plainly written in the Constitution has been denied?
12462Is it true, then, that colored people can displace any more white labor by being free than by remaining slaves?
12462Is there any better or equal hope in the world?
12462Is there such perfect identity of interests among the States to compose a new union as to produce harmony only and prevent renewed secession?
12462Is this quite just to creditors?
12462It forces us to ask, Is there in all republics this inherent and fatal weakness?
12462It is not"Can_ any_ of us_ imagine_ better?"
12462Must a government of necessity be too_ strong_ for the liberties of its own people, or too_ weak_ to maintain its own existence?
12462Object whatsoever is possible, still the question recurs,"Can we do better?"
12462One party to a contract may violate it-- break it, so to speak-- but does it not require all to lawfully rescind it?
12462Shall fugitives from labor be surrendered by national or by State authority?
12462Shall they be admitted?
12462To state the question more directly, Are all the laws_ but one_ to go unexecuted, and the Government itself go to pieces lest that one be violated?
12462To those, however, who really love the Union may I not speak?
12462What is a"sovereignty"in the political sense of the term?
12462Which of the three powers named by Great Britain as an arbiter shall be chosen by the United States?
12462Who that is a sincere friend to it can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?
12462Why may not our country at some time average as many?
12462Why shall A adopt the plan of B rather than B that of A?
12462Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people?
12462Why this deliberate pressing out of view the rights of men and the authority of the people?
12462Why?
12462Why?
12462Will liberation make them any more numerous?
12462Will not the good people respond to a united and earnest appeal from us?
12462Will you hazard so desperate a step while there is any possibility that any portion of the ills you fly from have no real existence?
12462Will you not embrace it?
12462Will you, while the certain ills you fly to are greater than all the real ones you fly from, will you risk the commission of so fearful a mistake?
12462Would it be far wrong to define it"a political community without a political superior"?
12462Yet who can say that each was not best suited for his particular sphere of action?
12462_ May_ Congress prohibit slavery in the Territories?
12462_ Must_ Congress protect slavery in the Territories?
12462but"Can we_ all_ do better?"
12462is it rendered impossible by its vices?
17444Am I to conclude that both are in error? 17444 Chiefs, headmen, and warriors, will you then by resistance compel us to resort to arms?
17444The conquest completed at the enormous waste of human life to the North and Northwest, with at least$ 250,000,000 added thereto, and_ cui bono_? 17444 And where is he? 17444 But why not have given me the proximate returns, such as he so eagerly furnished the President and certain secretaries? 17444 General Brown said to General Miller, when he saw that to win the battle the artillery on the ridge must be captured,Sir, can you take that battery?"
17444Has, then, a senior no corrective power over a junior officer in case of such persistent neglect and disobedience?"
17444He lost the game and said to one of the party,"Young gentleman, do you know why I lost that game?"
17444How, then, could we hope to penetrate in the interior?...
17444However, who would benefit by the free export of gold or silver?
17444Or will you by flight seek to hide yourselves in mountains and forests, and thus oblige us to hunt you down?
17444What officer can feel secure in the face of that great example of triumphant injustice?
17444What, then, Mexicans, is the liberty of which you boast?
17444Who can place before himself the anticipation of establishing higher claims upon the gratitude of the country than General Scott?
17444Who dare to stand?"
17444Yet, should war come at last, my enthusiasm will be rekindled, and then who knows but that I may yet write my history with my sword?
16158But,said the Senator,"could you have been elected without the votes of colored men?
16158Can that be possible?
16158Can you, Mr. President, afford to do such a thing as this?
16158Is he not a good postmaster?
16158What is the matter with him?
16158A patriotic desire to have the State redeemed(?)
16158And this brings us to a consideration of the question, What is meant by"Negro Domination?"
16158And why should not the representation from those States be the same in both conventions?
16158Are you now prepared to confess that in these grand and glorious achievements the party made a grave mistake?
16158But he no doubt asked himself the question:"What can I do?"
16158But the question was, Where is there a colored man possessing the qualifications necessary to one in charge of the executive department of the state?
16158But was this to be the settled policy of the government?
16158Could such a thing be possible?
16158How could he be otherwise?
16158How was it with the new reform administration?
16158Is that true of them now?
16158It was now in order for each one of them to ask himself the question:"Can I afford to do this?"
16158Must that chapter now be blotted out?
16158Must that hope now be destroyed?
16158Then why not exclude them altogether, and also those from the territories and the District of Columbia?
16158Then, what was the cause of this sudden and unexpected uprising?
16158Was the Fifteenth Amendment to the Federal Constitution premature and unwise?
16158Was the enfranchisement of the black men at the South by act of Congress a grave mistake?
16158Were the reconstructed State Governments that were organized as a result thereof a disappointment and a failure?
16158What inducement can a southern white man now have for becoming a Republican?
16158What was it?
16158What was the excuse for it?
16158What was the motive, the incentive that caused it?
16158When the redemption(?)
16158Where was it?
16158Who had it?
16158Why was this?
16158Will anyone assert that such is true of them now?
16158You have done this on previous occasions, why not do it again?
10464''Could you look spry, massa, if your child, your son you loved as well as your life, was torn away from you? 10464 All things round of freedom ring-- Winged birds and dashing wave; What are joyous sounds to him In his chains, a fettered slave?"
10464And did Mark say nothing more than that?
10464And did Missy Katy never ask about it afterward?
10464And what have I of my own? 10464 And would you like to read?"
10464And_ was_ he rewarded?
10464Are you sold there, Mark?
10464Auntie,said little Cornelia,"have my little banty''s eggs hatched yet?"
10464But why did those slaves let their masters bring them into this state? 10464 But, papa, do n''t you think the Indians had good cause for their hatred to the whites?"
10464Dear papa, tell us a story with a poor slave in it, wo n''t you? 10464 Do you expect him to rival a Henry Clay or an Andrew Jackson?"
10464Good morning, Mr. Jennings,said the trader,"what can I do for you to- day?"
10464I wish I had hold of him,said Alfred,"would n''t I give it to him?"
10464Is father come?
10464Lewis?
10464Mother, ca n''t I bring in the lights?
10464Mother,said the boy,"what have we done that we should be treated so much worse than other people?"
10464Ned?
10464So Judy was a slave, mother?
10464Suppose they were black,said he to himself,"would they be any meaner, less powerful, less valuable, less spirited?
10464What did you tread upon the dog for, you great clumsy nigger? 10464 What is the matter now, little baby?"
10464What is the matter with you, girl? 10464 What would you take for what you know about readin''?"
10464Where are you going, Maggie?
10464Why Fanny, child, is you awake? 10464 Why do their fathers let these masters have their children?
10464Why, Hasty, what is the matter?
10464Why, how did that happen, Hasty?
10464Why, is she sick?
10464Why, mamma, do they make them work so late as that?
10464''Ai nt this his night to come home, mother?"
10464And de fever all gone, too?
10464And those dear brothers and sisters, what had become of them?
10464And what are you doing with this, I''d like to know?"
10464Are they not little beauties?"
10464But are all the children in America free like you?
10464But do you really think that Mr. Nelson would refuse to have him remain even in the State?
10464Could it be that slavery was so bad, that she was surrounded by these suffering creatures, and was doing nothing for them?
10464Could you come here by sunrise every morning?"
10464Did n''t he pay enough for them, and see that they were well fed and clothed, and what more did they want?
10464Do you forget what our blessed Saviour said about returning good for evil?"
10464Do you know where they live?"
10464Do you wonder that she became perfectly wild, and beside herself at times?
10464Has she a husband or children?"
10464Have you ever heard her history, mother?
10464He said to her:"''Why, Judy, where are you going?''
10464How have you been these two or three days?"
10464How is yer dis mornin'', dear?"
10464How would you feel if all you loved best were carried off by a cruel slave- driver, and you had_ no hope_ of hearing from them again in this world?
10464I do not see that color makes much difference with animals, why should it make so much difference among men?
10464I thought my nose would have been blown off; and what would my little girl have said if she had seen her papa come home without a nose?
10464If we have time this morning, wo n''t you go and see them?"
10464If you ai n''t dead, why do n''t you come to me?"
10464Imagine his terror, then, as she seized him rudely by the wrists and exclaimed,"It''s you, is it?
10464Is it not so, my children?
10464Louis?"
10464My mother calls me her good boy, My father calls me brave; What wicked action have I done, That I should be a slave?
10464Now do n''t you think_ that_ was a good trait in their character?"
10464Now who''d a thought on''t?
10464Now, which was the worst used in this case?"
10464One day the missionary said:"Had you not better give it up?"
10464Religion?
10464She could scarcely speak a word distinctly, but taking first one and then the other by the hand, she said inquiringly:"Lewis?"
10464Was it right, you ask, for her to take her own life?
10464Was_ that_ his mother?
10464What blow can she arrest?
10464What do you want of a book?
10464What makes the difference that I should be higher priced?
10464What temptation avert?
10464Who made the white men masters over us?"
10464Why did n''t they fight as our forefathers did when they threw off the yoke of England''s laws?"
10464Why have you not come to pay me my money?"
10464Why, do they sell little children away from their mothers?"
10464Wo n''t you, Mark?"
10464Would you have run?"
10464Would you like to take one, mother?"
10464Yet what is a slave mother''s protection to her child?
10464_ do_ you think she will come?"
10464am dat you?
10464and_ sold_?
10464if you have, wo n''t you tell it to us?"
10464in that old house, Harry?"
10464said Alfred as they drove along,"what is more enlivening than the merry jingling of the sleigh bells on a clear frosty day?"
10464said little Cornelia, burying her face in her mother''s lap, and sobbing aloud,"Do they do such wicked things?"
10464what''s here?"
10464where''s Lew?"
12101An annual report of what?
12101Are they admitted as citizens?
12101Are we men?
12101But,continued Nott,"the solemn question here arises-- in what condition will this momentous change place us?
12101How forswear?
12101I have plowed, and planted, and gathered into barns, and no man could head me-- and a''n''t I a woman? 12101 Just what is the light in which we are to regard the slaves?"
12101What can a man do to help such a suffering mass of humanity?
12101What of the darker world that watches? 12101 What, Peggy,"asked Price,"were you going to set the town on fire?"
12101What, is it about Mr. Hogg''s goods?
12101( Boston?)
12101After a while the slave raised the important question: Had not his residence outside of a slave state made him a free man?
12101And what was the Negro Problem?
12101And which is the world to choose, Christ or Mammon?
12101Approaching the cabin of a free Negro they asked,"Is this Southampton County?"
12101Are they admitted as property?
12101Asked in court by Gray if he still believed in the providential nature of his mission, he asked,"Was not Christ crucified?"
12101But whar did Christ come from?"
12101But, sir, where did the Greeks and the Romans and the Jews get it?
12101Could a bishop hold a slave?
12101Could any one use a young woman who wanted to work for her board?
12101Could our worst enemies or the worst enemies of republics, wish us a severer judgment?"
12101Could the Church really countenance slavery?
12101Dey talks''bout dis ting in de head-- what dis dey call it?"
12101Do we not owe it to civilized man to stand in the breach and stay the uplifted arm?...
12101Have we any other master but Jesus Christ alone?
12101How could one know that wakeful and sagacious enemies without would not discover the vulnerable point and use it for the country''s overthrow?
12101How many families of your town would take in a Negro man or woman, teach them, bear with them, and seek to make them Christians?
12101How many merchants would take Adolph, if I wanted to make him a clerk; or mechanics, if I wanted to teach him a trade?
12101How shall we measure such a life?
12101I am aware that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity?
12101I could work as much and eat as much as a man, when I could get it, and bear de lash as well-- and a''n''t I a woman?
12101If I wanted to put Jane and Rosa to school, how many schools are there in the Northern states that would take them in?...
12101If my cup wo n''t hold but a pint and yourn holds a quart, would n''t ye be mean not to let me have my little half- measure full?"
12101In any case the answer to the first question at once suggested another, What shall we do with the Negro?
12101In the first place, what is he worth, and especially what is he worth in honest Southern opinion?
12101In the same month George W. Cable answered affirmatively and with emphasis the question,"Does the Negro pay for his education?"
12101In this life was it also possible for the children of Africa to have a permanent and an honorable place?
12101Is He not their master as well as ours?
12101Is it finally to be an agency for the upbuilding of the nation, or simply one of the forces that retard?
12101Is she to abide by the principles that guided her in 1776, or simply seize her share of the booty?
12101Is there not land enough in America, or''corn enough in Egypt''?
12101It was said after the Civil War that he would not work except under compulsion; just how had he come to be regarded in the industry of the New South?
12101Maughan''s The Republic of Liberia, London( 1920?
12101Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee?
12101Query: Was it genuine statesmanship that permitted these people to feel that they must leave the South?
12101Raising her voice she repeated,"Whar did Christ come from?
12101Said St. Clair to Ophelia:"If we emancipate, are you willing to educate?
12101Shall we permit that blow to fall?
12101So did the king of Egypt doubt the very existence of God, saying,''Who is the Lord, that I should let Israel go?''
12101Somerset objected to this and in so doing raised the important legal question, Did a slave by being brought to England become free?
12101The question then arises: Just what is the relation that he is finally to sustain to other workingmen?
12101This is a duty: the whites do not trade with you; why should you give them your patronage?
12101Was he not made by the Creator to sit in the shade, and make the blacks work without remuneration for their services, to support him and his family?
12101What is its real promise in American life?
12101What right, then, have we to obey and call any man master but Himself?
12101What the Negro in the last analysis wonders is: Who was right, Livingstone or Rhodes?
12101What though before us lies the open grave?
12101What will my children say if I deprive them of so much estate?
12101What''s dat got to do with women''s rights or niggers''rights?
12101What, then, is this dark world thinking?
12101When despairing African fugitives do the same thing-- it is-- what_ is_ it?"
12101When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in?
12101Who can weigh love and hope and service, and the joy of answered prayer?
12101Who could believe that such a tremendous physical force would remain forever spell- bound and quiescent?
12101Why should they send us into a far country to die?
12101Will you despair, seeing Truth, and Justice, and Mercy, and God, and Christ, and the Holy Ghost, are on your side?
12101Would King accordingly enter into conference with the English officials with reference to disposing of any Negroes who might be sent?
12101_ But is there no civil law to protect me_?
12101he asked;"then why are they not admitted on an equality with white citizens?
12101my brothers, are we men?...
12101or naked, and clothed thee?
12101or thirsty, and gave thee drink?
12101then why is not other property admitted into the computation?"
15938''I believe there was,''said she;''but pray what do you want with it?'' 15938 ''What can detain them?''
15938''Where have you been, husband?'' 15938 Ca n''t you give us an account of that mutiny at Morristown?"
15938Did any of you ever hear or read an account of the night- attack on General Wayne, near Savannah, just before the close of the war?
15938Did this affair happen before that of Andrà ©''s?
15938Did you say you was with General Stark, at Bennington?
15938Do you mean to say that the coward is the wisest man?
15938Have you ever seen a painting of the fight between Colonel Allan M''Lean and some British troops? 15938 How long did the expedition occupy?"
15938I do n''t want to interrupt your eating, Brown and Hanson,said Colson,"but could n''t you stir us up a little with the drum and fife?"
15938It was almost equal to Alexander and Buce-- Buce-- Alexander the Great, and that wild horse you know he tamed when a boy-- what was its name?
15938Then tell us about it, wo n''t you?
15938Was n''t it a dark night?
15938Were any of you at Quebec, with Arnold and Montgomery?
15938Were either of you in the expedition against Ticonderoga?
15938What sort of a looking man was Arnold at that time?
15938What sort of a looking man was Stark?
15938What was the loss of the enemy that day?
15938What was the number of the troops who arrived safe?
15938Who told you that story?
15938Who was he?
15938Why did n''t he send the Indians to Greene''s camp, or some other American post?
15938Will you tell us about the battle in which he fell?
15938''Can they have deceived me?
15938''Friend Roberts,''said the enterprising girl,''may this damsel and myself pass to visit a friend at a neighbouring farm?''
15938''Ride him?''
15938''What aim?''
15938And if he had not been, in the circumstances of amazing responsibility in which he was placed, how could he have been brave?"
15938Besides, what wo n''t a woman do to save her husband, at all times?"
15938Brown?"
15938Come, which of you will tell something about George Washington-- the Father of his Country?"
15938Delaplace then said,''By what authority do you demand it?''
15938Did Wayne slaughter the enemy at Stony Point?
15938Did either of you ever see Henry Lee?
15938Did he desert his post or shrink from the charge?''
15938Did n''t we, Hanson?"
15938Galloping up to him, he inquired if a regiment of horse and body of infantry had passed that way?
15938Say, was he not your sire?
15938The justice only interrupted him with the occasional inquiry,''Most done?''
15938Then, turning to Rugsdale, he said,''Speak, sir, what does this mean?''
15938What could the enemy expect from our regulars?"
15938What could you do with a gun?''
15938What''s the matter with you?"
15938Which of you can oblige us by giving us your recollections of our first great struggle?"
15938Why answer they not the signal?''
15938Why did the pilgrim cross the wave?
15938are you going mad?
15938said the old man,''has he misbehaved?
15938why do n''t you disperse?''
12486Why should Congregational worship be excluded to make room for others?
12486And how do they fulfil the solemn trust?
12486Are the Indians at Marshpee, protected in the same manner the whites are, in their religious freedom?
12486Are the interests of a whole people to be sacrificed to one man?
12486Brothers, our fathers of this State meet soon to make laws; will you help us to enable them to hear the voice of the red man?
12486But what says the amended article on this subject of religious freedom?
12486But who is the"_ Marshpee Deputation_,"that is showing off to such advantage in the city?
12486Can I think that Apes will press it?
12486Can he ever have read the third Article of the Bill of Rights, as amended?
12486Can it be wondered, that the Indians become more and more degraded?
12486Can you, gentlemen, can the Legislature, resist the simple appeal of their memorial?
12486Do they not look exclusively to his own benefit, without regard to the wishes of the Indians?
12486Do you think the white men would like it?
12486Does he mean to insinuate he does not walk worthily now?
12486Does it not appear from, this, and from his message, that the Ex- Governor is a man of pure republican principles?
12486Does not he better deserve the name who took from us two dollars for sleeping in his stable?
12486Fish beyond the period of their own existence?
12486Fish continue to hold the parsonage against their will?
12486Fish in possession of this property, which he claims to hold by the Laws?
12486Fish the improvement of the parsonage and Meeting- house?
12486From the days of Elliott, to the year 1834, have they made one citizen?
12486Have not the Indians a right to their own property?
12486How has it ever been conveyed out of their hands?
12486How will the white man of Massachusetts ask favor for the red men of the South, while the poor Marshpee red men, his near neighbors, sigh in bondage?
12486If the white man desired the welfare of his red brethren, why did he not give them schools?
12486In the name of Heaven,( with due reverence,) I ask, what people could improve under laws which gave such temptation and facility to plunder?
12486Is it creditable to let the_ white_ spiders break through the laws, while we catch and crush the poor Indian flies?
12486Is not depriving them of all means of mental culture the worst of all robberies?
12486Is not the conclusion then, from all the facts in the case, that the system of laws persisted in since 1763, have failed as acts of paternal care?
12486Is not this a gross perversion of the design of the donors, even if they had any power to have made this grant?
12486Is not this more expensive in proportion to the good done, than any heathen mission on record?
12486Is there any thing unreasonable in their requests?
12486Is there, then, any danger in giving the Indians an opportunity to try a liberal experiment for self- government?
12486Is this language for a Christian minister to address to the Legislature of Massachusetts?
12486Is this possible?
12486Is this religious liberty for the Indians?
12486Is this right, and ought the Indians to be sacrificed to the advantage a single man derives from holding an office of very trifling profit?
12486Is this sword designed to protect or oppress the Indians?
12486Mr. Dwight, one of the Committee, asked, if so many whites being there, did not tend to discourage the Indians from being interested in the meeting?
12486Now what power had these men in 1783, to sequester four hundred acres of the common land of the Indians, for any purpose?
12486O, ye who despise Indians, merely because they are poor, ignorant, and copper- colored; do you not think that God will have respect unto them?
12486Or, can it be that there is no disgrace in persisting in wrong toward Indians?
12486Should he turn them loose to shift for themselves, at the risk of losing them?)
12486Should the worst come to the worst, does the proud white think that a dark skin is less honorable in the sight of God than his own beautiful hide?
12486The Speaker put the question, shall the petition be read?
12486The question is, how can a man do good among a people who do not respect him or desire his presence, and who refuse to hear him preach?
12486Their object was to promote the gospel in Marshpee, but how has it turned out?
12486This being the case, ought he not to pay as much regard to them?
12486To petition for an established Church in Marshpee?
12486Was it by virtue of his settlement, so that he now claims the land as a sole corporation?
12486Was it then a public use?
12486What has been the result of those"rival factions,"in Marshpee?
12486What kind of law is this?
12486What says the Bill of rights?
12486What would the pious Williams say to Harvard College, could he visit Marshpee on a Sabbath?
12486Where and how was their consent given to this act of 1809?
12486Where are all our Cherokee philanthropists, at this time?
12486Where did the General- Court get any power to give away the property of the Indians, any more than the lands of white men, held in common?
12486Who shall dare to call that in question?
12486Who were the Congregational church, and who the society in Marshpee, in 1811?
12486Who, then, dared to teach them?
12486Why has not the State done something to supply us with teachers and places of instruction?
12486Why is it more iniquitous to plunder a stranded ship than to rob, and perhaps murder, an Indian tribe?
12486Why should not this odious, and brutifying system be put an end to?
12486Why should they not_ vote_, maintain schools,( they have volunteered to do this in some instances,) and use as they please that which is their own?
12486Will not your white brothers of Georgia tell you to look at home, and clear your own borders of oppression, before you trouble them?
12486Will other papers publish this simple appeal to the justice of the white men?
12486Will the good people of Massachusetts revert back to the days of their fathers, when they were under the galling yoke of the mother country?
12486Will you think of this?
12486Would they ever have thus yielded to an Indian, if they had not been compelled?
12486You plead for the Cherokees, will you not raise your voice for the red man of Marshpee?
12486when they petitioned the government for a redress of grievances, but in vain?
11728Do you mean to say,said the planter,"that there is a State called Wisconsin that has sent thirty thousand men into your armies?"
11728General,said the planter,"what troops are those passing below?"
11728No, no,said Grant;"do you not see that I have come without even a sword?
11728What is the matter?
11728Who,said Seward,"is to control the national policy?"
11728Will that work pay for the book or only for the damage?
11728Wisconsin?
11728''How about Mr. Hewitt''s bill against the War Department?
11728''If,''said Lincoln,''I should write on that account an order to have it paid, do you suppose the Secretary of the Treasury would pay it?''
11728''What?''
11728And have they not, sir?
11728And how much would it avail you, if you could, by the use of John Brown, Helper''s Book, and the like, break up the Republican organization?
11728Can a man lose a right to himself if he himself has been stolen?"
11728Can we cast our votes with their view, and against our own?
11728Can you not cut it?"
11728Change positions with the enemy, and think you not he would break your communication with Richmond in twenty- four hours?...
11728Could Washington himself speak, would he cast the blame of that sectionalism upon us, who sustain his policy, or upon you who repudiate it?
11728Did Mr. Lincoln regard the address which he had just delivered to a small and critical audience as a success?
11728Did a faint shadow of the future rest upon his soul?
11728Did he feel the loneliness of the situation-- the want of his loyal Illinois adherents?
11728Did he have the faintest glimmer of the brilliant effect which was to follow?
11728Did his sinking heart infer that he was but a speck of humanity to which the great city would never again give a thought?
11728Did we not see a little of this in the last war?
11728Do you accept the challenge?
11728Do you believe that it is for the advantage of this country to put no restriction to the extension of slavery?"
11728Do you say that I must leave my old''Mammy''behind in South Carolina?"
11728Finally he asked,''What are you in Washington for?''
11728Have they not power to provide for the general defence and welfare?
11728Have you any memoranda of your investigations which you would approve of inserting?
11728He insisted from day to day in bringing Douglas back to this issue:"What do you, Douglas, propose to do about slavery in the territories?
11728Hewitt?''
11728How is this condition going to be changed by war even under the assumption that the war may be successful in securing your independence?
11728How many men are there in a regiment?"
11728If the majority is not to rule, who would be the judge of the issue or where is such judge to be found?"
11728In view of our moral, social, and political responsibilities, can we do this?
11728Is it not adherence to the old and tried, against the new and untried?
11728Is it your final judgment that there is to be no further reservation of free territory in this country?
11728Is there in all republics this inherent weakness?"
11728It simply leaves the inquiry:"_ What was the understanding those fathers had of the question mentioned_?"
11728It was argued by Patrick Henry in the Convention in Virginia, as follows:"May not Congress enact that every black man must fight?
11728It was in 1854 that Lincoln first propounded the famous question,"Can the nation endure half slave and half free?"
11728Lincoln?"
11728May they not pronounce all slaves free, and will they not be warranted by that power?
11728May they not think that these call for the abolition of slavery?
11728Now, can you, or not, be prevailed upon to pause and to consider whether this is quite just to us, or even to yourselves?
11728Should you not claim to be at least his equal in prowess, and act upon the claim?
11728The fact is substantially true; but does it prove the issue?
11728The question recurs, what will satisfy them?
11728These natural, and apparently adequate means all failing, what will convince them?
11728Was this the record of a man who should be made the head of a nation in troubled times?
11728We deny it; and what is your proof?
11728What are you talking about?"
11728What induced the Southampton insurrection, twenty- eight years ago, in which, at least, three times as many lives were lost as at Harper''s Ferry?
11728What is conservatism?
11728What is the frame of Government under which we live?
11728What is the question which, according to the text, those fathers understood"just as well, and even better than we do now"?
11728What were this man''s thoughts when he was left alone?
11728What would that other channel probably be?
11728Where is Wisconsin?"
11728Why can you not reach there before him, unless you admit that he is more than your equal on a march?
11728Why did the President put up so long with the vaingloriousness and ineffectiveness of McClellan?
11728Why does he have to wait for his money?''
11728Why should he have accepted even for one brief and unfortunate campaign the service of an incompetent like Pope?
11728Why was the army of the South permitted during the first two years of the War to have so large an advantage in skilled and enterprising leadership?
11728Why were not the real men like Sherman, Grant, Thomas, McPherson, Sheridan, and others brought more promptly into the important positions?
11728Will it satisfy them, if, in the future, we have nothing to do with invasions and insurrections?
11728Will they be satisfied if the Territories be unconditionally surrendered to them?
11728Would that be your behaviour in such an emergency?
11728Would the number of John Browns be lessened or enlarged by the operation?
11728Would you have that question reduced to its former proportions?
11728You can not escape this conclusion; and yet, are you willing to abide by it?
11728You produce your proof; and what is it?
11728[ 4] Who were our fathers that framed the Constitution?
11728said Lincoln,''you have not yet got what the nation owes you?
11728said the planter,"Wisconsin?
18266Why seek ye the living among the dead?
182663._ DEATH-- AND AFTER?
18266Again quoting from the"Notes on Devachan":"_ Who goes to Devachan?"
18266And man has questioned ever of Religion, Whence comes it?
18266Does the last penalty of the law mean the highest honour of the peerage?
18266Is a wooden spoon the emblem of the most illustrious pre- eminence in learning?
18266What can be a greater fraud than our body, so apparently solid, stable, visible and tangible?
18266What can be more depressing than the darkness in which a house is kept shrouded, while the dead body is awaiting sepulture?
18266What then is being_ en rapport_?
18266Whither goes it?
18266Will not this suffice?
18266[ 49] A pure medium''s Ego can be drawn to and made, for an instant, to unite in a magnetic(?)
15572''[ 49] But then when is the operation of a Bill confined to Great Britain, or, to use popular language, what is a British Bill?
1557222.--What is meaning of supremacy of Imperial Parliament?
1557258.--Why should England accept in 1893 a worse bargain than was offered her in 1886?
15572Are the Irish members, if summoned, to vote on all matters, or on some only?
15572Are they prepared to forget the imperative claims of evicted tenants or imprisoned zealots?
15572But can the judgment be enforced?
15572But is it true that even the Home Rulers of Ireland are satisfied?
15572But why confine our observation to Ireland?
15572But will the advantage of even this modified half- and- half Home Rule be really offered to England?
15572Can it be possible that Ministerialists themselves are not certain what are the fixed principles of the new policy?
15572Can we say that the new constitution works well when its real and visible sanction is the use of British soldiers?
15572Do we find that Portuguese and Spaniards gladly subordinate their interests to the welfare of England?
15572Does it, for example, preserve a right to trial by jury?
15572Has this fact arrested the attention of Gladstonians?
15572How is Home Rule to be made a reality?
15572How is the modification to be obtained?
15572If the blind lead the blind, what wonder if they stumble over a precipice?
15572If their acquiescence was a mere pretence, what trust can we place in the assertion that they accept the arrangement of 1893?
15572Is it credible that the Land Leaguers have forgotten what is due to the wounded soldiers of their cause?
15572Is it not natural for Home Rulers to think that the predominant partner ought to be deprived of his predominance?
15572Is it or is it not a principle that members from Ireland shall be summoned to Westminster?
15572Is it possible to combine the effective supremacy of the Imperial Parliament with Home Rule or the substantial legislative independence of Ireland?
15572Is the argument valid?
15572Is the operation of the Bill confined to Great Britain?
15572Is the plea of necessity made out?
15572Is there or is there not any idea of excluding Ulster from the operation of the Bill?
15572Is this a result in which any Englishman or Irishman could rejoice?
15572Should the Irish Government state that the rent is iniquitously high, and refuse to collect it, what will be the position of the British Ministry?
15572What Bills, I answer, ought to be passed whilst the constitution of England is undergoing fundamental alteration?
15572What does that mean?
15572What if the Sheriff is a strong Nationalist, and makes default?
15572What if the officer of the Court is in fact some bailiff trembling for his own life?
15572What is the meaning or justification of the proposed surrender by England of every compensation for Irish Home Rule which was offered her in 1886?
15572What necessity is there for enacting that a sovereign Parliament, which institutes, may alter a scheme of taxation?
15572What would be the result of that?
15572What, for example, is the effect of an Act of the Imperial Parliament which is''impliedly''extended to Ireland?
15572What, however, is the true meaning of this''supreme authority,''''supremacy,''or''sovereignty,''if you like, of the Imperial Parliament?
15572What, however, rendered the three travellers unpopular?
15572Where then lies the path of safety?
15572Which Cabinet would have a right to retain power?
15572Who can say with assurance what Gladstonians understand by Imperial supremacy?
15572Why not?
15572Why should Irishmen be more reasonable than other men?
15572Why should we be surprised at this?
15572Why, it will be said, assume that the Irish Government and the Irish people will not enforce the law?
15572Will English Courts find it easy to give effect to a judgment in Ireland if the Irish Executive and its servants stand neutral or hostile?
15572Will any Irishman of spirit bear this?
15572Will the Imperial supremacy which is supposed to be so effective in the colonies be of any more worth in Ireland than in Victoria?
15572Will they permanently acquiesce in restraints not imposed on the Channel Islands?
15572[ 123] How far, then, is trust in any of the three forms, which it may on this occasion take, a reasonable sentiment?
15572que ne me disiez- vous cela la veille du 15 mai?"''
15572why did n''t you remind me of that on the day before May 15?"''
15854And I said,''Why is this thus? 15854 Is any thing to be seen of the Delaware chief?"
15854Is any thing to be seen?
15854Is it fast to the warlock, or does he carry it above the left ear?
15854Is the rock empty, Judith?
15854Not hear it? 15854 They said,''Doth not like us?''
15854They then said,''Wilt not marry us?'' 15854 What are the trees saying?"
15854What is''t?--what is''t, Judith?
15854What now, Judith?--what next? 15854 Where does he wear his hawk''s feather?"
15854Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? 15854 Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference because they are greener? 15854 At Genoa he drives the_ cicerone_ to despair by pretending never to have heard of Christopher Columbus, and inquiring innocently,Is he dead?"
15854Do I not distinguish that heavy and horrible beating of her heart?
15854Do put your accents in the proper spot: Do n''t, let me beg you, do n''t say''How?''
15854Do the Mingoes still follow, or are we quit of''em for the present?"
15854Do you remember any act of enormous folly, at which you would blush, even in the remotest cavern of the earth?
15854From the tops of mountains they appear like smooth- shaven lawns; yet whither shall we walk but in this taller grass?
15854Have I not heard her footstep on the stair?
15854Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way?
15854How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When, through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell?
15854Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born?
15854Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
15854Is she not hurrying to upbraid me for my haste?
15854It was the precise point at which Sidney Smith had uttered that bitter taunt in the_ Edinburgh Review_,''Who reads an American book?''
15854O, whither shall I fly?
15854One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp he was-- come acrost him with his box and says:"''What might it be that you''ve got in the box?''
15854Said I not that my senses were acute?
15854Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side?
15854Then they said,"Wilt not marry us?"
15854They said,"Doth not like us?"
15854To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men That rived the rebel line asunder?"
15854Was there no meaning in the live repose of the valley behind the mill, and which Homer or Shakespeare could not re- form for me in words?
15854Well, what''s_ he_ good for?''
15854What could I do?
15854What could a poor old orphan do?
15854What if Remorse should assume the features of an injured friend?
15854What if he should stand at your bed''s foot, in the likeness of a corpse, with a bloody stain upon the shroud?
15854What if the fiend should come in woman''s garments, with a pale beauty amid sin and desolation, and lie down by your side?
15854What is patriotism?
15854What is the reason of this thusness?"
15854What is the reason of this thusness?''
15854What links of human affection brings she over the sea?
15854What was It?, 186.
15854What was it that Nature would say?
15854What worlds in the yet unformed Occident May come refined with accents that are ours?"
15854What would human life be without forests, those natural cities?
15854What''s that you say?-- Why, dern it!--sho!-- No?
15854Whence comes this?"
15854Where are the flowers, the fair young flowers, That lately sprang and stood In brighter light and softer airs, A beauteous sisterhood?
15854Whither,''midst falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day, Far through their rosy depths dost thou pursue Thy solitary way?
15854Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us and not the history of theirs?"
15854Will she not be here anon?
15854Would you not think the bases of the earth rising beneath it?
15854Would you not think the foundation of the deep had given way?
15854You ask what I mean?
15854[ 1] On being asked, Whence is the flower?
15854and''Wherefore did I come?''"
15854for''What?''
15854said my grandsire, as he shook Some powder in his pan,"What could this lovely creature do Against a desperate man?"
15854what is this?
15161''But what makes the neap tides?'' 15161 ''Well, brother,''said he,''why did you not come in to prayers?''
15161''What is this?'' 15161 ''Will you behave yourself if I let you in?''
15161An Irishman once came to his office:''And are yez Misther Brady?'' 15161 But what is your name?"
15161Captain Porter,said he, with awful solemnity,"are you a captain in Israel?"
15161Did you put in the consideration? 15161 Did you see him?"
15161Did you smell him?
15161Do you know her? 15161 Do you mean to say there are a million of dots here?"
15161Have you got the papers?
15161Henry,said Mrs. Beecher, solemnly,"what do you think of when you hear a bell tolling like that?"
15161How do you live, then?
15161How much do you think each is worth?
15161I stopped him short by saying,''Pooh, pooh, man, what are you talking about? 15161 Indeed,"exclaimed the old man, warmly;"your father?
15161Indeed,said Mr. Astor,"how much do you suppose I am worth?"
15161Is it a machine you want?
15161Is this Peter Cartwright, from Illinois, the old Western pioneer?
15161My redoubtable antagonist,says he,"had got on the fence, and, looking down at me, said,''D---- you, you are feeling for a dirk, are you?''
15161Then who the devil am I?
15161Well,said Cartwright,"what is it?"
15161What error?
15161What is the news?
15161What shall I do?
15161Where is my money?
15161Who is she?
15161Who revealed that to you?
15161Why, then, did_ he_ bring home my turkey?
15161Would the indorsement of Mr.----, or Mr.----, be sufficient?
15161Would you like to see it?
15161Yes, you are a pretty Christian, ai n''t you?
15161_ I_ think, was that soul prepared? 15161 ''An accident?'' 15161 ''Have ye, now? 15161 ''How will they do?'' 15161 ''I ax yer pardon; I ought n''t to intrude upon yez,''''But what is it, Patrick?'' 15161 ''Look here, Raphael,''he exclaimed, as the latter appeared;''did I not always tell you that every painter could be a sculptor?'' 15161 ''Well, what_ was_ it?'' 15161 ''You will, will you?'' 15161 Am I still dreaming, or awake? 15161 And wilt thou die? 15161 But when was the genius of a Yankee ever baffled by difficulties? 15161 But,_ I am struck_, is passive, because if you are struck you do n''t do any thing, do you?'' 15161 Christ died for me, and shall not I Be willing for my Prince to die? 15161 Do I not know The life of woman is full of woe? 15161 Does he not warn us all to seek The happier, better land on high, Where flowers immortal never wither; And could he forbid me to go thither? 15161 Have you got the money about you? 15161 How does it fit?'' 15161 I constantly asked myself this question: Is it so, that I can not preach? 15161 Is it not a want of faith on our part that causes the reluctance and hesitation we all feel in urging others to avoid a peril so much more momentous?
15161Is she a deserving object?"
15161Of how many"Government Contractors"during the war can it be said that their work was much better than they had agreed to furnish?
15161The man looked at him in amazement, and the preacher continued, sternly,"Well, did the angel you saw smell of brimstone?
15161The next morning''Old Nick''very innocently(?)
15161The pastor said:"May it not be the natural delicacy we feel, and ought to feel, in approaching the interior consciousness of another person?"
15161Then came the question, how shall one man know that which is uppermost in the thoughts of the many?
15161Upon receiving his turkey, the young man thanked him for his trouble, and asked,"How much shall I pay you?"
15161What ails thee, my poor child?
15161What cared they for predestination or free- will, or for any of the dogmas of the schools?
15161What could he not justly demand in wages from a New York sculptor?
15161What dost thou mean?
15161What if this were of God?
15161What is it you wish?''
15161What wouldst thou?
15161What, then, if thou wert dead?
15161Why is this?
15161Why should I live?
15161Why was this?
15161Will you accept him?
15161Will you, by personal and living faith, accept him as your Saviour from sin?
15161You can say_ a man_, but you ca n''t say_ a men_, can you?''
15161exclaimed Astor,''ca n''t I insure your ship my self?''
15161he exclaimed,"how can I sleep when twenty human beings are drowning every hour, and I am the man that can save them?"
15161or what is the matter?
15161said Mr. Brady;''then why do n''t you go for a doctor?''
15161what error?"
14422What, then, is an American, this new man?
14422A certain number of figures written on a check and signed by a familiar name, what may it not accomplish?
14422An incompetent or disloyal executive could undoubtedly under such a system do much to disorganize the public service; but what will you have?
14422And above all, how is a democratic community, which necessarily includes everybody in its benefits and responsibilities, to be kept well united?
14422And how can they be punished?
14422And how is this Promise to be fulfilled?
14422And if so, how far?
14422And what, if any, are its dangers?
14422Are we to answer, like Bismarck, that the"true people is an invisible multitude of spirits-- the nation of yesterday and of to- morrow"?
14422But how would such specific legislative proposals originate?
14422But why should a man become an individual because he does what everybody else does, only with more energy and success?
14422Dedicated TO THE MEMORY OF THE LATE DAVID GOODMAN CROLY CONTENTS CHAPTER I WHAT IS THE PROMISE OF AMERICAN LIFE?
14422Do the rigid advocates of that Doctrine fall into an error analogous to the error against which Washington and Hamilton were protesting?
14422Do they not tend, indirectly, and within a limited compass, to convert the American democratic idea into a dangerously aggressive principle?
14422Do we lack culture?
14422Does it still contribute?
14422Does the Monroe Doctrine, as stated above, deserve such uncompromising adherence?
14422For him the practical questions are: How can the improvement best be brought about?
14422Has it contributed in the past to such efficiency?
14422Have they been transgressed by Great Britain?
14422How can it be translated into terms of contemporary American conditions?
14422How can they best be selected and what should be their functions?
14422How did the Democratic political system of Jefferson and Jackson issue in undemocratic inequalities?
14422How long can Great Britain afford to maintain her existing control of the sea?
14422How, indeed, are these specialists to get at the public whom they are supposed to lead?
14422How, then, did these inequalities come about?
14422If so, what responsibilities?
14422In order to exalt the leader have I not too much disparaged the followers?
14422In the course of American history what measure of legislation expressive of a progressive national idea can be attributed to the Democratic party?
14422In view of her peculiar economic condition and her threatened decrease in population have those limits been transgressed by France?
14422In what way and to what extent does the existing economic system contribute to the creation of such genuine individuals?
14422In what way must a democratic state behave in order to contribute to its own integrity?
14422In what way will such work and the sort of individuality thereby developed exercise a decisive influence on behalf of social amelioration?
14422Is American art neglected and impoverished?
14422Is New York City ugly?
14422Is he obliged to sit down and wait until the edifying, economic, political, and social transformation has taken place?
14422Is it an adequate expression of the national interest of the American democracy in the field of foreign affairs?
14422Is it desirable for the American citizen to be something of a hero?
14422Is not her partial retirement from American waters the first step in such a policy?
14422Is not the Japanese alliance a dubious device for the partial shifting of burdens too heavy to bear?
14422Is there any ground for such aggressive discontent?
14422Is there any way in which it can be exercised on behalf both of liberty and equality?
14422It is all very well to say that a man should do his work competently, faithfully, and fearlessly, but how are we to define the standard of excellence?
14422Let it be admitted that the man who accumulates$ 50,000,000 in part earns it, but how about the man who inherits it?
14422Of what avail would his independence and competence be in case there were nobody to accept his leadership?
14422Or does the discontent indicate the existence of more radical economic evils or the necessity of more radical economic reforms?
14422Should it be exercised on behalf of individual liberty?
14422Should it be exercised on behalf of social equality?
14422Such being the situation in general, how can the duty and the opportunity of the individual at the present time best be defined?
14422The exigencies of such schooling frequently demand severe coercive measures, but what schooling does not?
14422The people are Sovereign; but who and what are the people?
14422The question it must answer is: How can it contribute to the increase of American individuality?
14422War is hell, is it?
14422What are its implications?
14422What are the particular benefits which this better future will give to Americans either individually or as a nation?
14422What is the effect of this aristocratic organization upon the efficiently and fertility of the English political system?
14422What is the propriety and justice of such a declaration of continental isolation?
14422What sort of regulation should supplement such emphatic recognition?
14422What, for instance, are the limits of a practicable policy of colonial expansion?
14422What, then, was a good American to do who was at once a convinced democrat and a loyal Unionist?
14422When a man is seeking to do his best, how shall he go about it?
14422Why should not the practice be made official?
14422Will it fulfill itself, or does it imply certain responsibilities?
14422and how can a many- headed Sovereignty be made to work?
14422and, How much may it amount to?
1864And a day less or more At sea or ashore, We die-- does it matter when?
1864Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied over there beyond the seas?
1864FARRAGUT AT MOBILE BAY Ha, old ship, do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the river wars?
1864GENERAL GRANT AND THE VICKSBURG CAMPAIGN What flag is this you carry Along the sea and shore?
1864GEORGE ROGERS CLARK AND THE CONQUEST OF THE NORTHWEST Have the elder races halted?
1864How would he and such men as he stand the great ordeal when it came?
1864I know St. George''s blood- red cross, Thou mistress of the seas, But what is she whose streaming bars Roll out before the breeze?
1864I write of one, While with dim eyes I think of three; Who weeps not others fair and brave as he?
1864If you ask, what if we do fail?
1864The brigadier answered,"Are you afraid to go, sir?"
1864To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men Thet rived the rebel line asunder?
1864Was it to destroy a great nation, and fetter human progress in the New World?
1864Was this barbarous force now to prevail in the United States in the nineteenth century?
1864With side to side, and spar to spar, Whose smoking decks are these?
13545And is mine one?
13545And what use will my thrifty Aunt make of the blue violets?
13545Aunt Sarah, did you know Frau Schmidt, instead of using flour alone when baking cakes, frequently uses a mixture of flour and cornstarch? 13545 Aunt Sarah, how was sgraffito ware made?
13545Aunt Sarah, may I have the old spinning wheel in the attic? 13545 Aunt Sarah, why was straw ever put under this carpet?"
13545Aunt Sarah,inquired Mary one day,"do you think it pays a housekeeper to bake her own bread?"
13545Aunt Sarah,inquired Mary,"is the rhubarb large enough to use?"
13545Aunt Sarah,questioned Mary one day,"do you mind if I copy some of your recipes?"
13545But what did the husband think of all this?
13545Did n''t I hear that worthless scamp, Fritz Schmidt, a- referrin''to me and a- sayin''to Miss Midleton fer the''servant''to bring over the butter? 13545 Do n''t you mean''That Grand Old Name Called Mary?''"
13545Do tell me, Aunt, what this small iron boat, on the top shelf, was ever used for? 13545 Have you ever made rag rugs?"
13545Have you forgotten, Aunt Sarah, you promised to tell me something interesting about the first red clover introduced in Bucks County?
13545How are you today?
13545If''twere not for God and good people, what would become of the unfortunate?
13545Is_ that all_ you get?
13545Mary, did you ever hear this Persian proverb? 13545 Mary, did you notice the gayly- decorated, old- fashioned coffee pot and tea caddy in the corner cupboard?
13545Mary, have you ever read the poem, The Potter and the Clay?'' 13545 Now,"said Mary,"what shall we do with these stiff, ugly, haircloth- covered chairs and sofa?"
13545Oh, you mean the picture on the mantel standing near those twin gilded china vases, gay with red and blue paint?
13545Professor Schmidt, can you tell me the name of that weed?
13545Speaking of cakes, Aunt Sarah,said Mary,"have you ever used Swansdown cake flour?
13545That old mulberry tree, from the berries of which you made such delicious pies and marmalade last Summer, is it dead?
13545They had no trolley cars in those days?
13545Was there a pottery on your father''s farm, Aunt Sarah?
13545What is it, dear? 13545 Why did you give your family of dolls such an odd name, Aunt Sarah?"
13545Why,exclaimed Mary,"were there so many potteries in that locality?"
13545***** What draws my eye to yonder spot-- That bench against the wall?
13545And do n''t you think we might paint the floor around the edges of the rug to imitate the woodwork?
13545And is not common?
13545And what is this small frame containing a yellowed piece of paper cut in intricate designs, presumably with scissors?"
13545And who shall say it was not answered?
13545And why was their hair all worn hanging in one braid over each shoulder, with a band over the forehead?
13545And, what if we are commonplace?
13545Are they anything like braided mats?"
13545Aunt Sarah, where did you get this very old poem,''The Deserted City''?"
13545Aunt Sarah,"exclaimed Mary,"do you mean a carpet like the one in the spare bedroom?"
13545Ca n''t we consign them all to the attic?
13545Could we not have it painted to imitate chestnut wood?
13545Did you ever see them grow, Mary?
13545Did you notice the strong, substantial manner in which it is made?
13545Do n''t you think that would be pretty, Aunt Sarah?"
13545Do you suppose the same birds return here from the South every Summer?"
13545Exceeding peace had made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said:"What writest thou?"
13545FISH, CLAMS AND OYSTER( BONED SHAD) How many young cooks know how to bone a shad?
13545Have you ever noticed, Aunt Sarah, what a symphony in green is the yard?
13545Have you ever read the poem,''The Changed Cross?''
13545Have you ever seen an"Elbadritchel?"
13545Have you never read the poem?
13545He said''twas a good, serviceable color, and more economical to buy it all alike, and remarked:''What''s the difference, anyway?
13545How will I ever repay you for all your kindness to me?"
13545I''m hired girl What does that make out if I do work here?
13545In what nobler work could women engage than in work to promote the comfort and well- being of the ones they love in the home?
13545Is it the same as slip- decorated pottery?"
13545It may be but a little corner, which you have been asked to fill; What matters it, if you are in it, doing the Master''s will?
13545Jake, beaming with happiness, said,"Sibylla vos side by me yet?"
13545Mary is a dear girl, why should she not think of marrying?"
13545Mary replied,"Do n''t you think men are very queer, anyway, Aunt Sarah?
13545Mary, have you ever eaten a small, sweet wafer called''Zimmet Waffle?''
13545No?
13545No?
13545Sadie, can you crochet?"
13545Say not the days are evil-- who''s to blame?
13545Seeing the letter in his hand she inquired:"What news, John?"
13545She turned to her Aunt, saying,"Do n''t you think the room looks bright, cheery and livable?"
13545Should she have equal political rights?
13545Speaking of salt, my dear, have you read the poem,''The King''s Daughters,''by Margaret Vandegrift?
13545Suffrage, the right of woman to vote; will it not take women from the home?
13545Suppose we start a''girls''campfire,''right here in the country?
13545Then this dull, dark, gray- blue painted woodwork; could any one imagine anything more hideously ugly?
13545They certainly possessed intelligent faces, but why those queer- shaped Indian dresses?
13545To quote an old physician,"If horses thrive on oats, why not boys who resemble young colts?"
13545Was hot er dort i m Schtille g''denkt?
13545Was n''t it her duty to leave the home and see where these products were produced, and if they were sanitary?
13545Weescht du''s?
13545Wer mecht es wisse-- sag?
13545What did my son say?"
13545What difference, if an honest heart beat beneath a laborer''s hickory shirt, or one of fine linen?
13545What makes you think it is condescension for me to address you?"
13545What to a hungry man is more nutritious and appetizing than a perfectly broiled, rare, juicy, steak, served hot?
13545Who has not felt the sweet freshness of early morning before"the sunshine is all on the wing"or the birds awaken and begin to chatter and to sing?
13545Who is it has said,''The discovery of a new dish makes more for the happiness of man than the discovery of a star''?
13545Why so many strings of gaudy beads around their necks?
13545Will man accord woman the same reverence she has received in the past?
13545Wo n''t they look just sweet?"
13545Would you like to see your Uncle''s old deed, which he came into possession of when he inherited the farm from his father?"
13545Yes, and without an''alarm clock,''too, Sibylla, eh?"
13545You remember, we could not decide what use to make of your old, tan cravenette stormcoat?
13545You see that old locust tree against one side the ruined wall of the house?"
13545You see the highest flat rock along the Narrows?
13545[ Illustration: THE OLD MILL]"Aunt Sarah, what is pumpernickel?"
13545exclaimed Mary,"is lard made from pork fat?
13545inquired Mary,"is it like rye bread?"
13545what then shall I say that is both bright and fine?
12422''And does Psyche know this?''
12422''And were you flogged, Louisa?''
12422''Did your mother tell you so?''
12422''Do you think it wrong, Israel,''said I,''to work on Sunday?''
12422''Missis, we hab um piccaninny-- tree weeks in de ospital, and den right out upon the hoe again--_can we strong_ dat way, missis?
12422''Oh,''said I,''Louisa; but the rattlesnakes, the dreadful rattlesnakes in the swamps; were you not afraid of those horrible creatures?''
12422''Some persons are free and some are not-- do you know that, Mary?''
12422''Well, but he acknowledged Renty as his son, why should he deny these?''
12422''What, on the Sabbath day, Israel?''
12422''Whatsoever ye would that men should do unto you, do ye also unto them?''
12422''Who is your mother, Renty?''
12422''Who their father?''
12422''Who told you so?''
12422''Why did you come home at last?''
12422''Why, had he observed any insubordination in those who did?''
12422''Why, how is that?''
12422''You nigger-- I say, you black nigger,--you no hear me call you-- what for you no run quick?''
12422( How do you do?
12422After all,_ why_ are we contrived to laugh at all, if laughter is not essentially befitting and beneficial?
12422But how is such a state of things to endure?--and again, how is it to end?
12422But how shall I describe to you the spectacle which was presented to me, on my entering the first of these?
12422But what will you?
12422But, after all, what can he do?
12422By the by, E----, how do you think Berkshire county farmers would relish labouring hard all day upon_ two meals_ of Indian corn or hominy?
12422By this time, what do you think of the moralities, as well as the amenities, of slave life?
12422Can you conceive a more wretched picture than that which it exhibits of the conditions under which these women live?
12422Did I tell you of that poor old decrepid creature Dorcas, who came to beg some sugar of me the other day?
12422Did you ever read( but I am sure you never did, and no more did I), an epic poem on fresh- water fish?
12422Did your parson never tell you that your conscience was for yourself and not for your neighbours, Israel?''
12422Do n''t you think one might accept the rattlesnakes, or perhaps indeed the slavery, for the sake of the green peas?
12422Does not that sound very like the very best sort of free pride, the pride of character, the honourable pride of honesty, integrity, and fidelity?
12422Fits and hard labour in the fields, unpaid labour, labour exacted with stripes-- how do you fancy that?
12422Have you visions now of well- to- do farmers with comfortable homesteads, decent habits, industrious, intelligent, cheerful, and thrifty?
12422Here my child''s white nurse, my dear Margery, who had hitherto been silent, interfered, saying,''Oh, then you think it will not always be so?''
12422How can we keep this man in such a condition?
12422How is such a cruel sin of injustice to be answered?
12422How shall I describe Darien to you?
12422I am afraid, E----, this woman actually imagines that there will be no slaves in Heaven; is n''t that preposterous now?
12422I asked him, for I was curious to know, how they managed to administer the Sacrament to a mixed congregation?
12422I asked how they could be expected to know it?
12422I make no comment; what need, or can I add, to such stories?
12422I say, I am a free person, Mary-- do you know that?''
12422I was rather dismayed at the promptness of this reply, and hesitated a little at my next question,''Who is your father?''
12422I wonder if my mere narration can make your blood boil, as the facts did mine?
12422I, of course, went on with''whose Molly?''
12422Is not that a peculiar poetical proposition?
12422K----?''
12422K----?''
12422K----?''
12422Moreover, born and bred in America, how should he care or wish to help it?
12422O----?''
12422Or why, if good really has prevailed in it, do you rejoice that it is speedily to pass away?
12422Our doctor''s wife is a New England woman; how can she live here?
12422Query: Did she really mean hinges-- or angels?
12422The women who visited me yesterday evening were all in the family- way, and came to entreat of me to have the sentence( what else can I call it?)
12422Was not that a curious reward for a slave who was supposed not to be able to read his own praises?
12422Was not that striking from such a poor old ignorant crone?
12422Well may you, or any other Northern Abolitionist, consider this a heaven- forsaken region,--why?
12422What would one of your Yankee farmers say to such abodes?
12422Where shall any mass of men be found with power of character and mind sufficient to bear up against such a weight of prejudice?
12422Who, on such estates as these, shall witness to any act of tyranny or barbarity, however atrocious?
12422Would you take the one with the other?
12422how can he help it all?
12422or''Why do you believe such trash; do n''t you know the niggers are all d----d liars?''
12422said I,''what is that?''
12422saying as she took up my watch from the table and looked at it,''Ah?
12422shouted in an imperious scream, is the civillest mode of apostrophising those at a distance from them; more frequently it is''You niggar, you hear?
12422that greets me whichever way I turn, makes me long to stop my ears now; for what can I say or do any more for them?
12422vous dirai- je, maman?''
12422we coloured people eat it, missis;''said I,''Why do you say we coloured people?''
12422what can she do for these poor people, where I who am supposed to own them can do nothing?
12422what for me wish to be free?
12422who can be bold to say, I could have done no more, I could have done no better?
18941Can these statements be true; and can the English people hear them unmoved?
18941Has the race degenerated?
18941Is it true, or is it not, that our navy was accustomed to hold the Americans in utter contempt?
18941Or have you, under the baneful influence of contending factions, forgot your country?...
18941Shame, where is thy blush?
18941Will you stand with your arms folded and look on this interesting struggle?...
17154Are not these legitimate investments in the common stock of the nation, which should command a proportionate interest?
17154Are we willing to try them?
17154As an evidence of the degradation to which we have been reduced, we dare premise, that this chapter will give offence to many, very many, and why?
17154But to return to emigration: Where shall we go?
17154But what is our condition even amidst our Anti- Slavery friends?
17154But why deem any argument necessary to show the unrighteousness of colonization?
17154Dr. Durbin and the colored clergyman?
17154How do we compare with them?
17154Is it true, that all should remain in degradation, because a part are degraded?
17154Should they be respected at all as a nation?
17154Talk not of consequences; we are now in chains; shall we shake them off and go to a land of liberty?
17154Then what is our condition?
17154These laws apply to us-- shall we not be aroused?
17154They brave dangers and risk consequences; shall we shrink from them?
17154This appears now to be the only remaining question-- the means of successful elevation in this our own native land?
17154This granted, the question will then be, Where shall we go?
17154Upon whom does the country look, as the most eligible of her favored sons?
17154What are consequences, compared in the scale of value, with liberty and freedom; the rights and privileges of our wives and children?
17154What can we do?
17154What claims then have colored men, based upon the principles set forth, as fundamentally entitled to citizenship?
17154What part of mankind is the"denizen of every soil, and the lord of terrestrial creation,"if it be not the black race?
17154What part of the great continent shall our destination be-- shall we emigrate to the North or South?
17154What shall we do?
17154What then is the remedy, for our degradation and oppression?
17154What then shall we do?--what is the remedy-- is the important question to be answered?
17154Where then is our political superiority to the enslaved?
17154White men seek responsibilities; shall we shun them?
17154Would there be an equality here between the children of these two families?
17154Would they be worthy of it?
12564Am I in the road to Stockton, and can I get there tonight?
12564Are you a preacher?
12564Can I get something to eat? 12564 Can you wait until I preach my sermon?"
12564Did you ever get your free- papers?
12564Did you ever shoot an Indian?
12564Did you know there was quite a quarrel about you this morning?
12564Do n''t you wish you were a Kentuckian?
12564Do you mean Dick?
12564Do you mean the literal restoration of the Jews to Palestine?
12564Do you think a young girl of twenty could love an old man like me?
12564Excuse me, my old friend, if I ask if you do not, as a dying man, have some thoughts about God and eternity?
12564Hard at it, are you, uncle?
12564How are you today, Dan?
12564How are you today?
12564How do you feel about changing worlds, my old friend?
12564How is his health?
12564How long will it take you?
12564How was that?
12564How?
12564I was brought up partly in Virginia too?
12564Is he dead?
12564Is there any hope of her restoration?
12564Me take um?
12564Missus, who is yer kinfolks back dar in Virginny, any way?
12564Of what persuasion are you?!
12564Shall I kneel here and pray with you?
12564So you were corralled last night?
12564So you were corralled last night?
12564Wbar''bouts, in Virginny?
12564Were any of the women killed?
12564What do you mean?
12564What for?
12564What has become of B--?
12564What is lead?
12564What is the matter here?
12564What is the matter?
12564What is the matter?
12564What is the meaning of that remark?
12564What was the name of the proprietor of the house?
12564What''s the matter?
12564Where''s you from, Massa?
12564Who hath defied God and escaped?
12564Why so? 12564 Would he let me talk to him?"
12564Yes-- is there any thing we can do for you?
12564Yes; what of it?
12564You got grub-- coche carne?
12564You makee Christian newspaper? 12564 About four o''clock in the afternoon Dick''s mistress sat down by me, and, after a pause, remarked:Do you know that tomorrow is Christmas- day?"
12564And does the Wisest Worker take Quick human hearts, instead of stone, And hew and carve them one by one, Nor heed the pangs with which they break?
12564And more: if but creation''s waste, Would he have given us sense to yearn For the perfection none can earn, And hope the fuller life to taste?
12564Are the real queens as happy?
12564But what was the Emperor after?
12564But what will God do with them hereafter?
12564Can I get shelter with you for the night?"
12564Did he also pray?
12564Did such a dream cast a momentary glamour over a life spent in raking among the muck- heaps?
12564Did this sordid old man yearn for pure human love amid his millions?
12564Did you ever hear a sweeter voice than that?"
12564Do sane men and women ever commit suicide?
12564Do you see that tall pumping- apparatus, with water- tank on top, in the rear of the house?"
12564Doctor, God never gave me up, and I never ceased to yearn for his mercy and love, even in the darkest season of my unhappy life?"
12564Eternity?
12564Fixing his stern and fiery gaze upon her, and knitting his great bushy eyebrows, he thundered the question:"Sister, do you ever pray?"
12564Have you not noted these malign coincidences in life?
12564He opened and read it as we drove slowly along, and as he did so he brightened up, and turning to Henry, said:"Henry, were you ever a slave?"
12564His mother, who bent over him with a pale face, noticed the look, and almost screamed:"''Tommy, here is your mother-- don''t you know me?''
12564His text was, Who hath hardened himself against him, and hath prospered?
12564How can I live?
12564How can she give up her child?
12564How long, how long?
12564I said:"What yer want wid me?"
12564I want to see him once more; where will I be likely to find him?''
12564If the inevitable why?
12564Is it in the circumstances, the external conditions?
12564Kinneth?"
12564One night I preached from the text, Should it be according to thy mind?
12564Rome ground them under her iron heel, and where is the empire of the Caesars?
12564She received me with a mixture of mock dignity and smiling condescension, and surveying herself admiringly, she asked:"How do you like my dress?"
12564Spain smote the Jew, and where is her glory?
12564Strange?
12564The Assyrian smote the Jew, and where is the proud Assyrian Empire?
12564The General spoke:"Did you know, sir, that I am perhaps the most attentive reader of your paper to be found in California?"
12564The words were something like these, but who could picture Baker''s oratory?
12564Was this the charm that drew him forth so early?
12564What do you think?"
12564What do you think?"
12564What does God say?
12564What have I done, that it should be proposed to send me to the Legislature?
12564What have I done?"
12564What mysteries of being lie beyond that sapphire sea?
12564What reason has anybody to think I am that sort of a man?
12564What was the mystery?
12564What were her thoughts as she sat there looking so pitifully up into the silent, far- off heavens?
12564What wonders shall burst upon the vision when this mortal shall put on immortality?
12564What''s dat?
12564Where are you from?"
12564Where is happiness, after all?
12564Who says man is not a fallen, broken creature, and that there is not a devil at hand to tempt him?
12564Who that ever had a real friend does not?
12564Why call us back to a world where we lost all, and in quitting which we risked all?
12564Why not give it up?"
12564Will ye take the turkey, and my thanks wid it?"
12564Would you like some eggs?
12564You talkee Jesus?
12564You will pray for me?"
12564do n''t you hear her?
12564is this what thy creature man was made for?
12564once or twice, and here he would come, stretching his long legs, and saying,"Oot,""oot,""oot"( is that the way to spell it?).
12564or, is it in the mind?
17386Do you think we shall ever have a second revolution?
17386Is he thrown to the ground?
17386Is he wounded?
17386Is my son killed?
17386( 1603?)
17386(?)
17386* Fortescue''s Governance of England( Plummer''s edition)( 1460?).
17386-- Hegel THE COMING OF THE SAXONS, OR ENGLISH 449(?)
17386--Macaulay Beginning with the Divine Right of Kings and Ending with the Divine Right of the People King or Parliament?
1738639) married Anne Neville, widow(?)
17386After the Romans abandoned Britain the English invaded the island 449(?
17386As they looked into each other''s hollow eyes, the question came, Must we surrender?
17386Before that time the Norman''s contempt for the Saxon was so great, that his most indignant exclamation was,"Do you take me for an Englishman?"
17386From one end of it to the other the people were now heard singing:"And shall Trelawney die, and shall Trelawney die?
17386Henry, looking around, asked timidly,"Am I a prisoner?"
17386His Majesty patronizingly asked him,"Well, my man, what have you to sell?"
17386How did it occur?
17386How, then, can my claim be disputed?"
17386If they objected to Episcopal government in the one, might they not presently object to royal government in the other?
17386In a different spirit, Chaucer,"the morning star of English song,"now began( 1390?)
17386Jenkinson?"
17386John( Lackland),( Coeur de Lion), H 1199- 1216 1189- 1199 Arthur, murdered H by John?
17386O. W. Holmes Political Reaction-- Absolutism of the Crown-- The English Reformation and the New Learning Crown or Pope?
17386Rise of the English Navy( SS401, 408) 1589(?).
17386Seizing their"rough- handled spears and bronze swords,"they set sail for the shining chalk cliffs of Britain, 449(?).
17386The Britons beg for Help; Coming of the Jutes, 449(?).
17386The New Movement in Literature, 1390(?).
17386The ballad began:"Ho, Brother Teague, dost hear de decree?
17386The question then arose, Might not a still further advance be made by employing steam to draw cars on these roads, or, better still, on iron rails?
17386Then the miners took up the words, and beneath the hills and fields the ominous echo was heard:"And shall Trelawney die, and shall Trelawney die?
17386There were no more ringing Jacobite songs, sung over bowls of steaming punch, of"Wha''ll be king but Charlie?"
17386What came of it?
17386What caused it?
17386When did the event occur?
17386When the fight was over, the King asked,"What is the name of that castle yonder?"
17386Where did it occur?
17386[ 1] See"Why did the Pilgrim Fathers come to New England?"
17386[ 2]"What building is that?"
17386what for mine and me, What hath bread tax done for thee?
17386when?
17386|++1485- 1509 of York( murdered in H the Tower by=================================---------------- Richard III?
18632And after that, your guest historian comes on; how much time will he be allowed?
18632Are you sure?
18632But how will we get the audience to accept it? 18632 Ees zees a concept original weet you?"
18632Has somebody invented a time machine?
18632How''s this sound?
18632Huh?
18632Sounds like it, does n''t it? 18632 Think he might be somebody up your alley, Colonel?"
18632Well, how could you present that?
18632What do you mean?
18632What do you think, Professor?
18632What goes on?
18632Where the hell do you suppose he got that suit?
18632You mean it''s just time? 18632 You mean, zings sometimes,''ow- you- say, leak in from one of zees ozzer worlds?
18632Zees--''ow you say-- zees alternate probabeelitay; eet ees a theory zhenerally accept''een zees countree?
18632Zen eet ees zhenerally accept''by zee scienteest''?
18632Zen you believe zat zeese ozzer world of zee alternate probabeelitay, zey exist?
18632And did you catch his accent?"
18632But how could it be handled any other way?
18632Good God, are we going to talk about that?"
18632How could you figure out just what the difference would have been?"
18632That''s Henry the Seventh, not Henry the Eighth?
18632The man in the club- car who got off at Harrisburg; did you know him?"
18632There''d be some differences at the time, but over the years would n''t they all cancel out?"
18632Why?"
18632You''re going to end this show you were talking about with a shot of Columbus wading up to the beach with an English flag, are n''t you?"
18632Zat has been known to''appen?"
19117Are you going to school?
19117Have you lived all your life in the valley?
19117What-- since the world had been so generous to him, and lifted from his shoulders the trials of living-- could he do for his people?
19117When my men said that this German major said,''How many have you got?'' 19117 He had asked himself two questions:What was the great need of the people who live far back in the mountains?"
19117How much of the farm were they preparing to"put in corn"?
19117Was Mrs. Embry Wright, his only married sister, staying with his mother to comfort her?
19117Were George and Jim and Robert, the younger brothers, keeping those mules fat?
1940413 Is Free Will a Fact or a Fallacy?
19404144 Was Poe Immoral?
19404171 Has Life Meaning?
1940439 Did Jesus Ever Live?
19404He kept referring to such ideas as,"Is slavery right or wrong?"
19463Does an author,said"The New Yorker"in February,( p. 182) 1837,"subject himself to personal criticism by submitting a work to the public?
19463Have you read the American novels?
19463Were we ever unjust to Cooper?
11157And what will you do with the cyclamen, uncle? 11157 But if the darling hath a vocation?"
11157Happy!--child, am I not?
11157Holy Mother, am I not? 11157 Horses, my friend?
11157How shall I execute my will?
11157How_ can_ that man go to church?
11157I?
11157If I gave him away, I suppose he would be fatted and killed, of course?
11157If Mees Lucinda would pairmit?
11157Is n''t that brother Antonio?
11157Is she not the very presentment of our Blessed Lady in the Annunciation?
11157Knowest thou not that bird, with his little red beak?
11157My daughter,he said, after looking vainly down the dark shadows upon the path of the stranger,"have you ever seen this man before?"
11157What business, asked he,"has this boy with such an office?
11157What is that?
11157What talk is this? 11157 Where is it?
11157You are ver''tired, Mees Lucinda?
11157You do n''t know of any poor person who''d like to have a pig, do you?
11157And board?
11157And then a stern voice within him answered,--"What then?
11157Are there any good woods near here, Israel?"
11157Be you ever a- goin''back to France, Mister?"
11157But every candid and sensible man of middle age knows thoroughly well the answer to the question, Who was the greatest fool that he himself ever knew?
11157But why not be technical?
11157Can the wounded pride of the Ancient Dominion be so far soothed that she can allow us again to bask in the sunshine of her favor?
11157Could the cotton- planter hold out any longer?
11157Dear Mees, will you to marry your poor slave?"
11157Do I not walk the earth in a dream of bliss, and see the footsteps of my Most Blessed Lord and his dear Mother on every rock and hill?
11157Do n''t you think he might be killed in his sleep, Israel?"
11157Do you remember how pink his pretty little nose was,--just like a rosebud,--and how bright his eyes looked, and his cunning legs?
11157Hath the power to bind and loose in Christ''s Church been indeed given to whoever can buy it with the wages of robbery and oppression?
11157Have you heard him say to his friend on the other side, in bitterness,"I have made a fool of myself"?
11157Have you sat next a man unused to speaking at a public dinner?
11157His life-- was it a failure?
11157I did n''t say you he d, did I?
11157I say, boy, you look like you''re smart; can you figure?
11157I shall finish for you the lesson till I come to- night for a French conversation?"
11157I sot out fur to say, Why do n''t ye marry Miss Lucindy?"
11157If we were all heroes, who would be_ valet- de- chambre_?
11157If you are too much tired, is it better to wait?
11157Is a thing to be regarded as mature, when it suits your present taste, when it is approved by your present deliberate judgment?
11157Is it Vealy to feel or to show keen emotion?
11157Is it a precious result and indication of the maturity of the human mind to look as if you felt nothing at all?
11157Is it not dreadful?"
11157Is it your leg or your arm?
11157Is n''t it so, brother Antonio?"
11157Is the Holy Ghost indeed alone dispensed through the medium of Alexander and his scarlet crew of cardinals?
11157Is there a God that judgeth in the earth?"
11157Is there a standard by which we may ascertain beyond question whether a composition be Veal or Beef?
11157It is a difficult question, to which the answer can not be elicited, Who is the greatest fool in this world?
11157May not this phenomenon bear some relation to the colder winters and the hotter summers of the eastern compared with the western coasts?
11157Monsieur, are n''t you a Romanist?"
11157Must we make Territories of them, and blot out those malignant stars from our glorious and triumphant banner?
11157Not want a good husband to take care of you when your poor old grandmother is gone?
11157Now the blood was shed, the risk was incurred, his friends were killed or captured, and all for what?
11157Or is there any God?
11157Or must we, for a generation, hold the States we have subdued by military occupation?
11157Suppose I''m going to delve, and toil, and spin, and wear myself to the bone, and have her slip through my fingers at last with a vocation?
11157The golden- mouthed St. Chrisostom writes in his Homilies,--"Does the rich man wear silken shawls?
11157They called out,''Is this Southampton County?''
11157They might kill or imprison unresisting negroes by day, but could they resist their avengers by night?
11157This melted Miss Lucinda''s orthodoxy right down; she only said,--"Then you will go to church with me?"
11157WHERE WILL THE REBELLION LEAVE US?
11157Was it the fear of Nat Turner, and his deluded, drunken handful of followers, which produced such effects?
11157Was it this that induced distant counties, where the very name of Southampton was strange, to arm and equip for a struggle?
11157Was not your feeling a singular mixture of humiliation and self- complacency?
11157Was there, till too late, a doubt whether the traitors at home in Virginia would sustain them in an overt act of such big overture as an attempt here?
11157Were they imbecile?
11157Were they timid?
11157What am I, unworthy sinner, that such grace is granted me?
11157What are the things about a composition which stamp it as such?
11157What else was our friend, until he went to the war?
11157What is it that makes intellectual Veal?
11157What right had that bombastic rubbish to touch and thrill you as it used to do?
11157What sorrow can he have, or what need for the prayers of a poor maid like me?"
11157What was it?
11157Who will provide for you?"
11157Why did it not emancipate the Scottish intellect?
11157Why does every prayer and pious word of the faithful reproach me?
11157Why does he not bring himself to bear?
11157Why does he not concentrate?
11157Why is God silent?
11157Why should not this valuable plant be introduced into America?
11157Why, oh, why did she tie up the roots of her black hair with an unconcealable scarlet string?
11157Will a couple of dollars a day hire you, till we finish this sale?
11157Will a people we have subjugated ever live with us again on terms of equality and friendship?
11157Would he be Roman, or would he be Christian?
11157Would it have been less an abdication, if he had remained within the realm, and attempted to hold it as the viceroy of France?
11157Would you do a kindness to that miserable man?
11157You will feel just so yourself some day, when Alexander Augustus says,"Will you be mine, loveliest of jour sex?"
11157_ When_ shall thought be regarded as mature?
11157and would the wives of Cabinet Ministers call on Mrs. Eaton?
11157but how can you like_ me_?"
11157does not that mean something?"
11157gasped Monsieur,--"I, the foreign, the poor?
11157have you seen him nervously rise and utter an incoherent, ungrammatical, and unintelligible sentence or two, and then sit down with a ghastly smile?
11157if we were all women, who would be men?
11157jamais!_""Pa''s dead, eh?
11157or shamming?
11157said Miss Manners,"I hope you have n''t hurt yourself, Sir?"
11157what man would not have regarded these as indispensable to improvement, particularly when they paid his board?
11157what pretty, pretty bird is this?"
11157whipped two, and want more?
11157wo n''t you step in and help me?
15866And did you get left?
15866But of course the thought at once occurs to us, How can we_ be_ considering the high cost of the necessaries of life? 15866 Do you begin to feel rested?"
15866Give me leave, mister?
15866How am I to get things in their right perspective? 15866 How do you make that out?"
15866Who shall rule?
15866And what would it be for?
15866Are we tending to a Plutocracy, or can a real Democracy hold its own?
15866At last he asked, hesitatingly,"What do you think of it?
15866But I stumbled over the question, in regard to certain Commandments,"What are the reasons annexed?"
15866But how does the British Empire hold together?
15866But how is it to be distributed?
15866But in so much as we were bound to find him out sometime, shall we quarrel with Dickens because we were enabled to do so in the first chapter?
15866But is the remedy to be found in the restriction of immigration?
15866But it must have occurred to some one to ask,"What will happen when the Oregons and Californias are filled up?"
15866But we may ask, When these diverse peoples come together on common ground, what sort of man do they choose as their symbol?
15866But what of yesterday?
15866But when one is asked to warm his enthusiasm by means of the Roman monuments, he naturally asks,''Enthusiasm over what?''
15866Can it get itself obeyed?
15866Could any better description be given of the kind of man whom Americans delight to honor?
15866Did not all Lilliput laugh over the discovery of Gulliver?
15866Do you remember that story of Jules Verne about a voyage to the moon?
15866Does it seem to you to be cogent?"
15866Does the charm remain?
15866Druids or pre- Druids?
15866Even when it is admitted that when considered in a large way the change is for the better, the question arises, Who is to pay for it?
15866Having traversed the period from King William to the dwellers in the Halls of Tara, what more natural than to take a further plunge into the past?
15866His ready- made world does not please him-- why should it?
15866Honest Touchstone, in trying to reconcile the different points of view, blurted out the test question,"Hast any philosophy in thee, Shepherd?"
15866How can Worship be personified?
15866How can they?
15866How can this machinery be controlled and used for truly human ends?
15866How do the old scenes affect us?
15866How shall we answer the prophets of ill?
15866I ask you to remember two letters-- E and N._ What_ does the country expect this Federation to do?
15866If Seattle should cease to grow while we are looking at it, what should we do then?
15866If Tiberius must exhibit his colossal inhumanity, could he have anywhere in all the world chosen a better spot?
15866If a person possessed a cheerful disposition, you should ask,"How did he get it?"
15866If that was not happiness, what was it?
15866If the Home Rule Bill be enacted into law, will Ulster submit to be ruled by a Catholic majority?
15866If you do n''t feel that you can afford to make such a heavy investment as I have suggested, why do n''t you put your material into a short story?
15866In the light of such facts as these, who can be a pessimist?
15866In your judgment is it organic or functional?"
15866Is n''t there a little of a cheaper quality that they could show you?
15866Is not the motto of the true knight,_ Ich dien_?
15866Is there any symptom of decadence more sure than when the moral temperature suddenly rises above normal?
15866Is this an evidence of a cynic humor in the blood, or is it a manifestation of childish optimism?
15866Is this still to be a land of opportunity?
15866North Ovid is real, and so would be the apartment- house; but what of it?
15866Said he:"Can the Ethiopian change his skin or the leopard his spots?
15866Shall Ireland any longer submit to be ruled by the English?
15866Should the abutters be assessed for betterments or should they sue for damages?
15866Should we push on to it?
15866Suppose the pagan Maxentius had triumphed over Constantine, what difference would it have made in the picture?
15866THE CONTEMPORANEOUSNESS OF ROME I"You here, Bagster?"
15866That the Common has been saved many times before is true; but is that any reason why we should falter now?
15866The Man on Horseback will appear, and what shall we do then?
15866The question is--"Can rules or tutors educate The semigod whom we await?"
15866The question which disturbs us is, Ought we to have done so?
15866There they are, and here you are, and what are you going to do about them?"
15866Under those circumstances what did Ulphilas do?
15866Was it fear or love?
15866Was there ever a greater contrast between an earthly paradise and abounding sinfulness?
15866Well, what do you say to Cavour?
15866Were they still under the influence of the glacial period and attempting to imitate the wild doings of Nature?
15866What are the"reasons annexed"to all this uproar?
15866What can a mere Act of Parliament do when confronted by such a combination as that?
15866What is Gradgrind to us or we to Gradgrind?
15866What is it about a stamp act that arouses such fierceness of resistance?
15866What right has Sir Lionel to lay down the law for Hodge?
15866What shall be done with the next ninety millions?
15866What should we see when we got there?
15866What spurred them on to their feats of prodigious industry?
15866What then?"
15866What''s the use of being here unless you are here in the spirit?
15866Where was the stern little city which Calvin taught and ruled?
15866Where will it find the troops to coerce the province?
15866Which Boniface?
15866Who is to get the benefit of these economies?
15866Who were the worshipers?
15866Why ca n''t I feel that way about the great events that happened down there?"
15866Why should he do so when there was no Scripture for it?
15866Why should not Hodge have a right to have his point of view considered?
15866Why should not the sinners have the same means of identification?
15866Why should they do this?
15866Will she pay that three- pence?
15866Will the Labor party be a little less noisy and insistent in its demands?
15866Will the masses of the people submit any longer to the existing inequalities in political representation?
15866Will the women of England kindly wait a little till their demands can be considered in a dignified way?
15866Will you allow me, as one in the same line, to indulge in a little criticism?
15866_ When_ does the country expect you to do it?
11708But,said I,"does Mr. Buchanan know for what purpose you are going to North Carolina?"
11708Do n''t you intend to strengthen the forts at Charleston?
11708How can he[ Douglas] oppose the advances of slavery? 11708 If God be for us, who can be against us?
11708J. MEDILL, Esq., Chicago,( very) Ill.What have I ever said in favor of''Negro equality''with reference to your fight?
11708That is all very well,replied the President,"but does that secure the forts?"
11708We have now territory enough, but how long will it be enough? 11708 Were his reported remarks correct?"
11708What are five to one?
11708''I desire him to answer whether he is opposed to the acquisition of any new territory unless slavery is first prohibited therein?''
11708''I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to the prohibition of the slave trade between the different States?''
11708''I desire to know whether Lincoln to- day stands, as he did in 1854, in favor of the unconditional repeal of the fugitive- slave law?''
11708''I want to know whether he stands to- day pledged to the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia?''
11708And how is it he tells us they can exclude it?
11708Are you in favor of acquiring additional territory, in disregard of how such acquisition may affect the nation on the slavery question?"
11708But if we are to turn our attention to the dark ages of the world, why confine our view to colored slavery?
11708But if we possessed this power, would it be wise to exercise it under existing circumstances?...
11708But what then?
11708But who resists it?
11708By strengthening this Government?
11708Can he possibly show that it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest?
11708Can he withhold it without violating his oath?
11708Can we not come together for the future?
11708Can you not help me a little in this matter in your end of the vineyard?"
11708Could the Charleston Convention heal the feud of leaders, and bridge the chasm in policy and principle?
11708Did we brave all then to falter now?--now, when that same enemy is wavering, dissevered, and belligerent?
11708Do you find it in our platform, our speeches, our conventions, or anywhere?
11708Do you really believe that such is our aim?
11708Do you say that such restriction of slavery would be unconstitutional, and that some of the States would not submit to its enforcement?
11708Does he mean to say that he has been devoting his life to securing to the people of the Territories the right to exclude slavery from the Territories?
11708Have you heard us assert that as our aim?
11708How are questions of public debt, public archives, public lands, and other public property, and, above all, the questions of boundary to be settled?
11708How are we to effect this?
11708How can it be otherwise?
11708How, then, have we to provide a remedy?
11708I ask any honest Democrat if the small, the local, the trivial and temporary question is not, Who shall be governor?
11708If I am asked, Why so?
11708If a State court may do this, on a question involving the liberty of a human being, what protection do the laws afford?
11708If it pass laws hostile to slavery, will you annul them and substitute laws favoring slavery in their stead?...
11708If it pass unfriendly acts, will you pass friendly?
11708If not, who are the disunionists, you or we?
11708If so, would it not furnish good reason for extending such facilities to the States?
11708In view of our moral, social, and political responsibilities, can we do this?
11708Is it expedient to do so?"
11708Is it proper to place arms in the hands of hired workmen?
11708Is the North to be the gainer?
11708Is the South to be the gainer?
11708Is this a sufficient excuse for devising a new test of political orthodoxy?...
11708It was therefore a simple problem: What candidate could carry these States?
11708On what ground has that confidence been forfeited, and why is it that we now refuse him our support and fellowship?
11708On whose authority, then, did Calhoun declare that the Administration had changed its mind?
11708Secondly, Did his residence at Rock Island and at Fort Snelling, under the various prohibitions of slavery existing there, work his freedom?
11708Should the majority, he asked, surrender to the minority?
11708The Dred Scott decision had thus annihilated"popular sovereignty,"Would Douglas admit his blunder in law, and his error in statesmanship?
11708There is only space to insert a few disconnected quotations: Now, what is Judge Douglas''s popular sovereignty?
11708These natural and apparently adequate means all failing, what will convince them?
11708Was there not an appropriation at the last session for converting flint into percussion arms?
11708Was this fourth instance the prelude of an intention to curb or stifle free Congressional debate?
11708What are we to do when you shall have broken up and destroyed this government?
11708What follows?
11708What induced the Southampton insurrection, twenty- eight years ago, in which at least three times as many lives were lost as at Harper''s Ferry?
11708What must she do?
11708What pen shall adequately describe this vast audience of ten thousand souls?
11708What result did he look for from his movement thus far?
11708What right had the Governor to intermeddle?
11708What will satisfy them?
11708What will they do?
11708What, now, did Brown intend to do?
11708When, how, or to what extent may we act, separately or unitedly, to ward off dangers if we can, to meet them most effectually if we must?
11708Who believes this?
11708Who has fought the battles of the South for the last twenty- five years, and borne the brunt of the difficulty upon the border?
11708Who has, in spite of the decision, declared Dred Scott free, and resisted the authority of his master over him?
11708Who is to be benefited?
11708Why did the message thus leap at one bound without necessary connection or coherence from the discussion of executive to those of legislative powers?
11708Why shall it be done?
11708Why talk of war against States when the duty of the hour was the exercise of acknowledged authority against insurrectionary citizens?
11708Why this secret suppression by Secretary Cobb?
11708Why?
11708Will it be replied that, while we are mutually unwilling now to yield anything, we will be mutually willing, after awhile, to concede everything?
11708Will it satisfy them if, in the future, we have nothing to do with invasions and insurrections?
11708Will they be satisfied if the Territories be unconditionally surrendered to them?
11708Will you?
11708Would it not equally recover from the shock of the Lecompton Constitution?
11708[ 2] Two questions were presented to the court: First, Is Dred Scott a citizen entitled to sue?
11708[ 2]"Shall I tell you what this collision means?
11708[ Sidenote] N.Y."Tribune,"May 18, 1860. Who, then, could carry these doubtful and pivotal States?
11708and more especially, can he pass unfriendly legislation to violate his oath?
11708while the durable, the important, and the mischievous one is, Shall this soil be planted with slavery?
19273I would reply,''Suppose the mainsail was as soft as silk and the hawser as pliable, would you, as a sailor, throw them away on dead men?'' 19273 And what about a comparison of thoseother"liars with the newspaper man?
19273And who were these innocent villagers?
19273Can love teach youthful maidens anything at all of Botany?
19273Does anybody deny that the highest proof of special genius is the possession of the instinct to adapt itself to the matter in hand?
19273Flint, who died of rum at Key West much regretted?
19273Here it is:_ Joe._ So, then, you know all about this errand of ours?
19273IN_ the_ OPERATIC FIELD Did I remark in some preceding breath that Allison is more or less"dippy"over music?
19273In the same breath he wrote that it was not likely that Mr. Allison was the author-- but why not likely?
19273Musical?
19273Oh, care''s the King of all-- A King who doth appal; But shall we who love delight bow before him?
19273Or Aristotle singing to a maiden with his lute?
19273Or Mathematics cause a thrill erotic in the heart?
19273Or raise revolting cry-- Proclaiming pleasure high, Declare it treason if good men dare adore him?
19273Or that Mr. Herbert Spencer thought out ethics at a ball?
19273Or was she wench... Or some shuddering maid...?
19273Were you, astute and keen reader of auguries, afraid of being found out?
19273What do the pen marks say?
19273What do you think would happen?
19273What does the ink say about dates?
19273Who writes all these magnificent things that me and Homer and Bill could n''t and did n''t write?
19273Whoever heard of Homer making sonnets to an eye- brow?
19273Why, then, maintain that Mr. Allison was not the author?
19273Will flirting give a lady brains-- if she has n''t got any?-- Or solve the esoteric problems hid in Ray''s Third Part?
19273Wrinkling it by thinking how his love he''d prosecute; Do you think Professor Agassiz learned all he knew by sighing?
19273You remember Knowles of Georgia?
19273_ Joe._ Yes, that''s it; but who are Professor Andover and his party?
17726And you knew I would n''t consent-- hey?
17726Are you busy?
17726Better cushions?
17726Ca n''t you hitch along, you fellow next me?
17726Can I do anything for you?
17726Do n''t you know she''s been watching the men set out for the Fort?
17726Do you know?
17726Does he know of this-- this enterprise? 17726 Has Bulchester gone yet, Mistress Royal?"
17726How can you not trust her? 17726 I mean are you on duty?"
17726Said it to you?
17726That''s it, is it?
17726The hospitals? 17726 Then what does it mean?"
17726What does this mean?
17726What''s the matter with the fellow?
17726Why is my safety of any more importance than the soldiers''? 17726 You know he is your enemy?"
17726You know that you are running a great risk?
17726You?
17726***** Are You Out Of PAPER?
17726-------------------------------------- Are You Out Of PAPER?
177263.--Who was the first American woman to publicly espouse the cause of Anti- Slavery?
177264.--"Where can I find the best account of the Know- Nothings, that figured in American politics some years ago?"
177266.--Where can I find a full account of the history of the Indian tribes of early Massachusetts?
177267.--Has the life of Robert Rantoul Jr. ever been written?
17726And had she not always loved him?
17726And were there other causes of hatred, possibly money causes, that had spared her?
17726And your father, Mistress Elizabeth?"
17726Are there soldiers in the hospitals?
17726But if he died, what real difference would that make to her?
17726But is it plausible that such pabulum meets all the needs of those people who frequent these entertainments?
17726But is not the_ guarantee_ also greater?
17726But, is it enough that a man should know how to read and write before he can cast a ballot?
17726Can we do anything for them, Nancy and I?"
17726Could she have shown coquetry, or in any way teased him now?
17726Did he know the man so thoroughly, then?
17726Do these qualifications comprise everything that is necessary to a proper and safe exercise of the right of suffrage?
17726Do you want to desert them?
17726Does not vicarious suffering seem to be an important factor in the development of the race?
17726Finally a distinct pause came in answer to the call:"Who next?"
17726Had Elizabeth noticed them enter the boat together?
17726Had she not always been a coquette?
17726He smiled, and still holding it, asked after a moment''s hesitation,"Should you be very much disappointed if I begged you not to return this morning?"
17726How could I help thinking so when there came up before me her answer to the magistrate''s question,"Have you familiarity with these spirits?"
17726I have no right to insist upon your staying; but do n''t you think we ought to stay?
17726If he went to his death in this way, how would Katie feel?
17726Leaning towards the stern, he said to one of his men:--"Greene will you change places with me?"
17726Or Stationery Of Any Kind?
17726Or Stationery Of Any Kind?
17726Shall I not tell them?
17726Shall she give him Katie''s letter at once, and in her name warn him to take care of the life that was of so much value to his betrothed?
17726Shall we go back to our comfortable home, and leave all this suffering behind us, when we might do our little to help?
17726Shall we, Nancy?
17726Tell me how you feel?
17726The news is it, I wonder?
17726What are you going to do about this?
17726What is the explanation of this custom?
17726What will she say when she knows?"
17726When did you come back from your reconnoitering party?"
17726Where''s your father?"
17726Who was to go?
17726Why two?
17726Will you permit me to take this as a fire- ship, and will you remain under my especial care until this other vessel sails?"
17726Yet why?
17726You wo n''t be offended if I call patriotism a stronger power?"
17726and wo n''t you stay with me?"
17726he reiterated,"Why are you here?"
17726or the letter?"
17726what''s the matter?"
17726why could n''t such a testimony of neighbors and friends have saved her?
13124''What, do you wish to insult me?'' 13124 And who is to be married, pray?"
13124Captain Gary, did your men use any rails?
13124Dem who?
13124Did you ever know who stole your biscuits that night at Frederick City?
13124Did you have them put back?
13124Did you have them replaced?
13124Did your men take any rails?
13124Do n''t you know that I am not going to give you information that will be of any service to you?
13124Do you not know that all papers are considered at nine o''clock A.M.?
13124Do you think to frighten or intimidate me by burning my house that I will tell what I choose to conceal? 13124 Got furloughs?"
13124Has there been a stampede?
13124Hello, boys, when did you get back? 13124 How did you find all?"
13124How long were you in the water, Jim?
13124Is dat so?
13124Licking, h----l,said the wounded Major,"who could fight such people?
13124Lost your swords in a fight?
13124Was the water cold?
13124Well, look er here,said Jack, looking suspiciously around at the soldiers;"who you people be, nohow?"
13124Well, well, is you dem?
13124Well, what in the world were you thinking so deeply about that you were lost to every other environment?
13124What brigade?
13124What division?
13124What is the trouble?
13124What was the force that came out to attack you? 13124 What would a man want to put flour down in a straw stack for when no one knew of''Lee''s coming?''"
13124Where are your men?
13124Where was Lee?
13124Where was he going?
13124Where was he?
13124Why do you bring me this paper to sign this time of day?
13124Why in the h----l do n''t you come on with the biscuits, Jess?
13124You do n''t say so?
13124*****"DID THE NEGROES WISH FREEDOM?"
13124A great problem now presented itself to the Confederate authorities for solution, but who could cut the Gordion knot?
13124All the consolation he got was"how deep was the water,''Mucus''?"
13124And what caused it?
13124And what must have been the feelings of the troops that were to receive this mighty shock of battle?
13124Are n''t you the chap that torn my coat sometime ago?
13124Are the Yankees smart enough to catch the stars?"
13124But what is death to the soldier?
13124But where are the South''s dead?
13124But who was"to bell the cat?"
13124Desert my comrades; betray the country I have sworn to defend; leave the flag under whose folds I have lost all but life?
13124Did any of the soldiers long for home or the opening of the next campaign?
13124Did the frozen ground cut our feet through our raw- hide moccasins?
13124Did the men murmur or complain?
13124Did the soldiers of the South believe as yet that they were beaten?
13124Did we feel the cold?
13124Do n''t you know your old friend Webster?"
13124Do you call that fighting?
13124Do you think I care so much for my house and its belongings?
13124Does it look possible at this late day that a cause so just and righteous could fail, with such men and women to defend it?
13124Echo answers from every hill and dale, from every home where orphan and widow weep and mourn,"Where?"
13124General Hartranft, of Ninth Corps, says in answer to the question"Driven out?"
13124Gentle reader, were you ever, as you thought, at death''s door, when the grim monster was facing you, when life looked indeed a very brief span?
13124Great Scotts, John, are you gone crazy?
13124Had they grown disheartened and demoralized by their defeat at Knoxville, or had they lost their old- time confidence in themselves and their General?
13124Had we been betrayed?
13124He answered the question"how deep was the water?"
13124He said,"But where do the officers sleep?"
13124He spoke to the soldier, saying:"Who is that?"
13124He then said,"Do n''t you know that I know you are telling a d----d lie?"
13124He was asked:"What command do you belong to?"
13124How many of these noble souls died that their country might be free?
13124How shall I avoid thee?
13124How was it with the South?
13124I ask again was there ever before such troops as those of the South?
13124I repeat it, was there ever an assaulting column better braced or supported?
13124I said to William,"What can you do?"
13124I see you have two stars; are you a Brigadier General?"
13124Insult-- was it?
13124Is the lion so far back in his lair as not to feel the prods of his tormentors?
13124Lincoln called for 300,000 more troops, and the same question was asked at the South,"Where will he get them and how pay them?"
13124Make them?"
13124Now the question naturally arises, had he gone on his regular duties would the circumstances have been different?
13124Now will any reader of this question the fact that Longstreet''s men suffered any great hardships, isolated as they were from the outside world?
13124Should he recognize me, then what?
13124Someone asked the colored waiter,"What was that noise?"
13124The Adjutant knew that his education was defective and said,"What did you say, Joe?"
13124The Colonel said:"Do n''t you know the Yankees are between the pickets and the breastworks, and will soon attack our whole line?"
13124The days of knight- errantry had their decadence; may not the days of the South''s chivalry have theirs?
13124The force that was exposed in the open?"
13124The lass asked me, with some feeling of scorn,"Is the boat yours?"
13124The seconds call out in calm, deliberate tones:"Gentlemen, are you ready?"
13124The soldier replied, not recognizing the Colonel''s voice:"Who in the h----l are you?"
13124Then scratching his head musingly, Jack said at last,"I don know''bout dat-- what you gwine do wid me, anyhow; what yer want?"
13124Then something like the following colloquy took place:"Well, Mack, what is the news from home?"
13124These were the encouraging messages Generals Beauregard and Hardee were receiving, but where were the troops to accomplish such work?
13124This was too much for Sim Price, and he said,"Good God, John Duckett, are you shooting at the moon?"
13124To the question,"Which were the best troops from the South?"
13124Was it any wonder that so many hundreds, nay thousands, of these Goths failed to answer to Sherman''s last roll call?
13124Was it for the superior gallantry of the enemy''s troops or the superior Generalship of their adversary?
13124Was there ever elsewhere on earth such women?
13124Was there ever such blind faith or dogged tenacity of purpose?
13124We gained an unparalleled prestige for courage, but are the people to- day better morally, socially, and politically?
13124We gained the shadow; have we the substance?
13124Were the ladies refugeeing-- getting out of harm''s way?
13124Were there ever before such people as those of the Southland?
13124Were there ever such patriotic fathers, such Christian mothers, such brave and heroic sons and daughters?
13124Were we ashamed?
13124What about the four cannons blown up?
13124What did such men of the South have to fight for-- no negroes, no property, not even a home that they could call their own?
13124What is the matter with you?"
13124What was it that caused them to make such sacrifices-- to even give their lives to the cause?
13124What were the Confederate losses during the war?
13124What''s the news at home?"
13124When the South would talk of resistance, the North would ask,"Where are her soldiers?"
13124Where are the Confederate dead?
13124Which State lost the most soldiers in proportion to the number furnished the war?
13124Who commands this company?"
13124Who is it that has ever looked upon a battlefield and could forget the sickening scene, or obliterate from his mind the memory of its dreaded sight?
13124Who of us are prepared to say whether this was mere chance, or that the bolt was guided and directed by an invisible hand?
13124Who were to blame?
13124Who would drink first?
13124Who would think of baking bread on a ram- rod?
13124Why is it that memory takes us away back into our past experiences without as much saying,"With your leave, sir"?
13124Will God, in His wisdom, ever have cause to again create such women as those of the Southland?
13124Will the fleet accept the gauge of battle?
13124Will the fleet attempt the succor of their struggling comrades?
13124Will there ever again exist circumstances and conditions that will require such heroism, fortitude, and suffering?
13124Will there ever be again?
13124Will they dare to run the gauntlet of the heavy dahlgreen guns that line the channel sides?
13124With fear and trembling he pointed to the brilliant light and said:"Do n''t you see''em yonder?
13124With such a people to contend, with such heroes to face in the field, was it any wonder that the North began to despair of ever conquering the South?
13124Would we be reported and our tents searched next day?
13124You think I can wait out here naked and freeze?"
13124You want er kill er nudder nigger, do n''t you?"
13124or is his apathy or contempt too great to be aroused from his slumber by such feeble blows?
13124or with what spell Dissolve the enchantment of thy magic cell?
13124the name of her people great?
17112Can any good come out of Nazareth?
17112Hast thou hope?
17112If you ask, what is the first step in the way of truth? 17112 If you ask, what is the second?
17112What is eternity?
17112What is wanting,said Napoleon one day to Madame Campan,"in order that the youth of France be well educated?"
17112A child''s eyes, those clear wells of undefiled thought-- what on earth can be more beautiful?
17112Alexander, CÃ ¦ sar, Charlemagne and I myself have founded empires; but upon what do these creations of our genius depend?
17112And dost thou serve God in newness of life and conversation?
17112And shall I prove ungrateful?
17112And why take ye thought for raiment?
17112Are all old things done away, and all things in thee become new?
17112Are friendship''s pleasures to be sold?
17112But what, it may be asked, are the requisites for a life of retirement?
17112Can gold remove the mortal hour?
17112Do you know what a man is?
17112Do you know what is more hard to bear than the reverses of fortune?
17112Do you think that any one can move the heart but He that made it?
17112Do you wish men to speak well of you?
17112Has not God borne with you these many years?
17112Hast thou a new heart and renewed affections?
17112Have you known how to compose your manners?
17112Have you known how to take repose?
17112How can there be pride in a contrite heart?
17112If not,--what hast thou to do with hopes of heaven?
17112If you ask me which is the real hereditary sin of human nature, do you imagine I shall answer pride or luxury or ambition or egotism?
17112If you ask, what is the third?
17112In life can love be bought with gold?
17112Indeed, who can estimate the interest of knowledge?
17112Is it not as the steps of degree in the Temple, whereby we descend to the knowledge of ourselves, and ascend to the knowledge of God?
17112Is it reasonable to take it ill, that anybody desires of us that which is their own?
17112Is it then saying too much if I say, that man by thinking only becomes truly man?
17112Is that necessary?
17112Is there a heart that music can not melt?
17112It must be so-- Plato, thou reasonest well-- Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality?
17112Love why do we one passion call, When''tis a compound of them all?
17112MORALITY.--In cases of doubtful morality, it is usual to say, Is there any harm in doing this?
17112Nay, who dare shine, if not in virtue''s cause?
17112O who would trust this world, or prize what''s in it, That gives and takes, and chops and changes, ev''ry minute?
17112Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught?
17112Ought a gentleman to be a loyal son, a true husband, an honest father?
17112RECONCILIATION.--Wherein is it possible for us, wicked and impious creatures, to be justified, except in the only Son of God?
17112SLANDER.--When will talkers refrain from evil- speaking?
17112Seest thou a man diligent in his business?
17112Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit?
17112There is no better rule to try a doctrine by than the question, Is it merciful, or is it unmerciful?
17112There is nothing like fun, is there?
17112This question may sometimes be best answered by asking ourselves another: Is there any harm in letting it alone?
17112To purchase Heaven has gold the power?
17112Too many have no idea of the subjection of their temper to the influence of religion, and yet what is changed, if the temper is not?
17112Unblest with sense above their peers refin''d, Who shall stand up, dictators to mankind?
17112What do people mean when they talk about unhappiness?
17112What does competency in the long run mean?
17112What gem hath dropp''d and sparkles o''er his chain?
17112What is beauty?
17112What is difficulty?
17112What is good- looking, as Horace Smith remarks, but looking good?
17112What is it to be a gentleman?
17112What is the Bible in your house?
17112What is the best government?
17112What is the grave?
17112What is there in the vale of life Half so delightful as a wife; When friendship, love and peace combine To stamp the marriage- bond divine?
17112What then shall the sowers of discord be called, but the children of the devil?
17112What''s a table richly spread, Without a woman at its head?
17112When our country is threatened by dangers and pressed by difficulties who are the best bulwarks of its defence?
17112Whence but from Heaven, could men unskill''d in arts, In several ages born, in several parts, Weave such agreeing truths?
17112Whence?
17112Where is the man who has the power and skill To stem the torrent of a woman''s will?
17112Who hath woe?
17112Why are we so blind?
17112Why not make earnest effort to confer that pleasure on others?
17112Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
17112Why will any man be so impertinently officious as to tell me all prospect of a future state is only fancy and delusion?
17112Would we attain mercy?
17112or how, or why Should all conspire to cheat us with a lie?
17112what would the world be to us, If the children were no more?
17112whither?
17112who hath babbling?
17112who hath contentions?
17112who hath redness of eyes?
17112who hath sorrow?
17112who hath wounds without cause?
17112why?
14849And is mine one?
14849''Twas doing nothing was his curse-- Is there a vice can plague us worse?
14849A common friendship-- who talks of a common friendship?
14849A useless flint o''er which the waters flow?
14849All is beauty: And knowing this, is love, and love is duty: What further may be sought for or declared?
14849All the world cries,"Where is the man who will save us?"
14849Am I wrong to be always so happy?
14849And Jehovah said unto Joshua, Get thee up; wherefore art thou thus fallen upon thy face?
14849And do our loves all perish with our frames?
14849And dost thou hear the word ere it be spoken, And apprehend love''s presence by its power?
14849And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others?
14849And it is n''t the fact that you''re hurt that counts, But only-- how did you take it?
14849And loved so well a high behavior, In man or maid, that thou from speech refrained, Nobility more noble to repay?
14849And the son of man, that thou visitest him?
14849And they said one to another, Was not our heart burning within us, while he spake to us in the way, while he opened to us the scriptures?
14849And thou sayest, What doth God know?
14849And what of that?
14849And where are thy playmates now, O man of sober brow?
14849And which of you by being anxious can add one cubit unto the measure of his life?
14849And who will walk a mile with me Along life''s weary way?
14849And why art thou disquieted within me?
14849Are not two sparrows sold for a penny?
14849Are not ye of much more value than they?
14849Are the stars too distant?
14849Are you in earnest?
14849Art little?
14849At rich men''s tables eaten bread and pulse?
14849But he is in one mind, and who can turn him?
14849But the little daughter whispered, As she took his icy hand,"Is n''t God upon the ocean, Just the same as on the land?"
14849But what if I fail of my purpose here?
14849But whoso hath the world''s goods, and beholdeth his brother in need, and shutteth up his compassion from him, how doth the love of God abide in him?
14849Can a fig tree, my brethren, yield olives, or a vine figs?
14849Can he judge through the thick darkness?
14849Can thy heart endure, or can thy hands be strong, in the days that I shall deal with thee?
14849Can you add to that line That he lived for it too?
14849Canst thou prophesy, thou little tree, What the glory of the boughs shall be?
14849Didst fancy life was spent on beds of ease, Fluttering the rose- leaves scattered by the breeze?
14849Didst fondly dream the sun would never set?
14849Do ye hear the children weeping, O my brothers, Ere the sorrow comes with years?
14849Dost fear to lose thy way?
14849Doth God exact day labor, light denied?
14849Exceeding peace made Ben Adhem bold, And to the presence in the room he said,"What writest thou?"
14849Feeling the way-- and if the way is cold, What matter?
14849For doth not that rightly seem to be lost which is given to one ungrateful?
14849For what shall a man be profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and forfeit his life?
14849George W. F. Hegel born 1770. Who are thy playmates, boy?
14849God will not seek thy race, Nor will he ask thy birth; Alone he will demand of thee, What hast thou done on earth?
14849Hast thou named all the birds without a gun?
14849Have we not darkened and dazed ourselves with books long enough?
14849Have we not groveled here long enough eating and drinking like mere brutes?
14849Have we not stood here like trees in the ground long enough?
14849Have you an ancient wound?
14849Having eyes, see ye not?
14849He said:"My child, do you yield?
14849He went out, and found others standing; and he saith unto them, Why stand ye here all the day idle?
14849How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to stand the test of ridicule?
14849How many smiles?--a score?
14849How to constitute oneself a man?
14849I will lift up mine eyes unto the mountains: From whence shall my help come?
14849If a man die, shall he live again?
14849If heard aright It is the knell of my departed hours: Where are they?
14849If there were dreams to sell, Merry and sad to tell, And the crier rang the bell, What would you buy?
14849In the hour of distress and misery the eye of every mortal turns to friendship; in the hour of gladness and conviviality, what is your want?
14849Is all that we see or seem But a dream within a dream?
14849Is life a noxious weed which whirlwinds sow?
14849Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
14849Is n''t it interesting to get blamed for everything?
14849Is not God in the height of heaven?
14849Is not the life more than the food, and the body than the raiment?
14849It is not worth the keeping: let it go: But shall it?
14849Josephine born 1763 Could we by a wish Have what we will and get the future now, Would we wish aught done undone in the past?
14849Know ye not that your body is a temple of the Holy Spirit which is in you, which ye have from God?
14849Look full into thy spirit''s self, The world of mystery scan; What if thy way to faith in God Should lie through faith in man?
14849Loved the wild rose, and left it on the stalk?
14849NOVEMBER Who said November''s face was grim?
14849O God, can I not save One from the pitiless wave?
14849Say, dost thou understand the whispered token, The promise breathed from every leaf and flower?
14849Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit?
14849Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights at my side, In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree?
14849Shall I give up the friend I have valued and tried, If he kneel not before the same altar as me?
14849Shall I hold on with both hands to every paltry possession?
14849Shall days spring up as wild vines grow, Unheeding where they climb or cling?
14849Shall two walk together, except they have agreed?
14849Shall we have ears on the stretch for the footfalls of sorrow that never come, but be deaf to the whirr of the wings of happiness that fill all space?
14849Summer and flowers are far away; Gloomy old Winter is king to- day; Buds will not blow, and sun will not shine: What shall I do for a valentine?
14849Temptation sharp?
14849The great Gods pass through the great Time- hall; Who can see?
14849Then why, my soul, dost thou complain?
14849Then why, my soul, dost thou complain?
14849There is sunshine without and within me, and how should I mope or be sad?
14849Though you have but a little room, do you fancy that God is not there, too, and it is impossible to live therein a life that shall be somewhat lofty?
14849Thy bountiful care what tongue can recite?
14849Unarmed faced danger with a heart of trust?
14849Was it hard for him?
14849Was it thus that he plodded ahead, Never turning aside?
14849Was the trial sore?
14849Well, what of that?
14849Well, what of that?
14849What do you live for if it is not to make life less difficult for each other?
14849What doctor possesses such curative resources as those latent in a single ray of hope?
14849What does your anxiety do?
14849What have you done with your soul, my friend?
14849What if no bird through the pearl rain is soaring?
14849What if no blossom looks upward adoring?
14849What is man, that thou art mindful of him?
14849What is the essence and life of character?
14849What is your life?
14849What shall we do with it?
14849What though to- night wrecks you and me If so to- morrow saves?
14849What would be the use of immortality for a person who can not use well half an hour?
14849What''s hallowed ground?
14849When I hear a young man spoken of as giving promise of high genius, the first question I ask about him is always-- Does he work?
14849When the heart overflows with gratitude or with other sweet and sacred sentiment, what is the word to which it would give utterance?
14849Whence comest thou?"
14849Where else can we live?
14849Who is the happiest person?
14849Who is wise and understanding among you?
14849Who knoweth not in all these, That the hand of Jehovah hath wrought this?
14849Who said her voice was harsh and sad?
14849Who stands ready to act again and always in the spirit of this day of reunion and hope and patriotic fervor?
14849Who would fail, for a pause too early?
14849Who would fail, for one step withholden?
14849Who would fail, for one word unsaid?
14849Who would not rather have a right to immortality than to be immortal without a right to be?
14849Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand?
14849Why are we so glad to talk and take our turns to prattle, when so rarely we get back to the stronghold of our silence with an unwounded conscience?
14849Why art thou cast down, O my soul?
14849Why comes temptation but for a man to meet And master and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph?
14849Why comest thou?"
14849Why drooping seek the dark recess?
14849Why drooping seek the dark recess?
14849Why, why repine, my pensive friend, At pleasures slipped away?
14849Will ye leave the flowers for the crown?"
14849are they thine, When round thy brow the wreaths of glory shine; While rapture gazes on thy radiant way,''Midst the bright realms of clear mental day?
14849each a space Of some few yards before his face; Does that the whole wide plan explain?
14849little loveliest lady mine, What shall I send for your valentine?
14849what do we see?
14849when the eve is cool?
19829Are the Farmers paying off their Mortgages?
19829Are the Mallets properly muffled?
19829Do you not recognize me?
19829How about the Mushrooms?
19829How can you bear to watch it?
19829Is the Garden Gate securely locked?
19829Is the Look- Out stationed on the Fence?
19829What Time is it Now?
19829What is it?
19829What is the Idea?
19829What shall it avail a Man if he is Principal Depositor at a Bank when it comes to riding behind Horses that wear Plumes?
19829When did he start?
19829Why are you annoyed by these Evidences of Prosperity?
19829Why are you wearing yourself to a Shadow and getting Old before your Time?
19829Why these tears?
19829You are still Unmarried?
19829Are you Wise to the Fact that the Wife of a Successful Business Man now occupies a Niche in the Hall of Fame right next to the Sister of Jesse James?
19829But a Nice Fellow?
19829Do you think they would stand for any of that old- style Guff about Sir Ralph getting the Hammer- Lock on Dorothy just outside the Loggia?
19829How are you making it?"
19829If I made up like an ordinary Sadie and talked Straight Stuff, do you think I could last through Ten Editions?
19829Line 1452: should it be"an Orator never has been known to Decline"?
19829Line 1627:"go Blind"substituted for"go Blink"Line 1937:"Ory- Eyed"in text; is"Dry- Eyed"meant?
19829What became of the Bundle?
11154Ah, my Lord, if I might make so bold, why should you expose your person by staying longer? 11154 And he asked you to pray for him?"
11154And now, tell me, little lamb, have you any idea who this grand cavalier may be that gave you the ring?
11154And what of the''House of Sarelli that goes back to the days of the old Roman Empire''? 11154 But how,"persisted the patriot,"if you listened to what its natives say of it?"
11154But who is_ she_?
11154But,I asked,"are you sure she is alive?
11154Ca n''t a body say a civil word to her?
11154Did I ever hear anything like it? 11154 Do you think I would suffer, night after night, if I could help it?
11154Have n''t I, child? 11154 Have n''t I?"
11154He did, then?
11154In hell?
11154Is Rachel Emmons at home?
11154Is your name Rachel Emmons?
11154Oh, dear Jocunda,said Agnes,"why must you go this minute?
11154Oh, my dear master,said the old man, falling on his knees,"what is to become of us?
11154Oh, then you really did take the ring to Saint Agnes?
11154Says Paddy,''There''s few play This music,--can you play?'' 11154 Seen him?
11154She''s dead,said she, at last, and then added,--"let''s see,--ain''t you the gentleman that called here, some three or four years ago?"
11154Well, Paolo?
11154Well, did you ever hear of their making the most beautiful music?
11154Well, it does seem hard,said Jocunda;"but what''s the use of thinking of it?
11154Well, what is that to me?
11154Well?
11154What for?
11154Where did you move from?
11154Where should they be? 11154 Who thinks of bringing her to shame?
11154Who''s touching your child?
11154Whom do you mean?
11154Why did you murder her?
11154Why,said Agnes,"do those Sirens sing there yet?"
11154Will you tell her a gentleman wants to see her?
11154You are Rachel Emmons?
11154You do n''t mean to say she''s not dead?
11154You do n''t mean to say this shanty is haunted?
11154You have n''t seen him since?
11154You will go with me?
11154''What d''s she mean?''
1115433 and you may see the passengers;--is that a young woman''s face turned toward you looking out of the window?
11154A dozen steps, scarce that, to his own door: A dozen steps?
11154Ah, Washington, why did you charge us so much for our milk and butter and strawberries?
11154Am I, then, fallen so low that my wooing would disgrace a peasant- girl?"
11154An Italian peasant- woman may trust Providence for her gown, but ear- rings she attends to herself,--for what is life without them?
11154But could he safely do it?
11154But have you never found out what occasions the noise?"
11154But now, dear master, will you stay lingering after this girl till some of our enemies hear where you are and pounce down upon us?
11154But what cared he, who had read of ladies''love, And how young Launcelot gained his Guenovere,-- A foundling, too, or of uncertain strain?
11154But what man of breeding could ever stand the type Southern Senator?
11154But where are the spikes on which the rebels''heads used to grin until their jaws fell off?
11154But would any amount of conciliation suffice to restore the feeling that existed here when the Prince of Wales was our guest?
11154Can the privations of the camp so instantaneously dethrone Bacchus and set up Mars?
11154Can those be the gay cavaliers who are now uplifting their war- whoops with such a modest grace at Richmond and Montgomery?
11154Can we ever trust them to build a ship or construct a rifle again?
11154Come now?"
11154Could murder, or worse than murder, lurk behind these visitations?
11154Did he hear it, and fall asleep with thanksgiving in his heart, and arise in the morning to a liberated life?"
11154Did he use to drink from this old pump, or the well in which it stands?
11154Did his shoulders rub against this angle of the old house, built with rounded bricks?
11154Did little Will use to look out at this window with the bull''s- eye panes?
11154Did you ever hear about any in the gorge?"
11154Did you never hear in Dante of the Popes that are burning in hell?
11154Did you want some sewin''done?"
11154Do civilians eat in this proportion?
11154Do you mean to say that you_ can not_ cease to do so, if you would?"
11154Fact is, what''s the use o''livin''in this way?
11154Have n''t I stayed awake for days, till my strength gave way, rather than fall asleep, for_ his_ sake?
11154Have you asked her to be merciful and not disturb you?"
11154Have you never tried to resist it?
11154Have you seen her since?
11154He stopped, stood still for half a minute, and finally responded,--"Who air you?"
11154How could they help being heathen,--being born so,--and never hearing of the true Church?"
11154How long shall I suffer?
11154Indeed, how can an army like theirs be strong?
11154Is it for her interest that the United States should be weakened?
11154Is it worthy of a great lord of an ancient house to bring her to shame?"
11154Is motion but a succession of rests?
11154Is my gentle reader tired of the short marches and frequent halts of the Seventh?
11154Is there not some difference between the two cases?
11154Is this to be the last of American civil wars, or only the first one?
11154Of the bright enthusiasm and the quenchless industry of the next few weeks what need to speak?
11154Pray, how far is it to your dreadful old den?"
11154Prithee, child, what manner of man was this gallant?"
11154Shall I say this?
11154Shall we stand in Venice on the Bridge of Sighs, and then take this stereoscopic gondola and go through it from St. Mark''s to the Arsenal?
11154That England recognized the Spanish- Americans is true; but why did she recognize them?
11154The popular will is plainly destined to a change; and who dare predict the results of its changing?
11154The riddle of the modern Sphinx is, How to create a new architecture?
11154The tone of his voice, querulous and lamenting, rather implied,"Why do n''t you let me alone?"
11154The woman said, in rather a milder tone,--"What''s the good o''knowin''what makes it, when you ca n''t stop it?"
11154Then she kind o''screeched out,--''Eber Nicholson, what are you doin''?''
11154Then she said ag''in,--''Eber Nicholson, what are you doin''?
11154They died five hundred years ago,--but what are centuries in Westminster Abbey?
11154This Rachel Emmons,--you say she is still living,--in what way does she cause the disturbances?"
11154To the right, fragments of signs, as follow: 22 PAT CO BR PR What can this be but 229,_ Patent Combs and Brushes_, PROUT?
11154Turning suddenly to the man, I asked,--"Is your name Eber Nicholson?"
11154Was n''t Dante a Christian, I beg to know?"
11154What are you going to do about it then?
11154What change for him?
11154What do we care for the Crescent, and the Horseguards, and Nelson''s Monument, and the statue of Achilles, and the new Houses of Parliament?
11154What had private soldiers to do with the desks of law- givers?
11154What is left to me but the mountains and my sword?
11154What is to become of one''s soul, I wonder?"
11154What to be done?
11154What was it to Russia whether Bourbons or Bonapartes should reign over France?
11154What was the cause of this sudden change?
11154Where are all the people that ought to be seen here?
11154Who could be out on the lonely prairie with a drum, at that time of night?
11154Who is that gentleman in the shiny hat on the sidewalk in front of the Shakspeare house?
11154Who is that lady in the carriage at the door of Burns''s cottage?
11154Who knows what originals I may not find, even in a solitary settler''s shanty?"
11154Why did you visit him in the first place, when, perhaps, you might have prevented it?"
11154Why should we be allowed to revel longer in the dining- rooms of Washington hotels, partaking the admirable dainties there?
11154Why, I want to know if you never heard about the King of Amalfi''s son coming home from fighting for the Holy Sepulchre?
11154Why?
11154can such things be possible?"
11154do n''t I remember every word o''_ that_ night?
11154do n''t we have priests?
11154how can the saints themselves be happy?"
11154it does want its old Jocunda, does it?"
11154little Agnes?"
11154where have you been all day?"
18379Ca n''t the party raise any better material than that?
18379How did you do it? 18379 So you''re John Sherman?"
18379What in God''s name,said some friend after the meeting,"could induce you to promulgate such an opinion?"
18379Why,Dr. Johnson had asked,"do the loudest yelps for liberty come from the drivers of slaves?"
18379Will our generals,he exclaimed in private,"never get that idea out of their heads?
18379''Are you in_ feeling_ as well as in_ judgment_ glad you are married as you are?''
18379''Have you said this to the President?''
18379''What are you reading?''
18379''What are you studying?''
18379("Did Stanton tell you I was a damned fool?
18379A little before his death Brown was asked:"How do you justify your acts?"
18379After speaking of the precedents for conscription in America, he continued:"Wherein is the peculiar hardship now?
18379Are we degenerate?
18379Are you not over- cautious when you assume that you can not do what the enemy is constantly doing?
18379At Chase''s instance[ Transcriber''s note: insistance?]
18379But if McClellan had had all he demanded to take Richmond and had made good his promise, what would Lee have done?
18379Did McClellan''s plan, he asked, require less time or money than Lincoln''s?
18379Did he ever do his best to beat the enemy?
18379Did he ever, except for a moment, concentrate himself singly upon any great object?
18379Did it make it more valuable?
18379Did it make victory more certain?
18379Did you not think, and partly form the purpose, of courting her the first time you ever saw or heard of her?
18379Do they not have the hardest of it?
18379English people did not know the American Constitution, and when told that the North did not threaten to abolish slavery would answer"Why not?"
18379Has the manhood of our race run out?"
18379He delighted in the following: A picket challenged a tug going up Broad River, South Carolina, with:"Who goes there?"
18379How came you to court her?
18379How can any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favour of degrading classes of white people?
18379How could I be?
18379In case of disaster, did it make retreat more easy?
18379Is there bad news from Fort Sumter?"
18379It was too big to haul out, too knotty to split, and too wet and soggy to burn; what did you do?"
18379Let the dead at Fredericksburg answer.--Ought this war to continue?
18379MAY WE HELP?
18379May I ask those who have not differed from me to join with me in this same spirit towards those who have?
18379Now what I want to know is, how are you going to pay my bill?"
18379Shall there any man be put to death this day in Israel?"
18379Shall we separate?
18379The choice was made by plain representative Americans who set to themselves this question:"With what candidate can we beat Douglas?"
18379Was California to be admitted as a State with this Constitution of its own choice, which the bulk of the people of America approved?
18379Was he often betrayed into marked frankness, or into marked generosity?
18379Was his information ever accurate?
18379Was his purpose in the war ever definite, and, if so, made plain to his Government?
18379Was it not that you found yourself unable to reason yourself out of it?
18379We''ve got major- generals enough up here-- why do n''t you bring us up some hardtack?"
18379Were even his preparations thorough?
18379What do you mean by that?
18379What good would a proclamation of emancipation from me do especially as we are now situated?
18379What had reason to do with it at that early stage?"
18379What then?
18379What was the character of that institution as it presented itself in 1830 and onwards?
18379Who should quail while they do not?"
18379Why, then, did Lincoln stand against him?
18379Will you make the promise and try to keep it?"
18379Will you pardon me for asking what the horses of your army have done since the battle of Antietam that fatigues anything?"
18379With what success?
18379You know how that Illinois farmer managed the big log that lay in the middle of the field?
15093A medal-- a-- a medal like Tony''s?
15093Any clue?
15093Because I am my father''s daughter, do you think this money I have made is tainted, too? 15093 But it could n''t eat a chicken very well, could it, Lovelace Peyton?"
15093But it will cost so much and where--?
15093But, have n''t you got any apple plan at all?
15093Did the boys look to you as if the thing that is making them all act so important was nice or disagreeable, Phyllis?
15093Did you ask Miss Prissy, Tony?
15093Did you get any more cholera? 15093 Did you see a shadow dodge behind Roxy''s cottage just a minute ago, Phyllis?"
15093Do both of you trust me enough to let me try to help if I do it with my own brains and not-- not my father''s money?
15093Do n''t the chloroform smell good, Phyllie?
15093Do n''t you see that Roxy has to be nice to her, because if she is n''t we will think it is spite about the house? 15093 Do you like to hear about such awful things?"
15093Do you reckon that little boy had rheumatiz and did n''t know any plaster for it?
15093Do you remember that shadow we saw dodge through the yard the evening we came from the Raccoon outing, Phyllis?
15093Do you think I would do a thing like that, Phyllis-- be a girl''s friend in private?
15093Do you think it is possible that Lovey is going to be-- be blind?
15093Do you want me to read the medicine book, now, Lovelace Peyton? 15093 Experiments?"
15093Guess what crawl I have founded now, Roxy?
15093He won''t-- won''t keep you-- that is, not many years-- will he?
15093How did Belle find it out, and why should they think Father is dishonest-- even if Rogers is?
15093I will, Lovelace Peyton, I will,I answered; but I shuddered, for how could I stand to see him tortured, as I felt he was going to be?
15093Is I going to be blind, Phyllie, and kin they be a blind doctor, if I am?
15093It''s Miss Phyllis Forsythe, is n''t it, that I have come home to find masquerading as my own grandmother?
15093Now, will you be good and be the leader of the Kittens?
15093Oh, Father,I fairly gasped,"did I tell you anything about Mr. Douglass''s secret that I ought not?"
15093Oh, Phyllis, and what will Lovey do without you?
15093Oh, can you hold me up, Phyllis?
15093Oh, girls, do you suppose that dreadful man has got out of jail in the city and is coming back to maybe-- maybe--?
15093Oh, is n''t he awful?
15093Oh,sighed Roxy,"some day he will find a real snake and then what will I do?"
15093Phyllie always wants what I git her, even squirms; do n''t you, Phyllie?
15093Roxy,he said, not seeming to notice me,"you have n''t been in my shed working with my bottles, have you?
15093Say, Bubble, is the long pole for exercise going to be braced so the Dumpling can go over without danger?
15093Say, Phyllis, when you raised Roxy from the ground, did you use the other muscles of your body or depend a lot on the shoulder lift?
15093Shall I report my condition to you to- morrow?
15093Tainted moneywere the words the magazine used-- wouldn''t feeding hungry little children take the taint off the money and the people who gave it?
15093That medicine will work fine,answered Lovelace Peyton;"but if it kills you, can I cut you open to see how you work inside?
15093Then my thousand dollars won''t-- won''t be needed?
15093Tony did n''t tell Belle about it on purpose, did he?
15093Well, have you told this one to these''bubbles,''as my young friend Luttrell so appropriately calls them? 15093 What are you doing?"
15093What are you going to do about the pies?
15093What course will Uncle Pompey take?
15093What experiments?
15093What has Miss Belle done that needs an expression of appreciation on just this particular day of May?
15093What has Mr. Rogers done to make your brother uneasy about the secret?
15093When did you find it out?
15093Who found it out, Roxanne?
15093Why do n''t folks write in books what diseases other folks have got, Phyllie?
15093Why, Tony,I said with difficult but becoming gravity,"do n''t you know that I know that you did n''t mean to do anything to hurt me?"
15093Why, how did you know about that explosion that Lovelace Peyton almost blew us all into pieces with?
15093Will you always go with me to tell me how the folks and sores and blood and things look, Phyllie, so I kin give the right medicine?
15093Will you come right back?
15093Will you trade, Roxanne?
15093Your plan wo n''t make me have to-- to let anybody give them to me, will it, Phyllis?
15093And as if having Roxanne hold me in both arms and love me beyond my wildest expectations was not enough, what should happen to me?
15093And is that the reason why you do n''t want to use it?"
15093Belle, you help Roxy skin that kid and get him into clean clothes while I swab up and light old Pomp''s jimson- weed pipe for him?"
15093But if it is?
15093But is there any great thing a blind man can do except be a musician?
15093But the sensation of the day was when Tony really fell and skinned his arm bad-- and what do you think he did?
15093But what happened then?
15093Ca n''t I go and get the charlotte russe for you now?"
15093Ca n''t you see Mamie Sue turning that ring around and around on her finger?"
15093Can live coals be showered on a person if nobody ever intended it?
15093Can you promise to take part of the job for me?"
15093Could I?
15093Could I?
15093Could something be the matter with me and I not know it?
15093Did I find Roxanne Byrd dissolved in an indigo sea on the day after she had lost a huge fortune?
15093Did I know that I would be in Byrdsville next week or ever again?
15093Did the medicine work?"
15093Do I deserve it all?
15093Do n''t you think so?
15093Do such things happen every spring, or is it just something that has unblinded my eyes?
15093Do you blame me for not minding washing and ironing and cooking and toe- poking or dress- shrinking with a brother who is an idol like that?"
15093Do you remember that experiment about cutting away a piece of the heart itself that the man tried?
15093Do you suppose they will all go?"
15093Do you think blue will be prettier than pink, or would you have--?"
15093Do you two Palefaces promise to rustle around as soon as I go?"
15093Forsythe?"
15093Have the other''poor but prouds''thawed to you to any extent?"
15093He is n''t, but what right have I to bask in public favor while he is in outer darkness?
15093How can I go to sleep and wait until morning to know if those lovely, blue, little- boy eyes will never look up at me again?
15093How can they hate me if I have n''t ever done anything to them?
15093How can we save it and him?"
15093How can you sympathize with your friends''affairs if you do n''t make them tell you all?
15093How could I in a place where everybody had what they wanted and money is not needed to make them enjoy life?
15093How did you come to think out that process of a disturbance of atomic arrangement at that temperature?"
15093How do I know he wants to be enthroned and"idolized"in my heart?
15093How do you manage it all?"
15093I can starve Lovey and myself enough to get the things for the crust, but where are the apples to come from?
15093I will and do trust my father, but can I trust him to trust Rogers?
15093I wonder if he would like that lovely long- stemmed pipe that is in the drug store?
15093I wonder what we would do, if we had to have somebody go to places with us who thought they had to chaperon us?
15093I wonder why I ever started a record of myself and my friends like I am doing?
15093I wonder why Miss Prissy does n''t want to marry such a grand man as the Colonel is?
15093Is there no way the rich can turn poor without disgrace?
15093Is this the end of the life that bloomed out in me like the apple blossoms do on the bare trees, only to be shattered?
15093It''s lovely, is n''t it, Phyllis?"
15093Just yesterday he brought a queer kind of-- Oh, what do you suppose he has found now?"
15093Now, if that is n''t the truth, I do n''t know what is, and what more could I say about myself?
15093Oh, what is the matter?"
15093Or could Lovey have got in?
15093Roxanne hesitated and then said:"Are you sure you don''t-- that is, are you sure?"
15093See http://kdl.kyvl.org/cgi/t/text/text-idx?
15093See?"
15093See?"
15093Shall I go get the axe?"
15093Through all my misery I ask myself if any girl in the whole wide world ever had a friend like Roxanne Byrd?
15093To take me away now would be to tear me-- but where was Father, and why did n''t I hear what he is going to do and have done to him?
15093Want to come out and have a look with me?
15093What can I do to ease this awful anxiety?
15093What can they be pitying me about?
15093What have they been doing?"
15093What medical college would you advise, Doctor?"
15093What would Father do when that prosecution found him?
15093What would I have done if I had lost even what she had been to me these sad years-- before I found you to help me?"
15093What would all of us do without her?"
15093What would she do if she should lose the Colonel by sudden death before she has rewarded his affections by marrying him?
15093When do you study?"
15093Who told you?"
15093Will that do, Miss Prissy Bubble?"
15093Will you come?"
15093Will you?"
15093Wo n''t it be fun to look back from richness and remember when an apple looked as big as one of the Harpeth Hills?"
15093Wo n''t you stay with me always and read me about smallpox like you promised?
15093Wonder what he does with the money?
15093Would God be so cruel to me as to let me get just this one little taste of being happy and then take it away from me?
15093Would I go-- would I go across the dead body of my father''s honor and my own and anybody''s disgraces and any other old thing?
15093Would you ask him before you make the aprons or trust to his not noticing?"
15093exclaimed Roxanne, rising right above the pies which sank my heart like lead to think of her having to furnish; and where would she get them?
18467You found everything as represented?
1846787?
18467Can a proposition be plainer?
18467Can an offer be more fair and business- like?
18467Do you consult your own reason and best interests?
18467Does not every one know that, when the unnatural stimulus is removed, he fails?
18467Does the fact that an article is prepared by a process known only to the manufacturer render that article less valuable?
18467For instance, how is the chair of astronomy filled?
18467For what crime can be more deserving of punishment than the holding out of false hopes and pretenses to the unfortunate?
18467He asked me"why I did not go to the Invalids''Hotel and Surgical Institute, at Buffalo, N.Y., and get cured?"
18467How many physicians know the elementary composition of the remedies which they employ, some of which never have been analyzed?
18467How shall we distinguish the combination of organic elements, if not by the manner in which they characterize the constitution?
18467How, then, can we account for the evident accommodation of the eye to the varying distances?
18467I spent the day in grateful tears-- how could I help it?
18467I then asked him, what about Dr. Pierce''s world- famed Surgical Institute?
18467If he have light, why hide it from the world?
18467If she desire a plurality of loves, it must be a law of her nature; but is communism the desire of our wives and daughters?
18467If these were the statistics twenty- four years ago, with our greatly increased population, what must they be to- day?
18467If you ask: Is there any advantage in considering the phenomena of nature as the result of DIVINE VOLITION?
18467In all seriousness we ask would any other remedy except a narcotic or stimulant be used with such persistency for anything like this length of time?
18467Is it any wonder that acute suppressions occur or that inflammations set in?
18467Is it meritorious in the physician to modestly veil his discoveries, regardless of their importance?
18467Is it not apparent that such agents form a habit which is often worse than the disease, and yet fail to effect a cure?
18467Is it not preferable to say that she responds to intelligent, loving Omnipotence?
18467Is not this true of nine- tenths of all who suffer from this malady, and have recourse to this class of remedies?
18467It therefore follows that generation in some animals require?
18467Legislators have battled with intemperance, but have done comparatively little to banish from our midst this necessary(?)
18467Man breathes by means of lungs; but who can understand their wonderful mechanism, so perfect in all its parts?
18467Now to the point-- are you listening?
18467Of course the principle which is lacking should be supplied; but has the physician the remedial agents properly prepared, and ready for prescribing?
18467Reader, are you accustomed to think and act for yourself?
18467Should this vitalizing power be termed nerve- force, electricity, heat, or motion?
18467Then by what?
18467Then how can we remedially fulfill the preceding indications?
18467This being done, the question naturally arises:_ How can health be best maintained and longevity secured?_ INFLUENCE OF FOOD.
18467Under the continued operation of a poison, inducing such symptoms as these, what chance is there for remedies to accomplish their specific action?
18467What are newspapers for, if not to circulate information?
18467What are the physiological and morbid results attending the ordinary and the immoderate exercise of the VOLITIVE FACULTIES?
18467What earthly being do we love so devotedly as our mother?
18467What more valuable information can a newspaper give than to tell a sick man where he can be cured?
18467What physician presumes to prescribe for himself, when suddenly prostrated by serious illness?
18467What rendered him thus perfect?
18467What results follow the_ natural_ and the_ excessive_ exercise of the EMOTIVE FACULTIES?
18467What rounded off his natural asperities, and moulded up his virtues?
18467What shall we say concerning abortionists, men and women who are willing to engage in the murder of innocents for pay?
18467What should be the essential characteristics of an Invalids''Home?
18467What suffering is greater than the sense of awful suffocation from a heart that is not acting well?
18467When the faculty of a university is to be chosen, how are its members selected?
18467Who can estimate the value of such a transformation from nervousness and despondency to vigorous manhood?
18467Why?
18467Why?
18467Why?
18467Would any one think of giving to a weak, debilitated man large portions of brandy to enable him to work?
13642Mr. Edmondson, will you come this way a moment?
13642Suppose western Virginia and northern Kentucky, were tomorrow to emancipate their slaves, what would become of them? 13642 We have been repeatedly asked, why do you not send those slaves to Liberia?
13642[ 50] What then resulted from the agitation and discussion? 13642 [ 9] Garrett Davis inquired:"Will you preserve the Union or rush into the vortex of revolution under the name of secession?
13642''Why?''
13642And again, why are the Negroes of Virginia less cruelly treated?
13642And did you not observe on the day such ceremony was performing, that I carried a bow in my hand, and a quiver filled with arrows on my back?
13642And how is this, that God created us amongst the rest of human beings, and yet man would level us with the brute?
13642And who told you, Sir, that nature had created the Negroes with less feeling than other men?
13642And why are those imported, more wicked in your opinion?
13642Are not all prisoners at the disposal of their captors?
13642Are not my rights the same as his?
13642Arraigned before the almighty Sovereign of the universe, how will you answer the charge of such complicated enormity?
13642Buckner?
13642But do not their frequent risings, and the cruelties they from time to time retaliate upon their masters, give the lie to this natural insensibility?
13642But how could you judge whether the blacks were different from the whites, who saw them only in a state of slavery and wretchedness?
13642But how severely are those superiors punished?
13642But is it right opinion?
13642But is this fact to be imputed to them as a personal crime?
13642But what does it all amount to?
13642But where have these people gone?
13642But would they be admitted there?
13642Can Americans, after the noble contempt they expressed for tyrants, meanly descend to take up the scourge?
13642Can the efforts of a slave for the recovery of his liberty, be denominated vicious or criminal?
13642Combien de secondes auroit và © cu un homme âgà © de soix- ante- dix ans dix- sept jours et douze heures?
13642Could it possibly be that these splendid truths, this forecast of universal liberty, might include them too?
13642Did Weebaigah sell slaves?
13642Did not you see me make_ custom_--annual ceremony-- for Weebaigah, the third king of Dahomey?
13642Do we estimate beauty by the figure of a Laplander?
13642Do you not arm their tyrants, when you tell them, the insensibility of the Negroes alleviates their torments?
13642Does nature follow another order, other laws for them?--Have not they speech, that peculiar characteristic of humanity?
13642Education and circumstances!--Now where are the Negroes favoured by either?
13642Exactly what part did the rich slaveholders play during this crisis when the State was called upon to decide the question between the North and South?
13642For twelve centuries the problem"how shall Africa be redeemed?"
13642From the moment you violate the laws of nature, in regard to them, why should not they shake them off in their relative duties to you?
13642God his father as well as mine?
13642Has one susceptibilities of improvement, mentally, socially, and morally?
13642Have not they eyes, ears, a shape, and organs like ours?
13642Have not they the same faculties-- reason, memory, imagination?
13642He asked where were their schools, orphan asylums?
13642His conscience an infallible guide as well as mine?
13642How can one conclude then that they would have elected seceders to represent them in a"sovereignty convention"?
13642How can there be such a thing as history for a race which is just beginning to live?
13642How is it possible such horrid prospects should not fire his soul?
13642How much more so must be those unfortunate beings who stand in the predicament of the bat in the fable, whom both birds and beasts disowned?
13642How then did the neutrality policy work out?
13642How, if chance should present him with arms and liberty, should he resist using them, to put an end to his own existence, or that of his tormentors?
13642I answer, by no means, and if there be no ships to receive their captives, what will become of them?
13642I kill them, but do I ever insist on being paid for them?
13642I reply by another question, had we not clubs, and bows, and arrows before we knew white men?
13642If he does not feel, how should he remember?
13642If such vengeance would be lawful in me, what makes the Negro more guilty?
13642If the colored people can not enjoy freedom in a free State, what can they do?
13642Il a cependant, dois- je, le dire?
13642In mine, more quick, more ardent in their resentments?
13642In regard to their being sent to Africa, because they were natives of that land, they asked:"How can a man be born in two countries at the same time?"
13642In the language of Patrick Henry, will we be ready tomorrow or next day to act more than now?
13642In what light can the people of Europe consider America after the strange inconsistency of her conduct?
13642Is not nature our common parent?
13642Is not this contempt observable, for instance in the very first period?
13642Is one bound by the laws of God to improve the talents he has received from the Creator''s hands?
13642Is one embraced in the commands search the scriptures?
13642Justly can it be demanded''What sort of civilization is this?
13642Others felt like the lady who inquired:"Is it possible that any of my slaves should go to heaven, and must I see them there?
13642Ought she to comply with it?
13642Perhaps you may be asked, how will the blacks be punished with guns and powder?
13642Remove the cause or is it not the only crime?
13642S[andys?]
13642Shall I tell you why there are no authors or men of learning among the Negroes?
13642Shall we say that the Indians or Arabs are not our equals, because they despise both our arts and our sciences?
13642Some may say, why did not the Kentucky Legislature go for coercion?
13642The contest then must be who can arm fastest, and where are our arms?
13642They are not our fellow- creatures will they say: a philosopher of Paris has proved it?
13642To whom are the wretched sons of Africa to apply for redress, if their cruel master treats them with unkindness?
13642To whom will they resort for protection, if he is base enough to refuse it to them?
13642Turning to Demitt, the officer asked,''What''s your occupation?''
13642Was Cartouche less detestable because Brinvilliers had existed before him?
13642Was he to let them remain in this country to cut the throats of his subjects?
13642Was it otherwise, they would be sacrificed to it here, as well as there; how can we praise such forced humanity?
13642Were the Revolutionary fathers so stupid as to think that the British would adopt the same policy?
13642What can account for so unusual a character?
13642What else could he have done with them?
13642What has made you what you are?
13642What has this author in question done?
13642What is eloquence but the language of reason and sensibility?
13642What of that?
13642What spring of action could raise a Negro from his debased condition?
13642What then degrades this natural and moral sensibility?
13642What then is race orthodoxy?
13642What were the motives that prompted this man to so extraordinary and laborious a life?
13642What were they to do then when this militia, which could not be uniformly kept up, should grow impatient with the service?
13642What white man would be less cruel in his situation?
13642What would the Negroes think when they saw their offering thrown away from the altar of their country?
13642Whence does it come?''"
13642Whence the free black?
13642Where is he?
13642Where shall they go?
13642Where shall they go?
13642Where then shall they go?
13642While they were proceeding thus, an onlooker said to Emily,"Are n''t you ashamed to run away and make all this trouble for everybody?"
13642Who can without the complicated emotions of anger and impatience, suppose himself in the predicament of a slave?
13642Who told you so?
13642Who told you there were no learned blacks?
13642Who will say that it would not be more safe and wise to emigrate to Africa than to Canada, Oregon, California or Mexico?
13642Why should that be called wickedness and depravity in him, which would be stiled virtue in me, in you, in every white man?
13642Why this comparison, which seems to insinuate a justification of the Virginians?
13642Why this general indifference about home; why are the household gods, why is the sacred hearth so wantonly abandoned?
13642Will she comply with this appeal?
13642Will such a practice stand the scrutiny of this great rule of moral government?
13642Will they not consider her as an abandoned and deceitful country?
13642You say they are not so thievish in Virginia, propagate faster, and are less depraved: Why?
13642[ 12] In the meantime what had become of Samuel?
13642[ 2] But can a natural consequence be criminal?
13642[ 3]--Will the Americans allow the people of England to get the start of them in acts of humanity?
13642[ 9] Besides, if I neglect this indispensable duty, would my ancestors suffer me to live?
13642and are we to blame, if we send delinquents to a far country?
13642are we not exposed to all the same wants?
13642cut off the heads of people who have never done me any harm?"
13642do we not feel all the same sentiments-- are we not capable of all the same exertions-- and are we not entitled to all the same rights, as other men?
13642do you judge so because they have vegetated for three centuries in European fetters, and at this day have not altogether shaken off the horrid yoke?
13642does a misfortune cease to be such, because there is a greater elsewhere?
13642how, on the contrary, not give vent to all the indignation, which must naturally arise in every feeling mind?
13642if you poison us, do we not die?
13642if you prick us, do we not bleed?
13642magnanimity by the soul of a courtier?
13642or intelligence by the stupidity of an Esquimaux?
13642or the Quakers, because they neither respect academies nor wits?
13642that I was only solicitous about my own name, and forgetful of my ancestors?
13642the road to glory and honor is impassible to him: What then should he write for?
13642what imperfection in the faculties of our minds?--Has not a negro eyes?
13642what inferiority of art in the fashoning of our bodies?
13642what variety is there in our organization?
13642would they not trouble me day and night, and say, that I sent no body to serve them?
1457729. Who was responsible for the issue?
14577Am I able carefully and punctually to correct all the notes required?
14577Are deposits guaranteed?
14577Are the functions of government in this country increasing?
14577Are the greenbacks in circulation to- day?
14577At what periods in American history have large issues of paper money been emitted?
14577By what means was trade accomplished before the use of money?
14577By whom is a national bank chartered?
14577Could a man in 1860 consistently accept both the Dred Scott decision and the doctrine of popular sovereignty?
14577Describe the social life of the Western pioneer?
14577Did America ever have a theocracy?
14577Did Calhoun favor the Compromise of 1850?
14577Did Grant favor the Tenure of Office Act?
14577Did Hamilton''s measures tend to centralize power?
14577Did Lee make more than one attempt to invade the North?
14577Did Lincoln favor the social equality of the white and black races?
14577Did Lincoln''s assassination have any effect on the reconstruction policy?
14577Did Massachusetts favor the Tariff of 1816?
14577Did Spain have any part in calling out the Monroe Doctrine?
14577Did Thaddeus Stevens favor the Fifteenth Amendment to the Constitution?
14577Did the Civil Service Act passed in 1883 include postmasters?
14577Did the Emancipation Proclamation free all the slaves in the United States?
14577Did the North favor the Force Bill of 1833?
14577Did the Republican party stand for the abolition of slavery in 1860?
14577Did the Revolution of 1688 have any effect on the colonies?
14577Did the Whigs favor internal improvements?
14577Did the Wilson- Gorman Act reduce the tariff to a revenue basis?
14577Did the bank accomplish them?
14577Did the members of the Constitutional Convention exceed their instructions?
14577Did the rule of 1756 affect the people of the colonies?
14577Did the second United States Bank accomplish the purpose for which it was formed?
14577Did the working- men of England favor the South during the Civil War?
14577Discuss the growth of the sentiment for internal improvements?
14577Do they do so to- day?
14577Does funding a debt lessen it?
14577Does the Constitution of the United States prevent a State from establishing a religion?
14577Does the Federal Constitution compel negro suffrage?
14577Does the constitutional provision for uniform duties protect the Territories?
14577Does the time spent in writing up notes justify itself by fixing in the child''s mind new and really relevant information not given in the text?
14577Has a joint resolution ever been used to acquire territory other than that included in Texas?
14577Has the Federal Government ever attempted to restrict the power of the press?
14577Has the Republican party ever reduced the protective tariffs of the war?
14577Has the United States any control over the debts of Cuba?
14577Has the United States ever resorted to a tax on incomes?
14577How does it compare with the area of the original thirteen States?
14577How many people live to- day in the territory included in the purchase?
14577How much previous work have you done in the library?
14577In what particulars did Andrew Jackson accurately reflect the spirit or the ideals of the new West?
14577In what ways has democracy advanced since 1789?
14577Is Utah a part of the Louisiana Purchase?
14577Is a cabinet provided for in the Constitution?
14577Is it a secure investment?
14577Is it constitutional for banks chartered by the State to emit bills of credit?
14577Is it illegal to- day for a railway to give a cheaper rate to one shipper than to another?
14577Is it in existence to- day?
14577Is it possible for a State to repudiate its debts?
14577Is it possible for a man to be defeated for the Presidency if a majority of the people vote for him?
14577Is it teaching students to combine facts, opinions, and statistics, to form conclusions really their own?
14577Is it true that the South lost the Civil War because of slavery?
14577Is the Canadian frontier fortified?
14577Is the notebook work as I am conducting it calculated to develop the habit of critical reading?
14577It will be well for the teacher to inquire:"What am I doing to cultivate such an ability in my students?"
14577May States emit bills of credit?
14577May it issue paper money?
14577Of what other books is he the author?
14577Of what use are source books?
14577Of what use do you think the library should be to you in the course you are just entering?
14577The same thing is accomplished by reversing the process and asking such questions as,--"Who was the American Fabius"?
14577To what amount?
14577To what extent was the Revolution brought about by economic causes?
14577Under what President was the independent treasury first established?
14577Was Cromwell''s colonial policy helpful to the American colonies?
14577Was a President of the United States ever impeached?
14577Was impressment practiced in England?
14577Was it necessary for the South to resort to the draft?
14577Was the Anaconda System successful?
14577Was the Sugar Act legal?
14577Was the"Ohio Idea"ever strong enough to affect legislation?
14577Was there any effort to amend the Articles of Confederation?
14577Were the Huguenots excluded from Canada?
14577Were the Writs of Assistance used in England?
14577Were the claims for indirect damages in the Alabama claims allowed?
14577Were they legal tender for private debts contracted before their issue?
14577What States are included in the purchase?
14577What advantage did the Government expect to receive in passing the act?
14577What are the dates of our greatest panics?
14577What are the functions of money?
14577What case decided the constitutionality of the bank?
14577What considerations made the secession of the West in our early history a likely possibility?
14577What determines the amount of money needed in a country?
14577What do you think are the purposes of the subject you are about to take up?
14577What encyclopedias and works of general reference are in your library?
14577What geographical reasons caused Napoleon to sell it?
14577What has been used for money at various periods of our history?
14577What has been your method of study in other courses of history?
14577What influence did the purchase have on our retention of the territory east of the Mississippi?
14577What is Bimetallism?
14577What is Gresham''s Law?
14577What is a United States bond?
14577What is a source book?
14577What is cheap money?
14577What is free silver?
14577What is illustrated by the attempt to found the State of Franklin?
14577What is its area?
14577What is its average rate of interest?
14577What is meant by doing business on credit?
14577What is meant by"Free Coinage"?
14577What is meant by"Gratuitous Coinage"?
14577What is meant by"Market Ratio"?
14577What is meant by"Mint Ratio"?
14577What is meant by"Standard Money"?
14577What is meant by"Wildcat Banking"?
14577What is the effect of large issues of paper money on prices?
14577What is the effect of large issues of paper money on wages?
14577What is the name of the text you are to use?
14577What is the name, reputation, and position of the author?
14577What is the"Aldrich Plan"?
14577What on wages?
14577What source books on this period of history are in the library?
14577What things did the English colonies possess in common?
14577What was the Currency Act of 1900?
14577What was the effect on prices?
14577What was the"Bland- Allison Act"?
14577What was the"Crime of''73"?
14577What were the chief causes?
14577What were the defects in the Articles of Confederation?
14577What were the objects of the first United States Bank?
14577What were the results of the struggle over the admission of Missouri?
14577What were the results to the colonies of the French and Indian War?
14577When was the Resumption Act passed?
14577When was the first National Banking Act passed?
14577When was the second United States Bank chartered?
14577When were greenbacks issued?
14577Why can the American people be regarded as the world''s greatest colonizers?
14577Why could Washington be regarded as only an Englishman living in America?
14577Why does the wage- earner suffer?
14577Why is silver not the standard to- day?
14577Why should banking business be profitable under the act?
14577Why was it not rechartered?
14577Why was the second United States Bank rechartered?
14577Why?
14577Why?
14577Why?
14577Why?
14577or the"Sage of Menlo Park"?
14577or"The Great Compromiser"?
12973''But,''said Butler,''I''ll warrant the dogs are after a bear; do n''t you hear old Beaver? 12973 And they mobbed you at Atchison?"
12973Anybody hurt?
12973Anybody killed?
12973Are you a correspondent of the_ New York Tribune_?
12973Baptism, its Authority and Design;"From Whence Ami? 12973 But why do n''t you run away?
12973But,says the old gentleman,"they do n''t allow convicted murderers to go about in this way, without a guard to watch them?"
12973Can you tell me,he inquired,"where the prison is where these robbers and murderers are confined?"
12973Did you come to make Kansas a free State?
12973Does Pardee Butler ride a bay horse?
12973Have you had your breakfast?
12973Let every man look out for himself?
12973Now,said the Judge,"was it whisky you bought of this saloonkeeper?"
12973Oh, is that it? 12973 Wall, do n''t you know thar''s a woman thar that''s goin''to skin you?"
12973Well, what did you come for?
12973Well, where did you lodge?
12973What is your name?
12973When Jesus said,''Into thy hands I commend my spirit,''did he mean,''Into thy hands I commend my breath''? 12973 When do you do most of your thinking?"
12973Who cares?
12973Who''s your boss?
12973Why did n''t you take it? 12973 Why, I look all right, do n''t I?"
12973Why, what''s the matter? 12973 _ Are You an Abolitionist_?"
12973_And what is your name?"
12973After some desultory talk, they asked me:"_ Are you an abolitionist_?"
12973Am I told that the safety of slave property requires that Abolitionists should not be heard in the slave States?
12973An African lion hunter, when questioned,"Is it not fine sport to hunt lions?"
12973And do not the people of freedom like it?
12973And do not these considerations go far to explain the contrast that is everywhere seen to exist between Protestant and Catholic countries?
12973And now, my friends, will you not demean yourselves worthy of the high place that God has given you?
12973And now, my friends, you are laying the foundations of many generations, and will you not take heed how these foundations are laid?
12973And what should I do?
12973And what were the purposes of the Emigrant Aid Society that it should be such an offense to the people in Missouri?
12973B., did the people expect me, uninvited, to pitch into a quarrel with which I have nothing whatever to do?"
12973B., was it not a good sermon?"
12973Be permitted to run at large among our slaves, sowing the seeds of discord and discontent, jeopardizing our lives and property?
12973But I kept thinking of the question:"Are you an abolitionist?"
12973But does it never mean more than this?
12973But religious and thoughtful men looked far beyond this question of what shall we eat and what shall we drink, and wherewithal shall we be clothed?
12973But somebody has to do this frontier and pioneer work; and might it not as well be me and my wife as any other man and his wife?
12973But these men were impatient, and said:"We just want to know will you sign these resolutions?"
12973But what of the spirit?
12973But whence had he his knowledge of the mobbing at Atchison?
12973Butcher''s rifle out of the wagon, saying,"I am going down there to see; who will go with me?"
12973Ca n''t we submit this to the people, and who wants another?"
12973Can you repent if you take God at his word and do as did the apostles and the primitive Christians?
12973Did he see the folly of his course?
12973Did they not have on their side the President and his Cabinet?
12973From whence then came this overwhelming majority?
12973Geary?
12973Had I any right as a Christian and as an American citizen, when providentially called to this work, to withdraw myself from aiding in its settlement?
12973Have they killed my husband?"
12973Have we not made our constitution?
12973He did so, and received a letter from Gen. Lane, asking,"How much will you pay for the place?"
12973He said bluntly at the table:"Well, Mr. Butler, they treated you rather roughly at At- Atchison, did they not?"
12973He took it and with something of hesitation said,"Wo n''t you come in and drink with us?"
12973He works by_ means_:"How shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard?"
12973Here they caught me by the wrists, from behind, and demanded,"Will you sign?"
12973Here was Col. Sumner with his United States dragoons, and he was a man to obey orders; and what were we going to do about it?
12973How did such growth in Kansas come to be?
12973How, then, could I understand you as referring to anything else than to my own published Cincinnati utterances?
12973I asked,''Who is that aged veteran?
12973If I was sometimes charged with abolitionism, was not this man blacker than myself?
12973If Protestantism seas done so much in spite of all its divisions, what will it not do if these hindrances are taken out of the way?
12973Is it any wonder that the cause does not go forward faster?
12973Is the moon less beautiful because the man in the moon does not wear a handsome face?
12973Is the sun less glorious because there are spots on the sun?
12973It is asked: What have we to do with slavery?
12973It will be asked, What, then, do we gain who live in these river counties, and in these cities, by the passage of this prohibitory law?
12973Jones demanded:"What''s up?"
12973Kelley turned short on him and said:"Do you belong to Kansas?"
12973Man has a spirit, and can man''s spirit die?
12973Many will ask now, as they have asked already, what is the true and proper cause of all these troubles I have had in Atchison?
12973Moreover, it forbade a farmer to manufacture_ hard_ cider from his own orchard, and would not this be a_ hard_ and tyrannical law?
12973Mr. Kelley did not know me, and asked:"What is it?"
12973Mr. Pomeroy came forward and shook hands with Sheriff Jones-- should not_ gentlemen_ shake hands when they meet?
12973Needs it to be said, that to do this work well, the teachers in this school of the prophets have need to be well qualified?
12973Now we believe that this man is an innocent man; and what will the Lord say to us if we turn him out of doors?"
12973Now who does not see that to touch any one of these was to touch all?
12973Now, who does not see that here is the basis of hearty co- operation, whether in the church or in the world, of men from the South or from the North?
12973Of course we did not quarrel; why should we?
12973One of their number bristled up to me and said,"Have you got a revolver?"
12973One thought was ever present in my heart, how far could brethren co- operate together who had been on opposite sides?
12973Paradise sometimes means the happy garden where Adam and Eve dwelt; but does it never mean more than that?
12973Pardee Butler?
12973Should a cowardly Yankee be allowed to defy them, and scoff at them, and call them"bull- dogs and blood- hounds,"with impunity?
12973Should we fight, or should we not fight?
12973So, granting that spirit sometimes means breath, may it not also mean more than that?
12973Springer said,"I once heard him begin a sermon with the question,''Are we dogs, or are we men?''"
12973The Free State men began to falter and to ask each other,"Is it not best to try the Governor, and see if he will be as good as his word?"
12973The Sheriff had got as far as the door when the witness called out:"Judge, are you going to lock me up?"
12973The first commanded universal attention:"Does the spirit die when the body dies?"
12973The question, Shall slaveholders be received as church members?
12973Then another company came in and demanded:"What''s all this fussing about?"
12973Then the question came up, What kind of a raft shall it be?
12973Then they had asked for a Southern Governor, for would not he be true to the South?
12973They asked incredulously,"An''kin ye haul that thar slide up that slippery bank?"
12973They say,"We beg leave to ask respectfully, what are the demands against us?"
12973They therefore asked his wife:"Has your husband a rifle, musket, or fire- arms of any kind?"
12973This I did, but my friend Mr. Snyder concluded:"This is a hard saying, who can hear it?"
12973This broke the silence, and the men that had me in charge asked:"Did the Emigrant Aid Society send you here?"
12973This question, however, we did often ask ourselves:"What had we done that we should be made to suffer thus?"
12973This seemed very fair, but what did it amount to?
12973Was it Lane coming to attack him?
12973Was it possible that Lane was even now in the neighborhood?
12973Was not Congress on their side?
12973Was not Persifer F. Smith, Commandant at Fort Leavenworth, at least indifferent to all their deeds of violence?
12973We ask, Shall a man expressing such sentiments be permitted to reside in our midst?
12973We have come all the way from South_ Carliny_ to see a Yankee trick an''haint we got it?"
12973We shall see how it will be?"
12973Well may the writer ask,"Is it any wonder that the cause does not go forward faster?"
12973Were my prospects blighted from this time forward?
12973What could it be?
12973What did it mean that citizens of Missouri should go over in force and vote in the Territory of Kansas?
12973What did it mean?
12973What did you come for?"
12973What do you think he had found?
12973What for?
12973What is it we can do for you?"
12973What shall we do?"
12973What treasures untold reside in the Lord''s house, the Lord''s day, the Lord''s book, and the ordinances of the Lord?
12973What was that?''
12973What was the meaning of the Kansas- Nebraska bill?
12973What was the_ New York Tribune_ doing, that it should raise such a tumult?
12973What were the intentions of the Black Republicans?
12973What would become of Kansas, or of the United States?
12973What would become of my wife and children?
12973What would become of myself?
12973What would the brethren say of me?
12973What, then, is the remedy?
12973When a good square meal had somewhat thawed them out, I said,"Boys, what made you quit swearing last night?"
12973When he saw father, he exclaimed, with a great oath,"------------, what you driving my cattle off for?"
12973Who were these men that had come to Atchison county to ride rough- shod over him in his own house?
12973Why, then, were not these bloody counsels made good by deeds?
12973Will you not go along with us?"
12973Wood asked:"Is Jacob Branson in this crowd?"
12973You the terrible murderers about whom I have heard so much?"
12973Your name is Butler, is it not?"
12973_ This was my only offence._ What must you think of yourself, sir, in this notice you take of this transaction?
12973and Whither Am I Going?"
12973and what shall I drink?
12973and wherewithal shall I be clothed?
12973that old building, falling to pieces, without either doors or windows?"
12973you convicted felons?
19049[ 129] How gracious of them to vouchsafe even trite explanations, but why frame a set of degrees to conceal what they wished to hide? 19049 And the Lord said unto me, Amos, what seest thou? 19049 But did Masonry have to go outside its own history and tradition to learn Hermetic truths and symbols? 19049 But what is your need? 19049 But why does not the wisest and noblest plan do more than half what its advocates hope and pray and labor so heroically to bring about? 19049 Did he know what the bee hive means in the symbolism of Masonry? 19049 HUTCHINSON,_ The Spirit of Masonry_#/ CHAPTER II_ The Masonic Philosophy_Hast any philosophy in thee, Shepherd?
19049Had he done so, would it have met with such instant and universal acceptance by old Masons who stood for the ancient usages of the order?
19049Have we any evidence tending to confirm this inference?
19049Have ye said that he would die?
19049How else can we explain the fact that when the Knights of the Crusades went to the Holy Land they came back a secret, oath- bound fraternity?
19049Is he Solomon?
19049Is it surprising that we find so few references in later literature to what was thus held as a sacred secret?
19049KENNEDY,_ The Servant in the House_#/ CHAPTER I_ What is Masonry_ I What, then, is Masonry, and what is it trying to do in the world?
19049Not that men are ignorant; Who can boast that he is wise?
19049Not that men are wicked; Who can claim to be good?
19049Our own religion?
19049Then men of every name will ask, when they meet:/P Not what is your creed?
19049Was such wisdom new to Masonry?
19049We seem to come, we seem to go; But whence or whither who can know?
19049Were these Fellows made acquainted with the secrets of an Apprentice?
19049What attracted them to it as far back as 1600, and earlier?
19049What faith builded this home of the soul, what philosophy underlies and upholds it?
19049What held them with increasing power and an ever- deepening interest?
19049What is it that so tragically delays the march of man toward the better and wiser social order whereof our prophets dream?
19049What may this fact set in the fixed and changeless East mean?
19049What shall we say of this Legend, with its recurring and insistent emphasis upon the antiquity of the order, and its linking of Egypt with Israel?
19049What was the Master''s Part?
19049When is a man a Mason?
19049Where did they get it?
19049Where else could they have done so?
19049Wherefore go elsewhere than to Masonry itself to trace the_ pure_ stream of Hermetic faith through the ages?
19049Wherefore their interest in the order at all?
19049Who else can he be?
19049Who is sufficient to describe a spirit so benign?
19049Who knows but that the crypt of the past may become the church of the future?
19049Who knows, for example-- even with the Klein essay on_ The Great Symbol_[94] in hand-- what Pythagoras meant by his lesser and greater Tetractys?
19049Who was Hermes?
19049Who were they?
19049Who were those"men of intelligence"to whom Pike ascribed the making of the Third Degree of Masonry?
19049Why all this unnecessary mystery-- not to say mystification-- when the facts are so plain, written in records and carved in stone?
19049Why any disguise at all if it had no hidden meaning?
19049Why did not Freemasonry die, along with the Guilds, or else revert to some kind of trades- union?
19049Why did they continue to enter the Lodges until they had the rule of them?
19049Why do they not succeed?
19049Why such a people, having such a tradition?
19049Why was this?
19049Why, then, it may be asked, speak of such a thing as the Secret Doctrine at all, since it were better named the Open Secret of the world?
19049[ 130] What_ was_ his wisdom?
19049[ 74] Why so, when the name was well known, written in the Bible which lay upon the altar for all to read?
13237Agnes, my darling, what shall we do? 13237 All days are alike to God,"says the reformer;"why should we observe the Sabbath more than any other day?"
13237And are men here the same, with all their faculties?
13237And do you think I would permit you to leave me thus at random, going, you know not where, without any preconceived plans? 13237 But what motive,"I asked hesitatingly,"could Richard have had for his course?"
13237Can you not take another pupil, Miss Reef?
13237Cried?
13237Did you not see that figure? 13237 Do you see the tip of his castle yonder?"
13237Has Herbert left you?
13237Have I been ill, Mary? 13237 Herbert,"said he, and his countenance darkened;"you can not see Herbert, he is ill."Not see Herbert, and he ill?
13237His son Herbert?
13237How,I cried in astonishment;"I proprietor?
13237I do n''t know,said I,"whether its reely myself or not, for I have n''t seed myself-- how do I look?"
13237I have been looking all over for you; why are you hiding yourself away up here?
13237If he is my child, as you say, why should he not be here? 13237 Is it an academy?"
13237Is this you?
13237May I ask your age?
13237Miss Reef,he demanded solemnly,"why will you delay?
13237Motive? 13237 No; why should I?"
13237Quick, where is the key?
13237Richard married?
13237Sir,said I,"I am calm now; will you not explain to me this frightful mystery?
13237Sit still-- where are you going?
13237So soon, Agnes?
13237So there be''nt,said she, puckerin''up her pretty little mouth;"but tell me, now, is this reely you?"
13237The science of mind?
13237The whole establishment?
13237Thee has a poor memory,remarked William Penn, with a bright smile,"Did not the Bible teach thee that there was an upper and a lower seat?
13237There is no one to be seen here,replied another;"what can it mean?"
13237This marvellous growth is owing to their being essentially a mediumistic people-- is it not so?
13237What are you doing here?
13237What do you mean, sir?
13237What have I to do with that? 13237 What wonder is this?"
13237Where are you going, Agnes? 13237 Where did you come from?"
13237Where the deuce,he mutters,"is the showman?"
13237Who be you?
13237Whose voice is that? 13237 Why does that girl stand glowering at me?"
13237Why, Mary, are you here?
13237Why, how is this?
13237Why?
13237Will you not reward me for my industry?
13237Will you open the door, or shall I?
13237Would you like to sit upon my knee?
13237Yes; do I not speak clearly? 13237 Yes; why not?
13237You will?
13237You, Agnes-- you, verily? 13237 A fearful foreboding possessed me; what could it mean? 13237 Agnes, where are you?
13237Ai nt you afeared I''ll tell Prince Albert of your_ dooins_?"
13237Ai nt you afeared of me?
13237And are all our paraphernalia for funerals, our solemn black, and our long prayers but useless ceremonies?
13237Are you ling''ring where The blue- eyed angels your sweet kisses share?
13237As I did so a heavy, thumping footstep sounded upon the platform, and a surly voice inquired:"Are you Miss Reef?"
13237As we turned the corner of the street I ventured to ask:"Is it to some school you are guiding me?"
13237Bristed?"
13237Bristed?"
13237Bristed?"
13237But will it not live with the living?
13237Can honor set- to a leg?
13237Can the intruder be Richard?
13237Do they cling to their earthly love?
13237Do you comprehend the extent of the undertaking?
13237Do you have such things here?
13237Do you not see that it is best?"
13237Do you wish to perpetuate that crime?
13237Doth he feel it?
13237Doth he hear it?
13237Go whither?
13237Had I done right?
13237Had my riotous heart burnt the secret upon those blushing petals?
13237Had she arisen from her grave beneath the granite of the church- yard to warn me?
13237Have you any you''d like to lose?"
13237He comes-- he questions,"From whence comest thou?"
13237He pressed my hands and said:"Agnes, can I converse with you in private here a few moments?"
13237Honor hath no skill in surgery, then?
13237Houses, stores, and works of art on every side?"
13237How came you here?
13237How could Richard expect to obtain, through my agency, possession of a son whom he had never acknowledged?
13237How is this to be done?
13237How long must I wait?
13237How near is the spirit world to earth?
13237How should I act?
13237How then?
13237I clenched Richard''s arm so that he muttered an oath, and said sharply,"My God, Agnes, what are you doing?"
13237I here took the opportunity to ask Franklin if it was necessary, in communicating with absent individuals, to use those external appliances?
13237I summoned courage to ask:"Were you sent for Miss Reef?"
13237If so, what was he doing at that hour of the night?
13237In return I would inquire,"Why, when men can travel by the steam- engine, do they prefer the slow movements of the horse?"
13237Is it insensible, then?
13237Is this a Christian deed, to flaunt a vice, And with another''s failings gild your own?
13237Is this a Christian deed?
13237Is this the New Jerusalem?
13237Is your home so radiant that never more Your steps will be heard at my lowly door?
13237Leave when I am_ sealed_ to you?"
13237Must brother''s heart his very kin disown, While rudest hand disturbs her mouldering dust?
13237My sister, have I lived to see thy name Dishonored?
13237One evening I ventured to ask:"Richard, why are your visits so brief, and made only in the night?"
13237Or an arm?
13237Or are the dead jealous of their rights?
13237Or take away the grief of a wound?
13237Presently, in broken tones he asked,"Is that Miss Reef?"
13237Shall it be by following in the beaten track of custom?
13237Shall mankind call it just?
13237So you are the young lady who has undertaken to be bored with my little nephew?"
13237Soil not my angel wing; Keep not from rest; How can I upward spring, Clasped to thy breast?
13237Some power outside of myself forced me to ask,"Herbert, what ails your throat; has any one hurt you?"
13237Somebody was riding away; who was it?
13237Spying Brown, I cried out,"Why, how is this, Brown?
13237The question is often asked,"Why should immortals walk, when they can move with greater velocity than light?"
13237Thou, who wast my pride, my stay; Shall Jealousy and Fraud thy love defame And I be dumb?
13237To hearken to the whisperings and device Of old age, selfish, to suspicion grown?
13237To misconstrue each friendly look-- each tone-- And out of natural love create vile lust?
13237Was I afraid of Richard?
13237Was he not the proper person to consult in my dilemma?
13237What could I say?
13237What could be the matter?
13237What could it mean?
13237What crime was this that he hinted at so strangely?
13237What has he found?
13237What hell more fearful than the hell of licentiousness?
13237What intellect so versatile as to reproduce in song and narrative the characteristic styles of so many, and yet so dissimilar authors?
13237What is Heaven?
13237What is honor?
13237What is honor?
13237What is that word, honor?
13237What might he not do in his drunken excitement?
13237What plan had he now in view?
13237What pleasant trick is this you have been playing me?"
13237What political economist, strongly biased in favor of one mode of government, can contemplate dispassionately an opposing form?
13237What right had I to give away a property given to me for an especial purpose?
13237What secret foe is in their midst?
13237Whence came the impression?
13237Where am I?"
13237Where was I?
13237Where was I?
13237Who brought you?
13237Who has a better right to him than I?
13237Who hath it?
13237Whom have we not seen, from Napoleon down to the last suicide?
13237Why did you leave Bristed Hall?"
13237Why should I hurry away?
13237Why will you turn from me when I desire to help you?"
13237Why?
13237Will you walk, or shall I call a cab?"
13237Would you demand liberty for the army?
13237Yea; but how if honor pricks me off when I come on?
13237Your jewels and costly raiment you must have left behind; then whence comes all this wealth and luxury?"
13237_ Browning_?"
13237up and dressed?"
13237what do I see through my blinding tears?--What misty form through the tempest appears?
13237why, Agnes, that can not be; has he not a wife now living in France?
13237would he undo me?
13237you have become acquainted with him?
13237you young varlet; where are you going so early in the morning?"
19910''Better go to bed, had n''t we?'' 19910 ''Why did n''t you tell them who you were?''
19910But your great Generals-- where are they?
19910Captain Pershing,said the President, when the party was seated at the table,"did I ever meet you in the Santiago campaign?"
19910Did my brother protest? 19910 Do you think you can stand India, now, my lad?"
19910I thank you for the honor,said Foch with some embarrassment,"but are n''t there-- difficulties?
19910My men are nearly starving,he began--"What do you need?"
19910Often goes around hospital in Bloemfontein, and it''s''Well, my lad, how are you today? 19910 Ready to make a lawyer out of yourself?"
19910Then how about Joseph Jacques? 19910 Well, son, how goes it now?"
19910Well, who knows? 19910 What are you going to do with it?"
19910When was that? 19910 Who among you would fire upon his Emperor?"
19910Who will volunteer to ride back with the message? 19910 Why did you go off and join the French army?"
19910Why not, sir?
19910Will you serve with Kitchener?
19910You are not afraid of your health breaking down?
19910You do not think that you are too old for this arduous task?
19910About nine- thirty or ten o''clock, I''d say:"''John, how are you coming?''
19910Anything I can do for you?
19910Anything you want?''
19910Are you sure you''re comfortable?''
19910But more than once on such a jaunt would come the inquiry:"Where''s Douglas?"
19910But when he reached the General Staff, the remark was frequently heard:"Who is this Joffre?
19910But when he sees a man dying, it''s''Can I pray with you, my lad?''
19910Did they also astonish the silent officer himself?
19910Did this idle schoolboy dream dreams of future greatness on the battlefields of the land that was now teaching him to draw the sword?
19910GRANT THE MAN WHO"CAME BACK""Can a man''come back''?"
19910Goes to the hospital train--''Are you comfortable?
19910Had not this doctrine been expressly implied in the Federal Constitution?
19910I selected a particularly bold one and challenged according to orders:''Halt, who comes there?''
19910I then said:''Halt, who stands there?''
19910In a letter home he writes( one of many such references),"Can not you cure poor Spec?
19910Like it?"
19910Sublime?
19910We can imagine the following conversation on one of their helter- skelter rides together:"What are you studying now, George?"
19910Were we not put on earth for a higher mission?
19910What did I say?"
19910What was the good of it all?
19910When I promptly said:''Halt, who sits there?''
19910Whence came this power to one who had been a lonely and derided boy?
19910Who was this man who had been selected for so important a task?
19910Who was this strong, stern, silent soldier whose career linked up past wars with the great World War of our own day?
19910Why did men have to learn to kill each other anyhow?
19910Why did n''t our Representative pick some one that would be a credit to the district?"
19910Within a very short time after he came to the post, a senior officer would turn to him, and say:''Pershing, what do you think of this?''
19910Would General Pershing hold himself in readiness for this supreme task?
19932Ez you cole?
19932So yer wan''t me ter tell you de truf? 19932 ''What you going to do''? 19932 Am I Bawn ter Die? 19932 An ef''n it was a Yank come''long, he say too,''What you prayin''''bout?'' 19932 And then sometimes we would meet a white man and he would say,''How you like to come work on my farm''? 19932 Clothes good''nuff fer anybody, candy, en we went ter parties en urther places, en w''at else could I''se wan''?
19932Come again, wo nt you?
19932De Jedge said,"Whar did he whup you?"
19932De Marster ob Pommpy''year''d''m en de Marster made a leetle noise en Pommpy seze,"Who ez dat?"
19932Did you know that a white woman shot de first cannon dat was ever fired in de state o Georgia?
19932Ef''n dey met a niggah on de road dey''d say,"Whar ez you gwin dis time ob mawnin''?"
19932En dere wuz soldier camps in east Nashville en you had ter hab a pass ter git thro?"
19932En who ez dat gal wid you?''
19932He hunted all thro de house, en up in de loft, en said whar ez de niggers?
19932He laughed en sezs,''You ez brave ain''you?''"
19932He say,''What you prayin''''bout?''
19932He sezs,"Frankie, ez you laughin''?"
19932He sezs,"Wuz yo Marster good ter you?"
19932He''d say,"Frankie ai n''t you cryin''?"
19932I asked him this morning, did nt I Lola?
19932I just spoke sassy- like and say,"Old Marster, what you got to tell us"?
19932I went back ter Missis-- en she sezs,"W''at ez de matter wid you?"
19932If you and me had her education, we''d be fixed now would nt we?
19932In 1885 did you say?
19932Jedge sezs,"Frankie ez dat yo mammy?"
19932Meet a body in the road and they ask,''Where you going''?
19932Sometimes''long comes another Yank on a horse an he arsk,''Boy ain you tired?''
19932They''d hide in the bushes, or wait along side of the road, and when the niggers come from meeting, the Pattyroolers''s say,''Whar''s your pass''?
19932Yank say,''what you mean, Marster?
19932You notices how light- complected I is?
19932You wants to be free, do nt you?''
19932en dey said,''Ai n''t you out late Henry?
13304A pickaxe?
13304Agnes, do you know?
13304Ah, but how dared he swear that he had thought of no one but me and loved me passionately? 13304 Ah, my darling, my sweet wife,"he cried,"not sleeping yet?
13304And are n''t you going to bed?
13304And why is that?
13304And you are very happy?
13304And you do n''t say that Marie Wakeman is the same as ever?
13304And you have n''t missed me at all?
13304And you have not seen it since you were a boy?
13304Are you going to let him off?
13304Are you going to?
13304Are you mad?
13304But ca n''t you guess why?
13304But do you think he''s there?
13304But if he wo n''t?
13304But wo n''t the men want me to free her by letting that infernal crew go?
13304Can not Bridget go?
13304Can we reach it?
13304Can you ask?
13304Can you swim?
13304Constantine?
13304Could we not drag one in, my lord, and put it where the goat is, behind the house?
13304Could you? 13304 Dare you go and seek him there?
13304Did Constantine let you see the old woman whom I sent to him?
13304Did she remind you of the time you kissed her?
13304Did you hear me?
13304Did you tell her to say that?
13304Do n''t you really read them?
13304Do you believe all Constantine tells you?
13304Do you know you have n''t spoken to me to- night, nor shaken hands with me?
13304Do you mean that they will kill this woman?
13304Do you suppose that I should ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men?
13304Does your wife pay you such compliments, Vlacho?
13304Fishermen? 13304 For me?
13304Had she better go first?
13304Have n''t you mocked me enough?
13304Have you friends there?
13304Have you lost the way?
13304How came you,said I,"who ought to restrain these rascals, to be at their head?
13304How can I stay here?
13304How on earth did you know?
13304How''s she going to get up?
13304How''s the prisoner?
13304I had to swear my life out that no one was here-- and then,''If no one''s there, why may n''t I come?'' 13304 I say, Charlie, I wonder what this yarn''s about?
13304Is it a way out?
13304Is it likely I should tell you now?
13304Is n''t there a refuge hut on the Bosses?
13304Is she as annoying as that?
13304Is she as handsome as ever?
13304Is that you, Belden?
13304Is there? 13304 It belongs to Constantine, does n''t it?"
13304Killed him?
13304Marry him?
13304Must I give an account of every movement?
13304My name-- my name?
13304Oh, how can I tell what I want? 13304 She proposes to marry Constantine,"I answered, and added quickly to Hogvardt:"What''s the game with those knives, Hog?"
13304Sooner than marry you?
13304Storm or no storm?
13304That I told him he was his uncle''s murderer?
13304Then they brought him up, and got rid of his body when the islanders had gone?
13304There is nobody there?
13304Waiting for a train?
13304Well, has he told you anything?
13304Well, what does the captive queen say?
13304Well, what is it?
13304Well, young man,he asked, finally,"what did you come here for?"
13304What are you doing down here to- night?
13304What are you grinning at?
13304What did you do that for?
13304What have you been doing?
13304What of that? 13304 What the deuce did those rascals do with the old gentleman, Charlie?"
13304What''s all the shindy?
13304What, after I had known you?
13304What, the one who was with Constantine?
13304Where am I?
13304Where are we?
13304Where are you going?
13304Where did you find it, Denny?
13304Where have you been?
13304Where is Euphrosyne?
13304Where is she now?
13304Where is the other part of the committee?
13304Where was Stefan Stefanopoulos killed, and what became of his body?
13304Who of the five appointed is to write the district address? 13304 Who told you?"
13304Who''s doing revolver practice in the wood? 13304 Who, then, man?"
13304Why do you want to go to the top of the hill?
13304Why should I not? 13304 Why should I tell you?
13304Will you stay out of his hands?
13304Will you tell us all we want to know?
13304You do n''t mean to say she''s at it yet?
13304You hear what he proposes?
13304You mean she ca n''t come spying about here?
13304You set me free?
13304You would accept his offer?
13304You''ll tell me nothing? 13304 You''re thinking you can reach them?"
13304You''ve made up your mind which, I gather?
13304After all, is a woman glad to have all her aspirations and desires confined within four walls?
13304Ah, what are you thinking of?"
13304And her voice showed the stress of her feeling, though it was quite clear when she called:"Ca n''t you climb up?"
13304And how the dickens did she get there, Charlie?"
13304And she commented:"Why, Philip, what has happened?
13304And this other here?"
13304And what reporter can reach that sweet seclusion across the distant housemaid''s wily and experienced art?
13304As soon as I arrived Baker hurried to me, saying:''How is it?
13304At the harbor?"
13304But how is it that you are not married?"
13304But might n''t we leave that question for the moment?"
13304But why dwell on the little book, which was only the trembling organ- pipe through which the music thrilled?
13304Can we expect them to seek the honey dew of paradise while they see us contented to feed on the grass of the field?"
13304Did any lady come with him?"
13304Did he give you the message?"
13304Did they bury Stefan somewhere under the house?"
13304Do I believe in the"middle march"of life, as the girl did in the morning, before the battle of the day?
13304Do I preoccupy myself with your figures made of honey and butter?"
13304Do you condemn me, too?
13304Do you know who that was?
13304Do you really want to go there now?"
13304Euphrosyne leant forward, clasping her hands, and said to me:"Have you killed him?"
13304Finally he spoke low:"Are you going to scold me, too?
13304For who else could it be that would give orders to Constantine Stefanopoulos, and ask where"my people"were?
13304Had I been wrong to extort this much punishment for my most inhospitable reception?
13304Had the_ Vermont election_ given them any light?
13304Have n''t we immortal souls as well as they?
13304Have you been making any more of your''mistakes,''as you call them?"
13304Have you forgotten the night you kissed me?"
13304Have you no mercy for me?"
13304He did not look up, but asked quietly:"Well, have you packed him off?"
13304He''s my cousin and--""And your suitor?"
13304Heavens, what did she do that for when Denny was there, watching everything with those shrewd eyes of his?
13304How came you to be in it?"
13304How came you, who ought to shun the society of men like Constantine Stefanopoulos and his tool Vlacho, to be working with them?"
13304How is it possible that one should not have done more harm than good by that unguided sympathy?
13304However, I suppose he consoles himself with his chant again?"
13304I came a step nearer, and leaned forward to ask my next question:"Who are you?
13304I suppose I_ might_--""What, dear?"
13304I told her how Denny had found it, and I added:"Now, what does''beneath the earth''mean?
13304If the fruit of electing Mr. Clay would have been to prevent the extension of slavery, could the act of electing have been evil?
13304Is it a new kind of drink?"
13304It would be a pity to spoil the house, would n''t it?"
13304Look here, who was the fellow with you and Vlacho?"
13304May I go there?"
13304Now tell me, is Morris going it openly?
13304Or dare you only skulk behind the walls of the house?"
13304Or would they let us go?
13304Presently he asked quietly:"Why did you come to me?"
13304Shall you threaten me with the whip again?"
13304She looked down at him and asked:"Can you hold on long?"
13304She may love her cramped quarters, to be sure, but can she always forget that they are cramped?
13304She raised her head, and said in tones that sounded almost eager:"My own room?
13304She smiled at that, but then she leant forward and asked:"How long have you provisions for?"
13304She started visibly, crying,"Where did you get that?"
13304She stood there, and, raising her glance to my face, asked simply:"Is it true?"
13304Sometimes, in recent years, a letter comes or a voice speaks:"Do you remember-- so many years ago-- when I was in great trouble?
13304Then I returned to the hall, and said to Denny:"Rather a trump card, is n''t she?"
13304They were still a while; then Agnes asked:"Can we do anything more?"
13304This general proposition is doubtless correct; but did it apply?
13304We are to be asked to join the whist club-- what do you think of that?
13304What are you shouting for?"
13304What autograph or lion hunter can ruin your best chapter by bombardment in mid- morning?
13304What did his life amount to anyway, that he should count one thing more trivial than another?
13304What is it worth to- day?"]
13304What was the book?
13304What''s your name?"
13304Where do they land?
13304Where the devil are you, Charlie?"
13304Where were you going?"
13304Who are you?"
13304Who else, I also asked myself, save the daughter of the noble house, would boast the air, the hands, the face, that graced our young prisoner?
13304With a glance of the utmost scorn, Euphrosyne asked, coldly:"And what are the lives of all of you to me?"
13304Without asking Constantine?
13304Would the islanders fight for their lady?
13304You heard what I promised my friend?"
13304You would have no objection to taking a prominent part in politics, if you were called upon?
13304You''re sure it''s for me?"
13304[ Illustration:"''AGNES, DO YOU KNOW?''
20105Can any of the wounded pull a rope?
20105*** Afraid of them!--what, sir-- shall we who have laid the proud British lion at our feet, now be afraid of his whelps?"
20105But why should these tremendous efforts be necessary?
20105Grave questions are presenting themselves for solution, but who can doubt that the American people have the brain and the vigor to solve them?
20105Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
20105Menendez asked:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
20105Said, in a tremulous voice:''Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?''"
20105That they learned to love their adopted land who can question?
20105The question is then put,''Does any one object?''"
20105Was it to be Badajos over again?
20105What is it that gentlemen wish?
20105What would they have?
20105When all of the Frenchmen, about two hundred in number, had been thus secured, Menendez again asked them:"Are you Catholics or Lutherans?"
20105When some one objected that she was a pagan--"Is it not my duty,"he replied,"to lead the blind to the light?"
20105Why stand we here idle?
11760Children, have ye any meat?
11760Hast thou not known? 11760 Say not in thy heart, Who shall ascend into heaven?
11760Seekest thou great things for thyself?
11760A man says:"Ca n''t I do as I like with my own?"
11760A ransom must be paid to somebody-- to whom was this ransom paid?
11760About His dying-- how did He die?
11760And Faraday, weeping, said:"Why will people go astray when they have this blest book to guide them?"
11760And I put it to you this morning whether you can any longer tolerate that omission?
11760And what did they mean?
11760And what is the object of connecting man with God?
11760And what to him is the resultant enfranchisement?
11760And where is Christ?
11760And who are Christ''s?
11760And why is it greater than charity?
11760And why not?
11760Are there any in whom the immortal hope burns low?
11760Are there any merchants here who are despondent?
11760Are there any parents whose children have wandered far?
11760Are you anxious for your children?
11760Are you hopeless and despondent because of your fainting strength?
11760Are you sick with hope long deferred?
11760Are you weak, oh, patriot?
11760Art thou one of the old prophets of Israel, escaped from his rocky tomb?
11760Besides, do we know whether voices that seem to be lost, are so in reality?
11760Brethren, does our common thought of redemptive glory reach back into this august and awful presence?
11760But are we right?
11760But has reverence no relationship to the practical?
11760But how did you destroy it?
11760But what is the fact?
11760But what made Luther?
11760But when the thrones of Rome were occupied with men who held the same opinion of the Bible as he does today, what was the freedom of the race?
11760But: What end have you in view?
11760By Thomas DeWitt Talmage Moody, Dwight Lyman, What Think ye of Christ?
11760By what interest are you led?
11760By whom have you been bought?
11760Can the trees of the field, as they clap their hands and sing in the freshening breeze, do other than refer it to heaven?
11760Can we safely exile it from our moral and spiritual culture?
11760Can you tell me anything that is going to last?
11760Christianity does not ask:"What think ye of the Bible?"
11760Did you ever notice how continually John associates love and faith with eternal life?
11760Did you ever think what he meant by that?
11760Dine on what?
11760Do you find yourselves face to face with the fact that Christ died for our sins?
11760Do you recall those wonderful sentences, scattered here and there about the apostle''s writings, and beginning with the words"but now"?
11760Do you think that that is a fair explanation?
11760Do you wonder that from that day to this the"carpenter''s son"of the Bible has been scoffed at by this infidelity?
11760Do your days of service seem short, until your life is scarcely longer than the flower that blooms to- day and is gone tomorrow?
11760Does the thought of the modern disciple journey in this distant pilgrimage?
11760Everyone has asked himself the great question of antiquity as of the modern world: What is the_ summum bonum_--the supreme good?
11760Has slavery worn man''s strength to nothingness until he is as weak as the broken reed and the withered grass?
11760Hath not God pledged His strength to the worker, that God whose arm strikes out worlds as the smith strikes out sparks upon the anvil?
11760Have the sons of the fathers never heard of the everlasting God, the Lord, Creator of the ends of the earth?
11760Have troubles driven happiness from thee, as the hawk drives the young lark or nightingale from its nest?
11760Have we not here, on the contrary, the image of human life?
11760Have you ever noticed how much of Christ''s life was spent in doing kind things-- in merely doing kind things?
11760How did it go?
11760How does that touch you as a revelation of magnificence in strength?
11760How does the Roman Catholic Church do it?
11760How is it that she pursues her conquering way, in spite of stupidities and blunders that would have killed any other institution?
11760How is it that this prophet and poet has become companion of the great ones of the earth?
11760How many of you will join me in reading this chapter once a week for the next three months?
11760How shall he care for these, when he returns to his ruined estate?
11760How then are we to have this transcendent living whole conveyed into our souls?
11760How?
11760I wonder why it is that we are not all kinder than we are?
11760If Christ was indeed a ransom, the question naturally arose, who paid the price?
11760If we could have forecast the training of such a life, how should we have pictured it?
11760If you and I could have imagined the introduction of this life of lives to the world, how should we picture that?
11760In the event of death, what arm shall lift a shield above these little ones?
11760Is any one prepared to dissociate this contemplation from the apostle''s cheery optimism?
11760Is it not a complete justification of our plea?
11760Is it not significant of what a great man of affairs found needful for the enkindling and sustenance of a courageous hope?
11760Is it the delusion of the sleeper, or the whisper of God?
11760Is life not full of opportunities for learning love?
11760Is not man''s helper that God who dippeth up the seas in the hollow of His hand?
11760Is not rather the thought of coming glory one of its abiding springs?
11760Is not that yet more pathetically significant?
11760Is the Shepherd and Leader of His little flock unequal to their guidance across the desert?
11760Is the ladder set up from the earth, or is it let down from above?
11760Is the way long and through a desert?
11760Is there one of us long tossed on sunless seas of doubt, long conscious of failure and disappointment in life?
11760It asks:"What think ye of Christ?"
11760It is David singing:"Why art thou cast down, O my soul?"
11760It is Jesus saying to Mary, and, in her, to all those whom grief afflicts:"Why weepest thou?"
11760Man''s hand unequal to the task of rebuilding Jerusalem?
11760Now how?
11760Now, what are the secrets of this courageous and energetic optimism?
11760Oh, brother, is it true of you, that after all the painful years happiness is not yours?
11760Oh, how can I fulfil it?
11760Or art thou perchance He whom we await?
11760Or do we now regard it as unpractical and irrelevant?
11760Roaming then through the entire records of his life and teachings, do we discover any significant emphasis?
11760Roman Catholics go to mass; what is the mass?
11760Shall I tell you what the cause is?
11760Shall we discard it as an irrelevant factor in the purposes of common life?
11760Shall we go forward with our Bible or backward without it?
11760The wisdom of the ancients, where is it?
11760There is the root, there the stem, and there are the leaves, and there is everything; but where is the flower?
11760They had toiled all night and caught nothing; is not that a significant description of many human lives?
11760They no longer say to any one who now lifts up his voice: Who are you?
11760Thine enemies too strong for thee?
11760To all this wretched state of man what offers came from Seneca, whom skepticism quotes as a moralist?
11760To what shall we refer this sublime, transfiguring dream?
11760We have the boat and the nets, all this elaborate organization of the Church, but have we caught anything this year?
11760We men and women sometimes feel burdened because of the sin we see around us; shall not the heavenly Father be as sensitive and responsive as we men?
11760We must arise with courage undismayed, and join in the cry of the ages: When wilt thou save the people, O God of mercy, when?
11760Well, pray, what is practical preaching?
11760What are the spacious issues of the glorious work?
11760What are the things in this Man''s life?
11760What are these, arrayed in white, Brighter than the noonday sun?
11760What can we do with that which is the true life of man?
11760What can we say of that which is the highest wisdom, the widest sympathy, the divinest love, and the mightiest power in human history?
11760What do you think of that?
11760What does this prophet on the Isle of Patmos see and hear, as he looks out into future ages and coming worlds?
11760What good are we if it is good for nothing, since it is at the root of all our institutions?
11760What if their language had decayed and their institutions had perished?
11760What is behind it?
11760What is it made of?
11760What is life?
11760What is the Lord''s Supper?
11760What is the noblest object of desire, the supreme gift to covet?
11760What is the secret of the strength of the Roman Catholic Church?
11760What is the soul of that amazingly beautiful and seemingly fantastic mythology of the Greeks?
11760What is the truth?
11760What is the use of having faith?
11760What makes a man a good artist, a good sculptor, a good musician?
11760What makes a man a good cricketer?
11760What makes a man a good linguist, a good stenographer?
11760What party do you serve?
11760What was Christ doing in the carpenter''s shop?
11760What was His spirituality?
11760What was that?
11760What was this spirit in him?
11760What will be the joy of that harvest?
11760When did it go?
11760When you go into the average church to- day, what great idea meets you?
11760Where are the men and women saved by our triumphant effort?
11760Where did He get it?
11760Where is the draft of fishes?
11760Wherever we look, this gospel is the master light of all our seeing; and once more, is it not light from heaven?
11760Who believed in freedom then?
11760Who is Christ?
11760Who then art thou, mysterious preacher?
11760Who weighs the mountains with scales and the hills in the balance?
11760Whose program for the production of intellectual and spiritual liberty can liberals accept?
11760Why did they not know Him?
11760Why do they worship Apollo and Aphrodite, Hermes and Athene?
11760Why do we want to live tomorrow?
11760Why is love greater than faith?
11760Why?
11760Why?
11760Why?
11760Why?
11760Will you come?
11760Will you observe what its elements are?
11760Would he ever dream of taking His name in vain if he loved Him?
11760Would he not be too glad to have one day in seven to dedicate more exclusively to the object of his affection?
11760You could only insult him if you suggested that he should not steal-- how could he steal from those he loved?
11760but"How have I loved?"
11760that is, to bring Christ down; or who shall descend into the abyss?
18637[ 1] Another leveled a similar criticism at the entire amendment;What is meant by the terms excessive bail?
18637''If he decides against the treaty, to whom is a nation to appeal?''
18637*** But are we all, on that account, at the mercy of the legislative majorities?
18637*** Commerce among the States must, of necessity, be commerce[ within?]
18637*** The inquiry is,"wrote Justice Washington,"what are the privileges and immunities of citizens in the several States?
18637And why may not the products of the field be brought within the principle?
18637But can the Court stop at this point?
18637But how was this done?
18637But is its scope the same?
18637Can it be doubted that Congress has power to repeal at any time the protection which present legislation affords organized labor?
18637Can we establish a constitutional doctrine which forbids the elected representatives of the people to make this choice?
18637Can we hold that the First Amendment deprives Congress of what it deemed necessary for the Government''s protection?
18637Does the Fourteenth Amendment Incorporate the Bill of Rights?
18637Effect of the Oath Does the oath add anything to the President''s powers?
18637He says:"Can we then say that the judgment Congress exercised was denied it by the Constitution?
18637How as to the converse situation?
18637How does''released time''operate in Champaign?
18637How is this practice to be squared with the express words of the Constitution?
18637How is this vast proliferation of cases, and attendant expansion of the Court''s constitutional jurisdiction, to be explained?
18637IS ANY IMMUNITY LEFT THE STATES?
18637If a committee departs so far from its domain[ as?]
18637If hitherto, why not henceforth?
18637Is everybody out of step but this Court?
18637Is it impaired by the acts under which the defendant holds?
18637Is that such a violation of contracts as is prohibited by the Constitution of the United States?
18637Is this contract protected by the Constitution of the United States?
18637MYERS CASE VERSUS HUMPHREY CASE How does this issue stand today?
18637May not the House of Representatives impeach the President for such refusal?
18637Second, assuming an affirmative answer to the above question, is Congress under constitutional obligation to supply such implementation?
18637Should, on the other hand, the adolescent mind be put at the mercy of the uninhibited reading tastes of an elderly federal judge?
18637THE COMMANDER IN CHIEF A CIVILIAN OFFICER Is the Commander in Chiefship a military or civilian office in the contemplation of the Constitution?
18637To the question:"What is the law which governs an army invading an enemy''s country?"
18637Was the same principle expected to apply to the power over foreign and interstate commerce?
18637What could be more irrational?
18637What is it that is to be regulated?
18637What is the liberty which that clause underwrites?
18637What is understood by excessive fines?
18637What powers are implied from this duty?
18637What, then, are the outstanding differences between such conditional prohibitions of commerce and that with which this rà © sumà © deals?
18637When does this happen?
18637Whence, however, comes this law?
18637Who are to be the judges?
18637Would[ not?]
18637[ 1587] How is it as to judicial decisions?
18637[ 164] WHEN IS A TREATY SELF- EXECUTING?
18637[ 1650] The Right to Reserve: When Limited.--Is the right which is reserved by a State to"amend"or"alter"a charter without restriction?
18637[ 218] A little later he raises the question,"But how are competing interests to be assessed?"
18637[ 341] A FORMAL OR A FORMATIVE POWER?
18637[ 44] OATH OF OFFICE What is the time relationship between a President''s assumption of office and his taking the oath?
18637in"9 Stat., 428, 432- 433"and removed question mark in"Grand Depository of the Democratic Principle"?
18637or could he be fined or taxed for doing so?
18637the strange spectacle be offered to the public world of an attempt by this court to arrest proceedings in that court?
15693''And to- night, too?'' 15693 ''Is the firm a good one?
15693''Was your mother a Christian?'' 15693 ''Well I can call again if you are too busy to talk to me now?''
15693''Why do n''t you ask your mother or father for advice?'' 15693 And I looked around, and I said,''Are we all here?''
15693Are you here?
15693Divorce in your country, is it not a menace?
15693Do you remember the handful of flowers I picked for you, and asked you to send them to your family?
15693Dr. Talmage, will you not honour me by coming up to my house to dine, and staying with us over night?
15693Have you ever thanked God for delightsome food?
15693How did you like the tea service which my husband sent you?
15693How do you avoid them?
15693If the President die, what of his successor?
15693Is it the Atlantic you object to?
15693Is n''t it beautiful?
15693Is there no one inside in authority?
15693Look at that dog''s eyes, is n''t he a fine fellow?
15693Look at that sycamore,he said;"did you find in the Holy Land any more thrifty than that?
15693Oh,he said,"have n''t you a stronger mind than that?
15693Senators, are you ready for the question? 15693 Tell me, how many kinds of time have you here?"
15693What is the value of this? 15693 What shall we say of the prince in Israel who has left us?
15693Where has the money for this great enterprise been expended?
15693Who did you say this was?
15693Will you accept a copy of my books?
15693Wo n''t you come and see my play to- night?
15693''What is it, John?''
15693''Why were you taken?
156935:"How much owest thou unto my Lord?"
15693A gentleman wrote me this way for advice about his social burden:"What shall I do?
15693A minister should have a conference with his people before he preaches, otherwise how can he tell what medicine to give them?
15693And I went into the chapel of the great town, and I said:''Where do the poor worship, and where are the benches on which they sit?''
15693And the question is already absorbing my entire nature,''What can I do to repay Brooklyn for this great uprising?''
15693And when told it came from America, they would say:"What part of America?
15693Are n''t they honourable men?''
15693Are you here?
15693Are you treated well?
15693As I stepped on to the platform, I said,"Where is Governor Hendricks?"
15693Because he was a great poet who had died?
15693Because he was so able an editor?
15693Because he was so very old?
15693Brown?"
15693But how could I recover it, and in so short a time?
15693But where had it gone?
15693But who would have been the Christ?
15693Ca n''t you read a book you do n''t exactly believe, and not be affected by it?"
15693Call the roll of Abraham Lincoln''s Cabinet?
15693Call the roll of Jefferson''s Cabinet?
15693Call the roll of Madison''s Cabinet?
15693Call the roll of Monroe''s Cabinet?
15693Call the roll of Pierce''s Cabinet?
15693Can anyone imagine the difference of my appreciation of Dr. Hardman and Dr. Scott?
15693Can we compress the ocean into a dewdrop?
15693Can you arrange it?
15693Can you lend me a shilling?
15693Could there be anything more savage?
15693Did we not at one time have a Secretary of the United States carried home dead drunk?
15693Did we not have a Vice- President sworn in so intoxicated the whole land hid its head in shame?
15693Do I approve of the Passion Play at Ober- Ammergau?
15693Dr. Richards, of Morristown, New Jersey, when a child was handed to him for baptism, and the names given,"Had n''t you better call it something else?"
15693Have n''t you a fair chance?
15693Have you, in America, any of the terrible agnosticism that we have in Europe?
15693He arrived in time, and preached a glowing and rousing sermon on the text,"Have ye received the Holy Ghost?"
15693He came to my father''s house one day, and while we were all seated in the room, he said:"Mr. Talmage, are all your children Christians?"
15693He has a hearty''How are you to- day?''
15693He said,"DeWitt, would you like to read that book?"
15693He turned around to me, a boy of seven years, and said,"DeWitt, what are you crying about?
15693He was a man that people in the streets stopped to look at, and strangers would say as he passed,"I wonder who that man is?"
15693He was in the newspapers-- and the children?
15693Here, fellows, have you heard the news?
15693His anxious wife inquired,''What is it so funny, John?''
15693How can she get him back?
15693How do you account for the fact that your son is such a dissipated fellow?"
15693How shall he get his people back?
15693How to set the idea of a World''s Fair agoing?
15693I discovered, in a long conversation that I had with him, that he was ready to die, and when a man is ready why should he be afraid?
15693I greeted him amid the marble walls of the Senate with the words"Did n''t I tell you so?"
15693I once said to my father,"Are people so much worse now than they used to- be?"
15693I said to a very wealthy man, who employed thousands of men in his establishments in different cities:"Have you had many strikes?"
15693I said to him as I looked up into his face:"How tall are you?"
15693I said to him:''Have you any one in mind whom you would like to talk to?''
15693I said to the driver,"Do you know Mr. Ruskin when you see him?"
15693I said:"Mr. Bryant, will you read for us''Thanatopsis''?"
15693I stretched myself out upon the seats for a sound sleep, saying,"Lord, what wilt Thou have me to do?
15693I then called to a gentleman in the orchestra whom I knew could sing well:"Thompson, ca n''t you sing better than that?"
15693I wonder what they saw going on in the courtyard?
15693If 49 would marry 22, if summer is fascinated with spring, whose business is it but their own?
15693If a sculptor can mould a handsome form out of clay, what can he not put out of Parian marble?
15693If we had not been our own rulers, but had been ruled-- what would America have been then?
15693Lord?"
15693Merciful Father, have I not suffered enough?''
15693My family accompanied me to the railroad train, and my thought was should we ever meet again?
15693My father and mother have a comfortable tent, and I have a good tent; why should I take the money?
15693My informant heard them say to him,"Well, how was it?"
15693My wife met me with anxious countenance, and said,"How did you get hurt, and what is the matter?"
15693One of our party asked for his autograph; he cheerfully gave it, asking,"Is that all I can do for you?"
15693Paris is France, London is England, why not New York the United States?
15693President,''I said,''I do not want to pry into State secrets, but I would like to know how many ducks you did shoot?''
15693Some of them would come staggering back and say:--"Please tell us who sent this bread to us?"
15693The question was asked softly, sometimes very softly, in regard to a bill:"Is there any money in it?"
15693This insured a cordial greeting for the Doctor, but how was he to make himself understood?
15693To whom did all this money belong?
15693Turning to the Doctor, she said, almost tearfully:"Why, Doctor Talmage, how can they refuse you?"
15693Under right administration who could tell what our beloved city is to be?
15693Was there in all time or eternity past, or will there be in all time or eternity to come, such a scene of self- abnegation?
15693We drove five miles through the park before reaching the gates of Chatsworth-- shall I call it house or castle?
15693We used to say:"Mother, where are you going?"
15693What can I do for you?''
15693What can I do that I have not done, so that I can see clearly?"
15693What fired the long line of cars that made night hideous?
15693What forced three rail trains from the tracks and shot down engineers with their hands on the valves?
15693What if he did say"Gentlemen, I am a very poor man, but tell your King he is not rich enough to buy me"?
15693What is the value of that?"
15693What lifted the wild howl in Chicago?
15693What made all the land and all the world feel so badly when William Cullen Bryant was laid down at Roslyn?
15693What mean those graves on the heights of Fredericksburg?
15693What shall I do?"
15693What shall I do?"
15693What was it that defeated the armies sometimes in the late war?
15693What was the matter in Pittsburg that summer?
15693When my father lay dying the old country minister said to him,"Mr. Talmage, how do you feel now as you are about to pass the Jordan of death?"
15693Who can estimate the power which emanated from the pulpits of Dr. McElroy, or Dr. DeWitt, or Dr. Spring, or Dr. Krebs?
15693Who can hear the metallic voice of that Caiaphas without thinking of some church court that condemned a man better than themselves?
15693Who does control his temper, always?
15693Who shall estimate the value of such a pedigree?
15693Who will ever forget that woman''s cry, or the face from which suffering has dried the last tear?
15693Whoever did escape it?
15693Why not cross the line this hour, out of the world into the kingdom of God?
15693Why not in the college?
15693Why should anyone want to kill him?
15693Why should anyone want to kill him?
15693Why should anyone want to kill him?
15693Why should they want to flaunt any of its shreds?
15693Why should we neglect to pay in full the price of our four years''unrighteousness?
15693Why, coming toward that city, were we obliged to dismount from the cars and take carriages through the back streets?
15693Why, when one night the Michigan Central train left Chicago, were there but three passengers on board a train of eight cars?
15693Will it not be glorious to meet again in our Father''s house, where the word goodbye shall never be spoken?
15693Will you omit the wines at that dinner?"
15693Will you write me an order for his release?"
15693Wo n''t you please do this for me?"
15693Would Dr. Talmage come round and talk to her?
15693Would I see it acted again?
15693Would it be right and honourable for me to leave?
15693Young men write for advice: One with the commercial instinct strongly developed, wants to know if the ministry pays?
15693all this for one year?"
15693he asks; and for sight for"the eye, the window of our immortal nature, the gate through which all colours march, the picture gallery of the soul?"
12023''Oh, Missis,''says I,''how could you do it?'' 12023 ''When will the siege commence?''
12023''_ You_ will, you nigger? 12023 An''says I to her,--"''Who is God, anyhow, mammy?''
12023And which of our guests is to be represented by the oak?
12023But you certainly had a poet in your family?
12023But, Sojourner, had you never been told about Jesus Christ?
12023But, surely, you can not believe that she is entitled only to a single fling at the mark?
12023Do you preach from the Bible?
12023Do you recollect John Norton''s funeral elegy on Ann Bradstreet, the Eve of our female minstrelsy?
12023Has he done anything?
12023Hello, Cap''n,called out the driver, complimenting me with that military title,"can you give a hand to this trunk?
12023How in the name of wonder did you get to Foxden?
12023How so?
12023How under the sun did_ you_ get to Foxden?
12023Is this the man of sorrows Who stood at Pilate''s bar, Condemned by haughty Herod And by his men of war? 12023 Sojourner, what do you think of Women''s Rights?"
12023The meanest child of glory Outshines the radiant sun; But who can speak the splendor Of Jesus on his throne? 12023 This is Doctor Dastick''s, is it not?
12023Well, Sojourner, did you always go by this name?
12023What is cause but necessary condition?
12023What is it? 12023 What makes you so sure there is any heaven?"
12023Why, Sojourner, what do you preach from, then?
12023You are?
12023_ Is_ he?
12023__ Is it_ Spartan stoicism? 12023 An''says I,''Laws, you did n''t think o''sech a thing as my sleepin''in dat''ar''_ bed_, did you? 12023 An''then says I,''_ Who_ is this?'' 12023 And how much may that reach? 12023 And if this be true, how shall we imagine a greater satisfaction than to find the fresh truth of Nature set in a polished and graceful form? 12023 And is it not written in the volumes of evidence sworn to before the Commission appointed by Parliament to inquire into the condition of the army? 12023 And now,_ Why did I marry Miss Hurribattle?_ I am sure I had no intention of doing so. 12023 And shall we not act wisely, if we recur to them again and again, during this momentous contest? 12023 And what is the crop so much like turnip, but still green, and apparently of more vigorous growth? 12023 And what of that story of the arrest of Seneca? 12023 And what should we expect to find on those first shores? 12023 And would you not take immediate measures to provide such a man with permanent quarters in a mad- house?] 12023 Bad generalship on the part of the Russians, certainly; but what else? 12023 But are we the sole and exclusive proprietors of this experience? 12023 But her chief delight was to talk ofglory,"and to sing hymns whose burden was,--"O glory, glory, glory, Wo n''t you come along with me?"
12023But how if you recognize in the untimely visitor a member of your own household?
12023But looking back to the days which the old yellow letters bring back, you will think to yourself, Where are the hopes and anticipations of that time?
12023But what is the good of saying all this, if a woman can not help herself?
12023But what was decided by this bloody struggle?
12023But what will you do about it?
12023But why dwell on what soon became mere butchery?
12023Can that lovely, erect, blooming lady be a bride of fifty years?
12023Can you find in all this nothing to quicken the pulse of your patriotism?
12023Could anything be more unpromising?
12023Did not the deacons turn him out?''
12023Did you ever try to keep off an evil you dreaded by interposing this buffer?
12023Did"the Alma"crown the allied generals with fresh and well- earned laurels?
12023Do you believe this to be the first war that was ever mismanaged, and that our undoubted blunders are either novel or peculiar to Republics?
12023Do you know whether Mrs. Hunesley expected me?"
12023Dr. Johnson never did so; and who am I to question his literary infallibility?
12023Ef women want any rights more''n dey''s got, why do n''t dey jes''_ take''em_, an''not be talkin''about it?''
12023Forts Pickens,[ Sumter?]
12023From day to day, after this time, he would always demand of Sir James Clark,"How long is this_ posthumous_ life of mine to last?"
12023Had society charms for her, and in the social circle and the festive throng were her chief delights?
12023Has all the boasting, have all the promises, been on the Federal side?
12023Has the art come to a stand- still, then; and shall we take to reading Cato on fair days, as well as rainy?
12023Have the increased means of gratifying taste expanded it, or has taste rapidly developed created the means of supply?
12023Have_ we_ accomplished nothing aggressively?
12023He is no longer met at every turn with"Under which king, bezonian?
12023He tints it with gay hues of green and pink and rose, and puts it in the confectioner''s glass windows, where you buy-- what?
12023He was a pious old preacher; but then I seemed to see Cato in the light, an''he was all polluted an''vile, like me; an''I said,''Is it old Sally?''
12023How is it possibly with Germanicus?
12023How is this?
12023How you goin''to do it?
12023I am very glad of it,"but soon after added,"Was he a favorite dog?"
12023I hear her baby- wagon, And the little wheels go over my heart; Oh, when will the light of the darkened house return?
12023If Light can thus deceive, wherefore not Life?"
12023Is all quiet upon the Rhine?
12023Is here no ground for encouragement, no incitement to renewed effort?
12023Is it a fossil turtle?
12023Is it a mass of twigs taken from the stomach of a mastodon?
12023Is it a specimen of the top of Mount Sinai?
12023Is it given out of compliment to the dead or the living?"
12023Is it not rather stark lunacy?
12023Is it old Cato?''
12023Is not this metaphysics made easy, and prettily employed?
12023Is the picture clear?
12023Miss Hurribattle seemed wandering in the mazes of a similar perplexity, and finally said,--"What is a bone- party?
12023Now has not this been precisely our cardinal and capital error, and are we not to- day suffering its natural consequences?
12023Now was not this our exact dilemma?
12023Now what shall be done?
12023Oh, when will she come who made the hills so fair?
12023On being reproached for his Vandalism, he retorted,--"Trees may be seen everywhere, but such a Grecian portico as that-- where?"
12023Poison?
12023Said my friend Smith to me, a few days ago:"You remember Miss Jones, and all about that?
12023Shall we attribute the similarities and the differences alike to physical causes?
12023Shall we hesitate, despond, despair?
12023She seemed to be conscious of what was passing in my mind, and suddenly said,--"Did you ever see a lady throw a stone?"
12023She''d groan an''groan, an''says I to her,--"''Mammy, what makes you groan so?''
12023Sisters, what have_ you_ done, and what do you mean to do?
12023Sometimes, when the wave of talk retreated a little, I would catch the prattle of some retiring rill to this effect:"But who are these Hurribattles?
12023Talkers are everywhere, but where are the men that say things?
12023To what extent was_ this_ battle decisive?
12023Was ever another scorpion more completely surrounded and shut in by a cordon of fire?
12023Was it that he lived too soon,--that the world he sought was not ready for him?
12023Was she devoted to literary pursuits?
12023We appeal once more to Mr. Russell:--"I may inquire, Was there any generalship shown by any of the allied generals at the Alma?
12023What can she do about it?
12023What do they mean by peace?
12023What is it, then?
12023What satisfaction is there in proving that she is far below where she ought to be, if inexorable circumstance prevent her from climbing higher?
12023What then?
12023What wonder that the startling summons found us all unready for such a crisis?
12023When shall we cease our meagre distrust?
12023When to each other our true hearts yield?
12023Where are the electric people who thrill a whole circle with sudden vitality?
12023Where are the flinty people whose contact strikes fire?
12023Where are the people that can be listened to and quoted?
12023Where are the seers, the prophets, the Magi, who shall unfold for us the secrets of the sky and the seas, and the mystery of human hearts?
12023Where in the past or the present shall we find a great and powerful nation much addicted to modesty or self- depreciation?
12023Who could have thought such darkness lay concealed Within thy beams, O Sun?
12023Who does not know that the private history of every family with the ordinary allowance of brains is a record of incessant internecine warfare?
12023Who ever heard of the mother of a young and increasing family living in an atmosphere of peace, not to say pleasure, above conflicts and storms?
12023Who has all he wishes?
12023Who that was there can ever forget it?
12023Who would now think of designating a parcel of serious savages"the praying Indians of Natick"?
12023Why do we, then, shun Death with anxious strife?
12023Will you not pause for some overt act of hostility, some convincing proof of a fell purpose?
12023Will you point me to a single war, ever waged on the face of the earth, where all the rulers were above reproach and all their subordinates unselfish?
12023Will you seize and overpower him without asking a single question, or waiting for a word of explanation?
12023You go about lecturing, do you not?"
12023You may regret the result; but does it in the least tend to show that you were cowardly or careless?
12023You''s heerd o''me, I reckon?"
12023have not contractors grown rich while soldiers have suffered?
12023have not incompetent generals been unjustly advanced, and skilful commanders been summarily shelved?
12023have we gained any advantages at all commensurate with our loss of blood and our expenditure of money?
12023or who could find, Whilst fly and leaf and insect stood revealed, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind?
12023would not a cessation of hostilities on any terms be better than such a war as we are now waging?
12968( 2)How can it help those who need assistance temporarily, without weakening their desire to become self- supporting?
12968(_ a_) How was the Congress composed?
12968(_ c_) The powers of Congress?
1296812. Who are some of the best- known representatives and senators?
1296813. Who are the senators from your State?
129683. Who are now the heads of the executive departments?
129685. Who pays for the education that young people receive in the public schools?
129687. Who are our ambassadors?
1296882- 83?
12968Are independent party organizations formed?
12968Are officers paid by fees or by salaries?
12968Are our ambassadors given adequate salaries?
12968Are our coasts well defended?
12968Are party lines closely adhered to by voters in city elections?
12968Are the States which allow women the right to vote justified in the enactment of their suffrage laws?
12968Are the United States Courts influenced in their decisions by politics?
12968Are they commissioners or supervisors?
12968Are they controlled by boards or by single officers?
12968Are they paid salaries?
12968Are they successful?
12968By whom were they succeeded?
12968Can you account for its origin?
12968Can you give the name of any foreign ambassadors in Washington?
12968Colonial Relations.--Why was union so long delayed?
12968Committees or Boards.--The important questions that arise in connection with administrative departments are, how shall they be organized?
12968Did he receive a majority of the popular votes?
12968Do all the voters ever assemble to make laws?
12968Do you agree with Mr. Bryce that the tendency is to select for President men who have not been prominent?
12968Do you believe in the municipal ownership of any of them?
12968Do you know of other instances in our history where a stamp act has been passed?
12968Does it own property elsewhere?
12968Does the Constitution permit the acquisition of territory?
12968Does the President select the members of his Cabinet from among former members of Congress?
12968Does the law of 1883 seem to have brought about satisfactory results?
12968Does the legislature enact special laws for the city?
12968Does the management of local government excite as much interest among the citizens as it should?
12968For what reasons are they noted?
12968For whom did they vote?
12968From a consular report learn what the duties of a consul are?
12968Has the city other sources of revenue besides taxation?
12968Have the members of the Cabinet ever been allowed to appear before Congress in the interests of their own departments?
12968He received how many?
12968How are obstructive tactics carried on?
12968How are the water, lighting, and street- car plants managed?
12968How do police officers receive appointment?
12968How do the officers obtain their positions?
12968How do you account for the variation?
12968How do you account for this policy in the first years of our government, and not at a later time?
12968How do you justify expenditures for these purposes?
12968How does the statement illustrate the point emphasized in this chapter, that a common danger produces union?
12968How is it determined which bills shall be thus favored?
12968How is the fact that conflicts between the authority of the Federal and the State courts do not arise, accounted for?
12968How is this majority in your State to be accounted for?
12968How large is the district in which your home is located?
12968How large is your Congressional district?
12968How many different methods are used in paying these officers?
12968How many electoral votes were required for election?
12968How many electors were there from your State?
12968How many members constitute the county board?
12968How many persons are included in the civil service of the United States?
12968How may the latter be corrected?
12968How much has your local government done toward furnishing things that are not merely conveniences?
12968How was it finally accomplished?
12968How was it finally settled?
12968How was it regarded?
12968How was the Constitution regarded in Virginia?
12968How was the stamp act regarded in the different colonies as shown by the addresses made and resolutions offered?
12968How was their election for a second term to be accounted for?
12968I have the highest veneration for those gentlemen; but, sir, give me leave to demand what right had they to say,''We, the people''?...
12968If an officer fails to enforce an ordinance, what course would you take to secure its enforcement?
12968If differences arise, then, as to the authority of National or State government over a given question, how are these disputes to be settled peaceably?
12968If not, can you account for the lack of uniformity?
12968If not, how is the will of the majority expressed?
12968If so, why is this true?
12968In the States which have woman suffrage, may women vote for representatives?
12968In what particulars do the offices resemble each other?
12968In what ways are students directly interested in having efficient local governments?
12968In what ways may a treaty be abrogated?
12968In what ways was it different from that of 1765?
12968In what ways?
12968Is it economically administered?
12968Is it now considered difficult to amend the Constitution?
12968Is it still in force?
12968Is it successful?
12968Is the system of local government uniform throughout your State?
12968Is there a postal savings- bank in your town?
12968Is this tariff high, low, or moderate in its rate?
12968May Congress establish a protective tariff, or a system of internal improvements?
12968May a President have many of the privileges of private life?
12968May a man be fitted for political preferment and not be competent to pass an adequate examination?
12968May the House refuse to admit a person duly elected and possessing the necessary qualifications?
12968Of what business does each have charge?
12968Ought Section 2, Amendment XIV, to be enforced?
12968Population?
12968Section 1 has already been partially discussed on p. 95, under the question,"Who are citizens?"
12968Should his responsibility be increased?
12968Should it be increased?
12968Should the President be elected by direct popular vote?
12968Should there be a system of postal telegraphy?
12968The Presidential Term.--Shall the President hold office for a term of three years, of seven years, or during good behavior?
12968The Slavery Problem; Second Compromise.--How was the number of the representatives to be found?
12968The council or board of aldermen: number of members, term of office, manner of election, compensation?
12968The question frequently arises, therefore, ought representatives to be compelled to receive instructions from those who elect them?
12968Two problems confront the department of public charities:( 1) How can it distinguish between those who actually need assistance and those who do not?
12968Under what conditions may a case be appealed from the supreme court of the State to the United States Supreme Court?
12968Under what conditions was the first platform of a National convention agreed upon?
12968V.)(_ b_) The number necessary for a quorum?
12968Was the adoption of the Fifteenth Amendment a wise policy?
12968Was the city organized under a general law of the State, or was it granted a special charter?
12968Was the number increased in the last apportionment?
12968Was the present President notable before his election?
12968Were slaves to be counted a part of the population?
12968Were there notable bonds of union even at this time?
12968Were they prominent in National affairs before they were selected for these positions?
12968What are his principal powers?
12968What are its advantages and disadvantages?
12968What are its faults?
12968What are some of the difficulties encountered in becoming a citizen?
12968What are some of the local regulations regarding the poor?
12968What are some of the official cares of the President?
12968What are the excellent features of your city''s government?
12968What are the names of the members of the Supreme Court at present?
12968What are the principal items of expense?
12968What buildings has the county at the county seat?
12968What can you learn of reform movements that have taken place in your city''s history?
12968What difference is there in the granting of recognition in the Senate and House?
12968What facts can be given showing the difficulty of amending the Articles of Confederation?
12968What has been the influence of the Supreme Court in the history of our nation?
12968What have been some of the most important treaties entered into on the part of the United States?
12968What is a"minority"President?
12968What is his meaning?
12968What is the cost of your city government per annum?
12968What is the extent of our merchant marine?
12968What is the great seal of the United States, and what is its use?
12968What is the length of the term for which each county officer holds his position?
12968What is the method used in counting the electoral votes?
12968What is the nature of the questions asked in the examinations?
12968What is the number of the present Congress?
12968What is the particular work of the Marine Department?
12968What is the special value of the work of the Bureau of American Republics?
12968What is the work of the Bureau of Engraving and Printing?
12968What objections were made against the Constitution in North Carolina?
12968What offices have been included in the extension of the Civil Service Law?
12968What other influences have increased this sentiment?
12968What process is followed in laying out a new town?
12968What progress has been made in the direction of settling disputes between nations by arbitration instead of by war?
12968What proportion of them is included in the classified service?
12968What reasons can you give for or against such a change?
12968What reasons can you give in favor of the Seventeenth Amendment?
12968What results followed?
12968What special problem was connected with the location of the capital?
12968What was its influence?
12968What was the Tenure of Office Act of 1867?
12968What was the attitude of the New York Convention toward the Constitution?
12968What was the attitude toward union during the period 1783- 1788?
12968What was the character of our navy prior to 1883?
12968What was the history of the State Department prior to 1789?
12968What was the origin of the committees of correspondence and how did they aid in unification?
12968What was the probable origin of the system of electing the President by electors?
12968What were the chief causes for the success of his party?
12968What were the chief points discussed in the President''s last annual message?
12968What were the conditions under which the Emancipation Proclamation was issued?
12968What would have been the status of North Carolina and Rhode Island if they had not ratified?
12968When do the meetings of the board occur?
12968When held?
12968When was each elected?
12968Which is the better method?
12968Which of the Presidents have served two terms?
12968Which type of local government exists in your State?
12968Who are the judges?
12968Who authorized them to speak the language of, We, the people, instead of, We, the States?
12968Why did it become of great importance?
12968Why do liquors and tobaccos bear the heaviest excise taxes?
12968Why was the adoption of the Articles of Confederation so long delayed?
12968Why was the election of John Quincy Adams of especial interest?
12968Why, it may be asked, is such complex machinery necessary in municipal government?
12968Would successful governors make good candidates for President?
12968Would this be desirable?
12968Would this be desirable?
12968Would you favor making the governor of your State President?
12968Would you have voted for the Seventeenth Amendment?
12968[ 2] public health?
12968and how shall the officers who control them be appointed?
12968in the incorporation of a village?
12968of the Marine Hospital?
12968of the Steamboat Inspection Service?
12968protection from fire?
18196''Do you think the expunging resolution will be disposed of today?'' 18196 ''In what way, Mr. Adams,''I inquired,''is this expunging process to be accomplished?
18196''It will pass, I suppose, sir?'' 18196 And is that all?"
18196Do the gentlemen from the South,said he,"think they can frighten me by their threats?
18196Do you remember,said the colonel,"at the battle of Monmouth, I was a volunteer aid to Gen. Scott?
18196For is not the spirit of that solemnity, and of this, effectively the same? 18196 I answer your question,--Is death an evil?
18196What, then, am I to say? 18196 Who will put the question?"
18196--"Has he fainted?"
18196--"Is he dead?"
18196Accordingly, Mr. Adams was immediately interrupted by a burst of voices demanding,"How shall the question be put?"
18196And have we not been called upon in this House, to recognize Texian independence?
18196And he would cheerfully speak; but other and more devoted men had occupied the field, and what was left for him to say on temperance?
18196And shall this vast congregation soon be brought to the grave-- that house appointed for all the living?
18196And what can I say on such a subject?
18196And what does your law say?
18196And what is the theme he has given me?
18196And what is this Clerk of yours?
18196And where is the degree of vice or immorality which shall deprive the citizen of the right to supplicate for a boon, or to pray for mercy?
18196But on what subject of public interest could a public man speak, that would find harmony among an intelligent, thinking people?
18196But when again shall the tomb of a President of the United States open its doors to receive a son who has filled the same office?"
18196But, continued the inquirer, is not this a good one--"To seek the greatest good of the greatest number?"
18196Can we preserve these remote and hostile possessions in any way, without forfeiting our own blood- bought heritage of freedom?
18196Do you wonder,"said he,"that a boy of seven years of age, who witnessed this scene, should be a patriot?"
18196Does Freedom own and accept our profuse oblations of blood, or does she reject the sacrifice?
18196Does it say that, before presenting a petition, you shall look into it, and see whether it comes from the virtuous, and the great, and the mighty?
18196Does the gentleman from Virginia deny that Thomas Jefferson was an abolitionist?
18196For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?''
18196For with reference to what principle could it be that Berkely proclaimed this, the last, to be the noblest empire of time?
18196Had the gentleman from Massachusetts a right, under the rule, to read the petition?
18196Has some Cromwell closed the legislative chambers?
18196How shall we govern the conquered people?
18196If that day was dedicated to the blessed memory of the past, is not this devoted to the no less blessed hope of the future?
18196If that was the commemoration of the good deeds of your forefathers, may not this be called the commemoration of the future achievements of your sons?
18196Is anybody harmed by it?
18196Is he to control the destinies of sixteen millions of freemen?
18196Is he to suspend, by his mere negative, the functions of Government, and put an end to this Congress?
18196Is it not transcendently by his exertions that we all address each other here by the endearing appellation of countrymen and fellow- citizens?
18196Is the objectionable resolution to be erased from the journal with a pen; or is the leaf that contains it to be cut out?''
18196Is this an evidence of the existence of that heroic valor which has so often led our arms on to glory and immortality?
18196Is this life?--with laboring step''To tread our former footsteps?
18196May I hope that some means may be found to communicate these our feelings, of which I am so proud to be the organ?
18196Mine, sir, pray to me, and I listen to them; and shall not the feeble supplicate?
18196Mr. Adams continued:--"Was this an intention to conquer Texas, to re- establish that slavery which had been abolished by the United Mexican States?
18196Mr. Pinckney rose to a question of order, and inquired if there was now any question pending before the House?
18196Nay, is the war itself just?
18196Need I say that citizen was the younger Adams, and that Washington had the sagacity to discover him?
18196Need it be said that John Quincy Adams studied justice, honor and gratitude, not by the false standards of the age, but by their own true nature?
18196Of his private life, what but must meet an echoing shout of applause from every voice within this hall?
18196On Monday he inquired the day of the month?
18196On a certain occasion, Mr. Adams was asked,"What are the recognized principles of politics?"
18196Re- open negotiation, sir, with France?
18196Say, couldst thou speak, what warning voice were thine?
18196Shall it be drawn on the shore of the Rio Grande, or on the summit of the Sierra Madre?
18196Shall new loans and levies be granted to prosecute still farther a war so glorious?
18196Shall we be content with the humiliation of the foe?
18196Shall we incorporate their mingled races with ourselves, or rule them with the despotism of proconsular power?
18196Should not this evil be abated?
18196Sir, is this a specimen of your boasted chivalry?
18196Some individual present uttering a hope that he might recover, he asked with a smile--"Do you think I fear to die?"
18196The constitution is a sacred document, and should not be violated; but how often is it strictly adhered to, to the very letter?
18196There were now resolute hearts and willing hands to undertake it, but who was strong enough, and bold enough to lead?
18196To how many thousands of our countrymen has it proved a benefit?
18196To what single individual has it ever proved an injury?
18196We do not, and can not organize; and why?
18196Well, sir, and what of that?
18196What course should Mr. Adams adopt?
18196What means, then, this abrupt and fearful silence?
18196What new event is this?
18196What shall become of the minority, in that case?
18196What though the elements of political strife remain?
18196What though the magnanimity of Adams was not appreciated, and his contemporaries preferred his military competitor in the subsequent election?
18196What though there still are parties, and the din and turmoil of their contests are ceaselessly heard?
18196What time more suitable for this operation could have been selected than the anniversary of our great national festival?
18196What unlooked for calamity has quelled the debates of the Senate and calmed the excitement of the people?
18196What voice of man can add to the impressiveness and solemnity of this scene?
18196What, effect will this new- born ambition have upon ourselves?
18196When will savages be satiated with blood?
18196Where is such a law to be found?
18196Where shall we trace anew the ever- advancing line of our empire?
18196Where, in the land of freemen, was the right of petition ever placed on the exclusive basis of morality and virtue?
18196Who could foretell its termination, or its dread results?
18196Who had patience to bear with enthusiasm that overleaped its mark, and with intolerance that defeated its own generous purposes?
18196Who provoked, and by what unpardonable offence, this disastrous strife between two eminent Republics, so scandalous to Democratic Institutions?
18196Who was bold enough to provoke them, and bring the execration of the nation down upon his own head?
18196Who was fit to preside in such a case?
18196Who were those who fell at Alamo?
18196Why, then, object to a candid and fearless investigation of the subject?
18196Will it leave us the virtue to continue the career of social progress?
18196Will these conquests extend her domain, or will they be usurped by ever- grasping slavery?
18196Would he accept or reject such a nomination?
18196Would that severity be magnanimous, or even just?
18196Yet it is due to mutual friendship, to ask once in a while how we do?
18196of Texian fame?
18196or shall it be abandoned?
18196or shall we complete his subjugation?
20183''Have you,''said Mr. Canning,''any claim to the Shetland Islands?'' 20183 Is the time arriving,"he asks,"for me to speak?
20183''Have you any_ claim_,''said I,''to the mouth of Columbia River?''
20183''Why, do you not_ know_,''replied he,''that we have a claim?''
20183''Would I appoint a time for that purpose?''
20183A_ fortiori_, then, was he not amenable to the censure of the House?
20183And where was it possible to draw the line?
20183Even on the dry pages of Niles''s"Weekly Register"occurs the triumphant paragraph:"Who would not be an American?
20183I said, No....''And why so?''
20183I was hesitating upon an answer when he relieved me from embarrassment by saying,''Peut- être sont- ce des considerations de finance?''
20183Slavery, the Indians, the public lands, the collection and disbursement of public money, the tariff, and foreign affairs:--what is to become of them?"
20183So now the puzzled cry went up:"How shall the question be put?"
20183What had the two great parties to advise concerning the policy of the country in this hour of peril?
20183What was to be done?
20183What was to be thought, the latter angrily asked, of a president who refused to make any distinction between the sheep and the goats?
20183Will a change produce reform?
20183Yet what could he do?
20183or must I go down to the grave and leave posterity to do justice to my father and to me?"
15392*** Having now shown what can not save the Union, I return to the question with which I commenced, How can the Union be saved?
15392A remarkable change has taken place since; but what did the wise and great men of all parts of the country think of slavery then?
15392Absorbed in a thousand trifles, how has the nation all at once come to a stand?
15392Admitting, however, that the old United States are in no danger from this principle-- why is it so?
15392Again: Have they stood forth faithfully to repel violations of the Constitution?
15392All political power may be abused, but is it to stop where abuse may begin?
15392An American no longer?
15392And are there any degrees of injustice which will withdraw from sovereign power the capacity of making a given law?
15392And is it not plain to every man?
15392Are all the seeds of distraction or division crushed and dissipated?"
15392Because the defence was unsuccessful?
15392But can this be done?
15392But can you make this compact?
15392But does he know how remarks of that sort will be received by the laboring people of the North?
15392But how stands the profession of devotion to the Union by our assailants, when brought to this test?
15392But what did he say?
15392But will it be the last?
15392But will the North agree to this?
15392Can they point to any State where a powerful oligarchy, possessed of immense wealth, has ever existed without attempting to meddle in the government?
15392Do gentlemen perceive the consequences to which their arguments must lead if they are of any value?
15392Does not the event show they judged rightly?
15392Does success gild crime into patriotism, and the want of it change heroic self- devotion to imprudence?
15392Does the gentleman remember that freedom to preach was first gained, dragging in its train freedom to print?
15392Even now, does not manufacturing, banking, and commercial capital perpetually vex our politics?
15392Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine?
15392Have sixty years taught us nothing?
15392Have they abstained from violating the Constitution?
15392Have you settled the questions which you have been so long discussing and deliberating upon at Washington?
15392How is each of the thirty States to defend itself?
15392How is the Union formed?
15392How shall the stream rise above its fountain?
15392How would the intimation have been received, that Warren and his associates should have merited a better time?
15392If even all those great patriots, and all that enthusiasm for justice and liberty, did not avail to keep us safe in such a Union, what will?
15392If it is, why does our power of correction sleep?
15392If this be so, what are they worth?
15392If we look back to the history of the commerce of this country in the early years of this government, what were our exports?
15392If you make it enter into a new and additional compact, is it any longer the same Union?
15392In 1831, what was the state of things?
15392In what estimation did they hold it at the time when this Constitution was adopted?
15392Is a citizen, or are the courts of justice to inquire whether that, or any other law, is just, before they obey or execute it?
15392Is all peace and all quiet?"
15392Is all quiet-- all happy?
15392Is it denied that those States possess a republican form of government?
15392Is it, then, not certain, that if something is not done to arrest it, the South will be forced to choose between abolition and secession?
15392Is the assertion of such freedom before the age?
15392Is the doctrine to be sustained here that it is imprudent for men to aid magistrates in executing the laws?
15392Is the original cause of the movement-- that slavery is a sin, and ought to be suppressed-- weaker now than at the commencement?
15392Is the right to hold slaves a right which Massachusetts enjoys?
15392Is there any danger of the torch being applied to any portion of the country?
15392Is there any thing inherently wrong in such denunciation of such criticism?
15392Is there any violation of principle there?
15392It has been asked why Lovejoy and his friends did not appeal to the executive-- trust their defence to the police of the city?
15392It is in fact simply this: Has the civil magistrate a right to put down a riot?
15392Men are continually asking each other, Had Lovejoy a right to resist?
15392Mr. President, what is a compromise?
15392Mr. President, what is an individual man?
15392Now, I ask, what limitation can possibly be placed upon the powers of a government claiming and exercising such rights?
15392On a church resolution, hidden often in its records, and meant only as a decent cover for servility in daily practice?
15392On a few cold prayers, mere lip- service, and never from the heart?
15392On political parties, with their superficial influence at best, and seeking ordinarily only to use existing prejudices to the best advantage?
15392Or has the South greater means of influencing or controlling the movements of this Government now, than it had when the agitation commenced?
15392Perhaps not-- but who shall answer for their successors?
15392Pray, what is the evidence which every gentleman must have obtained on this subject, from information sought by himself or communicated by others?
15392Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?
15392Shall we, then, trust to mere politics, where even revolution has failed?
15392So much before the age as to leave one no right to make it because it displeases the community?
15392That speaker has lived twenty- two years, and the complaint of twenty- three millions of people is,"Shall we never hear of any thing but slavery?"
15392The Union is a compact; and is it an equal party to that compact, because it has equal Federal rights?
15392The man who understands his own time, and whose genius moulds the future to his views, he is a statesman, is he not?
15392The next question to be considered is: What has caused this belief?
15392The next question, going one step further back, is: What has caused this widely- diffused and almost universal discontent?
15392The question is, what must we do if we do anything?
15392The question now is, Did he act within the constitution and the laws?
15392The question then recurs: What is the cause of this discontent?
15392The question, then, is, How can this be done?
15392Was Hampden imprudent when he drew the sword and threw away the scabbard?
15392Well, what was the result?
15392What States are to secede?
15392What am I to be?
15392What are we-- what is any man-- worth who is not ready and willing to sacrifice himself for the benefit of his country when it is necessary?
15392What consequence follows?
15392What else was it that foiled the whole power of Persia at Marathon and Salamis?
15392What follows?
15392What is a State in the sense of the Constitution?
15392What is that Union?
15392What is the denunciation with which we are charged?
15392What is this harsh criticism of motives with which we are charged?
15392What is to become of the army?
15392What is to become of the navy?
15392What is to become of the public lands?
15392What is to remain American?
15392What may you not do by dexterity and perseverance with this terrific power?
15392What must it be?
15392What must we admit, and into what?
15392What new guaranties does he propose to prevent the voyage from being again turned into a piratical slave- trading cruise?
15392What then is the professed result?
15392What was the course of my friend upon this subject of the Wilmot proviso?
15392What were the purposes of coming into the Union among the original States?
15392What will be the judgment of our constituents, when we return to them and they ask us:"How have you left your country?
15392What would become of Missouri?
15392Where is the eagle still to tower?
15392Where is the flag of the Republic to remain?
15392Where is the line to be drawn?
15392Where shall our church organizations or parties get strength to attack their great parent and moulder, the slave power?
15392Where, then, was the imprudence?
15392Who converted these men and their distinguished associates?
15392Who could tune for Slavery?
15392Who doubts it?
15392Who invents this libel on his country?
15392Who is so foolish-- I beg everybody''s pardon-- as to expect to see any such thing?
15392Who, then, or what converted Burlingame and Wilson, Sumner and Adams, Palfrey and Mann, Chase and Hale, and Phillips and Giddings?
15392Why give mobs to one and monuments to the other?
15392Why is the constitutional guaranty suffered to be inactive?
15392Why should not slave capital exert the same influence?
15392Why, sir, what coercion is there?
15392Why, what would be the result?
15392Why, who are the laboring people of the North?
15392Why?
15392Will not all the monarchs of the Old World pronounce our glorious Republic a disgraceful failure?
15392Will she join the arrondissement of the slave States?
15392Will the gentlemen tell us that it is the quantity of slaves, not the quality of slavery, which takes from a government the republican form?
15392Will the honorable Senator permit me to interrupt him for a moment?
15392Will the militia of the nation, which must furnish our soldiers and seamen, increase as slaves increase?
15392Will you go home and leave all in disorder and confusion-- all unsettled-- all open?
15392Yes, but what sort of a compact?
15392You have thus had forced upon you the greatest and the gravest question that can ever come under your consideration: How can the Union be preserved?
15392or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground?
15392what response, Mr. President, can you make to that wife of your choice and those children with whom you have been blessed by God?
11379And Joe Daviess?
11379And Tommy Dye?
11379And knowing this, she loves him, and the judge and his nephew trust him?
11379And what are the signs of true love? 11379 But about her-- is she fond of him?
11379But how does it happen that you are here, my son?
11379But tell me, dearest, can souls communicate without speech or sign-- if they only love enough?
11379But what does it mean, dear? 11379 But who is the stranger with them, David?
11379But why did the scoundrels run away before finishing their infamous work? 11379 But why-- loving her-- should he wish to marry her against her will?"
11379Can you see any clouds, David? 11379 Can you see the blue jay?
11379Dearest, when a thing like this happens the law has to take certain--"What has the law to do with my uncle Philip''s clothes? 11379 Did David have to go through the big deadening, William?"
11379Did n''t you get the coffee made to suit you, after all that rumpus? 11379 Do n''t you know me?
11379Do you happen to know, William, what these distinguished gentlemen are discussing with such interest and gravity? 11379 Do you know where he is to be found in case I should want to send for him?"
11379Do you mean to tell me that a man of half Alston''s intelligence does n''t know that those men never have a horse that they have n''t stolen?
11379Have you heard anything more about the attorney- general''s offering his services? 11379 He is no relation to her, is he?
11379Hey? 11379 How can any creature in human form be so utterly unnatural-- so wholly a monster?
11379How can the child have known what was going on? 11379 How can those murderous scoundrels have known that the attorney- general would ride to Anvil Rock alone?
11379How can you take me?
11379How could you? 11379 If I had a prayer to make for any great good... it should be that one of your children should be the first American poet?"
11379Is it something that you have written?
11379Is it the end of the world, dear heart?
11379Is n''t he a bold buccaneer?
11379Is this the same thing that has come down the ages? 11379 Let me think-- what kind would be best?"
11379Now, what''s the use of raking all that up again? 11379 Ruth, my dear, what''s all this about some stranger''s bringing you home last night?"
11379The first is this: How may a girl tell what people call''true love''from every other kind of love? 11379 They are a handsome, well- matched young couple, are they not?"
11379Well, what are they?
11379Well, what of it?
11379What are they digging for? 11379 What difference does the saddle make?
11379What foolish thing have I said? 11379 What if it_ is_ General Jackson?"
11379What is Andrew Jackson but a sinner, too? 11379 What is his name?"
11379What is it, David, dear?
11379What is it?
11379What is it?
11379What is your opinion, Father? 11379 What shall we do?"
11379What time to- day did Pressley leave Cedar House? 11379 What was it that those men on horseback brought here?
11379Where are you? 11379 Where is Ruth?
11379Where is she? 11379 Where were you, William?
11379Who are those men, Paul? 11379 Who fetched all these things?"
11379Who is this gentleman, David?
11379Who says Joe Daviess is going away?
11379Who''s afraid of a comet with only one tail? 11379 Why not?"
11379Why should n''t I be lively?
11379Will you go with me, David? 11379 You ca n''t help not knowing anything, can you, poor dear?"
11379You know him?
11379You like them?
11379And Philip Alston, who pretends to love her?
11379And William Pressley is an honest man, is n''t he, even though such a solemn, pompous prig?
11379And do you know any more about birds than you do about love, you poor dear?
11379And even now, who knows whether or not that fearful price need have been paid?
11379And is it true that none of the singing birds were here till the settlers came?
11379And it''s a ticklish business, going over there in the dark, is n''t it, old man?"
11379And may I see them, Sister?
11379And then what was there to tell her or any one?
11379And what are they doing here?"
11379And what are you here for, my son?
11379And what do you really think of it, Father?"
11379And where is the doctor''s horse?
11379And why do birds sing so seldom in the depths of the forest?
11379Are they here?
11379But how are we going to prove it?"
11379But how does anybody know?
11379But how long would it or could it stand against the doubts of the man she loved?
11379By what means can they possibly have learned anything about the plan?
11379Ca n''t you say what a fine fellow William is?
11379Can it be one of the sure signs of true love to feel at the first sight of a face that it is the one you have most wanted to see all your life?
11379Can it be possible that he has sent you-- on business?
11379Can you hear the silvery ripple of their plaints?
11379Can you hear them?
11379Can you hear what I say?
11379Can you hear-- dear heart?
11379Can you realize that it''s true?
11379Could I, dear?"
11379Could this be Ruth speaking like that-- and to himself?
11379Did any bird say so?
11379Did n''t all the wasps and flies go blind and die sooner than common, right in the middle of the hottest weather?
11379Did you know that he once held a high office under Spain?
11379Did you see or hear them, Father?"
11379Do n''t you see he is n''t well?
11379Do n''t you see?
11379Do you hear?
11379Do you know that girl?
11379Do you think so, David?
11379Does it still interest you, Father?
11379Had he come back when you came away?
11379Has anything happened to Ruth?
11379Has anything happened?"
11379Has n''t he always been our best friend?"
11379Have you seen him?
11379Have you the slightest idea how they could have learned anything of our plan?"
11379He is determined to put it in motion before he leaves for Tippecanoe--""Then he is really going?"
11379How can he endure to see her, much less profess fondness for her, knowing what he has done?"
11379How can it be so hot in December?
11379How can she be?"
11379How can she tell?
11379How could we have forgotten?"
11379How did they find out enough to enable them to set this villanous trap?
11379How do the signs of true love look?
11379How do they feel, I wonder?
11379How do you think they found out?
11379How is it with you?"
11379I certainly have not-- have you?"
11379I have n''t seen any reason to change, have you?
11379If I could do my part as well as you do yours, we would n''t fail so often, would we, old man?"
11379If I could only once get my hand on a particle of evidence.--Do you suppose he could have known what we were talking about?"
11379Is anything wrong with Ruth?
11379Is he badly, hurt?
11379Is it decided that he will go?"
11379Is it the same that made a dignified gentleman, like David, dance-- as those fanatics are doing down there-- till he became a laughing- stock?
11379Is it the same that made a sensible man like Saul join his faith to a witch and believe that he saw visions?
11379Is it the same that we find in the Bible-- making great men and wise ones do such wild things?
11379Is it you-- uncle Philip?
11379Is n''t it good?"
11379Is n''t it like a chime of fairy bells, heard in a dream?
11379Is n''t it ready?"
11379Is she your sister?
11379Is there anything in the science of your profession to explain it?
11379It would n''t be possible for you to do that, would it?"
11379Looking upward toward his own reward, even this bitter, black winter''s night became as nothing; but Toby-- what was there for Toby?
11379May I ask, sir, if you can tell me the precise date of the attorney- general''s departure-- for the seat of war, I mean-- for Tippecanoe?"
11379May I read it now?
11379Oh-- why-- don''t you come to me?
11379Ruth must know sooner or later, and, knowing, would she still love him?
11379See-- was there ever anything so lovely?"
11379So that he now plunged in without any address at all:"I say-- who pays for them there youngsters, yonder?"
11379The question is-- How?
11379The very trees, the very leaves on the trees, seemed to be singing together and praising God.... Will you share this divine peace with me?
11379Then flashing round on him in her impetuous way:"Why do n''t you say that you feel his heart beat?
11379There is no reason, is there, to think that she does n''t love the young man?
11379Was he going with the attorney- general to Tippecanoe?
11379We are all proud of him-- hey, judge?"
11379We''ve gone over all that-- and more than once-- haven''t we?
11379What are the robbers or the country to me-- beside him?
11379What are they looking for?
11379What business can he or any other decent man have with the nest of rattlesnakes that we ca n''t drag out from under that bluff?"
11379What can it be?
11379What did you say?"
11379What do I care about what happens to the attorney- general?
11379What do you make of it all?
11379What do you mean by reading anything so tiresome out of that foolish book?
11379What do you mean by speaking so to my uncle Robert?
11379What do you think it could have been?
11379What does it matter, after all-- our knowing nothing about ourselves, who we are, or where we came from?
11379What have you allowed to happen to her?
11379What have you done with the child?
11379What if he has n''t?"
11379What in the world can it mean, David?
11379What is it you want?
11379What is she doing?
11379What is the matter with them?
11379What is there to expect from him?
11379What is there to put round them-- to wrap them in?"
11379What is wrong?
11379What makes you in such an all- fired hurry?"
11379What possible object could Philip Alston have in concealing anything that he might know about you and me?
11379What right had he to choose her husband?
11379What should she do when he was gone?
11379What under heaven could she have been doing there-- in such a place, at such a time?
11379What was Ruth''s relation to Philip Alston?
11379What was his hold upon Judge Knox?
11379What was his influence over William Pressley?
11379What was it?"
11379What was this power that he wielded over the whole family of Cedar House?
11379What''s the matter?"
11379What''s the odds?
11379Where do you think we came from, David?
11379Where is William?
11379Where is he?
11379Where is she?
11379Where is she?"
11379Where were you going?"
11379Which way did they go?
11379Who are they?"
11379Who are you that come here putting your hand on my niece, and ordering the family about?
11379Who could blame the girl?
11379Who ever heard of such a thing before?
11379Who is that?"
11379Who is with him?"
11379Who knows?
11379Who that has known the horse at his best can have failed to observe and recognize and be moved by this fact?
11379Who would tell her?
11379Why are you so slow?"
11379Why did n''t we think to get your rifle?
11379Why did you tell him?"
11379Why do n''t you answer?
11379Why do n''t you speak?
11379Why do the leaves droop like that?
11379Why do they always cross the stream in a slanting direction?
11379Why do they never fly straight across?
11379Will you come back with me to the chapel?
11379Will you come into the other room and see them?
11379Will you come with me this night to the foot of the cross?...
11379Will you give it to me now, sir?
11379Will you never come?
11379Would she never reach it?
11379You are out of place here; as Uncle Philip Alston says--""Then why did he put me here?"
11379You do see, do n''t you?"
11379You remembered, did n''t you, to tell him that the latch- string of Cedar House always hangs on the outside?
11379You will remember-- and tell her?"
11379You wo n''t mind stopping to tell Ruth, doctor?
11379and what were you doing?
11379she cried in wounded reproach,"how can you?
20160_ Q._ How do you prove that there is but one true God? 20160 All were put into the utmost consternation-- men, women, and children crying,''What shall we do?'' 20160 Almost of course the good people began with the question, What good men shall we keep out? 20160 And who can look at our past history and feel proud of our present status?
20160But when they handed Dr. Dwight a list of subjects for class disputation, to their surprise, he selected this:''Is the Bible the word of God?''
20160Could this be due to the Quaker faith in the sufficiency of"the Light that lighteneth every man that cometh into the world"?
20160Did not these things betoken a superficial piety, springing up like seed in the thin soil of rocky places?
20160How could the two parties walk together when one prayed_ Vater unser_, and the other_ unser Vater_?
20160It is a prevailing trait of this theology, born of the great revival, that it has constantly held before itself not only the question, What is truth?
20160Nay, verily, said Murray( in this following one of his colleagues, James Relly); what saith the Scripture?
20160Shall we be unworthy of the trust?
20160Should this consent be given?
20160The foundations were destroyed, and what should the righteous do?
20160The governor was incompetent and corrupt, and the minister was faithful and plain- spoken; what could result but conflict?
20160This, with Doddridge''s hymn,"My God, and is thy table spread?"
20160Were all the population of Salem to be reckoned as of the church of Salem?
20160What form will the structure take?
20160Would it tend to mitigate the intensity of sectarian competition, or would it tend rather to aggravate it?
20160and if not, who should"discern between the righteous and the wicked"?
20160but also the question, How shall it be preached?
10138And she is such a very pretty girl,continued Peggy,--"so intelligent and graceful; do n''t you think so, Sam?"
10138And what did Mrs. Jaynes say?
10138Any one here seen a ghost? 10138 Branches, eh?
10138But I may give you just a look, now and then?
10138But could I have seen him? 10138 But how will you catch them?"
10138But is n''t it going to stand in our window any more?
10138But tell me truly, was I indeed such a blessing to you,''the very cherubim that did preserve thee''? 10138 But the stranger, the foreign lady?"
10138But where is the nosegay, aunty?
10138But why do n''t you like her, Tira?
10138But why, then, did he cease to write? 10138 But, cousin,"said she, smiling,"what gem have you there, hidden in the carriage, too precious to be seen?
10138Ca n''t we buy some young turkeys?
10138Ca n''t you drive there with me, Cousin Sam, and get some more?
10138Can you let me have some of your young turkeys, ma''am?
10138Cure me of Kate Stevens?
10138Did you give away the flower- pot too? 10138 Did you know anything of the young lady?"
10138Did you see it yourself, Martina?
10138Do n''t I know it, you poor dear?
10138Do you know what you have seen?
10138Do you wish me to repent having trusted you, Kate?
10138George-- who?
10138Ha''n''t I been through the same straits myself? 10138 He pulls down the old,"say they;"but what does he give us in place of it?
10138How could I forget?
10138I!--you!--but how, caro Padrone?
10138If I stay,said Dante, when there was question of going to Rome,"who will go?
10138Is it possible?
10138Many branches broken, Padrone?
10138Pray, what have you got such a spite against the Jayneses for?
10138Pretty,--isn''t it?
10138See you aught, Sister Annie?
10138The Button- Rose was a gift from him, then?
10138Well, I declare, you han''t heerd about them turkeys, hev ye? 10138 Well, I do''no'';--want to eat''em or raise''em?"
10138What can we do?
10138What do you mean by askin''such a question as that, Cornele?
10138What is that remark of Byron about young ladies''friendship? 10138 What was his name?"
10138What, Kate?
10138Who told you about Mrs. Peters''s turkeys, Cousin Sam?
10138Who''s got a spite against''em? 10138 Why do n''t you tell the man he is wasting that water?
10138Why how do yew do, Mister Greene? 10138 Why strikest not?
10138Why, Kate, do you really wish to get rid of me?
10138Why, Kate, what are you conjuring up in your foolish little noddle?
10138Why, there,--don''t you see? 10138 Why?"
10138Yes; but what ails you, child? 10138 ''That''s the way I am to be used, is it?'' 10138 *****What say you to the humming- bird now?"
10138--''What is it now?''
10138----Have I ever acted in private theatricals?
10138----How can a man help writing poetry in such a place?
10138----Where have I been for the last three or four days?
10138A Prologue?
10138A prettier one you never saw in France or Cuba, Miss Carrie,--that''s what papa calls you, I suppose?"
10138After a moment''s silence, the lady asked in a softer tone,"Now do tell me, Morani, is it true that poor Hans recanted before he died?"
10138All to once Miss Jaynes wheeled and spoke to me:''Well, Miss Tira,''says she,''can I have a dollar from you?''
10138And how could it be otherwise?
10138And now what do you think the Syndic wanted the key for?
10138And shall we dare extend our profane comparisons even higher than the Cabinet?
10138And what do these names prove?
10138Are all these traditions absolute fictions, and is he himself a pure creation of the imagination?
10138Are not these results proofs irrefragable of the wisdom of the government under which they have come to pass?
10138Are the States which name themselves, in simplicity or in irony, the Free States, to be always the satrapies of a central power like this?
10138Are they not akin?
10138As I was helping my aunt exchange her bridal for her travelling attire, I whispered,"What say you to my doctrine of first love, aunty?"
10138But if Twilight should be pensive at the demise of Lorenzo, is there any reason why Aurora should weep outright upon the same occasion?
10138But will the many always thus submit themselves to the domination of the few?
10138But, in sober truth, Katy, why is there not as true poetry in battling with feeling as in yielding to it?
10138Could not Day or Night move from Julian''s monument, and take up the same position at Lorenzo''s tomb, or"Ninny''s tomb,"or any other tomb?
10138Did I arrive before he had left?"
10138Did I ever tell you about a month I spent up in Centreville, the year I came home from Germany?
10138Did Michel Angelo look upon his subject as a purely imaginary one?
10138Did you ever happen to see that most soft- spoken and velvet- handed steam- engine at the Mint?
10138Did you ever meet again?"
10138Do you know how important good jockeying is to authors?
10138Do you think that only smooth brows and bright cheeks ought to be kissed?
10138Down at the Island, deer- shooting.--How many did I bag?
10138Gentility without ability I do despise; but where''t''a''n''t so,''t''a''n''t no matter; but I''xpect it do n''t ensure the faowls none, doos it?"
10138Got the bread sot to rise, hev ye?
10138Has she a story?"
10138Have the Representative Men of the nation been made or maintained great and magnanimous, too?
10138How came they to be furnished with such a luxury?
10138How have the men of America stood this test?
10138How many of our readers can name the names of their successors of the present day?
10138How would you fancy being a Sukey Fay, Kate?"
10138I brought home one buck shot.--The Island is where?
10138I cried,"where is our little rose?"
10138I read it twice, and then asked,--"Where does he mention his wife?"
10138Inflated obscurities, bloated insignificances, who knows or cares whence they came or what they are?
10138Is it society to sit in one of your chairs?
10138Is n''t that plain?"
10138Is our spirit effectually broken?
10138Is the success of this conspiracy to be final and eternal?
10138Martina alone ventured on the awe- struck whisper of"What was it like, Beppo?"
10138Melindy?"
10138Now he hardly seems entitled to marry; for how can he protect a woman, who can not protect himself?
10138On the third page is a sentence which read now is of terrible import:"Mutiny with[ among?]
10138Pretty sightly places they be though, a''n''t they?
10138Rejecting, then, as nugatory, every attempt to assign Robin Hood a definite position in history, what view shall we adopt?
10138Shall we bring the shadowy majesty of Washington''s august idea alongside the microscopic realities of to- day?
10138She ha''n''t got round yet, he s she?
10138So?"
10138Solitary was he?
10138Suppose the storm had laid my head low, and turned up my toes; what then, eh, little girls?"
10138The bullet itself he took out of his waistcoat pocket, and holding it towards Beppo, asked,"Had n''t it a mark?"
10138The romance is what I want; and what''s that without''the magic of a name''?"
10138Then the wife of the skipper lost at sea Said,"God has touched him!--why should we?"
10138Think you now it would really have been better to go a- swinging on a willow- tree over a pond, and so have made a good poetical end?"
10138Though I never owned a horse, have I not been the proprietor of six equine females, of which one was the prettiest little"Morgin"that ever stepped?
10138Tucker?"
10138WHERE WILL IT END?
10138Was I to be squeaked out of all my wisdom, and knowledge, and device, after this fashion?
10138Was Lorenzo any more to Aurora than Julian, that she should weep for him only?
10138Was he a real cousin?"
10138Was this Lorenzo, the husband of Madeleine, the father of Catharine?
10138What artist has she produced that did not instinctively fly, like Allston, to regions in which genius could breathe and art was possible?
10138What be you calc''latin''to give?"
10138What book has the South ever given to the libraries of the world?
10138What could I do?
10138What could my husband do more?
10138What divine, excepting the godly men whose theologic skill has attained to the doctrine that Slavery is of the essence of the Gospel of Jesus Christ?
10138What do you think an admiring friend said the other day to one that was talking good things,--good enough to print?
10138What event in our annals is there that Slavery has not set her brand upon it to mark it as her own?
10138What had that to do with it?"
10138What is a Prologue?
10138What is the shame that clothes the skin, To the nameless horror that lives within?
10138What is the use of my saying what some of these opinions are?
10138What need to recount the Fugitive- Slave Bill, and the other"Compromises"of 1850?
10138What to do with these brisk young men who break through all fences, and make themselves at home in every house?
10138What was her name?
10138What was it like?"
10138What was that thing which appeared, twenty years ago, on the tower of San Ciprano?"
10138What was the matter?
10138What work of art has she ever added to its galleries?
10138What would be the state of the highways of life, if we did not drive our_ thought- sprinklers_ through them with the valves open, sometimes?
10138Where are now Calhoun, and Clay, and Webster?
10138Where did you and Melindy go that day arter berries?"
10138Where will shortly be Cass, and Buchanan, and Benton, and their like?
10138Who are to take their places?
10138Who can blame a man for being satisfied with the argument,"I was ill, and am well,--great is Hahnemann!"?
10138Who ever heard of giving whiskey to a turkey?"
10138Who wants to see the ghost''s hat?"
10138Whom did you give it to?"
10138Whom else did you look for?"
10138Why are they hindered from taking such newspapers as they please?
10138Why can they have no free schools?
10138Why can they not support their own ministers, and have a Gospel of Free Labor preached to them, if they choose?
10138Why does he not strike out a system of his own?
10138Why is it necessary that a missionary society be formed at the North to furnish them with such ministers as the slave- master can approve?
10138Why is it that the value of acres increases in a geometrical ratio, as they stretch away towards the North Star from the frontier of Slavery?
10138Why must Northern publishers expurgate and emasculate the literature of the world before it is permitted to reach them?
10138Will you read the letter?"
10138With every advantage for gathering strength and self- reliance, it is weak and dependent.--Why this difference between the two?
10138Wo n''t you please to read it to me?"
10138Would you like to see it once more?"
10138Yet who ever found a starved crow, or even saw one driven by hunger from any of his accustomed caution?
10138You have heard of our rich cousin in Cuba, Henry Morrison?"
10138You think you ca n''t let us have the turkeys?"
10138and are we never to be roused, by any indignities, to fervent resentment and effectual resistance?
10138and if I go, who will stay?"
10138and so we have witches too?"
10138at last he cried,--"What to me is this noisy ride?
10138ca n''t you sleep on deck without a pillow?
10138cried the Doctor,"do you mean that witches have more power than the Madonna?"
10138exclaimed the unwary Mrs. Prouty,--"do you mean to say you think he''s got any idea of such a thing, Bildad?"
10138fill a fresh bumper,--for why should we go logwood While the< nectar> still reddens our cups as they flow?
10138is the brand of meanness and compromise burnt in uneffaceably upon our souls?
10138what had happened?
10138what makes you so cross?"
10138when will you learn common sense?
10138why not share his new happiness with so dear a friend?"
18453''All very well,''said Aunt Sarah;''I have no doubt the excursion would be charming; but who will accompany you?''
18453''But if some person unknown to you should speak to you?''
18453''Do you mean to oppose the Administration and distress the Government?''
18453''For any threat of any fate, wouldst follow his commands?''
18453''How shall you begin it?''
18453''How?''
18453''I hope there was nothing unpleasant in that letter?''
18453''In other words, strong minded means weak minded, is that it, auntie?''
18453''Is Gus at home?''
18453''Is not every able editor a ruler of the world, being a persuader of it?''
18453''My dear madam, are you ill?''
18453''Porphyro''we know to be Louis Napoleon, but who are''Rodomant and Diamid?''
18453''Thank you, auntie, and you will not call us strong minded?''
18453''Well, well, girls, young people always can talk faster than old ones; but do you really think it safe for you to venture without escort?
18453''What do you mean by your long historical disquisitions?''
18453''Where is your mamma?''
18453''Which?''
18453''Who is our new visitor, Belle, who indulges in a tandem?''
18453''Why do you give us so much metaphysics?''
18453''Why, dear aunt,''said Lucy D----,''you would not have us weak minded, would you?
18453(_ Loud applause._) But how is it with the South?
18453(_ Loud cheers._) And where is the great giant State of the West-- Missouri?
18453***** Was not the silence of the forests holy?
18453And how as to Virginia?
18453And how as to money?
18453And if it does not, what is the use of repeating either of them day after day and week after week?
18453But how happens it that Belle Meeker is desperately in love with the Signor?
18453But how?
18453But what as to the results?
18453But what injury was_ that_ to England, compared to the seizure of Mexico by France?
18453But what is a letter?...
18453But what then?
18453But why should not every board of enrolment throughout the country also be a board of enlistment?
18453Can there be any doubt as to the result of such a conflict?
18453Debit and Credit; Money- making Farmers; Does Farming Pay?
18453Did I not, with the whole strength of my wishes and desires draw upon me this very love so dear to my heart and so fatal to my repose?
18453Did she study exclusively in the German schools of musical art?
18453Did you ever have an adventure of the sort''?
18453Do any of you who may be my readers know of half a dozen happy families in your circle of friends and acquaintance?
18453Do comparisons help us?
18453Do we ever sufficiently realize the duties which this marvellous union has enjoined upon us, the privileges with which it has endowed us?
18453Frederick P. Stanton, 73 Was He Successful?
18453HAS THE WAR GONE SLOWLY?
18453Had war been the result of the_ Trent_ affair, what would have become of our immense fleet of merchant ships which was then afloat in Indian waters?
18453Has not this truly national and patriotic poet a home in every American heart?
18453Have you forgotten your old friend Angelina Hobbs?
18453He heard them ask:''Is the six times Murdered really dead?
18453He will endeavor to see me before he goes; but will he succeed?
18453How fares it with young professional men during the first ten years of their career?
18453I said to myself:''Why should I write, when I will tell all to the prince royal( it seems to me as if I could call him thus during my whole life)?
18453If it does, why need both sets of advertisements appear at all?
18453In reading this clause, the question naturally arises: Why is this provision made applicable only to families in which the father is still living?
18453Is it not he who should write to my parents?
18453Is it not thus that such affairs are conducted?
18453Is it true that''our democratic institutions are now on trial?''
18453Is love then a never- ending source of sorrow?
18453NOT TOO SLOW-- WHY?
18453No man can find a substitute when he lies a- dying;--why should all his years be spent in the vain endeavor to find a substitute for living?
18453Now tell me unto whom most thanks our liege shall owe, When war is o''er?
18453O cunning foe, that round dost go these heavenward birds to snare, When every brighter line is vain, wouldst tempt them with despair?
18453One says to his companion:''Do you know who that is?''
18453Rubens is a great artist, but does that gainsay Raphael?
18453Shall the royal purple so daze our eyes, that we can not see the depths of heavenly blue?
18453The abbot''s brows were sternly bent an instant on his guest:''Dost thou-- thou dost not, sure!--invite this traitor to thy breast?''
18453The abbot''s cheer grew calm and clear:''Now, Master, tell me true: For aught that Satan proffers thee, such trespass wouldst thou_ do_?''
18453Then a question occurred: how should we divide the honors, supposing such an article should really find its way into print?
18453WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
18453What are these two pitiful islands in comparison with the great, wealthy, and fertile island which, lies to the west of them?
18453What can hold it together?
18453What can prevent such an agglomeration from falling to pieces?
18453What do you mean, papa?''
18453What do you suppose he is worth?''
18453What does Europe for any of its toiling millions who reject this munificent offer?
18453What is Rhythm?
18453What is meant by the term,''strong- minded woman''?''
18453What is the result of this decision?
18453What is to be done?
18453What more can be said?
18453What needeth but to own thy sin and straight thy sin forsake?''
18453What title to recognition as an independent power can the Confederate rebels present to the neutral powers of the world?
18453What will my parents say?
18453What wise and good man would wish to save it from extinction?
18453What would become of Paterfamilias, his family, and his friends, if they were deprived of this resource?
18453What would become of him if the provender supplied him by his newspaper were suddenly cut off?
18453What, meantime, can I say by way of explanation?
18453When Mrs. Meeker came in, she demanded, in an irritated tone,''What do you want, Harriet?''
18453When shall I be at peace with my conscience?
18453When shall I see him again?
18453Who is he?
18453Who is it?''
18453Why did I not show him the abyss into which we were about to fall?...
18453Why did not these reflections present themselves to me before?
18453Why is this?
18453Why should not a widow, having two uncommissioned sons in the army, have her remaining son exempt, as well as if her husband were still living?
18453With all these vast natural advantages, has man, in our country, performed his duty, in availing himself of the bounteous gifts of Providence?
18453Would there not be material for a standard quarrel in the fact that neither could claim sole proprietorship?
18453will she rise no more to deliver her faithful children from mortal anguish?''
20064And what will you do afterwards?
20064And what will you do with it?
20064As good a one as I know how?
20064But if I should refuse you admission?
20064Do you know anything about the business?
20064Do you want a hand?
20064Do you want the whole of it at once?
20064Have you been brought up to work?
20064Have you room for an apprentice?
20064How can that be?
20064How much do you charge for board?
20064How much do you need?
20064How much is it, sir?
20064How often do you get drunk in the week?
20064How shall I get something to eat?
20064How?
20064If I take you, will you stay with me and work out your time?
20064Is it not good French, then?
20064Is your father willing that you should learn this trade?
20064Well how much do you charge?
20064What is going on?
20064What salary do you ask?
20064What shall I do,asked the governor,"if the stamped paper should be sent to me by the king''s authority?"
20064What''s the excitement about?
20064Why, what age are you?
20064But how did people measure time during the countless ages that rolled away before the invention of the clock?
20064But the terrible question was, how near right is the chronometer?
20064But who and what was this man, and why was he performing these laborious journeys?
20064But who could pick them out?
20064But, in the mean time, are you right in abandoning this property, and your country with it?
20064But, then, what is carbon?
20064Do you mark that sentence, reader?
20064Does he live economically?
20064Does he manage it well?
20064Does the reader know how the industrial classes were treated in former times?
20064Has he capital enough for his business?
20064He was greatly taken with them, and he said to himself:"Why not try a few letters on a similar plan from Washington, to be published in New York?"
20064He would enter an office and ask in his whining note:--"Do you want a hand?"
20064How is this?
20064I''d cry, And lightly fly Into my saddle seat; My rein I''d slack, My whip I''d crack-- What music is so sweet?
20064In the course of a few years, eight bouncing girls and boys filled his little house; and the question recurs with force: How did he support them all?
20064Is his business reasonably safe?
20064Is the supposed borrower an honest man?
20064Maydole?"
20064Need I say that from that moment the influential classes, almost to a man, dropped him?
20064Was this pure philanthropy?
20064Well, what do you complain of?"
20064What can a city of yesterday, they ask, find to place in its archives, beyond the names of the first settlers, and the erection of the first elevator?
20064What mortal eye can discern in a man the_ genuine_ celestial fire before he has proved its existence by the devotion of a lifetime to his object?
20064When?
20064Where is now the negro car?
20064Where?"
20064Who can it be?"
20064Who can wonder at it?
20064Who has supplied all these millions of miles of wire?
20064Who is it?
20064Why are the operatives at Lowell less discontented than elsewhere?
20064Why not?
12771''Do you think so?'' 12771 ''No, sir,''replied he, with eagerness;''what is it?''
12771''So you ca n''t pay it, eh? 12771 But suppose the Doctor should leave you?"
12771Can you get out that wine,asked the owner,"without discharging the tea?"
12771Can you take a party up to the city in this gale?
12771Captain Porter,said he, with awful solemnity,"are you a captain in Israel?"
12771Had you not better defer your speech?
12771Has he committed murder? 12771 How am I to get there?"
12771How can you preside over that House to- day?
12771How have you made it?'' 12771 If they had been opposed to pillars and ornaments, why did they invite scientific men to prepare pictures and plans almost inevitably ornamental?
12771If we are restricted in the use of our money to the enumerated powers, on what principle can the purchase of Louisiana be justified?
12771Is all this surprising V Why should Democrats think it so? 12771 Is it owing to ignorance or prejudice,"he wrote,"that I have not yet met a single person who had discovered, or would allow the merit of this work?"
12771May he not be tempted,added the President,"to name his reward?"
12771Of what use would it be?
12771Shall we suppress the impost, and give that advantage to foreign over domestic manufactures? 12771 The happiness of my life,"writes her father,"depends upon your exertions; for what else, for whom else, do I live?"
12771Well,said Davis,"do n''t you know why we have given the contract to you?"
12771What can I say?
12771What did you mean, Captain, by saying that you could get out the ship in one day?
12771What do you think of that?
12771What is this?
12771What will you get her out for?
12771Why do n''t you send in a bid?
12771Why not,said he to himself,"try, a few letters on a similar plan from this city, to be published in New York?"
12771Why then should we not invite him?
12771Why, what has he done?
12771Why?
12771''Do you know,''said he, holding up the paper to my face,''that it was by and through your agency that this paper ever became successful?''
12771--"How democratic?"
12771--"I rose up suddenly from the sofa, and rubbing my head,''What book shall I buy for her?''
12771A man worth$ 60,000, and ca n''t pay an old debt of$ 500?''
12771After a rigmarole of Roman history and Augustus Caesar, he proceeded thus:---"Shall we not profit by these examples of history?
12771After giving his own version of their proceedings, he said:"Well, what was the result?
12771And can one interest be crushed without manifest and immediate injury to all the others?
12771And may not this be part of the exquisite economy of nature, which ever strives to get into each place the smallest man that can fill it?
12771And what made John Adams President but his fiery utterances in favor of the Declaration of Independence?
12771And what_ was_ the question at issue?
12771Are authority and compulsion then the only engines by which you can be moved?
12771Are these costly and elegant persons humble believers?
12771Are we to say that the people of the United States are competent to judge of bread, but not of newspapers?
12771Are we to say that the people of the United States prefer evil to good?
12771Being asked one day what he considered to be the secret of success in business, he replied:--"Secret?
12771Besides, who knows but Van Buren is of the blood of the great Julius himself?
12771But has not the most relentless despot an interest in the prosperity of his subjects?
12771But how could he leave his mother alone on the farm?
12771But now, what remedy?
12771But what did he say?
12771But what is news?
12771But what then becomes of the interests of others?
12771But what will history say of restriction?
12771But why was it a_ conjecture_?
12771Can anything be worse than that?
12771Can the imagination paint anything more dreadful this side hell?"
12771Can they be measured by moneyed valuation?
12771Can we wonder that his neighbors thought him mad?
12771Can you point out to me any such paper, published in the city?''
12771Could he hope to succeed, when so many able and enterprising men had failed?
12771Did he help civilization, or was he an obstacle in its way?
12771Did he ripen and improve to the end, or did he degenerate and go astray?
12771Did they scout the project of building a palace for poor orphans?
12771During the first evening of his brother''s stay at his house the question was discussed, What should the young man do in his new country?
12771Give him but an oven, and would he not turn you out fire- proof and cold- proof India- rubber, as fast as a baker can produce loaves of bread?
12771Had he a right to keep his family in a condition so humiliating and painful?
12771Has Heaven more to grant?"
12771Has he robbed, forged, or run away with somebody''s wife?"
12771Has the God of heaven, in anger, here changed the order of nature?
12771He added, that he intended to lead a better life in these particulars for the future; but who can reform at forty- seven?
12771He declared that Demosthenes was his model,--an orator who was a master of all the arts?
12771He fought well; but would it do to promote a man to high rank who knew the game so well, and upon whom no man could get any_ hold_?
12771He had succeeded in the hardware business; why not return to it?
12771He spoke with the power of other days?
12771Her boy, too,--would he not be heir- presumptive to a throne?
12771How are we to limit the sway of tyrant Majority?
12771How was it that no one laughed outright at such billing and cooing as this?
12771I never knew a weak or ignorant person who had a good temper Why are girls to be told that they resemble angels, but to sink them below women?
12771If every boy in the Northern States old enough to understand the question had been asked, What is your country?
12771If the friends of Mr. Adams had set the will of the people at defiance on the tariff question, what had the supporters of General Jackson done?
12771If they had been content with Mr. Girard''s plain plan, would they have called in architects for others?
12771Is Mr. Biddle culpable?
12771Is it Clay, or is it Demosthenes?
12771Is it not a want of faith on our part that causes the reluctance and hesitation we all feel in urging others to avoid a peril so much more momentous?"
12771Is it possible that white men have lived in this delightful land for two hundred and fifty- seven years?
12771Is it to be expected that general laws can be adapted to the feelings of the more eastern and the more southern parts of so extensive a nation?
12771Is not that good luck?
12771Is not the following brief passage an almost exhaustive statement of the true American policy?
12771Jeopard, do we say?
12771Mr. Irving relates that a friend having expressed surprise at this, Mr. Astor replied:--"What would you have me do?
12771Nevertheless, is it not apparent that such meetings as this, conducted by a man of tact, good sense, and experience, must be an aid to good living?
12771Now, what was the first step of the Democratic Councils, after Mr. Girard''s death, in relation to the College?
12771Of what am I formed that I live, and why?
12771Of what service can I be in this world, either to you or any one else, with a body reduced to premature old age, and a mind enfeebled and bewildered?
12771Once, however, the compiler ventures to depart from his plan by inserting the lines by Sir William Jones,"What constitutes a State?"
12771Or dream of future happiness While on the road to hell?"
12771Or has not the captain of the steamboat made a mistake, and turned into the wrong river?"
12771Or have we made a mistake, and copied a passage from the speech of a Unionist of 1865?
12771See, now, they put that in the papers, wo n''t you?
12771Sir, are these advantages to be counted as trifles in the present state of the world?
12771The President is discussing the question, What shall we do with the surplus?
12771The boy happening to use the word"country,"the Northerner asked him,"What is your country?"
12771The great question has been, What is the condition of the Southern States and the feeling of the Southern people?
12771The old man cried out from the middle of his blanket,--"Has Mrs.---- paid that rent yet?"
12771The pastor said:"May it not be the natural delicacy we feel, and ought to feel, in approaching the interior consciousness of another person?"
12771The preacher speaks of"humble believers,"and we look around and ask, Where are they?
12771The problem was, how to produce in a_ mass_ of India- rubber the change effected on the surface by sulphur and sun?
12771The proper answer to this question depends upon another: What ought we to think of Napoleon Bonaparte?
12771The question arises, Why has not this paper been long ago outdone in giving the news?
12771The question at issue in all these measures, he maintained, was the same, and it was this: Are we a nation or a confederacy?
12771The question occurs, then, Was it right and best for the United States to declare war against Great Britain in 1812?
12771There is not left one pretext of alarm even to calumny; for bereft of fortune, of popular favor, and almost of friends, what could he accomplish?
12771Was he sincere, pure, just, and benevolent?
12771Was it here that Jamestown stood?
12771Was there ever a public man, not at the head of a state, so beloved as he?
12771Was this man, who lies dead here before us, faithful to his trust?
12771Were not four years of such vicissitude enough?
12771Were there no views to offices and profits under the trust?
12771Were they satisfied with the plan of it as described in his will?
12771What are we to say of the public that has so resolutely sustained this paper, which the outside world so generally condemns?
12771What are we to say of this?
12771What are we to think of a man who is at once so able and so false?
12771What are we to think of the Rings that seem now- a- days to form themselves, as it were, spontaneously in every great corporation?
12771What are we to think of the great numbers of Southern Yankees who were, and are, the bitterest foes of all that New England represents?
12771What city has presented Mr. Stanton with a house, or Mr. Welles with fifty thousand dollars''worth of government bonds?
12771What examples worthy of imitation will it furnish to posterity?
12771What have we left?
12771What is religion?
12771What is there in political life equal to it?
12771What more rational thing could they do?
12771What need was there that their Senator should sometimes be a mendicant and sometimes a pauper?
12771What pride, what pleasure will our children find in the events of such times?
12771What room in a benevolent heart for joy, when a point of time, a moment''s space removed us to that heavenly place, or shut us up in hell?
12771What was his relief when his creditor accosted him gayly with,"Well, Mr. Goodyear, what can I do for you to- day?"
12771What was it, then?
12771What was the New Jersey railroad worth when he and a few friends went over one day and bought it at auction?
12771When will you do it?"
12771Who can estimate the influence of these clear and emphatic utterances ten years after?
12771Who ever heard one more melodious?
12771Who ever heard such cheers, so hearty, distinct, and ringing, as those which his name evoked?
12771Who had ever touched India- rubber without loss?
12771Who proposes to pension him,--much less his_ mother_?"
12771Who so fortunate?
12771Who so happy as Theodosia?
12771Who thinks of_ his_ family, impoverished by the devotion of his attention to his country, instead of their advancement?
12771Who would have thought to find a romance in the history of India- rubber?
12771Who would have twenty millions at such a price?
12771Why did Mr. Clay neglect to convert the conjecture into certainty?
12771Why do the Abolitionists oppose colonization?
12771Why go to antiquity or to the Old World for subjects, when such a subject as this remains unwritten?
12771Why is it only in the Southern States that the doctrine of States''Rights is ever heard of?
12771Why is this?
12771Why is this?
12771Why should their opponents be astonished?
12771Why this change?
12771Why this difference?
12771Why was this?
12771Why was this?
12771Why, then, did not this powerful combination supplant the Herald?
12771Why, then, expose my person?
12771Why, then, has State pride died away in the North, and grown stronger in the South?
12771Why, then, is my father banished from a country for which he has encountered wounds and dangers and fatigue for years?
12771Would you believe it, my friend, that I have visited as many as fifteen sick people in a day?
12771Would you have me stay at home and weep for what I can not help?"
12771and how could the money be raised to pay for a seven years''education?
12771exclaimed Astor,"ca n''t I insure your ship myself?"
12771exclaimed Girard in great panic,"what shall I do?"
12771from what unfriendly cause does this arise?
12771my dear father, I do live, but how does it happen?
12771said Astor,"do n''t you know the reason?
12771said he,"can neither affection nor civility induce you to devote to me the small portion of time which I have required?
12771said he,"how can I sleep while twenty human beings are drowning every hour, and I am the man who can save them?"
12771said the commissary, observing his astonishment, is it you?"
12771what do you mean?''
20803And have four hundred such fellows a right to take our liberties?"
20803Or how did Cornwallis happen to be at Yorktown when Washington made such a long leap and pounced upon him there?
20803This led many people to ask,"What business has a parliament sitting the other side of the ocean to be making laws for us?"
20803What makes Mr. Fiske''s histories just what they are?
20803Why did the British armies make South Carolina their chief objective point after New York?
20803Why were New Jersey and the Hudson river so important?
15508But if the people of a Territory took away property in slaves, were they not also defying the Federal authorities?
15508But,urged Mason of Virginia,"I ask the Senator, then, what is to be done with the garrison if they are in a starving condition?"
15508Does the gentleman,asked Seddon, drawing him out for the edification of the House,"hold that the Democratic party is pledged to 54Â ° 40''?"
15508Does the gentleman,persisted his interrogator,"understand the President to have violated the Democratic creed in offering to compromise on 49Â °?"
15508Has not that treaty with Santa Anna been since discarded by the Mexican government?
15508If the platform is not a matter of much consequence, why press that question to the disruption of the party? 15508 Let me ask you where you have succeeded in excluding slavery by an act of Congress from one inch of American soil?
15508What are good Democrats to do?
15508Where did the gentleman from Illinois stand now? 15508 Why break up the Union upon an abstraction?"
15508Why,he asked,"are you not satisfied with these practical results?
15508Will you force it on them against their will,he demanded,"simply because they would have voted it down if you had consulted them?
15508Would the Senator who is speaking for the administration say explicitly, whether he would advise the withdrawal of the troops from the forts?
15508[ 634] How was this pledge redeemed? 15508 [ 679] Could any words have been more explicit?
15508[ 980] Why has not some artist seized upon the dramatic moment when they rose and passed to the end of the room to examine a map which hung there? 15508 After all, was it not a common principle for which they had been contending? 15508 And as for the right of the people to frame a constitution, who had ever disputed that right? 15508 And how could a member of Congress keep his oath and withhold the necessary protection to slave property in the Territories? 15508 And were they willing to shatter the Union because of this feeling? 15508 And who could know better the needs of the community than the commonalty? 15508 Are not the United States now_ free_ to adopt such measures as an independent nation may_ justly adopt_ in defense of its_ rights and honor_? 15508 Because it is an Administration measure, does it therefore follow that it is a party measure?
15508But could Congress thus extend the Constitution, by this fiat?
15508But had the_ will_ of the people ruled?
15508But was Toombs willing to concede that the people of a Territory might exclude slavery?
15508But was all this anything more than the clever manoeuvering of an adroit politician in a characteristic parliamentary game?
15508But was the invaded territory properly"our country"?
15508But what was this principle?
15508But where?
15508By what authority?
15508By what process of reasoning had Douglas reached this conclusion?
15508Can anything be done in Iowa and Missouri?
15508Could a campaign be successfully fought without other weapons than the well- worn blunderbusses in the Democratic arsenal?
15508Could an administration that had condoned the frauds already practiced in Kansas be trusted to appoint disinterested commissioners?
15508Could he not best serve the administration by bearding disunionism in its den?
15508Could it be true that Scott had promised the entire patronage of his administration to the Whigs?
15508Could it count upon the support of those who had counselled peace, peace at any cost?
15508Could the party evolve a constructive programme and at the same time name a candidate that would win another victory at the polls?
15508Did Congress have such power?
15508Did President Polk mean to be ambiguous at this point?
15508Did ever lawyer serve politician so well?
15508Did his hearers realize, he insisted, that refusal to do so was a violation of the Constitution?
15508Did not I tell you so?
15508Did one- third of the Democratic party propose to read out the remaining two- thirds?
15508Elsewhere State credit was building canals and railroads: why should Illinois, so generously endowed by nature, lag behind?
15508For his part he would like to know"who it is that has the right to say who is in the party and who not?"
15508Had Douglas sent home the intimation that the game was up?
15508Had he any reason to swerve from the strict letter of the Democratic creed?
15508Had he failed to gauge the depth of Northern public opinion?
15508Had he no eyes to see beyond the object immediately within his field of vision?
15508Had he no imagination?
15508Had he not been given these lands as a permanent home, after being driven from the hunting ground of his fathers?
15508Had he not sworn to obey the Constitution, and then, forsooth, refused to support the enforcement of the Fugitive Slave law?
15508Had his alert intelligence suddenly become myopic?
15508Had the Senator from Illinois not urged the intervention of Congress to prevent polygamy in Utah?
15508Has a nation no higher destiny than mere territorial bigness?
15508Have we not given the notice?
15508How can possession be regained, by arms or by a peaceable adjustment of the matters in controversy?
15508How could these diverse elements be fused into a true and enduring union?
15508How could they have been otherwise in his environment?
15508How else, indeed, could the general will find fit expression, except through the attrition of many minds?
15508How is it?
15508How many of them?"
15508How much social intercourse is there between us?
15508How then could the people of the Territories be free to legislate against slavery?
15508How would the author of the Kansas- Nebraska Act face the palpable breakdown of his policy?
15508How, asked Douglas, will he accomplish this?
15508How, then, could Colorado construct even a public road?
15508How, then, could Colorado make those necessary exemptions which were to be found on all statute books?
15508If it pass laws hostile to slavery, will you annul them, and substitute laws favoring slavery in their stead?"
15508If the Missouri Compromise were repealed, would not the original laws of Louisiana, which legalized slavery, be revived?
15508If the Territorial Legislature refuses to act, will you act?...
15508If this Constitution were to be repudiated, he begged to know,"who is to be the prophet to reveal the will of God, and establish a theocracy for us?"
15508If this inference is not correct, if this interpretation of the inaugural address is faulty, urged Douglas, why preserve this impenetrable silence?
15508In other words, was the principle, newly recovered, to be applied retroactively?
15508In the name of God, how is the railroad to be made, if you will never let people live on the lands through which the road passes?
15508Is not thirty years sufficient notice?
15508Is that the mode in which I am called upon to carry out the principle of self- government and popular sovereignty in the Territories?"
15508Is there no reverence for the supremacy of the laws and the civil institutions of the country displayed on this occasion?
15508Is this the conduct of a lawless desperado, who delights in trampling upon Constitution, and law, and right?
15508Might it not also, in the course of time, break up provincial feeling, cause a transfusion of ideas, and in the end produce an organic union?
15508Might this not be his opportunity?
15508Must an intensive culture with spiritual aims be sacrificed to a vulgar exploitation of physical resources?
15508Now, let me inquire, where are you to find the slave territory with which to balance these seventeen free territories, or even any one of them?
15508On what could they have grounded their hopes?
15508One other question remained: was the word"State,"as used in the clause just cited, intended to include Territories?
15508Since the township might act as a corporate body for school purposes, why might they not enjoy the full measure of township government?
15508The words were clear; but what was their implication?
15508Turning to Douglas, Davis said,"Now, the senator asks, will you make a discrimination in the Territories?
15508Upon this delicate problem was Douglas also able to bring expert testimony to bear?
15508Wait for the issue of the negotiations now pending?
15508Was Mr. Lincoln trying to dodge the questions?
15508Was he misinformed, or had he hastily selected the usable portion of the evidence?
15508Was he opposed to the admission of more slave States?
15508Was he still in favor of 61?"
15508Was he wiser and more conscientious than they?
15508Was it intended that Congress should act on this principle in organizing future Territories?
15508Was it likely that the pro- slavery party in Kansas would take this desperate course, without assurance of some sort from Washington?
15508Was it the intention of the Court to leave the principle of popular sovereignty standing upright?
15508Was it wise to convert a good general into a bad president?
15508Was not the decision rather fatal to the great doctrine-- the shibboleth of the Democratic party?
15508Was the new Territory of Colorado to be free or slave?
15508Was there any middle ground?
15508Was this a necessary implication from the Dred Scott decision?
15508Was this not in the nature of an inducement, a bribe?"
15508What could there have been in the serious- minded, dark- visaged"Little Giant"to win the hand of this mistress of many hearts?
15508What did these events portend?
15508What had he to offset his youth, his rawness, and his legislative inexperience?
15508What is popular sovereignty"?
15508What qualities had Douglas which would single him out from the crowd and impress his constituents with a sense of his capacity for public service?
15508What right had these misguided men to speak in the name of Almighty God upon a political question?
15508What sort of sovereignty was this?
15508What was actual residence?
15508What was the true inwardness of this unwillingness to prohibit slavery where it could never go?
15508What were the feelings of the individual who had been such a divisive force in the Charleston convention?
15508What, then, became of the great fundamental principle of popular sovereignty?
15508What, then, was the inference?
15508When had Congress ever created a State out of"an unorganized body of people having no constitution, or laws, or legitimate bond of union?"
15508When?
15508Where was the Vermont lad who did not fight over again the battles of Bennington, Ticonderoga, and Plattsburg?
15508Where was the candidate who possessed these qualifications and who would be acceptable to the South?
15508Where, then, demanded his critics, was the guarantee that the Kansas- Nebraska bill would banish the slavery controversies from Congress?
15508Who could rouse the latent Unionism of the Northwest and of the border States like Douglas?
15508Who has interpolated this Lecompton constitution into the party platform?...
15508Who made it a party measure?...
15508Who would be a likelier candidate for Congress in this Democratic constituency than the popular judge of the Fifth Circuit Court?
15508Whose was the"clerical error"?
15508Why did you not tell us in the beginning of this debate that the whole fight was against the man, and not upon the platform?
15508Why do you not adopt this institution?
15508Why emigrate from a region but just reclaimed from barbarism, where good land was still abundant?
15508Why except negroes?
15508Why hesitate then as to means, when the desired end was in clear view?
15508Why keep repeating this talk about a policy which the United States has almost invariably repudiated in fact?
15508Why not let the people know what the policy of the administration is?
15508Why not let them vote against it?
15508Why not; was not Nebraska large enough for both?
15508Why prohibit slavery where the government can not make it exist?
15508Why protect this wandering population in Oregon?
15508Why should Northerner affront Southerner by imperious demands, when the same end might be attained by a compromise which would not cost either dear?
15508Why then leave the question open for further agitation?
15508Why was the South so eager to repudiate the principle of non- intervention?
15508Why, then, hold to a mere form, when the substance could be otherwise secured?
15508Why, then, make an exception of slave property?
15508Why, then, pledge our faith never to annex any more of Mexico or any portion of Central America?
15508Will the Senator from Illinois take notice?"
15508Would a Democratic majority punish this flagrant transgression of Federal law by unseating the offenders?
15508Would a census of the present population give a majority in the proposed convention to the free- State party in Kansas?
15508Would a court so constituted command respect?
15508Would he not call upon the President at once and give him the assurance of his support?
15508Would he oppose the admission of a new State with such a constitution as the people of that State should see fit to make?
15508Would it approve itself to the anxious people of the North?
15508Would the administration which had precipitated the war, prove itself equal to the legislative burdens imposed by that war?
15508Yes, but where?
15508[ 130] Besides, what legal qualifications could this young man of twenty- seven possess for so important a post?
15508[ 226] Did Douglas misinterpret these articles, or did he chance upon an unauthentic version of them?
15508[ 295] Did she know that just such treatment-- strange paradox-- won, while it at times wounded, the heart of the unromantic Westerner?
15508[ 380] But had Douglas no policy peculiarly his own, to qualify him for the leadership of his party?
15508[ 390] Was Douglas cognizant of the situation?
15508[ 459] What was this momentous bill to which the President thus pledged himself?
15508[ 481] But did this divest Congress of the power of revision?
15508[ 61] What were prudent men to do?
15508[ 668] Had he not himself felt misgivings as to his own course?
15508[ 722] Could any blunder have been more unfortunate?
15508[ 733] Why should Douglas persist in misrepresenting him?
15508[ 815]"Then the senator is really indifferent to slavery, as he is reported to have said?"
15508[ 866]"First, If Abraham Lincoln be elected President of the United States, will the Southern States be justified in seceding from the Union?"
15508[ 925] Why try to force slavery to go where experience has demonstrated that climate is adverse and where the people do not want it?
11118''Deed, Mass Roger? 11118 And have n''t I as good a right to it as any?"
11118And now?
11118And that was----?
11118And the jelly like molten rubies that I made? 11118 And what is mulled wine made with?"
11118Anything fresh this morning? 11118 Are you going to Martinique?"
11118But, massa,--s''pose I deserve a thrashing?
11118Can I be of service to you, Sir?
11118Cattle? 11118 Come, look here naow, yeou, don''stan''aäskin''questions over''n''over;--''t beats all I ha''n''t I tol''y''a dozen times?"
11118Contraband?
11118Did you?
11118Do n''t you see Webster_ ers_ in the words cent_er_ and theat_er_? 11118 Do n''t you see?"
11118Do you know what you promised me on my birthday? 11118 Do you know"--he broke out all at once--"why they do n''t take steppes in Tartary for establishing Insane Hospitals?"
11118Do you mean that I shall go away? 11118 Do you remember your first repast at the Bawn?"
11118Do you want money?
11118Do?
11118Has he made such a request?
11118How can you go to Martinique?
11118How is this?
11118How much is very well?
11118How, Sir? 11118 I mean-- How do you know that I do?"
11118I? 11118 If I should go back to Martinique, I should become one in your remembrance,--should I not?
11118If he spells leather_ lether_, and feather_ fether_, is n''t there danger that he''ll give us a_ bad spell of weather_? 11118 Indeed?
11118Is Mr. Raleigh''s heart such a delicate organ?
11118Is it ready now?
11118Is n''t it a leetle rash to give him the use of his hands? 11118 It would n''t be possible for me to sit on the box and drive?"
11118Mr. Raleigh,said Marguerite,"did you ever love my mother?"
11118Mrs. Purcell,asked Mr. Raleigh, as that lady entered,"is this little banquet no seduction to you?"
11118Must I go, mamma?
11118Must I leave you?
11118Naow get up, will ye?
11118Not going? 11118 Now, then, Sir?"
11118Reach home like Cinderella? 11118 Ruined?
11118Sha''n''t I? 11118 So you prefer_ Cane_ to_ A bell_, do you?"
11118Then you confess to being a myth?
11118Then you have n''t any bad news for me? 11118 This is what the Inquisition calls applying the question?"
11118Two affairs on hand at once? 11118 Unless I marry Mr. Heath, I lose my wealth?
11118We shall be soon at home? 11118 Well?"
11118What are you doing?
11118What are you poisoning all this brood for?
11118What do you mean?
11118What do you suppose has become of that little miniature I told you of? 11118 What has this to do with it?"
11118What have I to do with it?
11118What if she had died?
11118What is it?
11118What is the matter, Cousin Elsie? 11118 What is the meaning of all this?
11118What is this?
11118What more felicity can fell to creature Than to enjoy delight with liberty?
11118What then?
11118What untoward fate cast him there?
11118What''s the matter with your shoulder, Venner?
11118When I reached this point, young Heath turned to me with that impudently nonchalant drawl of his, saying,--''And her property, Sir?''
11118When a fellah goes out huntin''and shoots a squirrel, do you think he''s go''n''to let another fellah pick him up and kerry him off? 11118 Where is Raleigh?"
11118Where is she? 11118 Where shall I send your trunk after you from your uncle''s?"
11118Which am I now?
11118Which in particular?
11118Who collects the money to defray the expenses of the last campaign in Italy?
11118Who''a hurt? 11118 Why did you give it up?"
11118Why do you think in French?
11118Why is his way of spelling like the floor of an oven? 11118 Why not?"
11118Why, how is that, Old Joe?
11118Why, to see if there''s any_ corn under''em!_he said; and immediately asked,"Why is Douglas like the earth?"
11118Will you hear''em now,--now I''m here?
11118Will you mount? 11118 Would you give it such a character, Miss Rite?"
11118You are not in toilet?
11118You can not imagine?
11118You did not know the original Raleigh?
11118You do not anticipate any unpleasant effect?
11118You have? 11118 You knew Mr. Raleigh thirteen years ago?"
11118You think that absurd? 11118 You wo n''t?"
11118You would n''t act so, if you were dancing with Mr. Langdon,--would you, Elsie?
11118You would not, then, propose to an heiress?
11118Your daughter is ignorant?--your wife?
11118Yours?
11118_ Buvez, Monsieur_,she said;"_ c''est le vin de la vie!_""Do you know how near daylight it is?"
11118_ Comment?_cried Marguerite, breathlessly.
11118_ Qu''avez vous?_she exclaimed.
11118A cry?"
11118And can I serve you at this point?"
11118Any Conundrum?"
11118Are you safe?"
11118Beggar her to divide her property?"
11118Berger?"
11118But in this respect differs he much from those men who have wrought great things for the world, and whom the world is content to reverence?
11118But would Italy be permitted to settle her quarrel with her old oppressor without foreign intervention?
11118But would it be wisdom in the Free States to put themselves at the mercy of such a panic whenever the whim took South Carolina to be discontented?
11118But, because one''s hands are tender, can not one''s nerves be strong, one''s will indomitable?
11118By the way, what do you think of Mary Purcell''s engagement?
11118Can you have seen it?"
11118Did it break your heart?"
11118Do n''t you think it will be safer-- for the women- folks-- jest to wait till mornin'', afore you put that j''int into the socket?"
11118Do n''t you want to wait here, jest a little while, till I come back?
11118Do you know what day it is?"
11118Do you want to come?"
11118During that time, Miss Fanny Gilbert wrote novels, and was unhappy: would she have been happy, if, in the interval, she had chronicled small beer?
11118Even if the secessionists could accomplish their schemes, who would be the losers?
11118Give it up?
11118Has any one heard from the Colonel?
11118Have we escaped the French fashions of_ Ã  -la- mode_ watering- places, to be fastidious amid wigwams and unpeopled shores?
11118Have you eyes to find the five Which five thousand could survive?
11118He glanced at her keenly an instant, then handed her his cup, saying,--"May I trouble you?"
11118Helen''s eyes glistened as she interrupted him,--"What do you mean?
11118Here are dates; if you would n''t choose the things in themselves, truly you would for their associations?
11118Here are nuts swathed in syrup; you''ll have none of them?
11118I do n''t believe you have exercised enough;--don''t you think it''s confinement in the school has made you nervous?"
11118I have been seeking you, and what sprite sends you to me?"
11118If a woman''s happiness is to be found in love, and not in fame, the question nevertheless recurs,--What is she to do before the love comes?
11118If he should make these demands, or either of them, would the other European Powers permit the Italians to comply with them?
11118If it seem prosaic, what care we?
11118Indeed?
11118Is he ill?"
11118Is it a good thing to"extend the area of freedom"by pillaging some feeble Mexico?
11118Is it, then, impossible that she, having command of the house- hold, should have been able to substitute a dead for the living child?
11118It is not long since we listened to an interesting discussion of this question:--Which was the more important year to Europe,--1859 or 1860?
11118Ketched ye''ith a slippernoose, hey?
11118Light and sparkling,--thin and tart,--isn''t it Solomon who forbids mixed drink?"
11118May I dress it with sweet- brier to- night?
11118Mowzer?"
11118Mr. Bernard heard the answer, but presently stared about and asked again,_"Who''s hurt?
11118Mr. Langdon, has anything happened to you?"
11118My dear Laura Matilda, have you ever worked your way under ground, like the ghost Hamlet, Senior?
11118No?
11118Not a chocolate?
11118On the contrary, you confess, but a dim idea of that peculiar mode of progression abides in the well- ordered mansion of your mind?
11118Presently the Patriarch asked again,--"Why was M. Berger authorized to go to the dances given to the Prince?"
11118Presently,--"Why, Bernard, my dear friend, my brother, it can not be that you are in danger?
11118Shall a coat be synonymous with cowardice?
11118Shall he insult the whole city with his solvency?
11118Shall trousers deter us from the passage?
11118Spec you mind dat time when all dese yer folks lib''d acrost de lake dat summer, an''massa was possessed to''most lib dar too?
11118Tell me now, you are not in earnest, are you, but only trying a little sentiment on me?"
11118The man a''n''t hurt,--don''t you see him stirring?
11118The subjoined Conundrum is not allowed:--Why is Hasty Pudding like the Prince?
11118The tale?
11118WHO WAS CASPAR HAUSER?
11118We have nerve; has it not been tested throughout the somewhat arduous journey of the preceding weeks?
11118Well, one day, massa mind Ol''Cap''s runnin''acrost in de rain an''in great state ob excitement to tell him his house done burnt up?"
11118What are the Bedouins to the Zouaves, who unquestionably would be as formidable in Lapland as in Algiers?
11118What did you dream?"
11118What do you stop for?"
11118What does that signify?
11118What is the boat to us but a means?
11118What is the matter?"
11118What other potentate did anything for that country in 1859, or has done anything for it since that memorable year?
11118What then?"
11118What was that?
11118What were Indians, however deadly,--what starvation, however imminent,--what pestilence, however lurking,--to a solid obstacle like this?
11118What were the Pyramids to that?
11118What''n thunder''r''y''abaout, y''darned Portagee?"
11118What''n thunder''s that''ere raoun''y''r neck?
11118What''s happened?
11118What''s happened?
11118What''s happened?"
11118What''s that''ere stickin''aout o''y''r boot?"
11118Where were his ears and judgment on that occasion?
11118Where, then?
11118Who is there here that I can have any true society with, but you?
11118Who shall define what makes the essential difference between those lowest and these loftiest types?
11118Why cattle?"
11118Why did he remain his protector, and thus make himself a party to the fraud?
11118Why is a-- a-- a-- like a-- a-- a--?
11118Why may we not form an harmonious quartette?
11118Why were they not engaged before?"
11118Why, then, did Stanhope wait for his death before he proclaimed the imposture?
11118Will this first ladder never end?
11118Will you allow me to invite them in here?
11118Will you never be at peace?"
11118Will you take me up- stairs?"
11118Would all the mines of Peru tempt me?"
11118You do n''t believe in presentiments, do you?"
11118You would not leave us for another school, would you?"
11118You would not marry an heiress?"
11118You would think of me just as you would have thought of the Dryad yesterday, if she had stepped from the tree and stepped back again?"
11118You''ll see to it,--won''t you, Abel?"
11118Your servants could not explain it?"
11118_ Le Roi est mort?
11118_ Que sais- je_?
11118_"Who''s hurt?
11118and does the phrase become a bad one only when it means the peaceful progress of constitutional liberty within our own borders?
11118and what''s all this noise about?"
11118are you mad?"
11118are you not brothers?
11118he called out,"what have you got there?
11118he replied,--"what do you call green?"
11118is all right?
11118or what marvel is an amphibian with the bill of a duck to him who has gazed aghast at the intricate anatomy of the bill of English?
11118really?_ If the complexion of his politics were not accounted for by his being an_ eager_ person himself?
11118really?_ If the complexion of his politics were not accounted for by his being an_ eager_ person himself?
11118said Mr. Laudersdale, entering,"where is your mother?"
11118said Mr. Raleigh, leaping from the other side of the brook to the mossy trunk,"is it you?
11158''Does she mean to stay me?'' 11158 ''The mermaids refuse my offering,''I said;''will you accept it?''
11158And not to see Mrs. Aaron Wilton?
11158And you are afraid to trust me with it?
11158Are you not ashamed to plead it? 11158 But Ernest?"
11158But how is this, Anna? 11158 But would not Maryland lose many more slaves, as the border member of a foreign confederacy, than she does now in the Union?"
11158But,the writer ventured to inquire,"what will become of the Federal District, since its inhabitants have no''State right of secession''?"
11158Can not give me my sister''s letter?
11158Can not he be both sexton and artist?
11158Could you bear to be shut in?
11158Crisis? 11158 DEAR HARRY,--"Do you know that I love him?--that I love Ernest?
11158Did Miss Lettie commission you to ask?
11158Did n''t I? 11158 Did you hear that noise, Miss Anna?"
11158Do I look like a murderer?
11158Do n''t turn your eyes away; do you know what certain words in this world mean?
11158Do you know the contents of the letter that made Lettie so anxious?
11158Do you know what it is, what it means, when a human soul calls out from its highest heights to another mortal,''Thou art mine''?
11158Do you refuse to give it to me?
11158Father, have you made me your friend?
11158Have you ever studied law?
11158Have you one drop of mercy for him who destroyed your sister?
11158Have you the letter that you picked up last night?
11158How can he?
11158How could we pass quietly along the very place?
11158How is he?
11158How?
11158I do n''t dispute the general truth,I replied,--"but, particularly, is this man''s life in danger?"
11158In case of general secession and war,the writer ventured next to inquire,"would there probably, in your opinion, be danger of a slave insurrection?"
11158Is Mr. Axtell an artist?
11158Is he so much hurt?
11158Is it any harm, papa?
11158Is it like Mary?
11158Is tea over?
11158Is this a place for songs? 11158 It will, papa; what is it?"
11158Look a here, Miss Anna,--isn''t it vastly funny master''s bringing a crazy man here? 11158 Look down upon us?"
11158No, how should you? 11158 Not if I were Harry''s betrothed?"
11158Papa,I said, as if introducing the most ordinary topic of conversation,"what was the occasion of sister Mary''s death?
11158Papa,I said,"why not tell me truly?
11158Perhaps I have not worn this one; but will you wear it to please me?
11158Secede? 11158 Sing for you?"
11158To pity Harry?
11158To whom, father?
11158Ugly time? 11158 Upon which side, Sir, do you think there is usually the most misunderstanding,--on the part of the North concerning the South?
11158Was Mary engaged to be married, father?
11158Was she sick, Chloe?
11158Were you here when she died?
11158What are you thinking of? 11158 What for?"
11158What has this to do with poor Ernest?
11158What is it? 11158 What it has done for me?"
11158What made her die, Chloe?
11158What should I know of the Nereïd?
11158What would these two good people say,I asked myself, in thinking,"if they knew all that I have learned in my visit, not yet a week long?"
11158Where are you going?
11158Where is it?
11158Who is it?
11158Who painted the portrait in your house?
11158Who was the master, Chloe?
11158Whose grave is this?
11158Why Ragmuff?
11158Why does not my father take me in? 11158 Why not, Mr. Axtell?
11158Why were we not lost in the same storm?
11158Why will it please you? 11158 Why, I did n''t consider there was one chance in a thousand of success,--did you?"
11158Why, how is this?
11158Will you come away from that cold, damp place?
11158Will you go?
11158Will you listen to me a little while?
11158Will you make me one promise, only one?
11158Will you rise?
11158You are confident, then, Sir, that fifteen States will secede?
11158You do not mean that my boy will look down upon his mother?
11158You do not mean to send Violet to Italy, and to take care of Ernest?
11158You will stay and see Harry and Ernest?
11158Your dream is too mystical; will you tell me what it has done for you? 11158 ----?
11158A few days after his mother''s death, he said to Violet,--"Is it not time for you to tell me that it is I who need you more than Ernest?
11158Almost every letter contains the inquiry,"What is the new breech- loading rifle you allude to, and where is it to be had?"
11158Am I a freeman?
11158Am I not his child, even as Sophie?"
11158And I looked down at my two passive hands, and asked,"Which one of them?"
11158And if they have done and are doing all this, who will be to blame, if the enemy shall accomplish their purpose?
11158And so I began by asking,--"Am I like my sister who died, Chloe?"
11158And where, oh, where, will it rise to?
11158Are not these still Iduna''s apples, the taste of which keeps the gods forever young?
11158As she lowered the latch without any sound, she would say to herself,"Why is it that boys must have all the fun, and girls all the work?"
11158At least, have not all men, everywhere, the sacred and comprehensive right of equal freedom of endeavor to occupy their highest capacities?
11158Besides, gentlemen do n''t wear marriage- rings: how came you to?"
11158But these beautiful thickets of birch and alder along the bank, how to get through them?
11158But what to do?
11158But( do you hate the moral to a story?)
11158Could not you hold it to earth more closely than that?
11158Could you be satisfied with him?
11158Did my father mean to keep me forever?
11158Do you know, Violet, that takes the life out of me?
11158Hath this been in your days, or even in the days of your fathers?...
11158Have you any more remarks to me?
11158He asked me,"Why?"
11158He has attained now, Ernest has, what he was looking for; and have I not a right to my reward?"
11158He looked at it, as he then had done, uncomprehending, and said only,--"Will I let you?"
11158He looked up, great tears falling from his eyes, and asked,--"Where?"
11158Honey darling, do n''t you know that Master Percival, your father, was my master ever so many years?"
11158How can society be kept together, if men will not keep their compacts?
11158How can we live with such men?
11158How can we remain?
11158How does the gardener treat his plants?
11158How, then, are they formed?
11158I am older than Sophie was when you took her in where I have not been; why will you not make me your friend?"
11158I asked,--"How is your sister since morning?"
11158I lifted my head from my father''s shoulder, and asked, in some dismay,--"What is it, father?"
11158I thought of the face in the Upper Country, and asked,--"Why?"
11158If you can not live for yourself, for me, will you not live for Harry''s sake?"
11158In what Jericho of the forest can he hide his diminished head?
11158Is it feared that taxes will check immigration?
11158Is my State, a free State, to lie down and submit because political fossils raise the cry of''The Glorious Union''?
11158Is not the body precious, too?
11158It is not symbolical, is it?"
11158KINDERGARTEN-- WHAT IS IT?
11158Lesser examples of this are seen in his grim jest at Westminster Hall,--"What use of so many lawyers?
11158Miss Percival, could you wear such a vestment in the march of life?"
11158My mother smiled: or was it my fancy?
11158Of what worth would the Declaration of Independence be now, had it not been for Trenton and Princeton, Saratoga and Yorktown?
11158Ordilinier?"
11158Refuse them, and what then?
11158Seward?"
11158That is pleasant, after all, is it not?"
11158The only question, is, How?"
11158The words,--what_ are_ they,--those that ope the door?
11158To secure the wisdom and perpetuity of this experiment, are not governments instituted?
11158Undoubtedly gentlemen make revolutions in history; but since all may be Christians, may not all men be gentlemen?
11158Was that the young girl?
11158Was there one that hung so high and sheltered by the tangled branches that our sticks could not dislodge it?
11158What am I to do?
11158What are the imported half- ripe fruits of the torrid South, to this fruit matured by the cold of the frigid North?
11158What care I for Iduna''s apples so long as I can get these?
11158What could Mr. Axtell have meant by saying that he had killed Mary, who, Chloe had assured me, died peaceably in her father''s house?
11158What do you think of it now?"
11158What if the brokers''quotations show our stocks discredited, and the gold dollar costs one hundred and twenty- seven cents?
11158What is a Kindergarten?
11158What matter, if I held the cold iron thereof to my lips awhile?
11158What was here?
11158When I found voice, it was to ask,--"''Who are you?''
11158When he paused for breath, in the width of detail that he furnished, I asked,--"When was this stranger brought here?"
11158When it came, she looked up into her father''s face and said,--"Papa, I am not a child, to be coaxed into forgetfulness; why will you not trust me?
11158Where is the Archimedes?
11158While the manly man of the woods is breathing Nature like an Amreeta draught, is it anything less than the_ summum bonum_?
11158Who shall stand godfather at the christening of the wild apples?
11158Whose fault is that?
11158Why a railroad, even a wooden one, here?
11158Why did self come up?
11158Why not marry shallop to stream?
11158Why not yield to the enticement of this current, fleet and clear, and gain a few beautiful miles before nightfall?
11158Why publish it just as the tide of war was turning in our favor?
11158Why was it that this little omission of Jeffy''s, the African boy, should create a vacancy?
11158Why wilt you be so careless of that?"
11158Why, it has been asked, spring it so suddenly upon the country?
11158Will you come into this boat, now?''
11158Will you come on shore?''
11158Will you come to me on the twenty- fifth of March?"
11158Will you forgive my rudeness?"
11158Will you take a walk with me?"
11158Would it ever go down?
11158Would it not tax a man''s invention,--no one to be named after a man, and all in the_ lingua vernacula_?
11158Would not the very soil of America, in which Liberty is said to inhere, cry out and rise against any but an affirmative answer to such questions?
11158Would you let her come?"
11158You can read, can you not?"
11158You will give me to him?
11158and think you that they will let Loki or Thjassi carry them off to Jötunheim, while they grow wrinkled and gray?
11158are you very sure the Nereïd is a sound vessel?"
11158how shall we know where to find him?"
11158or am I a man to sing?"
11158or on the part of the South concerning the North?"
11158said the honest soul,--"what for can that icy lady want to see old Chloe?"
11158what has happened to my child?"
11158what has happened?"
11158why?"
11158will this man recover?"
21276Then[ Transcriber''s note: Their?]
21276Were the English governing noblemen of the day ready to persist in the new policy?
20873''From Germany?''
20873''From Spain?''
20873''Well, where on earth are you from then, or what are you?''
20873''Which of the ten tribes are the Swiss?''"
20873''You ca n''t be from England, I am sure?''
20873Interesting as that balance may be to Europe, how does it concern us?
20873Now that the precise state of negotiation was known, why should the House longer leave this matter to the discretion of the President?
20873Of the destiny of the Anglo- Saxon race, of its universal monarchy over the whole of North America?
20873Shall the revenue be reduced?
20873What advantages, he asked, had our commercial treaties given us, either that with France or that with England?
20873What, he asked, were these principles?
18618But when?
18618Dead, sir?
18618Did the Americans stand fire?
18618If the governor refuses to give the pass, shall the revenue officer be allowed to seize the tea and land it to- morrow morning?
18618Shall we submit and say nothing? 18618 What makes thee think so, Isaac?"
18618Who cares what this country fellow thinks?
18618Who is he anyway? 18618 Would ten dollars be of any service?"
186183. Who were the men Washington chose to help him in his new task as President?
186184. Who was Kit Carson, and how did he help Frémont?
186187. Who was Lafayette, and what did he do for the American cause?
18618A weak man would have said:"What can I do with an army like this?
18618And how did the Provincials, as the British called the Americans, regard the situation?
18618And what do you suppose the chief business of this Congress was?
18618Are you a patriot?
18618Are you locating every event upon the map?
18618Are you making frequent use of the map?
18618Are you making frequent use of the map?
18618Are you making frequent use of the map?
18618Are you making frequent use of your map?
18618Are you making frequent use of your maps?
18618But how can we help ourselves?"
18618But when shall we be stronger?
18618Can you explain Patrick Henry''s power as an orator?
18618Can you explain how it was that he had such a powerful influence over men?
18618Can you tell in what ways each of these is of special value to us?
18618Did not the British fleet have them so close under its nose that it could easily get between them and New York and make escape impossible?
18618Did you ever hear of such a party?
18618Do you wonder that the colonists felt that England was taking an unfair advantage?
18618Do you wonder that they loved their new home?
18618For how could the Americans get away?
18618Have you in your mind a picture of young Patrick Henry as he rode on horseback along the country road toward Williamsburg?
18618He wanted to rule England in his own way, and how could he do so if he allowed his stubborn colonists in America thus to get the better of him?
18618How are we all dependent upon one another?
18618How can the simple colonists resist it?"
18618How did Washington show his ability as a general at New York?
18618How did he help his countrymen before taking up his public life?
18618How did he prove his strength at that time?
18618How did he save this settlement from the Indians?
18618How did the colonies help the people of Boston at this time?
18618How did the people express their feeling for Washington when he was on his way to New York to be inaugurated as President?
18618How do you account for Clark''s remarkable success?
18618How is the telegraph useful to men?
18618How may we be truly patriotic?
18618In what respects were Samuel Adams and Patrick Henry unlike as boys?
18618In what way did George III and Parliament punish Boston for throwing the tea overboard?
18618In what ways are coal, iron, and steel especially useful?
18618In what ways was the Erie Canal useful to the people?
18618Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
18618It is good for us to ask ourselves this question: How can I be helpful in the community where I live, which has done so much for me?
18618Of Daniel Webster?
18618Of Henry Clay?
18618On a certain occasion Morse said to one of them, who owed him for a few months''teaching:"Well, Strothers, my boy, how are we off for money?"
18618Serious questions are being discussed:"What shall we do about the Stamp Act?"
18618Shall we beg Parliament to repeal the act, or shall we take a bold stand and declare that we will not obey it?"
18618Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
18618Shall we send a petition to King George asking him for justice?
18618Should you not like to have been one of the guests?
18618The English captain, feeling sure of victory, called out:"Has your ship struck?"
18618Then arose the burning question:"Shall the territory we have acquired from Mexico be free or open to slavery?"
18618What and where was the National Road?
18618What are the four great industries taken up in this chapter?
18618What can you tell about the early life of John C. Calhoun?
18618What can you tell of Robertson''s boyhood?
18618What did I say?"
18618What did Nathan Hale do?
18618What did Washington say when he heard that the Americans had stood their ground in face of the British assault?
18618What did William Pitt think of the Stamp Act?
18618What did he do for Kentucky?
18618What did he do for Texas?
18618What did he find out about the spirit of these colonists?
18618What did the Americans win by the treaty?
18618What do you admire about John Paul Jones?
18618What do you admire about Morse?
18618What do you admire about each of the three great statesmen?
18618What do you admire about him?
18618What do you admire about him?
18618What do you admire about him?
18618What do you admire about him?
18618What do you admire about him?
18618What do you admire in Patrick Henry?
18618What do you admire in Samuel Adams?
18618What do you think of him?
18618What do you think of him?
18618What do you think of him?
18618What effects did the invention of the cotton- gin have upon slavery?
18618What great mistake did General Howe make at that time?
18618What is it that gentlemen wish?
18618What kind of Indian fighter was Sevier?
18618What kind of army did Washington have when he took command at Cambridge?
18618What kind of boy was Andrew Jackson?
18618What kind of boy was Grant?
18618What kind of boy was Houston?
18618What kind of boy was he?
18618What kind of boyhood had Daniel Boone?
18618What kind of man was Daniel Morgan, and what do you think of him?
18618What kind of man was George III?
18618What kind of man was he?
18618What kind of man?
18618What kind of man?
18618What kind of man?
18618What kind of student was he in college?
18618What led up to the"Boston Tea Party"?
18618What part did he take in the events leading up to the purchase of Florida?
18618What sort of training did the pioneer boy receive in school and at home?
18618What was Clark''s brilliant plan?
18618What was Webster''s idea of the Union, and in what way did it differ from Hayne''s?
18618What was the Compromise of 1850?
18618What was the Declaration of Independence, and when was it signed?
18618What was the Emancipation Proclamation?
18618What was the First Continental Congress, and what did it do?
18618What was the Missouri Compromise?
18618What was the Stamp Act?
18618What was the condition of his army when he took command in the South?
18618What was the extent of our country at that time?
18618What was the outcome of the desperate sea duel between the Bon Homme Richard and the Serapis?
18618What was the tax law of 1767, and why did the colonists object to paying the new taxes?
18618What were some of the important results of the Civil War?
18618What were the results of the Battle of Bunker Hill?
18618What were the results of the capture of Burgoyne?
18618What were the results of this expedition?
18618What would they have?
18618When did he make a great speech in St. John''s Church, Richmond?
18618When did it end?
18618When did the Revolution begin?
18618When did this war begin, and when did it end?
18618Why did Jefferson send Lewis and Clark on their famous expedition?
18618Why did Lee go with Virginia when this State seceded?
18618Why did Parliament pass it, and why did the colonists object to it?
18618Why did Parliament repeal it?
18618Why did Robertson plant a settlement at the place where Nashville now stands?
18618Why did Sevier go with his family to the Watauga settlement?
18618Why did he so strongly desire that the colonists should be compelled to pay a tax to England?
18618Why did not Lincoln set the slaves free when he became President?
18618Why did the Americans fortify Breed''s Hill?
18618Why did the British troops march out to Lexington and Concord?
18618Why did the English call him a pirate when he was sailing along the British coasts in order to destroy property?
18618Why did the Westerners wish the Mississippi to be open to their trade?
18618Why did they admire him?
18618Why has Washington been called the"Father of his Country"?
18618Why stand we here idle?
18618Why was Clay called"the Great Peacemaker"?
18618Why was Napoleon willing to sell us the whole of Louisiana?
18618Why were the people of South Carolina opposed to the high tariff laws of 1828 and 1832?
18618Will it be the next week, or the next year?
18618Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
15099''Have you on your Sabbath shoon or have you no on your Sabbath shoon?'' 15099 And what about t''others?"
15099Aunt Matilda, do you think Dorcas was afraid of sore eyes?
15099Beautiful sunshine, is n''t it?
15099But you''ll tell me what It''s all about, wo n''t you?
15099Can you prove your age?
15099Can you spell?
15099Confound''The Pleasures of Hope,''he protested;"ca n''t I write anything else?"
15099Did I ever go with your daughter Miranda?
15099Did it?
15099Did n''t you see the Sarpent inspirin''him?
15099Did you hear the news?
15099Did you see my boy?
15099Do n''t you think I might go home now?
15099Do n''t you think they ought to let me go home?
15099Do you think I could begin without being baptized?
15099Do you think he means you?
15099Do you think he''d help a feller? 15099 Do you think that Jesus Christ would-- would-- well, do you think he''d help a poor, unlarnt Flat Cricker like me?"
15099Does he?
15099Has Henry fallen in and got a ducking, Shocky?
15099Have you any friends?
15099He do n''t scare you?
15099How did you get here so early, Ralph?
15099How do I''low?
15099How do you''low he''ll get in?
15099How long has the claimant lived on his claim?
15099How old did you say you were? 15099 How old?"
15099How_ did_ this happen?
15099I guess you''re a little skeered by what the old man said, a''n''t you?
15099I say, ole woman,broke in old Jack,"I say, wot is all this''ere spoutin''about the Square fer?"
15099I suppose Mr. Hartsook rode your horse to Lewisburg?
15099If it was n''t for what?
15099Is my mother in that place? 15099 Is that the poor- house?"
15099Is your arm improving?
15099It was real good in Mr. Pearson to take me, was n''t it? 15099 No-- sir-- I was waitin''to see if you warn''t a- goin'', too-- I--""Well?"
15099Pap wants to know ef you would spend to- morry and Sunday at our house?
15099Want to be a school- master, do you? 15099 Well, a''n''t you afraid of me, then?"
15099Well, fer one thing, what kind of gals did he go with? 15099 Well, what are you a- tremblin''about, you coward?"
15099What d''ye say, Marthy?
15099What is the condition of the enemy? 15099 What ort I to do?"
15099What will you do with the tough boys? 15099 What would you do with me, for instance?"
15099Where are you going? 15099 Where is Walter?"
15099Who are you?
15099Who d''ye s''pose''tis?
15099Who goes there?
15099Why a''n''t you afraid of me?
15099Why do you say''poor old tree''?
15099Why not? 15099 Why, Ralph Hartsook, where did you drop down from-- and what have you got?"
15099Why, Shocky, have n''t you gone yet?
15099Why, Shocky?
15099Why, do you think an old soldier like me, hobbling on a wooden leg, is afraid of them thieves? 15099 Why, how do you feel?"
15099Why, plague take it, who said Hanner?
15099Would he thrash?
15099Ya- as,said Schroeder,"put how did Yinkins vellers know dat I sell te medder to te Shquire, hey?
15099You a''n''t a- goin to fight_ me_?
15099You do n''t say?
15099You do n''t say?
15099You here, Miss Hawkins?
15099You mean, then, that I''m to begin now to put in my best licks for Jesus Christ, and that he''ll help me?
15099You''re a purty gal, a''n''t you? 15099 A purty son, a''n''t you?
15099And he read about Nathanael, who lived only six miles away, saying,''Can any good thing come out of Nazareth?''"
15099And he would come?
15099And how could he explain his own walk through the pasture and down the road?
15099And then what would be the effect on his prospects?
15099And you know the cure fer rheumatiz?"
15099Any other trustees?
15099But had he turned coward and deserted his friend?
15099But has n''t this little boy-- Shocking, or what do you call him?--got any mother?"
15099But how should he influence Martha to give up Bud?
15099But just at this moment who should stride into the school- house but Pearson, the one- legged old soldier basket- maker?
15099But what about Bud?
15099But what right had he to supplant Bud?
15099But why speak of the driving of duty?
15099But--""But what?"
15099Could it be that Hannah''s mother was the room- mate of this loathsome creature, whose profanity and obscenity did not intermit for a moment?
15099Could n''t you git him over to Lewisburg?
15099Did Dr. Small shrug his shoulder?
15099Did God concern himself with these things?
15099Did he inflict corporal punishment?
15099Did n''t I come home late last Wednesday night?
15099Did n''t I face the Britishers?
15099Did n''t he?"
15099Did n''t she go all over the neighborhood a- warnin''people?
15099Did not Miss Nancy enjoy a hundred weddings and have the love of five hundred children?
15099Do n''t you?"
15099Do not even the Pharisees the same?
15099Do you know I think that hoss knows something''s up?
15099Do you think He does?
15099Fetch her here out of the poor- house?
15099For if it wurn''t fer spellin''-books and sich occasions as these, where would the Bible be?
15099For what is a bulldog but a stoic philosopher?
15099For, was not the pure, unconscious face of Hannah on the Devil''s side?
15099HAS GOD FORGOTTEN SHOCKY?
15099Had Mr. Hartsook offered any explanations?
15099Had he ever paid her any attention afterward?
15099Hartsook?"
15099Has God Forgotten Shocky?
15099Hey?
15099Hey?
15099Hey?"
15099Hey?"
15099How tid Yinkins know anyting''bout the Shquire''s bayin''me dree huntert in te hard gash-- hey?"
15099How''s that?"
15099I wonder if God forgets all about poor folks when their father dies and their mother gits into the poor- house?
15099I wonder what becomes of folks when God forgets''em?"
15099Is it a poorer place than Means''s?
15099Is it not wise to be happy?
15099Is not that what He meant when he said of such as Miss Sawyer that they should have a hundred- fold in this life for all their sacrifices?
15099Means?"
15099Of his own accord?
15099On Hannah?
15099On the people at Lewisburg?
15099Or, was it the recollection that Shocky was Hannah''s brother?
15099Or, was it the weird thoughts that he expressed?
15099Ought an old country to sow the fertile soil of a colony with such noxious seed?
15099Pearson?"
15099Ralph shivered a little at thought of this, but if it was right to knock Jones down at all, why might not Bud do it"heartily as unto the Lord?"
15099Ralph would have explained, but how?
15099See it nodding its head to them other trees in the woods?
15099She could get happy in class- meeting( for who had a better right?
15099Should he rise and give the alarm?
15099So, with many adjustings of that most adjustable wig?
15099The blue- grass pasture( was it not like unto the garden of Eden?)
15099The trustees have n''t come to fill it up, have they?"
15099Thomson?"
15099To stay, or to flee?
15099Underwood?"
15099Was Hannah deceitful?
15099Was it respect for muscle, or was it the influence of Small?
15099Was it the brotherhood in affliction that made Shocky''s words choke him so?
15099Was there any God?
15099Well, what would_ you_ do in Flat Crick deestrick,_ I''d_ like to know?
15099Were the robbers breaking into the house below?
15099What about it?
15099What business had he being out of bed at two o''clock in the morning?
15099What business had he watching Dr. Small as he went home from the bedside of a dying patient near daylight in the morning?
15099What could Bud do if he were there?
15099What did Henry Small want to visit this old quack for?
15099What did I take you fer?
15099What did she mean?
15099What do you want to know the meaning of a word for?
15099What had the current of conversation to do with him?
15099What if Shocky should die?
15099What if he joined the conspiracy to marry him to this weak- eyed, weak- headed wood- nymph, or backwoods nymph?
15099What is it?"
15099What kind of a place is a poor- house?
15099What need of analyzing her experiences_ in vacuo_ to find out the state of her soul?
15099What shall I do?"
15099What though she had not tasted food since the morning of that exciting day?
15099What though the rain was in her face?
15099What though there might be robbers in the woods?
15099What though there were ten rough miles to travel?
15099What was he that he should aspire to possess her?
15099What was the connection between her and Shocky?
15099What was the hidden part of her life?
15099What would Gin''ral Winfield Scott say ef he knew that one of them as fit at Lundy''s Lane backed out, retreated, run fer fear of a passel of thieves?
15099What would she say if he should confess?
15099What''s him and her been a- courtin''fer for a year ef he did n''t think she was smart?
15099What''s the use of tryin''?
15099When Hannah was in one scale and the whole world in the other, of what account was the world?
15099Which way did you come, Shocky?"
15099White?"
15099Who could it be?
15099Who knows whether he''s a fit man fer anybody to go with?
15099Who will volunteer to take turns sitting up with Henry?"
15099Who would not stay in an earthy paradise ten minutes longer, even though it did make purgatory the hotter afterward?
15099Why else did he avoid the session of the court?
15099Why not walk?
15099Why should he?
15099Why should his evil genius haunt him?
15099Why should men on horseback have any significance to him?
15099With another he asked himself, What shall I do about the robbery?
15099Would God indeed bring things out right?
15099Would Small try to win Hannah''s love to throw it away again, as he had done with others?
15099Would it all come out right if Bud married Hannah?
15099Would it all come out right if he were driven from Flat Creek with a dark suspicion upon his character?
15099Would you inflict corporal punishment if you were tiger- trainer in Van Amburgh''s happy family?
15099Would"Meanses''Hanner"beat the master?
15099You need not answer unless you choose; but what prompted you to take the direction you did in your walk on that evening?"
15099You would n''t like to take a coon hunt nor nothin'', would you?"
15099You''re a purty gal, a''n''t you?
15099You?
15099[ Illustration: BETSY SHORT]"Well, Shocky, what is it?"
15099[ Illustration: MRS. MEANS]"Did you use the blood warm?"
15099_ Wo n''t_ you take me in there, so as I can just kiss her once?
15099beat the master that had laid out Jim Phillips?
15099do n''t I remember when he was poarer nor Job''s turkey?
15099is that you?
15099said that astounded saint,"fetch a pauper here?
15099why what do you think- ah?
15099with many turnings of that reversible glass eye?
20171And did you git onny thing?
20171And what did you get, Jacob?
20171Is it down William?
20171What are those potatoes worth, I say?
20171What''s you bin doin''in dat mud puddle? 20171 And is there no life and intelligence in all this throng of spheres? 20171 And what are they? 20171 And what did you get Pat?
20171Are there no eyes to see those floods of light, no hearts to share with ours that love which holds all these mighty orbs in place?
20171Are there no sails on those far away summer seas, no wings to cleave those crystal airs, no forms divine to walk those radiant fields?
20171At last he said:"Then, if nothing but a fight will satisfy you, will you allow me to kneel down and say my prayer before we fight?"
20171But why mourn and brood over broken fortunes and the calamities of life?
20171Did I say phantoms of light?
20171Did you ever pass the remains of a"boom"town in your travels?
20171Did you never gaze upon the remains of"Bunk City,"where but yesterday all was life and bustle, and to- day it looks like the ruins of Babylon?
20171Did you never hear a country fiddler tune his fiddle?
20171Did you never hear a fiddler fiddle?
20171Did you never hear a mountain love song?
20171Did you never hear the juvenile orator of the old field school speak?
20171Did you never hear the music of the old time singing school?
20171Did you never observe him wrestling with a pair of boots two numbers too small, as Jacob wrestled with the angel?
20171Did you never witness an old field school"exhibition,"far out in the country, and listen to its music?
20171Do you sometimes forget and wound the hearts of your children with frowns and the dagger of cruel words, and sometimes with a blow?
20171Do you sometimes, in your own peevishness, and your own meanness, wish yourself away from their fretful cries and noisy sports?
20171Far happier than the bachelor is old Uncle Rastus in his cabin, when he holds Aunt Dina''s hand in his and asks:"Who''s sweet?"
20171Fellow thitithenth, if you can trust me in the capathity uv a tholjer, caint you trust me in the capathity uv the Legithlature?
20171Have you ever thought of the glory of Eden, the first estate of man?
20171Have you ever thought of the wealth that perished when paradise was lost?
20171If I had n''t a- been perseverin'', an''had n''t a- kep on a- dig- gin''an''a- diggin, whar would I have been to- day?
20171If old Vanderbilt had n''t a- been persevering in his pertickler kind uv dig- gin'', whar would he be to- day?
20171Just from college, ca n''t you tell?
20171The ladies screamed and helped him to his feet, all crying at once:"Are you hurt Mr.''Rickety''--are you hurt?"
20171The old lady screamed and shouted:"What in the world is the matter, Adam?"
20171The paregoric period of life is full of spoons and midnight squalls, but what is home without a baby?
20171We crush under our feet the roses of peace and love in our eagerness to reach the illuminated heights of glory; and what is earthly glory?
20171We stumble over the golden nuggets of contentment in pursuit of the phantoms of wealth, and what is wealth?
20171Whar did he git hit at?
20171What are these, and all the sweet melodies we hear, but echoes from the realm of visions and dreams?
20171What greater wonders will the dreamers yet unfold?
20171What intelligence less than God could fashion the human body?
20171What is it that thinks and feels and knows and acts?
20171What is that white belt we call the milky way, which spans the heavens and sparkles like a Sahara of diamonds?
20171What is this mystery we call the soul?
20171What makes''em''buse de baby kaze de jam an''zarves am sweet?
20171Whence, and what, if not of God, is this mystery we call the mind?
20171Where ends this dream of God?
20171While the old man was gone the merchant came out and said to John:"What are those potatoes worth, my son?"
20171Who can forget the old time courtships at the singing school?
20171Who can forget the old time singing master?
20171Who knows but that Mars may now be a paradise inhabited by a blessed race, unsullied by sin, untouched by death?
20171Who knows but that his roseate color is only the blush of his flowers?
20171Who would not have been touched by such an appeal?
20171Why do n''t da keep temptation frum de little han''s an''feet?
20171Why have your house decorated and painted by inferior workmen, when you can have it done by skilled workmen-- by artists-- for the same price?
20171Why tarry in the doldrums of pessimism, with never a breeze to catch your limp and drooping sails and waft you on a joyous wave?
20171he shouted to a bystander,"whar wuz you_ at_ when the lightnin''struck the show?"
20171who can forget the old school house that stood on the hill?
19703An''you godd some mo''chillen?
19703And I suppose then your poor mother grew angry, eh?
19703And now you do not know what to do with her?
19703Bud, anny''ow, Madame, wad you thing?
19703But how do you know he is a pirate?
19703But how is your mother?
19703But how shall it be?
19703But is it good news you have, or bad?
19703But oo, Miché?
19703Did I say the book of nature is a catechism? 19703 Do you know her?"
19703Do you think so? 19703 Does she look like you, Madame Delphine?"
19703Have you something to say to us?
19703His name?
19703How do we know?
19703How do you know?
19703How is that?
19703I am going there myself,said he;"but why do you want to see Jean Thompson, Madame Delphine?"
19703I kin mague you de troub''to kib dad will fo''me, Miché Vignevielle?
19703I suppose she is a sweet, good daughter?
19703I suppose you will want to see my lill''girl?
19703If it arrive to me to die----"Yez?
19703In a word,said Evariste Varrillat, the physician,"you think we are partly to blame for the omission of many of your Paternosters, eh?"
19703Is dad so, Madame Carraze? 19703 Is dad so, Père Jerome?"
19703Lafitte? 19703 Lag she been you''h- own?"
19703Madame Delphine, you saw dat man?
19703Madame,said Monsieur Vignevielle,"wad pud you hout so hearly dis morning?"
19703Maman?
19703More trouble?
19703Oh, my mother, what have you done?
19703She''s a good lill''chile, eh?
19703To me?
19703To see me?
19703Wad you goin''mague?
19703Wad you wand?
19703Was it she who was with you last Sunday?
19703We like a clean parlor, my daughter, even though no one is ever coming to see us, eh?
19703Well?
19703Well?
19703What are you going to tell him?
19703What did they try to do?
19703What have you been doing?
19703What is the difficulty?
19703Where is your mother now?
19703Why do you cry?
19703Why do you not found hospitals and asylums at once,asked the attorney, at another time, with a vexed laugh,"and get the credit of it?"
19703Why do you not make him_ your_ banker, also, Madame Delphine?
19703Why not?
19703Why, my dear child, I was just saying, we like a clean----But the daughter was desperate:"Oh, tell me, my mother,_ who_ is coming?"
19703Yes?
19703You dunno wad I mean, Madame Carraze?
19703You have a little boy?
19703You sawed''i m? 19703 You thing?"
19703You will come firz by you''se''f?
19703You wish to know his name?
19703You''ave one lill''gal, Madame Carraze?
19703_ Chérie_,said Madame Delphine on one of these evenings,"why do you dream so much?"
19703_ Mais_, fo''w''y?
19703_ Qui ci ça?_ What is that?
19703_ Qui ci ça?_ What is that?
19703_ Qui ci ça?_called Madame Delphine, in a frightened voice, as the two stood up, holding to each other.
19703Ai nt it?''
19703And do you go to my church, Madame----?"
19703And she?
19703Another question came more timidly:"Do-- do you think he knows_ him_?"
19703But fo''w''y you lill''gal lose doze hapetide?"
19703Can it be?
19703Daz ze way, ai nt it?"
19703Do you not see?
19703Fo''w''y dad is?"
19703Had he mistaken?
19703He allowed a few moments more to pass, and then asked:"_ N''est- ce- pas_, Madame Delphine?
19703He rose and walked once across the room, returned, and said, in the Creole dialect:"Is he a good man-- without doubt?"
19703He slowly said:"Is dad possib'', Madame Delphine?"
19703He started to resume his walk, but turned to her again and said:"Why did they make that law?
19703He took pains to speak first, saying, in a re- assuring tone, and in the language he had last heard her use:"''Ow I kin serve you, Madame?"
19703How can I help you?"
19703How can_ we_ speak of him as a law- breaker who might have saved him from that name?"
19703Is there nothing dreadful in that?
19703Madame Carraze,"he said, partly extending his hand,"you see?
19703Madame Delphine was not prepared for the movement, and on that account repeated her question:"What are you thinking about?"
19703Not to the charge of them who stoned him?
19703Oh, Père Jerome, what shall I do?
19703Oh, where is there any room, in this world of common disgrace, for pride?
19703Oo it was?"
19703Père Jerome laid his hat upon a chest of drawers, sat down opposite her, and said, as he wiped his kindly face:"Well, Madame Carraze?"
19703Père Jerome waited a little before replying; then he said, very gently:"I suppose dad muss''ave been by accyden'', Madame Delphine?"
19703She''s a lill''small gal?"
19703Smuggler-- patriot-- where was the difference?
19703Some think it was Jean Lafitte, the famous; you have heard of him?
19703The law did not stop her from being that; and now, when she wants to be a white man''s good and honest wife, shall that law stop her?
19703Then she began to say something else, stopped, and with much nervousness asked:"Père Jerome, what was the name of that man?"
19703To whose charge then?
19703Where are you going, Madame Delphine?"
19703Will she espy the dark form in the deep shade of the orange, and, with one piercing scream, wheel and vanish?
19703Will she stop?
19703Will she turn aside?
19703Would he push it, as his wo nt was?
19703You know w''ere''s dad''ouse of Michè Jean Tomkin?
19703_ Can it be?_ Is this his quest, or is it lunacy?
19703_ Can it be?_ Is this his quest, or is it lunacy?
19703from which race do they want to keep my daughter separate?
19703ma mère, qui vini''ci ce soir?_"--Who is coming here this evening?
20232But, mother, are you sure?
20232Oh, sister, do you think he can be the little brother we have been praying God to send us? 20232 Well, mother, wo n''t you kneel down here by me, and pray for him again?"
20232And were we disappointed?
20232But as we take pleasant walks through our happy valley, what means this unusual sound that arrests our footsteps?
20232But where now are all those who then called that little quadrangle"_ home_?"
20232Comprehended did I say?
20232Do you see the lake that lies so peacefully at our feet?
20232How do you know but God has heard your prayer, and sent you this little brother?"
20232I am glad they prayed; did they think of this when they gained the victory in that first, fierce battle at Mill Spring?
20232In the course of my visit one of the daughters called out,"Lucy, where''s the fine needle?
20232Like a flash it came to me, and I replied:"Is this my brother Andrew?"
20232Malcolm, look at that little boy on the steps of our quarters; who can he be?
20232Mrs. Clark, I am not sick or in personal trouble, but do n''t you feel sorry that Moses is dead?"
20232Sometime in September the pioneer regiment arrived in pretty good condition at-- where?
20232The fort may be attacked, and should anything befall you, my best beloved, what would become of me?
20232The question now arose, where shall we find suitable food for our convalescent?
20232Then, as in a dream, I heard,"Where''s mother?"
20232Twice she reads this order, and then, looking up with a smile, says, with a slight tremor in her voice:"Is this all, beloved?
20232Were the Indians surrounding us?
20232What can it be?
20232What can it be?
20232What could it mean?
20232What if it was still cold, and there must yet be many stormy days?
20232What words can depict the scene that broke upon his bewildered gaze when the horse instinctively stopped about three miles from the fort?
20232Where did he come from?"
20232Who has not heard of him and his indomitable courage?
20232Why should I feel thus?
20232Why should it so distress you?
20232Why was it that they flew only a few rods and then fell dead?
20232You surely do not flinch from duty?"
20232You will return in better spirits and be happy again, will you not, my drooping lily?
20232_ Second_--Could the soldier be brought to submit cheerfully to the privation?"
20232are you sick or have you had bad news?"
20232father, is it you?"
20232how can you bear the thought?"
20232is he going to stay with us always?"
20232is this beardless boy the desperate mutineer of whom you have been telling me?"
20232tears again?
20232where did he come from?
20232who are now living of that gallant old regiment?
20232who can comprehend its entire unselfishness?"
11465A''n''t he a stunner?
11465Ah? 11465 And I was not"----"Was not?"
11465And did you refuse to take the kiss?
11465And how does Mr. Dudley Venner take all this?
11465And should n''t you have known her?
11465And this was buried by your Aunt Susanne Le Blanc?
11465And what was that?
11465And who are there here?
11465And will be thirty- eight next?
11465And with what do you all occupy yourselves, pray?
11465Are the old oleanders in the garden yet?
11465Are you going to keep me under the hedge all night?
11465Are you not tired of your position?
11465Are you sure,she once timidly whispered to me,"are you very sure, Mr.------, that there is no danger of being led astray?
11465But are you not ashamed to make this demand, when you have just received these valuable jewels?
11465But surely, Sophy, you a''n''t afraid to have Dick marry her, if she would have him for any reason, are you? 11465 By what courier will you make it reach me?"
11465Concerning me?
11465Did he?
11465Did it burn blue?
11465Do not remember?
11465Do you know, you constantly reassure me? 11465 Do you know,"continued Mrs. Purcell,"what makes the Laudersdale so gay?
11465Do you really think Dick means mischief to anybody, that he has such dangerous- looking things?
11465Dressed- to- death- and- drawers- empty, do n''t you see we''re goin''to have a squall? 11465 Have you watched him pretty close for the last few days?"
11465Her name was Ursule?
11465Her own child?
11465How can I be angry with you?
11465How can they look so, when you give me such a welcome?
11465How did you know Mr. Laudersdale Was my father?
11465How do you dare touch such a venomous sprite?
11465How do you know all this of yourself?
11465How is it,I asked him,"that so many of my fellow- mediums inspire me with an instinctive dislike and mistrust?"
11465How long before we reach New York?
11465How often to- night have I asked pardon? 11465 How, indeed?
11465I? 11465 I?
11465In a few hours? 11465 Is Mr. Laudersdale with you?"
11465Is fragrance the flower''s soul?
11465Is it not sweet?
11465Is that Mr. Laudersdale''s age?
11465It is always putting up a hand to snatch you?
11465It will not alarm you now?
11465Keep an establishment?
11465Marguerite? 11465 Marry a man because she hates him, Sophy?
11465Me? 11465 Mr. Raleigh"--"Well?"
11465Mrs. Laudersdale has forgotten me?
11465Mrs. Laudersdale? 11465 Must I tell you?"
11465No one? 11465 Nor guess?"
11465Not at all timid?
11465Quelle est cette à © toile qui file, Qui file, file, et disparait?
11465Reducing the equation, the ship is on fire?
11465Roofs should be screens, and not prisons, not shells, you think?
11465Shall I accompany you?
11465She is with you now, then?
11465So that is Mr. Raleigh, is it?
11465Suppose,I thought,"I allow the usual effect to be produced, yet reverse the character of its operation?
11465Terrifying? 11465 That was your servant?"
11465There is Mrs. Purcell,--you remember Helen Heath? 11465 There is"------"And how came you all in the country so early in the season,--anybody with your devotion to company?"
11465They suffered you to go on account of your terror? 11465 Ursule is with us, or on the other one?"
11465Well, how has Elsie seemed of late?
11465Well, you are still angry with me?
11465Well,said Mrs. McLean, drawing breath again,"who is it?"
11465Well?
11465What I''seen''bout Dick Venner?
11465What cheer?
11465What did you mean, then?
11465What have you seen? 11465 What is it like, Sir?
11465What is it that you have seen about Mr. Richard Venner that gives you such a spite against him, Sophy?
11465What is it?
11465What was that you said to yourself?
11465What''s that you say, Sophy? 11465 Where be you a- cruising to?"
11465Where is Ursule? 11465 Where is your cloak?"
11465Who is writing in that room? 11465 Who tol''you Elsie was a woman, Doctor?"
11465Why will you not imprison sunlight in that way, Mr. Desmond? 11465 Why, are you fifty- five years old?"
11465Why,said the Doctor, sharply,--"have you ever seen him with any such weapon about him?"
11465Why?
11465Yes; and yours?
11465You are very uncomfortable, Mademoiselle Le Blanc?
11465You are, Sir?
11465You can not try that at the Highlands?
11465You do n''t mean that she has any ugly thing about her, except-- you know-- under the necklace?
11465You have made the Sandy Hook light?
11465You will not take cold?
11465[ 35] Again he says, in regard to his treatiseDe Perspectiva,"or On Optics,--"Why should I conceal the truth?
11465_ Moi?_she replied.
11465''Tributary to the pitiful sand- bank of Tripoli?''
11465''_ Who says she is vain?
11465An''she ha''n''got the same kind o''feelin''s as other women.--Do you know that young gen''l''m''n up at the school, Doctor?"
11465And circumstance of matter what doth weigh?
11465And in the aspect which the affair has since taken, who can say that Andrà ©''s fate has been entirely unfortunate?
11465And never, never again, thus to fall low?
11465And now shall I keep an establishment?"
11465And there was the least possible shade of unconscious regret in the voice before it added,--"And what was I?"
11465And what was the vague, dark Presence which still overshadowed me at such times?
11465And you escaped?"
11465Another time I asked,--"How is it that the spirits of great authors speak so tamely to us?
11465Are not Erard and Broadwood and Chickering the true humanizers of our time?
11465Are we not"Yankees"to the world, though to the diplomatists"citizens of the United States of America"?
11465As my right hand lay quietly on my knee, and I asked myself, with a stupid wonder,"Now, can I move it?"
11465At this rate, when are our payments to have an end?"
11465But do we reflect that Vermont is half marble, and that Lake Superior can send us bronze enough for regiments of statues?
11465But does he alter the inside of the head?
11465But might they not, in the first place, have been derived from me?
11465But the Bey was not to be talked over; he refused to be led away from the main question,--"Where are the money, the regalia, the naval stores?"
11465But were you really frightened?"
11465Ca n''t they help growing twelve feet high in this new soil, any more than our maize?
11465Can she come here?"
11465Can you tell me?"
11465Could not we get up a party, Miss Stuart, an evening- party, to see a little bit of sunlight struck out,--on a moonshiny night, too?"
11465Could she have stayed to meet the schoolmaster?
11465Did she go only to get out of his, her cousin''s, reach?
11465Did she love me?
11465Did you ever burn firecrackers?
11465Do n''t you see?"
11465Do n''t you think so?"
11465Does it answer for pearl or for daisy with you?"
11465Dr. Heavysterne or his Honor Littleton Coke, but it is,"Who knows where Hockey Jones is?"
11465Draws near?
11465How did you know it?"
11465How shall we, Whom the stars draw so, and the uplifting sea?
11465I no like his looks these las''days.--Is that a very pooty gen''l''m''n up at the school- house, Doctor?"
11465I shall come back to you,--may I?"
11465In that case, where would he, Dick, be?
11465Is he taller, or thinner, or graver, or darker, or what?
11465Is n''t it people of the finest organization, comprehensive, large- souled, that are capable of the extremes either of courage or fear?
11465It must be----This is your mystery,_ n''est ce pas?_ Mamma was my grandmamma.
11465It''s the young Missis, Doctor,--it''s our Elsie,--it''s the baby, as we use''t''call her,--don''you remember, Doctor?
11465Laudersdale?"
11465Let me see,--you had a flirtation with Helen that summer, did n''t you?
11465Mr. Reynolds, will you take this young lady to her servant, Ursule, the woman you rescued?"
11465My beauty have anything ugly?
11465My left hand was quiet; why did its fingers not move also?
11465No?
11465Nor do I object to his claiming for women the right to make books and pictures and( shall I say it?)
11465Of course, you will be a surprise to everybody.--There, run along, children; we''ll follow.--Yes, wo n''t it be delightful, Roger?
11465Or are they sighing faintly for desire That with May dawn their leaves may be o''erflowed, And dews about their feet may never fail?"
11465Or do we really have so many?
11465Raleigh?"
11465Raleigh?"
11465Raleigh?"
11465Raleigh?"
11465Seventeen year ago,''n''her poor mother cryin''for her,--''Where is she?
11465Shall I be obliged to keep an establishment?"
11465She was tall and large?"
11465So blind, as well as maimed and halt and lame, What sometimes makes it see?
11465Soon recovering herself,--"And what do you think of the mirage now?"
11465Suddenly, the wonder came into my mind,--How is it my fingers move?
11465Supposing it came to the worst, what could be done then?
11465Tell me, Sophy, what do you think would happen, if he should chance to fall in love with Elsie, and she with him, and he should marry her?"
11465That is his age?"
11465That over the wounds and anguish The easeful flood might roll?
11465The Bey had heard of the ships and cargoes left at Algiers, and asked at once, Where were all the good things promised to him by Famin?
11465The Bey read it, and repeated his question,--"Why has the Prince of America not sent the hundred and seven thousand dollars?"
11465The ocean in a tea- cup?
11465Then how did you know me?
11465Then is the danger which you mentioned past?"
11465Then why should you wish to hasten?
11465Then you can not imagine a situation in which you would lose self- possession?"
11465There is Mrs. Heath,--you never have forgotten her?"
11465They might, perhaps, make all oratory but their own penal, and then( who knows?)
11465Was I falling behind in spiritual progress?
11465Was I too weak to be the medium for the promised revelations?
11465Was it possible that he was going to take a fancy to her?
11465Was it possible, in any way, to exasperate her irritable nature against him, and in this way to render her more accessible to his own advances?
11465Was she not rather becoming more and more involved in the toils of this plotting Yankee?
11465What are you afraid of?
11465What did that mean?
11465What do I care for them?
11465What do I care, if Dick Venner die?
11465What do they care for me?
11465What if I should forget how to direct my hands?
11465What if he is?"
11465What if my knees, which were just as still as the hymn- books in the rack before me, should cease to bend, and I should sit there forever?
11465What if they should refuse to obey me?
11465What is it that stops them?
11465What is the answer of the experienced lawgiver?
11465What is this dreadful danger?"
11465What makes it melt and flow, And melt and melt and flow,-- Till light, clear- shining through its heart of dew, Makes all things new?
11465What makes it melt, Dissolving from the earthiness that made it hard and heavy?
11465What set them going?
11465What shall I deem their converse?
11465What sort of scholar must he now be, who should be worthy to be put into comparison with the philosopher of the thirteenth century?
11465What would our civilization be without the piano?
11465What you think she do,''f anybody else tech it?"
11465When may I see the snow?
11465Which proves?"
11465Who can taste Thy divineness, Nor hunger and thirst to bestow?
11465Who is that?"
11465Why describe her?
11465Why not?
11465Will not they, the immortal souls of the ages past, who have guided us to a knowledge of the truth, assist us also in preserving it pure?"
11465Will nothing rouse my country?
11465Would they hail The wild gray light that fronts yon massive cloud, Or the half- bow rising like pillared fire?
11465Yet what does it contain?
11465You dance, then?"
11465You don''think I care for Dick?
11465You feigned death?
11465You have dear friends at home, whom you wish to see, who wish to see you?"
11465You took flight?"
11465_ Oui, dà  !_ I have exchanged great queen magnolias for rues; what will you give me for pomegranates and oleanders?"
11465a ghost?"
11465and"Did Dandy Glover really die in India?"
11465cried Mrs. Stilton, really distressed,"how can you say such a thing of me?
11465exclaimed Mrs. Stilton, with a pitiful cry, while the tears burst hot and fast from her eyes;"dear husband, what does this mean?
11465how shall it be, With all His infinite promising in thee?
11465need I name the subject of my contemplations?
11465said the old Doctor, one morning,"after you''ve harnessed Caustic, come into the study a few minutes, will you?"
11465she exclaimed, in a deep, harsh voice,"where''s the pale- face?
11465was it I, That deep in its easeful water My wounded soul might lie?
11465what ails him?
11465where is she?
14004Are you sincere in what you say?
14004Did n''t you?
14004Do you really think,said Lincoln,"that announcement was the occasion of my nomination?"
14004Dr. Bateman, will you measure us?
14004Is dat''rithmetic?
14004Oh, does he?
14004What do you mean?
14004Who knew how many wives he had?
14004Who wrote the play?
14004Why not? 14004 Why not?
14004''A school of events?''
14004''And did you expect to meet a savage?''
14004''Are you sure?''
14004''Can you build this bridge?''
14004''Did Lincoln authorize you to sign it?''
14004''Did Lincoln give you an order of that kind?''
14004''Did Mr. Lincoln ever read this book?''
14004''Did Stanton say I was a d----d fool?''
14004''Did you submit fully under the first loss?''
14004''Do you mean to say the President is a d----d fool?''
14004''Do you think we shall elect a Free- soil President in 1860?''
14004''Have you ever heard about Sykes''s yellow dog?''
14004''Hello,''said he,''what is it?''
14004''How is that brought about?''
14004''How is that?''
14004''How much?''
14004''If I sign this list as a whole, will you be responsible for the future good behavior of these men?''
14004''That is so,''one of them says; I wonder if he is a Kentuckian?
14004''Well,''said Mr. Lincoln, after Mr. Winslow had finished,''well, Commodore Smith, what do you think of it?''
14004''What for?''
14004''What is it?''
14004''What is it?''
14004''What is it?''
14004''What luck had you?''
14004''Where is Lincoln?''
14004''Where is it?''
14004''Where is your room?''
14004''Who?''
14004''Why do n''t you get rid of him, then?''
14004''Why not let_ us_ make them a little more conventional, and file them to a classical pattern?''
14004''Why,''said the President,''have you not read those papers?
14004''Will you act as clerk of the election to- day?''
14004''Will you take us and our trunks to the steamer?''
14004''Would you have a Judge with no preconceived notions of law?''
14004''Would you_ pack_ the Supreme Court?''
14004''You, then, take the responsibility of your acts, do you?''
14004''_] If not, then why shall we not, as heretofore, be recognized and acknowledged as brethren again, living in peace and harmony, one with another?
14004A little past midnight the question came again from Lincoln,"Brough, what is your majority by this time?"
14004After having expressed his thanks to Anderson for his conduct in South Carolina, Lincoln said,"Major, do you remember ever meeting me before?"
14004And did he stop and speak to you?"
14004And what if all should fail?
14004And who that thinks with me will not fearlessly adopt the oath I take?
14004Anything busted?"
14004Are all the common ones so grand, And all the titled ones so mean?
14004Are you going to split the Ohio down through, and push your half off a piece?
14004Are you not over- cautious when you assume that you can not do what the enemy is constantly doing?
14004As he read it his face became like lead, and I said,''What shall be done?''
14004As soon as I had assisted him in checking his steed, the President said to me:''He came pretty near getting away with me, did n''t he?
14004As soon as the inquiry had been made, Lincoln''s face began lighting up, and he said:"What has become of our old friend Bob Lewis, of DeWitt County?
14004At the close he asked,"Has the Friend finished?"
14004At what point shall we expect the approach of danger?
14004At what point, then, is the approach of danger to be expected?
14004Brough was at hand, and directly the electric voice inquired,"Brough, about what is your majority now?"
14004Browning asked,"And did you once see Shelley plain?
14004But how if she votes herself a slave State unfairly-- that is, by the very means for which you would hang men?
14004But is it entirely politic to read or speak it as it is written?"
14004Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make law?
14004Can it be that there are opposing opinions in the North as to the necessity of putting down this rebellion?
14004Can not this last bloody battle be avoided?''
14004Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
14004Can you not help me a little in this matter in your end of the vineyard?
14004Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work?
14004Change positions with the enemy, and think you not he would break your communication with Richmond within the next twenty- four hours?
14004Chase?''
14004Do n''t you know that we are in the midst of war?
14004Do n''t you see it?"
14004Do n''t you wish so too?"
14004Do you remember a story that Bob used to tell us about his going to Missouri to look up some Mormon lands that belonged to his father?
14004Do you suppose that I will condescend to break a lance with your low and obscure colleague?''
14004Do you take the President of the United States to be a commission broker?
14004Does your plan involve a greatly larger expenditure of_ time_ and_ money_ than mine?
14004Free them all, and keep them among us as underlings?
14004Free them, and make them politically and socially our equals?
14004Had he been called of God to the throne of power at such a time as this, to be the leader and deliverer of the people?
14004Had she wronged both men?
14004Has anything ever threatened the existence of this Union save and except this very institution of slavery?
14004He had done, he contemplated doing, no wrong, no injustice to any citizen of the United States; why then should there be a desire to strike him down?
14004He laughed and said,''Ca n''t the party raise better material than that?''
14004He passed the sheet, on which he had written the verses, to me, saying,''Have you ever read them?''
14004He said to a gentleman who called upon Mrs. Lincoln,"Do you think, sir, that my father has gone to heaven?"
14004He then remarked to me,''Hannah, what did I tell you?
14004Hearts are mourning in the North, While the sister rivers seek the main, Red with our life- blood flowing forth-- Who shall gather it up again?
14004Here a dispute arose, when Jim said,"Now, you''spose three pigeons sit on that fence, and somebody shoot one of dem; do t''other two stay dar?
14004His response was,''Where did you find it?''
14004How am I to know that you did not lose it by a trap after getting into somebody''s orchard?''
14004How can anyone who abhors the oppression of the negroes be in favor of degrading classes of white people?
14004How can men hesitate a moment as to the duty of the Government to restore its authority in every part of the country?
14004How could I be?
14004How would you look taking an oath to support what you declare is an ungodly Constitution, and asking God to help you?''
14004How, then, shall we perform it?
14004I am a plain, common man, like the rest of you; and why should not I have as good a right to speak my sentiments as the rest of you?
14004I said:''For whom are you going to ring?''
14004If not recruited and rested then, when could they ever be?
14004If this had been said among Marion''s men, Southerners though they were, what would have become of the man who said it?
14004If this is true, how do you propose to improve the condition of things by enlarging slavery?--by spreading it out and making it bigger?
14004If you ca n''t now live with the land, how will you then live without it?
14004In case of a disaster, would not a retreat be more difficult by your plan than mine?
14004In fact, would it not be_ less_ valuable in this, that it would break no great line of the enemy''s communication, while mine would?
14004Is it quite certain that this betters their condition?
14004Is slavery wrong?
14004Is the land any richer?
14004Is there never one in all the land, One on whose might the Cause may lean?
14004Is there no hour or spot when or where I may escape these constant calls?
14004It forces us to ask,''Is there, in all Republics, this inherent and fatal weakness?
14004Jim answered,"No; what is''rithmetic?"
14004Lincoln calmly retorted,"Senator, that is just about the distance from here to the Capitol, is it not?"
14004Lincoln, how often have you sworn to support the Constitution?
14004Lincoln?"
14004Lincoln?''
14004Lincoln?''
14004Listening to the despatch, he asked,''What does Stanton say?''
14004Looking at the different boats, they singled out mine and asked,''Who owns this?''
14004More than once he exclaimed,''Must more blood be shed?
14004Mr. Chase, wo n''t you make a draft of what you think ought to be inserted?"
14004Mr. Lincoln, imitating the bird, said:''_ Tweet, tweet, tweet_; is n''t he singing sweetly?''
14004Mr. Lincoln, who was still standing, said,''Threatened to_ shoot you_?''
14004Must a Government, of necessity, be too strong for the liberties of its own people, or too weak to maintain its own existence?''"
14004Must she still be admitted, or the Union dissolved?
14004Nasby?''
14004Now, what would they think of their_ honest_ Abe if he should make such an appointment as the one proposed?"
14004Of his poor mother lying beneath the tangled underbrush in a distant forest?
14004Of that other grave in the quiet Concord cemetery?
14004Of the mighty changes which had lifted him from the lowest to the highest estate on earth?
14004Of the weary road which had brought him to this lofty summit?
14004Oh, what will the country say_?''
14004Or are you going to keep it right alongside of us outrageous fellows?
14004Said he,''Young man, do you see that gun?''
14004Says I,''Abe, what are you studying?''
14004Says he,''Smoot, did you vote for me?''
14004Shall we befriend her?"
14004Shall we expect some transatlantic military giant to step the ocean and crush us at a blow?
14004Should you not claim to be at least his equal in prowess, and act upon the claim?
14004Slowly and distinctly he read the first paragraph, and then turned to Herndon with,"What do you think of that?"
14004Speaking of this incident next day, he said,"Did you notice that sunburst?
14004That suffering and death press upon all of us?
14004That there is no room left for them?
14004That works of humanity and affection, which we would cheerfully perform in days of peace, are all trampled upon and outlawed by war?
14004The President regarded the old man for an instant with dry eyes, and said,''_ What will the country say?
14004The President said:"Seward, you never heard, did you, how I earned my first dollar?"
14004The father''s face frightened her and she cried,''What is wrong, husband?''
14004The question recurs, How shall we fortify against it?
14004They got so far in half an hour that Lincoln could say, in his hearty way:"Colonel, how tall are you?"
14004They lingered bashfully near the door, and Lincoln, noticing their embarrassment, rose and said good- naturedly,"How do you do, my good fellows?
14004To the question, When is the war to end?
14004Two young contrabands, as we have learned to call them, were seated together, when one said to the other,"Jim, do you know''rithmetic?"
14004Was it possible to lose the nation and yet preserve the Constitution?
14004Was there presaged to him a vision of that grander review of our victorious armies at the close of the war, which he was not to see?"
14004Well, then, I want to know what you are going to do with your half of it?
14004What can I do for you?
14004What can you do in Missouri better than here?
14004What did he think of?
14004What do you suppose he wants?"
14004What do you want?''
14004What has ever threatened our liberty and prosperity, save and except this institution of slavery?
14004What have I done, or omitted to do, which has provoked the hostility of the''Tribune''?"
14004What if he should love her still, and should return and find her wedded to another?
14004What if the resources of the Government should prove inadequate, and its enemies too powerful to be subdued by force?
14004What is it that we hold most dear among us?
14004What is yours?''
14004What next?
14004What ruler ever won it like this President of ours?
14004What shall I do?''
14004What tells you the thing must be rooted out?''
14004What then?
14004What would not that man achieve for mankind who should free America from slavery?
14004What''s the matter?''
14004What''s the matter?''
14004What''s this?
14004When General Burnside was about to leave, the President inquired,''Is there anything, my dear General, that I can do for you?''
14004When he came back I said,''Doctor, what have you to say now?''
14004When shall I come, and how long will you need me each time?''
14004When the President turned to me, I asked whether we might not look to him as the coming deliverer of the nation from its one great evil?
14004When they were about to part, the minister said:"Mr. Lincoln, may I say one thing to you before we separate?"
14004When they were done, Mr. Lincoln said,''Gentlemen, why do you bring this matter to me?
14004When they were fairly on the platform, and a short distance from the car, I stepped forward and accosted the President:''How are you, Lincoln?''
14004Wherein is a victory more certain by your plan than mine?
14004Wherein is a victory_ more valuable_ by your plan than mine?
14004While he was so engaged, several old friends, who had learned of his arrival, rushed in to see him, some of them shouting,''How are you, Old Abe?''
14004Why can you not reach there before him, unless you admit that he is more than your equal on the march?
14004Why do you come here to appeal to my humanity?
14004Why do you follow me here with such business as this?
14004Why do you not go to the War- office, where they have charge of all this matter of papers and transportation?"
14004Why is it?
14004Why is it?''
14004Why not take it to the Department having these things in charge?''
14004Why not?"
14004Why not?"
14004Why should he, with so many burdens upon him, and with such necessity for solace in his home and his affections, be brought into so tender a trial?
14004Will any body there, any more than here, do your work for you?
14004Will you let my name stay on the old sign till I come back from Washington?"
14004Will you make war upon us and kill us all?
14004Will you pardon me for asking what the horses of your army have done since the battle of Antietam that fatigues anything?"
14004Will you sit down?"
14004Would you have gone out of the House-- skulked the vote?
14004Would you have voted what you felt and knew to be a lie?
14004said Mr. Lincoln,''how are they getting along down there?''
14004said the boy,''do n''t you see he is gnawing his rope off?
21537And why not?
21537CHAPTER XV ONE NATION OR TWO?
21537Had not the President carried every county in Alabama and Mississippi in the recent election?
21537Had they not elected Lyman Trumbull in 1855 in spite of all the"great man"could do?
21537How would the West and"the people"use their power?
21537The cry,"Shall the people rule?"
21537Was there a similar example in all history?
21537Was there ever a better chance for the new group of leaders?
21537What was the way out of the dangerous_ impasse_?
21537Why should not the United States fulfill her destiny?
21537With the ablest New England and Middle States leaders in the Senate and House, why might not the arrangement of 1825 be renewed?
21537Would the Northwestern wing of the party continue loyal?
21537Would they be disappointed?
21537[ Illustration: One Nation, or Two?]
21537_ One Nation or Two?_ 289 XVI.
15767Ai n''t it fine?
15767An''are you Texans, too?
15767An''if I''m not pressin''too much,said the Panther, in mock humility,"may I make so bold as to ask our young Solomon what is natural history?"
15767And does he say nothing about our lives and good treatment?
15767And if we should surrender, what then?
15767And none escaped?
15767And that the Mexican force dispatched against the Eastern settlements is much nearer than was supposed?
15767And what did you do?
15767And why is the young señor here?
15767And you expect to remain with them?
15767And your answer?
15767And your reply?
15767Are all the columns provided?
15767Are you already weeping for the conquered?
15767Are you going to fight for Texas?
15767Are you sure?
15767Boys,he asked weakly,"how did you find me?"
15767Boys,he exclaimed,"did you hear that?"
15767Boys,he said,"you know a merchant, John Roylston, who has headquarters in New Orleans, and also offices in St. Louis and Cincinnati?"
15767But are you sure,asked Ned,"that it will be an end of the Texans?
15767But what of the wicked Texans? 15767 By the great horn spoon, who can that feller in front be?
15767Can he make all the signs, an''has he rid the goat?
15767Did he get the order?
15767Did that sound to you like a Mexican whistling?
15767Did you see a boy called Ned Fulton in the Alamo, a tall, handsome fellow with brown hair and gray eyes?
15767Do I mean it? 15767 Do n''t you see?"
15767Do n''t you think,said Ned,"that we ought to find out just exactly what is here, and what this army intends?"
15767Do we follow them down into Mexico?
15767Do we go down to the coast?
15767Do you mean that?
15767Do you mean to say,asked Obed White,"that none of the Texans survived the fall of the Alamo?"
15767Do you see that black speck there, where the sky touches the ground?
15767Do you think Fannin will get through?
15767Do you think I ought to shoot him?
15767Do you think they will get us again?
15767Do you think we can beat them off?
15767Do you want some more rifles, Davy?
15767Does he hereby swear never to tell any secret of ours to Mexican or Indian?
15767Does he swear to obey all our laws and by- laws wherever he may be, and whenever he is put to the test?
15767Does that mean we''re not goin''on?
15767From whom?
15767Goliad?
15767Has it been finally settled?
15767Have n''t you seen Mexicans enough for one day? 15767 Have you any friends here with you?"
15767Have you any specially good riflemen?
15767Have you been anywhere near San Antonio?
15767Have you been close to San Antonio, Simpson?
15767Have you heard anything about the men inside?
15767Have you heard or seen anything?
15767Have you heard when we march?
15767Have you seen the President?
15767How do you know?
15767How is that?
15767How large do you think this force was?
15767How long have you been with them?
15767How much further is it?
15767How?
15767I have heard that the church was abandoned, but where is Ward, and where are his men?
15767In what way did they show it?
15767Is it possible?
15767Is it rescue?
15767Is n''t that a light?
15767Me?
15767Might he not be among the prisoners?
15767Ned,said the Panther,"you know how to go back to the cabin, do n''t you?"
15767Now what are they gathering cavalry out there for? 15767 Now what has disturbed you?"
15767Now what in thunder can they want?
15767Now, what have you been up to, young''un?
15767On what terms?
15767Ought I to see Colonel Travis?
15767Santa Anna himself?
15767Santiago, but was it not, Josà ©?
15767See, is n''t that the top of a mast sticking up above those scrub trees?
15767That''s so,said Obed,"but who''d have thought of this?
15767The Alamo? 15767 The order has been issued that no Texan shall be spared, and do you not see the red flag waving there close by us?"
15767Then the Alamo has not fallen?
15767Then why do n''t you join us, and we three will turn into four?
15767Then why talk to us about it?
15767Then you still mean to fight against us?
15767Wa''al, then, what do you have to say?
15767We attack about three days from now, do we not?
15767We''re mighty glad to see you,said Crockett,"but we ai n''t welcomin''you to no picnic, I reckon you understand that, do n''t you, Jim Smith?"
15767Well, Ned, I s''pose you can make a purty good guess what this means?
15767Well, they''ve got plenty of faults, but you have n''t heard of them buyin''their lives at the price of a comrade''s, have you?
15767What are they?
15767What are you going to do now?
15767What did he say?
15767What did you do with the Panther and Obed?
15767What do you hear from the Alamo, Smith?
15767What do you mean by a service now?
15767What do you mean?
15767What do you say they are?
15767What do you think he wants?
15767What do you think it is, Panther?
15767What do you think of him?
15767What do you think we''d better do, Panther?
15767What do you want?
15767What do you wish us to do?
15767What does General Santa Anna demand of us?
15767What has become of King?
15767What is it that you wish to say to us?
15767What is it?
15767What is our best plan, Panther?
15767What is the matter with you?
15767What is your name?
15767What luck?
15767What matters it?
15767What shall we do?
15767What was he saying, Ned?
15767What was it that you were saying about the general?
15767What was that?
15767What will they do next?
15767What would you say?
15767What''s that?
15767What''s the use of our hurryin''?
15767When are we to be released? 15767 Where are your Texans now?"
15767Where did you get it?
15767Which is to be first, Davy?
15767Who are you?
15767Who are you?
15767Why are the Texans so foolish as to oppose the great Santa Anna, the most illustrious and powerful of all generals and rulers? 15767 Why are you so anxious to have Roylston?"
15767Why are you walking here?
15767Why did n''t you think of whistling the tune sooner?
15767Why did n''t you?
15767Why do n''t you speak up?
15767Why not make it a whole city with a fine big hotel right in the center of it?
15767Why were you running away in the dark?
15767Why, what is it?
15767Will you go along, too?
15767Will,exclaimed the Panther,"have you gone plum''crazy?
15767You are Texans and friends?
15767You feel that way about it, do you?
15767You like it here?
15767You say that you were in the Alamo, and that all the defenders have fallen except you?
15767You see it, do n''t you? 15767 You think that we can break through?"
15767You think, then, we should retreat?
15767You''re goin''toward the Alamo?
15767You?
15767Your name?
15767Ai n''t that so, Hank?"
15767An''may I ask, ma''am, how you come to be here?"
15767And even should they miss, what chance do you think you have here?"
15767And it can be no other army than that of Cos.""Right again, ai n''t he, Obed?"
15767Are they yet ready to surrender their throats to our knives?
15767Are you game enough to go, Ned?
15767Are you sure, Ned, that you can not go with me and bring your friend Allen, too?
15767But had he failed them?
15767But he pressed his lips firmly together for a moment and then said to Ned:"Keep this to yourself, will you?
15767But who can prevail against the great Santa Anna?
15767Could such as Crockett and Bowie and Travis be blind to their danger?
15767Could these men, heroes of a thousand dangers, have really given up?
15767Crockett?"
15767Did they not know that he would come and crush them, every one?"
15767Did you ever see anything go as slow as they do?"
15767Did you see anything besides a lot of Mexican vaqueros, fuddled with liquor and sound asleep?"
15767Did you see that figure passin''between us an''the cabin?"
15767Do n''t you see her, that big, stout cabin ahead?"
15767Do n''t; you know us?"
15767Do we stay?"
15767Do you hear anything, Ned?"
15767Do you notice, Will, that it''s beginning to cloud up again?
15767Do you speak Spanish?"
15767Do you wish it?"
15767Even if he got through, how could he ever bring Roylston and the relief force in time?
15767For Heaven''s sake, Mr. Panther, the state of affairs ai n''t so bad as that, is it?"
15767How could I have continued dealings with such a man?
15767How could that be?
15767How could you get out?"
15767How did you ever happen to do it?"
15767How far off would you say that light is, Panther?"
15767How is the new republic?"
15767How many of the Texans are left?
15767How were Crockett and Bowie?
15767How you feelin''now, Ned?"
15767If the mine was ready, why did they not set the match?
15767If they saw him they could easily ride him down, and what chance would he have with only four bullets in his pouch?
15767Is it not so, Fernando?"
15767Is n''t that so, boys?"
15767It was like Napoleon on the night before Austerlitz, and what was he but the Napoleon of the New World?
15767Listen to that beautiful song, wo n''t you?"
15767Look at these bones, will you?
15767Many replied yes, but then a voice spoke out of the darkness:"What of the wounded, Colonel?
15767Not to give up in the sense of surrender, but to expect death fighting?
15767Now what do you think, Ned?"
15767Or rather, what chance would he have if the pouch contained a hundred?
15767Roylston?"
15767Roylston?"
15767Shall we do it?"
15767Shall we open fire, Colonel?"
15767Thar, do you hear that trumpet blowin''ag''in?
15767The music ceased presently and one of the men said to Ned:"What company?"
15767They were all good comrades together, and what more was to be asked?
15767They''ll sweep the country clean, will they?
15767Wake me up about midnight, wo n''t you?"
15767Was it likely that his friends would ever find this paper, or, if finding it, was it likely that any one of them could ever obtain his inheritance?
15767Was it possible that every man, overpowered by fatigue, had fallen into slumber at such a moment?
15767We do n''t have much chance to travel right now, do we, Bee- Hunter?"
15767Well, what of it?
15767Were other tragedies to be added to that of the Alamo?
15767Were they asleep?
15767Were you with Fannin?"
15767What chance had men without an ounce of food or a drop of water to withstand a siege?
15767What could men without ammunition do against many times their number, well armed?
15767What did a single captive amount to, anyhow?
15767What did you do in the storm, Ned?"
15767What do you say, Ned?"
15767What do you say, Obed?"
15767What do you say, boys, all of you?"
15767What do you say, boys?
15767What do you think about it, Hank?"
15767What do you think we can do, Ned?"
15767What do you want?"
15767What more could be asked by two simple peasants of small wants?
15767What were they doing inside now?
15767When do we get our parole?"
15767Whence had come these shots?
15767Where are Fannin and his men now?
15767Where are the defenders of Refugio?
15767Where were the fair Mexican promises, in accordance with which they had yielded?
15767Why did the Mexican army remain awake so late?
15767Why do you not go north into the states where life is safe?"
15767Why should I not?
15767Why should they be deprived of their part in the festival to follow up a prisoner?
15767Why should they guard a boy when everybody else was getting ready to be merry?
15767Why should they?
15767Why should they?
15767Why should we retreat?"
15767Why was Urrea doing everything, and why were his superiors standing by, evidently a prey to some great nervous strain?
15767Wo n''t you do what I say and slip out of the Alamo while there''s still a chance?"
15767Would his comrades and he ever escape from those walls?
15767Would you let miserable Mexican ponies overtake you?
15767You survived that by a miracle, but where are all your companions in that siege?
15767asked the Panther,"if we told you that Santa Anna an''7,000 men were on the Rio Grande ready to march on San Antonio?"
15767said Ned, pointing to the west,"or is it a firefly or something of the kind?"
21090And I said,''Why is this thus? 21090 Mais ou sont les neiges d''antan?"
21090They said,''Doth not like us?'' 21090 They then said,''Wilt not marry us?''
21090What are the trees saying?
21090What though the field be lost? 21090 Where are the snows of yester year?
21090Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe? 21090 At Genoa he drives the cicerone to despair by pretending never to have heard of Christopher Columbus, and inquiring innocently,Is he dead?"
21090Do put your accents in the proper spot; Do n''t, let me beg you, do n''t say''How?''
21090How Sleep the Brave?
21090In such verses as Carew''s_ Encouragements to a Lover_, and George Wither''s_ The Manly Heart_--"If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?"
21090In the_ Europeans_, 1879, and an{ 588}_ International Episode_, 1878, he has reversed the process, bringing Old Word[ Transcriber''s note: World?]
21090Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born?
21090It was the precise point at which Sidney Smith had uttered that bitter taunt in the_ Edinburgh Review_,''Who reads an American book?''
21090Or are ye very Nature, the goddéss, That have depainted with your heavenly hand This garden full of flowrës as they stand?"
21090So young and so untender?
21090Thou bender of the thistle of Lora; why, thou breeze of the valley, hast thou left mine ear?
21090To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men That rived the rebel line asunder?"
21090What Was it?
21090What frail man Dares lift his hand against it?
21090What is patriotism?
21090What is the reason of this thusness?''
21090What''s that you say?-- Why, dern it!--sho!-- No?
21090Who, even after a single reading or representation, ever forgets Falstaff, or Shylock, or King Lear?
21090Whom do you love best in the world?
21090Why Come Ye Not to Courte?
21090Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us and not the history of theirs?"
21090and''Wherefore did I come?''"
21090for''What?''
15585''A boy has eighty- five turnips, and gives his sister thirty,''--pretty present for a girl, is n''t it?
15585''Bear it? 15585 ''Candor''s the order of the day, is n''t it?''
15585''Do you know,''said he, looking shyly at Hollins,''that I begin to think Beer must be a natural beverage? 15585 ''Now, are you sure you can bear the test?''
15585''Oil and vinegar?'' 15585 ''We think we know one another,''exclaimed Rollins;''but do we?
15585''Well, Abel,''Eunice rejoined,''how are we to distinguish what is best for us? 15585 ''What shall we call the place?"
15585A hypo?
15585Ai n''t that a hard life you are laying out for yourself? 15585 An''a long porch?"
15585An''what if I should tell ye I had conscientious scruples agenst lettin''meself be adored for a heavenly personage?
15585And the-- the person?
15585Are you sick?
15585But had n''t you better take a little time to think it over? 15585 But suppose some one should come along and want to be entertained?"
15585Could_ you_ stand such stuff,--say?
15585Do n''t you really think you are going to lose me, girls?
15585Do you know where this house o''Dutton''s is?
15585Do you think we had better keep it up all the time?
15585Does she know who sends them?''
15585Forgive you? 15585 Furniture goods?"
15585Haou abaout shoes?
15585Haou do you cattle''ate to treat the ten- acre lot? 15585 Has n''t father got enough stamps to see him through?"
15585Has n''t he any family in the town?
15585Has n''t the man any friends?
15585Have you any red calico like this?
15585Have you any red stuff like this?
15585Have you any stuff like this?'' 15585 How came ye to larn the language, annyway?"
15585How much, sir?
15585How would you like to be companion to a literary man?
15585How would you like to play with him?
15585I did n''t know you knew each other, Lottie?
15585I''d''a been glad to get howld av a bit av timporal sovereighnty, do n''t you see? 15585 I?"
15585Inasmuch as to how?
15585Is Turkey- red just like this?
15585Is it me unavoidable duty to live on this perch, Heller?
15585Is it the wife, ye mane?
15585Is n''t that logic? 15585 Is n''t that splendid, Uncle Teddy?
15585Is n''t there anybody to look after him?
15585Is your name Billings?
15585Is your name Johnson?
15585It would come handy, though, to have a man around to see to things and kind o''provide, would n''t it, though?
15585Lives here?
15585Lottie''s going to play, too; so will you and Daniel, wo n''t you, uncle? 15585 Margaret Callaghan,_ is_ that thing your husband?"
15585My dear Billy, sha''n''t you wait a little while to see if you always like her as well as you do now? 15585 Red stuff?
15585Say, will you come and play with me some time?
15585Spend a_ what_?
15585Sure on''t?
15585Sure, mum, he has a family; was n''t he married this blessed mornin''?
15585The diocese of New York?
15585Then Turkey- red is what you want?
15585Trouble? 15585 Want to go back this morning?"
15585Well, Billy Boy Blue, come blow your horn; what haystack have you been under till this time of day? 15585 Well, have you it in any quality of goods?"
15585What Margaret?
15585What are ye afther doin'', Heller?
15585What are ye goin''to do?
15585What can you do?
15585What do you want?
15585What in wonder have you bought a red dress for? 15585 What is Turkey- red?"
15585What means all this?
15585What part of the work do you incline to yourself?
15585What post would suit you?
15585What shade do you want?
15585What shall we do for lamps, if we can not use any animal substance? 15585 What think you of that?"
15585What will become of him?
15585What''s the matter, my boy?
15585What''s yer will, sir?
15585Where do you come from? 15585 Where do you guess?"
15585Where will I find red calico like this?
15585Who else? 15585 Who is it that says a garden is a standing source of pleasure?
15585Why, Daniel Lovegrove, my nephew, what does this mean? 15585 Why, ma, do n''t you know what a toadskin is?
15585With a big pole in front of it?
15585Would n''t you enjoy it more from church, auntie?
15585Yes, the wife; where is she?
15585You are travelling, h''m?
15585You do n''t seem well to- night, Daniel?
15585You have no Tower in America?
15585You shall be the gentleman?
15585_ Our_ Margaret? 15585 ''We act according to impulse, do n''t we? 15585 ...Shelldrake, however, turning to his wife, said,--"''Elviry, how many up- stairs rooms is there in that house down on the Sound?''
15585Abel Mallory, for instance?"
15585Ai n''t ye got no sinse at all?"
15585Am I dreaming?"
15585An''what business has Dutchmen here, annyway, whin an Irishman has begun the good worrk?
15585And I said--"Why is this thus?
15585And how is Dolly?
15585And is man less than a cow, that he can not cultivate his instincts to an equal point?
15585And then bum- by you will get old or sick ma''be, and who is going to want you around then?
15585And, Nephew Frederick!--h''m!--can you lend me three dollars for the hackman?
15585And, besides, how did the vine know enough to travel in exactly the right direction, three feet, to find what it wanted?
15585Are there any but intimate family friends here this evening?"
15585Are you cold- blooded, or are you insensible?"
15585Are you sick?"
15585As a hardship he ca n''t be beat; and what are the rogues sent to prison for, but to suffer punishment?
15585As he heard this, Billy idled along the edge of the tank for a moment, then faced about and said,--"P''raps I will some day,--where do you live?"
15585At that tender age I writ a Essy for a lit''ry Institoot entitled,"Is Cats to be trusted?"
15585But have the_ pains_ of the garden ever been dwelt upon?
15585But the difficulty is, who will it be?
15585But what of a sermon that takes life out of you?
15585Can you keep a secret?"
15585Caverns of serpents, or grottoes of priceless gems?
15585Could it be possible that Billy was caught in that vortex which whirled me down at ten years,--a little boy''s first love?
15585Could n''t the chafe, now, take an army out in his doubled- barrelled canoes, an''commince the work av convarsion?
15585D''you-- Miss Pilgrim?"
15585Did I never tell you the story?
15585Did n''t I tell ye, Larry, not to be afther ringin''at the owle gintleman''s knocker?
15585Do n''t you think it would be a good plan to learn Billy better before you try to teach him?
15585Do you hesitate?
15585Does he suppose that a man can live thirty- five years in this state of probation, without becoming slightly calloused to a pun on his own name?
15585Does this proposition strike you?
15585Have people, now, been entirely honest in what they have said and written on this theme?
15585Have you been near her?
15585Have you had your breakfast, and taken care of Crab?"
15585He just catches your eye, and, when he says,"Do n''t you think so, sir?"
15585He of the nose nodded eagerly at that, and wrote,"Also you make to be washed my shirt?"
15585He would seem to take me by the throat, saying,''why do n''t you laugh-- why do n''t you burst with merriment?''
15585He wrote at once,"How much you pay?"
15585How are we to know_ what_ vegetables to choose, or what animal and mineral substances to avoid?''
15585How could a back- ache over the pea- bed compensate for these felicities?
15585How d''ye do, Miss Pilgrim?"
15585How did you suppose your mother''d feel to see you playing with those ragamuffins?"
15585How does the cow distinguish between the wholesome and the poisonous herbs of the meadow?
15585How old are you?"
15585How on earth did she get there?"
15585I did not think it necessary to answer this remark, but said:"Then you''ve got nothing to match this?"
15585I know that chemical analysis is said to show it; but may not the alcohol be created, somehow, during the analysis?''
15585I took a long breath to recover from my astonishment at this unimaginable revelation, then said:"Is your feeling returned?"
15585I wondher, Heller, if some av these other islands would n''t furnish us a change of diet?
15585I wrote:"You wish employment?"
15585I''m a stranger, you know; but is there such a lady here as Mrs. Craggs,--Mrs._ Cromwell_ Craggs?
15585I''m not melanancholy on religion, and"--"You do n''t tell me you''re in love?"
15585If I had n''t, how could I ever wear your trousers?"
15585If I should discoorse to these cannebals in their own contimptible language, would it surprise ye, Heller?"
15585In the next moment Heller, bowing with a ceremonious air of respect, inquired,"What are your commands, my lord bishop?"
15585Is it a go?
15585Is it for furniture?"
15585Is it not so, Abel?''"
15585Is it possible?
15585Is that so?"
15585It is always''Who will I marry?''
15585Know ye not, consumers of flesh meat, that ye are nourishing the wolf and tiger in your bosoms?"
15585Now, is your digestion awry?"
15585Now, suppose they-- or he-- the man whose brains are out-- goes about with his coffin under his arm, like my worthy uncle?
15585Now, what are my merits?''
15585O, Pen, I did n''t dare to hope I should find--""Oh, Chauncey, is it you?"
15585One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come across him with his box, and says,"What might it be that you''ve got in the box?"
15585Presently, one of them turned around to me and said:"Is it Dave Dutton ye''re askin''about?"
15585Professor, what may be the spiritual condition av things hereaway, do ye think?"
15585Says I,''Put down that poor little pup; ai n''t you ashamed of yourself, Patsy Grogan?''
15585Shall I adopt a form of religion?
15585Shall I claim property in any created thing?
15585Shall I consume flesh?
15585Shall I interest myself in politics?
15585Shall I stimulate with tea, coffee, or wine?
15585Shall I subjugate cattle?
15585Shall I trade?
15585Shall we go and join the plays?"
15585Shelldrake gave a long whistle, and finally gasped out,--"''Well, what next?''
15585Smoke?
15585So, when Hollins, turning towards me, as he continued, exclaimed,--''Come, why should not this candor be adopted in our Arcadia?
15585Suppose it''s evil to swear: is n''t it better I should express it, and be done with it, than keep it bottled up, to ferment in my mind?
15585Suppose they should go by some accident, when your father was too old to make any more stamps for himself?"
15585Suppose your parents were to lose all their property, what would become of them without a little son who could make money and keep accounts?"
15585The Funny Fellow spoke to Miss Grasscloth:"''Why are the fishermen who catch these shad like wigmakers?''
15585The matter with him?
15585There I asked a man:"Where will I find red calico?"
15585They are cheerful, and why should it not be thusly with us?"
15585They said--"Doth not like us?"
15585They then said--"Wilt not marry us?"
15585Uncle Teddy, d''ye know it was n''t a dog- fight, after all?
15585Was it called the''Ridge House''?"
15585Was my name providentially ordered to be Green, that he might pass verbal contumely upon it?
15585We see the summer smile of the Earth,--enamelled meadow and limpid stream,--but what hides she in her sunless heart?
15585Well, if the plans and charts From Andre''s boots he hauled out, Is his name to be bawled out Forever, round these parts?
15585Well, what''s_ he_ good for?"
15585What brought on this sudden attack?
15585What did the grizzly old cuss do, however, but commence darncin and larfin in the most joyous manner?
15585What do ye say now to meself exhibitin''the gift av miracles an''tongues?
15585What does a young blade of twenty- two know?
15585What indeed could invest human flesh with such terrors,--what but this?
15585What is the reason of this thusness?"
15585What is there in me to love?
15585What is there in the Rumbullions to start you off on such a bender of bashfulness as this which I here behold?"
15585What right has any one to explode a petard in the midst of sweet sociality, and blow every thing like sequence and sentiment sky- high?
15585When I entered I approached the"floor- walker,"and handing him my sample, said:"Have you any calico like this?"
15585When she opened her blue eyes innocently, and said,"Miss Crickey?"
15585Where d''you live?"
15585Where does the boy learn such horrid words?"
15585Where will you find it?
15585Who does not chuckle over the humors of Autolycus, rogue and peddler?
15585Who does not thank William the Great for Falstaff, and Hackett for his personation of the fat knight?
15585Who ever heard of such a thing?
15585Who knows but she''d make a likely wife?
15585Who''s that fat lady on the sofa, that laughs so loud?"
15585Why ca n''t we strip off these hollow Shams,''( he made great use of that word,)''and be our true selves, pure, perfect, and divine?''
15585Why do n''t you bespeak her?
15585Why, what made you think of that, Jesse?''
15585Why_ is n''t_ he like Daniel?"
15585Will any one-- will you, Enos-- commence at once by telling me now-- to my face-- my principal faults?''
15585Will whiting be allowed in the community?"
15585Wo n''t you just hand me that gum- cam- phyer bottle, now you are up?
15585Would it make you happy if I was to learn a hymn for you,--a smashing big hymn-- six verses, long metre, and no grumbling?"
15585You have n''t heard, have you,"she continued,"whether or no there was any other damage done by the gale?"
15585You remember something of the society of Norridgeport, the last winter you were there?
15585You''ll forgive me, uncle, for not mentioning her name yet?
15585and not''Who will marry me?''"
15585going?"
15585he whispered, in a choking voice;"can she mean me?"
15585is n''t that unanswerable?"
15585or,"What is your opinion, sir?"
15585said he,"after this treatment, can you ask me if am going?"
15585said she, suddenly, sitting upright on the lounge,"I wo n''t have the horses from Brown''s livery--"The what, auntie?"
15585what are_ you_ stopping the way for?"
15585what have I been thinking of?
15585you do n''t think I mean he''d support them?
1713( 1) Meanwhile, what of those other gay picnickers, Senator Wade and Senator Chandler? 1713 ( 5) Did ever a subordinate, even a general, administer to a superior a more astounding snub?
1713( 5) In other words, is the Dred Scott decision good law? 1713 ( 7) What would Sumner and all the Abolitionists say to that?
1713Did Stanton say I was a damned fool?
1713Is it not odd,said Lincoln,"that the only channel he could send it was that roundabout route by the awfully wicked city of Chicago?
1713Now, to what does all this amount? 1713 We deny it, and what is your proof?
1713What is the Presidency worth to me,he asked the Ohio committee,"if I have no country?
1713You remember my speaking to you of what I called your overcautiousness? 1713 ''We''ve never had a cross word during all that time, have we?'' 1713 ''Where is your room?'' 1713 ( 16) As a solution of the sectional quarrel, to the extent that it had been definitely put into words, what could have been more astute? 1713 ( 25) But what, under the circumstances, could he do? 1713 ( 3) Was it possible that Chandler, Wade, Davis and the rest had jumped too soon? 1713 ( 3) Why did precise, complacent Miss Todd pick out so strange a man for her mate? 1713 ( 7) Was this the nemesis of Lincoln''s pliability in action during the first stage of his Presidency? 1713 After all, was it certain that one of these votes would change if Blair did not resign? 1713 After all, was the war hopeless? 1713 Am I perfectly sure the emotion is permanent?
1713And after all that, who knows what next?
1713And always the feverish question, what is the strength of the faction that approves this?
1713And amid it all, between the lines of it all, could not any one glimpse a scheme for the expansion of the United States southward?
1713And he never tired of a set of stanzas in the minor key beginning:"Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
1713And how did Lincoln attain this?
1713And of the Secretary of State and his deep policies?
1713And that unnatural silence of the Vindictives, what did that mean?
1713And the two great armies, Grant''s in Virginia, Sherman''s in Georgia, was there never to be stirring news of either of these?
1713And what advice did the country give him?
1713And what might not a defeated Spain be willing to do with Cuba?
1713And who was satisfied with the way the war was going?
1713And whom should the President trust- the tired old General who disagreed with him, or the eager young men who held views he would like to hold?
1713And whose advice should he accept as authoritative?
1713And with the tide running strong against him, what could he do?
1713And would not Southern capital in the nature of things, have a large share in all that was to come?
1713And yet, what was wrong?
1713Are those undefined"war powers,"which are the most sovereign functions of our government, vested in Congress or in the President?
1713Are you not over- cautious when you assume that you can not do what the enemy is constantly doing?
1713As Seward had foreseen, Montgomery held the trumps; but had Montgomery the courage to play them?
1713As party strategy, in the moment when the old Vindictive Coalition seemed on the highroad to complete revival, was that exactly the tune to sing?
1713Assuming that they were right in their political forecast, assuming that he was not to be reelected, what did it signify?
1713At the time all of them laid their heads together-- for what purpose?
1713But as to that-- as of the whippings in Kentucky-- what else, from the peasant point of view, would you expect?
1713But could he be clear in his own mind that this was the thing to do?
1713But how could he prevent it?
1713But how could it make an issue upon emancipation, as long as the President, the object of its antagonism, also refused to support emancipation?
1713But how was it to be proved that this was, in fact, the true issue of the moment?
1713But since Seymour had failed him, who was there that could serve his purpose?
1713But what course should it take, what favored regions were to become its immediate beneficiaries?
1713But what was it?
1713But what would such a convention discuss?
1713But what, for a general who could read between the lines, could have been more delightful?
1713But who was to take his place?
1713But why?
1713Can Louisiana be brought into proper practical relation with the Union sooner by sustaining or by discarding her new State government?
1713Can one help suspecting there was vague hope in his heart that he might be adventuring to the land of hearts''desire?
1713Could a man who laughed when you preached on the beauty of the hewing of Agag, could such a man be sincere?
1713Could he reconstruct the Union in a wise and merciful fashion despite their desperate opposition?
1713Could the Vindictive leaders induce it to go to that length?
1713Despite their importance would it be safe to nominate them?
1713Did I not tell you so?
1713Did Lincoln feel unequal, at the moment, to this great task?
1713Did it break into fragments and pass peacemeal to the various revolted colonies?
1713Did it form a basis for drawing back into the Union the lower South?
1713Did they talk of Stanton, of his waywardness, his furies?
1713Did you court her for her wealth?
1713Do you take the President of the United States to be a commission broker?
1713During the latter half of August, the fate of the Conspiracy hung on the question, Can Andrew and his group be drawn in?
1713Especially, why did many Democrats do so?
1713From what part of his heredity did this derive?
1713Granted that a dictator was needed, which should it be-- the President or Congress?
1713Had austere, reticent Iron- sides, sure of the Lord, but taking no liberties with their souls, at last found out their descendant?
1713Had this narrowly constitutional issue arisen in quiet times, who can say how slight might have been its significance?
1713Having forged the thunderbolt, why could he not, if he chose, instantly smite and destroy?
1713Hay, Century.?
1713He sneered fiercely,"Whence comes this new- born zeal of the Senator from Illinois?
1713How came you to court her?
1713How could a rowdy be the salvation of the country?
1713How far could he trust his military advisers?
1713How had he created this personal confidence?
1713How had he done it?
1713How should I look lugging him over?
1713How were Gilmore and Jaquess faring?
1713IS CONGRESS THE PRESIDENT''S MASTER?
1713If he went on in his weak, amiable way listening to the time- servers who were listening to the bigots, what would become of the country?
1713If the Breckinridge leaders were n''t maneuvering to save their faces, what could they be accused of doing?
1713If the South had not voted lack of confidence in the Breckinridge crowd, what had it voted?
1713In Congress or in the President?
1713Is it a fact or a myth?
1713Is it true that a slave- holder can take his slaves into Kansas if the people of Kansas want to keep him out?
1713It is color then; the lighter having the right to enslave the darker?
1713Lincoln pondered the question, how could the rift between Douglas and the Democratic machine be made irrevocable?
1713Looking up from his writing, he said cheerfully,"What have I done wrong?
1713Must I shoot a simple- minded soldier boy who deserts while I must not touch a hair of a wily agitator who induces him to desert?
1713Must a government of necessity be too strong for the liberties of its people or too weak to maintain its own existence?
1713Now that he had located the right tree, had the knowledge come too late?
1713Now, my friends, can this country be saved on that basis?
1713Of the terrible Committee?
1713Of the way Lincoln had tied his own hands, brought his will to stalemate, through his recognition of the unofficial councils?
1713Or between political enemies?
1713Or was precious time being squandered in preparation?
1713Or, how far will this go toward creating a new element in the political kaleidoscope?
1713Presently, he inquired:''Billy''--he always called me by that name--''how long have we been together?''
1713Raymond, aghast, inquired what he would do if Hooker resisted, if he raised his troops in mutiny?
1713Remembering New Orleans, could any imaginative youth be content with Pigeon Creek?
1713Should his military advice be accepted as final?
1713Suppose Sumter is evacuated; suppose Montgomery has lost her chance to force Virginia into war by precipitating the issue of coercion, what follows?
1713The problem entered politics with the question how could this be brought about without appearing to contradict democracy?
1713The question is, will it be wiser to take it as it is and help to improve it, or to reject and disperse it?
1713The question narrows itself to this: why was Sumter fired upon precisely when it was?
1713There was loud and general disapproval and of course, the habitual question,"Who next?"
1713They, Wade, Chandler, Stevens, Davis, could not do it; why could he?
1713Was Lee invincible?
1713Was it a practical scheme?
1713Was it because you thought she deserved it and that you had given her reason to expect it?
1713Was it conceivable that Lincoln would balk the wishes of the party by obstructing such a natural mode of extrication?
1713Was it conceivable that the war fury was only talk?
1713Was it due to far- away Puritan ancestors?
1713Was it not that you found yourself unable to reason yourself out of it?"
1713Was it the male gift of the forest?
1713Was it to catch McClellan in a trap?
1713Was it transferred somehow to the group collectively?
1713Was the Republic to issue from the war a worthy or an unworthy nation?
1713Was the best of the Northern manhood perishing to no result?
1713Was the limitation of slave area to be on one side only, the Northern side?
1713Was there an efficient general response to his call for troops?
1713Was there any way to forestall or disarm the Vindictives?
1713Was this insolent scold to be invited into the Cabinet?
1713Was"rescue"of the President anything more than a dream?
1713What are we made men for but to encounter and overcome opposition arrayed against us in the line of our duty?
1713What candidate can they find who will give them more of either?
1713What could the Republicans among themselves agree to propose?
1713What did it matter?
1713What do you mean by that?
1713What induced Lincoln to throw out this hint of a possible surrender on the subject of emancipation?
1713What of that?
1713What protection against such an extension of boundaries?
1713What room for personal affronts however gross in a mood like his?
1713What was he to do next?
1713What was it but a falling back on the original policy of the party, the undoing of those measures of 1854 which had called the party into being?
1713What was it that kept him wavering at this eleventh hour?
1713What was really afoot in Canada?
1713What was there in that idea which should strike so deep?
1713What were the Vindictives about?
1713What would it be?
1713When Chase himself took a hand and wrote him a letter, Lincoln said to his secretary,"What is it about?"
1713When the Crown renounced its sovereignty in America, what became of it?
1713When would it come?
1713Where could they find another?
1713Where did the President stand?
1713Where in last analysis does the Constitution place the ultimate powers of sovereignty, the war powers?
1713Who can doubt that this deliberate assimilation, the typical artistic process, began on Pigeon Creek?
1713Who could say what new pattern of affairs the political kaleidoscope might not soon reveal?
1713Who did it?
1713Who else linked the Democrats and the Jacobins?
1713Who else would have had the impulse to make this quaint little confession?
1713Who knows?
1713Who was it that did the actual revolting against the Crown-- colonies, parties, individuals, the whole American people, who?
1713Why did men who were not Abolitionists raise a hue and cry?
1713Why did not Greeley come out bravely and tell the truth?
1713Why did not the government do something?
1713Why did the cause of the people inspire its champion to regard the doctrine of State sovereignty as anti- christ?
1713Why had the same sort of success inspired him at Springfield and humiliated him at Washington?
1713Why might not new Slave States be created outside the Union, eventually to be drawn in?
1713Why might not such attempts succeed?
1713Why might not this be the opportunity to retrieve his failure in Congress?
1713Why not?
1713Why not?
1713Why should such a person be singled out to become responsible for the safety of the capital?
1713Why was it not merely one view in a permissible disagreement over the interpretation of the Constitution?
1713Why-- was not this, remembering Douglas''s assumptions, a master- stroke?
1713With you and not with me is the solemn question''Shall it be peace or a sword?''"
1713Would not the party be compelled to take some relatively minor figure, some essentially new man?
1713XVII DEFINING THE ISSUE XVIII THE JACOBIN CLUB XIX THE JACOBINS BECOME INQUISITORS XX IS CONGRESS THE PRESIDENT''S MASTER?
1713You do not mean color exactly?
1713You mean the whites are intellectually the superiors of the blacks, and therefore have the right to enslave them?
20910''Who are you?'' 20910 And am I taking pleasure in my bath, do you think?"
20910And how can men die better, Than in facing fearful odds, For the ashes of their Fathers, And the temples of their Gods?
20910And that vile odor about you? 20910 How did you get your hair wet?"
20910What have I done,he cried, weeping,"what have my children done, that I should meet with such a fate?"
20910What shall we do?
20910Where have you been, sir?
20910Where,asked Atahualpa, looking about in surprise,"are the strangers?"
20910An''how about that one?"
20910But where was I?
20910Could it be that mysterious Cipango of Marco Polo, search for which had been the object of Columbus''s voyage?
20910Did the deadly teredo bore the ship''s timbers full of holes, until she went down with all on board?
20910Did they die of starvation in their crazy brigantine, drifting on and on while they rotted in the blazing sun, until her seams opened and she sank?
20910Did they founder in one of the sudden and fierce storms which sometimes swept{ 27} that coast?
20910Else how should we dispose of Nero, Tiberius, Torquemada, and gentlemen of their stripe?
20910Fighting- chickens, eh?"
20910Have I missed him?"
20910Hey?
20910How has this disaster happened?''
20910I was paralyzed, but William burst out with a boldness that savored of an inspiration,"Why father, you here?
20910If he and his were men, they could of course be easily exterminated, but were they men?
20910Indeed, how can the reader help wishing that?
20910Is he a Mormon, anyway, or what?
20910Is that perspiration, too?"
20910Mr. Chase,"he gasped out at last;"what is the matter?"
20910The American flag flies over the Philippines-- shall I say forever?
20910Think of a small-- say"skinny"--little boy, about nine or ten years old, in a purple shad- bellied coat which had been made to fit(?)
20910Were they cast on shore to become the prey of Indians whose enmity they had provoked by their own conduct?
20910What must have been the emotions that filled their breasts as the days dragged on?
20910What would the result of the struggle be?
20910Where was Guatemoc?
20910Wherefore do you slay me without justice?
20910Who shall decide when the doctors disagree?
20910Whoever was in charge at the time-- perhaps Lewis-- at the interpreter''s instance[ Transcriber''s note: insistence?
20910Why Did He Take the Name of Jones?
20910Why is it that grown people will be so inconsiderate about a little boy''s clothes?
20910Why is it that parents are so thoughtless about the naming of their children?
20910Yet would it have been better for the world if the Peruvians had succeeded in expelling the Spaniards, or would it have been worse?
20910[ 1]"What is this, Francisco Pizarro?"
20910[ 9] Query: Does the reader not wish that the Peruvians had succeeded?
20910cried the ticket man, appalled{ 326} at the sight,"How many blame children has the mayor of the town got?
20910exclaimed Sandoval;''are these the great counsels, and artifices of war which you have always been wo nt to show us?
20910what is this?''
20910{ 250}"What if he kills you or disables you?"
20281A_ what_?
20281At what hour?
20281Colonel Burr?
20281Do you know, sir, that the world is branding you a traitor? 20281 How?"
20281Is General Jackson at home?
20281SHOULD THE NATION OWN THE RAILWAYS? 20281 Which daughter do you refer to?"
20281Why do you protest,was written,"when you already know you are but a tyro in this phase of being?
20281And is the growth of such poverty, not retrogression?
20281And that Felix Grundy refused to drink your health in my house to- night?"
20281And where must this radical work begin?
20281And who is to settle as to what is"an intelligent public opinion,"that has the right to put down"bumptiousness"?
20281Are hours of labor lessening and possibilities increasing?
20281Are these ideas indefinite?
20281As to the practical means of carrying out conceptions that might daily be doomed to alteration?
20281But does this mean that our civilization is a failure, and the prime of life past for the Republic?
20281But just how is this"data"to be accumulated, so long as anybody who dares to have a new idea is to be arrested and imprisoned?
20281But was not that dying man the creator( if creator there had been) of the restored Teutonic state?
20281But was the work done?
20281But who is to decide what is"bumptiousness"?
20281Did not the revived empire spring from the races in which Prussia was incarnate?
20281Do they not mean"money at cost"?
20281Does this mean a proportionate enlightenment for the one below?
20281Has the average worker time or thought for self- improvement and larger life?
20281Have we not reason to believe that the reading, intelligent majorities of the western prairies are to bring us some light and benefit?
20281He knew he would never suffer Felix Grundy to outdo him in the simple matter of a bow; but how?
20281How about his intellectual standing?
20281How did they get it?"
20281How many American corporations are able to borrow money at such a rate?
20281I am heartily with him in being in favor of the millennium; but the practical question is,--_which way_?
20281If so, what remained to be achieved?
20281If the men who attain these positions remained private citizens, would passes be thrust upon them?
20281In France where were they who had ever heard the truth about"1806 and Jéna"?
20281Insult to the host, or insult to conviction?
20281Is it just possible that his nationalism, which is not of the military type even, is already manifesting some symptoms of the incipient disease?
20281Is it possible that the railway companies can legitimately use anything like$ 14,000,000 yearly in protecting their rights in the courts?
20281Is not truth, where human impulses and irrationalities are concerned, derived from sources lying higher than the regions sacred to"Blue Books"?
20281Mr. Bellamy himself lets out, in a most curious way, his own advanced(?)
20281Our educational theories, on paper and in text- books, are well- nigh perfect; in actual operation why should they fail?
20281Shall we have a separate school for every child?
20281Shall we have a special teacher for each mind?
20281Shall we not expect from this some good?
20281Supposing a creation according to both Heinrich von Sybel and the chroniclers of French vain- gloriousness, who was the creator?
20281Take passenger rates for instance; they are very low; but who benefits by the reduction?
20281The end was still a gigantic one, and one to which no true, brave patriot dared be false as an ideal,--but how as to the execution?
20281The first question asked was,"From your standpoint do you consider death the end of conscious existence?"
20281There was some delay in the answer, but soon reply came"On Madison St.""Whereabouts on Madison?"
20281To one who has watched these conditions, the question arises, does the general advance keep step with the special?
20281WHERE MUST LASTING PROGRESS BEGIN?
20281Was not the work of those who first evened the ground and laid the foundation- stones as important as of those who laid the capstones at last?
20281What can be done to mitigate the miseries of the masses?
20281What class has not?
20281What then?
20281What would have been thought of the famous Davy Crockett, if he had fired his gun after the coon had said,"Do n''t shoot, for I will come right down"?
20281What, then, is the defect?
20281What, then, may we expect on the part of the great mass of the people whose equal(?)
20281What?
20281When"eh?"
20281Who sets him, or anybody else, up on high to look down with"toleration"on other people?
20281Why is it that when a legislature is in session passes are as plentiful as leaves in the forest in autumn?
20281Would he be cried down to- day?"
20281Would he,_ could_ he, think of anything so delightfully graceful?
20281_ Ques._--"But we may apprehend what we do not fully understand or comprehend?"
20281_ Ques._--"Do you mean that comprehension is a word of wider significance than understanding?"
20281_ Ques._--"Is death expected on your plane as on ours, or do all understand that the next change is progressive?"
20281or who, after the 4th September,''70, were capable of realizing that the just retribution for Jéna was Sédan?
20281said he,"does n''t charity always mean''money''?
20281tolerance he does not undertake to guarantee?
20281was it not in good earnest the Hohenzollern line, the descendant of the Great Elector that answered for the regeneration?
16272''And suppose he found a boat here,''I suggested,''and made the shore some ways down?''
16272''And who in h-- l ar ye?''
16272''Answer me now,''it said,''have you yet begun to live?''
16272''But if bound for the Station, why should he wade through the creek here, sis miles out of his way?
16272''But what on earth am I to do without you?''
16272''But what the thunder,''asked Caper,''are those of us who do n''t win the prize, going to do with paintings of such a size, left on our hands?
16272''But, signore, do buy a bouquet to please your lady?''
16272''By the way, Rita,''asked Rocjean,''where is your little brother, Beppo?''
16272''Come and dine with me next Sunday in Pulaski?''
16272''Dead?
16272''Did you get no trace of her in the morning?''
16272''Do you mean to say I am not honest?''
16272''Frank Wilson killed?
16272''Hain''t she wanted''mong de nusses, massa?''
16272''How did you catch them?''
16272''How much injury can we inflict upon the North?
16272''I want to know, Mr. Jessup,''he demanded, when all were together, including Charley,''whether you are the owner in here or Hiram Meeker?''
16272''Is Andy Jones har?''
16272''Is that so?''
16272''It''s so, an''t it, Charley?''
16272''Let it be so,''says Carolina;''what right exists to adopt a national policy that does not equally benefit all sections?''
16272''My heart is weary,--waiting for the May,''_ So_ sad and weary; will_ you_ give it rest?
16272''Never mind what_ you_ said,''interrupted the Colonel, a little impatiently, but showing no displeasure;''what did_ she_ say?''
16272''P''r''aps you han''t heerd on th''Ab''lisheners, Andy?''
16272''Perhaps you would like to settle with me?''
16272''Quite well, thank you, Miles,''said the Colonel, with a certain patronizing air,''have you seen my man Moye?''
16272''Safe?
16272''Stop what?''
16272''That maybe,''quoth Rocjean;''you know what THEOS means in Greek, do n''t you?''
16272''The manger?''
16272''The thin gentleman with hair very much brushed, be Gad?''
16272''Vell, what are his brincibles?''
16272''Well, Rita, you have n''t any thing to do, now that the English have all fled from Rome before the malaria?''
16272''Well, how much personal property?''
16272''Well, how much real estate shall I set down to you?''
16272''Well,''said the Colonel,''what do you think of our bacon''as it runs''?''
16272''What are you about, Jim?''
16272''What brought you here, you d-- d insolent hound?''
16272''What could be your object,''asked Mr. Jessup,''in doing what would throw disgrace on my store, for you know such an admission would disgrace us?''
16272''What did she say?''
16272''What in the world are you doing with that great book?''
16272''What is the Signore Giovanni''s last name?''
16272''What the----''hell do_ you_ know about it?
16272''What-- what the d----l is the matter?''
16272''When were you born?''
16272''Where''s Andy Jones?''
16272''Which route do you think he has taken?''
16272''Which way do you think Moye has gone?''
16272''Who are you?''
16272''Who knows, Signore Giacomo?
16272''Who set you up to be a judge on the question of the welfare of any part of the population South?''
16272''Why do you ask such a price?''
16272''Why do you put such a question, Pease?''
16272''Why not,''he said,''strike at once for the end of his route?
16272''Why so?''
16272''Why, I thought he was using him for his new statue?''
16272''Why, what do you mean?''
16272''Why, what is the matter?
16272''Why, what would you have me do different from what I am doing?''
16272''Why,''said Caper,''they do n''t keep the baker- shops, and wine- shops, and wood- yards, do they?''
16272''Yes, but confound it, Meeker, what is it you want?
16272''You bin givin''them crows partikler hail, hain''t you, Squire?''
16272''You d-- d nigger, do you dare to speak so to me?''
16272( looking cheeringly to young Tyler,)''you could n''t do more''n fire both barrils into''em, ef they was flour- barrils, could you?''
16272***** Do we say too much when we call the following poem truly beautiful?
16272After a great deal more twaddle like this, I asked him why you heretics all had such hard names, that we others never could speak them?
16272All wasted, lost?
16272And have we not a chivalry here that is working a revolution?
16272And this war-- who shall tell; what historic pen can record its grand and glorious chivalry?
16272And what does the Senator propose to concede to us of the North?
16272And when love shines, oh I who can bear to die?
16272And who is the bravest knight in the field?
16272And_ why_ let it alone?
16272Are not their laborers overworked?
16272Are there not abuses in society at the North?
16272Are you ambitious-- would you win honor?
16272At what time does the next train go up?''
16272But how will the poor whites of the South like this?
16272But in this are we worse than they?
16272But is it ten years since the census was taken?
16272But the question to be decided is: Is such a kind of peace worth the price demanded for it?
16272But what does this involve?
16272By exasperating their best buyers beyond all reconciliation?
16272Can it enter into the mind of any Carolina Legislature to confiscate this property, and pot it in the Treasury?
16272Carlyle truly says:''Each of us here, let the world go how it will, and be victorious or not victorious, has he not a little life of his own to lead?
16272Come, Sandy, will you go in for the pile?''
16272Did n''t thar big gun-- Daniel Webster-- didn''t he make mince- meat o''South- Carolina Hayne on that ar subject?
16272Did you call for our papers?
16272Did your wife ever want any thing that she did n''t somehow get it?
16272Do you all understand?''
16272Do you think I''m describing a witch or ghoul?
16272Edmonds, 1 Was He Successful?
16272Even if this arrogant demand was complied with, would peace be thus possible?
16272Had n''t ye better show the gentleman some of your''n,''fore you go?''
16272Have you got them safe?''
16272Have you not such friends?
16272How are they to obtain these?
16272How much can we make Northern commerce suffer by depression of business, privateering, or otherwise?
16272How much of the debts owing to Northern citizens can we confiscate?
16272How much property in the South owned by Northern men can we appropriate?
16272Howsumdever, thar''s nary a thing I would n''t do for you-- you knows thet?''
16272I braced my leg up agin my barril; he braced his leg up agin his barril--''''W- w- what?''
16272If the wives and daughters of blacks are debauched here, are not the wives and daughters of whites debauched there?
16272Is it a hardship to die that one may live forever?
16272Is it reasonable to suppose that no provocation will occur on this long frontier?
16272Is n''t that liberal?''
16272It is involved in the inquiry: Can the colored population be converted into an element of national strength?
16272It will be treason to wear an inch of English cloth or of French silk, and what lie will they say to their starving operatives then?
16272John Neil, 534 What shall be the End?
16272Just as Pease was about to measure off the desired quantity, Mrs. Esterbrook exclaimed:''You are sure those colors are fast?''
16272Leger,''etc., entitled, WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
16272Légume, you will come in, wo n''t you?''
16272Many of them are old acquaintances-- who, for instance, can have forgotten the following, from the Richmond_ Whig_?
16272Mary Jessup was disconsolate; but why?
16272Meanwhile, the question urges itself on us every day with more pressing power, how we are really to settle the whole difficulty?
16272Meanwhile, what became of the once aristocratic Opposition, with its''silk- stocking gentry,''as they were termed?
16272Mr. Pinchfip having asked Rocjean why, in placing that book there, he was like a passenger paying his fare to the driver of an omnibus?
16272Or what, indeed, is to become of us, if no cotton be forthcoming?
16272Our guide was Dhemetri, of course-- who ever heard of a guide that was not named Dhemetri?
16272Pro- slavery sagacity was quick- sighted in its apprehensions that it could not dodge the inquiry,''Whence comes this disparity?''
16272Replying to the question, he said:''Kinder reckon I wull, Cunnel; howsomdever, I keeps the stakes, anyhow?''
16272Said he to Fra''Tonelli:''''What are these poor people about?''
16272Sha n''t we trail him thar?''
16272Shall I explain how, while acting for his employer quite as a good, honest man would act, his motive was to serve self and self only?
16272Should the descendant of an oppressed and persecuted race take part with oppressors?
16272That will make four hundred and fifty, wo n''t it, Stella?''
16272The black meekly seated himself, when the Colonel asked:''Well, Pomp, what do you know about Jule''s going off?''
16272Then the question was asked by neighbor Johnson:''When were you born?''
16272They have it in their power to make our country literally_ free_--will they hesitate to use that power?
16272This was insupportable; but how could he help it?
16272Thus old bachelors take the matrimonial leap-- not so widowers-- how is it to be accounted for?
16272To the serpent?
16272To what extent can we paralyze Northern mechanical industry, subvert Northern trade, and lay it under disabilities?
16272V., 14 For the Hour of Triumph, 26 In Transitu, 27 Among the Pines, 28 Was He Successful?
16272VII What shall be the end?
16272WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
16272WHAT SHALL BE THE END?
16272Was n''t my reputation admitted to be spotless?
16272What are the terms proposed that alone appear to satisfy the South?
16272What do you think about it, Pompey?''
16272What if it works abuses?
16272What if the black, at times, is overburdened, and his wife and daughters debauched?
16272What is the solution of the riddle as it respects the strength of democratic government?
16272What is to be gained by a dissolution of the Union?
16272What is to become of_ them_?
16272What knight of the olden time ever did as much for his ladye fayre as he did for all womanity who wrought out the problem of the sewing- machine?
16272What news do you get from our Company K?''
16272What news do you get from the village to- day?
16272What position could have been taken showing the necessity of disenthrallment from oppressive government?
16272What shall I do about Moye?''
16272What were the protection and sense of justice here spoken of; and what the sequences flowing from such protection and justice?
16272What''s up with him?''
16272What, to begin with, is_ the_ French dialect?
16272What_ could_ Pease do for revenge?
16272When I was elected to the State Senate was n''t my name held up in the newspapers as an example for young men?
16272When shall we commence?''
16272When you most need their friendship, where is it?
16272Where is to be found the evidence that these rights have been forfeited?
16272While seated at the table, the Colonel asked:''Has every thing gone right, Alice, since we left home?''
16272While sin here hides itself under cover of the night, does it not there stalk abroad at noonday?
16272Who blames the gorilla?
16272Who but our own genial Meister Karl- Mace Sloper?
16272Who dare deny the right of the colored man morally, religiously, or politically, to assert them?
16272Who deserves best at the hands of the nation''s power, the oppressor or the oppressed?
16272Who fill our brothels?
16272Who is here?''
16272Who load our penitentiaries, crowd our whipping- posts, debauch our slaves, and cheat and defraud us all?
16272Why follow the slow steps he took in order to throw us off the track?
16272Why not go straight on by the road?''
16272Why the Anglo- Saxon idiom?
16272Why, are they fleet of foot?''
16272Will no slaves run away?
16272Will the bordering people sink down from war, and all its exasperations, and become as peaceful as lambs?
16272Will ye send fur''em?
16272Will you not embrace it?
16272With all these rowdies here, it will not do to leave the horses alone-- will you stay and keep an eye on them over to- morrow?''
16272Without love''s sunshine, who can care to live?
16272Would Shakspeare, had he known of it, have written of taking one''s_ ease_ at his inn?
16272Would not the breaking up of the Union involve the people in calamities that no patience, or wisdom upon the part of the North could avert?
16272Would you care to know how he gloated over the discomfiture of his rival?
16272Would you like to be told how curiously he smiled to himself as he continued to sweep out and sand that little village store?
16272You ask why the blade at the point finishes off in a circle?
16272You do n''t mean it?''
16272You pride yourself on your possessions; but how can you have life or possessions, if they are not recorded in my book?
16272[ Has the reader any desire that I should lay bare the innermost thoughts and feelings of this youth not yet eighteen?
16272_ Will I take a glass of wine_?
16272all full of flowers, and lace, and ribbons?
16272and will not a Yankee barter away the chastity of his own mother for a dirty dollar?
16272are they dead?''
16272eh, my good fellow?''
16272exclaimed Uncle Bill,''could n''t you stop off the torrent for one minute?
16272exclaimed my host,''gone where?''
16272exclaimed the Colonel, perceptibly moderating his tone,''which ones?''
16272forever I can wait; Forever?
16272how ar''ye?''
16272how could they say my reputation was unspotted?''
16272living and strong and well; Were you not killed by the rebels?
16272my dear fellow,''said the Colonel, on perceiving me,''are you stirring so early?
16272never mind,''said the Colonel, who had recovered his coolness;''but why are all these people here?''
16272or shall I permit the reader gradually to acquire a knowledge of Hiram''s characteristics as the narrative proceeds?]
16272said Rocjean,''I suppose you would be afraid to go to such horrible countries, among such people?''
16272stammered out the sleeper, gradually opening his eyes, and raising himself on one elbow,''Lord bless you, Cunnel, is thet you?
16272what in----brought_ you_ har?''
16272what will become of us at this rate?
13942Ah, gentlemen, what you say? 13942 And in what regiment?"
13942And you have bees, too-- don''t they sting the children, and give you a great deal of trouble? 13942 And, hast thou forgotten, friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me?
13942But,you say,"how can I find out whether a book is good or bad, without reading it?"
13942Did you compose it?
13942Do they not know that even truth is not to be spoken at all times? 13942 Has a son with him then?"
13942He''ll drop at last,said the corporal,"and what will become of his boy?"
13942How dead? 13942 How?"
13942Is he in the army, then?
13942Is it possible?
13942Is n''t she the best mother in the world?
13942Is something forgotten?
13942Methinks I hear some of you say,''Must a man afford himself no leisure?'' 13942 O is not love a marvel Which one can not unravel?
13942Sha n''t we be lonesome next winter?
13942So what signifies wishing and hoping for better times? 13942 Then what is to become of his poor boy?"
13942They say I do not trust Englishmen; do I mistrust Gordon Pasha? 13942 To what end,"says the former,"have I studied hard, and widened my resources?
13942WHO IS THIS FELLOW?
13942Well, what have you come for, Samuel?
13942What are you reading?
13942What deposit?
13942What, sir,said one of the royal princes to La Fayette,"do you really demand the assembling of a general congress of France?"
13942Where did you get it?
13942Who did you say was waiting for me?
13942Who has honor? 13942 Why from thy defenseless father,"He cried,"dost thou turn in flight?
13942Why, general,asked the young man,"what do you want with such a place of torment as hell?"
13942Why, how can people be so heedless?
13942''Do you so?''
13942***** Conclusion, True worker with the Lord, He labors not for hire; Co- partner in the sure reward, What can he more desire?
13942***** Now and Here O not to- morrow or afar, Thy work is now and here; Thy bosom holds the fairest star-- Dost see it shining clear?
13942***** With His Foes The king of beasts was dead-- By an old hero slain; Did dreams of honey for his bread Dance through the hero''s brain?
13942A man must have a backbone, or how is he to hold his head up?
13942After all, the difficulty to be got over is this-- how is mankind to be taught to take a just estimate of things?
13942All men, almost, agreed with all men that slavery was wrong; but what can we do?
13942An old tree is picturesque, an old castle venerable, an old cathedral inspires awe-- why should man be worse than his works?
13942And a great voice above him ask,"Dost thou thy brethren own?"
13942And after all, of what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered?
13942And ask not, What doth God require At the Eternal Day?
13942And is it not, therefore, even independently of myths and mysteries, entitled to be called the divine art?"
13942And shall we forfeit hope Because the fountains Are up the mighty slope Of yonder mountains?
13942And the words?
13942And thou, O human will, As wondrous as the light, Cans''t thou thy little trust fulfill Save through Another''s might?
13942And vanished the Star forever, When they turned from the Child away?
13942And want to get it back?"
13942And we must not be indefinite: begin what?
13942And what excuse is there, after all, for running the terrible risk?
13942And what shall I utter to comfort The heart that is dearest of all?
13942And what was Wordsworth''s conduct under this unequaled experience of bad faith and bad feeling?
13942And who can calculate the money- value to commerce in the production of instruments used in the application of electricity to medicine?
13942And will ye now despond Amid consuming toil, When there is hope and joy beyond Which death can not despoil?
13942And, lastly, what are our thoughts and struggles, vain ideas, and wishes?
13942Are there not some few among you with courage to lead where multitudes would follow-- some to whom a kind Providence has given liberty of action?
13942Are they weak, puny men, or men of physique?
13942Are you then your own master?
13942Art thou a mourner here?
13942Art thou my friend, blue, sparkling sea?
13942Art thou of both possessed?
13942Beneath their grievous task Did not his kindred groan?
13942But do not the purest and most beautiful conceptions of man partake of a divine character?
13942But how will the bundles mix?
13942But in how much obscurity are these difficult problems involved?
13942But what shall I say to the prostitution of this art to purposes of iniquity?
13942But when Winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then?
13942But who doth remember the gloom and the night, When the sky is aglow with the beautiful light?
13942Can he who owns her rule supreme From her caresses turn?
13942Can not you get somebody else to speak?
13942Canst show a finer touch, A grain of purer lore--"I could not love thee, dear, so much, Loved I not honor more?"
13942Could he believe that the grand lady, all blazing with jewels, and whom every body seemed to worship, would really sing his little song?
13942Could n''t she help her boys, for whom she was ready to die?
13942Do you say that you can find no work worth the doing?
13942Does old age need its apologies and its defenders?
13942Dost see how calm they are?
13942Dost thou truly love?
13942Dost wait for perfect good In man or womanhood?
13942Enough, this beginning?
13942Evil In the great wilderness Through which I hold my way, Is there no refuge from distress, Where foes are kept at bay?
13942For the bud it never unfolded, The light it flickered away, And whose is the power to utter The grief of that bitterest day?
13942For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?''
13942Friendly Readers: Last time I made a book I trod on some people''s corns and bunions, and they wrote me angry letters, asking,"Did you mean me?"
13942Has he a crook in the back?
13942Hast eyes to read the poem?
13942Hast music in thy heart, O toiler day by day, Along life''s rugged way?
13942Hast thou no thought or care?
13942Have you been told this before?
13942He fires up at once:"Twelve, did you say, sir?
13942He heard the psalm of peace, He sought again the plow; O civic toil, canst thou increase The laurels for his brow?
13942His faults are many-- Hast thou not any?
13942His form is yet before me, With the fair and lofty brow, And the day since last we kissed it-- Is it long since then and now?
13942How could their lives flow on evenly together?
13942How did he recompense all this exertion and endurance oh his behalf?
13942How is thy heart protected?
13942How much of addition to human comfort that one sentence includes, who can estimate?
13942How shall we ever be able to pay them?
13942I have made one mistake?
13942I hear their voice--"Come, play, rejoice; Come, be as happy as are we; Why should you not thus happy be?"
13942I want to ask them if they suppose our eyesight is not so sharp as theirs?
13942I wish mother could help; but, then I guess mother''s--""Help how?"
13942If God be for us, who can be against us?
13942If the world brings not fruition, Must we in darkness grope?
13942If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings?
13942If you were a servant, would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle?
13942If your children were threatened with typhoid fever would you have time to go for the doctor?
13942In gazing into heaven In idle ecstacy, What progress make ye to the haven Where ye at length would be?
13942In less than a thousand years we shall all be bald and poor too, and who knows what he may come to before that?
13942Is he beginning to stoop?
13942Is he getting round- shouldered?
13942Is it a benefit or a calamity?
13942Is it possible to put old heads upon young shoulders?
13942Is it so blessed and happy and flourishing as it seems to us?
13942Is it so dreadful to grow old?
13942Is not every thing better and brighter far then than in middle life?
13942Is not the art of music generally acknowledged to be one of these?
13942Is not youth a perpetual state of intoxication?
13942Is the country delivered, since General La Fayette is in Paris?"
13942Is the earth the limit To bright and beautiful hope?
13942Is this-- is_ this_ thine album?
13942Muscular strength, organic instincts, are all gone; but what then?
13942Never?
13942No Heaven in Truth and Love?
13942Now, in such circumstances, what would a mean, calculating young man have done?
13942O wouldst thou know The rarity Of Charity?
13942O, what are peace and beauty That stop this side of God, Though infinite the distance Remaining to be trod?"
13942O, what are peace and beauty, Except they stir the soul And make the man a hero, To gain some happier goal?
13942One more extract:"Why should I, at every mile, be stared at by the grinning skulls of those who are at rest?
13942One who knew how deeply the empire was indebted to him, wrote,"Can China tell how much she is indebted to Colonel Gordon?
13942Or did he chafe at this: That pain is everywhere?
13942People, he writes, should be taught by my example; they can not go beyond me--"What can he do that comes after the king?"
13942Practically unknown when the sun went down one day, when it rose next morning all Boston was saying,"Who is this fellow?
13942Put it into his money- box?
13942Shall I pour your honor out a glass of sack to your pipe?"
13942Shall our minds be the receptacle of every thing that an author has a mind to write?
13942Shall there be no distinction between the tree of life and the tree of death?
13942Shall we mire in impurity, and chase fantastic will- o''-the- wisps across the swamps, when we might walk in the blooming gardens of God?
13942Shall we stoop down and drink out of the trough which the wickedness of men has filled with pollution and shame?
13942Shone it not then in their bosoms, The light of Eternal Day?
13942Something for nothing?
13942Standing, as we do, chin- deep in fictitious literature, the first question that many of the young people are asking me is,"Shall we read novels?"
13942THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?"
13942The battle is set, The field to be won; What foes have you met, What work have you done?
13942The girl you fall in love with may be silly and ill- favored; but what of that?
13942The minstrel''s heart in sadness Was wrestling with his fate;"Am I the sport of madness,"He sighed,"and born too late?"
13942The question commonly asked by visitors to that corner of Grasmere churchyard was: Where would_ she_ be laid when the time came?
13942The reporters were here; when were they ever not?
13942Then he whispered to me, saying:"Why do you remove that chair?
13942This Album comes a- tapping At many a friendly door; Yea, gently, gently rapping--"Hast aught for me in store?
13942This hard, calculating, mercenary youth, did he seize the chance of shaking off a most troublesome and injurious traveling companion?
13942Thou that slavest, And self all spends; Thou that savest, And usest never; Thou that cravest, With no endeav- or, Thou that gavest, And hast forever?
13942Too young for the losses and crosses, Too young for the rise and the fall?
13942Troost?"
13942WENDELL PHILLIPS.--THE TIMES WHEN HE APPEARED--"WHO IS THIS FELLOW?"
13942Was she only"mother,"who prepared their meals and took care of their clothes?
13942Was she too old to begin?
13942We do not eat and drink for them: why should we lend them our ears and not our mouths?
13942We touch at last the mysterious door-- are we to be pitied or to be envied?
13942Well does Coventry Patmore sing:"Who is the happy husband?
13942What accumulated objections arise when we wish to examine them with mathematical rigor?
13942What are examples and citations to them?
13942What are ninety- two years compared with the years that open the first page of the future?
13942What books and newspapers shall we read?
13942What can I wish thee better Than that through all thy days,_ The spirit, not the letter_, Invite thy blame or praise?
13942What cared he for money now?
13942What could be the matter with me, an''please your honor?"
13942What death?"
13942What did the calculating wretch do with the money?
13942What does the reader, who has his own work to do, care for a great multitude of details which are not needed for the setting of the picture?
13942What had he done at that age to command more than ordinary respect and admiration?
13942What is a Vanity Fair, a mob, a hubbub and babel of noises, to be avoided, shunned, hated?
13942What is a monument of Aberdeen granite beside a monument of intellect and souls?
13942What is altogether deceitful upon the scales?
13942What is an epitaph of a few words cut by a sculptor''s chisel beside the epitaph of coming generations and hundreds writing his praise?
13942What is the use of reading or hearing for other people?
13942What mean the strange, hard words,"through tribulation?"
13942What now shall fill these widowed arms?
13942What shall we read?
13942What then are toil and trouble, With strength to meet them, double?
13942What though Spring is in the air, And the world is bright and fair?
13942What though the triumph of thy fond forecasting Lingers till earth is fading from thy sight?
13942What will friends be good for When the witness is needless they stood for?
13942What would you advise us to do?"
13942What''s in a name?
13942When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,"Elizabeth, why did''st thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?"
13942Whence honor, wealth, or fame, Which God delights to see?
13942Where can a cow live and not get milked?
13942Where is he now?
13942Where will the ass go that he will not have to work?
13942Where will you find land without stones, or meat without bones?
13942Which stuck to you?
13942Who are the leaders in the Churches?
13942Who are the men prominent in the pulpit?
13942Who is bravest Of my four friends?
13942Who is there that, in logical words, can express the effect music has on us?
13942Who is this Phillips?"
13942Who is this eager stranger Dismounted so soon at the door?
13942Who mourns the loss of liberty, With all things else secure?
13942Who shall say how much inspiration the noble band of ministering women in our civil war derived from the heroine of the Crimea?
13942Why are fifty per cent of the criminals in the jails and penitentiaries of the United States to- day under twenty- one years of age?
13942Why are they created?
13942Why do n''t they stop it?
13942Why should it be odious and ridiculous?
13942Why should we forget the dear sounds now she is our wife?
13942Why will you go sounding your way amidst the reefs and warning buoys, when there is such a vast ocean in which you may voyage, all sail set?
13942Why, at home you are at home, and what more do you want?
13942Will not those heavy taxes quite ruin the country?
13942With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man?
13942Would 20,000,000 taels repay the actual service he has rendered to the empire?"
13942Would you have time for the funeral?
13942Would you have time to watch the progress of the disease?
13942Would you like to come to my concert?"
13942Wouldst have another gem In Friendship''s diadem?
13942X. Dost give away thy heart, With all its sweet perfume?
13942Yet, what is altogether lighter than vanity?
13942You suddenly go in and say:"What are you doing?".
13942and if I, in astonishment, echo,"Sick?
13942continue what?
13942cries out poor, melancholy, morbid Hamlet, striking on a vein of thought,"what''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba?"
13942did I cry out?"
13942in sadness I cried, Where is thy trust in the Crucified?
13942said little Johnnie, who had taken no part in the talk; until now;"wo n''t mother be afraid?
13942said she,"at what price can you buy it?
13942who, who shall doubt Thy Master''s will was done?
21543Do you love the Algonquins?
21543Do you love the French?
21543What does the Captain say?
21543Who is that man who is eating in our lodge?
21543Why has he so long kept silence about this heroic feat?
21543Why, then, do we live among these people? 21543 And who was so fit for the work among the Indians as Jogues, who knew their language and customs? 21543 But how was a needy adventurer to raise the money to pay for the fort and to do all the high- sounding things that he had promised the King? 21543 But of what use would it be to prolong these horrors? 21543 But where was theGriffin"?
21543But where were Tonty and his men?
21543Could this be the long- desired route to the Pacific?
21543How, then, do we know the story to be false?
21543If Hennepin lied in saying that he descended the Great River, how do we know that he really ascended it?
21543If they saw{ 250} these taking actual form, would they not rage and move heaven and earth, that is to say, Louis the Great,[2] to crush them?
21543Its destination being the mouth of the Mississippi, what was the expedition doing at Matagorda Bay, in Texas?
21543Meanwhile what of the forty promising colonists on Sable Island?
21543Or were these Spanish vessels?
21543Was this the long- expected relief from France?
21543Were these friends or foes?
21543What was the cause of this singular neglect?
21543What was their reception to be?
21543What was this extraordinary man doing there?
21543Whether they would ever return from the dim, undiscovered country into which they were venturing, who could say?
21543Who could these beardless men be but Chinese or Japanese?
21543Why should France be shut up in Canada, with its poverty, its rigorous climate, its barren soil, covered with snow for half the year?
21543Would not one think that Jogues had had enough of the New World, with its deadly perils and cruel pains?
21543[ Illustration: Fort Caroline]"Why does he not lead us out to explore the country and find its treasures?
20439Do you mean so satisfy me,Susan replied,"that I would work, and recommend to all women to work... for the success of the third party ticket?...
20439Does not the law of the United States give the slaveholder the ownership of the slave? 20439 Have they done as they promised?"
20439I want to know,shouted Frederick Douglass,"if granting you the right of suffrage will change the nature of our sexes?"
20439IS IT A CRIME FOR A CITIZEN... TO VOTE?
20439Is this your usual manner of serving a warrant?
20439My friends, what are we here for?
20439Oh, if we could but make our meetings ring like those of the antislavery people, would n''t the world hear us? 20439 What can we do to get back into trust in each other?"
20439Who Were the Voters in the Early History of this Country?
20439Why go pell- mell for Grant,asked_ The Revolution_,"when all admit that he is unfit for the position?
20439Why not organize a Women''s National Loyal League?
20439[ 298] She asked,Is the right to vote one of the privileges or immunities of citizens?
20439[ 405]Where is the red shawl?"
20439[ 463] Deeply moved, Anna replied,But how can I promise that?
20439And do n''t you break it every time you help a slave to Canada?
20439Anthony?"
20439Are these cases heavier than a wash tub filled with water and clothes, or the old cheese tubs?...
20439Can it be that my stammering tongue ever will be loosed?"
20439Enthusiastic over her Albany success, she impetuously wrote Lucy Stone,"Is this not a wonderful time, an era long to be remembered?
20439Garrison in his_ Liberator_ had already asked,"Will the South be so obliging as to secede from the Union?"
20439How about the enfranchisement of Negroes by federal amendment or the enfranchisement of foreigners?
20439How can you not be all on fire?
20439How could such women, she asked herself, hope to represent the earnest, hard- working women who must be the backbone of the equal rights movement?
20439I have been asked along the Pacific coast,''What about Woodhull?
20439Impulsively she came to Victoria''s defense at the convention:"I have been asked by many,''Why did you drag Victoria Woodhull to the front?''
20439She wrote to Mrs. Stanton,"Was there ever a more terrific command to a Nation to''stand still and know that I am God''since the world began?
20439THE ONE WORD OF THE HOUR"If we women fail to speak the_ one word_ of the hour,"Susan wrote Anna E. Dickinson,"who shall do it?
20439Taking as her subject,"What Is American Slavery?"
20439Then with mounting impatience, she asked them,"How long will this injustice, this outrage continue?
20439They abused him in their newspapers and he, not to be outdone, ridiculed them in his speeches, shouting,"Where is Wendell Phillips, today?
20439This did not escape her, and always on good terms with the newsmen and informal with her audiences, she called out,"Boys, what is the matter?
20439Turning to the men in the front row, Professor Davies then asked,"What is the pleasure of the convention?"
20439Was Merritt among them?
20439Was it for this reason, Susan asked herself, that Mrs. Woodhull was called a"free- lover,"or did she actually advocate promiscuity?
20439Were they forever to be regarded as children or as lower than persons, along with criminals, idiots, and the insane?
20439What did she think of this?
20439What was it, Susan wondered, that kept them from understanding?
20439When this platform is too narrow for all to stand on, I shall not be on it.... Who is to set up a line?
20439Where is Henry Ward Beecher?
20439Where is Horace Greeley in this Kansas war for liberty?
20439Where is William Lloyd Garrison?
20439Who knows?
20439Why did the federal government interfere in her case, instead of leaving it in the hands of the state of New York?
20439Will the vows be kept to them-- will the girls have equal chances with the boys?
20439Will they return quietly to the plantation and patiently endure the old life of bondage with all its degradation, its cruelties, and wrong?
20439You make her your leader?''
20439[ 293]"Did you have any doubt yourself of your right to vote?"
20439[ 2] Charles B. Waite,"Who Were the Voters in the Early History of This Country?"
18977Dost thou not fear,quoth they,"lest God may metamorphose thee?"
18977''Am you Cunnel J----''s man?''
18977''Are there many of these poor whites around Georgetown?''
18977''But how did you expect to get on?
18977''But where will you and your daughters sleep?
18977''Careful of what?''
18977''Come, let us take drinks, for who shall stand against us?''
18977''Dead?''
18977''Did n''t you see, massa, how yaller all dem wimmin war?
18977''Did ye?
18977''Have Ablisherners thar, do n''t ye?
18977''How d''ye do, Scipio?''
18977''How do you do?
18977''How is it that you have lived in Georgetown for five years, and he only seventy miles off, and you never have seen him?''
18977''How many negroes has he?''
18977''If that is so we''d better stay, Scip; do n''t you think so?''
18977''Lor bress me, massa K----, am dat you?''
18977''Not there now?
18977''Quar, that; yer an Ablisherner, ai n''t ye?''
18977''Rail- splitter?
18977''Scip, did you know Jim before?''
18977''Shall I hold back my hand when my country calleth?
18977''Shall we, too, be as dogs cobbling shoes, or as the heathen who sell rat- traps, peddle milk- pails, and keep Thanksgiving?
18977''Was such depravity ever known before?
18977''We''m only massa and me, and de hoss, and we''m half dead wid de cold,''said Scipio;''ca n''t we cum in out ob de rain?''
18977''Whar_ did_ you cum from?
18977''What are we to do with one or two million of free blacks?''
18977''What d''ye say?
18977''What do they go agin the South for?''
18977''What does it mean-- that fresh bullet wound, and the marks of a recent whipping?''
18977''What does this mean?''
18977''What du the''du?''
18977''What look, massa?
18977''What''s that?
18977''What, both gone and left you ladies here alone?''
18977''Who told you that?''
18977''Why better than twenty of_ his_ niggers?''
18977''Why did he call you Scip_io_?
18977''Why do n''t they run?
18977''Why smilest thou, Oh SOLOMON?''
18977''Why would he have known your name?''
18977''Wo n''t you get into de carriage, massa?''
18977''Ye do n''t have no niggers thar, does ye?''
18977''Ye like brandy, do n''t ye?''
18977126 Westward, 246 What will you do with us?
18977369 Was he Successful?
18977A.?)
18977And he, mounting the ship, cried aloud,''Where are they?''
18977And its helpless family of molasses barrels;--can hearts be so void of pity?
18977And they asked much,''How shall we feed, and may we have servants?''
18977And what does it mean?
18977And what is myself?
18977And why?
18977Are there among Emerson''s earlier''big- sounding sentences and words of state,''any of which these are the legitimate fruit?
18977Are you sure?''
18977As for the humor, is it not of HOLMES?
18977As for the mass,--''tis a great pity,--_mais, que voulez vous?_ It is the fortune of life''s war; and then who knows?
18977As for the mass,--''tis a great pity,--_mais, que voulez vous?_ It is the fortune of life''s war; and then who knows?
18977As we rode along I said to the driver,''Scipio, what did you think of our lodgings?''
18977Ben in the rain?''
18977But do you know the origin of the phrase?
18977But under what name should that assassin be found?
18977But what am my life wuth?
18977But where goes the inventive talent now?
18977But whose, and why this singular design?
18977But why make her visits so secret?
18977But''_ was sagt_ mein Thales?''
18977But_ whence_ the expression?
18977C. E. Lord, 619 Cotton, is it our King?
18977C. G. Leland, 175 Progress, is it a Truth?
18977Can you get me a cup of tea?''
18977Did n''t ye say ye war one on''em?
18977Did some great man ungratefully entreat you?
18977Do these things prove nothing?
18977Do we not''make history rapidly in these days,''since England and France have entered on their modern career?
18977Do you think any morbid delicacy, any fear of giving offense to our''loyal Southern brethren,''should prevent our examining this slave question?
18977Do you, for that matter, fully understand why a Hindu yoghi torments himself for thirty years?
18977Does the soul of Infinite Love that beamed from Nazareth inform these pages with the active, perfect, immortal spirit of truth?
18977Dress nice, and make money?''
18977Had he partners in the deed?
18977Hear''st thou, Pisanio?
18977How do you fancy the picture?
18977How does all the folks live thar?''
18977How far is his house from here?''
18977I looked at my watch, and found it was nearly ten o''clock, and, feeling very tired, said to the hostess,--''Where do you mean we shall sleep?''
18977I said;''what do you mean by that?''
18977I said;''who tells you that?''
18977IS PROGRESS A TRUTH?
18977In answer to our summons a wretched- looking, half- clad, dirt- bedraggled woman thrust her head from the door- way, with the inquiry,''Who are ye?''
18977In other words, is Slavery in the United States to- day on trial?
18977In the obscurity that proves him great, for''To be great is to be misunderstood,''( is this the true''misery of greatness''of Milton?)
18977Is it possible to conceive of more ungoverned depravity or a madness more complete?
18977Is it''Freedom, that Bondage may live,''Which cheers on the North to the fray?
18977Is it''Slavery more Freedom to give,''That slogans the Southern foray?
18977Is this then our last farewell?''
18977Is your husband away from home?''
18977It was undeniable that the prisoner had been one of her intimates, but was the crime limited to himself alone?
18977Kinder reckon tain''t, is''t?''
18977Like to turn in now?''
18977Or did some evil WEED set you to burning The Cataline, and pocket all the plunder; Or did the patriot BEN engulf your little All in a lottery?
18977Or what do you make of untold and unutterable horrors, or crimes, as they were deemed, which to us seem bewildering nonsense?
18977Or what of the Sieur de Gilles, with his thousand or two of girl children elaborately tortured to death-- and he a type and not a sporad?
18977PAGE The Situation, 1 Is Progress a Truth?
18977Poetry 166 On the Plains 167 Seven Devils 171 What will you do with us?
18977Presently he rose, and, with an effort at self- control, walked towards the door, but stopped and faltered forth,''Must this be?
18977Quite a place, ai n''t it?''
18977Reader, have you ever visited the pleasant village of Princeton, New Jersey, renowned alike in the annals of the country and of the church?
18977Richard B. Kimball, 702 What shall we do with it?
18977SAUNDERS aptly called them, the Tobacco States?
18977Shall I tell you about them?
18977She soon resumed the conversation, with this remark:--''Reckon yer a stranger in these parts; whar d''ye come from?''
18977Suppose I take a glass with you?''
18977Tain''t so large as Charles''n, is''t?''
18977Tell me, axe- grinder, how you came so seedy?
18977Ten years ago it was a mooted question whether Fairfax lands could be made productive, and if so, would they pay the cost?
18977The planter despises poverty, but what is his contempt of a poor white man compared to that of his slave for such wretchedness?
18977The unintermitted repetition of the query,''How shall I win her love?''
18977Them people that go agin the South?''
18977Then said the captain,''Shall I refrain myself to stop this iniquity?
18977Then the question took possession of me,''How shall I win her love?--how shall I win her love?''
18977Then, after a pause, she added,--''What d''ye''lect that darky Linkum for President for?''
18977This is indeed believing in human power; and yet who would laugh_ through_ his heart at it?
18977To seize a poor innocent sloop-- has Slavery no bowels?
18977Was he implicated at all?
18977Was it FERNANDO, first king of our Gotham, Or the Collector?
18977Was not he wholly innocent of the murder, and only guilty of an unfortunate acquaintance?
18977What am any_ slave''s_ life wuth?
18977What can the cold marble be to me, when no longer animated by the soul with which my hope of your presence infused it?
18977What do you mean?''
18977What do you say, Scip?''
18977What indeed is the negro but an intensified Creole?
18977What is this but another version of Brahma?
18977What is to become of his high claims upon creatures who are to work out an infinite purpose?
18977What place has the nineteenth century in the long list of ages?
18977What then?
18977What though the stern proconsul''s grinding rule Close followed on the legion''s merciless sword?
18977What to this stupendous and perfect theory is the impotent and imperfect scheme so lamely announced by the sociologists of the C. S. A.?
18977What would he have me do?
18977Where are these men of froth and wind now,--these heroes of the stump and the bar- room?
18977Where could I go but to the great mother Nature?
18977Where is it now?
18977Who but a monster of treason could have penned the papers found in Andrà ©''s boot?
18977Who can doubt what the end thereof shall be?
18977Who furnishes it?''
18977Who is there among our readers who has not heard that phrase?
18977Who that heard can forget his appeals in behalf of_ the poor boy_, which moved the audience to tears, and shook even the equanimity of the jury?
18977Who then should inhabit that sunny clime save the''contraband''--who should there claim the respect due to the lord of the soil if not he?
18977Who will say that the days of chivalry are over, when such counterparts of the feudal serfs still exist?
18977Why did he not also solve that question, equally perplexing, as to who murdered Ellen Jewett?
18977Will you have no pity?
18977Will you please make some inquiries?''
18977Would it not be well to engage some person of judgment-- perhaps an artist-- to go to Italy and make an investment for us?
18977Ye know the Cunnel, du ye?''
18977he said,''will you bid me leave you thus?
18977is your son, is he?''
18977whar''s that?''
18977what is that blockade about?
18977what''s that?''
18977whither are you going?
18977why do you break and deface these old monuments?
21880Cottineau and others?
21880How I liked the country?
21880How long I had been in Europe?
21880How long I had been in this country?
21880How long I had lived at Amsterdam?
21880How will all your past exposures be converted into sources of inexpressible delight?
21880In what terms can he bestow suitable praise on merit so extraordinary, so unparalleled?
21880Whether I had not lived some time at Leyden?
21880Whether I had purchased a house at the Hague?
21880Who, that never experienced your sufferings, will( p.   243) be able to appreciate your joys?
21880Would it not be best to( p.   388) concentrate the whole or part of his command on this point?
21880fine gold at$ 20.67$ 165.36 Striking and wastage 20.00 Case 5.00-------$ 190.36 Whole cost$ 790.36 May I venture to make another suggestion?
10073Did you see that ardent bumpkin embracing his sweetheart?
10073Do you,asked the barber,"wish your hair____ or____?"
10073If Caesar hide himself, shall they not whisper''Lo, Caesar is____''?
10073If you prick us, do we not bleed? 10073 What is the gross sum that I owe thee?"
10073What''s Hecuba to him or he to Hecuba That he should____ for her?
10073What''s in a[n]____? 10073 ( 2) Of what family or families was it born? 10073 ( Shakespeare:_ A Midsummer Night''s Dream_) Is it so_ nominated_ in the bond? 10073 < Can, may.> Can I stay at home this afternoon, papa? 10073 < Cold, frigid.> Which is the more popular word? 10073 < Compulsion, obligation.> Who does not feel within him a compulsion to help the weak? 10073 < What Words to Learn First> What, then, is your first task? 10073 A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary? 10073 A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?> First, what kind of vocabulary do we wish to acquire? 10073 A Ready, an Accurate, or a Wide Vocabulary?> First, what kind of vocabulary do we wish to acquire? 10073 A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing? 10073 A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?> In the second place, are we to develop a vocabulary for oral discourse or a vocabulary for writing? 10073 A Vocabulary for Speech or for Writing?> In the second place, are we to develop a vocabulary for oral discourse or a vocabulary for writing? 10073 A blacksmith is beating iron; does the iron grow cold or frigid? 10073 A facile, readily used one? 10073 A prospective customer walks into your store; does he buy the goods you show him? 10073 A single standard for the sexes-- how it can be attained( or approximated) Should the divorce laws be made more stringent? 10073 Ai n''t it fierce the way they swipe umbrellas? 10073 An accurate one? 10073 And didst thou not kiss me and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings? 10073 Another question: Which word is the more inclusive in meaning? 10073 Are its detailed applications effective? 10073 Are substantial, home- keeping girls or girls rather fast and frivolous the more likely to obtain good husbands? 10073 Are the courts equally just to labor and capital? 10073 Are the figures appropriate to the subject matter? 10073 Are the people being spoken of favorably, unfavorably, or neutrally? 10073 Are there enough of them? 10073 Are these figures effective? 10073 Are you not very____ of your family connections? 10073 Are you to sulk, to withhold yourself from further exertion on the plea of a vocabulary- builder''s eight- hour day? 10073 Because you have studied the issues of the campaign and reached a well- reasoned conclusion how the general interests may be served? 10073 Betty, will you____ this cucumber? 10073 But are not such ways arbitrary, haphazard? 10073 But do we use them with precise and masterly understanding? 10073 But does that man kiss his mother, or salute the flag, or pay much heed to either? 10073 But how shall we____ the cause of this disease? 10073 But what shall we say of legerdemain( light, or sleight, of hand), maintain, coup de main, and the like? 10073 But, assuming that you have done your part, what have you gained? 10073 Can the other member be substituted without affecting the meaning of the sentence? 10073 Can you add to the list? 10073 Can you beat it? 10073 Can you bring to mind other words that embody it? 10073 Can you express the following ideas in other words without sacrifice of emotional suggestion? 10073 Can you properly contrast mortal with immortal existence? 10073 Can you substitute_ altitude_? 10073 Can you think of a proof that is surer? 10073 Can you think of circumstances in which a young girl might be so placed that the favorable synonyms might be applied to her? 10073 Can you trace a connection between the_ pastor_ of a church and a_ pastoral_ life? 10073 Can you, when the occasion comes, use them?-use them promptly and well? 10073 Can you____ the reason for your absence? 10073 Canst thou deny it? 10073 Could he have effected this purpose so well had he employed more figures of speech? 10073 Could he with reason murmur at his case Himself sole author of his own_ disgrace_? 10073 Could we say that a rich miser lives in affluence? 10073 Could_ height_ be substituted? 10073 Did not goodwife Keech, the butcher''s wife, come in then and call me gossip Quickly? 10073 Did the heretic____? 10073 Did you____ only seven thousand dollars for your house? 10073 Do any of the terms fail to make sense at all? 10073 Do the changes in substance make these changes in tone desirable? 10073 Do these add force, definiteness to the picture Shakespeare is drawing at that moment? 10073 Do you find collecting coins a pleasant____? 10073 Do you know exactly what they mean? 10073 Do you know what a_ fellow_, etymologically speaking, is? 10073 Do you know what a_ nickname_ is? 10073 Do you know what an_ umpire_ is? 10073 Do you often hear the word_ bucolic_? 10073 Do you regard it as written simply, with force and natural feeling? 10073 Do you sayThis exceeds the other in height"or"This exceeds the other in altitude"?
10073Do you say"This exceeds the other in height"or"This exceeds the other in altitude"?
10073Do you think words will not respond to cordiality like this?
10073Do you yourself use the term?
10073Do you____ the devil and all his works?
10073Do you____ your claim in this mine?
10073Does Lord Chesterfield''s saying"Whoever is in a_ hurry_ shows that the thing he is about is too big for him"help explain the distinction?
10073Does each keep the tone it adopts( that is, except for desirable changes)?
10073Does he mean an enjoyable one in general?
10073Does he sing a simple, perhaps tender, song in a low tone( as a lullaby to an infant)?
10073Does he sing gladly, spontaneously, high- spiritedly, as if his heart were pouring over with joy?
10073Does he sing loudly and freely?
10073Does he sing with his lips closed?
10073Does he sing with peculiar modulations from the regular into a falsetto voice?
10073Does he sing with vibratory notes and little runs, as in bird- music?
10073Does he utter the short, perhaps sharp, notes of certain birds and insects?
10073Does it appear, perhaps in disguised form, in any of the words immediately preceding or following?
10073Does it, as Shakespeare intends, bring vividly to your consciousness the course, motives, stages, evolution of a human being''s life?
10073Does not our knowledge fall short of that expected of well- informed men in this present age?
10073Does that mean that the privileges of the city are at your disposal, so that you have merely to reach forth your hand and pluck them?
10073Does the magnitude or importance of the object( Galveston) compensate for its lack of elevation and thus justify_ altitude_?
10073Does the original employ terms unfamiliar to you?
10073Does the person sing solemnly in a more or less uniform tone?
10073Does the word_ frigid_ carry for you a geographical suggestion( to the frigid zone)?
10073Does this answer our question?
10073Does this fact give you a further clue as to the distinction between the two words?
10073Does_ altitude_ betoken great height?
10073Does_ compensate_ not sound the more soothing?
10073Have you met any of the_ Eu''s_ elsewhere?
10073Hence you on meeting_ eulogy_ can exclaim:"How do you do, Mr. Eu?
10073How are Grandfather Gen and Grandmother Ology?
10073How are our listeners, our readers to take us?
10073How could such reproaches fail to____ my feelings?
10073How did we learn this?
10073How do you account for this fact?
10073How does Shakespeare reconcile the general poetic tone with such expressions as those quoted?
10073How does it affect the meaning of the word?
10073How many of the first twenty- five words in your description appeal to one or another of the five senses?
10073How many of them are"color"words?
10073How many"motion"words?
10073How much?
10073How would the meaning be affected if they were called_ rustic_ inhabitants?
10073How?
10073If his son ask bread, will he give him a stone?
10073If not, why not?
10073If not, why not?
10073If so, do you use it chiefly( perhaps entirely) in connection with human temperament or demeanor?
10073If so, does Hamlet speak jestingly when he greets the player,"Your ladyship is nearer heaven than when I saw you last, by the altitude of a chopine?"
10073If so, would the words_ above sea- level_ have to follow it?
10073If you substitute_ affluence_, what different impression do you get?
10073In each instance how is the meaning affected?
10073In what mood is it oftenest uttered?
10073In which way would you prefer for your employee to go about his task-- with_ haste_, with_ speed_, or with_ despatch_?
10073Income taxes-- what exemptions should be granted?
10073Is Goldsmith''s description of the village preacher--"passing rich with forty pounds a year"--as effective if_ wealthy_ is substituted?
10073Is a_ rustic_ bridge something to be ashamed of?
10073Is it desirable for a young man to take out life insurance?
10073Is it your custom to watch the clock while you eat?
10073Is it____ and____ alike?
10073Is it____ to spend money thus lavishly?
10073Is modesty rather than self- assertion regarding his own merits and abilities the better policy for an employee?
10073Is mortal existence also porcine?
10073Is n''t that man____ in his carriage?
10073Is porcine existence also mortal?
10073Is self- education better than collegiate training?
10073Is the Golden Rule practicable in the modern business world?
10073Is the division of men into strongly contrasted groups as to wealth one of nature''s necessities, or is it the result of a social and economic system?
10073Is the main figure effective?
10073Is the meaning exactly the same?
10073Is the style one you would like to cultivate for your own use?
10073Is the$ 1500 you would save worth the risk you would be obliged to take?
10073Is there for honest_ poverty_ That hings[ hangs] his head, and a''that?
10073Is there kinship between the two sets of words?
10073Is_ altitude_ used of persons?
10073Is_ cold_ used thus figuratively also?
10073Milton:_ Lycidas_) Can honor''s voice_ provoke_ the silent dust?
10073Now is n''t that assumption of omniscience____?
10073On the other hand, may that same term represent a temperature far beyond mere coolness?
10073Or does it show lack of spontaneity?--suffer from an unnatural and self- conscious manner of writing?
10073Or one as nearly as may be comprehensive?
10073Shall we try to____ their fears by telling them the accident may have been less calamitous than they have heard?
10073Should a divorced person be prohibited from remarrying?
10073Should all cities be required to establish zoölogical gardens, as well as schools, for the children?
10073Should one always tell the truth?
10073Should we have a high tariff at this juncture?
10073Since we____ the enemy to advance, would it not be wise to____ him?
10073So be it,--but which two?
10073Some one must arrange these papers for publication; will you be their____?
10073Some shortcomings of the labor unions Are the shortcomings of the labor unions accidental or inherent?
10073The first two in the dictionary, or hitherto left untouched in your systematic conquest of the dictionary?
10073The first two that stare at you from casual, everyday print?
10073The first two you can ferret from some technical jargon, some special department of human interest or endeavor?
10073The first two you hear spoken?
10073The precise meaning?
10073The right basis for business-- competition or coöperation?
10073There is such a thing as froth of utterance, but who has respect therefor or is deceived thereby?
10073To what extent shall the church concern itself with social and economic problems?
10073To what extent should osteopathy( chiropractic) be permitted( or protected) by law?
10073To what extent, if at all, shall Sunday diversions be restricted?
10073To what is it applied when debased, impure, spurious, alloyed, counterfeit could be used?
10073To what is_ base_ applied when inferior, cheap, worthless could be used as its synonyms?
10073To what is_ severe_ applied when harsh, stern, rigorous, drastic, austere, hard could be substituted for it?
10073To what profit?
10073What adjective pertaining to mankind forms a true contrast to_ porcine_?
10073What are the primary colors?
10073What are the results of these methods?
10073What are these facts and topics?
10073What became of these duplicates?
10073What besides the possession of wealth does_ affluent_ suggest?
10073What better proof that he is____ do you ask than that he babbles constantly about what happened when he was young?
10073What better than to insure the possession of the words regarding which you know this already, that you need them and should make them yours?
10073What can we learn from a rapid scrutiny of each?
10073What could glittering phraseology add to them?
10073What did John Wesley mean by saying,"Though I am always in_ haste_, I am never in a_ hurry_"?
10073What do these sentences suggest to you as to the social and mental qualifications of the person who employs them?
10073What do these words as thus used mean?
10073What does it suggest to you as to Burke''s social and mental qualifications?
10073What does this strain signify?
10073What does_ despatch_ suggest about getting work done that_ haste_ or_ speed_ does not?
10073What further marriage restrictions should be placed upon the physically or mentally unfit?
10073What further measures should be taken by the cities( states, nation) for the protection of motherhood?
10073What if he has n''t?
10073What is a synonym for_ mortal_ in its broad sense?
10073What is the central meaning of the word today?
10073What is the difference between_ riches_ and_ wealth_?
10073What is the number usually given?
10073What is their true meaning?
10073What is wrong with the connotation of the following?
10073What is_ wedlock_ forced, but a hell, An age of discord and continual strife?
10073What of the sentence:"The altitude of Galveston was not sufficient to protect it from the tidal wave"?
10073What power does this suggest that he has besides the possession of a great deal of money?
10073What proportion of its synonyms were you able to think up unaided?
10073What relation to you is your grandfather''s brother?
10073What significance does this relationship possess?
10073What then?
10073What was the last element discovered, and by whom?
10073What will be the result that comes out of it all?
10073What, then, is the degree of reproach that attaches to each of the two adjectives?
10073What, then, is the net result of our investigation?
10073What, then, is the principle upon which, at the outset, you should proceed?
10073When acute, violent, extreme, intense, sharp, distressing, afflictive could be substituted?
10073When ignoble, servile, slavish, groveling, menial could be used?
10073When keen, cutting, biting, stinging, caustic, critical, trenchant could be substituted?
10073When mean, despicable, contemptible, shameful, disgraceful, dishonorable, discreditable, scandalous, infamous, villainous, low- minded could be used?
10073When plain, unembellished, unadorned, chaste could be substituted?
10073When plebeian, obscure, untitled, vulgar, lowly, nameless, humble, unknown could be used?
10073When the two adjectives may be employed, is one of them unflattering?
10073Wherein do_ pastoral_ scenes differ from_ rural_?
10073Wherein?
10073Which expression of the thought would be the more easily understood by the average person?
10073Which implies the greater degree of possession, which the more permanence and stability?
10073Which is the more literary?
10073Which is the more often thus used?
10073Which narrative is the more concrete?
10073Which of the four adjectives best fits into Goldsmith''s dignified lament:"And____ mirth and manners are no more"?
10073Which of the two statements is the more forceful?
10073Which one?
10073Which term do you think the right one?
10073Which term, then, approaches the closer in meaning to the idea of mere coolness?
10073Which word suggests the more personal relationship with money?
10073Which word the more definitely denotes money or its immediate equivalent?
10073Which would you yourself remember the longer?
10073Who are you, that you should fret and rage, and bite the chains of nature?
10073Who would not____ a slimy creature like Uriah Heep?
10073Why did Prescott use the former in his_ Ferdinand and Isabella_?
10073Why did words having the same meaning find lodgment in the language in the first place?
10073Why do we say"get- rich- quick schemes"rather than"get- wealthy- quick schemes"?
10073Why is it that this use of_ expedition_ in Milton''s lines is apt?
10073Why should they not be as scrupulous to receive what they are entitled to in the medium of language as of money?
10073Why?
10073Why?
10073Why?
10073Why?
10073Why?
10073Why?
10073Why?
10073With what realities must we more carefully reckon?
10073Words not realities?
10073Would the man in the street be more likely to use one than the other?
10073Would you believe the passage is poetry?--that its total effect is one of poetic elevation?
10073Would you ordinarily speak of the_ rural_ or the_ rustic_ population to distinguish it from the urban?
10073Would you speak of a morning as bitterly cold or bitterly frigid?
10073Would you speak of_ rural_ or_ rustic_ activities?
10073Would_ despatch_ have served as well?
10073Would_ height_ be more natural?
10073You are always putting off until tomorrow what you could do today; do you think it pays to____ thus?
10073You are told that a major has command of a battalion; does that tell you anything about him?
10073You are told that he has command of a squadron, of a brigade, of a platoon; do these changes in circumstances have any import for you?
10073You call one civilian colonel and another major; which have you paid the higher compliment?
10073You enter the drawing room of one of the elite; are you invited again and again?
10073You interview a potential investor; does he accept your proposition or not?
10073You must form the habit of asking two questions about it:( 1) Is it married?
10073_ Can_ it convey as wide meanings, or is it limited in range?
10073_ Is_ it poetry?
10073_ Mother, the flag_--what sooner than an insult coupled with these terms will rouse a man to fight?
10073_ pastoral_ amusements from_ rustic_?
10073_ rural_ or_ rustic_ manners?
10073a profitable or lucrative one, in case I have business in hand?
10073a successful one, if I am selling stocks or buying a house?
10073a_ rustic_ chair?
10073a_ rustic_ gate?
10073ai n''t you up yet?"
10073how was it possible I could get on shore?
10073if you tickle us, do we not____?"
10073in its narrow sense?
10073mortal with porcine existence?
10073the degree of commendation?
10073the secondary colors?
10073what act, That____ so loud and____ in the index?"
10073your cousin''s daughter?
20065Are they,he asked,"to be disfranchised because they thought it was not the time to make such an expression?
20065But,added he,"who is the United States?
20065By whom was Mr. Stanton appointed?
20065Sir,said he,"does the Constitution authorize oligarchy, aristocracy, caste or monopoly?
20065Well, Mr. Wade, what would you do were you in my place and charged with my responsibilities?
20065What is before Congress?
20065Why was that convention here? 20065 --But how,"rejoined the President,"are you going to pick out so small a number and show them to be guiltier than the rest?"
20065And how long are our patient but suffering operatives to remain the victims of an extinct authority and an aggressive and a malevolent Legislature?''"
20065And whom has it chosen for its candidate?
20065Are these words,''during the term of the President,''applicable to Mr. Stanton''s case?
20065Are they not satisfied with the blood which has been shed?
20065Are they still unslaked?
20065Are we prepared to admit its existence unless the Constitution imperatively requires it?"
20065Are you not as safe under the Constitution as you are under an Act of Congress?
20065At the time when this order was issued for the removal of Mr. Stanton, was he holding during the term of the President by whom he was appointed?
20065But is he alone guilty?
20065But is that so under the provisions of the Constitution of the United States?
20065But, sir, would it be right?
20065By what specific act, at what precise time, did any one of those States take itself out of the American Union?
20065Can it be that in such a case he would be senator?
20065Can there be any doubt as to the designs of the Radicals if they should be able to keep their hold on the reins of government?
20065Did harm result from it?
20065Do they still want more blood?
20065Does his name appear in the Constitution, in any statute, in the history of this country anywhere?
20065Does not the murder of Lincoln appease the vengeance and wrath of the opponents of this Government?
20065For what period of time?
20065Had Mr. Delfosse and Mr. Galt proceeded in a similar manner?
20065Had any act of President Johnson up to the twelfth day of August last vitiated or interfered with that appointment?
20065Had he secured a solid vote in the South?
20065His own or Mr. Lincoln''s?
20065How long are the cotton ports of the South to remain sealed to Europe?
20065How long would he have ventured upon a tithe of the unrestrained vituperation which he safely indulged in here?
20065I am not surprised that we should hear the questions asked now,''How long are these afflictions to be endured?
20065I merely heard him ask the question,''Why would they not be the Congress?''"
20065If they were, sir, how and when did they become so?
20065In other words was the loss to the United States by the transaction to be$ 9,400,000 or$ 8,200,000?
20065Is there such an anomaly in our Government?
20065Is this what the loyal North has been fighting for?
20065Johnson promptly replied on the same day:"What possible good can be obtained by reconsidering the Constitutional Amendment?
20065Let me ask him if that does not leave in the hands of the States the same power that exists there now, and has existed heretofore?
20065Lord Campbell( discussing the civil war) said:"But if the present moment is abandoned what are we to wait for?
20065Loyal to what?
20065MR. BOUTWELL:"Did you at any time hear him make any remark concerning the Executive Department of the Government?"
20065MR. BOUTWELL:"Did you ever hear him make any remark looking to any controversy between Congress and the Executive?"
20065MR. BOUTWELL:"Did you hear him say any thing in private on that subject, either during that trip or at any other time?"
20065MR. BOUTWELL:"Have you heard him at any time make any remark or suggestion concerning the legality of Congress with the Southern members excluded?"
20065MR. BOUTWELL:"Have you heard him make a remark kindred to that elsewhere?"
20065MR. JAMES F. WILSON:"When did you hear him say that?"
20065MR. THOMAS WILLIAMS:"When you say''the North,''you mean the Democratic party of the North; or, in other words, the party favoring his policy?"
20065Mr. Bayard said,--"And is such a war necessary for the peace and happiness of the United States?
20065Mr. Trumbull inquired if the children of Chinese born in this country were not citizens?
20065Nay, was it not the needed demonstration of the freedom and justice of a republican government?
20065Now what are the facts in this case?
20065Now what is the condition of the South in reference to all this?
20065Now, shall we flout the Russian Government in every court in Europe for her friendship?
20065Shall I read the rest of the document?
20065Was it by the ordinance of secession?
20065Was it the Judicial department of that government?
20065Was not his appointment in full force at that hour?
20065Were their arms victorious?
20065What do you accomplish by it?
20065What is the difference?
20065What is the qualification for the office of President?
20065What remedy does it afford?
20065What then had the Legislature the right to conclude?
20065What to- day is the condition of affairs in that State?
20065What was the fair inference?
20065What would_ you_ do in my position?
20065What, then, should be done with these old men who had been holding office for so long a period?
20065Who knew how many more there were on their voyage here?
20065Whose Presidential term is Mr. Johnson now serving out?
20065Whose Presidential term was he holding under when the bullet of Booth became the proximate cause of this trial?
20065Why have they not a ship quick enough to catch her and strong enough to destroy her?"
20065Why not declare it so?
20065Why not, when you send out this military police through the lately rebellious States, send with it that impressive declaration?"
20065Why re- enact the Constitution merely to put it in a bill?
20065Why should General Schenck and William Lawrence vote for impeachment and General Garfield and John A. Bingham against it?
20065Why should Mr. Boutwell be so decidedly on one side and Mr. Dawes with equal firmness on the other?
20065Why should Thaddeus Stevens and Judge Kelley vote in the affirmative and the four Washburns in the negative?
20065Would the recreancy of President Johnson to his own party and his hope of Democratic support find any considerable response?
20065Would you deal lighter blows rather than heavier ones?
20065Would you drop the war where it is, or would you prosecute it in the future with elder- stalk squirts charged with rose- water?
20065Would you give up the contest leaving every available means unapplied?
20065_ With such a sickening alternative as civil war, why should not the experiment at least be made?
20065and will not this be justly subjected to the charge of bad faith on the part of the Federal Government?"
20065suppose I should give them?
20065{ But who, as Mr. Webster had asked Mr. Hayne thirty years before, was to judge of"the palpable infraction of our written charter of government?"
22567Could not Burr detach this district or a part of it from our Government and make here an empire of his own?
22567How can he answer it to his country?
22567Or might he not take it as the base of operations for an attack on Spanish America that should give him an empire there?
22567Subsequently in conversation with a South Carolina lady Tarleton said:"Why do you ladies so lionize Colonel Washington?
22567Then he felt himself an aristocrat, and who will deny that he was so?
21348(_ Hastily._) Whose agent is he? 21348 I will leave the paper then with Mr. Pownall to be--"(_ Hastily._) To what end would you leave it with him?
21348Sir,exclaimed Franklin,"is Philadelphia taken?"
21348Why, my lord? 21348 of"?
21348And was his accuser a man to have turned his back on such viands, had he also been bidden to the feast of flattery?
21348And what signifies the dearness of labor when an English shilling passes for five and twenty?"
21348Could they by no possibility be persuaded to withdraw it?
21348Did their shrewd and well- informed writer believe what he said?
21348Gout had disabled him, but who could tell when he might get sufficient respite to return and deal havoc?
21348Have you consulted Franklin upon this business?
21348He asked:"Is there no way of treating_ back_ of this step of independency?"
21348He said to Vaughan:"Is the new commission necessary?"
21348He was then asked what was the difference"between a duty on the importation of goods and an excise on their consumption?"
21348If Franklin relished the repast, who among mortals would not?
21348In an American tax what do we do?
21348Into what companies will he hereafter go with an unembarrassed face or the honest intrepidity of virtue?
21348Is that affair dropt?
21348Is your lordship quite sure that you have such a letter?
21348Mr. Hale in his recent volumes upon Franklin truly says that"it is unnecessary to place vituperative adjectives to the credit[ discredit?]
21348Or was he only uttering a prophecy which he desired, if possible, and for his own purposes to induce others to believe?
21348Other queries, like pendants, have also come: Why have you not included A, or B, or C?
21348Otherwise, if they carried the English laws and power of Parliament with them, what advantage could the Puritans propose to themselves by going?"
21348Our own property?
21348Should they have equal weight in voting, or not?
21348To whom else would the Frenchmen have unlocked their coffers as they did to him, whom they so warmly liked and admired?
21348Was he casting this political horoscope in good faith?
21348Was it a nation, or only a parcel of rebels?
21348We, your Majesty''s Commons of Great Britain, give and grant to your Majesty-- what?
21348What are they then to do?
21348When Jefferson was asked:"C''est vous, Monsieur, qui remplace le Docteur Franklin?"
21348Who are we to hear in provincial affairs?
21348Who shall say that Franklin''s personal prestige in Europe had not practical value for America?
21348Why should they exert their power in the most disgusting manner, and throw pain, terror, and displeasure into the breasts of their fellow citizens?"
21348With what face can we ask aids and subsidies from our friends, while we are wasting our own wealth in such prodigality?"
21348With what face could the ministry meet Parliament with a treaty deserting all those who had been faithful to their king?
21348Would they caulk their ships, would they even litter their horses, with wool, if it were not both plenty and cheap?
21348Yet what could have been reasonably expected?
21348[ 27] Which of these is agent for the province?
21348_ Q._ How can the commerce be affected?
21348_ Q._ If the act is not repealed, what do you think will be the consequences?
21348_ Q._ Is it in their power to do without them?
21348_ Q._ Why may it not?
21348_ Q._"Can anything less than a military force carry the Stamp Act into execution?
21348and what does he think of it?
11087Ah, Jacqueline, why not say to me what you are thinking? 11087 Allow me to ask, are you a believer in Dispensationism?"
11087Am I not?
11087And with no result?
11087Busy, grandpapa?
11087But if you should go away----"Would not that be flying from danger?"
11087But what do you say to all these signs and wonders which I have mentioned?
11087But what is the row? 11087 But what the mischief is to come of it?"
11087But where?
11087But wo n''t you have a weapon? 11087 But would n''t it be advisable to have a policeman, too?"
11087But you are not really going in?
11087Can no life come into these dry bones? 11087 Could anything have happened, Jacqueline?"
11087Did Robinson Crusoe ever come back to his father and mother?
11087Did you hear the newspipe has broke?
11087Did you think it was he, when I came up the stairs?
11087Do n''t you know it''s after midnight?
11087Do you accompany us, Sir, on this blessed crusade against crime and unbelief?
11087Fine day,he replies;"how''s business?"
11087For heresy?
11087Gloomy? 11087 Going with me?
11087Had he been insane the night before? 11087 Happy, do you say?"
11087Have I any cause for wretched looks, then? 11087 Have you felt any extraordinary spiritual impressions since you returned?"
11087Have you, then, gained nothing, Jacqueline?
11087He has been in prison, then?
11087How can I tell, Jacqueline? 11087 How is it, Elsie?"
11087I must stay here in Meaux, then?
11087In the other world?
11087Is it possible? 11087 Is it?
11087Is there anything under the sun,she exclaims,"that Dr. Holmes can not paint?"
11087Is there danger? 11087 Is there such danger for all men who believe with John Leclerc, and with-- with you, Victor?"
11087Jenny,said I to my wife,"do you remember the night I frightened you so and kissed you as you lay in a fainting- fit?"
11087Like Peter? 11087 May n''t I look at the poetry?"
11087Mazurier retracted? 11087 Mazurier?"
11087My life?
11087Nay, might it not be doing with your might what you found to do, that you might not be led into temptation?
11087No desire to lay hands on some sin- stricken wretch and cure him of the evil that is in him?
11087Not that we are wrong, mistaken, Victor?
11087Nothing in the way of chaos, I hope?
11087Now that was good, sensible poetry you were reading, was n''t it? 11087 Now where?"
11087Of him? 11087 Oh, do you remember what he said to John,--what he prayed in that room?
11087Oh, that''s all, is it, Sir? 11087 Oh, then, who can tell?
11087Or such a price as he pays who-- has been branded to- day?
11087Sir? 11087 Strange!--strange!--is it not?
11087That word_ sathan_, twice repeated, can it be anything else than_ Satan_? 11087 Thinking of Leclerc all the while?"
11087Victor, has He not said, who can best say it,''I will never leave you nor forsake you''?
11087Well, Old Cock, do you see your game?
11087Well, what is he?
11087What do you say to the Rochester knockings and the Stratford mysteries and the Mormon miracles?
11087What have you heard, Elsie?
11087What have you heard?
11087What is it, Victor?
11087What is it, Victor?
11087What is our life, that we should hold it at the expense of his Truth? 11087 What is that, Jacqueline?"
11087What is that?
11087What is this?
11087What shall I promise, Victor?
11087What the Old Harry are you about?
11087What will you do? 11087 What''s the matter?"
11087What, the occupant of the new house just below you? 11087 Where is yours?
11087Where will you go?
11087Wherefore?
11087Who is my nearest neighbor?
11087Will you?
11087You are on hand early_ this_ time, a''n''t you? 11087 You would not think the Truth worth buying at the price of your life?"
11087Your own, poor girl? 11087 ( Why?) 11087 --Hold the umbrella a little higher, will you?
11087All this while the house resounded with outcries of,"Who''s there?"
11087Am I an idiot?
11087An instant afterward, a muffled voice, like that of a man only half awake, shouted from a room behind me,"Who''s there?
11087And could it be any other than Jacqueline who touched his arm, and whispered,"Victor"?
11087And does he not know that it changes its course whenever it passes from a vacuum into any ponderable medium or in the opposite direction?
11087And if you persist in remaining here, what moral right have you to complain of God?...
11087And now, if these things be so, in the words of the great Grecian, John P.,_ what are you going to do about it_?
11087And what are you going to do about it?--telegraph?"
11087And when analyzed, what was the_ animus_ of Gibbon''s elaborate chronicle?
11087And with this recognized as a fact, ask the question, Of what are you afraid?
11087Are they opiates obliterating actual suffering, or prophets uttering hopeful predictions?
11087Are we not one in heart and purpose, Jacqueline?
11087Are we not, in this class of our tastes and feelings, becoming rapidly Egyptianized?
11087Are you Jacqueline?"
11087Are you sure that he is not a sharper, or an impostor, or a lunatic?"
11087Are you?
11087Because the swans have a vile habit of over- eating themselves, shall we nail them to the barn- door as a moral lesson to the crows?
11087But is n''t it rather odd that the man should use earthly gestures with an unearthly language?"
11087But where?"
11087Can we never extract this tape- worm of Europe from the brain of our country- men?
11087Did he not pray that he might not be led into temptation?"
11087Do n''t they find this climate especially salubrious and suited exactly to their constitutions?
11087Do n''t you catch a single glimpse or suspicion of meaning in these remarkable words?"
11087Do n''t you know me?
11087Do they mean, We, too, might have been geniuses, but we chose rather to be good and dull?
11087Do they not act as a stimulus upon her sensitive nervous system, and produce, somehow, a_ delightfully intoxicated state of the feelings_?
11087Do they speak languages and_ congregate and worship at the altar_?"
11087Do they suggest pleasant fancies, or recall the memories of happy days?
11087Do they walk erect like man?
11087Do you ever talk with trees?
11087Do you feel no irrepressible emotion, Sir,--no shaking?"
11087Do you live in this neighborhood?"
11087Do you suppose there is any country where they do not scald milkpans, and swaddle the infants, and burn the brushwood, and broil the fish?
11087Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old moustache as I am Is not a match for you all?
11087Does Mr. Collier''s folio reject this reading of the first line?
11087Does our theology furnish us with no clear conception of the state of the soul after death?
11087Elderkin?
11087Elderkin?"
11087Ever see a difference?"
11087For why should I blame him?
11087For you do not think that he lives any longer?"
11087Good stuff?
11087Had he sense and spirit enough to deal with such people?
11087Had not he as good right to ask questions as Abraham?
11087Has Mr. John M. Riley been brought to confess any state- prison offences?"
11087Has the Protestant Church equally definite notions on the subject, or, in fact, any fixed opinions respecting it whatever?
11087Have not the weeds as much right there as the corn?
11087Have they feet, hands, legs, arms,_ hair upon their heads, or beards upon their faces_?
11087Have they, perhaps, a double meaning,--souvenirs of felicity as well as symbols of sorrow?
11087Have you heard Everett, Garrison, Father Taylor, Theodore Parker?
11087Have you lost your courage?
11087Have you one for the Holy City?
11087Have you seen Mr. Allston, Doctor Channing, Mr. Adams, Mr. Webster, Mr. Greenough?
11087Have you seen a few lawyers, merchants, and brokers,--two or three scholars, two or three capitalists, two or three editors of newspapers?
11087Have you talked with Messieurs Turbinewheel, Summitlevel, and Lacofrupees?
11087He could have gone on, who might tell to what fanatical length?
11087He does n''t keep an omnibus with seats for twenty, does he?"
11087He had come to Jacqueline,--had but one purpose in his coming; yet it was she who must say,--"Is it true, Victor, that Martial Mazurier is in prison?"
11087He had recanted, done evil, in short, that good might come; and was not content with having done this thing: how should he be?
11087He took as his text,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"
11087How are you, and how have you been?
11087How can I tell?
11087How could I say it, my poor Victor?
11087How do you know?"
11087How know I that_ she_ marvelled at her lover''s choice, though all the world might marvel?
11087How many readers do not at the sight of these words feel an involuntary_ soupçon_ of a shudder?
11087How stands it in 1860?
11087How would they interpret our notions of a future state?
11087How''d you get hold of him?"
11087I have given you a treasure which was greater than I could keep.--Where is it that you live now, Jacqueline?
11087I have said the same, you think?"
11087I hope it does n''t disgust you with your neighborhood?"
11087I see it!-- No?
11087I speak not for him; but what will you do with your poor Victor, my poor Jacqueline?"
11087If thou rememberest each misdeed, If each should have its rightful meed, Lord, who shall stand before thee?
11087If you are the victim of your doing, who cares what you do?
11087If you plant a field with corn, and the weeds spring up also along with it, why do you complain?
11087If, then, the earth appears to be evil, is it not because''thine eye is evil''?
11087Is egotism a metaphysical varioloid of this malady?
11087Is it intended to put men on their guard against being geniuses?
11087Is not a Creator bound to guard his children against the ruin which inherited ignorance might entail on them?
11087Is not our work one, moreover?
11087Is not the pain they cause, in her case, qualified by actual pleasure?
11087Is not this a flagrant delusion of self- conceit?
11087Is she thinking now, I wonder, of the dead husband, or of something else?
11087Is the face too thin and hard, the lips compressed?
11087It is not his prayer, nor my earnings, that will have to do with the eternity of John Gabrie.--Do you hear me, Elsie?"
11087Jacqueline could hear it,--and yet how could this be declared?
11087Let a cloud of locusts descend upon a hundred square miles of this territory, and what means do you possess to arrest their ravages?...
11087Let a pack of hungry wolves surround you here in the forest, and who is master?
11087My dear Doctor Potter, how are you?
11087None?
11087Now I should like to know if a Westminster Catechism of the mosquitoes would''nt make as good an answer for them?
11087Now is there not involved in this artless answer a possible explanation of the above- mentioned fact?
11087Oh, Jacqueline and Victor, what is this I behold?
11087Oh, Jacqueline, is it not all blessed and all fair?"
11087Oh, Victor, what does it mean?"
11087Or is it none of these things, and does she find her work pleasant only because duty makes its performance cheerful labor?
11087Professor come home this very blessed morning with a story of one of her old black women?
11087Robinson?"
11087Shall I not tell you he brings me a little bunch of eels of his own spearing?
11087Shall I not to- day, Estelle, give you the history of this great arm- chair, the only historical piece of furniture in our house?
11087Shall it not be so, Jacqueline?
11087Shall they not live?
11087Shall we not stand side by side, soldiers of Christ, stronger in each other than in all the world beside?
11087She told the whole story;--shall I repeat it?
11087Should Love retreat before the fierce onset of Hate?
11087Should Truth succumb to these?
11087Should her woman''s pride have led her to her lofty lodging, and kept her there without a sign, till Victor himself came seeking her?
11087So does the snake, the monkey, the lizard and crocodile, and many other low and mean animals.--Have these creatures the reasoning faculties of man?
11087Taking our own monuments, cut with our own hands, inscribed with our own signs- manual, what would they infer our system of religion to have been?
11087Then turning to the master of the house,--"Do you like choc''late, Sir?
11087They say,"O Holy Ghost, hast thou forsaken thine own temples?"
11087Too old was he to be trusted on the treacherous deep; and friends(?)
11087Turning to Aunt Sarah, he says,--"Did you ever notice a difference in eggs, Marm?"
11087Victor Le Roy''s first endeavor, on being liberated, was-- of course to find Jacqueline?
11087Wait,--what is it you will do?
11087Was there enough capital of humanity in his somewhat limited nature to furnish sympathy and unshrinking service for his friends in an emergency?
11087Well, how was this extraordinary revelation received by the audience?"
11087Well, how you going to fix it when you have n''t got any milk?
11087Well, shall we get into the cars?
11087Well, shall we start?"
11087What am I?
11087What are we to do with them,--we who teach that the soul of a child is an unstained white tablet?"
11087What did he do with it?
11087What did hinder them?
11087What do you think must be my feelings when I see my worthiest parishioners rise in public and break out with unknown tongues?"
11087What dost thou here, Jacqueline?
11087What dost thou here, Victor?
11087What has she found among the flowers so consoling?
11087What have you to say, then?"
11087What is going to come of this?
11087What makes you speak so prudently, Jacqueline?
11087What makes your feet stick to the ground so fast, or inspires you to take to your legs and run for your life?
11087What mischief wo n''t he do to people who are so handy?"
11087What will you say to our boy, when he cries for me there in Saint Louis?
11087What would Johnstone, Boussingault, Liebig, and the other agricultural chemists say to this?"
11087What would_ you_ have done in my place?"
11087What, again, if something would happen, and then one could describe it?
11087When they came from Domrémy, she had relied on Jacqueline: there was safety in her counsel,--there was wisdom in it: but now, either?
11087Where else should he go?
11087Where shall I go, in truth?"
11087Where, then, was the prison of Le Roy''s captivity?
11087Which is her door?"
11087Who are you that have no task to keep you at home?
11087Who of us does not look with great tenderness on the young chieftain in the"Fair Maid of Perth,"when he confesses his want of courage?
11087Who wishes to be severe?
11087Who wishes to resist the eminent and polite, in behalf of the poor and low and impolite?
11087Why are you alone in the street?"
11087Why can not the marble- cutters procure some of the Heliconian fraternity as partners?
11087Why do you not declare,''Though all men deny Thee, yet will I never deny Thee''?
11087Why was_ man_ created?
11087Why, Elsie?
11087Why, let me ask you, did you go out there?
11087Why, what do you know of the man who has been your Columbus in this sea of wonders?
11087Why?
11087Will you go with me?"
11087Won hardly by a word: too easily, you think?
11087Would it be fair for a parent to put into a child''s hands the title- deeds to all its future possessions, and a bunch of matches?
11087Would n''t you like to have such a nice coffin as that?"
11087Would not the cause of this indefinable secret dread of the darkness which covers a graveyard be a curious matter of inquiry?
11087Would you like to sit here awhile and look at Humby''s''Modern Miracles''?"
11087Would you turn away from so much patient endurance of a hard lot?
11087Yet he can tell a good, big story yet, and when somebody was talking of turtles of good size, jumped up suddenly,"Did you ever see a terrapin, Sir?"
11087You do not think you will find anything there which you have not seen at home?
11087You know Jones''s poodle, and how obese he is?
11087You think that you at least are with Leclerc?"
11087_ He_ also had been beguiled,--ah, had he not?
11087and to what could it be owing, but to an innate organic tendency?
11087and was_ his_ hour the extremity of another''s weakness, not in the elevation of another''s spiritual strength?
11087and who that dares do it can keep his temper sweet, his frolic spirits?
11087are you the prophet?"
11087do n''t you see where they are going to?"
11087is it so?''
11087or does he suppose that Miranda remained standing, in spite of her father''s command?
11087said the good minister,"is this you?"
11087sold me?
11087that he is altogether a sparse man?
11087that you must be careful at table he has enough to eat, he takes such small pieces?
11087what_ was_ I saying?
2055All ready forward?
2055All ready there, forward?
2055Are you sure o''dat?
2055Ca n''t a man ask a question here without being flogged?
2055Do n''t you know Job Terry? 2055 Do n''t you want to come aboard and work?"
2055Has he brought his brig with him?
2055Have I ever refused my duty, sir? 2055 Hay algunas cosa de comer?"
2055How do things go aboard?
2055Que gusta usted?
2055There,said the cook,"what do you think o''dat?"
2055Well, D----,said the second mate to me,"this does not look much like Cambridge college, does it?
2055What are you going to flog that man for, sir?
2055What kind of a German?
2055What''s that?
2055What, in the name of God, is that?
2055What,said I,"have you been at work all day?"
2055What? 2055 Where away, cook?"
2055Who''ll go to church with me a week from to- day?
2055Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?
2055( Done?
2055( Sir Robert Peel had been minister, then?
2055("who knows?")
2055--"All ready the cross- jack yards?"
2055--"Have you any fresh provisions to spare?"
2055--"Where are you from, pray?"
2055--"Where are you from, pray?"
2055And when, at seven bells, the customary"All the larboard watch, ahoy?"
2055At each change of the watch, those coming on deck asked those going below--"How does she go along?"
2055At first we had but little success, all that we could get out of the lazy fellows, in reply to our questions, being the eternal drawling"Quien sabe?"
2055Brown?"
2055But beside the numbers, what is there for sailors to do?
2055But what was to be done?
2055Call the captain, and heave the ship aback?
2055Captain T---- turned to me and asked abruptly--"D----, do you want to go home in the ship?"
2055Do you hear the news?"
2055Doubtless nearly all were dead; but how had they died, and where?
2055Has the old bundle of bones got him at last?"
2055Have you ever known me to hang back, or to be insolent, or not to know my work?"
2055I asked his age, but could get no answer but"Quien sabe?"
2055I was to leave town the next day for a fortnight''s absence, and whom had they to see to them?
2055Mannini?
2055No you hear''em sing out,''Lan''o?''
2055Nothing is more common than to hear people say--"Are not sailors very idle at sea?--what can they find to do?"
2055One article spoke of Taney as Justicia Mayor de los Estados Unidos,( what had become of Marshall?
2055Pointing to the large irregular place which is always left blank round the poles, to denote that it is undiscovered, he looked up and asked.--"Pau?"
2055The mate then hailed the yards--"All ready forward?"
2055Then came the question,"Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?"
2055We went to the man of whom we hired them, but he only shrugged his shoulders, and to our question,"Where are the horses?"
2055What could be the matter?
2055What is the captain about?
2055What were these hides-- what were they not?--to us, to me, a boy, twenty- four years ago?
2055What''s the use in being always on the look- out for Davy Jones?"
2055Where were they all?
2055Why does not he run?
2055Will you ever be impudent to me again?"
2055Will you ever give me any more of your jaw?"
2055Yet how long would a people remain so, in such a country?
2055a d----d Kanaka?"
2055and where were Earl Grey and the Duke of Wellington?)
2055cried a man who was rigging out a top- gallant studding- sail boom.--"Where away?"
2055do you hear the news?"
2055ended?)
2055indeed, where could we stop?
2055only answered--"Quien sabe?"
2055said I,"Easter holydays?"
2055said one of the crew;"has the bloody agent slipped off the hooks?
2055said the cook, putting his head out of the galley--"California come?"
2055said"Chips,""you do n''t know what it is to have a wife, and"--"Do n''t I?"
2055the three Frenchmen roared through the Marseilles Hymn; the English and Scotchmen gave us"Rule Britannia,"and"Wha''ll be King but Charlie?"
2055was he dead, or banished?)
2055what brought you here?"
2055who the h--- are you?"
2055you know what countryman''e carpenter be?"
22557Ah, mes garçons,laughed the General--"Malbrouck s''en va- t- en guerre Mais quand reviendra- t- il?"
22557Malbrouck has gone a- fighting, But when will he return?
22557Who run?
22557_ À quel regiment?_again challenged the suspicious soldier.
22557But how prospered the fortunes of Poutrincourt{ 65} whilst the fate of Port Royal was hanging in the scale?
22557Quid miles?
22557Quid strata ingentia ligna?
22557What conquering light shone on thy lofty brow?
22557in the name of the King Et du monde civilisé?
22557stern smile of pride?
22557when will we get home?"
22557{ 386}"Is it the clang of wild- geese, Is it the Indians''yell That lends to the voice of the North wind The tone of a far- off bell?
12744But can not the kitten go through the same hole as the cat?
12744Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?
12744Have you any other business?
12744In the beginning?
12744Lord, is it I?
12744A man said to another,"Do you drink?"
12744All that is said is that they were ungrateful; but how about those who go out from our colleges and universities?
12744An indifferent Christian?
12744And he said unto him, Why callest thou me good?
12744And how about morals?
12744And how much can one wisely spend?
12744And if the light waves created the eyes, why did they not create them strong enough to bear the light?
12744And if ye salute your brethren only, what do ye more than others?
12744And is it not greater still that the people are able to reduce a President to the ranks as well as to lift him up?
12744And that brings us to the next question: How much should one desire to collect from society?
12744And what called forth this powerful illustration-- the sacrificing of the right eye and the right hand to save the body?
12744And what can be more important than the cleansing of the heart of all that obstructs one''s view of God?
12744And what excuses do men give?
12744And what of the man who showed us how to hurl our messages thousands of miles through space without the aid of wire?
12744And what would he think of saving weak babies by pasteurizing milk and of the efforts to find a specific for tuberculosis and cancer?
12744And where does that begin?
12744And why did the light waves quit playing when two eyes were perfected?
12744And why is it that we live under a government resting upon the consent of the governed, and in a land in which the people rule?
12744And why is the spring a spring?
12744And why take ye thought for raiment?
12744And, would He_ want_ to?
12744Are any more worthy to be trusted than Christians?
12744Are not many of these worse than ungrateful?
12744Are ye not much better than they?
12744Art thou a mourner?
12744But can one earn an_ hundred million_?
12744But how does the evolutionist explain the eye when he leaves God out?
12744But is the law of"natural selection"a sufficient explanation, or a more satisfactory explanation, than sexual selection?
12744But now that men are looked upon as children of apes, what matters it whether they are slaughtered or not?"
12744But what has God been doing since the"stuff"began to develop?
12744But what has been the experience of those who have been successful in accumulating money?
12744But what is justice?
12744But what is the_ natural tendency_ of Darwin''s doctrine?
12744But when his disciples saw it, they had indignation, saying, To what purpose is this waste?
12744But who will estimate the value of this narrative?
12744But why should the betrayal have come from one of the twelve?
12744But you say, a man can leave his money to his children?
12744But, suppose they make mistakes occasionally: have they not a right to make_ their own mistakes_?
12744But, would God_ want_ to perform a miracle?
12744Can Christians be indifferent to such statistics?
12744Can a man earn that much?
12744Can anything be less scientific than trying to guess what an animal is thinking about?
12744Can such a barbarous doctrine be sound?
12744Can that doctrine be accepted as scientific when its author admits that we can not apply it"without deterioration in the noblest part of our nature"?
12744Can they be blind to the benefits conferred by our churches?
12744Can you beat it?
12744Can you imagine anything more brutal?
12744Christ, noticing the absence of the others, inquired,"Were there not ten cleansed, but where are the nine?"
12744Could this be said of a man labouring under a delusion as to his real character?
12744Did you ever hear an atheist explain creation?
12744Do not even the publicans so?
12744Do not even the publicans the same?
12744Do these murmurs echo in the corridors of our universities?
12744Do we count the cost to others and think of the sacrifices they have made for our benefit?
12744Do we estimate the strength that education has brought to us and feel that we should put that strength under heavier loads?
12744Does it not seem incredible that the money of Christians is available for the outside world and yet not within reach of needy brethren?
12744Does the atheist understand the mystery of the life he lives?
12744Dost reel from righteous retribution''s blow?
12744Dost thou behold thy lost youth all aghast?
12744Even Judas himself, coerced by the action of the others, asked,"Master, is it I?"
12744Faith says obey; reason asks, Why?
12744For if ye love them which love you, what reward have ye?
12744For who can doubt that the prosperity and power of the nations of the world are due to the influence of the Bible upon the character and conduct?
12744Has man so fallen from his high estate, that we can not rightfully expect as much of him now as nineteen centuries ago?
12744Have they the confidence that the prophets of Baal had in their god?
12744Have you ever read a scientific definition of love?
12744Have you thought how few of each generation are remembered after death by any one outside of a small circle of friends?
12744Have you thought of the value of the ice machine?
12744Having answered the atheist''s first question, it is now my turn, and I ask my first question of the atheist:"Where do you begin?"
12744He even blames vaccination because it has preserved thousands who might otherwise have succumbed( for the benefit of the race?).
12744He saith unto him, which?
12744He was taken from prison and from judgment: and who shall declare his generation?
12744How can Christ''s teachings relieve the situation?
12744How can a brute mind comprehend spiritual things?
12744How can he delay acceptance of Christ''s offer to ennoble that which he has, and to add to it the things that are highest and best and most enduring?
12744How can one believe in prayer if, for millions of years, God has never touched a human life or laid His hand upon the destiny of the human race?
12744How can one feel God''s presence in his daily life if Darwin''s reasoning is sound?
12744How can one fight for a principle unless he believes in the triumph of right?
12744How can you explain Christ?
12744How could one ambitious for worldly success afford to reject such an applicant?
12744How did it build a watermelon?
12744How different this way of dealing from the way the carnal man acts, and yet who can question the wisdom of the Saviour''s plan?
12744How do we feel when we complete our education?
12744How highly does he prize the form of government under which he lives?
12744How is it possible for a preacher to be a power of God, whose source of authority is his own reason and convictions?
12744How long did the"light waves"have to play on the skin before the eyes came out?
12744How much did he earn?
12744How much is it worth to one to be born again?
12744How much money can a man rightfully collect from society?
12744How much of the intellectual wealth that we have so laboriously acquired can we carry with us?
12744How would conscription have been received if it applied to father, husband and son and not to wealth also?
12744How?
12744I can not understand a radish; can you?
12744III WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST?
12744If he complains of vaccination, what would he say of the more recent discovery of remedies for typhoid fever, yellow fever and the black plague?
12744If not, what excuse will they give?
12744If the Old Testament is so fascinating what may we expect of the New?
12744If you will analyze the miracle you will find just two questions in it:_ Can_ God perform a miracle?
12744Is any other proof needed to show the irreligious influence exerted by Darwinism applied to man?
12744Is eye or arm or body more important than the soul?
12744Is he discharging the duty which superior opportunity imposes upon him?
12744Is it not a reflection on the church that its members should ever be compelled to go outside for assistance in such emergencies?
12744Is it not astonishing that any person intelligent enough to teach school would talk such tommyrot to students and look serious while doing so?
12744Is it possible for one to render a service so large as to earn so vast a sum?
12744Is it possible for one to render so large a service?
12744Is it satisfactorily proved that species may be originated by selection?
12744Is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?
12744Is there any other plan?
12744Is this within the range of human possibility?
12744Is"thus saith the Lord"to be supplanted by guesses and speculations and assumptions?
12744It is to such that Christ appeals when He asks:"What shall it profit a man if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?"
12744Let him find out, if he can, why it is that a black cow can eat green grass and then give white milk with yellow butter in it?
12744Let no one be deceived-- if the devil would tempt the Saviour Himself, will he not tempt you?
12744Lowry, in"Where Is My Wandering Boy To- night?"
12744Must we believe this, too?
12744Nietzsche names Darwin as one of the three great men of his century, but tries to deprive him of credit(?)
12744Not only is a man limited in his collection of what he honestly earns, but will an honest man_ desire_ to collect more than he earns?
12744Of whom but an honest person could such a story be told?
12744Or does the Bible come to us from a source that is higher than man?
12744Or was He deluded?
12744Or was He the promised Messiah,"the Way, the Truth, and the Life,"as He declared Himself to be?
12744Or when saw we thee sick, or in prison, and came unto thee?
12744Or, did the males select for three years and then allow the females to do the selecting during leap year?
12744Or, what is more important, what would so great a sum_ do with them_?
12744Rouse thee from thy spell; Art thou a sinner?
12744Some years ago I read a story by Tolstoy, and I did not notice until I had completed it that the title of the story was,"What shall it profit?"
12744That none of the phenomena exhibited by the species are inconsistent with the origin of the species in this way?
12744The higher critic, however, comes to you in the guise of a friend and politely inquires:"Is n''t the light too near your eyes?
12744The narrative suggests an epitaph which every Christian can earn-- and who could desire more?
12744The question, What think ye of Christ?
12744The world has been full of delusions: have any of them produced a character like Christ?
12744The young man saith unto him, All these things have I kept from my youth up: what lack I yet?
12744Then shall the righteous answer him, saying, Lord, when saw we thee an hungered, and fed thee?
12744There is but one_ first_ question: Where do you begin?
12744Third: What right has a Christian to throw the influence of his example on the side of a habit that has brought millions to the grave?
12744This is a living world; why not a_ living_ God upon the throne?
12744Tolstoy insists that the science of"How to Live"is more important than any other science, and is this not true?
12744WHAT THINK YE OF CHRIST?
12744Was Christ an impostor?
12744Was Christ deceived?
12744We are familiar with this word but how shall it be interpreted in governmental terms?
12744We_ should_, but do we?
12744Well, what shall we say of ten millions?
12744Were they censured?
12744What Christian can afford to say less in regard to intoxicants?
12744What about the Bible, is it not here to stay?
12744What architect drew the plan?
12744What can Darwinism ever do to compensate any one for the destruction of faith in God, in His Word, in His Son, and of hope of immortality?
12744What could they do with the sum that they actually earn?
12744What did Gorry earn when he gave the world the ice machine?
12744What did the man earn who gave the world a sewing machine?
12744What estimate does he place upon the education which he has received?
12744What has he earned?
12744What has she earned?
12744What is it in man that can take the body and hold it in the fire until the flames consume the quivering flesh?
12744What is it, that, having, we live, and, having not, we are as the clod?
12744What is more mysterious than an egg?
12744What is the first question an atheist asks a Christian?
12744What is the profit?
12744What is to be done?
12744What moral right has he to take into his body that which he knows will lessen his capacity for service and_ may_ destroy even his desire to serve?
12744What of vaccination and the labours of Pasteur?
12744What shall it profit a man if he shall gain all the learning of the schools and lose his faith in God?
12744What shall we say of the man who gave to the world a knowledge of the use of steam and revolutionized the transportation of the globe?
12744What time has he to waste in hunting for"missing links"or in searching for resemblances between his forefathers and the ape?
12744What value does he put upon the religion that controls his heart?
12744What would have been the fate of the Church if the early Christians had had as little faith as many of our Christians of to- day?
12744What would have been the feeling among the people if we had entered the late war under such a handicap?
12744When Jesus understood it, he said unto them, Why trouble ye the woman?
12744When Job was asked,"Canst thou by searching find out God?"
12744When saw we thee a stranger, and took thee in?
12744When, before or since, has the littleness of the self- centered been so exposed and the nobility of self- surrender been so glorified?
12744Where did it find its flavouring extract and its colouring matter?
12744Where did that little watermelon seed get its tremendous strength?
12744Where does the atheist begin?
12744Where in all the books in all the libraries can one find as much that affects the welfare of man as is condensed into these three verses?
12744Which of you by taking thought can add one cubit unto his stature?
12744Who can be happier than the Christian?
12744Who dares to say that the plan will fail?
12744Who has a right to make mistakes for them?
12744Who has not seen a splendidly developed body with an ignorant brain to think for it and a puny spiritual life within?
12744Who represented the liquor traffic in that august tribunal?
12744Who will calculate the restraint that that one question,"Lord, is it I?"
12744Who will deny that the acceptance of the Darwinian hypothesis shuts out the higher reasonings and the larger conceptions of man?
12744Who will estimate the Bible''s value to society?
12744Who will estimate the value of the service rendered by the man who gave us a remedy for typhoid?
12744Who will measure the value of anesthetics in the treatment of disease and injury?
12744Who will say, after reading these words, that it is immaterial what man thinks about his origin?
12744Whose hand caught the hues of a summer sunset and wrapped them around the radish''s root down there in the darkness in the ground?
12744Why did the light waves make eyes and then make eyelids to keep the light out of the eyes?
12744Why did they not keep on playing until there were eyes all over the body?
12744Why do they not play to- day, so that we may see eyes in process of development?
12744Why not allow Him to work_ now_?
12744Why not employ the only untried remedy for the ills which afflict civilization?
12744Why should a church member be driven to these extremities when the loanable money in the church is sufficient for all needs?
12744Why should we encourage the guesses of these speculators and thus weaken our power to protest when they attempt the leap from the monkey to man?
12744Why will he be content with the pleasures of the body and the joys of the mind when he can have added to them the delights of the spirit?
12744Why will one choose a life that is small and contracted, when there is within his reach the life that is full and complete-- the Larger Life?
12744Why?
12744Why?
12744Why?
12744Will he be as sensitive to God''s will and as anxious to find out what God wants him to do?
12744Will man''s attitude toward Darwin''s God be the same as it would be toward the God of Moses?
12744Will the believer in Darwin''s God be as conscious of God''s presence in his daily life?
12744Will the believer in Darwin''s God be as fervent in prayer and as open to the reception of divine suggestions?
12744Will the mystery disturb him?
12744Will they try?
12744Winning hearts through love expressed in sacrifice, is that strange?
12744Would you have proof?
12744fight out their differences, have they not a right to demand information as to the merits of the dispute before the shivering begins?
12744has exerted upon Christ''s followers in the hour when some great temptation has made the believer hesitate upon the brink of sin?
12744or naked, and clothed thee?
12744or thirsty, and gave thee drink?
16057''And suppose, instead of that, I turn out a corporal''s guard, and bid them shoot you in the court- yard?'' 16057 ''Are you sure?''
16057''But what? 16057 ''Can you read that, Monsieur?''
16057''Can you read that, Sir?'' 16057 ''Can you read this?''
16057''Do n''t you know that the Stebbinses are worth five times as much as ever I was?'' 16057 ''Humph?''
16057''I am, then,--don''t you believe me?'' 16057 ''I thought so: any one with him?''
16057''Knife, I think?'' 16057 ''What do you come to me for?''
16057''What, all the time?'' 16057 ''Who keeps you?''
16057''Why not? 16057 ''You are right, Monsieur: Spanish knife!--Can you read this?''
16057A what?
16057And did the waterfall and the jockey cost anything?
16057And how do you contrive to pass your time? 16057 And is there anybody,"said I, as if continuing the conversation,"that you do love as Jane did?"
16057And let that poor lorn chile go in rags over Sunday, freezin''cold weather like this? 16057 And that plain little black one, with the stiff crop of scarlet feathers sticking straight up?"
16057And who are you, Sir?
16057And who might you be, Sir? 16057 Angels?
16057Are these,said Monsieur Louis Veuillot, speaking severely to me,"are these all your sacrifices to the truth?
16057But is there no standard of value?
16057But why borrow trouble?
16057Ca n''t nobody never have no fun in this house? 16057 Could I mend''em yis''day, when I did n''t have''em to mend?
16057Did it hurt ye?
16057Did n''t none on ye never see nobody afore? 16057 Do n''t you see him?
16057Do n''t you see you are dripping on the carpet?
16057Do n''t you think the customs of society make a difference? 16057 Do you ever compose?"
16057Do you know,said I,"that I''m quite sure the Misses Fielder think they are practising rigorous economy?"
16057Do you know,said Miss Featherstone,"I believe your papa is right?
16057Do you want me?
16057For better or wuss?
16057Help him any?
16057How could a girl dress for fifty dollars?
16057How do you get on, Sir?
16057How do you think?
16057How is it about that matter?
16057How would it have been, if he had n''t come?
16057I wonder if it is n''t just so with the men?
16057I? 16057 In these times of peril and suffering, if the inquiry arises, How shall there be retrenchment?
16057Is she able?
16057Is that so, Sir? 16057 Might David have been happy?
16057Mr. Lane,said Miss Joey, in an impressive undertone,"did you ever hear of anybody''s bewitchin''anybody?"
16057My dear girl,said I, earnestly, and taking a forward step,--"forgive me, but-- I think-- I hope-- you love David,--don''t you?"
16057My dear girl,said I,"what makes you tremble so?"
16057Now, it is true, all women are not called to such a life as this; but might not all women take a leaf at least from their book? 16057 S''pose I do''no''that?
16057Stand back, ca n''t you?
16057The thing is,said Marianne,"how can any woman, I, for example, know what is too much or too little?
16057The-- the what, Sir?
16057Well, papa,said Marianne,"in the matter of dress now,--how much ought one to spend just to look as others do?"
16057What angel is that, alighting upon earth?
16057What can we do with this fellow, Stephen?
16057What do you think of Monsieur Sainte- Beuve? 16057 What do you want?"
16057What secret?
16057What you wish that for?
16057What''s your name?
16057What, Sir,--if you please?
16057What?
16057Why do n''t you dress up, and go gallivantin''about''mong the gals?
16057Why is it imperative that you should have two or three courses at every meal? 16057 Why, my dear fellow,"replied Monsieur Paulin Limayrac, with a knowing look,"do n''t you know the secret?"
16057Would you ride easier, if I should trot? 16057 Would you, Stephen?
16057You do n''t suppose,said Mr. Williams,"we''d turn you out in such weather as this, do you?"
16057_ Jane who_?
16057***** WHAT WILL BECOME OF THEM?
16057?
16057A good deal, certainly; but what?
16057A''n''t we told to help our neighbor''s sheep out o''the ditch on the Lord''s day?
16057Ah, who shall lift that wand of magic power, And the lost clue regain?
16057Alas, when will he ever have such another?
16057Am I not an excellent prophet?
16057An''which is mos''consequence, I''d like to know, the neighbor''s sheep, or the neighbor hisself?"
16057And could anything express the state of young Reginald''s mind so ineffably as the primer type of his letter to Lucy?
16057And how much of her heart had the Doctor''s boy carried away?
16057And how was it with Mary Ellen?
16057And mebby you''ve noticed that these folks are great for gatherin''in herbs, and lobely, and bottlin''up hot- crop?"
16057And now was his life- path to lead him into a thorny wilderness?
16057And to sleep?
16057And was I sure about this last, about Warren?
16057And what better company, pray, can there be than a fair young face?
16057And"How do you do, Doctor?"
16057And, with all my pains, what had I accomplished?
16057As for Fessenden''s-- How shall we name him?
16057As these lines were anonymous, I did not care to pretend to recognize the author; besides, can you feel anger towards such a whipper- snapper?
16057At last Laure[ Laure Aglaë Rose de Beaurepaire,--would a rose by any other name smell as sweet?]
16057Be seated, Captain, if you please, and tell me what have you been doing all these years?''
16057But could he hold out?
16057But does an impulse in man, like the instinct of the bee, lead him to make just what he needs in his particular climate?
16057But how is this done, and by whom?
16057But how would he strike Mary Ellen,--this polished, smooth- tongued, handsomely dressed youth?
16057But what was her face saying?
16057But what''s a sheep for, if''t a''n''t for its wool to make the clo''es?
16057But will they reach this outcast beggar- boy, and benefit him?
16057Call that Christian, when he knows we ca n''t git another house, there''s sich a s''picion agin people o''color?"
16057Can one individual resist the whole current of society?
16057Certainly not, another replies; are not his principles erroneous, and second- hand at that?
16057Could n''t manage to hold, the umbrella over us, could you?
16057Do n''t you remember,"she continued,"that the fust week they come David had a bad cold?"
16057Do n''t you see you are smearing it?
16057Do you think, as things are, we could go back and dress for the sum you did?"
16057Does government encourage, stimulate, control, and turn to account this national appetite?
16057Does he not dredge the science with ridicule?
16057Does instinct or appetite in general shape itself to climate and other outward circumstances?
16057Does that seem like our David, Mr. Lane, a bashful young feller like him?"
16057Does the Bavarian take to beer as the bee to honey?
16057Each adores the other; but then what is more vulgar than to love one''s friends when they are successful?
16057Epics?
16057For, if the goodness of David, if the fascinations of Warren Luce had effected nothing, what could I hope?
16057He can not answer it; can you?
16057How can you say so?"
16057How d''''e do, Sar?
16057How do all these men live?
16057How had it been there through the slow hours of that feverish night?
16057How is all this done?
16057How should he be?
16057How was it to be thenceforth with those precious ones, and with him too, whom they all looked to for guidance and counsel?
16057How would it be in that home this morning?
16057How would it do to make a bold move,--to speak to her?
16057I muttered,"how could he steady his hands, with such a pair of white arms near them?
16057I say, Sir, what was you doing, lying here, Sir?
16057I should n''t like to do it myself, in the daytime; but in the night so, who cares?
16057I wonder if she would mind that?
16057Indeed, how could I disbelieve you after your lecture?''
16057Is he as unfaithful a critic as Monsieur Théophile Gautier and Monsieur Jules Janin?"
16057Is it right__ That we should bear it all_?"
16057Is that what you call serving our noble and austere cause?
16057Is there no action worth my mood, No deed of daring, high and pure, That shall, when I am dead, endure, A well- spring of perpetual good?"
16057Let me see; about how much do you weigh, Sir?
16057Might I not show her how much was at stake, and in some way have my faith confirmed?
16057Might she have loved him as''Jane''loved?
16057Not much above a hundred, do you?
16057Of human souls, self- moved?
16057Of_ men_?
16057Papa, how can you expect to learn about these things?"
16057Praises to that one, flattery to this one, soft words to him, compliments to another?
16057Progress?
16057S''pose God''ll forgit us''cause His grand church- folks do?
16057S''pose I want to see that chile''s head stove in?
16057S''pose all they can say''ll pedijice Him?"
16057She made no answer then; but a little after, when her mother stepped out a minute, she said, just as quietly,--"How will it be?"
16057Should, or should n''t I make bungling work of it?
16057Suppose, therefore, we stop at the possessive case, and call him simply Fessenden''s?
16057That is n''t the hat you were wearing yesterday?"
16057The reason of which was equally simple and clear: Front- doors were the most convenient and inviting; and what were they made for, if not to go in at?
16057The whole sex has produced no operas?
16057There is an order and progress, perhaps, but an order and progress of what?
16057These are not in Nature?
16057To assist the author in the expression of his ideas, and to elucidate subtile shades of meaning?
16057Was it not natural for him to infer that the largest houses had amplest accommodations, and that the rich could best afford to be bounteous?
16057Was not the popular current too strong to be safely defied?
16057Was she very sorry?
16057Was there no long strain and steady struggle there?
16057Was this death?
16057Were last night''s horrors a dream?
16057Were n''t they lovely, Marianne?
16057What are the final results upon body, mind, and heart of the present and future of the race?
16057What are you roaming about in this way for, intruding into people''s houses?"
16057What business had I, meddling with a young girl''s heart?
16057What do they do for themselves and for one another?
16057What does the lion- hunter secure?
16057What happens?
16057What if he was a-- Fessenden''s?
16057What is Herodotus to the Lives of the Saints, or Livy to Baronius?
16057What is it?"
16057What is the object of this multiplication of insignia and titles?
16057What sacristan, the convents through, Transcribes with such precision?
16057What should I say next?
16057What, then, rescues it?
16057When and how far is it prudent to depart from them?
16057When should they be strictly observed?
16057Where were those finer tastes and instincts which make you and me shrink from persons of color?
16057Which is mos''consequence, I''d like to know, your hat, or his head?
16057Who ever thought of objecting to me for not having them?
16057Whose assertion for that?
16057Why did n''t he go back, then?
16057Why did n''t he go to church, and be somebody?
16057Why did the monks never think of applying to such places the figure by which they protested against the introduction of coffee,"the fumes of hell"?
16057Why endeavor to drag farther his benumbed limbs?
16057Why must social intercourse so largely consist in eating?
16057Why must you always have cake in your closet?
16057Would it not be fatally inconsistent in a Liberal statesman to override every Liberal maxim and belie every Liberal profession?
16057Would you like to hear some of my verses?"
16057Would, or would n''t it answer for me to do this?
16057You do n''t think of remaining here all night, I trust, Sir?"
16057You know the Bible says,''Can a maid forget her ornaments?''
16057You remember the prophecy I made the other day?
16057do n''t you see him?
16057do n''t you see you have frightened them?
16057do you think that happiness dwells only in high places, or that these lowly homes are not dear to the poor?
16057exclaimed Bill;"Mr. Frisbie a''n''t really going to carry that threat into execution?"
16057go t''a wumman for the truth, when I can go t''infallible inference?"
16057how many has the entire opposite sex produced?
16057or again the moment when Skinner pokes Mr. Hardie lightly in the side and says,"But-- I''ve-- got-- THE RECEIPT"?
16057or las''night, when they was wringin''wet?
16057or to prove his let and hindrance, and to wrap his expression in mystery?
16057or would you prefer a canter?
16057spoke up Fessenden''s,"can I stop here over night?"
16057suffering what?''
16057was a worse darkness to settle down upon him?
16057was n''t he white?
16057what did I tell you?
16057what was that?''
16057what''ud we do, if''t wa''n''t for Joey, to make us laugh and keep our sperits up?
16057who Does such initials as I do?
16057who could have guessed that you were to be the means of letting in upon her benighted mind the secret of her own beauty?
16057who have you got there, William?"
16057why did n''t you be one of those fortunate children, well fed, rosy, and bright, instead of a starved and stupid tatterdemalion?
16057why need you feel undone to entertain a guest with no cake on your tea- table?
2044Am I satisfied?
2044Has not my sister here more sense than my brother Brooks? 2044 According to scientific notions of inertia and force, what ought to be the result? 2044 All they had put into the law was certainly thrown away, but were they happier in science? 2044 American character might perhaps account for it, but what accounted for American character? 2044 Apart from personal vanity, what would they sell it for? 2044 As the Niagara was to the Teutonic-- as 1860 was to 1890--so the Teutonic and 1890 must be to the next term-- and then? 2044 Between these great forces, where was the Administration and how was one to support it? 2044 But what can the Japanese do? 2044 Ca vous amuse, la vie? 2044 Ca vous amuse, la vie?
2044Complexity, Multiplicity, even a step towards Anarchy, it might suggest, but what step towards perfection?
2044Could inertia of race, on such a scale, be broken up, or take new form?
2044Did he himself quite know what he meant?
2044Did it flow or vibrate?
2044Do you mind letting me have it?"
2044Do you want to stop at the Embassy, on your way home, and ask which would run it best-- Herbert or his wife?"
2044From such contradictions among intelligent people, what was a young man to learn?
2044Granting that one of the three was a moral idiot, which was it:--Adams or Godkin or Cameron?
2044Had one sat all one''s life on the steps of Ara Coeli for this?
2044Have we lost faith?
2044Have we lost piety?
2044Have we lost the wealth of the inner man who is rich before God?
2044He had but to ask:"If a Congressman is a hog, what is a Senator?"
2044How could Adams prophesy that in another year or two, when he spoke of his Paris and its tastes, people would smile at his dotage?
2044How could he whisper the word Hartford Convention before the men who had made it?
2044How many years had he taken to admit a notion of what Michael Angelo and Rubens were driving at?
2044How should it have affected one''s future opinions and acts?
2044If Carlyle, too, was a fraud, what were his scholars and school?
2044If the glacial period were uniformity, what was catastrophe?
2044In fact, what strangeness should he feel?
2044In spite of Thurlow Weed''s advice, could one afford to trust human nature in politics?
2044In the heat of passion at the moment, one drew some harsh moral conclusions: Were they incorrect?
2044Is it worth while-- for me-- to keep up this useless labor?"
2044Is not Bessie worth two of Bay?
2044N''ai- je pas quatre pieds aussi bien que les autres?
2044No doubt he could depend on Seward, but on whom could Seward depend?
2044Should one be Guelph or Ghibelline?
2044That Palmerston had wanted a quarrel was obvious; why, then, did he submit so tamely to being made the victim of the quarrel?
2044The Law of Gravitation was so- and- so, but what was Gravitation?
2044The Russian people could never have changed-- could they ever be changed?
2044The stage- type of statesman was amusing, whether as Roscoe Conkling or Colonel Mulberry Sellers, but what was his value?
2044They had lost twenty years, but what had they gained?
2044This was the greatest stride in education since 1865, but what did it teach?
2044To what purpose had she existed, if, after nineteen hundred years, the world was bloodier than when she was born?
2044Was assassination forever to be the last word of Progress?
2044Was he wrong?
2044Was it a screw or thrust?
2044Was it a wire or a mathematical line?
2044Was it enough to satisfy him, that all America should call Washington barren and dangerous?
2044Was it real, or only apparent?
2044Was the American made to seem at home in it?
2044Was volume or intensity the stronger?
2044What and where was the vis nova that could hold its own before this prodigious ice- cap of vis inertiae?
2044What announced it?
2044What could a shy young private secretary do about it?
2044What course could he sail next?
2044What did he know about its value, or what did any one know?
2044What kind of political ambition was to result from this destructive political education?
2044What made Washington more dangerous than New York?
2044What mathematical equivalent could he suggest as the value of a Branly coherer?
2044What result could a student reach from it?
2044What value had the fight in education?
2044What was Unity?
2044What was he?--where was he going?
2044What was his view about the value of silence?
2044What was movement of inertia, and what its laws?
2044What was the use of training an active mind to waste its energy?
2044What would have been said had he suggested the chance of Secession and Civil War?
2044Who could tell?
2044Who knows?
2044Why add up the elements of resistance and anarchy?
2044Why had no President ever cared to employ him?
2044Why should he be dragged from a career he liked in a place he loved, into a career he detested, in a place and climate he shunned?
2044Why was one to be forced to affirm it?
2044Why was she unknown in America?
2044Would n''t we all elect Mrs. Lodge Senator against Cabot?
2044Would the President have a ghost of a chance if Mrs. Roosevelt ran against him?
2044and in what direction?
2044he asked:--"Moi?
2044pourquoi non?
14895''All right,''says he,''but Andrew Jackson''s dead, ai n''t he?'' 14895 ''But you still believe in him?''
14895About father? 14895 Ah, is the shoe done, entirely done?
14895Ah? 14895 Ai n''t you goin''to put it back?"
14895An''be told I''m a blamed liar? 14895 An''get sent up again for more''n two year?"
14895And are you trying to live according to it?
14895And if folks wo n''t give?
14895And so different from my daughter in that respect,--eh, dear?
14895Better?
14895But I would n''t know all about it in advance, would I? 14895 But suppose it were all true; how can mere notice from us help her?
14895But where does the lying come in, that you were talking about?
14895But you can at least change the subject, ca n''t you?
14895But, mother,persisted Eleanor,"what possible good will it do that Kimper girl for us merely to recognize her in the street?"
14895Can I have it?
14895Come to my house as soon as you like, then, and we''ll promise to keep you busy: wo n''t we, daughter?
14895Did n''t He do anything else?
14895Did n''t the Lord ever help you in any unexpected way, deacon?
14895Did you change your views at all under his arguments?
14895Did you, though?
14895Did, eh? 14895 Do n''t you feel Christ in you the hope of glory?"
14895Do n''t you feel that a sacrifice has been made to atone for your sins?
14895Do you know of any one, daughter, whose character more fully justifies him in doing so? 14895 Do you know, deacon,"said Sam,"I was thinkin''about the same thing?
14895Do you mean to call me the devil?
14895Do you mean, Deacon,said Sam, after a moment,"that what I''m believin''about Jesus is all wrong an''there ai n''t nothin''in it?"
14895Does n''t he talk of anything but his shoes?
14895Does she bring any of it home? 14895 Eh?
14895Goin''to give us money to buy candy an''go to all the circuses?
14895Great deal of good? 14895 Have all the children got good shoes and stockings and warm clothes?
14895Have you connected yourself with any church here as yet?
14895Here,as he gave a fig to each of the children and one to his wife,"how do you like that?"
14895His signature is put on by his own free will, is n''t it?
14895How can I help it?
14895How could I?
14895How did he seem to take what you said to him?
14895How did you get''em, Billy?
14895How''s you goin''to be better?
14895I do n''t know what you mean, deacon?
14895I suppose you allude to my conversion?
14895In spite of your new, loving, strong friend,--your Saviour? 14895 Is it as bad as that?"
14895Is n''t that putting it rather strong, Brother Quickset?
14895Is that a dead- sure thing?
14895Is that all?
14895It''s a fact, is n''t it?
14895It''s all right if he''s willing to sign it, is n''t it?
14895May I have some of these leavin''s?
14895Me?
14895Me?--in meetin''? 14895 My daughter, what can she have said to annoy you so much?"
14895My dear brother,exclaimed the priest,"which is the greater?
14895My dear child, what is the matter? 14895 Never drank anyding, eh?
14895Nor to teach people to live right?
14895Now, see here, Weitz, what do you mean, to ask me a question like that? 14895 Of course you think he loves you dearly?"
14895Oh, I believe; there was no trouble about that:''the devils also believe,''--you remember that passage, I suppose? 14895 Pay must be gettin''better?"
14895Ray Bartram,exclaimed the deacon, stopping short and looking the lawyer full in the face,"what on earth has got into you?"
14895See here, Sam; I need a new pair of shoes,--soft leather, thin soles, good cut; do you suppose you know how to measure me for them?
14895Should you like a different position?
14895That poor cobbler? 14895 The man looked kind o''puzzled like, an''at last says he,--"''What''s yer politics?''
14895Then you are satisfied He is God and Saviour, eh? 14895 Then you do admit that there are some God''s people besides Sam Kimper?"
14895Think somethin''of you? 14895 Tom,"asked the father,"why did n''t you come back to- day with what I gave you money to buy?"
14895Too small an end to be worthy of your attention, I suppose, deacon?
14895Vell,said the German,"is dat de vay you look at the question?"
14895Vouldn''t I, dough? 14895 Want it again?"
14895Was n''t Servetus that kind of a person? 14895 Well, Larry, would n''t it do just as well if there was somebody here to tell the truth about it?"
14895Well, daughter, do n''t you?
14895Well, dear, is that any reason why you should be jealous of poor Sam Kimper?
14895Well, well,said the ex- convict,"I wonder if that''s what it means?
14895Well, what did he say?
14895Well, you''re a sweet one, ai n''t you?
14895What are you doin''here?
14895What do I want o''somethin''else?
14895What do you mean by wild? 14895 What do you mean, child?"
14895What do you mean, then? 14895 What do you mean?"
14895What is that?
14895What''s dogs got to do with religion, I''d like to know? 14895 What''s_ he_ ever had to do with_ you_?"
14895What? 14895 What?"
14895What?
14895When did you promise the shoe to her?
14895Where''s Larry, Sam?
14895Where''s Larry?
14895Who can forget it?
14895Who was it told you to bring it?
14895Why did n''t you go talk to the preacher or Ray Bartram?
14895Why not? 14895 Wife,"said Sam, turning to his helpmate,"what wages does Jane get?"
14895Wo n''t you tell me who sent it?
14895You believe He has power to any extent, I suppose?
14895You believe it all?
14895You certainly will believe that as much as everything else you have read there?
14895You goin''to be a shoutin''Methodist? 14895 You have been at the office?"
14895You''re goin''to take''em away from me? 14895 ''Sam,''I hollered,''do n''t you want to buy a load of wood? 14895 An''you think you''re one yourself too, do n''t you?
14895And did n''t Calvin have to burn him at the stake?
14895Are n''t they good enough for you?
14895Are you working here?"
14895As he said to himself,--"What can be done with a man who only believes, and wo n''t argue or go to the bottom of things?
14895As he spoke, the lawyer took them, looked at them, and finally said,--"Deacon, how much money do you need?"
14895Bartram?"
14895Bartram?"
14895Before folks that-- that''s always b''longed to the church?"
14895Better, is it?
14895Brace up, my boy, why do n''t you, an''finish your work?"
14895But do you mean to say that what you''re making enables you to do for your family all that you should?"
14895But how can I do it, sir, when I''m expected to say that I believe this an''that, that I do n''t know nothin''about?
14895But what else can I think, Mr. Bartram, after all that''s gone on in me, an''what He''s said Himself?"
14895But when Jesus was on earth did He give much attention to men of your general character and standing?
14895But why should he have been quoted to me, or any other man in the community?
14895But, Mr. Price, what I asked you was, what''s the price o''them shoes?"
14895But, Tom, you''re pretty well grown up now; you''re almost a man; I s''pose the fellers in town think you_ are_ a man, do n''t they?
14895By the way, have you got that Bittles mortgage ready yet?"
14895Ca n''t the matter be arranged in some way so that I shall not hear any more about it?
14895Can you suggest anything?"
14895Certainly; but--""''About father?''
14895Dat''s de trouble, is n''t it?
14895Deacon Quickset?
14895Did he say anything that annoyed you in any way?"
14895Did n''t I tell Nan and the children?
14895Did n''t I tell you an''the judge?
14895Did you bring us anythin''?"
14895Do n''t I always hire him myself?"
14895Do n''t I know, I should like to ask?
14895Do n''t you see?"
14895Do n''t you think so?"
14895Do you imagine that being badly born and reared can keep that girl from having the same feelings?
14895Do you know what I''ve honestly believed for years about a lot of religious men in this town, you among the number?
14895Do you mean to say that he ever was wild in any way?"
14895Do you s''pose I vant to see people get drunk?
14895Do you s''pose I''m a fool?
14895Do you think mothers would have brought their children to Him that He might bless them?
14895Do you understan''?
14895Do you understan''me?"
14895Do you understand that, confound you?"
14895Does He do as much for your wife and children as for you?"
14895Does n''t Jane know how to sew?"
14895Does the family get the good of any of it?"
14895Everybody believes that, do n''t they?"
14895Fifty cents, I believe?
14895Finally he said,--"Nan, ai n''t you got nothin''else to do?"
14895From what''s in front of me, I guess you got along, did n''t you?"
14895Has any one questioned you, since, about what you said that evening?"
14895Have I got to have cold feet some more?"
14895Have I said or done anything to offend you?"
14895Have n''t you learned any more than that?"
14895How can you?"
14895How long since you stopped drinkin''?"
14895How much are they?"
14895How will they get them?"
14895How will we ever get along through the winter?"
14895How''s the rest?"
14895I believe this is your job, ma''am?"
14895I hope you wo n''t change your mind through anything that can be said to you by a person of that kind, or by any person whatever?"
14895I s''pose you''ll own up to that?"
14895I s''pose, sir, there must have been lots of folks of that kind when Jesus was around on the world alive: do n''t you think so?"
14895I suppose old Mrs. Poynter has been at you to get her interest- money out of me, has n''t she?"
14895I''ve coaxed them, threatened them, prayed for them with tears of agony, for what soul is not dear to our Saviour?
14895I-- I--""Well?"
14895If He''s all you take Him to be, are n''t you sure He''ll look out for your family?"
14895If better men could n''t do it, how could he?
14895If hotel servants know all about his goings- on evenings, what stories may they not tell if they choose?
14895Is that satisfactory?"
14895Keep right on looking so, wo n''t you?
14895Let''s see,--you''re twelve years old now, ai n''t you?
14895Let''s see; how long was you-- how long have you been away?"
14895Mother, what''s the reason a poor gal that do n''t ever look for any company above her always keeps findin''it when she do n''t want it?"
14895Mrs. Prency looked at the shoe through which the needle was rapidly passing back and forth, and finally said,--"He has n''t come again, I suppose?"
14895Now, what are you going to do about it?"
14895Own up, now; is n''t dat de trouble?
14895Sam looked up keenly, and said,"Mr. Bartram, are you in earnest?"
14895Sam was pallid by nature, more so through long confinement, but he looked yet more pale as he stammered,--"Me-- speak-- in meetin''?
14895Say, Tom, do you know dad''s mighty different to what he used to be before he got took up?"
14895Say, gi''me a quarter to go to the ball game with?
14895See here, Mr. Bartram, can you tell me somethin''I can do besides that?"
14895Somebody being burned?"
14895Tell me: ca n''t you speak?"
14895That girl is the daughter of the poor fellow--""Sam Kimper?--that you and father talk of so frequently?
14895The deacon followed him with his eyes, and finally said,--"I wonder how much truth there was in him-- about leaning on a higher power?"
14895The invisible Church has helped the visible, and--""Is my Church, then, invisible?"
14895The slight, bent form of the father straightened up, as he asked, quickly,--"Does the fellers around town pay attention to your sister Jane?"
14895Then Eleanor''s eyes flashed again, as she said,--"Mother, the idea of father--""Well?"
14895They use''em as a sign, do n''t you know?"
14895Tom wanted to go somewhere else; what boy does n''t, when his parents have anything for him to do?
14895Were n''t all His parables about matters that showed a sympathetic interest in the affairs which were nearest to the hearts of the people around Him?
14895What do you know about Him, after all?"
14895What do you suppose I have agreed to do?
14895What do you suppose he wanted?
14895What does any one in this town have to talk about just now, I wonder, except Reynolds Bartram and the church?
14895What does any other man do when he finds himself shaky about an important matter of opinion?
14895What for?
14895What''s got into both of us?
14895When did you get out?"
14895When''ll Billy get home, an''Tom?"
14895Where have your blessed eyes been?
14895Where''s the baby, though, that I ai n''t ever seen?"
14895Where?
14895Which exists only for the other?"
14895Why is it that they all think it necessary to come and talk to me about it?
14895Wo n''t that be bully to tell the fellers in the village?"
14895Wo n''t you tell me what it is?
14895Would you mind coming to my office, or taking me around to yours?"
14895Would you mind telling me?"
14895You are quite right in your surmise; but may I ask why you have spoken to me about it in this way?"
14895You believe me?"
14895You ca n''t imagine that she had anything to do with her father''s conversion, can you, still less with that of Mr. Bartram?
14895You do n''t feel that you''re prepared to die, do you?"
14895You do n''t know what those ways is, I s''pose, Dr. Guide, do you?"
14895You do n''t s''pose he''ll want it again an''send back for it, do you?"
14895You know I was there myself; you remember I spoke to you as you came out?"
14895You remember the parable of the ninety- and- nine?"
14895You want to know what bein''converted means?
14895You''re a good deal smarter than I be, sir: wo n''t you tell me how to go further?"
14895You''ve been to school a lot: why ca n''t you come to the shop with me, an''sit down an''tell me where an''how I do n''t talk like other folks?"
14895You''ve good enough clothes on you to keep you warm: what d''you want o''somethin''else?"
14895d''ye hear that?"
14895never in your life?
14895or are you like children at the table who will take only what suits them, and ignore everything else?"
14895what''s got into me?
20151And is it too late? 20151 And they wanted you to tell me of their misfortune"?
20151But if it be intended to redeem the legal tenders in gold, what will have been the net gain to the Government in the whole transaction? 20151 But now, gentlemen of the convention, what do we want?
20151But,replied the rich man,"if everybody was like you it would be spent in two months, and what would we then do?"
20151Do n''t you believe me?
20151Have a cigar?
20151He said to me,''Your name is----? 20151 How do you get it here?"
20151Nor gamble?
20151Nor smoke?
20151Well, what did Mr. Tilden say?
20151What salary will he require?
20151Yes,broke in Seward,"am I not Governor of this State?"
20151You do n''t drink?
20151''Can I have a passage down?''
20151''Do you return to New York with this boat?''
20151A laugh followed which roused his Southern blood, and he exclaimed:"Do you doubt it?
20151A plain man standing by offered to perform the service, and when they arrived at the door the young man asked,''What shall I pay you, sir''?
20151All the world asks is,"What can he do"?
20151And what claim founded in justice and right has been unsatisfied?
20151And will any one say that William G. Fargo was not deserving of this splendid success?
20151As young Childs had ability, and it was apparent, what matter it how old he was or where he came from?
20151But again gentlemen, what have we to gain by this proposed change of our relation to the general government?
20151But the ugly question recurs, what are you going to do with the greenbacks thus put afloat?
20151But what of the other nineteen?
20151By and by Charlie says,"Do you like it, Harry"?
20151Could any motive be more worthy of imitation than this?
20151Could any sentiment be more beautiful?
20151Could there be higher praise than this?
20151Dear reader, did you ever think that the more a person has to do, the more they feel they can do?
20151Did people get down on their knees to Beecher, begging him to occupy Plymouth church?
20151Do our readers call this luck?
20151Do we not find Michael Angelo neglecting school to copy drawings?
20151Do you reply that in many instances they have violated this law and have not been faithful to their engagements?
20151Does he often get so?
20151Does not history bear us out in this?
20151Does one of my readers for one moment allow himself to believe that Stephen Girard was a lucky man?
20151Franklin said,"Dost thou love life?
20151Fulton, I presume?''
20151Gaze on such a character; does it not thrill your very soul and cause your very heart to bleed that such a man should be shot by a dastardly assassin?
20151Girard?"
20151Had he been taking a drop too much?"
20151Have I missed him?
20151He went, and on his return reported, when the question:"What did Mr. Tilden say"?
20151Henry Clay learning pieces to recite in the barn or corn field?
20151How does it look?
20151How shall we do this great work?
20151How was this accomplished?
20151I ask the gentleman from Massachusetts to tell us, what then?
20151Is it anything surprising that those who aim at nothing, accomplish nothing in life?
20151Is it not so?
20151Is not that glorious success?
20151Is there no appeal in this wonderful and enchanting fact to man''s highest reason?
20151James being the eldest was once asked,"Which is Harper and which the brothers?"
20151Jay Gould has been the subject of much abuse; indeed, what great men have not been?
20151John?"
20151Look at Spurgeon; was he picked up bodily and placed in the pulpit he now stands upon?
20151Look at the men in our own community who have done the most for mankind; are they the wealthy, whose only duty seems to be to kill time?
20151Not how much do I know, but how much do I do with what I know?
20151Nothing is so fascinating as success, and the momentous question relative to every great man is:"How did he begin?"
20151Now, why is it some succeed while others fail?
20151Of what interest has the South been invaded?
20151One friend was heard to accost another in the street with:"John, will thee risk thy life in such a concern?
20151Or whence this dread secret and inward horror Of falling into naught?
20151Ought we soon to forget him to whom we are indebted, in a large measure, for all this?
20151PETER COOPER Who, indeed, is there who has not heard of Peter Cooper?
20151Pause, I entreat you, and consider for a moment what reasons you can give that will satisfy yourselves in calmer moments?
20151Reader, think of it; can you make yourself believe that his great riches came through''good luck''?
20151Shall I then make myself the subject of every opinion, wise or weak?
20151So said Christ eighteen hundred years ago; is it not so to- day?
20151Solomon said:"Seest thou a man diligent in his business?
20151The question the great busy world asks the claimant is: What can he do?
20151The world will only ask,"What can he do?"
20151They will be calm and deliberate judges of this case, and to what cause, or one overt- act can you point on which to rest the plea of justification?
20151This naturally awakens interest; where is it?
20151Was it''good luck''that placed Girard at one move at the head of American financiers?
20151Was this presumption?
20151What enterprise can you mention looking to the betterment of material interests in which he did not have part?
20151What general intentions-- what special traits led him to success?
20151What ideal stood before him, and by what means did he seek to attain it?
20151What is success?
20151What justice has been denied?
20151What king so strong Can tie the gall up in the slanderous tongue?
20151What more could be said?
20151What reasons can you give to the nations of the earth to justify it?
20151What reasons can you give to your fellow- sufferers in the calamity that it will bring upon us?
20151What right has the North assailed?
20151What was the effect?
20151When such lights of journalism would write for the_ Ledger_, what could lesser country editors say?
20151When we asked a three- fifths representation in Congress for our section was it not granted?
20151Where is the remedy?
20151While others were smoking and drinking,''having fun while they were young, for when would they if not then?''
20151Who built it?
20151Who dares deny that Cyrus W. Field is not deserving of enduring fame?
20151Who indeed has not wished that he could have at least a small part of the vast wealth possessed by the Vanderbilts?
20151Who indeed is there who has not heard of the Rothschilds?
20151Who would not be interested?
20151Who, indeed, has not heard of the American Express Company?
20151Why did he succeed, while others all about him who were far better situated, failed?
20151Why do n''t you make a sewing- machine?''
20151Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
20151Why was this man great?
20151Why would n''t he?
20151Why would n''t you?
20151Why, then, did he succeed, while so many others failed?
20151Why?
20151Will you endorse my note for that amount?"
20151Will you take it, General?''
20151Worldly reasoners and great financiers, wiseacres and successful editors prophesied its failure, but what mattered this to George W. Childs?
20151You are from----, in Pennsylvania?
20151You may get rid of the Five- twenty by issuing the greenback, but how will you get rid of the greenback except by paying gold?
20151You said that you had more than sixty members who voted for me for President, and who are ready to do it again"?
20151how many of us would''peter''out in a short time?
20151what would folks think?
21128If,continued Mr. Crittenden,"we are to find fault with every movement, who not appoint a committee of the House to attend the Commander- in- chief?
21128Will your legal- tender clause,he inquired,"make your notes any better?
21128Against whom would such a port make Algeria safe?
21128And if the soldier sends the notes to his wife to be passed at a country store for necessaries for his family, what will be the result?
21128But if not Mr. Seward, who?
21128By what process could its growth be checked?
21128Could he afford, as Secretary of State, to follow a policy which General Cass believed would destroy his own fame?
21128Do gentlemen appreciate the full import and meaning of that clause?
21128Do they realize the full extent to which it will carry them?
21128Do you imagine that because you force people to take these notes they are to be worth the money, and that no injury is to follow?
21128Does he not know that such notes must be dishonored, and the plighted faith of the government be broken?
21128Does not property rise?
21128Evidently only against England, and how could such a port help France against England?
21128From what quarter of the Union could this anti- slavery aggression be offset?
21128Had we not better wait for something like a victory?"
21128Has she not parted with all her former allies, with all her natural kindred in other States?
21128If we are to use suspended notes to pay our expenses, why not use our own?"
21128In his speech of that date, he asked, addressing the South,"How stands the case, then?
21128Is any portion of the people bound to contribute their money or their blood to carry on a contest like that?
21128Mr. Crittenden, speaking the sentiments of all, asked,"Why do you exact of Kentucky more than she has already done to show her loyalty?
21128Mr. Fessenden then inquired,"What do we offer without the legal- tender clause?
21128Must I shoot a simple- minded soldier- boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of the wily agitator who induces him to desert?
21128Sir, are they not words of brilliant, polished_ treason_, even in the very Capitol of the Republic?"
21128The committee asked General Stone, as a military man,"Who had the power to bring you to trial?"
21128The question here is which shall the Government of the United States recognize as the true and lawful Legislature of Virginia?"
21128To which Mr. Lincoln answered,"You would not have it done now, would you?
21128Was there ever such a temptation to swindle?
21128What is the consequence?
21128What then was the point of the negotiations committed to these consuls?
21128What will you be when emasculated by the withdrawal of fifteen States, and warred upon by them with active and inveterate hostility?"
21128What would happen if no cotton was furnished for three years?
21128Who could restore it to life and strength?
21128Why not send them with our army so that the power of Congress may be felt in battle as well as in the halls of legislation?"
21128Why require protection where you will have nothing to protect?
21128Why should it be asked that she should now surrender up her domestic institutions?"
21128Why should they give credit to that declaration?
21128_ Fourth_, Are you in favor of acquiring additional territory, in disregard of how such acquisition may affect the nation on the slavery question?]
21128are they not intended to animate our enemies?
21128are they not intended to destroy our zeal?
20121A blond source?
20121A cigarette?
20121A glass of rum?
20121And what business did you make with them?
20121And what other calls did you receive, prior to Mr. Cumshaw''s death?
20121And who else was in the car?
20121And, to your knowledge, did anybody else at the Embassy hear that?
20121Anything unusual about Mayor Bonney''s account?
20121Are you crazy?
20121Are you gentlemen ready?
20121Are you sure he''s really on the annexation side?
20121As I understand, I have the same rights of cross- examination of witnesses as counsel for the prosecution and defense; is that correct, Your Honor?
20121Can I offer you a drink, Captain, in token of mutual amity?
20121Can we get hold of a fast space- boat, with hyperdrive engines, in a hurry?
20121Can you get that introduced as evidence at the trial?
20121Care to join me?
20121Commander, what sort of an Embassy guard have we?
20121Court will now recess for an hour and a half; can you have them here by 1330?
20121Demoted you from the Consular Service?
20121Do you have that letter now?
20121Do you know how much they were paid for that job? 20121 Do you know these three defendants?"
20121Do you know this pistol?
20121Does anybody here know Basic well enough to translate the oath?
20121From the man who paid them to murder Ambassador Silas Cumshaw?
20121From what person did you get this machine that you gave to these persons for one hundred pesos?
20121Has the prosecution anything to say before we close the court?
20121His actions on the morning of May seventh as chairman of the Finance and Revenue Committee? 20121 How could you know, Mr. Thrombley?
20121How did you come to be sent as my secretary, if you ca n''t do secretarial work?
20121How many men were inside the jail when the three defendants came claiming sanctuary?
20121How much money did these three persons give you for this gun?
20121I assume that this is the weapon with which you claim to have shot Jack- High Abe Bonney?
20121I suppose, Doctor, that you have had quite a bit of experience, in your practice, with gunshot wounds?
20121Including his public acts on the last day of his life?
20121Is n''t that a replica of the Alamo?
20121Is that the thing you gave them for money?
20121Is this the gun?
20121Is this the usual type of weapon used in your New Texas political liquidations?
20121Just what impression did you get at the time, Captain?
20121Murderers?
20121My God, did somebody finally kill Aus Maverick?
20121Now, Mr. Longfellow,Goodham said,"did you recognize the people who were in the car from which the shots came?"
20121Somebody here gunnin''for the Ambassador?
20121That is n''t the trial that''s going on now, I hope?
20121They confessed to you, before you arrested them?
20121They got prosperous, all of a sudden?
20121This the usual type of weapon used in your New Texas political liquidations?
20121Want me to go over it again? 20121 We do n''t want the New Texans to know, of course, that you''ve sent for the fleet?"
20121What business did you make with them?
20121What did he do to you, Silk?
20121What does a z''Srauff swear by, that''s binding?
20121What is this? 20121 What is your business?"
20121What money did they give you for the machine?
20121What people do you see in this place that you have made business with?
20121What the devil''s the matter, Thrombley?
20121What was the call about the wrist watch?
20121What''s the procedure here?
20121What''s wrong, Gail?
20121What,Natalenko inquired,"do you think Machiavelli, Junior would do about the z''Srauff?"
20121Whatta we got to worry about, then?
20121When did Kettle- Belly Sam deposit this large sum?
20121Where do you have your house?
20121Which one of you- all is Mr. Stephen Silk?
20121Why does n''t the government, as such, protect itself with an army and air force large enough to resist any possible coalition of the big ranchers?
20121You heard Mr. Cumshaw tell Colonel Hickock that he would be out at the ranch at about 1030?
20121You know what you''ve done? 20121 You know where they got the money to buy that car?"
20121You know, I assume, our chief interest in New Texas?
20121You pick him up?
20121You think Kettle- Belly knew in advance what they were going to do?
20121You think that was planned in advance?
20121You think, then, that Mr. Cumshaw was assassinated by opponents of annexation?
20121Your Honor, how am I gon na go about swearing him in?
20121Your father coming to the barbecue, Gail?
20121Ai n''t it, Hoddy?"
20121Alone, right?
20121Am I expected to believe that this... this being... sold that air- car for a hundred pesos?"
20121Ambassador, where are we now?
20121Ambassador?"
20121Any questions from anybody else?"
20121Boone?"
20121But at what cost?
20121But the"justified conquest"urged by Machiavelli, Jr.?
20121Cumshaw?"
20121Curious problem... and, how would Stephen Silk have handled it?
20121Do you know where the money came from?
20121Do you know who the go- between was, and how much he got, and how much he kept for himself?
20121Do you so truly say?"
20121How far out would that be, with our facilities?"
20121How many of them were prisoners in the jail?"
20121How_ could_ you?"
20121I assume that the prosecution is going to introduce all that, too?"
20121I thought that over, could see the illogical logic, but..."How about your rancher oligarchy?"
20121If you saw another letter of the same sort, would you be able to say whether or not it might be like the one you mentioned?"
20121Is that correct?"
20121Mr. Vuvuvu, I have n''t heard any comment from you.... No comment?
20121Or will I have one, of any sort?"
20121Sidney?"
20121Silk brought with him as bodyguard?"
20121Silk picks things up very handily, does n''t he?"
20121Silk?
20121Silk?
20121Silk?"
20121Silk?"
20121Silk?"
20121Supreme Court?"
20121Thrombley?"
20121Thrombley?"
20121Vincent?"
20121Was it the same source that paid for the recent attempt on President Hutchinson''s life?"
20121Was that the last of your unusual business with Mayor Bonney?"
20121Was that you and your people who were chasing us?
20121We did n''t have any business to handle, because all the local officials were home nursing hangovers, so when Colonel Hickock called--""Who?"
20121What could I say?
20121What did you know about their financial circumstances, for instance?"
20121What happened?"
20121Where is that thing?
20121Why do n''t you go up and congratulate him, too?"
20121You going to introduce that as evidence for the prosecution?"
20121_ He does n''t want a diplomat; he wants a magician._"And what,"I asked,"will my official position be on New Texas, sir?
20121_ How did they find that out?_""Why... why, I''m sure I do n''t know,"Thrombley said.
20121_ Is that all, now?_ I thought.
21427Be you a witch?
21427By whose authority?
21427What makes you think so?
21427Who run?
21427Who run?
21427( Will the reader excuse me a moment while I light up a peculiarly black and redolent pipe?)
2142718?
21427At one time he was given a hatchet by his father, which---- But what has the historian to do with this morbid wandering in search of truth?
21427But what do we want of liberty, anyhow?
21427But why repine?
21427Can no one tell us what James B. Weaver had to do with the campaign of 1881?
21427Could the iron heel of despotism crunch such a spirit of liberty as that?
21427Did any one ever see an Indian smile since the landing of the Pilgrims?
21427Do you believe that either warrior is so fickle that he has entirely deserted the cause for which he fought?
21427Does the intelligent reader believe that"Tommy Atkins,"with two pairs of socks"and hit a- rainin'',"could whip men with twenty- seven pairs each?
21427Does the man look cheerful?
21427How about that, Hank?"
21427How many of us to- day, fellow- journalists, would be willing to stay in jail while the lawn festival and the kangaroo came and went?
21427I am often led to ask, in the language of the poet,"Is civilization a failure, and is the Caucasian played out?"
21427I suppose you have a power of attorney, of course, for discovering us?"
21427Is it not bad taste for them to pose in public and make a cheap Romeo and Juliet tableau of themselves?
21427Jackson rode up and in clarion tones called out,"Who told you to put that gun there, sir?
21427Need I add that after a while the people became dissatisfied with these rules and finally the whole matter was ceded to the crown?
21427Sabe?"
21427The close of the fight found Hooker on his old camping- ground opposite Fredericksburg, murmuring to himself, in a dazed sort of way,"Where am I?"
21427The second one, wearing the cape- overcoat tragedy air, wrote"Who will be my laundress now?"
21427Was it worth while?
21427We pause here to ask the question, Why did the pale- face usurp the lands of the Indians without remuneration?
21427Webster?"
21427Were they having their portraits painted by Landseer, or their deposition taken by Jeffreys, or having their Little Lord Fauntleroy clothes made?
21427What could be in poorer taste than scalping a man between the soup and the remove?
21427What could we do with it if we had it?
21427What more could you expect of a siege than that?
21427Where are the gibes and_ bon- mots_ made at that sad time?
21427Where is my Indian to night?
21427Where is that laughter now?
21427Where were they when New York was sold for twenty- four dollars?
21427Who knows any thing about repairing an engine?"
21427Who will tell us what he had to do with it?
21427Whom have we here?
21427Why discover a country that is so far from the railroad?
21427Why discover a country with no improvements?
21427Why discover a place when it is so far out of the way?
21427Why discover, at great expense, an entirely new country?
21427[ Illustration:"WHERE AM I?"]
21427_ Q._ Is it right or wrong?
21427_ Q._ Was he a great fighter?
21427_ Q._ What do you understand by rebellion?
21427_ Q._ What is religious freedom?
21427_ Q._ Who was Lord Baltimore?
21427_ Q._ Who was William Penn?
21427_ Q._ Would he have fought for a purse of forty thousand dollars?
21427of sixteen aggregated circuses, and eleven congresses of ferocious beasts, fierce and fragrant from their native lair, went by us?
16200About your brother?
16200Aha, my little mistresses, are you there?
16200All you want? 16200 And colored?"
16200And paper?
16200And so the boys will never know?
16200And what are you doing now?
16200And where?
16200And you ca n''t get free, if you want to?
16200And, Vivia dear, you will go, then?
16200Are you hungry?
16200Are you sure we are right in this, child?
16200At any cost?
16200But if I never did,--should you greatly care?
16200But the reason?
16200Did he pay in money?
16200Did you ever_ hear_ anything like it? 16200 Did you speak, mother?"
16200Do you care, Janet?
16200Do you see?
16200Do you suppose Beltran wrote mine or yours first?
16200Eh? 16200 Frazier is an agent: shall this money accrue to me or to his employers?
16200Gloves, now, hey? 16200 Harsh?
16200Have you left off loving Beltran, because he differs from you?
16200How about the Russians?
16200How much were white rags?
16200I said we are to be men like him, Tom and I, if we can?
16200I used to ride my boy so, and--"Eh?
16200I was cheated in it, eh?
16200If I were not strong enough to- morrow, what then?
16200Is it any easier for me to talk of that chance than you, Stephen?
16200Is it likely she could keep her word?
16200Is that all you''d want of me?
16200Is there any use to try?
16200Jane,called Mrs. Vennard from within,"did you find all the nests to- day?"
16200My dear, why do n''t you take your blocks up- stairs?
16200No?
16200On what shore has not the prow of your ships dashed? 16200 Ray,"she said,"where is Beltran?"
16200Ray-- How do you think Beltran will like it?
16200Shall I tell you?
16200Speak on, good Christian; manifest thyself;[ 52] Say, what is Faith?
16200There is something in it, is n''t there?
16200There''s no danger of thaw before morning, Jem?
16200Was it your fault? 16200 Well, and then, my son?"
16200Well, my friend?
16200What could they be to you, if you found them? 16200 What duties have I?"
16200What is it?
16200What is this, Stephen?
16200What made you? 16200 What would be better?
16200What?
16200Where have you been, Ray?
16200Where''s yer manners?
16200Who knows? 16200 Who planted this old apple- tree?"
16200Why does my face so much enamor thee, That to the garden fair thou turnest not, Which under the rays of Christ is blossoming? 16200 Why, Ready,"he said, faintly,"have you come?"
16200Why, what then, Jem? 16200 Work?"
16200You and little Jane will set me down by- and- by?
16200You do not answer me, Stephen?
16200You remember what I told you on Tuesday?
16200You will certainly go?
16200You will go with me?
16200You''re a clergyman?
16200Your country? 16200 ''Twas answered me:Say, who assureth thee That those works ever were?
16200A forest of oaks burns down or is cut down, and do oaks spring again?
16200Alas, in another confusion will there be another resource?
16200And does not the exquisite sensation of departed pain almost atone for the discomfort of its presence?
16200And if I could stand two cents in my tender infancy, do n''t you suppose I can stand your penny- a- lining now I am grown up?
16200And shall I consent to resign an atom of it while there''s a drop of blood in my body, to lose a single grain of its dust?
16200And shall I give such dominion to the first traitor that demands it?
16200And since"the good but wished with God is done,"can you not find it in your heart to"yearn o''er my little good and pardon_ my_ much ill"?
16200And then I heard:"The ancient and the new Postulates, that to thee are so conclusive, Why dost thou take them for the word divine?"
16200And what, after all, is this oblivion which you flaunt so threateningly?
16200And where was Beltran now?
16200And yet"--"What?"
16200Are the cookies done?
16200As for a God"--"Well, then, what are your purposes?"
16200Banks closed to- morrow, so no time''s lost, eh?
16200Because you are an epicure, shall there be no more cakes and ale?
16200Because you will have none but the vintages of dead centuries, shall not the people delight their hearts with new wine?
16200Beltran''s up on the Potomac, or else you could n''t have gotten this letter,--don''t you know?
16200But are there any among us who could in full sincerity, with logic and faith, have stood for the old devout theory of such visitations?
16200But did you think what you would do, if you refused your aid to me?
16200But even if they are accurate, what then?
16200But may all men stand there, and cling to it as resolutely as he did?
16200But though a writer is before critics, did it never occur to you that the critics are just as much before the writers?
16200But who is judge of aptness itself?
16200But why not Josephus and Ricardo and François and Michel, any and all who have poured their fancies and feelings into this mould?
16200Ca n''t you bend beneath it?
16200Can not a doctor prescribe for typhus fever, unless he has had typhus fever himself?
16200Can one conquer the universe by proclamation?
16200Clothing?
16200Did ever a thought come into your mind like a fresh, clean air into a stove- heated, foul room?
16200Did you believe what you preached, Stephen?"
16200Did you keep your word?"
16200Did you speak to the butterflies to hatch them under their yellow wings?
16200Do you not see that these people are an open book?
16200Do you remember the preachers, the travelling agents, that put up with us?
16200Do you suppose you love it any more than I do?"
16200Do you think I forget our alley- house with its three rooms?
16200Does this seem a little inconsistent with what I was saying just now to my homemade critics?
16200Else why do the failures of every great novelist and playwright almost always outnumber the successes?
16200For has it not been a fundamental principle that every people has a right to govern itself?
16200Ginger- pop beer is it that you scoff?
16200Had the true God no messenger?
16200Have I taken Benlomond for my model?
16200Have some, Vivia?
16200Have you found work?
16200He had been in one of the ways that butted down on hell; how would he come back to her?
16200Here''s home, and love, and God waiting; try another chance"?
16200How fast would Geology get on, if its professors talked only of what they knew?
16200How is it with you and your logic, you men who have been to college and discovered what you are talking about?
16200How long is it since you poured soldiers into Canada, and let all your yards work day and night to avenge the taking of two men out of the Trent?"
16200I believe he never knew who the good God was; how could he?"
16200I ca n''t talk as I please in a free country?
16200I write of one, While with dim eyes I think of three: Who weeps not others fair and brave as he?
16200If after a while it withered away, whose fault was it?
16200If he got up, where should he go?
16200If it ever had been, its essence was long since exhaled: there was nothing in his whole nature now but the stalest dregs, surely?
16200If the Rebels were to succeed, why should European governments do anything in aid of their cause, at the hazard of war with us?
16200If there were no hand now to plant it again, do you look for it to grow rotten, or not?
16200If we had not the right to leave the league, how had we the right to enter?
16200If you had known, just now, that I was a felon two days ago released from the penitentiary, what would you have said to me?
16200In these few hundred years had He forgotten the way of finding?
16200Is it likely?
16200Is that ignoble?
16200Is the affair quite plain now?"
16200Moreover, my America, if I do n''t use good English, whose fault is it?
16200My boy''ll mind that?
16200Of what use is it to know what a man does, unless you know what made him do it?
16200Oh, when its aged branches throw Thin shadows on the sward below, Shall fraud and force and iron will Oppress the weak and helpless still?
16200On the contrary, is he not the better able to prescribe from always having had a sound mind in a sound body?
16200Poor Stephen''s power?
16200Poorer than the Yarrows, you understand?
16200Pope, was it, who used to look around upon the missives hurled at him, and say,"These are my amusement"?
16200She saw nothing beyond?
16200Should n''t you care?"
16200Since the methods taken to insure self- control are insufficient, would it not have been possible to indicate better?
16200So will Totty, eh?"
16200Sorry?
16200Stephen, you want food; you want clothes; you"--"Is that all I want?"
16200That answer would be complete; and if it can not be made, what will it signify to us what shall be said of us by foreigners?
16200The raw material was as good as the average; why did you not work it up better?
16200The world was wide to him, cowering out from a cell: where were Martha and the little chaps lost in it?
16200Then, in the silence, came to him the memory of the old question,--"Hath no man condemned thee?"
16200They were going to let him out; but what difference did that make?
16200They were keen enough to put him in,--but who would stay with him, to say,"You''ve slipped, boy, but stand up again"?
16200Think of your own experience: do you not know that the vital facts of your life are hermetically sealed?
16200Vivia, do n''t you wish you were going to the war?"
16200Was he dulled, or had he learned in those years to shut in looks and thoughts closer prisoners than himself?
16200Was it worth the while to refuse it?
16200Was there no help?
16200Was this the far- famed Nimrod of the money- hunt?
16200We used to have snows like this at home, eh?"
16200We''re to try and be like him, Tom and I?
16200Well, and then?
16200Well, dear?"
16200Well, what else was there for him to do?
16200Well, what of it?
16200What can there be like acting them?
16200What could it matter to her?
16200What if the seams of the great inviting arm- chair, where so many friends have sat and lounged, do grow white?
16200What if we let him go?"
16200What is Stephen Yarrow to me, soul or body?
16200What is the net result, so far as we can see, of Mr. Beecher''s voluntary embassy?
16200What keeps you women alive?
16200What land is there with a name and a people where your banner has not led your soldiers?
16200What made her pull at Ready''s neck with such nervous jerks?
16200What manner of man was he?
16200What plant we in the apple- tree?
16200What plant we in the apple- tree?
16200What plant we in the apple- tree?
16200What shall the tasks of mercy be, Amid the toils, the strifes, the tears Of those who live when length of years Is wasting this apple- tree?
16200What should she do?
16200What use, eh?
16200What was his wife, or long- ago home, or his old God, now, to him?
16200What will you do, Stephen?"
16200What will you do, old fellow?"
16200What, in fact, if some easy couch has an undeniable hole worn in its friendly cover?
16200What_ can_ men know of housekeeping, and how things ought to look?
16200When I knock at the door of the Inner Temple, does he not fling it wide open, and does not his face welcome me?
16200When have Englishmen listened to nobler words, fuller of the true soul of eloquence?
16200Where are you going?"
16200Where should he turn now?
16200Where should we have been now, if England had quarrelled with and been conquered by Napoleon III.?
16200Where was it?
16200Who do you suppose is going to bring up your family for you?
16200Who would bring him back?
16200Who would do that?
16200Who?
16200Why did n''t you answer it?
16200Why do n''t we ever sit in the parlor?"
16200Why make we moan For loss that doth enrich us yet With upward yearnings of regret?
16200Why select the last disciple and ignore the first apostle?
16200Why should I intrench myself in hypothesis?
16200Why should it have the monopoly of fatiguing?
16200Why should she disquiet herself?
16200Why?
16200Will his brain ever muddle down to find comfort in that inn- keeper''s daughter?
16200Winter?
16200Wo n''t you come down where it''s warm?
16200Would John go back or come on?
16200Would our Revolutionary fathers have gone barefooted and bleeding over snows to defend air- tight stoves and cooking- ranges?
16200Would you make me cookies then, little Jane?"
16200Would?
16200Yet what matter who knew?
16200You do n''t understand me precisely?
16200You who discuss politics and decide affairs, are you not continually accusing each other of sophistry, inconsistency, and shying away from the point?
16200You wo n''t go, then?"
16200You''ve lost your little boy, now?"
16200[ 72]_ Hope they in thee_, in the high Theody He says,_ all those who recognize thy name_;[ 74] And who does not, if he my faith possesses?
16200_ Does_ he not?
16200a slip?
16200an''water- gully?"
16200constantlie jeere at ye holy brethren of New England,& some of ye marineer''s would in a scoffe ask when they should come to ye holie Land?
16200do n''t they look like manna?
16200food?"
16200how they snarled at other churches, and helped themselves out of the shop, as if to be a man of God implied a mean beggar?
16200oh, what made you?"
16200or a God to preach?"
16200or like the first hearty, living call of Greatheart through the dungeons of Giant Despair?
16200the carpentering by day, and the arithmetic by night?
16200the sweltering, sultry Sunday mornings in church, and the afternoons sniffling over the catechism among the rain- butts in the back- yard?
16200was there not another regiment in all the world than one to be sent down to New Mexico to meet Beltran and the Texan Rangers?"
16200what shall recompense us for our Lost Leader?
16200what was in a word?
16200where is he?"
16200where were those brothers now?
16200whither had they all separated?
16200why, what ails my girl?"
22238''Will it ever be finished?'' 22238 Does some one say it is a nationalistic idea?
22238How is your head?
22238Another ran:"''Oh, what has caused this great commotion the country through?
22238Can not the people in their sovereign capacity do for themselves all that a corporation can do?
22238Do they not own the ground beneath the surface and the air above the surface?...
22238For who in New England, and still young, does not hope some day to live in sight of the golden dome?
22238Had a part, did I say?
22238He wrote:"People of New England, are you not ashamed of yourselves?
22238He wrote:"Why shall the people give away their own rights?
22238How did he do it?
22238How tall are you?''
22238How, then, could young Carleton pierce through the hedge of authority?
22238Shall England or the United States control the northwestern section of the continent and the trade of the Pacific?"
22238Should there be an elevated railway, or a new avenue opened through the midst of the city?
22238The last thing he saw at night, and the first that met his eyes in the morning, was this picture, with the words,"Am I not a man and a brother?"
22238What need is there of a corporation?
22238What wonder, then, that the overwhelming majority of American writers of history have wrought here?
22238When is a battle over, and how can one know it?
22238Whither now should Carleton go?
22238Whither should he go?
22238Who at that time was wiser than he?
22238Who was he, and what did he do that he should have his life- story told?
22238Who would not live in such an age as this?
22238Why give away their rights, and burden themselves with taxes for the benefit of a corporation?
22238Why not as well ask if the sun rose this morning?
22238With such splendid chances for heroes, who would improve them?
22238Yet, at that time, who had ever thought of, or who, except the farmers and townsmen and students in the vicinity, had ever seen Gettysburg?
22771Is chronic pleuro- pneumonia contagious? 22771 Can the creature be otherwise than uneasy? 22771 How many succumb? 22771 How shall such attacks be prevented? 22771 How, then, is our stock to be improved? 22771 In response to a question,Whether any animals that had once been affected, had afterward recovered?"
22771The all- important question,"Is inoculation of service?"
22771The question should be-- with so much hay, so much grain, so many roots, how can the most milk, or butter, or cheese, be made?
22771Was not the cyst broken through by some accident, thus letting in the air, when she grew worse?
22771Would she not, probably, have overcome this disagreeable accident, and recovered, in spite of it?
22771_ 2dly._ In the event of such contagion''s existing, would all the animals become affected, or what proportion would resist the disease?
22771_ 3dly._ Amongst the animals attacked by the disease, how many recover, and under what circumstances?
22771_ 4thly._ Are there any animals of the ox species decidedly free from any susceptibility of being affected from the contagion of pleuro- pneumonia?
22771_ 5thly._ Do the animals, which have been once affected by a mild form of the disease, enjoy immunity from subsequent attacks?
22771_ 6thly._ Do the animals, which have once been affected by the disease in its active form, enjoy such immunity?
20752And I dare say, you must have only a little money left now?
20752And if, coming down from those higher functions in society, we descend to our domestic relations, where do we find that those relations are changed? 20752 And who did more than they to save the city?"
20752And you have come all that distance to help us with these things?
20752But how is that?
20752But who is it that says so? 20752 Does he not know that, for generations past, the institution of slavery had been forced upon us by the avarice, the love of power of the North?
20752Does not the intelligent freedman know that neither he nor we are accountable to God for the condition in which we were respectively born? 20752 How long does it take to come here from Mecca?"
20752In what particular have our relations changed? 20752 Is not our soil calling for the energetic efforts of his sinewy arms?
20752The Negroes prefer a glass necklace to that gold, which polite nations so highly value: can there be greater proof of their wanting common sense? 20752 Then you must have paid quite a lot of money for your passage?"
20752Where can that happiness spring from? 20752 Why, then, should there be any strife between us?
20752[ 507] Cardinal Gibbons, some years ago, wrote a letter in which occur the following sentiments:What then is the first need of the colored people?
20752--"But are they mine,"said the old woman,"do they not work for you, and are you not my son yourself?
20752--"Have you not,"rejoined the master,"two grandsons who can mend it for you?"
2075213, 23,''can the Ethiopian change his skin?''
20752Again, has one ever asked himself why it is that so much of the poetry of the Negro fails to reach the ultimate standards of art?
20752Am I to dine alone?''
20752And what are these rights?
20752And what repairs did the poor creature''s roof require?
20752And why?
20752But how have these records been made available?
20752But where?
20752Can we, in fact, live without him?
20752Can you expect any more?
20752Cur timeas, quamvis, dubitesve, nigerrima celsam_ Cæsaris occidui_, candere(_ x_)_ Musa_ domum?
20752Deprived of all created bliss, Through hardship, toil, and pain?
20752Does he not know that to- day we have in him the same implicit faith and reliance we had before?
20752Does the apprehension of being combated by the Indians damp their enterprize?
20752First of all, last of all, is it not the matter of technique?
20752How are we to explain this contradiction in dealing with the Negro?
20752How could either escape error?
20752How then are we to explain the profound change of sentiment indicated by the leading papers of the South just before the war?
20752How then can you expect from what we have seen of the bad life of you Christians that we should wish to be like you?"
20752In case of a serious alarm, this would prove but of little service; and what security is there against such an alarm?
20752In what case have our interests in the general welfare been divided?
20752Is it even the political leader whose eloquence stirred up the North and West to the rescue of that race?
20752Is it from the midst of a community divided against itself, or from one blessed with peace and harmony?
20752Is it the Federal soldier who fought for the freedom of that race?
20752Is it the fear of being pursued and overtaken that is an obstacle to the project?
20752Is it the uncertainty of a subsistence in this new mode of life, that deters them from undertaking it?
20752Is it true that Reconstruction was a failure?
20752Is not today the colored man as essential to our prosperity as he was before?
20752Le jour du repos n''appartient- il pas à tous les hommes, et plus particulièrement à ceux qui sont employés aux penibles travaux de la campagne?
20752Ought not Congress to be petitioned to grant them a district in a good climate, say on the shores of the Pacific Ocean?
20752Parviennent- ils à se procurer des esclaves?
20752Que résulte- t- il cependant de cette avarice mal entendue?
20752She perceived him, and accosting him, said,"My master, when will you send one of your carpenters to repair the roof of my hut?
20752The contest then must be who can arm fastest, and where are our arms?
20752To what civilization does he refer?
20752Two thirds of the camels bought by Daumas in the Sudan died before he reached"Isalab"( Ain Salah?
20752Un esclave fuit- il son maître?
20752Un maître ne doit- il pas a son esclave le vêtement et une nourriture substantielle, à proportion du travail qu''il en exige?
20752Un vol a- t- il été commis?
20752Was that true?
20752Was this a mistake?
20752What more natural in their revolt from the old country than to make this doctrine the political and moral sanction of their course?
20752What then is to be done?
20752What was wanting to shelter her from the wind and rain of heaven?
20752What, then, are some of those discoveries which have so completely destroyed the ethnic fetish of the Caucasian race?
20752When I had read the report, the Governor- General said:"What is now to be done?"
20752When one tribe defeats another the question arises, What is to be done with the prisoners?
20752Who was Minos?
20752Why dost thou fear or doubt that the blackest Muse may scale the lofty house of the western Caesar?
20752Why should not our gods be their gods-- our happiness be their happiness?
20752Would any one believe that I am a master of slaves of my own purchase?
20752[ 50] Were the terrors of San Domingo to be reenacted on the banks of Mississippi?
20752_ Redemption_ from what?
20752and am I born for this, To wear this slavish chain?
20752and must I still complain, Deprived of liberty?
20752can he quail or cower?
20752shall an_ Æthiop_ touch the martial string, Of battles, leaders, great achievements sing?
20752who suckled and raised your two brothers?
20752who was it but Irrouba?
10954A flight?
10954A large red one?
10954After this affecting tableau, is there anything you wish to say to me, hey?
10954Ai n''t tryin''ter fool us, are yer?
10954All is not lost yet, Mortlake, hey, hey, hey?
10954And Jess and Jimsy and----"And that other young fellow? 10954 And a nice, lonely sort of place, too, hey?"
10954And if not?
10954Are n''t you afraid of burglars coming and blowing the door of the safe off?
10954Are n''t you going to ask us in?
10954Are we far from Cape Charles?
10954Are you Miss Margaret Prescott, the girl aviator I have read so much about in the technical publications?
10954Are you going to keep on, Roy?
10954Are you going to tell him, Peggy?
10954Are you going to try for it?
10954But what about the_ Butterfly_?
10954But what are we to do with those two rascals now that we have caught them?
10954But what if, as you fear, the Prescotts have a superior aeroplane?
10954But what''s it all for?
10954But where are the folks who own it?
10954Can I help you fix the machine?
10954Can we do anything to help you?
10954Can we leave a message for you at your shops, or would you like a lift home with us?
10954Can you direct me to Mr. Mortlake''s aeroplane factory?
10954Can you guide us, my boy?
10954Can you read the printing on that sign?
10954Come, are you going to answer?
10954Confound it,he thought,"is this chit of a girl making fun of me?"
10954Did any of those bills have an identifying mark on it?
10954Did you come in an aeroplane, too?
10954Discharged you, eh? 10954 Do I have to answer that question, now?"
10954Do n''t mind if I have a look at it, do you?
10954Do you deny that this was your wallet?
10954Do you mean Mortlake?
10954Do you mean to say that Mortlake is scoundrel enough to plot against her, too?
10954Do you mind getting out?
10954Do you recall the safe being opened while you were in the room? 10954 Do you think I''ve got nothing to do but talk to you fellows all day?
10954Do you think it possible that he is also going to take in that outfit down the road?
10954Do you think that odious boy suspects anything?
10954Do you think we can overhaul her, Roy?
10954From yonder sky,grinned Jimsy, trying, not very successfully, to assume an inanely cheerful tone,"not badly hurt, old man, are you?"
10954Good gracious, Peggy, what are you trying to do?
10954Good heavens, is n''t there any good in the world?
10954Had an accident?
10954Had n''t you better shut down a bit? 10954 Have I?
10954Have you any idea at all as to the direction of the light, Peggy?
10954Have you got der plans?
10954Have you got your course?
10954He is in Hampton-- why?
10954He''s polite about it, is n''t he?
10954Heard the news?
10954Hey, girls, seen a package on the road?
10954Hey? 10954 How did it all happen?"
10954How did you ever come to make such a mistake?
10954How did you hear of it?
10954How far from here is the place where your partner is?
10954How long will that take, do you think?
10954How on earth did you happen to do that, Mortlake?
10954I agree with you,was the dry and rasping reply;"at least, they have put us in possession of one valuable bit of knowledge, hey?"
10954I beg your pardon?
10954I know, Sis, but what possible way have we to prove it? 10954 I suppose you fellows know that you are breaking the law and in danger of imprisonment if you are caught?"
10954I understand that you folks was in this house yesterday afternoon?
10954I wonder if he''ll have the face to brazen it out?
10954I wonder what mischief those young cubs are hatching up now?
10954I wonder who the fourth can be?
10954I-- here, what are you trying to do? 10954 Is n''t it against the rules for women or girls to drive machines in this contest?"
10954Is n''t it? 10954 Is n''t that just like a brother?
10954Is the island inhabited?
10954Is this enough?
10954Is this lieutenant going to stay long in Sandy Beach?
10954Is-- is the baby all right?
10954It''s too bad,repeated Fanning,"but ca n''t I do something?"
10954Let''s see,said Roy thoughtfully,"you''re one of the workmen at the Mortlake plant, are n''t you?"
10954Like to see how that was done?
10954Look here,cried Roy, indignantly wiggling in the officer''s strong grasp,"ca n''t you see that this is all a mistake?
10954Looks rather too warm to be comfortable, does n''t it?
10954Lost Brig Island,echoed Jess in an alarmed tone;"is this an island?"
10954Magnificently handled, do n''t you think so, Mortlake?
10954My dear Peggy,exclaimed Jess, with a smile that showed all her white even teeth,"what will you do next?
10954My dear, little girl,said James Bell,"can you trust me?"
10954No, but no doubt we shall when we reach the farm- house,put in Jess;"is n''t it thrilling, though?"
10954Not in there?
10954Now, what is there that''s familiar about that voice?
10954Oh, do you like it?
10954Oh, so you got the boy, hey?
10954Oh, were n''t they taken aback, though, at the idea?
10954Oh, you did, eh? 10954 Pardon me,"he said,"but is your name Regina?"
10954Pressing her a bit, are n''t you?
10954Queer, is n''t it?
10954Ready?
10954Ready?
10954Really? 10954 Roy Prescott here?"
10954Smart as a steel trap, with teeth that bite and hold, hey, hey, hey?
10954So the government really means to give us an opportunity to show the worth of our machines?
10954So,said Mortlake,"I''m left alone at last, eh?
10954Strong language?
10954Sure? 10954 That message you sent me-- what does it mean?"
10954That would be an easy bill to identify,commented Palmer, uneasily,"wonder if this can be a trap?"
10954The half- hour signal,cried Jimsy;"everything ready?"
10954Then what was it doing in your possession?
10954Then your brother did n''t see the safe opened?
10954There''s nothing serious the matter, is there?
10954They are actually selling stock?
10954They told me----"Oh, come in, wo n''t you?
10954This is a very unfortunate business, hey?
10954To what am I indebted for the pleasure of this visit?
10954We trust you absolutely,said Peggy,"and you''ll trust us?"
10954We understand, guv''ner,he rasped out in a hoarse voice;"Slim, here, and me do n''t take long ter catch on, eh, Slim?"
10954Well, I may have some work for you to do----"Work, guv''ner? 10954 Well, do you want to race then?"
10954Well, this is a nice fix, is n''t it?
10954Well, what do you want me to do about it?
10954Well, what if we did?
10954Well, what is it?
10954Well, what is it?
10954Well, where are those papers, then?
10954Well,growled Mortlake,"what have you got to say to me?"
10954Well,said Mr. Bell, looking round him with a smile,"who says that all the adventure and excitement is in the West?"
10954Well?
10954What are you going to do?
10954What can we do for you?
10954What d''ye think of that, hey, Mortlake?
10954What d''ye think of that? 10954 What did you come for?"
10954What did you read?
10954What do you mean to imply?
10954What do you think, Sis? 10954 What do you think?
10954What do you want me to do?
10954What do you want to do with me?
10954What game of cross- purposes and crooked answers is this?
10954What is all this-- a joke? 10954 What is it, Sis?"
10954What is it? 10954 What make of machine is your car, Fanning?"
10954What name was that you just mentioned?
10954What right have you to demand them?
10954What''s that? 10954 What''s that?
10954What''s the matter, sheriff?
10954What''s the meaning of this rough behavior?
10954What''s up?
10954What, wo n''t even the wonderful equalizer render her safe?
10954What, you here?
10954Whatever was that you used? 10954 Where are you off to?"
10954Where can they be going?
10954Where do you want me to go?
10954Where is the house? 10954 Where?"
10954Which one?
10954Who are they?
10954Who?
10954Why did n''t you say that before?
10954Why not?
10954Why should I? 10954 Why, did they?"
10954Why, if I may ask?
10954Why, what is it? 10954 Why?"
10954Why?
10954Will they report us?
10954Will you be good enough to mail some letters for us?
10954Will you do something for me-- will you aid a miserable outcast to right a great wrong?
10954Wonder where they can be going to?
10954Wot papers might you be lookin''fer?
10954Wots it worth if we tell yer where them papers are, guv''ners both?
10954Yep,was the grunted reply;"and now Mister What''s- Yer- Name, what are you going ter do with us?"
10954Yes,said Peggy,"did n''t you know?
10954Yes,she said;"why?"
10954You ai n''t goin''ter give us up guv''ner? 10954 You are sure this was the place?"
10954You ca n''t scare me by rattling old bones,he said,"What do you know about it?"
10954You do n''t think I''m going to allow Fanning Harding to scare me out of anything, do you?
10954You do not? 10954 You have an aviator attached to your place, then?"
10954You have been in New York, then?
10954You say that they were hanging about Mortlake''s place?
10954You see,she explained,"it would never do for us to reveal all our secrets, would it?
10954You thoroughly understand your instructions now?
10954You''re sure that bill is all right, Joey?
10954After all, why should n''t Mr. Harding and Mortlake be driving to the farm?
10954All agreed that things looked as black against them as could be, but-- where was the proof?
10954All right, ai n''t it?"
10954And in the face of this, do you mean to say that the boy would dare to keep up his apparent negotiations with the United States?"
10954And who do you think is to be his companion?"
10954And yet, what could be Mortlake''s object?
10954Are you willing to let your estimate of young Prescott stand or fall by this meeting?"
10954Bell?"
10954Bradbury know that I''m here?"
10954But I can do the same thing if you''d care to see it?"
10954But Jimsy said suddenly:"If that was the case, why did n''t they try to make out that I stole it?"
10954But Roy struck in with a question:"Was n''t Mr. Mortlake, accompanied by Harding, out here last night?"
10954But do n''t you see what power that gives us?"
10954But what does all this mean?
10954But what does all this mean?
10954But what had become of them?
10954But what under ther sun air you young folks in your fine clothes a- doin''out here?"
10954But what was the_ Golden Butterfly_ doing?
10954But what?
10954But why do you look so distressed, Peggy?"
10954But you do n''t think I''m worrying about your car now, do you?"
10954But, man, what has happened to you?
10954By the way, what time does the first test come off?"
10954Close at hand?"
10954Did n''t I, Slim?"
10954Did n''t you just hand the plans of the aeroplane over to that representative of a foreign government whom Mr. Mortlake is now chasing?"
10954Did you hear any details?"
10954Did you know that for some days past a German spy has been in Sandy Beach?"
10954Do you know him?"
10954Do you mean to try to lie out of it?
10954Do you suppose that Mr. Prescott will be long?"
10954Drop from ther clouds?"
10954Fine young girls, eh?
10954For what object?
10954Foun''suthin''vallerable, hev yer?
10954Got the money?"
10954Have you any clue yet?"
10954Hey, hey, hey?"
10954Hey, what''s all this?
10954Hey?"
10954How about it girls, are you hungry?"
10954Hullo, who''s this?"
10954I can take you to him?"
10954Is n''t that enough?"
10954Is this the Prescott house?"
10954Is your brother badly hurt?"
10954Listen-- who do you suppose has come back to Sandy Beach?"
10954Mortlake?"
10954Mortlake?"
10954Nice products of the twentieth century, hey?"
10954No, not that schooner below there-- I mean that sort of whitish drift-- it looks like cotton-- on the horizon?"
10954Now then-- do you know a man named Mortlake?"
10954Oh, how can I ever thank you?"
10954Or are you afraid to drive mine?"
10954Poor Roy, I wonder how he is getting along?"
10954Prescott?"
10954Regina, have n''t you a word for me?
10954Roy will be as good as ever by to- morrow, wo n''t you boy?"
10954See?"
10954Smart as a steel trap, hey?"
10954So Master Roy Prescott, you were planning to unmask me by that side- comb, were you?
10954So he was keeping that as evidence against me, eh?
10954Strange, is n''t it?"
10954Suppose they mistake us for burglars, and shoot us?"
10954Suppose----Good heavens, what''s that?"
10954That chap who got away wore a gray suit, while yours is a blue serge, is n''t it?"
10954That is, if you girls are n''t scared?"
10954The part of Roy on that eventful night had been played by:"Guess whom?"
10954To be accurate, young Prescott''s-- you know whom I mean?"
10954Was it fancy, or did Roy, for a second, see Mortlake quail and whiten?
10954We was broke, and----""And so you thought you''d replenish your pockets by holding up some automobilist or traveller, eh?
10954Well, what was the nature of that employment?"
10954Well, what''s that got to do with me?"
10954Well, would n''t that jar you?"
10954What about that pocket tool kit I had when I started out on the auto?
10954What are you doing here?"
10954What could be coming now?
10954What d''ye mean by that, hey?
10954What d''ye mean by that?"
10954What do you know about this?"
10954What do you mean?"
10954What do you want?"
10954What does all this mean?"
10954What is it?"
10954What more do you want?"
10954What of him?
10954What on earth do I know about it?"
10954What time is that naval lieutenant coming to look over the Prescott aeroplane, Peggy?"
10954What was that the crowd were shouting?
10954What''s all this?"
10954Where is such an aeroplane?"
10954Who can be coming now?"
10954Who could the two pretty girls in natty motor bonnets, with goggles attached, the plain, heavy skirts and dark shirt- waists be?
10954Who ever saw a barn with skylights on it?"
10954Who was in the parlor beside yourself when Mr. Galloway opened the wall safe to reward the men who had helped him extinguish the fire?"
10954Who''s to know we have the money?
10954Who, then?"
10954Who?"
10954Why ca n''t we get a doctor?
10954Why did you go into the manufacture of aerial machines, if you did n''t mean to stick it out?"
10954Why do n''t you call the police?"
10954Why do n''t you get somebody else to do it?"
10954Why had Regina been so mortified, and apparently alarmed, when she had announced the loss of one of her side- combs?
10954Will you go?"
10954Will you meet him?
10954Wo n''t you forgive me for deceiving you about your father all these years?"
10954Wo n''t you have a straw hat-- I mean a seat?"
10954Wonder where they can be going?"
10954You agree with me, do n''t you?"
10954You came here with him?"
10954You can see we''re not flying, ca n''t you?"
10954You thoroughly understand, now, to- morrow night on the road to Galloway''s farm?"
10954You wo n''t mind accompanying me then, while I oversee the workmen?"
10954Your brother was not there?"
10954asked Peggy boldly enough, despite her inward terror;"you had better go on at once, or----""Waal, or what?"
10954cried Mortlake, while old Mr. Harding spluttered:"Eh, eh?
10954exclaimed Peggy, as a sudden thought struck her,"suppose there should be trapdoors?"
10954he cried as his eyes fell on the trio,"whar under ther sun did you come from?
10954murmured Roy, smiling pluckily, as the Bancrofts came toward him with pitying looks,"but where in the world did you come from?"
10954shouted Mortlake, uselessly as he knew,"what''s the matter with you?"
10954shrilled Regina, who had now joined the group,"you do n''t surely mean to insinuate?
10954the man nodded his head in the direction in which Fanning and Regina had vanished,"did they come in a Mortlake aeroplane?"
10954whistled the boy,"a new conquest for the irresistible Fanning, eh?"
10954you did not drop it?"
20290And now, gentlemen of the Convention,said he,"what do we want?"
20290Are you aware, General,said the Senator,"that the Attorney- General must represent the Government in the Supreme Court?"
20290But did you know that he must there meet Daniel Webster, Reverdy Johnson, and other leading lawyers?
20290But,persisted Tucker,"will you love me when you get to be President?"
20290Can there,said he with dramatic effect,"be a point of pride against laying upon that sacred soil to- day the flag for which our fathers died?
20290Colonel B., will you not have a bone?
20290Colonel E., will you help to that chicken- pie before you?
20290Do n''t it distress you,said the Boston maiden,"to have Mr. Clay gamble?"
20290Do n''t you remember our conversations during the long walks we took together last summer at Newport, while in attendance on Story''s court?
20290Do you mean,said Mr. Brown,"to assert that what I have said is false?"
20290Douglas,says Tucker,"will you_ always_ love me?"
20290Have you the papers?
20290Is the demand for the previous question seconded?
20290Mr. Thompson,interrupted Mr. Devens,"how long since have they been wearing spurs in the navy?"
20290My dear Walker,said he, in amazement,"what is the matter?"
20290Nor anything to drink?
20290Then it may be the specie circular?
20290Well, sir,said he, in an angry tone,"you are the man who had the audacity to disfigure Old Ironsides?"
20290Well,good- naturedly replied Old Hickory,"do n''t I deserve just as much credit for picking out the man who could write it?"
20290Well,said Mr. Wade,"what can I do for you?
20290What do we want?
20290What do you want me to do for you?
20290What is it, then?
20290What is to be done?
20290What new part will Roscius next enact?
20290What sort of a man is General Pierce?
20290What was it?
20290What,retorted Mr. Clay,"can you look me in the face, sir, and say that you never used that language?"
20290Who is that lady?
20290''And why,''the monarch cried,''Desire again to share life''s toils?''
20290''My girl,''said I,''how deep''s the water and what''s the price of butter?''
20290''Well, what of that?
20290''Wha''ll be King but Charley?''
20290''What on earth is the matter with your chief?''
20290----, can you call again?''
20290A sharp witted opponent, to draw him out asked:"Should n''t niggers be permitted to sit at the table with white folks, on steamboats and at hotels?"
20290And why did I not, sir?
20290Are you in the business of shelving papa?
20290B., you have absented yourself from the House during its sittings, contrary to law, and without leave of the House; what excuse have you to offer?"
20290Blair?"
20290But how could we retreat?
20290Cutting, in a sneering tone,"that the gentleman from New York rose for?"
20290General Jackson, who was escorting a lady, promptly extended his hand, saying pleasantly:"How do you do, Mr. Adams?
20290General Thomas arose, and looking him in the eye, replied,"I have said so; do you wish to know on what authority?"
20290Had a good v''yage?"
20290Have n''t we( hic) had a turn( hic) over, gentlemen?"
20290He immediately inquired:"Is this Doniphan, who made that splendid march across the plains and swept the swift Comanches before him?"
20290He soon gathered up, when the following colloquy ensued:"Well, driver( hic), we''ve had quite a turn( hic) over, haint we?"
20290How could we make peace?
20290How did you find the roads from Lexington to here?"
20290How much is it?"
20290I asked him,''What are you suffering from?''
20290I told him what I wanted, and supposed I was going to get a direct answer, when, what do you think?
20290I wonder whether he knows himself what he is doing?
20290If the rest of the world have not learned that lesson, how shall they teach us?
20290It is contagious, I believe?"
20290It was inquired how Sam had always so much to eat?
20290Me, who was a Whig when you gentlemen were riding cornstalk horses in your fathers''barnyards?"
20290Meeting his old and intimate friend, General Armstrong, the next day, the President said,"Well, Bob, what do the people say of my message?"
20290One spree at Johnny Coyle''s; one spree at Johnny Coyle''s; And who would not be glad to join a spree at Johnny Coyle''s?"
20290Or,"I received some fine cod- fish from Boston to- day, sir; will you dine with me at five o''clock and taste them?"
20290Polk?"
20290Shall the main question be now put?"
20290She looked up with apparent astonishment and inquired,''Is that all?''
20290Sir, the gentleman says he is reminded by my speech of the''nursery rhyme,''''Who shot Cock Robin?
20290Such a motion having been made in one case, a voice cried out in the confusion which filled the chamber:"How are you going to do it?"
20290The young lady, in her Puritan simplicity, inquired:"Is card- playing a common practice here?"
20290Then, turning to the other lady, he asked,"Will you introduce your friend?"
20290They circulated large editions of a tract by Horace Greeley, entitled,"Why am I a Whig?"
20290This attention disturbed the sleeper, who gave a loud snort, when the boy jumped back and said,"You would n''t bite a blind boy, would you?"
20290This region of savages and wild beasts, of deserts of shifting sands and whirlwinds of dust, of cactus and prairie dogs?
20290Turning to Mr. Wade, he exclaimed:"Surely, you will not prevent me from taking my old black mammy with me?"
20290Upon what terms?
20290Was there ever witnessed such a barefaced corruption in any country before?"
20290What Representative could vote against the claim of a man whose money he had been winning, in small sums, it is true, all winter?
20290What became of the ten tribes?
20290What can we ever hope to do with the western coast, a coast of three thousand miles, rock- bound, cheerless, uninviting, and not a harbor on it?
20290What of future hopes?
20290What of it?"
20290What of past glories?
20290What use have we for this country?"
20290What was to be done?
20290What will become of public liberties?
20290Where is to be your boundary line?
20290Where the end of the principles we shall have to give up?
20290Who bids?"
20290Why do n''t he mind his own business?''
20290Why do you take off your coat here?"
20290Why, Mr. Wright, do you not know that he carries more than a pound of British lead in his body?"
20290[?]
20290he exclaimed,"with this vast, worthless area?
20290unwhig me?
20290what do you want?"
20290yes,"replied Mr. Wade,"you run the cook- shop down- stairs, do n''t you?"
16349''Oh, you are a runaway foremast hand are you? 16349 ''What on airth do you mean by saying"until you time is out?"
16349A kangaroo, eh? 16349 A nice navigator you are, ai n''t you, Spiller?
16349Am I my brother''s keeper?
16349And did n''t the doctor say I''d be dead before twelve this day?
16349And what sort of a mate-- husband, I mean-- have you got?
16349And where are you living now, Maggie?
16349And you bought a wedding ring?
16349But how can I help it?
16349But if you are caught, Joshua, what then?
16349But, Davy,asked Jack,"where is the port and the shipping, and where are all the settlers?
16349But, Jack, what have you been doing since I met you the year before last? 16349 Ca n''t you scratch it out, then?"
16349Captain,he said,"what has become of the new manager?"
16349Did n''t I show you de black man just now, Miss Sheppard, when he was going to de lake? 16349 Did na ye hear a gunshot just now?"
16349Did you tell the police about''em?
16349Do n''t you see you are going to be drowned?
16349Do you know him?
16349Do you know the names of any of the stars in this part of the roof?
16349Do you know the nature of an oath?
16349Do you mean to insinivate that I took''em? 16349 Do you take me for a blooming fool, Parson?
16349Does she ever throw you?
16349Have you a license?
16349Have you any questions to put to this witness?
16349Have you bought that horse, Mister?
16349Have you ever kept school before?
16349Help it? 16349 How does it happen that Mr. Sellars has not come over from Dresden?"
16349I see, Bob, you meant well, did n''t you? 16349 I was to say nothing, indeed, was I?
16349Is anything the matter? 16349 Is it to cook my dog Watch you mean?"
16349Is that long ago?
16349Know him? 16349 Know ye not that lovely river?
16349Know ye, is it? 16349 Long ago?
16349Maybe you''d like to mutiny, would n''t you?
16349No, what does he say?
16349Oh, I dare say you were a great man at home, were n''t you?
16349Oh, Nosey,she said,"what are you doing to poor Baldy?
16349Oh, it looks too like the Catholics, do n''t you see? 16349 The question is a perfectly fair one, Mr. Armstrong,"said the Judge: and turning to the witness he repeated:"Do you know the nature of an oath?"
16349Three men who want to kill you, eh? 16349 Well, Baldy,"he said,"and what did you hear?
16349Well, Tommy, what is the matter?
16349Well,asked Gleeson,"is anything the matter?"
16349What about the mulatto? 16349 What happened to the clock?"
16349What is his age?
16349What kind of timber do you want?
16349What made you leave Ireland, Jack?
16349What the----should I know about your sheep?
16349What was the biggest battle you ever were in?
16349Where have you been all this time?
16349Where''s the Sheriff?
16349Who are you?
16349Who is gone?
16349Who owns this building?
16349Whose planks are they?
16349Why do n''t you answer the question?
16349Why the blazes do n''t you get up and come out of this rat- hole?
16349Why, Maggie, you do n''t mean to say you have got a mate?
16349Why, Maggie,said Philip,"what on earth is the matter with you?"
16349Why, what can I do? 16349 Wo n''t Mr. Cunningham go after the men?"
16349Would you have any objection? 16349 You did not mean anything about Baldy, I suppose, did you, now?"
16349You do n''t know me, Mat?
16349You say you gave Cecily some money, a horse, saddle, and bridle?
16349A tall stranger came near looked at the group, and said:"My good man, what in thunder are you crying for?"
16349After recovering the power of speech, his first question was,"How is it possible that any man could ever consent to live in a hole like this?"
16349Ai n''t he pale?
16349Ai n''t you got any trade to work at?"
16349Ai n''t your time your own?''
16349And how am I to get it if I do n''t take it myself?
16349And how could a prayer ever reach heaven in time to be of any use to him, when he could not make it heard outside the deck- house?
16349And is it to hang me now you want to pay me back for the trouble I took for you and all the misery I suffered these long years?
16349And what call had I to say nothing?
16349And who is to blame but your own self for being in this place at all?
16349And who would like to live here for efer a thousand miles from decent neebors?
16349And will the Lord of the Vineyard commend it?
16349Any news to- day?"
16349Are the aboriginals amenable to British law?
16349Are ye runaway Government men?
16349Are you going to stand there all day, and watch me being flogged to death for nothing?"
16349Are you sure it was a kangaroo?"
16349Are you, indeed?
16349As soon as he saw Nosey he exclaimed,"Hello, Nosey, is that you?"
16349At last he said:"''I suppose you know what I mean, Miss Edgeworth?''
16349At last, in his extreme agony, the cook made a piteous appeal to the seamen:[ ILLUSTRATION 2]"Mates, are you men?
16349Barlow?"
16349Barney lived in Lockport, and in an audible whisper said to us:"Ai n''t he getting on finely?
16349Before leaving the court, he turned to the judge and said,"You hang me this time?"
16349Can as much be said of any year since?
16349Could I help you to look for it?"
16349Curious, is n''t it?"
16349Cuts me dead, do n''t he?
16349Did he believe in or hope for a heaven?
16349Did he ever think of anything-- of his past life, or of his future lot?
16349Did n''t you hear about him and Priscilla?"
16349Did you find out who took''em?"
16349Did you never try ashes?
16349Did you say a word to me until you finished your bloody work?
16349Did you start a station there for Imlay?"
16349Do n''t you see the blacks after you?"
16349Do you expect me to believe that anybody among the crowd there would murder you in broad daylight?
16349Do you know where you are now?"
16349Do you think they are swans?"
16349Do you think you could find him?"
16349Eh?"
16349For what purpose?
16349Had they committed mutiny and murder, or only justifiable homicide?
16349Harrigan?"
16349Has the mulatto a whole soul, half a soul, or no soul at all?"
16349He gazed at the river, which was flowing towards the mountains, and said:"What for stupid yallock* yan along a bulga**?"
16349He has been peeling your neck pretty bad, ai n''t he?
16349He pitied her, and said:"My good woman, have you lost anything?
16349He pointed them out to Campbell, and said:"What kind of birds are they?
16349He said:"Is Dr. Ignatius at home?"
16349He said:"Now, Jack, what are you going to do with that knife?"
16349He said:"Oh, is that you, Pilot?
16349He said:"Ve gates, schoolmeister?
16349He said:"Where''s that Britisher?
16349He said:"You as good as any other man, are you?
16349He said:"You want a place to camp on, do n''t you?"
16349He said:''Who are you, where from, and whither bound?''
16349He slowly repeated:"Nancy Toomey has been calling me a carroty- headed crawler, has she?"
16349He stayed with us all the time, and when we had eaten, said:"''Well, have you had a good breakfast?''
16349He was, indeed, very vain and flighty, sidling along his perch and saying:"Sweet pretty Joey, who are you, who are you?
16349Her mother would be certain to miss the watch, and what was she to do with it?
16349Here, Mr. Campbell, would n''t you like to take a roast egg or two for breakfast?
16349How are you getting along?"
16349How could he betray Jemima, his future partner in life?
16349Hugh Boyle held out the bottle, and said,''Here, Mr. McLaggan, would n''t you like a nip yourself?''
16349I asked him what he would like, a drink of water or a cup of tea?
16349I said dere''s de blackfellow, and he''s got papa''s lowsers on, did n''t I now?"
16349I said:"''I guess, Jonathan, this little kid is about the same age as your youngest boy in Boston, ai n''t he?''
16349I say, Nosey, you do n''t happen to have seen any dingoes or blacks about here lately?"
16349I suppose you are an honest man; you look like it anyway, and you would not want to see me murdered, now, would you?"
16349I suppose you were asleep, eh?
16349I would like to know what right the Government, or anybody else, has to ask me for twenty pounds for putting up a hut on this sandbank?
16349Ignatius?"
16349Is it a snake you are killing?"
16349Is that it?
16349Is that what you ask?
16349It has been asked, when did life first appear on the earth?
16349Jack said:"Do you see that big fellow there?
16349Know ye not that smiling river?
16349Man alive, do n''t you know the villain wants to murder me?"
16349Mat said:"Hello, you coves, is it robbing my garden ye are?"
16349Mr. Tyers, the commissioner?
16349Neddy said one night:"Do n''t you think, Joshua, this game of yours is rather dangerous?
16349Nosey eyed him with unusual savagery, and said:"Now did n''t I tell you to say no more about your blasted sheep, or I''d see you for it?
16349Now I put it to you, Neddy, as an honest and sensible man, Am I to get no pay for that seven years''work?
16349Now what did you mean?
16349Or is it true that in our inmost souls we wanted them to die, that we might possess their land in peace?
16349Philip said:"Not very lucky to- day, mate?"
16349Philip went up to the Boozer and said:"Well, my friend, what do you want here?"
16349Sambo paused, looked up to the gum tree, and said,"By golly, who''s dere?"
16349Shackson?"
16349She said:"You see dose two ducks, Miss Sheppard?"
16349So I crossed over and met him, and went close up to him and said,''Well, what have you to say for yoursel''now?''
16349So ye never went to Gippsland at all?"
16349Tell me now, did I murder poor Baldy or did you?
16349The bees or other insects usually take the dust from one flower to the other, but I suppose there are no bees about here just now?"
16349The blacks came nearer, and one of them said,"Gib fig tobacker, mate?"
16349The great question for statesmen now is,"What is to be done for the relief of the masses?"
16349The question is rather, when did the inanimate first appear?
16349The wife said:"What are we boun''to do now, Samiul?
16349Then she said to Mrs. Martin:"Ai n''t it a pity that so respectable a young man should be tramping through the bush like a pedlar with a pack?"
16349Then turning to Cowderoy, he said:"Do you know the nature of an oath?"
16349They look curious, do n''t they?
16349This woke up Bunbury, who sang out:"What''s the matter, Ruffles?
16349To see the isolated and miserable domiciles you occupy and the hard fare on which you subsist?
16349Was I to stand here all day and say never a word for myself until they were ready to hang me?
16349Was it not you who struck him down with the axe without saying as much as''by your leave,''either to me or to him?
16349Was n''t I always on the watch for you every evening looking for you, and the chop on the fire, and the hot tea, and everything comfortable?
16349We found two women cooking supper in the kitchen, and Jonathan said to the younger one,''Is the old man at home?''
16349Well, about those buoys, eh?
16349Were you ever in Preston?"
16349What do you say, Ned?
16349What do you say, mates?
16349What do you think about it, Nosey?"
16349What doom could they expect but that of damnation and eternal death?
16349What good could it do you?
16349What has the Government done for me or anybody else in Gippsland?
16349What has the poor fellow done to you, I''d like to know?
16349What have you to say to that charge?"
16349What makes you ask?"
16349What of that?
16349What shall I do?"
16349What was to be done with the prisoner?
16349What will my friends of the club in London say, when they hear of it, but that the service is going to the dogs?"
16349What with Jack, and what with herself?
16349What wrong have I done?"
16349What''s all that noise about?"
16349Whatever am I to do?
16349Wheer are me and the childer to go in this miserable lookin''place?"
16349When he went on board he spoke to Ruffles, master of the schooner, and said:"Is the harbour- master aboard?
16349When she returned, Nosey said, in a hoarse whisper:"Is he gan yet?"
16349When the wine has been drawn off from the lees, and time has matured it, of what kind will it be?
16349Where is the sense of that, I''d like to know?
16349Which way shall we go?
16349Who are the men in the boat down the channel?"
16349Who are you?
16349Who are you?
16349Who are you?
16349Who is that cove with the spyglass?"
16349Who''s afeered?
16349Why are you here?
16349Why did n''t you leave me alone when I had the fine holt of him?"
16349Why do n''t you like them?"
16349Why do n''t you parsons make money by your eddication if it''s any good, instead of goin''round beggin''?
16349Why not transport all convicts, separate the chaff from the wheat, and purge out the old leaven?
16349You are a gentleman; you have done yourself proud, and we are thankful, ai n''t we, Jack?
16349You can box it and make a bee- line for Western Port, ca n''t you?
16349You eat me?
16349You may be found out some day by an unlucky chance, and then what will you do?"
16349You''ve done your time once, Nosey, and how would you like to do it again?
16349he said,"and what are you doing here, and where did you come from?"
16349is that you?"
16349or had he any fear of hell and eternal punishment?
16349who are you?
16349you were sent out, were you?
16349you''d like to know who does it, would you?
16349your name is Peter, is n''t it?
15872''Why do you come to me?'' 15872 And will soon be present, I presume?"
15872Are you not afraid thus to speak-- is there nothing too holy to be profanely assaulted?
15872Are you really going to leave us, and so soon? 15872 By our grandfather, I suppose, Alice?"
15872Can Mr. Randolph be in earnest?
15872Did he tell you his Indian ghost story?
15872Did you ever get it?
15872Do you know you are on the graves of a great nation?
15872Do you remember my promise made here?
15872Do you remember our first meeting?
15872Have I fulfilled it? 15872 I am sorry you tell me so; wo n''t you be sorry, Miss Alice?"
15872I mus shake his hand; but what hab you done wid your beard, your hair, and your huntin- shirt?
15872I shall be sure to come,said the young man,"and suppose I bring with me these ladies?"
15872I shall not complain,replied the astonished young man;"but will you ride again to- morrow?"
15872Is old papa Jack and Bellile living?
15872Is this,thought he,"a delicate invitation to save my feelings, and is the latter clause meant as a hint that they do not want me?
15872Kind sir, tell me, have you no superstitions? 15872 Landlord,"said the Judge,"will you give us your attention?"
15872May I inquire, Colonel Dooly, what use you have for a gum in the matter we have met to settle?
15872May I join you in your walk home, miss?
15872Miss Alice, do you frequently visit Uncle Toney?
15872Miss Alice--(will you allow me this familiarity?)
15872So, my philosopher, you believe, whatever lifts the mind to worship God is the true faith?
15872Thar ai n''t? 15872 The ladies have retired-- shall we imitate their example, sir?
15872Uncle Toney, how old are you?
15872Uncle Toney, who was that wicked old man?
15872Well, by G--, sir, is my motion in order to- day? 15872 What are you laughing at, you whelp?"
15872What did that d----d black- muzzled whelp say?
15872What in the h--- does he mean by that?
15872What is your will, Judge Dooly?
15872What would become of the hospital?
15872Where is he from? 15872 Who is Uncle Toney?
15872Why do not her brothers- in- law inquire into this? 15872 Why, husband,"asked mother,"how did you get so wet?"
15872Why, what do you mean?
15872You ask me if I thought, or think, he ever deserted the Republican party in heart? 15872 You been mity sick, here, young massa, did n''t Miss Alice be good to you?
15872You no find dis country good like yourn, young massa?
15872''Then, can I get a little butter- milk?''
15872( or maybe you''ll want me to call it a parliament, sir?)
15872Ai n''t that thar hell- fired letter to me, sir-- a senator, sir, representing three parishes, sir-- before this House?
15872And is it so with all?
15872Answer me; were not these the true men in that day?
15872Are not these incompatible with the stern and towering traits essential to such a character as was Washington''s?
15872Are these too bright, too pure for time?
15872Are we not men, and manly?
15872Are you a wizzard that you have so drawn me on?
15872But what is to be done with the negro?
15872But where is that gentle, sweet, affectionate mother?
15872But who shall determine this lot?
15872But why the fear?
15872But you are not my father confessor-- then why do I talk to you as to one long known?
15872But, what could they do?
15872Can any one enumerate an instance where evil grew out of the early association of the sexes at school?
15872Can it be that these historians only wrote romances?
15872Can it be, simply to propagate his species, and perish?
15872Come, Sue, ca n''t you give the gentleman some music?
15872Could any but a god effect so much?
15872Could children of Anglo- Norman blood be so restrained?
15872Could you, in the presence of Almighty God-- He who knows the inmost thoughts-- justify your work of to- day?
15872Cousin, does he not astonish you?"
15872D--- it, do n''t you see it is a threat, sirs!--a threat to''sassinate me?
15872Dare I speak?
15872Death and corruption do their work, and life returns no more, and death is eternal, and the soul-- answer ye dumb graves-- did the soul come here?
15872Did he give you any of his stories?
15872Did the Great Spirit tell him to do this?
15872Did your sun come to you with fire in her hand and kindle it in your heart?
15872Disembodied, is she, as God, pervading all, and knowing all?
15872Do not the gentler virtues of our nature ever ripen with time?
15872Do the dead know?
15872Do they stir the romance of your nature as that of my baby sister?"
15872Do we feel as men?
15872Do you defy it?
15872Do you not see it in their action in this matter?
15872Do you remember who were the brave and generous, kind and truthful among them?
15872Do you suppose I can afford to risk my leg of flesh and bone against Tate''s wooden one?
15872Do you think of this?
15872Do you understand me?
15872Do you wonder, sir, that I seem eccentric?
15872Does any man suppose, if Mr. Calhoun had succeeded to the Presidency, that he would have commenced or continued this agitation?
15872Does she, with that devotion of heart which was so much hers in time, still love and protect me?
15872Grymes?"
15872Has it not been realized in the years of the recent intestine war?
15872Has nothing ever occurred to you, your reason could not account for?
15872Has that brief interview left an impression upon those two young hearts to endure beyond a day?
15872Hast thou gone with me through my long pilgrimage of time?
15872Have I done mine?"
15872Have no predictions, to be revealed in the coming future, come to you as foretold?"
15872Have you bought the home of our fathers from these red men?
15872Have you to- day done unto this man as you would he should do unto you?
15872Have you, as had the Natchez, a holy fire which is never extinguished in your heart?
15872He gave him His word in a book: do you find it there?
15872He inquires of the Indian inhabitant he is expelling from the country, Who was the architect of these, and what their signification?
15872He knew she was more than anxious for a home where she was mistress, and he must prepare it-- but how, or where?
15872He, their gallant, was respectfully silent, when Alice said, without lifting her eyes:"I wonder if La Salle ever stood here?
15872How could your words be so soft and gentle in the wild costume of the murderous savage?
15872How do we know that their spirits are not here by us now?
15872How many brilliant examples of this fatal fact does memory call up from the untimely grave?
15872How often that word is thoughtlessly spoken?
15872How quiet is the grave?
15872How will it be with you?
15872I have been here before, sir; and did n''t I move its adoption yesterday, sir?
15872I hear dat from ebery one ob my young misses, and where is dey now?
15872I hope you do not find your stay disagreeable in this house?"
15872I know my cousin has whispered something to you of me; my situation, my nature-- is it not so?"
15872I learned you at the plucking of that arrow from the cotton bale-- in your strange, wild garb; but never mind-- what were you going to say?"
15872I promised; when he extended his hand, and, grasping mine, asked:''Is this our last parting, or shall I see you to- morrow?''
15872I want to know, by the eternal gods, if a senator in this house-- this here body-- is to be threatened in this here way?
15872I wonder how many''s history I am writing now?
15872If I have kept thy counsels, and walked by their wisdom, hast thou approved, my mother?
15872If for him there is not a future, why were the instincts of his nature given?
15872If in sincerity we invoke God''s mercy, can the means that prompt the heart''s devotion, reliance, and love, be wrong?
15872If these results have followed the institution of African slavery, can it be inhuman and sinful?
15872If they worship God in sincerity, you say that is all?"
15872If this is all he is ever to know, does this complete a destiny for use?
15872If you have not, will they not hunt us away again, as you have?
15872In what battle were they ever defeated?
15872Is it instinctive?
15872Is it maidenly that I should?
15872Is it not all a mystery-- strange, strange, incomprehensible, and unnatural?
15872Is it not as reasonable to believe we lived before our birth into this, as to hope we shall live after death in another world?
15872Is it not rather an evidence that the Creator so designed?
15872Is it not strange that woman will confide to the strange man, what she will not to the kindred woman?
15872Is it that youth has no apprehensions, and we enjoy its anticipations and its present without alloy?
15872Is it the alchemist who always turns the sweets of youth to the sours of age?
15872Is it the blood, the rearing, or the religion of these people which makes them what they are?
15872Is it the leaves and trees, or sheaves Of yellow, ripened grain, Which wake to me, in memory, My boyhood''s days again?
15872Is it the mind which remembers, and is the mind the soul?
15872Is it this which makes such models of children and Christians in the educated Creole population of Louisiana?
15872Is not his measure full?
15872Is not this an attribute of greatness-- to be natural?
15872Is not this an honest confession?
15872Is she permitted, in her new being, to come at will, and breathe to my mind holy thoughts and holy feelings?
15872Is she up among these gems of heaven?
15872Is she yonder in the mighty Jupiter, looking down, and smiling at me?
15872Is the belief alone the Indian''s?
15872Is the flame first kindled burning still?
15872Is there one, whose years have brought increase of happiness, and who has lived on without a sorrow?
15872Is this cruel and sinful-- or the silent, mysterious operation of the laws of nature?
15872Is this hope the instinct of the coming, or does it grow from the baser instinct of love for the miserable life we have?
15872Is this natural?
15872Is this natural?
15872It is easy to ask, but who shall answer?
15872It said:"What did you leave me for?
15872Jefferson?"
15872Lamar, and his brother Mirabeau B. Lamar, Eugenius Nesbit, Walter T. Colquitt, and Eli S. Shorter?
15872Mathews, turning upon his back, asked,"To whom do I owe my life?"
15872May be you bring de ole man more dan one dar?"
15872Mr. Grymes, vat am I to do?"
15872Must the surviving spirit have Its memories of time and grief?
15872My wonder was, whence come all these people?
15872Now, wa''n''t that great?"
15872Order, sir; is my motion in order, sir?"
15872Senators?
15872Shall I, when purified by death, go to her?
15872Shall it forget the all of time, When time''s with all her uses gone, And be a babe in that new clime?
15872Shall we have your company?
15872Shall we return?
15872She gazed intently; could it be?
15872Sheriff?"
15872Should he, like this man, come to love the solitude and silence of the wilderness, and find companionship only with his traps and guns?
15872The ladies were in their night- clothes; but what will not woman do to aid the distressed, especially in the hour of peril?
15872The work was begun and was rapidly progressing; but now, when and by whom will this great, glorious garden be made?
15872Then the father of bride stepped up to the side of his daughter, when the groom said to the bride:"Wilt thou have me for thy husband?"
15872Then what is due from me to you?
15872Then what is life to age?
15872Then why fear?
15872Then why should he fear?
15872Then, is time his all?
15872There, now I am done-- don''t you think me very foolish?"
15872These means were to be devised, by whom?
15872They are but earth now-- and why am I here?
15872This is her last day; and to how many countless thousands is it the last day of life?
15872To him death is nothing: the brave defy death-- the good fear it not; then why should he fear?
15872To trace in the planetary system divine wisdom, and divine power; to see and know the same in the mite which floats in the sunbeam?
15872Was he as happy?
15872Was it not natural?
15872Was not this worship pure?
15872Was that what General Jackson fit the battle of New Orleans for, down yonder in old Chemut''s field?
15872Was the element of fire and the material for clothing given for any but man''s use?
15872We sat together long hours, and talked of the past-- alternately, as their memories floated up, asking each other,"Where is this one?
15872Well, sir, what order shall I take?
15872Were you not surprised to see that I could write?"
15872What are they?
15872What are we to do with missions?
15872What chase was ever unsuccessful over which they presided?
15872What do you do with this case, gentlemen?"
15872What has Burr left?
15872What has he not seen?
15872What is it to- day?
15872What is to be the consequence?
15872What is your faith?"
15872What was his design as manifested in his nature?
15872When did a father rob his children of their homes?
15872When did a father wash his hands in his children''s blood?
15872When they had approached within ten paces, Brashear stopped and said,"Are you ready?"
15872When were they known to be worn out with fatigue-- with hardship, hunger or thirst, heat or cold, either on land or water?
15872Where is he going?"
15872Where is the provision for him in the Bible?
15872Who can count the number of scalps which they brought from distant expeditions?
15872Who can resist him then?
15872Who can say it is not the true faith?"
15872Who can tell what to- morrow may bring forth?
15872Who deserves it more?
15872Who ever could stem as they the rushing current of the Father of rivers?
15872Who has a friend on whom he can rely, and who will not, to gratify his own ambition, sacrifice him?
15872Who knows, except the dead?
15872Who says it is mean to love the land, to keep in our hearts these graves, as we keep the Great Spirit?
15872Who that has lived seventy years will not attest this from his own life''s experience?
15872Why did he leave his own and come to take the red man''s?
15872Why have you cut your hair and beard?
15872Why is it deemed that there shall be no communication between the living and the dead?
15872Why is my summons delayed so long?
15872Why is this so?
15872Why she not come wid you?
15872Why the power to learn so much?
15872Why this indiscretion?"
15872Why this question, which implies a doubt of the goodness of God?
15872Why?
15872Will a century hence find one of the red race upon this continent?
15872Will he ever forget the speaking of the beaming features of that beautiful creature, when she lifted her head and looked into his face?
15872Will her heart ask:"Shall I ever meet him again?"
15872Will she dream of the dark beard, curled and flowing-- of the darker eye which looked and spoke?
15872Would the wild energies of these bow to such control, or yield such obedience from restraint or love?
15872You are gentle and kind, are you not?
15872You are not yet strong, and your weakness I have made weaker, because I have disturbed the fountain of your heart and brought up painful memories?"
15872You not want somebody to turn de squirrel for you?
15872You see it so with the white man; shall we not learn from him, and be like him?"
15872You tell me the traditions of the people who worshipped here say that this was a cardinal law unto them?"
15872and did it stretch on to contemplate the ruin and desolation which overspreads it now?
15872and do the memories of time die with time?
15872and do you recall their after lives?
15872and is not this insult to manliness, and a vile mockery to the feelings of men?
15872and shall this hope become a reality, and endure forever?
15872and this?"
15872and was all this grand creation of the earth, and all things therein, made to subserve him for so mean a purpose?
15872and was n''t I laughed out of the house, sir?
15872and will the wild story of the western wilderness come in the silent darkness of her chamber, and make her nestle closer to her pillow?
15872asked her eyes; and he looked:"Who are you; and where is your home, beautiful being, so strangely and so unexpectedly met?"
15872how will it be with you?
15872if so, for what?
15872is this reality, or am I dreaming?"
15872or an acquired faculty?
15872or does its_ all_ belong to love and joy when life and the world is new?
15872or have you taken it?
15872or is here the end of all; here, this little tenement?
15872or is it the instinct of race, the consequence of a purer and more sublimated nature from the blue blood of the exalted upon earth?
15872or is the soul independent of the mind, surviving the mind''s extinction?
15872or went it with life to the great first cause?
15872or, Do these pursue beyond the grave?
15872or, shall this accursed rabidness be purged away with death, and he become a tone in accord with inanimate things?
15872sa._?"
15872said I,''are you sure-- very sure?''
15872said he,"Alick, not gone yet?
15872said he,"you have found this old hermit, have you?
15872see you into my heart, here by your gravestone, to- night?
15872shall the heathen go to heaven?
15872that is it, is it?
15872that you bid us take it from you, and go back, and make a new home where the fathers of our fathers sleep in death?
15872the grave, the secrets of the grave, are they hidden there for ages, or shall they survive as treasures for eternity?
15872the heart, the heart-- what are all its joys of youth, and all its griefs of age?
15872what of this?
15872what would I not give to see him again?''"
15872why doffed the prairie chieftain''s robes of state and come forth a plain man?
21623Are you in earnest?
21623But where is the money for me?
21623Is it such a fast that I have chosen? 21623 Lord, who shall abide in thy tabernacle?
21623Shall the ax boast itself against him that heweth therewith? 21623 What agreement hath the temple of God with idols?"
21623Wherefore then gavest not thou my money into the bank, that at my coming I might have required mine own with usury or interest?
21623Who is my neighbor?
21623Whose shall these things be?
21623Why should the laws presume to level the rates for a whole state? 21623 ''What will you take?'' 21623 A day for a man to afflict his soul?... 21623 Also I said, The thing ye do is not good: ought ye not to walk in the fear of our God, because of the reproach of the nations, our enemies? 21623 And when one buys a farm for money does not that farm produce other money yearly? 21623 And whence is derived the profit of the merchant? 21623 Antonio--And what of him?
21623But were not the people of Israel discharged to take any usury or profit for lent money from their brethren?
21623Could there be a more absurd application of a Scripture passage?
21623Did he take interest?"
21623Do not rich men oppress you, and draw you before the judgment seats?
21623Do not they blaspheme that worthy name by which ye are called?"
21623Do they on this account deny themselves any of the good things of this life?
21623Have we not the rights of the cattle?
21623His ear is deaf to the voice,"Is not this the fast that I have chosen?
21623How do you prove from scripture, that moderate usury, or common interest, is not oppression in itself?
21623How do you prove that moderate usury is lawful?
21623How great a benefit can he gain by it?
21623Is it lawful to take any interest or gain for money lent?
21623Is it not to deal thy bread to the hungry, and that thou bring the poor that are cast out to thy house?"
21623Is it warrantable to take interest from the poor?
21623Is money born from roofs and walls?
21623Is not this the fast that I have chosen?...
21623Is the gaining of money by usury unlawful?
21623Or is your gold and silver, ewes and rams?"
21623Psalm 15:"Jehovah, Who shall sojourn in thy tabernacles?
21623The question is frequently discussed in church circles,"How can the laboring man be attracted to the churches?"
21623The question is, how rapidly can he earn, and how soon can his earnings be collected?
21623Thus we have in Isaiah 43:13:"I will work and who will let( hinder) it?"
21623To undo the heavy burdens and to let the oppressed go free?...
21623Was this inserted to make interest good?
21623We clip the following story:"Why do you borrow money for so short a time?"
21623Were not the Israelites forbidden to take usury from their brethren, whether poor or rich?
21623What can the borrower do or make with this capital?
21623What does a house from the letting of which I receive a rent?
21623What does the sea beget?
21623What is it to take usury, according to the proper signification of the word?
21623What is the unlawful profit for money, which may be called usury?
21623What is the usury condemned in scripture and by what reason?
21623What is this loan worth to you?
21623What is usury?
21623What kind of usury or interest is lawful?
21623What shall we believe was the question?
21623Who doubts that idle money is wholly useless?
21623Who shall dwell in thy holy hill?
21623Who shall dwell in thy holy hill?
21623Will you do it?"
21623or shall the saw magnify itself against him that shaketh it?
23748What shall the stake be?
23748What would you do, brethren, were you in our place?
23748Had God turned a new prophet loose in the earth?
23748What right, then, had the North to allow publications confessedly intended to destroy a legal southern institution, deeply rooted and cherished?
2390Well might Braddock exclaim with his last breath:"Who would have thought it?
10844''Scuse me, Senator, is this gent''man a friend of yours?
10844A busy day for us, eh, Senator?
10844Ai n''t it the limit?
10844And I have a chance to win?
10844And love?
10844And you told Mr. Haines that I was interested in Altacoola lands?
10844And you? 10844 Are n''t you afraid she''ll make trouble?"
10844Are you absolutely sure?
10844Are you financially interested in Gulf City?
10844Are you the newspaper man who is interviewing father? 10844 Behind them?
10844Blocking the traffic, eh?
10844But how about our supposed combination to protect the Government that Langdon will tell about?
10844But suppose Langdon does not weaken?
10844But the days do get short in November, when Congress meets, do n''t they?
10844But why do you think most of the Congressmen and Senators will vote for it?
10844But you see now?
10844By the way, Langdon, what is it you are going to do in the Senate this afternoon?
10844By the way, what do you know about him?
10844Can not the President of the Senate be persuaded not to recognize Langdon on the floor? 10844 Can you understand?"
10844Certainly you''re a Senator, but what''s a Senator, anyhow? 10844 Did n''t you, Carolina?"
10844Did you not run at Kenyon Hill?
10844Do I intrude?
10844Do I look like I''d fool with cheap skates, Haines? 10844 Do I?
10844Do n''t you see, Charlie, I have to stand for it? 10844 Do n''t you see?"
10844Do n''t you think the people who want Altacoola chosen as the site have the best arguments?
10844Do you care to smoke, Senator,Mrs. Spangler asked, as her guests concluded their repast,"if the young ladies do not object?"
10844Do you know what you''ve done to me?
10844Do you know, really, why this luncheon was given to- day?
10844Do you remember, Stevens, Lorimer Hawkslee, back in wartime?
10844Do you think that Hope or I could ever care for a man like this fellow? 10844 Easier for you?"
10844Father crooked? 10844 Father, oh, ca n''t you understand that I could n''t doze my life away down on those plantations?
10844For Altacoola?
10844Game?
10844Got your speech all right?
10844Have you anything further to say?
10844He can make father do anything he wants, and suppose I do n''t lead him on? 10844 How about that, Norton?"
10844How are you, Senator? 10844 How can you do it?"
10844How do we know that that letter is not a forgery, a trick?
10844How? 10844 How?
10844How?
10844How?
10844I do n''t understand?
10844I guess young Langdon is going to be one of the boys, is n''t he?
10844I suppose you have n''t been to New York of late, Senator?
10844I thought we were in the interview?
10844If they come?
10844Is that the way you represent your district; Norton?
10844Is this straight talk?
10844It is to- day that I appear before the ways and means committee, is n''t it?
10844Little Hope make trouble? 10844 Misfortune?"
10844Money?
10844No? 10844 Nothing could?"
10844Of what?
10844Oh, Mrs. Spangler,she ejaculated,"you are very kind to marry father, but--""What''s that?"
10844Oh, it is, is it?
10844Oh, that''s all? 10844 Or in love?"
10844Or in love?
10844Queer roost where this Senator is to hang out, is n''t it?
10844Say,he finally blurted out,"when I talk business I--""Are you in politics as a business?"
10844See here, Carolina,he cried,"what do you mean by letting that fellow make love to you?"
10844See here, young man, why are n''t you in politics?
10844Senator Peabody, you know Haines, do n''t you? 10844 Senator Peabody,"asked Langdon,"why are you so strong for Altacoola?"
10844So Altacoola is bidding, too?
10844So nobody is going to make a cent, eh? 10844 So you''re playing the game like all the rest?"
10844Steinert?
10844That would n''t prevent me from making a minority report for Gulf City and explaining why I made that report, would it?
10844The Altacoola naval base?
10844The Senator''s pretty busy these days with his naval base matter coming up, is n''t he?
10844The naval base?
10844The office seeking the man?
10844Then if you are as sure of that you ca n''t object to my being for Gulf City?
10844Then why do you stand for that whippersnapper''s talk?
10844Then why is father so important to them?
10844Then you do n''t want to know anything about that sort of stuff?
10844Then you guarantee him?
10844Think so?
10844Think so?
10844This new life will be a great change for you, then?
10844Those twelve votes you say were yours-- yours?
10844Was I there? 10844 Was there any particular reason for your not telling the truth?"
10844We''d lose frightfully, Charlie, if they changed to Gulf City, would n''t we?
10844Well, Senator, in the name of goodness, what are you going to do? 10844 Well, ca n''t you see what you''re doing?"
10844Well, how is the honorable to- day?
10844Well, my boy, what can I do for you?
10844Well, where in thunderation would you expect me to be, sir?
10844Well, who in hades will vote for it because it''s for the good of the United States?
10844What are you going to do at 12:30 to- morrow?
10844What are you going to do, sir?
10844What do you mean?
10844What do you mean?
10844What do you think of that, Hope Georgia? 10844 What do you want to know?"
10844What is it, sir?
10844What is it?
10844What kind of politics is Langdon playin''?
10844What rank were you, sir?
10844What was this you were saying about national politics?
10844What will you do,she asked,"now that you have given up this position?"
10844What''s that? 10844 What''s the matter with that girl?"
10844What''s the meaning of this?
10844What, father? 10844 Where are you going?
10844Where do I come in on this?
10844Where does the pesky stuff come from?
10844Where is Peabody?
10844Who knows, Mr. Haines? 10844 Who knows?
10844Who made the offer?
10844Why do n''t they prevent this?
10844Why do n''t you put your money into Gulf City and lose it, then?
10844Why do you so hesitate, Senator Langdon?
10844Why does n''t Peabody go to Philadelphia?
10844Why should n''t I?
10844Why, do you realize that to- day he is one of the most popular men in public life throughout the country; that''What does Langdon think?'' 10844 Why, you do n''t mean to tell me,"he exclaimed,"that Senator Langdon would vote for Gulf City for the naval base?"
10844Will you allow me to tell you a few more?
10844Wo n''t you take my advice, Mr. Haines? 10844 Yes, father, why do you hesitate?"
10844Yes?
10844You can swing him?
10844You do n''t mean that you could swing Langdon into Gulf City?
10844You down here to see Langdon, too?
10844You feel sure you want me?
10844You got Langdon''s money in Altacoola, through his son?
10844You have grown up very much since you came to the capital, have n''t you?
10844You have not been in politics very long, have you?
10844You know something of Altacoola lands, then, Norton?
10844You mean the biggest job of the session?
10844You mean what would I do if I was-- er-- if I was runnin''the job?
10844You mean,he gasped at last,"that you induce a boy to put$ 50,000 in Altacoola land when you knew I had to vote on the bill?
10844You remember the battle of Crawfordsville?
10844You sent that note,he exclaimed,"when you know Altacoola is the only proper place and Gulf City is a mud bank?"
10844You told father that?
10844You want to see me about something important? 10844 You were quite fond of her, were n''t you?"
10844You will promise that?
10844You wo n''t plan anything really desperate, Peabody, will you? 10844 You''re coming in with us?"
10844You''re switching to Gulf City?
10844You''re the organization, are n''t you?
10844You''ve got what, Senator?
10844A committee chairmanship?
10844A couple of Federal judgeships for his friends?
10844Ah yo''as blind as that o''ah yo''foolin''with me?"
10844An ambassadorship for some Mississippi charcoal burner?
10844And they fell into each other''s arms then and there, for what strong fighter does not respect another of his kind?
10844And you even let my daughter put her money in the same scheme?"
10844Answer me that, will you?
10844Are our rooms ready?"
10844Are they cheap little local folks or are they real people here who have some power and can do something that is worth while?"
10844Are you just gettin''wise?"
10844Are you sure?
10844But have you decided what to tell Peabody and Stevens as your plan of action if they come in here at 12:30?"
10844But to herself she muttered, as though mystified:"I wonder why Peabody changed his mind so suddenly?
10844But, come to think of it, how about some woman?
10844Ca n''t you look out?"
10844Did n''t you get my twelve votes in the Legislature?
10844Did they not have pledge of absolute secrecy?
10844Did you have a chance for Senator without''em?
10844Did you not sign the mortgage on which this$ 50,000 was raised?"
10844Do n''t you see?
10844Do you hear?"
10844Do you think the system of electing Senators by vote of State Legislatures should be abolished?"
10844For who will believe that this money was not put in these lands without your consent, without your direction, your order?
10844GRISMER LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS THE SENATOR AND BUD HAINES"FROM NEW YORK, EH?
10844Had Mrs. Spangler gone suddenly insane?
10844Haines?"
10844Haines?"
10844Haines?"
10844Haines?"
10844Haines?"
10844Have a see- gar, Senator?"
10844Have n''t I spent a week in Jackson?"
10844Have you the time to undertake it?"
10844He says to me, he says:''What''n h-- l do my constituents in New England care about things''way out on the Pacific Coast?
10844His daughters-- what did they think?
10844How am I to leave him?
10844How are you?"
10844How can you win for Altacoola without letting these grafters make money out of it?"
10844How could he have happened?
10844How could you betray or seek to betray your father, who sees in you the image of your dear mother, who has gone?"
10844How could you?
10844How dare yo''intehfere wid a friend of de Senator''s?
10844How do you do, Haines?"
10844How do you know?"
10844How much off on the tariff on the creature do we want?
10844I want to know if in your opinion the Constitution was designed to throttle expression of the public will?"
10844I would n''t make a mistake in a matter like this, would I, unless I was what you said I was-- a fool?"
10844I''ll--""Are you quite sure about that?"
10844If he did come, would she be able to have her father see him, as she had promised?
10844If they''re all-- your father, too-- crooked, why should n''t I be crooked?
10844Is it possible, sir, that you have actual knowledge of actual happenings that give you the right to talk as you have?
10844Is it very painful?"
10844Is n''t it perfectly glorious?
10844Is n''t it simple?
10844Is n''t that simple?"
10844Is n''t your dad right?"
10844Is one very much worse than the other?"
10844Is that the idea?
10844Is there any danger that they''ll change?
10844Is this Washington or is it heaven?"
10844Maybe we can influence the old man through his girls, do n''t you see?"
10844Now, Norton, who''s behind you?"
10844Now, how are we going to put that through?
10844Now, then, are you satisfied?"
10844Now, why do n''t you make a hundred thousand with it instead of letting it lie idle?
10844Remember that Western Senator who was''delivered''twice, both ways, on a graft bill?"
10844Say, Senator Stevens, are you kiddin''me?
10844She might marry again and free herself from this mode of life-- who knows?
10844She tossed back her head and said, coolly:"Why should n''t I let him make love to me if I choose?"
10844Something to drink?"
10844Speeches?
10844Stevens?
10844Suppose I get all these things for you?"
10844That gives us two hours and twenty minutes--""Yes, but for what?"
10844The most fashionable folks in Washington coming-- what more could you want, Hope?
10844The secretary opened the note to read:"Where in thunder does that hydrate come from-- South America or Russia?
10844Then, as they lighted their cigars, he inquired,"What army corps were you with, Colonel?"
10844Then, too, she was a most charming person, and the thought,"Why not-- why not take her at her word?"
10844There was a conspiracy against him, but how could he prove it?
10844Thought this bait too much for me to resist, did they?"
10844To whom was he to go for it?
10844Understand?
10844Understand?
10844Was a man never to admit that he had sought the office?
10844Was he really guilty and had promised to come merely to get rid of her?
10844Was it not preparing for its first Senator since 1885?
10844We do not need to deal with you--""Then why do you both spend so much time on me?"
10844Were you there, Senator?"
10844What are you going to do when people you ca n''t doubt pledge their word?"
10844What are your orders?"
10844What did it all mean?
10844What do I get in your cabinet?
10844What do you mean by touching a friend of mine?"
10844What do you think of it?"
10844What does it matter how we get the money, as long as we get it?"
10844What in God''s name does he want?
10844What is the world coming to?"
10844What town''s going to get it, Senator?"
10844What will you do-- what_ can_ you do?"
10844What would my old comrades of the Third Mississippi say if they saw me sitting here and you there with a whole body, sir, after what you have said?
10844What''s this?"
10844What?"
10844What?"
10844When Senator Langdon comes will you be kind enough to tell him I want to interview him?"
10844Where''s our project?
10844Who are these people?
10844Who dared say that?"
10844Who is it?"
10844Who said so?
10844Who''d put a naval base on a bunch of mud flats?
10844Who''s behind him?"
10844Why am I interested?"
10844Why ca n''t we change a lot of things now that we are here?"
10844Why do n''t you see father and talk with him?
10844Why should he now want the old fool at the Capitol?"
10844Why was he late?
10844Why was it, he pondered, that the business of the great United States of America was not conducted on business lines?
10844Why, Langdon, what''n h-- l are you kickin''an''questioning''about?
10844Why, are you still a child, or are you really a man?
10844Why, how could there be, Senator?"
10844Why, the Senate would appoint an investigating committee and investigate itself, would it not, when the ridiculous scandal came?
10844Will you go to the drawing- room to receive our guests?"
10844Will you?"
10844Wo n''t you come, Mr. Haines?
10844Would honor take the place of expediency in the affairs of state?
10844Would n''t any man who had interrupted a tête- á-tête another man was having with Miss Langdon be intruding?"
10844Would she affirm what Norton and Randolph had said?
10844Would the sphinx of the desert speak the story of the lost centuries?
10844Would the statue on the pedestal step down?
10844Yo''are absolutely certain that it wo n''t be too late to get to Senator Langdon?"
10844You believe in Altacoola, do n''t you?"
10844You can keep quiet?"
10844You catch the idea?"
10844You do n''t think there is, do you?"
10844You get that straight?"
10844You have now drafts for$ 50,000, have n''t you?"
10844You mean I could make a hundred thousand with my fifty between now and spring?"
10844You state what is false, and you know it, you-- you--""Then you are willing that others should have their rightful share?"
10844You want him to be a success, do n''t you?
10844You want to raise a scandal, do you?
10844[ Illustration:"FROM NEW YORK, EH?
10844but how did you know where to''phone?"
10844has become the watchword of the big body of independents who want honesty and decent government without graft?
26040But why did so many of the early settlers, quickly leave the Atlantic coast for the Connecticut valley?
26040There is still preserved a letter from England, written in a fine hand, with red ink, dated Obeydon?
16858About a half mile?
16858Ai n''t you got no mama and papa?
16858And mama was born in Scotland?
16858And you had a king at the head of your armies?
16858Boss, ai n''t you got three cents?
16858Come out, you imp, what are you doing under there?
16858David, what''s that in thy hand?
16858Has he any money, and is he a member of the church?
16858Have you a Christian man with the train?
16858Have you no mother?
16858How deep do you own into the earth?
16858How do you make that out?
16858How far do you own eastward?
16858How far do you own toward the west?
16858How old are you, sir?
16858Know what? 16858 My little lad, what''s that you have?"
16858My purse is light, but what of that? 16858 No, boss, what''s de matter?"
16858Shamgar, what''s that in thy hand?
16858Sir, are you a Christian?
16858That is well so far, but may we ask what sacrifice would this home be willing to make for the republic if its flag were in peril?
16858That''s a good job,said the Judge;"why did n''t I think of that?"
16858What are you doing with that sign?
16858What did you do, Pat?
16858What do you mean by getting so close to me? 16858 What''s the nationality of that gintleman, anyway?"
16858What''s the trouble?
16858Where are you going, all by your little self, anyway?
16858Who are you?
16858Who are your neighbors?
16858Why, my child, he has no trade, no money, and very little education; what are you going to do for a living?
16858Wo n''t you ask God to hold that train? 16858 Yes, dear; why do you ask?"
16858You never used liquor?
16858A Chicago editor quoted the statement and asked:"Is it possible education breeds in woman a distaste for matrimony and home life?"
16858A friend called to see him and said:"Jim, what have you to say after this misfortune?"
16858A friend said to me, during the great depression:"Do n''t you think it will be over soon?"
16858A little boy in Chicago said:"Papa, you were born in England?"
16858A man riding along a highway said to a farmer by the wayside:"How far to Baltimore?"
16858A physician came and as he bent over to examine the heart, the tramp said:"Was the little one saved?"
16858A visiting lady after service said:"Doctor, have you any more of the breed of that dog?
16858Again a half- drunk Union soldier rode up to our gate and said:"Who lives here?"
16858Am I putting too much stress upon the humanity side of national life?
16858An old woman suffering from rheumatism was asked by a friend:"Did you ever try electricity?"
16858And what was the fare to slumberland?
16858Another question was:"Who was Abraham Lincoln?"
16858Are they bankers or leading business men?
16858As they neared the poor fellow, one said to the other:"Did you ever see such an appeal for a drink?
16858Before I close would you like to have me point you to greatness?
16858Boys, are you poor?
16858Boys, can you stand the test?
16858Boys, have any of you done this within the past month, or six months?
16858Bring me the Bible and what do I find?
16858But how many are there who regret they ever put the bottle to their lips?
16858But suppose when the occasion comes, instead of inspiration one has indigestion, then what?
16858But what do you think?
16858But, who is the government?
16858Ca n''t we be just as earnest and eloquent in dealing out the truth?"
16858Call me a tramp, do you?
16858Can the man obey the doctor?
16858Can we save the cities of this republic?
16858Can you afford to wrap up your hopes of happiness in him and to him swear away your young life and love?
16858Cromwell said:"What good are they doing as silver apostles?
16858Did I say too much when I said the preacher would eat the turkey?
16858Did Solomon know what he was talking about when he gave it that detestable name?
16858Did he go to a better?
16858Did he settle it?
16858Did he settle it?
16858Did that settle it?
16858Did you sign it for him to sell to other fathers''sons and not yours?''
16858Do n''t you see you have put mud on my dress from your shoes?
16858Do n''t you think if alcoholic liquor had been intended as a beverage for mankind, the great Creator would have made a few springs of it somewhere?
16858Do our brothers stumble over strong drink?
16858Do you ask has the platform any blemishes?
16858Do you ask what we are to do with the Philippine Islands?
16858Do you know half the failures of life come from misfits of occupation?
16858Do you know how to do things?
16858Do you know what that means, a match struck in the dark?
16858Do you realize what it means when an American home is destroyed by drink?
16858Do you say that no such ignominious possibility hangs over any boy in this audience?
16858Do you say you can drink or let it alone?
16858Do you tell me money is the great question of this country, tariff the great question?
16858Does he let them stand?
16858Does it deceive and mock?
16858Does some young man in this audience say,"I can quit if I please?"
16858Does strong drink make our brother to offend?
16858Finally a very beautiful, blue- eyed, charming young lady said:"Since you do not dance, may I engage you for a promenade around the ball room?"
16858Go to the churches; are they crowded with men?
16858Go to the gambling halls; are they crowded with women?
16858Go to the jails and penitentiaries; are they full of women?
16858Go to the saloons; are they frequented by women?
16858Going to the house I said to my wife:"Where is Charlie?"
16858Going to the parlor I said:"What are you doing here?"
16858Going to the spot from whence came the voice and bending over the prostrate form of a dying soldier, the chaplain asked:"What can I do for you?"
16858Good for strength?
16858Have men all the intelligence?
16858Have men all the virtue?
16858Have mightier than we fallen through strong drink?
16858Have some of you had sorrows you could not harmonize with the logic of life?
16858Have you a trade?
16858Have you ever considered how it is baited to resist the forces of evil?
16858He answered:''No, father, but you signed that man''s petition to set up the saloon; whom did you expect him to sell to?
16858He asks,"Is not this my wife?"
16858He further said:"Will I ever drink again?
16858He immediately addressed the man who had the monkey:"Sir, is that gintleman in the cage paying his fare?
16858How does regulation regulate?
16858How would you have enjoyed being with the majority at the time of the flood?
16858I admit you can drink but are you sure you can let it alone?
16858I am frequently asked:"What do you recall as the best introduction you ever had?"
16858I am often asked:"Where do you find the most appreciative audiences?"
16858I answer by asking: What becomes of the men the saloons put out of business?
16858I called to mother; she came running, and taking the chicken from him said:"Do n''t you know to eat solid food will kill you?"
16858I said,"Judge, the question is, which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art?
16858I said:"This is a trying time with me, wo n''t you take a stroll along the beach and let me be alone today?"
16858I said:"Yes, but what are you going to do with it?"
16858I staggered to the colt, held the halter rein and when the tooth was removed my uncle, looking at me, said:"What''s the matter with you?
16858I''m sorry''bout the mud, you''ll''scuse me, wo n''t you, good lady?"
16858If I had life to live over would I do any better than I have done?
16858If it''s good for strength, why not give it to the ox, the mule and the horse?"
16858If we enter that young man''s home what do we find?
16858If you are going to California tomorrow, which way would you start, east or west?
16858If you can_ now_, are you sure you can two years hence?
16858If you merchants could take in eighty thousand dollars, could n''t you pay out six thousand and not get hurt?
16858Is alcoholic liquor as a beverage hurtful and wrong?
16858Is dat de chile I loved and laid wake wif so many nights and cooked so many sweet things for?
16858Is it a counterfeit business?
16858Is it any wonder the saloons hide behind green blinds or stained glass windows?
16858Is our country in danger?"
16858Is that true?
16858Is the drinker weak?
16858Is wine a mocker?
16858Is you got a knife?
16858Is you got a little girl like me?"
16858Judge, will you please let me kiss my little sister before you take her from me?"
16858Just then my uncle called:"George, where are you?"
16858Mr. Spurgeon called lecturing an art, and why not?
16858My answer is: how much more would they drink if we had not done what has been done?
16858My brother, what''s that in thy hand?
16858My reply was:"Are minorities always wrong or hopeless?
16858Nearing the old man he said:"Uncle, would you loan me three cents to cross the ferry?"
16858Now and then I am asked:"What will become of the men who are engaged in the liquor business if the country goes dry?
16858Now if public sentiment has made such a mistake in the allotment of virtues, why may it not have made a greater mistake in the allotment of spheres?
16858On leaving the platform an old miner said:"How do you stand on the money question?
16858On one occasion the question for debate was:"Which is the more attractive, the works of nature or the works of art?"
16858On our way to the hotel I said:"Were you not frightened when we started down that mountain?"
16858One night when he was sleeping drunk in one room, his old mother in another said:"Oh God, is my cup of sorrow not yet full?"
16858One who had heard me many times said:"Why do you do better at Ocean Grove than anywhere else I hear you?"
16858Seated one day in front of a hotel in London, a bootblack halted before him and said:"Mister, will you have a shine?"
16858Seeing the Yankee farmer at the front gate she rode up, dismounted and said:"Sir, will you please tell me, is this the way to Wareham?"
16858Several years ago my brother said to me:"Are you going West soon, as far as Kansas City?"
16858She had a baby in her arms, and I said:''Madam, what are you crying about?''
16858She said:"Is n''t this a grand sight?"
16858Some years ago when out on a little coast ride for pleasure,( if that''s what you call it) I said to the captain:"How long till we reach the shore?"
16858Students of history are asking,"Will the fate of Rome be repeated in the history of this republic?"
16858The Judge said:"Pat, how many times have you been before this court?"
16858The boy went but soon returned with his rosy cheeks cleansed, saying:"Sir, how do you like the job?"
16858The buyer looked the horse over and said:"Young man, what is your price?"
16858The drunkard with help arose and said:"Where am I?
16858The friend asked:"What does she do with so much money?"
16858The great jurist hailed the boy, saying,"Boy, have you a string?"
16858The judge rapped for order in the court and repeated the question,"Are you guilty or innocent of the charge?"
16858The lad had never seen a monkey and as they played their pranks about the cage he said:"Father, did God make monkeys?"
16858The little six- year old boy of the home said:"Mother, did you say little brother came from heaven?"
16858The man sinking into a chair said:''O God, am I never to see my home again?''"
16858The old woman broke the silence, saying:"Is dat my chile?
16858The superintendent said:"Will you help me lift this on to the track?"
16858The teacher of his class said to him:"James, who was the strongest man of whom we have any account?"
16858The three entered the saloon, the glasses were filled and the tramp took his and draining it, said:"Young men, I''m very thirsty, may I have another?"
16858They say to me:"What steps did you take?"
16858To a woman who could speak English I said:"How do you like this country?"
16858To say,"Of all my father''s family I love myself the best, If Providence takes care of me, who cares what takes the rest?"
16858Turning to the guide he said:"Who are these?"
16858Was n''t I in good condition for the trip?
16858Was strong drink recommended as a stimulant?
16858Was there ever a word of more weight in its application?
16858What about intelligence?
16858What about this inhuman denial of the right to order meat, drink, clothing and home life?
16858What are the consequences?
16858What are these little traits in human character?
16858What are you going to do about it?"
16858What becomes of their families?
16858What does this fellowship imply?
16858What makes the drunkard?
16858What makes the saloon?
16858What management would allow a horse to be thus handicapped?
16858What may the young before me expect in the next fifty years?
16858What supplies the drink?
16858What was done to revive him and renew his strength?
16858What was it?
16858What will become of their families?"
16858What would have become of the ship?
16858What''s the matter?"
16858When I answered, he asked:"Can your mother get supper for fourteen soldiers in thirty minutes?"
16858When I asked;"What''s your trouble?"
16858When brought before the court an austere judge said:"Who claims this child?"
16858When he said:"Going down the mountain to where we came from,"I said,"What will we hold to?"
16858When the father replied:"Yes,"the boy said:"Well, do n''t you guess God laughed when he made the first monkey?"
16858When they admitted they had, I said to my son:''Did I ever set such an example for you to follow?''
16858When they tired of the confinement, the older boy said:"Mother, can we go out for a walk?"
16858Where is the man who would be so inconsiderate as to thus hinder a horse?
16858Which is the safer, moderation or total- abstinence?
16858While taking my supper my hostess said:"Would you know smallpox if you were to see the symptoms?"
16858Who are the license voters?
16858Who is my neighbor?
16858Who makes the law?
16858Who makes the legislator?
16858Who would have thought an Emperor of Germany would ever"go back"on beer?
16858Whom did Daniel Webster leave his seat in the Senate that he might hear his eloquence?
16858Why do you ask that?"
16858Why is this?
16858Why was it better?
16858Why will he eat when he knows it means death?
16858Will he eat it?
16858Wo n''t you take her now?"
16858Young man, start wrong and end right?
16858Young man, which way are you going?
16858Young man, will you tamper and trifle with strong drink?
16858Young men, did Luke Howard go to a better hotel?
16858Young men, why was it a tree that had withstood the storms of ages, should, before such a little gust of wind bow its head and die?
16858Young people, do you know you live in a testing world, a world in which all buds and blossoms are tested?
16858who runs this house?"
16960Are we rebels?
16960Do you think it right,asked Grenville,"that America should be protected by this country and pay no part of the expenses?"
16960Does Mr. Wiberd preach against oppression?
16960Is not America already independent?
16960Must I shoot a simple- minded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of the wily agitator who induces him to desert?
16960Why not then declare it?
16960( 2) Shall the government be founded on states equal in power as under the Articles or on the broader and deeper foundation of population?
16960( 3) What direct share shall the people have in the election of national officers?
16960( 4) What shall be the qualifications for the suffrage?
16960( 5) How shall the conflicting interests of the commercial and the planting states be balanced so as to safeguard the essential rights of each?
16960( 6) What shall be the form of the new government?
16960( 7) What powers shall be conferred on it?
16960( 8) How shall the state legislatures be restrained from their attacks on property rights such as the issuance of paper money?
16960( 9) Shall the approval of all the states be necessary, as under the Articles, for the adoption and amendment of the Constitution?
169605. Who were some of the leading men in the convention?
169605. Who were the early settlers in the West?
169608. Who were among the early friends of Western development?
16960= How the War Was Won.=--Then how did the American army win the war?
16960= Questions= 1. Who were some of the critics of abuses in American life?
16960= Questions= 1. Who were the leaders in the first administration under the Constitution?
16960A sarcastic writer, while sneering at the idea of an American union, once remarked of colonial trade:"What sort of dish will you make?
16960Aided by funds from Northern friends, he gathered a small band of his followers around him, saying to them:"If God be for us, who can be against us?"
16960Amid what circumstances was the Monroe Doctrine applied in Cleveland''s administration?
16960Are any things owned and used in common in your community?
16960Are the people in cities more or less independent than the farmers?
16960Are they not to be violated but with His wrath?
16960Attacked?
16960By what body was it adopted?
16960By what devices was democracy limited in the first days of our Republic?
16960Can there be a policy of isolation for America?
16960Can you give any illustrations of the way that war promotes nationalism?
16960Could it succeed or was it destined to break down and be supplanted by a monarchy?
16960Did the West rapidly become like the older sections of the country?
16960Did the farmers need credit?
16960Did the traffic slacken because the food shipped was not of the best quality?
16960Did they compare in importance with British towns of the same period?
16960Do politicians sow dissensions in the army and among civilians?
16960Do you know of any other societies to compare with the Ku Klux Klan?
16960Do you think the English legislation was beneficial or injurious to the colonies?
16960Does Seward, the Secretary of State, propose harsh and caustic measures likely to draw England''s sword into the scale?
16960Does a New York newspaper call him an ignorant Western boor?
16960Has it changed in recent times?
16960Have we not witnessed it on this floor, sir?
16960How did Elihu Root define"invisible government"?
16960How did Germany finally drive the United States into war?
16960How did Mexico at first encourage American immigration?
16960How did diversity of opinion work for toleration?
16960How did he finally destroy it?
16960How did industrial conditions increase unrest?
16960How did it come into contact with the American Federation?
16960How did it happen that the farmers led in regulating railway rates?
16960How did reform movements draw women into public affairs and what were the chief results?
16960How did the Dred Scott decision become a political issue?
16960How did the West come to play a rôle in the Revolution?
16960How did the World War affect the presidential campaign of 1916?
16960How did the World War break out in Europe?
16960How did the colonial assemblies help to create an independent American spirit, in spite of a restricted suffrage?
16960How did the development of the West affect the East?
16960How did the federal government aid in western agriculture?
16960How did the powers conferred upon the federal government help cure the defects of the Articles of Confederation?
16960How did the state of English finances affect English policy?
16960How did the"Reign of Terror"change American opinion?
16960How did they come?
16960How did they travel?
16960How do you account for the rise and growth of the trusts?
16960How do you account for the triumph of Harrison in 1840?
16960How does modern reform involve government action?
16960How does money capital contribute to prosperity?
16960How does organized labor become involved with outside forces?
16960How far back in our history does the labor movement extend?
16960How far had settlement been carried?
16960How far had the western frontier advanced by 1776?
16960How has it fared in recent years?
16960How is the fluctuating state of public opinion reflected in the elections from 1880 to 1896?
16960How may leisure be secured?
16960How shall it be amended in the future?
16960How shall the Constitution be ratified?
16960How was interstate commerce mainly carried on?
16960How was settlement promoted after 1865?
16960How was the Confederacy financed?
16960How was the Oregon boundary dispute finally settled?
16960How was the Revolution financed?
16960How was the Spanish War viewed in England?
16960How were the terms of peace formulated?
16960How were the"Force bills"overcome?
16960How would you define"nationalism"?
16960How, therefore, could the Confederacy hope to sustain itself against such a combination of men, money, and materials as the North could marshal?
16960I ask whether as a people we can stand forth in the sight of God, in the sight of nations, and adopt this atrocious policy?
16960I now ask whether as a people we are prepared to seize on a neighboring territory for the end of extending slavery?
16960If I am not an American who ever was?...
16960In the Caribbean?
16960In the dark hour of the Revolution,"what held the patriot forces together?"
16960In the four quarters of the globe who reads an American book?
16960In what manner was the rest of the western region governed?
16960In what respects were the planting and commercial states opposed?
16960In what sections did industry flourish before the Civil War?
16960In what way did the North derive advantages from slavery?
16960In what way did the provisions for ratifying and amending the Constitution depart from the old system?
16960In what way was the South economically dependent upon the North?
16960In what ways did Southern agriculture tend to become like that of the North?
16960Is a mother begging for the life of a son sentenced to be shot as a deserter?
16960Is it a complaint from a citizen, deprived, as he believes, of his civil liberties unjustly or in violation of the Constitution?
16960Is it a matter of compromise with the South, so often proposed by men on both sides sick of carnage?
16960Is it a question of securing votes to ratify the thirteenth amendment abolishing slavery?
16960Is it high strategy of war, a question of the general best fitted to win Gettysburg-- Hooker, Sedgwick, or Meade?
16960Is it in the field of diplomacy?
16960Is it or is it not a result of democracy?
16960Is land in your community parceled out into small farms?
16960On national union?
16960On the Continent?
16960On what foundations did Southern hopes rest?
16960On what grounds did Calhoun defend slavery?
16960On what grounds were the limitations defended?
16960On what theory is it justified?
16960Or goes to an American play?
16960Or looks at an American picture or statue?"
16960Ship building?
16960Speaking of his native state, New York, he said:"What is the government of this state?
16960The South?
16960The government of the Constitution?
16960The only remaining question of importance, to use the popular phrase,--"Does the Constitution follow the flag?"
16960The outcome for the United States?
16960These general principles left undetermined two important matters:"What is an effective blockade?"
16960To national politics?
16960To place the vicious vagrant, the wandering Arabs, the Tartar hordes of our large cities on the level with the virtuous and good man?"
16960To the public?
16960Toward labor?
16960Was it not declared that governments derive their just power from the consent of the governed?
16960Was it not said that all men are created equal?
16960Was the output of food for his freight cars limited by bad drainage on the farms?
16960Was there a unified American opinion on American expansion?
16960Was this expansion a departure from our traditions?
16960Were farmers hampered in hauling their goods to his trains by bad roads?
16960Were the Jeffersonians able to apply their theories?
16960What American rights were assailed in the submarine campaign?
16960What action by President Polk precipitated war?
16960What agencies made colonization possible?
16960What are the elements of direct government?
16960What are the striking features of the new economic age?
16960What colonial industry was mainly developed by women?
16960What compromises were reached?
16960What courses were open to freedmen in 1865?
16960What determines the topics that appear in written history?
16960What did they mean?
16960What economic peculiarities did it retain or develop?
16960What events led to foreign intervention in China?
16960What forces favored the heavy importation of slaves?
16960What had been the career of Andrew Jackson before 1829?
16960What had been their previous training?
16960What has it been during the forty years of my acquaintance with it?
16960What illustrations can you give showing the influence of war in American political campaigns?
16960What international complications were involved in the Panama Canal problem?
16960What is Cuba''s relation to the United States?
16960What is history?
16960What is meant by the question:"Does the Constitution follow the flag?"
16960What is meant by the sea power?
16960What is meant by the"joint occupation"of Oregon?
16960What is meant by the"melting pot"?
16960What is the explanation of the extraordinary industrial progress of America?
16960What is the strategic importance of the Caribbean to the United States?
16960What measures were taken to restrain criticism of the government?
16960What nationalities were represented among the early colonists?
16960What number of states shall be necessary to put it into effect?
16960What part did Lincoln play in all phases of the war?
16960What part did women play in the intellectual movement that preceded the American Revolution?
16960What particular criticisms were advanced?
16960What party had used the title before?
16960What political and economic reforms did labor demand?
16960What preparations were necessary to settlement?
16960What principles do you think should govern the granting of amnesty?
16960What problems arise in connection with the assimilation of the alien to American life?
16960What produced the revolution in Texas?
16960What proof have we that the political parties were not clearly divided over issues between 1865 and 1896?
16960What relation did the opening of the great grain areas of the West bear to the growth of America''s commercial and financial power?
16960What rights did Congress attempt to confer upon the former slaves?
16960What routes did they take?
16960What sections of the country have been industrialized?
16960What signs pointed to a complete Democratic triumph in 1852?
16960What solution did Burke offer?
16960What special conditions favored a fall in silver between 1870 and 1896?
16960What step was taken to appease the opposition?
16960What steps were taken in colonial policies?
16960What topics are considered under"military affairs"?
16960What was Jefferson''s view?
16960What was Roosevelt''s progressive program?
16960What was Roosevelt''s theory of our Constitution?
16960What was its immediate effect?
16960What was the Burke- Paine controversy?
16960What was the United States to do?
16960What was the Wilson policy toward trusts?
16960What was the condition of the planters as compared with that of the Northern manufacturers?
16960What was the effect of abolition agitation?
16960What was the effect of the Revolution on colonial governments?
16960What was the leading feature of Jefferson''s political theory?
16960What was the nature of the conflict over ratification?
16960What was the nature of the opposition in England to the war?
16960What was the non- importation agreement?
16960What was the outcome as far as Cuba was concerned?
16960What was the outcome of the Alien and Sedition Acts?
16960What was the outcome of the final clash with the French?
16960What was the outcome?
16960What was the relation of the Federation to the extreme radicals?
16960What was the situation before 1860?
16960What was the theory of the relation of government to business in this period?
16960What were American policies with regard to each of those countries?
16960What were some of the early writings about women?
16960What were some of the points brought out in the Lincoln- Douglas debates?
16960What were the centers for iron working?
16960What were the important results of the"peaceful"French Revolution( 1789- 92)?
16960What were the leading measures adopted by the Republicans after their victory in 1896?
16960What were the leading towns?
16960What were the main planks in the Republican platform?
16960What were the peculiar features of the Confederate constitution?
16960What were the social results?
16960What were the startling events between 1850 and 1860?
16960What were the striking physical features of the West?
16960Who ever knew the tariff men to divide on any question affecting their confederated interests?...
16960Who led in it?
16960Who were some of the European writers on American affairs?
16960Why are labor and immigration closely related?
16960Why did anti- slavery sentiment practically disappear in the South?
16960Why did common tillage fail in colonial times?
16960Why did efforts at conciliation fail?
16960Why did efforts at reform by the Congress come to naught?
16960Why did the East and the South seek closer ties with the West?
16960Why did the United States become involved with England rather than with France?
16960Why did they come?
16960Why do n''t you vote a homestead for yourself?
16960Why is a fall in prices a loss to farmers and a gain to holders of fixed investments?
16960Why is a"free press"such an important thing to American democracy?
16960Why is diplomacy important in war?
16960Why is leisure necessary for the production of art and literature?
16960Why is the Declaration of Independence an"immortal"document?
16960Why is the public service of increasing importance?
16960Why is the year 1848 an important year in the woman movement?
16960Why was Europe especially interested in America at this period?
16960Why was Jackson opposed to the bank?
16960Why was admission to the union so eagerly sought?
16960Why was it difficult, if not impossible, to keep gold and silver at a parity?
16960Why was it impossible to establish and maintain a uniform policy in dealing with the Indians?
16960Why was it impossible to keep the slavery issue out of national politics?
16960Why was it rejected?
16960Why was it revolutionary in character?
16960Why was it very important both to the Americans and to the English?
16960Why was there a struggle for educational opportunities?
16960Why were capital and leadership so very important in early colonization?
16960Why were conservative men disturbed in the early nineties?
16960Why were individuals unable to go alone to America in the beginning?
16960Why were the Republicans especially strong immediately after the Civil War?
16960Why were women involved in the reform movements of the new century?
16960Why?
16960Why?
16960With what measures did Great Britain retaliate?
16960_ Americans in California._--Why stop at Santa Fé?
16960and"What is contraband of war?"
19745''Your grandfather, then?'' 19745 And where upon God''s footstool can domain more magnificent than this good county be found; one better adapted to the habitation of civilized man?
19745Approaching the heroic youth, as he was wringing the water from his own garments, I inquired,''Your father, is he?''
19745Did you get snake- bit?
19745Do n''t you know_ what will become of you,_ Ranze, if you swear to a lie?
19745Do you mean Senator William B. Giles of Virginia?
19745Edwin Booth has stepped from the stage of living men, and when in the tide of time will such a Hamlet again appear? 19745 Have you ever taught geography and English grammar?"
19745Is it possible?
19745Is it too much to say of this man that among the world''s benefactors a greater than he hath not appeared? 19745 Know you,"said I,"did n''t we go to school together to Mr. Caskie right here at Blue Water, when we were boys?"
19745Know you?
19745Known General Jackson,she replied,"known General Jackson?"
19745May we not believe that here will be realized in full fruition the fond hopes of those who have given it being? 19745 Mr. Stevenson, who are you fur fur President?"
19745My dear sir,exclaimed the regular candidate, grasping the interrogator warmly by the hand,"how are you, and how is the old lady?"
19745Of what church are you a minister?
19745Oh, you preach the tenets and doctrines of the Presbyterian Church, do you?
19745Suddenly he gave a pitiful yell, at which the school- master demanded:''What is the matter with you now?''
19745Three hundred years, three hundred years,slowly murmured the Colonel in pathetic tone,"is it possible that is has been so long?
19745Uncle Ephraim,said Vance with great solemnity,"do you believe in the doctrine of_ election?
19745Uncle Ephraim,said Vance,"do you think I have been_ elected?
19745Was it Richelieu who said,''Take away the sword; States can be saved without it''? 19745 Well, do n''t you know that_ that_ is n''t the Gospel?
19745What church do you belong to, Uncle Ephraim?
19745What is the further pleasure of the meeting?
19745What the hell is the reason I ca n''t?
19745What will you have, John?
19745What would have been the fate of the Church if the early Christians had had as little faith as many of our Christians now have? 19745 What?"
19745Who that ever saw Forrest''sitting as if in judgment upon kings''could forget that superb presence? 19745 Who,_ you?
19745Why, Adlai, do you know me?
19745Would you let a man die right here on your streets, for lack of a drink?
19745Yas, of course, I like to forgot all about that; who is running for the Legislature?
19745Yes, yes,she said,"did you know him?"
19745You and my father were near neighbors for years; how could I help knowing you?
19745You preach,continued His Honor in apparent amazement,"the doctrine of infant baptism, and of the final perseverance of the saints, do you?"
19745You preach,continued his Honor, with warmth well suited to the subject- matter,"that there is no hell?"
19745_ What in word- painting can exceed the following from an address by Robert G. Ingersoll? 19745 _ When, in the tide of time, will the House of Representatives witness the like of"Sunset"Cox?
19745_Do you know me, boy?"
19745A moment later, and from the floor and gallery many voices blended in the familiar refrain,"Do n''t you remember sweet Alice Ben Bolt?"
19745Addressing himself now to the comparatively youthful occupant of the lately vacated seat, His Honor inquired:"What is_ your_ church, sir?"
19745Advancing a step, and with apparent effort suppressing her emotion, she slowly articulated_"What did you say, Doctor?
19745After a moment''s pause, he continued,"By the way, did you ever hear the expression''before the Wah''?"
19745Am I correct?"
19745And what time more fitting can ever come in which to speak of those who have gone before,--of the early settlers of this good county?
19745As the officer was making an ineffectual attempt to get the unfortunate statesman upon his feet, he inquired:"Who are you?"
19745Assuring him that I never forgot my old friends, I inquired,"John, where is your brother Bill?"
19745At length, to relieve the strain of the situation, if possible, the writer inquired,"What was your remark, Doctor John?"
19745Baptist?
19745But is it possible that you are a sister- in- law of Governor Giles?"
19745But who can estimate, what seer can foretell, the evils that may result to us and our children from this judgment?
19745By the way, Mr. Sniffle, do you understand the nature of an oath?"
19745Complimented upon the manner in which he played Lear, he angrily exclaimed:''Played Lear, played Lear?
19745During my interview with Mrs. Eaton I said to her,"Madam, you must have known General Jackson when he was President?"
19745During the sermon, a desperado demanded:"Mr. Denton, where is the liquor you promised?"
19745Fourth, are you in favor of acquiring additional territory in disregard of how such acquisition may affect the nation on the slavery question?"
19745He said, when the startling words,"Then, Mr. President, where shall I go?"
19745How did they show the magnanimity that General Fry talks so much about?
19745How is that excellent old lady?"
19745How shall we accomplish it?
19745Humbly addressing a citizen who was just coming out with his copy of the_ Weekly Tribune_ in hand, he inquired,"Where can I get a drink?"
19745I would like Colonel Fellows to explain how it was that he was kept in a place of safety, while I was always at the front?"
19745I would like to know what kind of a man General Jackson really was?"
19745If so, what change might not have been wrought in the trend of history?
19745Immediately approaching my early classmate I took him by the hand and said,"How are you, John?"
19745In reply to the inquiry,"Are you satisfied, sir?"
19745In the words of another:"What blight and anguish met his agonized eyes, whose lips may tell?
19745Instantly Mr. Cox exclaimed:"Insatiate Archer, would not one suffice?"
19745Lincoln?"
19745May we not confidently abide in the hope that brighter days are in waiting for the beautiful island and her gallant people?
19745Meeting the Colonel the morning after the adjournment of the convention I inquired,"Are you happy?"
19745Methodist?
19745Now, sir, did he thereby make a_ new_ Hezekiah,_ or did he leave him just the same old Hezekiah?
19745O gentlemen, what might not this poor boy have been, and what might not poor Jimtown have been, with all these advantages?"
19745ONE QUESTION TOO MANY What lawyer has not, at some time, in the trial of a case asked just_ one question_ too many?
19745Oh, you preach the doctrine of the Methodist Church, do you?--infant baptism, and falling from grace?"
19745Recovering himself, he at length inquired:"You preach the doctrine of universal salvation, do you?"
19745Remembering that--"Two stars keep not Their motion in one sphere,"might not the removal of one have healed the widening breach in the Whig party?
19745Soon after his conversion, the preacher, taking him affectionately by the hand, inquired:"My young friend, are you very happy?"
19745Speak out, my friends, would you exchange it for the demon''s drink, alcohol?"
19745Sumner and Wilson and Stevens are constantly urging me, but I do n''t think it best now; do_ you_ think so, Henderson?"
19745The awful question,"If a man die shall he live again?"
19745The far more serious question now confronting was, For whom had the disputed States of Florida and Louisiana cast their votes?
19745The first inquiry from Vance as, drenched with rain, I entered his abode and approached a blazing fire, was,"Are you_ dry?
19745The law allows you time for preparation, Mr. Green; and so the court wants to know what time it would suit you to be hung?"
19745The plea''Am I my brother''s keeper?''
19745The question then arises, What rights and privileges are consistent with the public good?
19745The thought uppermost in his soul as he shook hands all around and accepted the proffered hospitality was,"What denomination is this?
19745Then a reverie into which the Doctor had fallen was at length disturbed by my inquiry,"What about Armstrong?"
19745Then, Mr. President,_ where shall I go?
19745Then, before making the fatal entry, suddenly turning to the prisoner, he demanded:"How long have you been preaching the Gospel?"
19745Three pistol shots were exchanged without effect, at the end of each the second of Clinton demanding of Swartout,"Are you satisfied, sir?"
19745Thus advised, I was ready for trial, and warmly grasping the hand extended me, I earnestly inquired,"Uncle Jake,_ how are you?
19745To the inquiry,"Which of the participants was the victor?"
19745To which proposition Mr. Douglas at once demanded,"What party does Mr. Lincoln represent?"
19745Upon what are you to try them?
19745Well, after he was in prison and as helpless as a child, what did they do with him?
19745Well, what is my name?"
19745What are you to try?
19745What he might next have said, whose lips can tell?
19745What matters it whether he shares in the shouts of triumph?
19745What might have been its effect upon the grand Internal Improvement Scheme-- the darling project of Henry Clay?
19745What page in our history tells of deeds so fraught with blessings to the generations of men as the discovery of America?
19745What part of the habitable globe has not heard of the wonders of his life?
19745What picture could be more vivid than this?
19745What schoolboy is not familiar with the story of gallant Phil Sheridan and"Winchester twenty miles away?"
19745When, in any age, or in any country, has there been gathered, within so small compass, so much of human greatness?
19745Who can ever forget the undying affection of David and Jonathan, of Damon and Pythias,_ of Scylla and Charybdis?
19745Who does not know or has not heard of"Private John Allen,"the sometime member of Congress from Mississippi?
19745With arm about my neck, he earnestly inquired:"Adlai, I came twenty miles to hear you speak; do n''t you remember me?"
19745Witness, do you undertake, under the solemn sanction of an oath, to say that my son Josiah was_ engaged_ in the game?
19745Wo n''t you take some of my hand bills to distribute?''"
19745Yes, this same magnanimous party that General Fry has been telling you about, what did they do with poor old Jeff Davis after he was captured?
19745You understand it that way, Mr. Green, do n''t you?"
19745_ What?
19745and how might the destiny of the"Lone Star,"the Republic of Texas, have been changed?
19745or"Which brings the greatest happiness to mankind, pursuit or possession?"
19745what brilliant broken plans, what bitter rending of sweet household ties, what sundering of strong manhood''s friendships?"
19745what upon the determination of the Oregon Boundary Question-- whether by diplomacy or war?
19745who shall deliver me from the body of this death?''
22461Are laws of this kind passed merely to excite odium and remain a dead letter?
22461But what did you mean to take?
22461Can this be Lot''s wife?
22461Then you mean that we shall construe it our own way?
22461What are the eastern bounds of Louisiana?
22461What assurance can you give that the States will agree to a treaty?
22461What do we get?
22461What have you to give us as reciprocity for the benefit of going to our islands?
22461What have you to give us in exchange for this and that?
22461What is independence?
22461What is your answer?
22461What powers?
22461What, then,he asked,"is the professed result?
22461''Pray, sir,''I rejoined,''what was that?''
22461A third matter of policy had yet to be determined: what powers had Congress over the new territory?
22461Adams was defeated, to be sure, but was Thomas Jefferson elected?
22461After they had practiced thrift and met their obligations, should they, forsooth, now aid their less provident sisters?
22461And for all these concessions what had been gained?
22461At the face value of the paper, or at the price for which it had been purchased?
22461But what if a State passed a law violating the obligation of contracts?
22461But what were the bounds of Louisiana?
22461Could the United States, then, recognize the colonies of Spain as independent republics without emerging from its traditional isolation?
22461If France was bent on possessing and holding Louisiana, might she not make concessions for the sake of retaining the friendship of the United States?
22461If such prosperity could follow in the wake of war, what commercial gains might not be expected in the piping times of peace?
22461Is he capable?
22461Is he faithful to the Constitution?
22461Might not a treaty be secured which would open up the British West India trade?
22461Might not the courts adjudge that the decrees had not been repealed_ pro forma_?
22461Might not votes for one project be traded for the other?
22461Should the capital be located on the Potomac, as Maryland and the Southern States wished, or somewhere in Pennsylvania?
22461The promise to evacuate the Western posts?
22461The vital question was: how were the present holders to be paid?
22461Upon whom would his mantle fall?
22461Upon whom would his mantle fall?
22461Was not representative government one of these privileges?
22461What do we give?
22461What is that Union?...
22461What was the measure which was accepted almost without discussion on"the high responsibility"of the President?
22461Who, besides a Tory, could have foreseen, or a Briton, predicted them?"
22461Why tinker with a constitution which had hardly been tried?
22461Would the Virginia representatives abandon their opposition to assumption for the sake of locating the capital on the banks of the Potomac?
22100And he said, Hagar, Sarai''s maid, whence comest thou? 22100 One was afraid and the other dare not"--but which?
22100Our political problem now is,''Can we as a nation continue together_ permanently_--forever-- half slave, and half free''? 22100 ( What law? 22100 And when they had called him unto David, the King said unto him, Art thou Ziba? 22100 Are you for it? 22100 Art thou called being a servant? 22100 But how can we attain it? 22100 But was it not in the divine plan that slavery in the Republic should come to a violent end? 22100 But where were his staff officers, who should furnish eyes and ears for their General? 22100 Could the Sixth Corps, could the cavalry, or could Sheridan have been spared from the battle? 22100 Could you not break him?_"A. 22100 Dissolution? 22100 Do men dream of Lot and Abraham parting, one to the east and the other to the west, peacefully, because their servants strive? 22100 Grant was not perfection as a soldier at Shiloh, but who else would or could have done so well? 22100 Had Kansas even become slave, what then? 22100 He seemed surprised to see me, and asked sharply,What are_ you_ doing here?"
22100How shall it be?
22100How was the news of the failure to reinforce Sumter, and of its being fired on and taken possession of by a rebellious people, received in the North?
22100I am against this, Are you for it?
22100I awaited his approach, and on his arrival accosted him with the inquiry,"What is the matter, General?"
22100If they could hold out a few days, could you help them?
22100In other respects, how dissimilar?
22100In the antithesis of this speech he asked and answered:"How can the Union be saved?
22100Is there, has there ever been, any question that by the laws of war, property, both of enemies and friends, may be taken when needed?"
22100Mr. President, do you remember the last chapter in that history?
22100Now that California and New Mexico were United States territory, how was it to be devoted to slavery to reward the friends of its acquisition?
22100One of the runaway slaves,"Joe,"a handsome mulatto,_ borrowed_(?)
22100That States will divide from States and boundary lines will be marked by compass and chain?
22100The law of the place whence it came, or the law of the place to which it was taken?
22100Then turning to me, he said,''General Mahone, I have no other troops, will you take your division to Sailor''s Creek?''
22100They were evidently taken by surprise, and retired in the utmost confusion[?].
22100We are''shivering in the wind,''are we, sir, over your Cuba question?
22100What can I do with you?"
22100What great soldier ever before took an army and moved it into battle against a formidable adversary in so short a time?
22100What"partisan ruling"of mine was not heartily approved by my party, or did not command at least the respect of the Democrats?
22100Where can I get it?
22100Where is Ewell?
22100Who shall make it?
22100Who would not, with their homes as open graveyards strewn with the dead of their families, etc.?
22100Why should the justices of the Supreme Court be free from its influence?
22100Will you please keep those people back?''
22100You will say, Why do not the people grow them?
22100_ Ought American Slavery to be Perpetuated?_( Brownlow and Pryne debate), p. 78, etc.
22100_ This is dissolution!_ If such, Sir, is_ dissolution_ seen in a glass darkly, how terrible will it be face to face?
22100has the army dissolved?''
22100why, in the name of God, should anybody prevent it?"
18675And here is my son; in the spring of life; on adventures so strange; in a universe so vast and so mysterious; what will be his destiny? 18675 And what will the future be?"
18675But how can you manage the men?
18675But this is Mr. Barker''s, is it not?
18675Can she select the paper containing her name?
18675Do you really think,said I,"that the Prophet is speaking, in those words, of men generally?"
18675Do you think that the Prophet refers in that passage to man''s natural proneness to evil?
18675Does Mr. Barker live here?
18675Is her name among those on the table?
18675Is that all?
18675Then is the law of God as various as men''s natural tendencies? 18675 Then why did you sell me them?"
18675What can he refer to else?
18675What else is he speaking of?
18675When will vain words have an end?
18675You will be dead,said he,"in twelve months, if you persist in your miserable course, and what will become of your wife and children?
18675''And do you laugh at God''s holy word?''
18675''Can there be any man so foolish as not to accept the mercy of her Majesty?''
18675''Do you know any one hereabouts?''
18675''What are_ you_ doing here to- night?''
18675''What if many of the numbers given in Exodus should, as Bishop Colenso asserts, be inaccurate?
18675''What is his name?''
18675''What is his name?''
18675''Where shall I take you?''
18675A friend whom I encountered on my way home, said,"What is the matter with you?
18675A man once asked me,''Which is the best English Grammar?''
18675Ah, why did I no sooner go To Thee, the only ease in pain?
18675Ah, why did I so late Thee know, Thee, lovelier than the sons of men?
18675Am I not laboring under some monster delusion?
18675Among the lectures which I delivered in my transition state was one in answer to the question;"What do you offer as a substitute for the Bible?
18675And can you, my young friends, dream of safety with facts like these in view?
18675And does the eagle obey the law of God in pouncing on the dove, and the dove in seeking to evade its talons?
18675And how happened it that, after having wandered so far away, I was permitted to return to my present happy position?
18675And if a man should ask me,''Which is the best translation of the Bible?''
18675And if might be right, why murmur at anything that is?
18675And if you tolerate fictions at all in Christianity, where will you stop?
18675And is not their light as brilliant as is desirable?
18675And the question arises, How happened this?
18675And were not Channing and Parker, the two great lights of Unitarianism in America, democrats?
18675And were not Price and Priestley democrats?
18675And were we not taught that the educational system of America was the result of its democratic form of Government?
18675And what account can you give of the people you are leading to untimely death by your example?"
18675And what can I wish for more?
18675And what can dead men do?
18675And what can we do better than chime in with the anthem of His worshippers?
18675And what shall we say of the Book of Revelation?
18675And what will be the destiny of the dear ones we have left behind?"
18675And where are the infallible interpreters?
18675And why is thy countenance fallen?
18675And why may not other faithful servants use the same plea?
18675And why should I say a thing twice over when saying it once would do as well, and even better?
18675And, first, what is Christ as presented in the Gospels?
18675Are not mankind right in hating and dreading infidelity, and in loving and honoring religion?
18675Are they not_ dead_?
18675Are you ill?
18675At length a thought struck him, and he said,"Who is John Myers going to vote for?"
18675At length he said,"Do you think your father would accept a copy of my works?"
18675Barker?''
18675Barker?''
18675Barker?''
18675Barker?''
18675Barker?''
18675But I asked,"_ Is_ infidelity true and good, and religion false and mischievous?
18675But do I therefore question the divine inspiration of the Bible which uses that expression?
18675But how will you prove that children_ ought_ to be reared?
18675But if I could not carry out my principle of trusting to mere reasoning to its full extent, why did I act on it at all?
18675But is a mountain either better or more beautiful for being covered with a verdant mantle from the top to the bottom?
18675But look on the other side?
18675But suppose the churches should treat a convert from infidelity as the church at Jerusalem treated Paul, what should he do?
18675But the question of questions is, Is the doctrine true?
18675But we too have a right to ask, Do they not give us light enough?
18675But what can be sadder than to be without God, and without hope, in a world like this?
18675But what good or sensible man would wish for the praise of such creatures as those?
18675But what is to be done on such occasions?
18675Can this be pleasing to God?
18675Can you give us anything better?"
18675Can you prove that it will not be a torment to her,--that it will not bring her to want, and shame, and an untimely death?
18675Can you show that the mother will confer any advantage on her child, or secure any advantage to herself, or any one else, by rearing it?
18675Can_ man_ purify himself as God is pure, in an instant?
18675Did you ever ask yourselves how these pebbles came to be so round and smooth?
18675Do they not answer the ends for which they were made, and are not those ends the most important and desirable imaginable?
18675Does God make men wicked, or cause them to sin?
18675Does any man suppose that the stars were set in the expanse of heaven absolutely that men might know what time of the year it was?
18675Does she run and kick the poor little creature, and say,"You naughty, dirty tike, if ever you try to walk again, I will throw you into the gutter?"
18675Does the murderer, whose tendency is to kill, obey the law of God, as well as the victim who struggles to escape his doom?
18675Does the writer speak as a man moved by the Holy Spirit?
18675Dr. Conquest''s?
18675For if the trumpet give an uncertain sound, who shall prepare himself to the battle?
18675Has it guided you to all truth and duty?
18675Have I not been imposed upon by a vicious logic?
18675He instantly became red in the face, and said,"Do you mean to deny the natural depravity of man?"
18675Hence the words of God in His address to Cain,''Why art thou wroth?
18675How came I to be the subject of this bad feeling?
18675How came I to wander into doubt and unbelief?
18675How can anything seem mysterious or untrue to them, that is not mysterious or untrue in its very nature?
18675How in the world did he come to be a preacher?
18675How is it then?
18675How is this difficulty to be met?
18675How_ can_ man have a right to take away the life of an animal?
18675I asked,"Can he select the paper containing his name?"
18675I asked,"Will the person whose name is on this paper answer me some questions?"
18675I felt the dreadful nature of the sacrifice, but what could I do?
18675I had promised to be guided by my wife; but suppose she should counsel me to give the required security, could I do so and be happy?
18675I know that all this is great weakness, but where is the man that is not weak?
18675I said,"Is that all?"
18675If it be the will of God that the powerful tendencies of some should neutralize the feebler tendencies of others, is not might, right?
18675If thou doest well shalt thou not be accepted?
18675If we ca n''t do anything but sin till we are regenerated, who is to blame for our sin, but He who neglects to regenerate us?
18675If we were wise we should say with the Redeemer,"The cup that My Father giveth me, shall I not drink it?"
18675Imagine Christianity to be received and reduced to practice by all the people on earth, what would be the result?
18675In His address to Cain He sets forth the whole principle of His government:''If thou doest well, shalt thou not be accepted?
18675Introduction.--My early life.--Enter the Church.--The Ministry.--Happy days.--Sad change.--How happened it?
18675Is every tendency the law of God?
18675Is it either better or more beautiful for having no abrupt sides, difficult of ascent,--for rising and falling by almost insensible degrees?
18675Is it some particular Greek or Hebrew Bible then?
18675Is it strange that, when faith in God is lost, the value of life is felt to be gone?
18675Is it the manuscripts?
18675Is that your idea?
18675It was his time now to explain and apologize, and what do you think was the reason he assigned for his proceedings?
18675John Wesley''s version?
18675Land was common property at first, and what right had any one to make it private?
18675Many a time, as I sat in my place in Conference, hearing what was said, and observing what was done, I asked myself,''Is this like Christ?
18675Must a record be totally infallible before it can be trusted at all?
18675One of these Essays is"On some of the Causes by which Evangelical Religion has been Rendered Unacceptable to Persons of Cultivated Taste?"
18675Shall I carry my humility to the extreme of disobedience?
18675Shall I ever be able to do anything in this way?
18675Shall I not rather arise, and, with a cheerful and joyous heart, do my Saviour what service I can?
18675Shall folly rage and be confident, and wisdom be afraid to whisper?
18675Shall truth be timid, and error bold?
18675So likewise ye, except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken?
18675Some weeks ago I read a paper before the M. E. Preachers''Meeting of Philadelphia, on ATHEISM,--what can it say for itself?
18675Suppose there had been no ocean, should we have had a long way to go to get into the next country, the country nearest to us?
18675The Unitarian version?
18675The common version?
18675The list of subjects for debate included the following:--"What is a Christian?
18675The only question with me is:''Is it divinely inspired?
18675The second day the question was,"What means should we recommend our constituents to use in order to obtain the reforms they desired?"
18675Then how comes it that you are brought here by the Secularists?
18675Then why does he use such an expression?
18675There were the words of Jeremiah for instance:"Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?"
18675To Methodists and Calvinists?
18675To the Catholics?
18675To the Church of England people?
18675To the Quakers?
18675To the Unitarians?
18675To whom?
18675Under the influence of this most rational, common- sense, practical Book, what could I do but become a thoroughly practical preacher?
18675Uniformity of feeling, of affection, of effort?
18675Uniformity of life?
18675Uniformity of opinion?
18675Uniformity of worship?
18675We ask, Which Bible?
18675Were not the people educated in America?
18675What can be more natural,--what more plausible,--what more rational,--what more pious?
18675What can we do better than teach His beneficent doctrines, and follow His glorious example?
18675What can we make of such passages?
18675What chance was there now for me?
18675What could I do?
18675What could be more rational than to expect them to be wrought in aid of man''s illumination and salvation?
18675What does the mother do when her baby falls?
18675What estimate can a man have of Christianity who receives his first impressions of it from such books?
18675What follows from all this?
18675What good, humane, or merciful motive can a man have to impel him to such a horrible undertaking?
18675What horrible notions are mistaken by some for Gospel?
18675What is Saving Faith?
18675What is man''s right to his own body worth, if he is deprived of his right to the land?
18675What is the Scripture doctrine with regard to the Atonement?
18675What is to be gained by assertions or denials relative to matters which have for ever passed out of the reach of our verification?
18675What kind of thoughts, and what kind of words were we likely to find in the writings of men like these?
18675What must angels think to look upon a scene like this?
18675What reason could there be for telling an all- wise God what you thought of Him, or how you felt towards Him?
18675What then is the upshot of what I am saying?
18675What then may we expect from other theological writers?
18675What to?
18675What wonder that so many tongues should praise Him, so many hearts adore Him, and so many nations bow before Him, and accept Him as their Lord?
18675What wonder then that Jesus should be so loved?
18675What, then of joy?"
18675When I found myself obliged to follow my heart in so many matters, why not follow it in all?
18675When I found that it led to utter degradation and ruin, why did I not renounce it, and trust once more in my native instincts?
18675When we got into the street the policeman said hurriedly,''Which is the way to your lodgings?''
18675Who authorized men to make laws for one another?
18675Who, that knows much of human nature, expects Catholics to judge righteously of Protestants, or Protestants to judge righteously of Catholics?
18675Whom_ has_ it guided to those blessed results?
18675Why contend for doctrines of no moment?
18675Why could I not check my thinking, enjoy my popularity, and rejoice in the success of my labors?
18675Why did I not trust Him more fully?
18675Why not go a step further and say, that neither believing nor trusting has anything to do with our salvation?
18675Why not?
18675Why should preachers make things hard that God makes easy, and require impossible tasks where God asks only a reasonable service?
18675Why should we expect Him to give us one on religion?
18675Will the caviller prove that the sun and moon would be greater blessings if their light wore more intense, or more abundant?
18675Would a mere error of reference invalidate the trustworthiness of the evangelist?
18675_ Any_ version?
18675shall I resist the call?
19548''Indeed? 19548 ''Is he in business?''
19548A reverence for him, my dear fellow?
19548And now what can we give you who have given us so much? 19548 Ca n''t you give us some instance of words in the singular number that end in s?"
19548Damnation, John,interposed the professor,"how often have I told you the word is profaneness and not profanity?"
19548Fitted?
19548Going on?
19548I intended to ask you just now whether the man you spoke to in the road was a typical native of the district?
19548If he knew him?
19548Of mummies, sir?
19548Papa,said the little boy to the veteran of the Civil War,"Did anybody help you to put down the Rebellion?"
19548Quid est tam furiosum quam verborum vel optimorum atque ornatissimorum sonitus inanis nulla subjecta sententia nec scientia?
19548Well,said Stevens,"which is the Republican damned scoundrel?
19548Well,said the old man,"what are you to be paid?"
19548What do you know about it, Johnny? 19548 What do you mean?"
19548What do you want, my boy?
19548What does Mr. Combe mean?
19548What is that you are saying, Commodore?
19548What is that, Curtis?
19548What is the matter?
19548What is the matter?
19548When?
19548Who shall deliver me from the body of this death?
19548Why did n''t you tell me that?
19548Why do you try to bite me? 19548 Why,"said I,"do n''t you see that the papers all over the country all full of him every morning?
19548Yes,said I,"and wo n''t you study up a little on Whately''s Logic?"
19548Youngster, what are you doing?
19548''Into what crime has he fallen?
19548A gentleman who was in the room said:"You have the cool breezes of the sea at Marshfield?"
19548After the proceedings were over, old Amos Baker was heard to say to somebody,"What do you suppose Squire Everett meant?
19548Aldrich rose from his seat and to the occasion and said very angrily,"What''s that you say, Sir?"
19548And if this be true, does such a falsehood cost them the respect and friendship of their associates or diminish their influence in the order?
19548And is not this a question of expediency rather than of right?"
19548And yet, and yet, do I exaggerate one particle, when I say that Dr. Hale has been all these, and more?
19548Are its discussions in the face of day?
19548As he passed Conkling one day in one of these movings, Conkling called out,"Davis, do you get travel for all these journeys?"
19548At dinner he broke out,''Davis, why ca n''t you descend into hell with the rest of the congregation?''
19548Attorney- General?"
19548But hark, a voice?
19548But is AEschylus greater than Leonidas, or Miltiades, or Themistocles?
19548But what are its demerits?
19548But when his time shall come, what will be the desolation of the country without the man?
19548But where is Poland?"
19548Butler showed me one day a call he had prepared, saying:"How do you think something like this would answer?"
19548By what informer has he been accused?
19548Can there be found in the history of Massachusetts such a record of shameless dishonor and such a terrible indictment and conviction?
19548Can you help us?"
19548Dana replied with great indignation, ending with the sentence:"The hand that feeds me-- the hand that feeds me, sir?
19548Did you not find him fitted?"
19548Do members of the association, after joining it, retain their membership in other political parties?
19548Do not Everett''s finest passages read well?
19548Do not Sheridan''s great perorations, and Burke''s, in the Impeachment of Warren Hastings, read well?
19548Do the persons whose political errors they especially oppose have an opportunity to know their purposes and to be convinced by their arguments?
19548Do you or do n''t you mean to exclude from such office and from such employment as teachers the bulk of the Catholic population of Massachusetts?
19548Do you think I can go through the Supreme Court without pantaloons?"
19548Does not Fisher Ames''s speech for the treaty read well?
19548Does not Lord Chatham''s"I rejoice that America has resisted"read well?
19548Has Reconstruction been a failure?
19548Have Gaston or Thompson or either Adams or Hancock or any of their candidates for Congress, anything to complain of in this respect?
19548Have you ever heard of an institution called the Political Boss?''
19548He asked me:"What do you think of them?"
19548He got up and put his head out of the window, and said,"Who''s there?
19548He looked at Gray''s stately proportions and called out:"How tall are you?"
19548He looked over the bar at Shaw and said:"Well, young man, do you think you can aid the Court any in this matter?"
19548He paused a moment with an amused and puzzled look, and said:"What is your last name?"
19548He replied, with a smile that indicated the gratification he would have had if he could have got at him:"He was an old humbug, was n''t he?"
19548He said:"All you should ask is, what is the rightful position?
19548He said:"Have you seen the speeches of President Eliot and Dr. Clarke and Mr. Codman at the Schurz banquet?"
19548He turned with great dignity upon the offender, and said,"Was that you that spoke, or was it a punkin busted?"
19548He was answered by a voice in the darkness below,"Doctor, how much camphire can anybody take by mistake without its killing them?"
19548Hearest thou, O, traveller, What he singeth to me?
19548His friend replied:"Whom have you got for leaders left?"
19548How this is done, who can tell?
19548How will such officials be likely to serve an Administration which they know does not trust them?"
19548I could not very well say,"What name did you say?"
19548I said to General Banks one day after the adjournment:"Do n''t you think it is quite likely that he will be the next President of the United States?"
19548I said to him:"Mr. President, how do you reconcile this with your declaration that no man would be removed from public office for political reasons?"
19548I said, Mr. Huntington-- Was not that ultra vires for a railroad corporation?
19548If that be true, does it seem to you that that course is honest?
19548In the Senate, during the Hawaiian debate, he quoted this passage from Juvenal: Sed quo cecidit sub crimine; quisnam Delator?
19548In whom is the power to determine who have been appointed electors--in Congress or in the State?
19548Is it likely that public virtue would withstand the temptation of the Presidency?
19548Is it not because we have here a sufficient, ample, safe, secure, convenient, commodious, port, harbor, haven?"
19548Is it the custom of many persons who belong to it to deny, when inquired of, that they are members of such an association?
19548Is it you opinion that General Philip H. Sheridan, were he living, would be unfit to hold civil or military office in this country?
19548Is the organization to which you refer a secret organization?
19548Is there another Union General, at least was there ever another Massachusetts General to whose integrity such suspicion attached?
19548Judge Metcalf, who was always fussy and interfering, said:"How can we tell anything by that, unless we know how large the stocking was?"
19548Meantime, wo n''t you look up the history of the matter a little?"
19548Mr. Webster rose with the unsurpassed courtesy and grace of manner of which he was master, and said:"Will the court pardon me a moment?"
19548One of us asked him:"Why, Mr. Lewis, what is the matter?"
19548Or is it that they have lost it already?
19548Or that his daughter, if she entertained the religious belief of her father, should be disqualified from being a teacher in a public school?
19548Or, how can they hold office and still keep their seats in this body?
19548Qui fugiunt?
19548Second, Who are to judge of the question whether the means be so appropriate, or plainly adapted?
19548Senator?"
19548Shall I introduce you?''
19548She described her dress with great minuteness, and added naively,"Did n''t I look pretty?"
19548Somebody came along and, seeing Butler seated in the corridor, said:"What are you about here, General?"
19548Suppose everybody were to do that?"
19548The Chief Justice interposed:"Brother Newton, what is the use of arguing that?
19548The Chief Justice said:"Are there any other objections to the plea, Brother Bacon?"
19548The Chief Justice said:"Well, then, the tenant is in the condition which you describe as being pretty well off, is n''t he, Brother Bacon?"
19548The Governor, who was getting his coat at the other end of the room, overheard the remark, and called out:"Who is lamenting our decay?"
19548The Universalist theologian began:"You''ll admit there is a God?"
19548The next morning the lawyer went up to Judge Mellen in court and said,"Judge, what was the matter with the young man last night?
19548The old Chief Justice looked at it, read it over again, and said"What publication is this?"
19548The only question that remains is-- Is a bank( a necessary and) a proper measure for effecting these purposes?
19548The question upon which the policy of all National election laws depends is, At whose will do you hold your right to be an American citizen?
19548There is no people but will strive to excell in something: what can we excell in if not in holinesse?
19548There was a little pause, and his friend said:"Well, who is the third?"
19548There were shouts from the crowd:"Will he promise to leave Worcester and never come back?"
19548To which he said,"Why, what do you say?"
19548To which the reply was,"Who''s taken it?"
19548Turning to the landlord of the hotel I asked,"What is the rule for holding the Court?
19548What can be said more, or what can be said better, to sum up the life of an American citizen?
19548What can have put such an extravagant yarn into the head of so amiable and good- natured a fellow?
19548What chiefly impressed the audience was the quotation from Milton, so well known now: What though the field be lost?
19548What do you want?"
19548What excuse have you to offer?"
19548What faith can an Executive put in officials forced on him, and those, too, whom he has suspended for reason?
19548What has happened in that time?
19548What judge has passed upon him?
19548What makes the meadow flower its bloom unfold?
19548What power can you invoke if that right be withheld from you?
19548What pride and love must we feel for the republic that calls such men to her high places?
19548What should be the standard of value and a legal tender for the payment of debts?
19548What witness has testified against him?
19548When a vote comes up, will you announce that I am paired with my colleague?"
19548When the Lord said,''Whom shall I send?''
19548Where in military story can there be found a brighter page than that?
19548Whereupon Judge Hoar sent for the original papers, and looking at them read the plea, and said:"Is n''t that a plea of non- tenure?"
19548Who can trust the promise of a God who has created a Universe and peopled it with fiends?
19548Who is he?''
19548Who is he?''
19548Who would doubt that he meant my Brother Washburn?"
19548Whom are they calling for now?''
19548Why do you tear my pantaloons?
19548Will it be agreeable to you?
19548Will you just look at it?"
19548Will you kindly announce that Mr. Sherman is paired with his colleague?"
19548Will you please to make another that no one shall wear our feathers, so that no one will kill us to get them?
19548Witness, can you tell me any single fact which tends to show that his man has committed adultery?"
19548Wo n''t you say something?"
19548_ When_ is it held?"
19548if God''s good will were so; For what is in this world, but care and woe?
19548quibus judiciis; quo teste probavit?
19548read well?
19548read well?
19548said his inquirer, with great surprise,"Do you mean to say that every Filipino agrees with Senator Hoar in his views?"
15913''What was that?'' 15913 ''What''s he think of the chances?''
15913And did the minister go on?
15913Are they ready?
15913At it?
15913But you''ll take them?
15913But your wife? 15913 Demon?
15913Did I tell ye that? 15913 Did you?"
15913Do you ne''er think what wondrous beings these? 15913 Do you see that black pool under the sycamore?"
15913Do you think, O blue- eyed banditti, Because you have scaled the wall, Such an old moustache as I am Is not a match for you all?
15913Does the old man still live?
15913Ef it is-- What ef he misses, an''wo n''t go back with me? 15913 Eh?
15913For what? 15913 Have you anything to which to turn, if this disappoints you?
15913Have you given up all hope of serving your fellows?
15913Heartsome? 15913 How does thee think it looks, Andy?"
15913How goes it, Mary?
15913How old is he?
15913I say, look here, why have row? 15913 I wish I could induce you to stay and have a talk over your future prospects, eh?
15913I wish, lad-- Would thee say,''God bless thee, Jane''? 15913 If it fails?"
15913If,said Ole Bull,"I kiss my enemy, what have I left for my friend?"
15913Mine, is it, lad? 15913 Mine?"
15913More noosances?
15913No; why should I? 15913 Perhaps thee''d be amused to look over Joseph''s case of books?"
15913Recreant, eh? 15913 Says I,''See my ducks an''sack, Mr. Starke?
15913Shall we stay here? 15913 She?
15913Shoes, eh?
15913Since then you have not seen her, I understand you? 15913 Starke and his wife?"
15913Success, you mean? 15913 The dog''s owner?"
15913Thee means_ God_, thee knows?
15913Thee scalds the raisin'', do n''t thee, now?
15913Thee''ll take neighbor Wart into town, Andrew?
15913Thee''s tired too, Jane?
15913This engine-- have you nothing to care for in life but that?
15913Thus o''er the ocean faint and far Trailed the gleam of his falchion brightly: Is it a god, or is it a star, That, entranced, I gaze on nightly?
15913To- morrow, did thee say, we would go home?
15913To- morrow, thee said, Andrew?
15913To- morrow, then?
15913Was summat wrong? 15913 Well?"
15913What ails him?
15913What ails ye, Jane?
15913What are you waiting here for, Mary?
15913What did she say?
15913What do you think of that fellow, Mary?
15913What do you tremble for, eh?
15913What is it, Jane?
15913What kept thee all day, Andrew?
15913What use, boy?
15913Whatever is thee glowerin''thataway about?
15913Why, God bless my soul, Sir, what can_ they_ do? 15913 Will ye speak wickedly for God?
15913Will you try again?
15913You do n''t care to hear the ins an''outs of it? 15913 You have children?"
15913You have little time for reading?
15913You have yourself lost faith in your invention?
15913You never work with it?
15913You seemed to me to be the very man to lead a forlorn hope against ignorance: are you quite content to settle down here and do nothing?
15913''An''without a decent suit to yer back, how kin you carry the thing before Congress?''
15913''He s_ he_ influence?''
15913''How kin ye?''
15913A''n''t I kind to her?
15913Afford it?
15913After all, my dear Andrew, why are you so sensitive on the subject of Slavery?
15913An armistice to whom, and for what purpose?
15913And the whiff of the fresh clover- blossoms?
15913And what has been the result of this ill- omened alliance?
15913And what is poetry but that song?
15913And when once confiscated, why should they not be employed in whatever manner will make them most serviceable to us?
15913And who shall say that their confidence was unreasonable?
15913Are these white men, with Anglo- Saxon blood in their veins, and the fair fame of this country in their keeping?
15913Are they brave?
15913At it for some time?"
15913But has not the President published to the world that the Proclamation was a measure of military necessity?
15913But how?
15913But where are your other fourteen?
15913But who are those enemies?
15913But who pays attention to newspaper- articles?
15913But will not some one set up a stone for my memory at Fort Adams or at Orleans, that my disgrace may not be more than I ought to bear?
15913But will the slaves consent to enlist?
15913But you''ll take care of it, wo n''t you?"
15913But, creatures of sympathy, needy dependants on approbation, as we are, shall we surrender to all or any of these lies?
15913But, once more, my friend, have you any reason to be attached to Slavery on political grounds?
15913But_ would_ she care?
15913Can there be any doubt about the issue now offered to the North by Peace Democrats?
15913Can you justify yourself in standing upon such a platform?
15913Certainly, but-- You''re a little nervous, Mr. Starke, and-- Wouldn''t it be better if you were not present?
15913D''ye smell yer oats?
15913Did Monsieur Credit die on the seventeenth of November?
15913Did honest and dull"Conservatism"have ever a happier description?
15913Did not all their past experience justify such confidence?
15913Did you think it would be brought in here?"
15913Do I object to that sentiment?
15913Do n''t that expand your lungs?
15913Do n''t you see it?"
15913Do they not say what they please, and vote as they choose, without molestation or hindrance?
15913Do you believe that this rule could have been maintained for so many years without the connivance and coöperation of Northern Democrats?
15913Do you dare to complain of this deliverance?
15913Do you deny that I have presented a truthful picture of the present position of your party?
15913Do you know his wife?"
15913Do you ne''er think who made them, and who taught The dialect they speak, where melodies Alone are the interpreters of thought?
15913Do you see the big, brave eyes of him?"
15913Does thee frequent the prize- fighters''ring, that thee''s got their slang so pat, lad?"
15913Eh?
15913For he asked, perfectly unconsciously,--"Pray, what has become of Texas?
15913Go?
15913Graff?"
15913Had they not repeatedly tested the temper and measured the_ morale_ of the people?
15913Have you ever had the curiosity to investigate the causes of this disaster?
15913Have you never seen her since?"
15913Have you seen Captain Back''s curious account of Sir Thomas Hoe''s Welcome?"
15913He''s my namesake, Mary, did you know?
15913His father replied,--"Your piece?
15913Home or friends?"
15913How are those enemies to be overcome?
15913How could I dare to return home and confront your wrath?
15913How does the balance incline, when a man or woman stands before us with a letter of introduction in hand?
15913How long_ did_ they mean to wait?
15913How many men know their vocation?
15913How?
15913How?"
15913I believe I never mentioned to you,"looking at Jane,"how I smuggled him into the pants you made, you thinkin''him a friend of mine?
15913I come out here to study my sermons, did you know?
15913If it fails, where''s your''justice on earth''?
15913Ignoble souls will shrivel in that day: The brightness of its coming can you bear?
15913Is it possible he is not with you?
15913Is it that God has room for all things in this Life of His?
15913Is nobody but Shakspeare a poet?
15913Is she always well, Andrew?"
15913Is the efficient aid of such men to be rejected?
15913Is thee comfortable?"
15913Is their noble self- sacrifice to be slighted?
15913Is there in the martyrology of poets any passage sadder than these lines?
15913Is there no mountain- peak but Dhawalaghiri?
15913Is there no music but Beethoven''s?
15913Is there nothing more important just now than to devise means of reinstating your party in power at the next Presidential election?
15913Is this a time in which to permit your old party animosities to render you indifferent to the honor and welfare of the nation?
15913Is this loyalty to the Constitution and the Union?
15913Is this the allegiance which a citizen owes to his country?
15913Is this the jocund Pilgrim of Outre- Mer?
15913Is''t home- like lookin''?
15913It''s different when some folks pokes fun at me, askin''for the lantern, an''"--"What odds?"
15913It''s ours now, an''it''s stocked, an''--Don''t thee think the house is snug itself, Andrew?
15913It''s yours now, Mr. Starke, d''y''understand?
15913Maybe thee thought me a hard woman?"
15913Mine, eh?"
15913Morning nap?
15913Mr. Starke, I may come and see you to- morrow, you said?
15913Murger replied,--"See it?
15913Not wished to see her?"
15913Now does not this correctly describe our position?
15913One ill, maybe?"
15913Only, where shall I begin?''
15913Others''ll be found to do it when it''s needed; what matter if he fails?
15913Richard''s our boy, thee knows?
15913See the man?
15913See what?"
15913Shall I have the honor of dancing?"
15913Should he keep him?
15913Should he let him go?
15913Sir?
15913Starke?
15913Starke?"
15913Starke?"
15913The Tabard inn is gone; but who, henceforth, will ride through Sudbury town without seeing the purple light shining around the Red Horse tavern?
15913The woman was tenacious; for what will not a mother''s heart brave?
15913Thee thinks it looks comfortable?"
15913Thee''ll not want to eat alone?"
15913Then,''Where was Vicksburg?''
15913There is good fishing hereabouts, eh, Jim?"
15913They would be freer in deciding, and-- suppose you and I stay here?"
15913To die like a grub?
15913To what does universal commendation amount more than universal indifference?
15913Was he thinking of that old dream?
15913Was it that which brought out from the face of the middle- aged working woman such a strange meaning of latent youth, beauty, and passion?
15913Was it welcomed by slaveholders?
15913We make no question about the calamities of war; but how are these calamities to be avoided?
15913Well, I used to sit thinking there, after the day''s work was done, until my head ached, of how I might do something,--to help, you understand?"
15913What are you so anxious an''wild about, Jane?
15913What avails it to talk of the blessings of peace and the horrors of war?
15913What boot they, when he on whom they are bestowed is beyond the reach of earthly voices?
15913What chance has it?
15913What chances has he, Miss?"
15913What critic shall decide if the song of a new singer be poetry, or the bard himself a poet?
15913What d''ye say?''
15913What in the name of Heaven could you have gotten at Dagneaux''s for five cents?
15913What is the reason of this deceit?
15913What kin_ I_ do?"
15913What kin_ I_ do?"
15913What more delightful to remember than that we brought together those who were each other''s counterparts?
15913What news from town?"
15913What right had any man to know what his wife was to him?
15913What sober step pauses at the Wayside Inn?
15913What was a man to do?
15913What would she say when he came back?
15913What''s the use of telling it?"
15913What, then, if he were called to account by the Department for violating the order of 1807?
15913When had any one of their schemes, no matter how monstrous it might at first have appeared, ever failed of final accomplishment?
15913Where is the young lion?"
15913Where was his youth, that it came not to the rescue?
15913Where will you go now, Jane?"
15913Who but the nation, or some part of it, dictates to the clerk?
15913Who can resist a mother struggling for her son?
15913Who is a poet but he whom the heart of man permanently accepts as a singer of its own hopes, emotions, and thoughts?
15913Who is going about to tie on the labels?
15913Who would you be willing should tie on yours?
15913Why did you let me go out with my pockets so full of money?
15913Why is n''t Richard down?
15913Why part with a present good, with the risk of incurring a future evil?
15913Will not our foes have good cause to despise our folly, if we leave in their hands this most efficient element of their power?
15913Will they fight for the cause which they have dared so many dangers to espouse?
15913Will you say that I have misrepresented the record of the Northern Democratic party?
15913Would you know other shadows and other sights than those you find in"Galignani''s Messenger"under the rubric,"Stranger''s Diary"?
15913Would you know something of the way in which men live in Paris?
15913Would you penetrate a little beneath the brilliant, glossy epidermis of the French capital?
15913Yet, on the whole, Andrew, what have you gained by it?
15913You do n''t believe in Phrenology, eh?
15913You have not cut up any of the old ones, I hope?''
15913You know him?
15913You know my wife, then?"
15913You know what a quiet place Philadelphia is?
15913You will not judge him too harshly, will you?
15913You''ll forgive me?"
15913_ Nothing but good of the dead_, do you say?
15913_ Would_ he go back to it?
15913and talk deceitfully for Him?"
15913and wherefore?
15913canst thou not be Blithe as the air is, and as free?"
15913do you catch that river- breeze?
15913do you remember the mysteries we boys used to invent about his room, in the old Intrepid days?
15913every hunger, loss, effort, held underneath and above in some infinite Order, suffered to live out its purpose, give up its uttermost uses?
15913for all these problems, all Evil as it seems to us?
15913no cataract but Niagara?
15913sharply,"did thee bring thy lunch, to eat at my stall?
15913that I have charged them with a submission and subserviency to the dictates of their Southern allies, which truthful history will not confirm?
15913that nothing in any man''s life is wasted?
15913the basket ye''ve got?
15913the trading look going out of her eyes suddenly,"Oh, are you his friends?
15913was I ever wo nt to do so unto thee?"
15913what will it not endure?
15913you do n''t mean to say that they are still playing it?"
26498Shall it succeed? 26498 But why should practical John Cooper be disposed to anticipate a special distinction for the infant who was the fifth of his numerous progeny? 26498 If Peter Cooper received in the end a handsome sum from this investment, who could grudge him the wealth so acquired? 22607 But, by- the- by, what is it?"
22607Who was the lucky purchaser?
22607''"And never buys?"
22607''"What is the book, my lord?"
22607''And it was solely for the sake of books that you committed these murders?''
22607''And why?''
22607''At what time do you dine?''
22607''Certainly, but why and wherefore?''
22607''Does that not interest them in the book, so that they buy it?''
22607''Here, what do you want for this?''
22607''His companion smiled, and replied by another question:"What is the man who reads the book?"
22607''Steal?''
22607''What do you think of my library?''
22607''What''s yer figger for them, any way?
22607), remarkable on account of its copy of the Valdarfer Boccaccio, 1471, £ 230; a copy(?
22607And what, indeed, it may be asked, will become of the hundreds and thousands of books which are now all the fashion?
22607But can so much and so many rare books ever be collected again in that space of time?''
22607But would he draw the line at stealing a book which deals with thieves?
22607Dr. King, in his translation(?)
22607How many men, who are getting £ 1,000 a year, spend £ 1 per month on books?
22607In what manner?
22607Taking the other man aside, he said,''Who have you been bidding for?''
22607Taking up this very volume, he turned to me and remarked,"This looks a rare edition, Mr. Stevens; do n''t you think so?
22607The enterprising individual who, on receipt of a catalogue of medical books, wired to the bookseller,''What will you take for the lot?''
22607What heart, having the least spark of ingenuity, is not hot at this indignity offered to literature?
22607What soul can be so frozen as not to melt into anger thereat?
22607Where is Dr. Johnson''s library, which must bear traces of his buttered toast?
22607[ Illustration:_ Lamb''s Cottage at Colebrook Row, Islington._] In an edition of Donne[?
17228''Do you want laws to prevent you from marryin niggers?'' 17228 ''Do you want niggers for sons- in- law?''
17228''Do you want to be marched up to the polls by those who tell you how to vote, beside a nigger?'' 17228 Am I awake, or am I dreamin?"
17228And my children-- is they little beasts and beastesses?
17228And no Kentuckian ever marries a nigger?
17228And why give them votes who will use em agin us?
17228Are you a Postmaster?
17228But spozn,sed I,"that it_ shood_ be pizoned?
17228Ca n''t yoo make yoose uv sich a man ez me?
17228Cood any boddy be more nootraller than that?
17228Den a yaller feller ai n''t but a half a beast, is he?
17228Did n''t he marry a nigger-- a full- blooded nigger? 17228 Did n''t he marry a nigger?"
17228Did they run away? 17228 Do I?"
17228Do yoo want to know my definition uv the word''conservative?''
17228Ham come from the same fadder and mudder as the odder two?
17228Hev yoo got wun?
17228How knowest thou?
17228How so?
17228How,retorted I,"do yoo know I''m from Noo Gersey, not hevin spoken a word in yoor hearin?"
17228I hev devoted myself to the task uv bindin up the wounds uv my beloved country--"Did you stop anybody very much from inflictin them sed wounds?
17228I know it wood,replied Johnson;"but where kin we find sich a one?
17228Is my old woman a old beastesses, too?
17228Kentucky went heavy into the sin biznis, and whar is Kentucky? 17228 Kin I o''ercloud that smilin cheek?"
17228Kin it be,mused I, pensively,"that we are doin the devil''s work, and are we to be finally rewarded in the manner I saw in my vision?
17228Kin this be endoored?
17228Missee-- what?
17228None uv your kind uv Democrats jined in this unholy croosade, and fell afore our deth- deelin swords-- did they?
17228So do I,replied I;"but what hev yoo agin him, aside from his obnoxious political opinions?"
17228To celebrate the battle uv Noo Orleans? 17228 Wat are you blubberin for?"
17228Wat is these?
17228Wat prizns wuz yoo incarcerated in?
17228Wat''s the matter with the eyes uv all the delegates?
17228Well, Mas''r,sed the old imbecile,"is I a beest?"
17228Well?
17228What are yoo here for?
17228What in thunder,sed one uv em,"did they mean by pilin on the agony over the the Yanks we killed?
17228What''n thunder, then, are yoo here for, beggin a post offis? 17228 What, my faithful servitor, dost thou most desire?"
17228Where?
17228Who are you, my gentle friend?
17228Who''ll do the work about the house?
17228Who''ll dress us, and wash us, and wait on us?
17228Why the result in yoor Deestrict?
17228Why? 17228 Why?"
17228Wich State are yoo from?
17228Will you have Andrew Johnson President or King?
17228Wuz they lazy? 17228 Yoor name?"
17228), and who shall stay our hand?
17228), or A. Johnson''s?
17228After Peerse he d run the machine four yeers, wat wuz there left?
17228Agin then I repeet, DO YOU WANT TO MARRY A NIGGER?
17228Ai nt that the kind uv stock we want, and the kind wich hez alluz set us up?
17228Ai nt the bulk uv em rather degraded and low than otherwise?
17228Am I datin my letters from"Post Orifis, Confedrit × Roads?"
17228Androo Johnson may possibly be on the high road to Dimocrisy; but, ez yet, what ashoorence hev we?
17228Are they constitooshnel Dimokrats?
17228Are they to go back on that holy determinashen to preserve the Anglo Sackson race on this continent in its purity?
17228Are yoo back into the Yoonyun uv your own free will and akkord?
17228Are you in favor uv elevatin the Afrikin to a posishen where he kin be yoor ekal, or perhaps yoor sooperior?
17228Are you quite shoor-- quite shoor?
17228Assoomin a intellectual look, I retorted,"Do you know Charles Sumner?"
17228But I ask yoo, did Noer hev three sons?"
17228But what uv that?
17228DO YOU WANT TO MARRY A NIGGER?
17228Deekin, why ca n''t yoo go to the devil by a straight road, ez I do?"
17228Democrisy?
17228Did n''t he--""Mrs. P.,"sed this Illinoy store- keeper, wich his name it wuz Pollock,"do yoo object to miscegenation?"
17228Do we turn to the courts?
17228Do we turn to the people?
17228Do yoo approve uv the canin uv Grinnell by Rosso?
17228Do yoo consider the keepin out uv Congris eleven sovrin states a unconstooshnel and unwarrantid assumption uv power by a secshnal Congris?
17228Do yoo hev the most implicit faith in Androo Johnson, in all that he hez done, all that he is doin, and all he may hereafter do?
17228Do you want the nigger aforesed to be mayors uv your towns, with all the hatred they hev towards us?
17228Does he propose to organize a new party, made up uv sich Republikins ez he can indoose to foller him and the Dimocrisy?
17228Does he think we kin carry sich a load ez he is for nothin?
17228Doth it not pain em?"
17228Ef I am a traitor, sed he, warmin up, who is the Judis Iscariot?
17228Ef I die, who''d swing around the cirkle?
17228Ef my niggers run off, who so prompt in their pursoot ez the Democratic marshals, wich alluz returned em to me ef it wuz possible?
17228Ef so, hedn''t I better quit and repent?"
17228Ef they are to support the President, they want, and will hev, the post orifises, for uv what use is it to support a man and pay yoor own expenses?
17228Ef yoo die, who mourns?
17228Eko answers, When?
17228Ez a Christian, woodent it be better to marry em than to add a violation uv the commandment to the sin uv amalgamashen?
17228Ez a sentinel on the watch- tower, I look out, and what do I see?
17228For wat''s the yoose uv sich a cuss ef it''s to be removed jist when you want it to stick?
17228Good God!--where are we driftin?
17228He asked em, ef he was Judis Iskariot who wuz the Saviour?
17228He he d bin Alderman uv his native town, and Vice- President; he wuz too modest to make a speech; but ef he wuz Joodas Iskariot, who wuz the Saviour?
17228He tried to earn his bread; but wat cood he do?
17228He was sacrificin hisself for them-- who he d made greater sacrifices?
17228Hevent yoo got a pardon in yoor pockit, which dockyment is all that saves yoor neck from stretchin hemp?
17228Hevent you diskivered that yoo are whipped?
17228Hevent you found out that yoo are subjoogated?
17228Hez he suffered nothin?
17228Hez there bin, as yit, any well authenticated case uv the removal uv a Ablishnist, and the apintment uv a constooshnel Democrat in his stead?
17228How cood he be servant unto his brethren except thro amalgamashen?
17228How did Androo Johnson treet us?
17228How wuz we reseeved?
17228How, let me ask, in the name of High Heaven, wood yoo like to be tried for hoss stealin afore a nigger jury?
17228I asked who wuz the Saviour ef I wuz Joodis Iskariot?
17228I coodent let Dimocrisy alone, and the eggins-- the ridin upon rails-- the takin uv the oath-- but why shood I harrow up the public buzzum?
17228I looked into the fucher, and wat did I see, ez them two men-- one sneekin, and tother ashamed uv hisself-- walked up that aisle?
17228I mite say more, but wherefore?
17228I onst saw a woman skinnin live eels, and I reproached her, saying,--"Woman, why skinnest thou eels alive?
17228I replied,--"Wood_ yoo_ be glad, or wood this congregashun be glad, to hev me in the Post Orfis in the place uv that Ablishnist?"
17228In Mexico?
17228In breef, wat wuz the sense, my brethren, in puttin new wine into old bottles?--uv patchin old cloth with new?
17228In the North?
17228In the South?
17228In the name uv Dimocrisy let me ask,"WHERE IS THE OFFICES?"
17228In what partikeler hez Androo Johnson showed hisself to be a Dimokrat?
17228Is Ablishnists to still retain the places uv trust and profit?
17228Is Androo Johnson all my fancy painted him, or is he still a heaven- defying persekooter uv the Democratic Saints?
17228Is Stanton, and Seward, and Welles histed out uv the cabinet, and Vallandigum, and Brite, and Wood apinted in their places?
17228Is a oath so hard to break?
17228Is a tailor to say''_ must not_''to shivelrus Georgy?
17228Is he not amenable to all the laws, even ez we is?
17228Is he not taxed ez we are, and more than most uv the Democrisy, for many uv em own property?
17228Is it troo, or is it not troo?
17228Is n''t it singler that men, when they go to the devil, alluz go in squads?
17228Is not the Afrikin a man?
17228Is the Northern Dimocrisy still troo?"
17228Is the giant Republican actually dead, or is he in a trance?
17228Kin I go and borrer eighteen dollars and sixty- three cents uv one uv them?
17228Kin it be?
17228Kin they offer fairer?
17228Kin they read?
17228Kin they write?
17228Mountin the rostrum, I ejaculated,--"''MEN AND BRETHREN, DO YOO WANT TO MARRY A NIGGER?''
17228My brethren, wich is the bottles?
17228My gentle friend,_ will_ they use their ballot agin us?
17228My liege, why wuz the NIGGER not made the central figger this year, ez before?
17228NASBY''S OPINION ON THE CAUSE OF THE PRESIDENT''S DEFEAT XXXVIII.--ANDREW JOHNSON PRESIDENT OR KING?
17228Now, why do n''t our father, the Government, fulfil the Skripter?
17228O, why wuzn''t we content to wear it?
17228On his return wat did he see?
17228Onless we amalgamated with em, how wood the male niggers be our brethren?
17228Our wise men may make laws to keep him in his normal speer, but uv wat avail is they?
17228Paul may plant and Apollus water; but uv what account is the plantin and waterin to me ef I do n''t get the increase?
17228Pogram?"
17228Ruther than risk that offis I''d chaw striknine, for uv what akkount is a Dimokrat, who hez wunst tasted the sweets uv place, and is ousted?
17228Shall we continue to enjoy that comfort?
17228Shall we go to Brazil?
17228Shel she appeel in vain?
17228Shel we desert Androo Johnson, after all the trouble he hez bin to in gettin back to us?
17228So long ez Dimocrats are kept out, what care I who hez the places?
17228Some may censure us for too much zeal in this matter, but what else cood we hev dun?
17228Takin for a text the passage,"The wagis uv sin is death,"I opened out ez follows:--"Wat is sin?
17228Thad Stevens?
17228The Illinoy store- keeper, uv the name uv Pollock, resoomed,--"I wuz about askin wat them niggers is ez is nearly white?"
17228The grosery keepers wanted to know what we wuz a going to hev meetin on week days for?
17228The skool teachers we will tar and feather, and whar is the bloo- koted hirelins to make us afeerd?
17228Their little talk about debts, and slavery, and sich, is the earth they''re droppin onto us for fun; but shel we, like ijeots, cut the rope?
17228Then why, I triumphantly ask, is he not entitled to a vote?
17228They are another race; they''r beasts; and who''d marry em but jist sich men ez Sumner and them other Ablishnists?"
17228They come to the Corners to sell the produx of their lands; do they leave their money at his bar?
17228They hev become sassy and impudent, and say,"Go to; are we not men?"
17228They spozed the South wood submit to hoomiliatin condishns?
17228Uv wat danger is preechers to these men, when yoo coodent git one uv em within gun- shot uv one?
17228WHO IS TO HEV THE POST OFFISIS?
17228Wat are you sheddin pearls for?"
17228Wat better is a nobleman?
17228Wat chance wood yoo hev wen arrestid for small misdemeanors, afore nigger judges?
17228Wat chance wood yoor children hev in a skool uv wich all the teechers wuz niggers?
17228Wat did I see?
17228Wat does this fact prove?
17228Wat he d we to go into this canvass with?
17228Wat hez worked this change?
17228Wat if a corrupt and radikle Congress does override your vetoes, and legislate for these cuss- ridden people?
17228Wat shel we do?
17228Wat then?
17228Wat uv_ my_ bowels?
17228Wat wuz the sence uv our askin our people to vote for Kernels for Congris wich he d, doorin the war, drafted their sons?
17228Wat wuz the yoose uv our assoomin what we did not hev?
17228Wat wuz the yoose uv talking Constooshnel Amendments to men who spozed that Internal Improvements and a Nashnel Bank wuz still the ishoo?
17228Wat''s the use, I askt, uv my preachin agin nigger equality, so long ez my Deekins practis it?
17228We do n''t like to do it, but shel skripter be violated?
17228We served sin faithfully, and where are we?
17228We shel hev sum fites: there''s Amakelitish post masters and Phillistine collectors to displace, but with a second Jaxon at our he d what can we fear?
17228We will burn his school houses, and destroy his spelling books( for shall the nigger be our superior?
17228What Androo Johnson means by dictatin to the Convenshuns uv sovereign States?
17228What cood they hev bin thinkin uv?
17228What did he do?
17228What do yoo think about it, Deekin?
17228What is a dozen tradesmen and two hundred and fifty niggers to the gellorious old Dimocratic John Guttle?
17228What is it all about?
17228What would they do if they he d their rites?"
17228What''s the yoose uv any oath_ he_ takes?"
17228When Ham wuz cust by Noar, wat wuz that cuss?
17228When will reason return to the people?
17228Wher is the Elisha who''ll wear it?"
17228Where is the President?"
17228Where kin we look for comfort?
17228Where shall we find refuge?
17228Where''s the ring for our finger, and the shoes for our feet?
17228Who furnisht him his licker for eight months, and who hez the best rite for the first dig at the proceeds uv the position?
17228Who is the Collectors, the Assessors, et settry?
17228Who knows?
17228Who pays for the Halls?
17228Who pays the Powder?
17228Who pays the music?
17228Who will deliver us?
17228Who will pluck us from the pit into wich we hev fallen?
17228Who wuz the Saviour?
17228Who''d sling the flag and the 36 stars at the people, and who''d leave the Constooshn in their hands?
17228Who''s got em?
17228Why do n''t it put onto us a purple robe?
17228Why do n''t it see us afar off, and run out to meet us?
17228Why do yoo talk uv wat South karliny will and wo nt do?
17228Why harrow up the public bosom, or lasserate the public mind?
17228Why wuz we not satisfied with it?
17228Why,"sed he,"do yoo think I use all the shot I hev?
17228Wich is new wine?
17228Wilkes Booth''s gost came in, and wanted to know what he wuz to hev in the new deal,"for,"sed he,"ef''t had n''t bin for me, where''d yoo all hev bin?
17228Will Androo Johnson, wich Ablishnists call Moses, but wich we, for obvious reasons, style the 2d Jaxon, heed that cry?
17228Will he do it?
17228Will you heed her cry?
17228Wood he go through with it?
17228Wood he lock horns with Wade and Sumner, and dare the wrath uv Thad Stevens?
17228Wood he?
17228Wood it trouble that eminent patriot Breckenridge, after all the times he swore to support the Constitution, to sware to it wunst more?
17228Wuz Thad Stevens?
17228Wuz dey all brudders?"
17228Wuz it any wonder that we went under?
17228Wuz not our experience in 1864 sufficient to deter em from makin any experiment wich involved abandonment uv any uv our principles?
17228Wuz the cuss a mistake?
17228Wuz the experiment a success?
17228Wuz the nigger not the race that wuz cussed?
17228Wuz this bauble the price uv yoor honesty and yoor principle?
17228[ Illustration: DO YOU KNOW CHARLES SUMNER?]
17228_ By the Court_.--Did they drink together?
17228and hezn''t he he d nineteen yaller children, every one uv wich he compelled, agin their will, to marry full- blooded niggers?
17228and wat harm is noosepapers to em, when they ca n''t read?
17228and where''s the fatted calf he ought to kill?
17228and wood it trouble him to break it any more than it did in''61?
17228by pledgin us to give up the ijee uv seceshen, and by pledgin on us to pay the Nashnel Yankee debt?"
17228for ef they cood, how many uv us wood to- day be holdin our places?
17228how cood they be so blind ez to refoose these olive branches?"
17228or will he persist in clingin to the black idol he embraced four years ago?
17228think yoo yoo''d hev if hauled up afore a nigger mayor on a charge uv disorderly conduct?
17228to the trumpets?
17228to, uv a half dozen niggers wich wuz consumed when it wuz burned, wat more kin I want?
17228uv yoor salary to a fund to be used for the defeat uv objectionable Congrismen in the disloyal states North?
17228why, indeed?
22692And so the book you handed me, to plight our troth,with ire said she,"you bought from Charlie here on tick?
22692Is there no way,so wails the host,"to lay this Richard Randle''s ghost?"
22692My fears are in the distance,is Woodrow''s grateful song;"what foe can make resistance against this mighty throng?
22692A bathroom?
22692And this old pilgrim, dour and hoary, on all our pleasure drew the noose; for, at the end of every story, he''d sadly ask:"What was the use?"
22692Are we striving, are we reaching, for the life serene and sweet?
22692Business seems unholy?
22692But what are these rip- snorting wagons?
22692Do you in anything excel?
22692For who can love a duffer so pallid, weak and thin, who seems resigned to suffer and let folks rub it in?
22692He looked me over long and well, and then enquired:"What can you do?
22692He placed the flag to thwart the scorner, the doubter, and the man obtuse; and then the old man in the corner looked up and asked:"What was the use?"
22692His hearers were standing before him in attitudes speaking of awe, for what could they do but adore him, the man with the prognathous jaw?
22692How many planets are between us and good old Mother Earth?
22692Is there a legend you hold dear, some legend of the long ago?
22692Long years have passed since R. R. Rox was placed in silver- mounted box; and does he rest in peace?
22692My darling love-- but who comes here?"
22692NAMING THE BABY First I thought I''d call him Caesar; but my Uncle Ebenezer said that name was badly hoodoed-- wasn''t Julius Caesar slain?
22692Oh, is it Saturn, Mars or Venus?
22692Old Bilks gold- bricked me in that deal, but does his system pay?
22692POST- MORTEM INDUSTRY You''ve heard of Richard Randle Rox?
22692Shall I get down to menial task?
22692Shall I your Cheap John wigwam share, the daughter of a millionaire, who early learned in wealth to bask?
22692THE BRIGHT FACE Things are moving slowly?
22692THE OUTCAST You ask me why I weep and moan, like some lost spirit in despair, and why I wonder[ Transcriber''s note: wander?]
22692That all the fakers come to it when they would fleece the suckers?
22692The maids who made their pies of mud, and danced in dirty alleys?
22692The old man broke into my story, and mildly asked:"What was the use?"
22692The people read me as I cook my victims, and exclaim with glee,"If he would only write a book, oh where would Scott and Dickens be?"
22692This side of heaven can there be such pure and unmixed ecstacy?
22692We smote him roundly in our anger, resolved to cook his ancient goose, and still, above the din and clangor, we heard him ask,"What is the use?"
22692What can you offer-- you who seek my hand?
22692What globe do we infest?
22692What mighty bird is that a- soaring-- I seem to hear its pinions roaring, it scoots along so fast?
22692Where are the kids who climbed the trees, the tousled young carousers, who got their faces black with dirt, and tore their little trousers?
22692Where are the lads who scrapped by rounds, while other lads kept tallies?
22692Why should the music cease?
22692You ask me why I pack this gun, all loaded up, prepared to shoot?
22692You hear the pageant''s dreary song as down the road it ambles; I wonder, oftentimes, how long you''ll stand my cheerful gambols?
22692You say I print too many ads, unfit for youths''perusal, of fakers''pills and liver pads?
22692You say my other pages reek with filthy"cures for cancer"?
22692You say my paper is n''t fit for aught but toughs and muckers?
22692[ Illustration: The Sleeper Wakes]"What world is this?"
22692he asked, in terror;"what life, of which I''m now a sharer?
22692off alone, and paw the ground and tear my hair?
26633But what if the dream life became more or less permanent to the exclusion of all other memories and sensations?
26633Now the question of the philosopher has always been: which is the true dream, the sleeping dream or the waking dream?
26633What is it worth to you?
26633Yet it is a question that follows naturally upon a clear prediction-- When?
20190By whom was Magna Charta exacted from King John at Runnymede?
20190From what king,etc., etc.?
20190From whom was,etc., etc.?
20190Has she bought a shawl?
20190How did the Assyian come down?
20190Is Mother Day particular about the sort of shawl she will buy?
20190Like what animal did?
20190WHAT constitutes a state? 20190 What, is there no bribing death?"
20190When?
20190Where are you going?
20190Where was Magna Charta,etc., etc.?
20190Where?
20190Which Mrs. Day will buy a shawl?
20190Which side of the fence do you want to be on?
20190Who came down?
20190Who will buy any shawl?
20190Who?
20190Why?
20190------------------------- ARE YOU TOO FAT?
20190------------------------- Is Your Stomach Wrong?
20190------------------------- What is SALIODIN?
20190A comma is used to set off a short quotation informally introduced; as, Who said,"The good die young"?
20190An interrogation point(?)
20190Art thou a mourner?
20190Art thou a sinner?
20190B. L. CASCADE"Have you read of the wonderful cures made by the Internal Bath?
20190Both inn convenient Why do dentists make good politicians?
20190Burns, Cuts, Sprains, Bruises?
20190But to reach Alpha Centauri it would take three years; and as this is the nearest of the stars, what time must it take to get to the others?
20190COLDS IN THE HEAD?
20190Catarrh, Fever Blisters?
20190Do you know it cures constipation and prevents and cures appendicitis?
20190Do you know that an occasional Internal Bath is a better preventive of illness and preserver of health than any other single means?
20190Do you know that it goes to the root of all disease and eradicates the cause?
20190Do you know that it makes beautiful complexions?
20190Dost reel from righteous retribution''s blow?
20190Dost thou behold thy lost youth all aghast?
20190Draw What does a dentist do?
20190Finally, what is this statue of Justice but the image of law?
20190Frost Bites, Soft Corns?
20190God made man Frail as a bubble; God made Love, Love made trouble; God made the vine; Was it a sin That man made wine To drown trouble in?
20190Grover Cleveland died on June 24, 1908, of debility, aged 71. WHO IS THE AUTHOR?
20190HAVE YOU CANCER, Tumors, Ulcers, Abscesses, Fever Sores, Goitre, Catarrh, Salt- Rheum, Rheumatism, Piles, Eczema, Scald Head, or Scrofula in any form?
20190HEALTH AND BEAUTY WOULD YOU BE BEAUTIFUL?
20190How can you be sure of finding these four properties in an antiseptic?
20190How can you take one from nineteen and leave twenty?
20190If the alphabet were invited out to dine what time would U, V, W, X, Y and Z go?
20190If, however, they are used, it is unnecessary to add the word to, because that is implied--"Whither are you going?"
20190In which month do ladies talk least?
20190Instead of"Because why?"
20190Instead of"Oh, dear, what will I do?"
20190Instead of"What may your name be?"
20190Instead of"Who learns you music?"
20190Instead of"Whom do you think him to be?"
20190Instead of"Will I give you some more tea?"
20190Instead of"Will you enter in?"
20190Instead of"Will you set down?"
20190MUSCULAR RHEUMATISM?
20190Now what is to be understood by this sentence: Was the rain over?
20190OMEGA NOVELTY COMPANY, Milwaukee, Wis.------------------------- Test It Yourself-- FREE A real Hair Restorative?
20190Of whom did you procure them?
20190On an appeal from the chair''s decision,"Shall the decision be sustained as the ruling of the house?"
20190On motion for orders of the day,"Will the house now proceed to the orders of the day?"
20190On motion for previous question, the form to be observed is,"Shall the main question be now put?"
20190On motion to strike out the words,"Shall the words stand part of the motion?"
20190Price$ 1.00------------------------- NEW KIND SALTED PEANUTS Did you ever try them?
20190Regular, irregular and defective?
20190SOLD BY ALL DRUGGISTS------------------------- Nervous?
20190Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights by my side in the cause of mankind whether our creeds agree?
20190Sore Head, Sore Nose, Sore Throat?
20190Sore Joints, Sore Feet?
20190Sore Lips, Sore Face, Sore Chest?
20190Sore Muscles, Sore Back, Neuralgia?
20190Suffer with Constipation, Sluggish Liver, Dyspepsia, Feel Bad All Over?
20190Swellings and Inflammations?
20190THE JETUM CO. CHICAGO------------------------- You''ll try It wo n''t You?
20190The Citizens''Wholesale Supply Co. Department C.- Columbus, Ohio------------------------- Have You Piles?
20190Then they really paid themselves for fighting?
20190Thus,"What was exacted by the barons from King John at Runnymede?"
20190To say,"Where are you going to?"
20190To whom do you speak?
20190WHAT IS MORE DESIRABLE THAN A CLEAR, HEALTHY SKIN?
20190WHAT''S IN A NAME?
20190What could be better than a Pure Wine?
20190What do you weigh with?
20190What does the mental picture of scales suggest?
20190What interest did they have in being ruled by him?
20190What is that which a train can not move without, and yet is not the least use to it?
20190What is that which is always invisible and never out of sight?
20190What is the weight of the moon?
20190What occupation is the sun?
20190What sea would make the best bed- room?
20190What thing is that which is lengthened by being cut at both ends?
20190What two letters make a county in Massachusetts?
20190What word makes you sick if you leave out one of its letters?
20190What word of ten letters can be spelled with five?
20190What would be the effect of green upon a complexion deficient in red?
20190When an objection is raised to considering questions,"Shall the question be considered?"
20190When asked"Who is there?"
20190When is a man over head and ears in debt?
20190When you wish to distinguish between two or more persons, say:"Which is the happy man?"
20190Where did the king get the money to pay them?
20190Which is the left side of a plum pudding?
20190Who do men say that I am?
20190Who fought for King George in 1776?
20190Who gave it to you?
20190Who said so?
20190Who was he?
20190Why Paris like the letter F?
20190Why are deep sighs like long stockings?
20190Why are fixed stars like pen, ink and paper?
20190Why are your eyes like stage horses?
20190Why are your teeth like verbs?
20190Why do we all go to bed?
20190Why is Ireland likely to become rich?
20190Why is a Jew in a fever like a diamond?
20190Why is a bee- hive like a spectator?
20190Why is a cook like a barber?
20190Why is a good saloon like a bad one?
20190Why is a good story like a church bell?
20190Why is a madman like two men?
20190Why is a man led astray like one governed by a girl?
20190Why is a man who runs in debt like a clock?
20190Why is a peach- stone like a regiment?
20190Why is a race at a circus like a big conflagration?
20190Why is a room full of married folks like an empty room?
20190Why is a theological student like a merchant?
20190Why is a waiter like a race horse?
20190Why is an island like the letter T?
20190Why is the Hudson River like a shoe?
20190Why is the letter D like a sailor?
20190Why is the wick of a candle like Athens?
20190Why not try it?
20190Why should red- headed men be chosen for soldiers?
20190Why, then, did they risk their lives for him?
20190not who--"Which of those ladies to you admire?"
20190or the market?
20190say"Oh, dear, what shall I do?"
20190say"Shall I give you some more tea?"
20190say"What is your name?"
20190say"Who teaches you music?"
20190say"Why?"
20190say"Will you enter?"
20190say"Will you sit down?"
20190say,"Who do you think him to be?"
22959Did Lincoln give you an order of that kind?
22959Did Stanton say I was a d----d fool?
22959Do you mean to say the President is a d----d fool?
22959Could the bolters from the Whig party overcome their traditional hatred of Martin Van Buren?
22959Could these elements be harmonized?
22959Do you not believe that they would_ hail_[ Hale] it as a blessing?
22959How could men apostatize from a cause which they had served with unflinching fidelity until it was completely triumphant?
22959How could such men acquire"education,"and"property,"under the absolute sway of a people who regarded them with loathing and contempt?
22959How should these mineral lands be disposed of?
22959If not, could the Barnburners, with their large following, be united on the candidate of the Liberty party, or some new man?
22959If not, why did he not recommend a"probation"for the hordes of"white trash"that were as unfit for political power as the negroes?
22959In plain English, what does it mean?
22959Mr. Ashmun replied,"Common rumor"; to which Mr. Bailey rejoined,"Does not the gentleman know that common rumor is a common liar?"
22959She looked up with apparent astonishment, and inquired''Is that all?''
22959The astonished native who, on hearing the news, suddenly inquired of a bystander,"Who the devil is Polk?"
22959They say that he lived in a cabin, And lived on old cider, too; Well, what if he did?
22959Turning to Mr. Brown, he said,"Has any such correspondence taken place?"
22959Was some miracle to be wrought through which the slave- masters were to be transfigured into negro apostles and devotees?
22959What guarantee has he for the investment of either capital or labor under such a system?"
22959What policy was now to be pursued?
22959What was the explanation of all this?
22959What would the new President do?
22959Who would grant them this"probation,"and help them turn it to good account?
26727Against whom these measures of precaution?
26727He then began again,''Why these armaments?
26727How long is it reasonable to expect that Portugal will abstain from retaliation?
26727The question:"What will the lords do?"
20487Do you accept the work?
20487Had you rather Cæsar were living, and die all slaves, than Cæsar were dead, to live all free men? 20487 Our brethren are already in the field; why stand we here idle?
20487Who is here so base that would be a bondman? 20487 William,"said I,"can you tell me anything about the silence of those sparkling, eternal stars and planets?"
20487_ Antonio finally asks for the three thousand ducats, and says:_Well, Shylock, shall we be beholden to you?
20487_ Cassius fires back this reply:_I an itching palm?
20487_ Launcelot, the foolish serving man for Shylock, says to old Gobbo, his blind father:_Do you not know me, father?
20487_ Lord Biron, who imagines himself in love with the beautiful Rosaline, soliloquizes in this fashion:_What?
20487_ Oberon:_Tarry, rash woman; am I not thy lord?
20487_ Opening the leaden casket, Bassanio exclaims:_What find I here?
20487_ Portia asks:_Is not Antonio able to discharge the money?
20487_ Queen says:_If it be, Why seems it so particular with thee?
20487_ She says:_How cam''st thou hither?
20487_ She sings:_How should I your true love know From another one?
20487_ Still brooding on the murder of Duncan, Macbeth says:_Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle towards my hand?
20487_ The Ghost passes across the stage and beckons Hamlet to follow, who frantically rushes after the apparition and says:_Whither wilt thou lead me?
20487_ The hour of assassination has arrived, and Cæsar, seated in the chair of state, says:_What is now amiss That Cæsar and his senate must redress?
20487_ The king asks:_How do you do, pretty lady?
20487_ Titania:_Then I must be thy lady?
20487_( And thou, Brutus?) 20487 _*****_"What have Kings that privates have not too, Save ceremony?
20487__A carrion death, within whose empty eye There is a written scroll?
20487__What have kings that privates have not too, Save ceremony?
20487Ah, dear Juliet, Why art thou yet so fair?
20487And do you now cull out a holiday?
20487And do you now put on your best attire?
20487And do you now strew flowers in his way, That comes in triumph over Pompey''s blood?
20487And what''s in prayer but this twofold force, To be forestalled ere we come to fall, Or pardoned being down?
20487Antonio and Shylock stand up in court, and Portia, after surveying each, inquires:"Is your name Shylock?"
20487Antonio hates me because I''m a Jew; Hath not a Jew eyes?
20487Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils Shrunk to this little measure?
20487Are all thy conquests, glories, triumphs, spoils, Shrunk to this little measure?
20487Art thou anything?
20487Art thou some god, some angel or some devil, That makest my blood cold, and my hair to stare?
20487Bernardo says:"Who''s there?"
20487Brutus and Cæsar; what should be in that Cæsar?
20487Brutus asks:"_ What is it that you would impart to me?
20487But O, what form of prayer Can serve my turn?
20487Claudius addressing Hamlet, says:_"But, now my nephew Hamlet, and my son How is it that the clouds still hang on you?
20487Come, let me clutch thee; I have thee not, and yet I see thee still, Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight?
20487Could you on this fair mountain leave to feed, And batten on this foul moor?
20487Curious kind of celestial justice, to kill any man for my sins and crimes?
20487Dar''st thou die?
20487Dost thou hear?
20487Dost thou lie so low?
20487Dost thou lie so low?
20487Dost thou love me?
20487Dost thou so hunger for my empty chair, That thou wilt needs invest thee with mine honors Before thy hour be ripe?
20487Flavius twits the turncoat rabble in this style:_"O you hard hearts, you cruel men of Rome, Knew ye not Pompey?
20487Fled with a Christian?
20487Forgive me my foul murder?
20487Hath not a Jew hands; Organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?
20487Have you eyes?
20487He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill; Did this in Cæsar seem ambitious?
20487I pardon that man''s life; what was thy cause?
20487I stand for judgment; shall I have it?
20487If you prick us, do we not bleed?
20487If you tickle us do we not laugh?
20487In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt, But, being seasoned with a gracious voice Obscures the show of evil?
20487In religion, What damned error, but some sober brow Will bless it, and approve it with a text, Hiding the grossness with fair ornament?
20487Is it possible A cur can lend three thousand ducats?
20487Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased by the price of chains and slavery?
20487Is not Love a Hercules Still climbing trees in the Hesperides?
20487Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow?
20487James Burbage gazed for a moment on the manly form of William and blurted out in his bluff manner,"What do you know?"
20487Juliet importunes him to stay, and says:_"Wilt thou be gone?
20487Juliet wills it so-- How is it, my soul?
20487Kind souls, what, weep you, when you but behold Our Cæsar''s vesture wounded?
20487Must I remember?
20487Now in the name of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Cæsar feed That he is grown so great?
20487Or art thou but A dagger of the mind; a false creation, Proceeding from the heat oppressed brain?
20487Portia asks:"Do you confess the bond?"
20487Portia then triumphantly asks:_"Art thou content, Jew, what dost thou say?
20487Portia:"Then must the Jew be merciful?"
20487Queen Gertrude says:_"How now, Ophelia?
20487Quite chop- fallen?
20487Roderick then turned to me and said,"Who are you?"
20487Salarino says to the Jew:_"Why, I am sure if he forfeit, thou wilt not Take his flesh; what''s that good for?
20487Say, why is this?
20487Shall I believe That unsubstantial death is amorous; And that the lean abhorred monster keeps Thee here in dark to be his paramour?
20487She hears him sing, and opening her eyes, says:_"What angel wakes me from my flowery bed?
20487She says to Antonio:"You stand within Shylock''s control, do you not?"
20487She says:"Could beauty, my lord, have better commerce than with honesty?"
20487She says:_"Go, get thee hence, for I will not away; What''s here?
20487Should I not say; Hath a dog money?
20487Shylock asks:"On what compulsion must I?
20487Sleep when he wakes?
20487Tell me that?"
20487The Duke asks:"Come you from old Bellario?"
20487The Prince asks:_"How shall I know if I do choose the right?
20487The dancing done, I''ll watch her place of stand, And, touching hers, make happy my rude hand, Did my heart love till now?
20487Turning abruptly to William, the proprietor said:"I understand you know something about theatres and acting?"
20487Was this ambition?
20487What if her eyes were there, they in her head?
20487What if this cursed hand Were thicker than itself with brother''s blood?
20487What is a man, If his chief good and market of his time Be but to sleep and feed?
20487What is it that gentlemen wish?
20487What should I say to you?
20487What should such fellows as I do Crawling between heaven and earth?
20487What should we do?
20487What would they have?
20487What, jealous Oberon?
20487When that my care could not withhold thy riots What wilt thou do, when riot is thy care?
20487Where be your gibes now, your gambols?
20487Wherefore?
20487Whereto serves mercy But to confront the visage of offense?
20487Who is here so rude that would be a Roman?
20487Who is here so vile that will not love his country?
20487Why dost thou not strike?
20487Why should a man whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster?
20487Why should that name be sounded more than yours?
20487Why should the poor be flattered?
20487Why would''st thou be a breeder of sinners?
20487Yea, noise?
20487Yet, Cæsar threw off all fear and suspicion and said:_"What can be avoided, Whose end is purposed by the mighty gods?
20487You all did love him once, not without cause; What cause withholds you, then, to mourn for him?
20487Your flashes of merriment, That were wo nt to set the table in a roar?
20487Your songs?
20487_"Art thou so bare and full of wretchedness, And fear''st to die?
20487and creep into the jaundice, By being peevish?
20487and if you wrong us shall we not revenge?
20487can''st thou not forbear me half an hour?
20487drink all; and leave me no friendly drop To help me after?
20487if you poison us Do we not die?
20487is it possible a young maid''s wits Should be as mortal as an old man''s life?
20487wherefore art thou Romeo?
20487who comes here?
13457And pray, sir, what may I be worth in the tariff of his Excellency''s good graces?
13457And that lady who is painted?
13457And that young lady with fair hair?
13457And the other?
13457And this is his birthday-- you have n''t made any mistake?
13457And what about your boy?
13457And what do you think of them?
13457And what may your horse, dogs, and hawks stand you in?
13457Are n''t they famously good?
13457Arst him,whispers Mr. Wells,"how many he killed?
13457Believe what? 13457 Believed what?"
13457Betty,I asked one of my parishioners,"why do you make these ill- natured, irritating speeches to your next- door neighbour?"
13457But am I to look at my watch? 13457 But,"you inquire,"is it not true that Joe was once a pirate?"
13457But,you object,"if game is so rare in Tarascon, what do the Tarascon sportsmen do every Sunday?"
13457Can I tell you what?
13457Colonel, perhaps, and aide- de- camp to his Imperial Majesty?
13457Do n''t you, sir? 13457 Do you ever come to London?"
13457Do you wish to dishonour yourself? 13457 General, then-- Monsieur le Général?"
13457Have you ever edited an agricultural paper before?
13457Have you seen any numbers of_ The Pickwick Papers_?
13457How was the_ Rambler_ published, ma''am?
13457In the house where she was a servant?
13457Is it not_ extraordinary?
13457It is not painted to the life, For where''s the trousers blue? 13457 My dear doctor,"said he to Goldsmith,"what harm does it do to a man to call him Holofernes?"
13457Now,said Lamb,"you old lake poet, you rascally poet, why do you call Voltaire dull?"
13457Oh, they do n''t, do n''t they? 13457 People are kind to you?"
13457Pooh, ma''am,he exclaimed to Mrs. Carter,"who is the worse for being talked of uncharitably?"
13457Son of the Queen?
13457The Prince merely said as he passed you--"Well, what did he say?
13457Think of it? 13457 Uncle,"I said, with a great effort,"will you buy that doll for me?"
13457Well, that''s whimsical enough; and how much may that lady be worth, according to his estimation?
13457Well, what will happen to you?
13457What can I do for you?
13457What do you think of Guy Fawkes and Judas Iscariot?
13457What is the meaning of all this?
13457What may the game be worth which you kill in the course of a year?
13457What ought you to do next?
13457What ought you to do on Sunday?
13457What would you?
13457Which is Adam and which is Eve?
13457Who is the Princess Alice?
13457Who is this for?
13457Who stole Pat Doolan''s pig? 13457 Whom do we mourn this time?"
13457Why?
13457With me, sir?
13457You are sure of it?
13457You going to Parry, sir?
13457You know that, do n''t you? 13457 You know to read the future?"
13457You''ve heard of Alabama, I dare say? 13457 Your baggage, registair free, sir?"
13457Your old missus is dead, ai n''t she, Joe?
13457_ My dear fellow,said Jerrold,"why go to the other extreme?_"*****"_ What a magnificent- looking man!"
13457_ Tell_ you, you cornstalk, you cabbage, you son of a cauliflower? 13457 ''And this you call--?'' 13457 ''Tis yours? 13457 (_ Anglicè_,You ox- headed lout, are you stone deaf?
13457***** And is W. Bullar going to work upon you with his"simple mysticism"?
13457***** King James said to the fly,"Have I three kingdoms, and thou must needs fly into my eye?"
13457*****"Why do I smile?"
13457*****"_ Do you approve of clergymen riding?"
13457A Morris Greek- and- Gothic song?
13457A faded and recumbent stranger, pausing in a profound reverie over the rim of a basin, asked me what kind of place Calais is?
13457A sunset, a man- of- war, a thunderstorm?
13457A tender Tennysonian lyric?
13457Abbé?"
13457About twice in a year, however, I do not mind asking you one thing which is easily answered, how you and Mrs. Carlyle are?
13457After a little time the comptroller looked down, looked up and said to Wordsworth,"Do n''t you think, sir, Milton was a great genius?"
13457After an awful pause the comptroller said,"Do n''t you think Newton a great genius?"
13457After service was performed his reverence, dropping the question of"Who stole Pat Doolan''s pig?"
13457Ai n''t I a monster?
13457All the while, until Monkhouse succeeded, we could hear Lamb struggling in the painting- room and calling at intervals,"Who is that fellow?
13457Am I not thy father and thy brother, And thy mother?
13457And are you not convinced that this race is between Marquis Sardanapalus and Earl Heliogabalus?
13457And do n''t you pity the poor Asiatics and Italians who comforted themselves, on their resurrection, with their being geese and turkeys?
13457And if they go from home, their reason is equally cogent,"What does it signify how we dress here, where nobody knows us?"
13457And this hillock itself-- who could paint it, With its changes of shadow and light?
13457And thou-- what needest with thy tribe''s black tents Who hast the red pavilion of my heart?
13457And what do you think of_ bofen- yed_?
13457And yet our fathers deem''d it two: Nor am I confident they err''d; Are you?
13457And yet, Suppose for once-- suppose, Ninette-- NINETTE But what?
13457And you bet you he_ did_ learn him, too?
13457Are you for eking out your shadowy list with such names as Alexander, Julius Caesar, Tamerlane, or Genghis Khan?"
13457As soon as he has caught your question he bursts out laughing, flings himself suddenly back, and exclaims, with a splutter:"How many ha''I killed?
13457As you pronounce it, does not William''s photograph present itself to your mental eye?
13457Besides, I heard enough to show Their love is proof against the snow:--''Why wait,''he said,''why wait for May, When love can warm a winter''s day?''"
13457But do you know that that is not a reliable article for a steady drink?
13457But touch that''ome of culture?
13457But what will you lack when your mates go by With a girl who cuts you dead?
13457But what''s odds?
13457But where will you look when they give the glance That tells you they know you funked?
13457But why?
13457But, do you know?
13457Can any man charge God, that he hath not given him enough to make his life happy?
13457Can we think no wealth enough but such a state for which a man may be brought into a præmunire, begged, proscribed, or poisoned?
13457DOES MAMMA KNOW?
13457Did you all bathe and"rux"yourselves well about in the brine?
13457Did you ever read any of the works of Janin?--No?
13457Did you read in F. Newman''s book?
13457Do n''t you believe in the transmigration of souls?
13457Do n''t you yearn towards those dear souls?
13457Do you ever see cows dressed in grey flannel in London?
13457Does not man, these enthusiasts ask, Most nearly approach the divine When engaged in the soul- stirring task Of filling his body with wine?
13457Does not the epithet describe the man?
13457Does not this daisy leap to my heart set in its coat of emerald?
13457Extraordinary, though, was it not?
13457For what did Dr. Allen... say when he felt Spedding''s head?
13457From B to C.--Whenever the fairer sex enter Parliament( breathes there a man with ears so deaf as to doubt their powers of parlance?)
13457GUARDIAN ANGELS[ Sidenote:_ Disraeli in"Tancred"_]"What should I be without my debts?"
13457HORTENSE Graceful?
13457Have I permission?
13457Have a cup of tea?"
13457Have not beggars been frequently known, When satisfied, soaked and replete, To imagine their bench was a throne And the civilised world at their feet?
13457Have you any philosophy?
13457Have you any red silk umbrellas in London?
13457Have you had any experience in agriculture practically?"
13457Have you read Thackeray''s little book--"The Second Funeral of Napoleon"?
13457He put the paper on his lap, and, while he polished his spectacles with his handkerchief, he said,"Are you the new editor?"
13457He sings, and without any shame He murders all the finest music: Does he prescribe?
13457He''d make a lovely Guy, would n''t he?"
13457He''s a bishop now, but he do n''t forget his old friends, do he?"
13457Hoby quietly said:"How did that happen, Sir John?"
13457How am I to find out when a quarter of an hour has passed?"
13457How is it possible to be happy with two mould candles ill snuffed?
13457How is your wife?"
13457How long is the Queen''s family likely to hold out?
13457How many?
13457How secure at least the greatest amount of happiness compatible with your condition?
13457How should they have any?
13457How will you make yourself most happy in it?
13457I am living( did I tell you this before?)
13457I have not done much in that way: the storms have been so furious-- unkind of them, eh?
13457I offer my arm to Dolores or Florentina( is not this familiarity strange?
13457I said to the guide,"Son, did you know what kind of an infernal place this was before you brought me down here?"
13457I say, who stole_ poor_ Pat Doolan''s pig?"
13457I simply ask you, as a man and a brother, if that was any way for him to do?
13457I went into the street and said to a demure, douce young Highlander,''Do ye think the Germans are coming?''
13457I wonder will He come again and tell it us?
13457I''scaped pirates by being ship- wracked; was the wrack a benefit therefore?
13457If I saw him sulky, or anythin'', up I''d go, an''''What''s matter?''
13457In brief, I am content, and what should providence add more?
13457Is he listening?
13457Is it football still and the picture show, The pub and the betting odds, When your brothers stand to the tyrant''s blow And England''s call is God''s?
13457Is it naught to you if your country fall, And Right is smashed by Wrong?
13457Is it not said of every baby?
13457Is it not---(never, Eddy, say"ai n''t it")-- A marvellous sight?
13457Is it true, I mean?
13457Is n''t it Scotland?...
13457Is n''t that consummate?
13457Is not this all funny?
13457Is not this wild rose sweet without a comment?
13457Is there an analogy, in certain constitutions, between keeping an umbrella up and keeping the spirits up?
13457Is this exegetical?
13457Is this æsthetic?
13457It changes occasionally to bright yellow, which is( is it?)
13457It is Winckelmann, is n''t it, who says that when you come to the age of expression in Greek art you have come to the age of decadence?
13457Jacotot Did not supply that lace, I know; And where, I ask, has mortal seen A hat unfeathered?
13457LOVE IN WINTER[ Sidenote:_ Austin Dobson_] Between the berried holly- bush The blackbird whistled to the thrush:"Which way did bright- eyed Bella go?
13457Lamb got up, and, taking a candle, said,"Sir, will you allow me to look at your phrenological development?"
13457Lamb seemed to take no notice; but all of a sudden he roared out,"Which is the gentleman we are going to lose?"
13457Lamb took hold of the long- clothes, saying,"Where, God bless me, where does it leave off?"
13457Lamb, who was dozing by the fire, turned round and said,"Pray, sir, did you say Milton was a great genius?"
13457Lamb?"
13457Lamb?"
13457Look, Speckle- breast, across the snow,-- Are those her dainty tracks I see, That wind beside the shrubbery?"
13457May I trust that you will give your immediate attention to this most important subject?
13457Monsieur, what say you?
13457Mr. Testator hazarded,"At ten?"
13457My answer at last was, as to the boys, I want them to be_ like me_; and as to the girls"in whose hands can they be so safe as in_ yours_?
13457NINETTE And then?
13457NINETTE What looks, you mean?
13457NINON But are they?
13457NINON Shall I?
13457NINON Suppose it were not so?
13457NINON Why, if that_ could_ occur, What kind of men should you prefer?
13457NINON(_ touching her cheek suspiciously_) Has he a scar on this side?
13457Next Sunday, after the service of the day, he called out with a loud voice, fixing his eyes on the suspected individual,"Who stole Pat Doolan''s pig?"
13457Now, was that any way for that old man''s nephew to impose on a stranger and orphan like me?
13457Now, what do you think of that?--for I really suppose you wrote it?"
13457Of a passion, an emotion, a mood?
13457Oh my benefactor, can you make him laugh?
13457One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come across him with his box, and says:"What might it be that you''ve got in that box?"
13457Or why, at any rate, should not the clergyman be born full- grown and in Holy Orders, not to say already beneficed?
13457Our rude forefathers deem''d it two: Can you imagine so absurd A view?
13457Quite true, but expression of what?
13457Shall I not know that it blows quite soon enough, without the officious Warden''s interference?
13457Shall you be at Sheffield?
13457Should one almost wonder if carpenters were to remonstrate that since the peace their trade decays, and that there is no demand for wooden legs?
13457Somewhere in Ameriky, is n''t it?
13457Sublime or graceful,--grave,--satiric?
13457The King can do no wrong?
13457The child said it was delightful, and added:"Does mamma know?
13457The fondest words that ever fell From Lady Clara, when they met, Were,"How d''ye do?
13457The gossiping tone does proceed into the universal, does it not?
13457The lord seeing that,"Sirrah,"says he,"do you not know me, that you use no reverence?"
13457The president of the society came up and bathed my head with cold water, and said:"What made you carry on so towards the last?"
13457Their dress is very independent of fashion; as they observe,"What does it signify how we dress here at Cranford, where everybody knows us?"
13457Till I know that, how can I understand the Review?
13457To which I as frankly smiled, and said,"How did you know me so soon?"
13457Twain, on showing the visitor into the sanctum, and finding her spouse thus engaged, said:"''Now, Mark, you_ know_ you love that baby-- don''t you?''
13457WHERE?
13457Wad ye stop the pipers?
13457Was he far wrong?
13457Was it U.T.''s?
13457Was it experience that guided the pencil of Raphael when he painted the palaces of Rome?
13457Was it not precisely the story for a vicar to tell?
13457Was it this?
13457Was n''t it grand?
13457Was the one I had fallen in love with at all beautiful?
13457We can not live without destroying animals, but shall we torture them for our sport-- sport in their destruction?
13457Well, what''s_ he_ good for?"
13457Well, who said they did?
13457What a change?
13457What am I to do in these times with such a family of children?
13457What are Agincourt and Waterloo in the presence of such sweetness?
13457What are all the poor folks to do during the winter?
13457What could they do if they were there?
13457What degree of endurance have I not calculated?
13457What do they do?
13457What expedient in negotiation is unknown to me?
13457What farmers are to employ all these?
13457What is the meaning of"exegetical"?
13457What is the moral support derived by some sea- going amateurs from an umbrella?
13457What is your_ bête noire_?--(What is my which?)
13457What landlord can find room for them?
13457What more can I request to you than this?
13457What need hath Nature of silver dishes, multitudes of waiters, delicate pages, perfumed napkins?
13457What play of the countenance have I not observed?
13457What say you, Mr. Lamb?
13457What was your thought?
13457What''s odds?"
13457What''s the odds?"
13457What, have n''t you heard him tell how they boarded a Spanish ship, and cut the throats and broke the heads of the swarthy crew?
13457What, with hands That hang like this?
13457When this story was told at the Club, one of those listeners who always want something more called out,"Well, and what did Waters say?"
13457Where are they gone?
13457Where will you look, sonny, where will you look When your children yet to be Clamour to learn of the part you took In the War that kept men free?
13457Where?
13457Who comes next on the list?"
13457Who criticise the Indian campaigns?
13457Who do up the heavy leaders on finance?
13457Who does not recognise the son in those accents?
13457Who edit the agricultural papers, you-- yam?
13457Who has not seen illustrious snobs in satin, and sweet, modest gentlewomen in homely print and serge?
13457Who review the books?
13457Who said it?
13457Who will there be to comfort me, Or who will be my friend?
13457Who write the dramatic critiques for the second- rate papers?
13457Who write the temperance appeals, and clamour about the flowing bowl?
13457Why do certain voyagers across the Channel always put up that article, and hold it up with a grim and fierce tenacity?
13457Why do they call, sonny, why do they call For men who are brave and strong?
13457Why is this?
13457Why should not chickens be born and clergymen be laid and hatched?
13457Why should we not all be baronets?
13457Why should we not raise ourselves, every man of us, on his own private hoist, to the Peerage?
13457Why should we?
13457Why, that all his bumps were so tempered that there was no merit in his sobriety-- then what would have been the use of a Conscience to him?
13457Why, what put it into your head that you could edit a paper of this nature?
13457Will you say it was naught to you if France Stood up to her foe or bunked?
13457Will you send a strangled cheer to the sky And grin till your cheeks are red?
13457Will you slink away, as it were from a blow, Your old head shamed and bent?
13457Wordsworth seemed asking himself,"Who is this?"
13457You do n''t think, do you, that these poor souls are incapable of appreciating_ delicacy_?
13457You feel the atmosphere-- what?...
13457You may remember that I lectured in Newark lately for the young gentlemen of the Clayonian Society?
13457You think it?
13457You would n''t?
13457[ Sidenote:_ Horace Walpole_] Can we easily leave the remains of such a year as this?
13457_ Pastor_.--"Did I not see old Nanny Smith talking with you at your door just now?"
13457and the"What then, sir?"
13457at a little cottage close by the lawn gates, where I have my books, a barrel of beer, which I tap myself( can you tap a barrel of beer?
13457by despising to- day, and looking up cloudward?
13457can you bring soothing tears to those parched orbs?"
13457can you doubt me?"
13457do you think one can remember a thing for ever?"
13457do you want to be killed a second time?
13457he asked in another letter;"if so, will you allow me to call upon you?"
13457how, sir?"
13457my Jones, What is become of you?"
13457quoth she,"deare_ Moll_, you must not deeme him olde; why, he is but forty- two; and am not I twenty- three?"
13457then what are you?"
13457this wide- stretching wold( Look out_ wold_) with its wonderful carpet Of emerald, purple, and gold?
13457was abruptly but anxiously asked--"Oh, why did n''t you go in?"
13457was it good?
13457what is that comes gliding in, And quite in middling haste?
13457what''s this?"
13457who is''t now we hear?
13457why did n''t you_ tell_ me you did n''t know anything about agriculture?"
13457why, madam, that Charles Lamb was a backbiter?"
13457you know him then?"
22925''Andthe finder will be liberally rewarded,"eh?''
22925''Check or currency?'' 22925 ''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks out to the steamer?''
22925But was n''t it dark at that hour?
22925Could n''t you be mistaken about this?
22925Do n''t you s''pose I got eyes?
22925How much do you want?
22925Is Papa- day happy in heaven?
22925Now, is n''t that strange?
22925Pore? 22925 Pretty soon an orderly came along in great haste, yellin'',''Who did that?--Who fired that shot?''
22925Smoot,said he,"did you vote for me?"
22925What am I to pay you?
22925What time did you see it?
22925When he came back I said,''Doctor, what do you say now?'' 22925 Where?"
22925Why, Mr. Lincoln, what''s the matter?
22925Abe laughed again and replied:"Needham, are you satisfied that I can throw you?
22925But that''s like promising to give you half of the first dollar I find floating up the Sangamon on a grindstone, is n''t it?
22925But"what is home without a mother?"
22925Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work?
22925Considering this a reflection upon his own habits, the little man sneered:"What, Mr. Lincoln, are you a temperance man?"
22925Did you ever see anything like it?
22925Do n''t you think it''s rather odd that He should send such a message by way of that awful wicked city of Chicago?"
22925Do you believe that you could bear that patiently?
22925Ever wear a wet buckskin glove?
22925For instance, do you suppose that I would ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men?"
22925For instance, there has been much discussion concerning Lincoln''s Gettysburg Address-- where was it written, and did he deliver it from notes?
22925He finally turned to us and said:"''Gentlemen, did you ever read anything from"Artemus Ward?"
22925He laughed and said:"''Ca n''t the party raise any better material than that?''
22925He-- the father-- had got along better without going to school, and why should Abe have a better education than his father?
22925I understand you to say the murder was committed about half past nine o''clock, and there was a bright moon at the time?"
22925Is that satisfactory?''
22925Is the land any richer?
22925Lincoln( brightening)--"Good, where is it?"
22925Matilda only wept silently, and the lad went on,"What are you going to tell mother about it?"
22925My God, is that all?"
22925Speed--"So you are to be one of us?"
22925Then he would wail again in the bitterness of his disappointment:"Papa- day, where''s my Papa- day?"
22925What boy has not done so time and again in his youthful dreams?
22925What can you do in Missouri better than here?
22925Why did you disobey mother?"
22925Will anybody there, any more than here, do your work for you?
22925the lines by William Knox, beginning:"''Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
20088And I suppose Miss Almiry keeps at her singing?
20088And anything more?
20088Are you a good shot?
20088But what?
20088But, my child,says the mother;"are you not sewing that breadth upon the wrong side?"
20088Can you fetch him?
20088Could n''t you get her plain sewing? 20088 Do you know him?"
20088Do you know,said the philosopher to me one day, while talking upon this very subject,"that Ricardo was my grand- disciple?"
20088Do you live here?
20088Do you see that Rebel riding yonder?
20088Do you think we could get that school in Taunton for her?
20088Give me up? 20088 Have you never any larger shrimps?"
20088Have you the key of the gallery?
20088How is her handwriting? 20088 How_ can_ I drop her?
20088I say, Phil,Reuben had said, as he marched his old schoolmate up Broadway,"it''s rather a touch beyond Ashfield, this, is n''t it?
20088Is he in the habit of doing as he did to- night with strangers?
20088Is this religion?
20088Miss Annie,he added, in imitation of my manner,"supposin''I see you home?"
20088Miss Darry, shall you or I take Mr. Allen to see the picture? 20088 Oh, as usual, the old question,"said I,--"''What''s to be done with her?''"
20088Oh, have they been telling you about that, Miss Darry?
20088Then will you not come to- morrow evening?
20088Then you admired his appearance?
20088Well, my young friend, I suppose this studio is open to visitors?
20088Well, what shall we do with her?
20088Well, what will you do with her?
20088Well, young man, shall you or I lead in the horse?
20088Well,I answered,"is there any occupation, by which any of us gain our living, which has not its disagreeable side?
20088Well,said Bob,"to return from all this to the question, What''s to be done with her?
20088What are you going to do with it?
20088What is the reason of this?
20088What''s all this talk about?
20088What''s the matter, Georgie? 20088 Why, you see, Mill was my disciple, and Ricardo was his;_ ergo_, Ricardo was my grand- disciple: hey?"
20088Will you, John?
20088You certainly do not doubt the sincerity of our invitation?
20088You do n''t mean,said my wife,"to propose that our_ protégée_ should go to Marianne as a servant?"
20088You do n''t say you mean to become a parson?
20088You may be a gentleman for aught I see to the contrary; but it requires a great deal to make one.--What school was that the blacksmith spoke of?
20088You''re mighty pretty now, Sary Ann; and it a''n''t no use to look ahead to the time when you wo n''t be, is it?
20088Your grand- disciple? 20088 ''D y''ever hear anything like it? 20088 --perhaps, he adds, in the next breath inquiring,What are you going to do with our niggers?"
20088Allen?"
20088And can you wisely discern roasts, steaks, and fowl?
20088And if I drop her, who will take her up?"
20088And should he descend from this ground to plead with him upon the score of his short- lived worldly career?
20088And was not this also coming very near Nature?
20088And where is the churn?
20088Are not his labors dry and hard and exhausting?
20088Are not his later plays as much better_ every way_, as in respect of the female characters?
20088Are there any further touches to be given it?"
20088Are there incorporeal carriages and horses?
20088Are there no trials to a woman, I beg to know, in teaching a district school, where all the boys, big and little, of a neighborhood congregate?
20088Are you going to_ my_ distressed woman?
20088But are not the_ men_ of his later plays quite as much superior to the men of his first?
20088Can I help knowing that she is poor and suffering?
20088Can any one ask why the figure of the lady who brought those books to us three thousand miles over the sea"haunts us like a shadow"?
20088Can grave men admit such fancies as these?
20088Crowfield?--some twelve or thirteen, are there not?
20088D''ye hear''em shout?
20088D''ye mind those thunder- claps?
20088Did he not tempt her to some mischievous sally of mirth, on many a day when they were kneeling in couple about the family altar?
20088Did they believe in your better world?
20088Do I not wear large shoes for fear of corns like Virgil, and sometimes complain of sore eyes like Horace?"
20088Do n''t you see what a foolish fellow you are to work for him, when you might be earning for yourself?"
20088Do n''t you see, Tracy, that she does n''t like flattery?"
20088Do n''t you think so, Rose?"
20088Do we use too gross a figure to represent what many people would call the influences of the Spirit?
20088Do you believe He asks it idly?
20088Do you believe He asks it?
20088Do you feel now and then the least little bit Of an incipient earthquake fit, Accompanied with awful raps?
20088Do you mean to let me share your happiness?
20088Does not Mr. White see that his inferences in this are just the reverse of what they should be?
20088Does not the blacksmith spend half his life in soot and grime, that he may gain a competence for the other half?
20088Does not the lawyer spend all his days either in a dusty office or in the foul air of a court- room?
20088Does she write a good hand?"
20088For Paulding and for Walke,-- For Phelps, for Gwin, and for Shirk!-- But what''s the use to talk?
20088For who can doubt that the senses are entitled to their full blossom?
20088Had he a brother?
20088Had he a mother?
20088Had he a sister?
20088Had he not set before him in"line upon line"the awful truth that his immortal career was at stake?
20088Had he not unfolded the terrors of God''s wrath upon sinners?
20088Had he not warned him over and over that he was standing upon slippery places?
20088Had n''t you better go back to the school- house and wait for me?"
20088Had she bet on the losing horse at the Derby?
20088Had she bought an expensive bonnet?
20088Had she gambled?
20088He is of Scotch parentage; and who knows but he may be akin to the ploughman- poet whose"arrowy songs still sing in our morning air"?
20088How do you think Old Boody''s tavern and sign- board would look along here?"
20088How so?"
20088I thought of his home, his heart- life:--"Had he a father?
20088If one were ever penurious, might it not be of these handsome loaves of hers?
20088If this woman were to work in a factory, would she not often be brought into associations distasteful to her?
20088If you could be hard- hearted enough to win H. from this bilious beverage, would it not be worth the perils?
20088In those days when they raced through the Catechism together, did he never provoke her mocking smiles by his sneers at the ponderous language?
20088Is he not brought into much disagreeable contact with the lowest class of society?
20088Is he not himself in some measure accountable?
20088Is it any less drudgery to stand all day behind a counter, serving customers, than to tend a door- bell and wait on a table?
20088Is it possible, that, shut up between those covers, long unknown, all these existed which have since made life brighter and better to us?
20088Is n''t that good theology?"
20088Is n''t the old_ Cinc._ a trump?
20088Is not that library as real to us as when the books filled its shelves, and we were welcomed by the gentle voice of its master?
20088Is she handy with her needle?"
20088Is there not a better future for these men also?
20088Might it not be the same in any of the arts and trades in which a living is to be got?
20088Now by what possible calling open to her capacity can she pay her board and washing, fuel and lights, and clear a hundred and some odd dollars a year?
20088Of what should I be afraid?"
20088Or was it the impulse of some strong benevolent purpose?
20088Or was there a nearer one Still, and a dearer one Yet, than all other?"
20088Shall he not, Alice?"
20088THE WOMAN QUESTION: OR, WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH HER?
20088The day of Pentecost showed a great miracle, indeed; but was not the day of miracles past?
20088The founder of Christianity says,''Whether is greater, he that sitteth at meat or he that serveth?
20088Then what becomes of the positive character of this narrative, as a lesson, as a warning to us?
20088Think you not they are genuine love- pats?
20088Was this the machinery a mystifier was likely to select?
20088Well, well, they thought you were given over to bad courses; but it''s all right now, I hear; quite upon the other tack, eh, Reuben?
20088What admonition could the Doctor add to those which he had addressed to his poor son fortnightly for years past?
20088What are the doctors for, if''tisn''t to cure people?"
20088What can she do?"
20088What does he_ think_?
20088What does the old Boss think?
20088What have the spirits of the departed to do with conveyances resembling those of earthly structure?
20088What hinders these women from rushing to the help of one another, just as two drops of water on a leaf rush together and make one?
20088What, then, does this appeal mean?
20088Where is the other city of the same size in which such a number of amateur lady- artists could be found?
20088Who cares to hear it, except on Sundays?"
20088Who cares to read it?
20088Who ever tasted anything, save a nut, half so sweet, or who ever anything so pure?
20088Who shall say that authors and students do not come back to the books which contain their invisible souls, or spirits like themselves?
20088Why not let him show his admiration of the child, if he wanted to?"
20088Why, then, should she show timidity and shyness at this meeting with him?
20088Why_ did_ she sell those books?
20088Will he shrink?
20088Will it ever rise?
20088Will not some of these ways satisfy our ardent reformers and physiologists?
20088Will you give it?"
20088Would n''t the old people stare?"
20088Would the prayers of the good people of Ashfield help him?
20088Writing to Robert Morris, Washington had asked,"What are we to do with this heavy debt?"
20088You would have let a sunbeam play over that little hand, had you possessed the technical knowledge to manage it: now, would n''t you?"
20088[ C] Or is all this, even if genuine, only symbolical,--sounds without objective counterpart?
20088and would it not be advisable to pay the collectors so much per cent on the sums collected?"
20088are you not taking wrong stitches again?
20088d''ye hear?
20088d''ye hear?
20088did ye hear the hiss and scream Of that hot steam?
20088what are you crying for?"
20088where''s the money for that job?
27586How could Canada resist?
22994And where,he asked,"would all this power and money center?
22994But these issues are not with the same imperious"Which?"
22994But what constitutional historian has made any adequate attempt to interpret political facts by the light of these social areas and changes?
22994But where is the proof of this?
22994Can these ideals of individualism and democracy be reconciled and applied to the twentieth century type of civilization?
22994Can you hem in such a territory as that?
22994Did"Populistic"tendencies appear in this frontier, and were there grievances which explained these tendencies?
22994Have we not here an illustration of what is possible and necessary for the historian?
22994How adjust the old conceptions to the changed conditions of modern life?
22994How did the frontiersman differ from the man of the coast?
22994How far was this first frontier a field for the investment of eastern capital and for political control by it?
22994How shall we conserve what was best in pioneer ideals?
22994In other words, has the United States itself an original contribution to make to the history of society?
22994Said Duquesne to the Iroquois,"Are you ignorant of the difference between the king of England and the king of France?
22994Sir, can it be pretended that the patriots of that day would for one moment have listened to it?
22994The Mississippi Valley is asking,"What shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?"
22994The Northwest extends eastward to the base of the Alleghany Mountains, and does not all of western New York lie westward of the Alleghany Mountains?
22994The people before me,--who are you but New York men, while you are men of the Northwest?"
22994The result is stated by a writer in_ De Bow''s Review_ in 1852 in these words:--"What is New Orleans now?
22994Think, here_ Should this be done any more?_ We read of Balaam, in Num.
22994This called out Burke''s splendid protest: If you stopped your grants, what would be the consequence?
22994Were there evidences of antagonism between the frontier and the settled, property- holding classes of the coast?
22994What effects followed from the trader''s frontier?
22994What has it been in American life?
22994What is the West?
22994What more effective agency is there for the cultivation of the seed wheat of ideals than the university?
22994What were America''s"morning wishes"?
22994Whence comes all the inspiration of free soil which spreads itself with such cheerful voices over all these plains?
22994Where are her dreams of greatness and glory?
22994Where can we find a more promising body of sowers of the grain?
22994Why was it that the Indian trader passed so rapidly across the continent?
15718And was he pleased?
15718Are You a Good or a Poor Penman?
15718Are you certain your drains are not stopped up?
15718Are you full- up, George?
15718Broke down?
15718But I tell you--"I know, dear; but what are we going to do about it? 15718 But how?"
15718But supposing the electric apparatus failed?
15718But what am I goin''to do till then? 15718 But where does the dignity come in?"
15718Can you take the first train?
15718Did n''t you feel anything, my boy?
15718Do n''t you want to know how these trucks are going to make you money?
15718Do you really think you have a right to devote so much time to outside work?
15718Done los''something, boss?
15718Ella,said Miss Bartelme, looking up from her desk,"why did n''t you tell me the truth when you came in here the other day?
15718Got any friends in the army?
15718Got anything else?
15718Got ta job?
15718Have n''t you any reasons at all?
15718Have n''t you ever talked it over at home or at school?
15718Have n''t you ever thought about it?
15718How are you, Steve? 15718 How do you feel now?"
15718How many times have I got to tell all of you to put the head of my bed toward the engine?
15718How would you like to go into a good home where some one would love you and care for you?
15718I do n''t know-- is that a good position?
15718If you have n''t anything to write about, why write at all?
15718Is n''t that it?
15718Is this point essential to the accomplishment of my aim?
15718Really, you know,he mused,"does it pay Society to reward its individuals in inverse ratio to their usefulness?"
15718Saturday afternoons off?
15718Say, Mis''Cronan, there was n''t no real dragon, was they?
15718Say, kid, ai n''t it the limit that a woman ca n''t vote on her own business?
15718Suppose I have company for dinner and the Home Assistant is n''t through her work when her eight hours are up, what happens?
15718Suppose I wanted to buy them anyway?
15718Supposing the motor driving the gyroscopes broke down; what then?
15718THEY CALL ME THE''HEN EDITOR''THE STORY OF A SMALL- TOWN NEWSPAPER WOMAN By SADIE L. MOSSLER"What do you stay buried in this burg for?
15718That meant perpetuity to us, do n''t you see?
15718Them soldiers have a pretty easy life, do n''t they?
15718They was n''t no really dragon, was they?
15718Think you''ll like to soldier with us?
15718Vat, Minna, you ai n''t goin''to stay out of de mill today and lose your pay? 15718 Was n''t it so?"
15718We got out some paper today, did n''t we?
15718Well, could n''t I stand on a box?
15718Well, have you ever seen the chauffeur at night, after being out all day with the car? 15718 Well, how old are you, Steve?"
15718Were you lost in the cave, as Tom Sawyer and Becky Thatcher were?
15718What can I do for you?
15718What do you mean,she declared,"by putting it in the paper that I served light refreshments at my party?"
15718What does it mean anyway?
15718What has he done to show that?
15718What is the reason that so many Arbor day trees die?
15718What kind of a position?
15718What made you think you needed motor trucks?
15718What part of my material will make the strongest appeal to the readers of this newspaper?
15718What shall I write about?
15718What time d''ye have to get to work in the morning?
15718What would my readers ask this person if they had a chance to talk to him about this subject?
15718What''s your name?
15718Why do you want to be a chauffeur?
15718Why do you want to leave school?
15718Why, Ella, would n''t you like to have a kind friend, somebody you could confide in and go walking with and who would be interested in you?
15718Will the reader like this?
15718Will these girls from offices and stores do their work well? 15718 Will you contribute$ 500 to get rid of them?"
15718With Briddie?
15718Would you like to be a machinist?
15718Would you like to be a plumber?
15718You in the army?
15718( 2) HOW MUCH HEAT IS THERE IN YOUR COAL?
15718( 3) WHO''S THE BEST BOSS?
15718( 3)(_ Kansas City Star_) MUST YOUR HOME BURN?
15718( 3)(_ New York Times)_ FARM WIZARD ACHIEVES AGRICULTURAL WONDERS BY ROBERT G. SKERRETT Can a farm be operated like a factory?
15718( 4)"SHE SANK BY THE BOW"--BUT WHY?
15718( 4)(_ Good Housekeeping_) GERALDINE FARRAR''S ADVICE TO ASPIRING SINGERS INTERVIEW BY JOHN CORBIN"When did I first decide to be an opera singer?"
15718( 4)(_ San Francisco Call_) DOES IT PAY THE STATE TO EDUCATE PRETTY GIRLS FOR TEACHERS?
15718( 5) HOW SHALL WE KEEP WARM THIS WINTER?
15718( 6) DOES DEEP PLOWING PAY?
15718( 6)(_ The Outlook_) GROW OLD ALONG WITH ME BY CHARLES HENRY LERRIGO Are you interested in adding fifteen years to your life?
15718( 7)(_ Country Gentleman_) SIMPLE ACCOUNTS FOR FARM BUSINESS BY MORTON O. COOPER Is your farm making money or losing it?
15718A picture of a young woman feeding chickens in a backyard poultry run that accompanied an article entitled"Did You Ever Think of a Meat Garden?"
15718After the sick man''s job?
15718And he?
15718And if you''re no scholar, how can you become a full professor?
15718And the kind of woman who should attempt the summer camp for girls as a means of additional income?
15718And were they not checks of a denomination far larger than those we selfishly cashed for ourselves?
15718And what other flower, at whatever price per dozen, will give you such abundance of beauty without a fear of frosts?
15718And what then?
15718And what was a poor professor doing at Newport?
15718And will not Sue lose, possibly, some of the gentle manners and dainty ways inculcated at home, by close contact with divers other ways and manners?
15718And with those who succeed, what have they more than I?
15718And yet, when willing to stop being a lady, what could one do?
15718Are concrete examples and specific instances employed effectively?
15718Are figures of speech used effectively?
15718Are important ideas placed at the beginning of sentences?
15718Are the paragraphs long or short?
15718Are they well- organized units?
15718BY KATHERINE ATKINSON Does it pay the state to educate its teachers?
15718But even when the way has been paved for it, the question,"Why do you want to leave school?"
15718But how about the porter who is not so smart-- the man who has the lean run?
15718But it was that latter part that held me back, that and one other factor:"Those who won,"and"What do they get out of it more than I?"
15718But meanwhile, why be too down- hearted?
15718But what about the employees-- the clerks and the factory workers?
15718By what means are the narrative passages made interesting?
15718Camouflage?
15718Can fickle nature be offset and crops be brought to maturity upon schedule time?
15718Can she trust any one else to watch over her in the matter of flannels and dry stockings?
15718Can you beat it?"
15718Company reputation?
15718Could an article on the same subject, or on a similar one, be written for a newspaper in your section of the country?
15718Could any parts of the article be omitted without serious loss?
15718Could the parts be rearranged with gain in clearness, interest, or progress?
15718Did the writer accomplish his purpose?
15718Did the writer aim to entertain, to inform, or to give practical guidance?
15718Do n''t you understand that it is much easier for me to help you if you speak the truth right away?"
15718Do normal school and university graduates continue teaching long enough to make adequate return for the money invested in their training?
15718Do the descriptive parts of the article portray the impressions vividly?
15718Do the paragraphs begin with important ideas?
15718Do the sentences yield their meaning easily when read rapidly?
15718Do the words, figures of speech, sentences, and paragraphs in this article suggest to you possible means of improving your own style?
15718Do we seem very amusing to you?
15718Do you know what it is to lie awake at night and plan your campaign for the following day?
15718Do you know what they have called me, the old men and women who are wise-- the full- bloods?
15718Do you know?
15718Do you want the rest of the children workin''ten hours a day too?
15718Does it have more than one appeal?
15718Does it seem to be particularly well adapted to the readers of the publication in which it was printed?
15718Does the article contain any material that seems unnecessary to the accomplishment of the purpose?
15718Does the article march on steadily from beginning to end?
15718Does the article suggest to you some sources from which you might obtain material for your own articles?
15718Does the writer seem to have had a definitely formulated purpose?
15718Does this pay?
15718Finally:"Would you like to be a doctor?"
15718For what does it profit a tired teacher if she fill her camp list and have no margin of profit for her weeks of hard labor?
15718From the time of"Mistress Mary, quite contrary, How does your garden grow?"
15718From the_ Journal of Heredity_ was gleaned material for an article entitled"What Chance Has the Poor Child?"
15718Gone as you look at the tiny hand, is n''t it?
15718Got anybody you can let me have for to- day?"
15718Got anything else?"
15718Had we a right not to have children?
15718Had we a right to have children?
15718Have n''t I already dragged you down-- you, a lovely, fine- grained, highly evolved woman-- down to the position of a servant in my house?
15718Have they been"in"on this"big shove toward prosperity?"
15718Have they found it a"nice"town to live in?
15718Have you ever given thought to the accidentalism of many great discoveries?
15718Have you felt that you would_ like_ to take a month''s vacation, but with so many"irons in the fire"things would go to smash if you did?
15718Have you followed the chain of accidents, coincidences, and fortunate circumstances?
15718He must ask himself,"What is my aim in writing this article?"
15718He ought to ask himself,"How widespread is the interest in my subject?
15718How could they waken the public to woman''s bitter necessity for shorter hours?
15718How did they accomplish the next move?
15718How does the Home Assistant plan work in households where two or more helpers are kept?
15718How far back should we be were it not for these fortuitous circumstances?
15718How far did the character of the subject determine the methods of treatment?
15718How long is a second?
15718How much of it was based on his personal observations?
15718How much of the article was based on his personal experience?
15718How much will it appeal to the average individual?
15718How would you state this apparent purpose in one sentence?
15718How''s that for equality?
15718How?
15718I have done both and ought to know.... Can it be merely because the one is done strictly in the home or because no one can see you do it?
15718I''d stand a good chance of losing a customer, would n''t I?
15718I''m so glad to learn of it; but is n''t it tedious to cut the celery into such small bits?"
15718If a person has ability, will not the world learn it?
15718In an article in the_ Philadelphia Ledger_ on"What Can I Do to Earn Money?"
15718Is it practical?"
15718Is it sane?
15718Is it the tunes or the words or we ourselves?
15718Is not the dear old fellow always absent- minded on the stage?
15718Is such a policy safe?
15718Is that the old idea?
15718Is the article easy to read?
15718Is the article of general or of local interest?
15718Is the article predominantly narrative, descriptive, or expository?
15718Is the beginning an integral part of the article?
15718Is the beginning skillfully connected with the body of the article?
15718Is the diction literary or colloquial, specific or general, original or trite, connotative or denotative?
15718Is the length of the article proportionate to the subject?
15718Is the length of the beginning proportionate to the length of the whole article?
15718Is the material so arranged that the average reader will reach the conclusion that the writer intended to have him reach?
15718Is the purpose a worthy one?
15718Is the subject so presented that the average reader is led to see its application to himself and to his own affairs?
15718Is the title attractive, accurate, concise, and concrete?
15718Is the tone well suited to the subject?
15718Is the type of beginning well adapted to the subject and the material?
15718Is there any evidence that the article was timely when it was published?
15718Is there any other type better adapted to the subject and material?
15718Is there variety in paragraph beginnings?
15718Is there variety in sentence length and structure?
15718Is there variety in the methods of presentation?
15718It looks dull, does n''t it?
15718It sounds fanciful, does n''t it?
15718Mary Antin herself accepted the Is this paragraph girls''invitation to attend the graduation out of logical order?
15718Now is n''t that just like a husband?
15718One day it flashed upon me:''Why invest in city property?
15718Or is it merely because it is unskilled labor?
15718Overalls on, sleeves rolled up, face streaming with perspiration?
15718Precincts 1, 4, 5 of the 9th Ward"So yez would be afther havin''me scratch Misther Troy?"
15718Price?
15718QUESTION BEGINNINGS( 1)(_ Kansas City Star_) TRACING THE DROUTH TO ITS LAIR What becomes of the rainfall in the plains states?
15718Repairing the mechanism, polishing the brass?
15718Say, how much do you want for them anyhow?"
15718Should Carl be blamed?
15718Should I be blamed?
15718Should only the financially fit be allowed to survive-- to reproduce their species?
15718Some of them have a habit of dropping in at the New Haven ticket offices and demanding:"Is Eugene running up on the Merchants''to- night?"
15718That I should go to school every day, while I worked-- who could dream of such a thing?
15718That appealed to me as printable, but where to put it in the paper?
15718That is not why he was called an economist; but can you blame my brothers for doing their best to break the engagement?...
15718The compulsion of the thing, or the appeal of the phrase-- which?
15718The direct question,"Do you know why the sky is blue?"
15718The fact that Columbus, one of her Is this comment by countrymen, had discovered the country the writer effective?
15718The following are typical question titles and sub- titles:( 1) WHAT IS A FAIR PRICE FOR MILK?
15718The house is still standing at Rossville, Ga. Do you know what the old people tell us children when we wish we could go back there?"
15718The housekeeper who has been in the habit of coming into her kitchen about half past five and saying,"Oh, Mary, what can we have for dinner?
15718The new plan seems expensive?
15718Then he added:"But what could you expect?
15718Then, looking up and taking in the big, raw- boned physique of the youngster,"Ever think of joinin''?"
15718There''s raisins in this rice puddin'', ai n''t there?"
15718They''ve got us down-- are we going to let them keep us down?
15718Tired to death?"
15718To what extent are narration and description used for expository purposes?
15718To what type does it conform?
15718To which type does this article conform?
15718Troy to contend with again?"
15718Troy, pledged body and soul to the manufacturers?
15718Troy?
15718WHO''LL DO JOHN''S WORK?
15718Was any of the material obtained from newspapers or periodicals?
15718Was there any law compelling them to give their money to their Alma Mater?
15718We, moreover, in return for our interest in education, did we not shamelessly accept monthly checks from the university treasurer''s office?
15718Were n''t they in the hands of the"big cinch,"as a certain combination of business men in St. Louis is known?
15718Were we?
15718Whadd''ye think the man wanted to paint the picture for if there was n''t a dragon?
15718What Some Recent Tests Have Demonstrated( 7) SHALL I START A CANNING BUSINESS?
15718What appears to have suggested the subject to the writer?
15718What becomes of the older porters?
15718What better than that a woman should set the tune for that voice?
15718What can be done for Lemuel?
15718What color are they?"
15718What could be done?
15718What could the papers do?
15718What department is showing a profit?
15718What did it mean?
15718What has happened?
15718What has he done?
15718What have I, a college professor''s wife, to confess?
15718What if he had been in haste, or had been driven off by the queen''s yellow- jacketed soldiers?
15718What if he had no curiosity, if he had not been a paper- maker, if he had not enjoyed acquaintance with Voelter?
15718What is he?
15718What is life insurance but the bet of an unknown number of yearly premiums against the payment of the policy?
15718What is the character of the sub- title, and what relation does it bear to the title?
15718What kind of a salesman do you call yourself anyway?"
15718What main topics are taken up in the article?
15718What next?"
15718What of it?
15718What one is piling up a loss?
15718What other methods might have been used to advantage in presenting this subject?
15718What phases of it are likely to have the greatest interest for the greatest number of persons?"
15718What portions of the article were evidently obtained by interviews?
15718What possible subjects does the article suggest to you?
15718What reports, documents, technical periodicals, and books of reference were used as sources in preparing the article?
15718What type of beginning is used?
15718What was you calc''lating askin''for showin''me where you found it?"
15718What, for the average reader, is the source of interest in the article?
15718When a writer undertakes to choose between the two, he should ask himself,"Are the facts worth remembering?"
15718When we get''em linked together with speedways, where''ll you find anything prettier?"
15718When?
15718Where did you get your recipe?"
15718Where is de_ fleisch_ and de_ brot_ widout your wages?"
15718Where?
15718Who is John Browning?
15718Who?
15718Why are so many responses received to the other advertisement?"
15718Why ca n''t a mistake be made in either direction?"
15718Why ca n''t this farm bureau put on a spraying service?"
15718Why did they fail?
15718Why do n''t the people around here drain their country?"
15718Why is a signed name to an article necessary, when everyone knows when the paper comes out that I wrote the article?
15718Why is it, then, that the people make such a sorry exhibition of themselves when they attempt to sing the patriotic songs of our country?
15718Why not a little farm?
15718Why not in my own department?
15718Why not?
15718Why should I pay back the money?
15718Why?
15718Why?
15718Why?
15718Will you help me to get a job?"
15718Will you mind if I eat supper here?"
15718Will you?"
15718With what other flower can you do that?
15718Would You Rather Work For a Man or For a Machine?
15718Would n''t you rather they worked her nine hours a day instead o''ten-- such a soft little kid with such a lot o''growin''to do?
15718Would the beginning attract the attention and hold the interest of the average reader?
15718Would you rather not have a good interested worker for eight hours a day than none at all?
15718You never heard of him?
15718You never step on your own toe, do you, or hit yourself in the face-- if you can help it?
15718and what do you get out of it?
15718and,"What do I expect to accomplish?"
15718and,"Will they furnish food for thought?"
15718¶"How old are you?"
20256And from whence,writes Judge Johnson,"did relief arrive, at last?
20256But what is the right of search in time of peace? 20256 How, then,"said Lord Castlereagh,"shall we escape the old difficulty?
20256Mr. Chairman,continued Mr. Adams,"are you ready for all these wars?
20256Now, I think the arbitrator would say,What the devil had you to do with that steamboat?"
20256To come to a later period,--what says the history of our Anglo- Saxon ancestors? 20256 What else did the gentlemen say?
20256What is the object of this resolution? 20256 What, sir, I ask, is the object of this resolution?
20256''Who hath woe?
20256''Who will put the question?''
20256Accordingly Mr. Adams was interrupted by a burst of voices demanding,''How shall the question be put?''
20256After reading, as I have done, and carefully examining the papers put forth on both sides, I asked myself, What is the question between us?
20256And has the pillory or the penitentiary been the reward of that Postmaster- general?
20256And how has Congress felt, and how has the American government acted, on this point?
20256And if England, standing by, should dare to intermeddle and ask,"Do you take part with Texas?"
20256And is not this enough?
20256And what citizens?
20256And what is this clerk of yours?
20256And what ought you to do?
20256And what shall we gain?
20256And where is the degree of vice or immorality which shall deprive the citizen of the right to supplicate for a boon, or to pray for mercy?
20256And why?
20256Are women to have no opinions or actions on subjects relating to the general welfare?
20256But what happened thirty years after, when the reäction came?
20256But what sort of comprehension had both the friends and the opponents of the resolution put upon it?
20256But what was your steamboat about?
20256But who can hold a firebrand in his hand by thinking of the frosty Caucasus?
20256But, if we go to war, what must be the effect of the peace that follows?
20256By what fatality does it happen that all the most eloquent orators are on its slavish side?
20256Can you enlist under such a standard?
20256Can you wonder that they shrink from the light of free discussion-- that they skulk from the grasp of freedom and of truth?
20256Did she bring''discredit''on her sex by mingling in politics?
20256Did the gentleman never hear of Deborah, to whom the children of Israel came up for judgment?
20256Does he not remember Cloelia and her hundred companions, who swam across the river, under a shower of darts, escaping from Porsenna?
20256Does he not remember Portia, the wife of Brutus and daughter of Cato, and in what terms she is represented in the history of Rome?
20256Does it say that, before presenting a petition, you shall look into it, and see whether it comes from the virtuous, and the great, and the mighty?
20256Had not the general government assumed that debt?
20256Had they not employed trust- money?
20256Has he forgotten Cornelia, the mother of the Gracchi, who declared that her children were her jewels?
20256Has he forgotten Esther, who, by HER PETITION, saved her people and her country?
20256Has he forgotten the deed of Jael, who slew the dreaded enemy of her country?
20256Has not the President a right to send the Attorney- General to New York on that or any other subject?
20256Have we not aided and abetted one of her provinces in insurrection against her for that cause?
20256Have we not been fifteen years plotting rebellion against our neighbor republic of Mexico, for abolishing slavery throughout all her provinces?
20256Have we not tamely submitted for years to the daily violation of the freedom of the post- office and of the press by a committee of seal- breakers?
20256He inquires into what we are doing:"Are we not suffering our own hands to be manacled, and our own feet to be fettered, with the chains of slavery?
20256I said''No; that I had for some time that intention, but I had given it up,''--''And why?''
20256Instead of which, what have we seen?
20256Is he to suspend, by his mere negative, the functions of government, and put an end to this Congress?
20256Is it not because they formed part of an expedition got up in Texas against the Mexican city of Santa Fé?
20256Is there any remedy for this state of things?
20256Is this candid?
20256Is this fair?
20256Is this just?
20256It came originally from the devil.--''Doth Job serve God for naught?''
20256Marshall, Cushing, Chase, Washington, Johnson, Livingston, Todd,--where are they?
20256Of which of these classes would the rights be disregarded by the presentation of a petition from slaves?
20256Or is our_ indirect_ participation in the African slave- trade to be protected, at whatever expense of blood and treasure?
20256Or what would the men have been but for the influence of the women of that day?
20256Signs of what?
20256Sir, what does the gentleman understand by''political subjects''?
20256They have stricken me, shalt thou say, and I was not sick; they have beaten me, and I felt it not: when shall I awake?
20256This is the law even of despotism; and what does your law say?
20256To come nearer home,--what were the women of the United States in the struggle of the Revolution?
20256To say nothing of Boadicea, the British heroine in the time of the Cæsars, what name is more illustrious than that of Elizabeth?
20256Violent debates and great confusion in the house ensued; but when the question,"Shall the petition be received?"
20256Was not here a debt of the State of Arkansas of half a million of dollars?
20256Was there such representation in any other portion of the Union?
20256Was this not protection?
20256We do not and can not organize; and why?
20256Were they devoted_ exclusively_ to the duties and enjoyments of the fireside?
20256Were they not taken_ flagrante bello_, actually engaged in a war they had nothing to do with, to which the United States were no party?
20256What are the rights of the South?
20256What can it be but to encourage frauds on the revenue of other nations?
20256What else did he not say?
20256What had she been doing?
20256What have the feelings of the house to do with the free agency of a member in the discharge of his duty?
20256What is it we do demand?
20256What is the natural effect of the promulgation of such principles by such authority?
20256What is the_ South_?
20256What then?
20256What was she to do the next morning?
20256What was this but protection to this machinery of the South?
20256What were these_ obvious reasons_?
20256When the voice of Mr. Adams again caught the ear of the reporter, he was proceeding as follows:"Would you smother discussion on the duelling law?
20256Where are they all?
20256Where did the gentleman get this principle?
20256Where is such a law to be found?
20256Where is that brilliant luminary, so long the pride of Maryland and of the American bar, then my opposing counsel, Luther Martin?
20256Where is that eloquent statesman and learned lawyer who was my associate counsel in the management of that cause, Robert Goodloe Harper?
20256Where is the man who ever served in a legislative capacity in your councils whose character could stand a test like this?"
20256Where is the marshal-- where are the criers of the court?
20256Where, in the land of freemen, was the right of petition ever placed on the exclusive basis of morality and virtue?
20256Who struck the first blow?
20256Why were they concealed?
20256Why?
20256Will a change produce a reform?
20256where is one of the very judges of the court, arbiter of life and death, before whom I commenced this anxious argument, even now prematurely closed?
20256who hath babbling?
20256who hath contentions?
20256who hath redness of eyes?
20256who hath sorrow?
20256who hath wounds without cause?
16810How many of you are in this thing?
16810( the Chairman) What do you think of his[ the black man''s] intellectual and moral qualities and his capacity for development?
16810A barrel of about 3 bushels?
16810A third, or a half, or a quarter?
16810About that store system; how extensive is it, and how great an evil does it constitute?
16810About what amount?
16810All seasons of the year?
16810All you ask is to continue to be let alone?
16810And are the productions of the small holdings and large holdings similar; I inquire as to cotton particularly?
16810And desire still more of it?
16810And generally earnestly devoted to their work?
16810And have they not signally failed to make omnipotent the one and practicable the other?
16810And he becomes an employer himself?
16810And it is as prevalent in Louisiana and Mississippi as in Arkansas?
16810And of good quality?
16810And of that which has not been improved but might be improved, how much?
16810And political disturbances are at an end?
16810And the aim of the Southern planter is to accommodate this tendency of things to smaller rentings?
16810And the negroes prefer to be there to anywhere else?
16810And what of the Bourbon Democratic party?
16810And why is this?
16810And why not?
16810And why should there be royal revenues and princely preserves?
16810And why?
16810And will a white man find any difficulty in hiring another white man and negro to work together side by side in the field?
16810And, pray, is the white man less magnanimous than the black man?
16810And, without consumption, what does production amount to?
16810Are any of the white teachers Southern in birth?
16810Are oranges raised there?
16810Are peaches raised there also?
16810Are potatoes raised largely in Louisiana?
16810Are the negroes on those lands generally having the same opportunities for education that they do on your plantation?
16810At least one half?
16810At what rates per acre have you known the title to change in some instances?
16810Below the Red River, in Louisiana, is it not a relief in case of an overflow?
16810Between what ages do they actually attend school?
16810But to- day where are they?
16810But what shall we say of that society which is incapable of extending the protection which is inherent in it?
16810Ca n''t do it, do you say?
16810Came they not through Norman conquest and robbery?
16810Can it be anything else than training in elementary industry, such as is now demanded for our Northern common- schools?
16810Can they block it at the outlet of the Red River?
16810Can this be an education in Latin and Greek?
16810Can you give the average crop of potatoes per acre?
16810Charging them simply the cost of transportation?
16810Do not colored men vote white men into office?
16810Do the negroes conduct affairs with reasonable prudence, and consult the interest of the owners?
16810Do these small white farmers employ negro help to any extent?
16810Do they add anything to the wealth of a nation or the happiness of a people?
16810Do they exhibit any reluctance to work in company with the negro?
16810Do they pay their own expenses, board and shelter?
16810Do they remain or do they go and buy homesteads for themselves?
16810Do they work together?
16810Do they, upon these farm or small plantations being converted into farms, work in companionship with the negro laborer?
16810Do you anticipate in the near or remote future any further difficulty from the race question?
16810Do you find any inclination among the older negroes who are past school age to endeavor to read and write?
16810Do you find that desire strong among the colored people?
16810Do you find that the feeling among the negroes which resulted in the exodus of a few years ago has been allayed and perhaps has disappeared?
16810Do you know as to the relative size of the two counties?
16810Do you mean to be understood that these traders do business upon borrowed capital?
16810Do you see any reason why, with fair opportunities assured to himself and to his children, he may not become a useful and competent, American citizen?
16810Do you think that is diminishing?
16810Do you think that$ 80 or$ 100 per acre would be a reasonable price for these plantation lands?
16810Do you think there is any sort of occasion for that?
16810Do your people at home prefer the sweet to the Irish potato for their own use?
16810Does he usually locate upon the plantation lands along the rivers?
16810Eighty I think you said?
16810Even with the Northwest?
16810For how long a time each year is school kept open?
16810From what States?
16810From what circumstances comes this increase?
16810From what fact does that arise?
16810From what perennial fountain did it draw its nobility and wealth?
16810Greater extremes, or is there a uniform flow?
16810Has not labor a fair claim to an equal solicitude on the part of the State?
16810Has there been any computation or reasonable estimate that you know of the value of those lands affected by the overflow?
16810Has this increased drainage from the Atchafalaya resulted in any injury to the navigation of the river as far north?
16810Have not the United States done this very thing?
16810Have they ever been cleared as yet?
16810Have they not conferred freedom and the ballot, which are necessary the one to the other?
16810Have you observed the origin of these statistics?
16810Have you traveled considerably through the North?
16810He may hire some white and other colored laborers, I suppose?
16810How as to their material prosperity and thrift and saving?
16810How can anything else be fairly expected in our present state of things from the_ average_ workingman under the_ average_ employer?
16810How can he furnish it, unless the education given him is chiefly industrial and technical?
16810How can the interest of the laborers of your section be best subserved?
16810How can the interest of the laborers of your section be best subserved?
16810How could it be otherwise?
16810How could it be otherwise?
16810How could the men who devised it expect for it anything more than a speedy, ignominous collapse?
16810How do they propose to check it?
16810How in regard to oats, rye, corn, wheat, potatoes, and crops of that description?
16810How is it to be otherwise?
16810How many children are there on your own property?
16810How many hours do the laborers work?
16810How many hours do the laborers work?
16810How many of them were there?
16810How many suits will he want in a year?
16810How much do these colored teachers themselves know?
16810How valuable are these plantations per acre?
16810I said to him,"What is the matter, where are you all going?"
16810I said,"It is several miles to the river; how are they going?"
16810I should like to ask this question further, whether any of the negroes along the alluvial bottoms are obtaining ownership of lands in fee- simple?
16810If this be true, what should be the policy of the whites towards the blacks?
16810If we may not call the violence, the assassinations, which have disgraced the South,_ treason_ by what fitter name, pray, shall we call it?
16810Improved plantations?
16810In Arkansas?
16810In how large tracts are the plantations held?
16810In money?
16810In the Southern States proper about two thirds of the population is white, is it not?
16810In those instances, how do matters work?
16810In what way is the white laboring population of the South employed?
16810Is he a capable man?
16810Is he a capable man?
16810Is it a fair vote and an honest count?
16810Is it because he is the constitutionally invested oligarch of government?
16810Is it because the law of the land reserves unto him the dominance of power?
16810Is it because the white man is the created viceregent of government?
16810Is it not to be found in the powerful monopolies we have created?
16810Is it to be found in an unjust pension list?
16810Is it to be found in burdensome taxation or ill- adjusted tariff regulations?
16810Is it to be found in the dead- weight of illiteracy which we carry?
16810Is that the only instance?
16810Is the cost of clothing in your part of the country about the same as here?
16810Is the potato of good quality raised on those rich lands?
16810Is there any tendency among the white and colored laborers of any class to work in companionship, or to fraternize at all in labor?
16810Is there or not any perceptible increase or diminution of the column of the Mississippi itself as compared with 25, or 50, or 100 years ago?
16810Is this a fancy picture?
16810It has taken us generations to arrive at the standard, has it not?
16810It is necessary for you as well as the negro?
16810No white man inquires whether he can work by himself or is to work in company with a negro?
16810Not to as great extent as mechanics and artisans?
16810Now, what is the solution of this manifold and grievous state of things?
16810Now, will you state to us what the existing facilities for education are among the negroes?
16810Of that which is thus useless now, what portion has been formerly under cultivation?
16810Of the population, which is, as a rule, the more healthy in the South, the colored or the white population?
16810One third of the entire amount that has been improved is now destroyed by reason of the overflow, resulting from imperfections in the levee system?
16810Or is it simply to get their money?
16810Q. I do not know that you are able to state to what extent they actually attend school in the hill districts?
16810Q. I suppose some time they will be liable to make some accumulations, and they will now and then own a plantation?
16810Q. I suppose the colored population hardly buy custom goods?
16810Q. I suppose there is no doubt that the Atchafalaya furnishes an outlet, which relieves your plantations very much?
16810Q. I understand you to say that nearly all of them attend?
16810Q. I would use the word"leading"rather than"central"there-- the leading idea?
16810Q. Plums?
16810Said I,"What did you pay him for this?"
16810Should we appropriate annually from nine to twelve millions of dollars to improve the morals of the people by informing their intelligence?
16810Since that time you have been in the Mississippi Valley?
16810Some may ask: Shall we, then, not have some scholars, men learned in all that higher education gives?
16810Some pride in their race, to have them get on, I suppose?
16810Suppose the same standard of distribution of school funds should be applied to the city or the State of New York; what would be the logical result?
16810That is an advantage no farmer has elsewhere in the United States than in Arkansas?
16810That must bring a suit of clothes pretty cheap in a colored family; they really expend nothing but buy the cloth themselves?
16810That one year with another, more water runs down the channel?
16810The amount of land that has been improved and which is now destroyed by reason of the overflow, you can not state?
16810The central idea of the South is a national idea, then?
16810The dagger of Brutus and the sword of Cromwell, were they not drawn in the name of Liberty-- the People?
16810The data you consider reliable?
16810The emigration to these States has been of the younger and more vigorous population, not so liable to die as those who remain behind and are older?
16810The guillotine of the French Commune and the derringer of J. Wilkes Booth, were they not inspired by Liberty-- the People?
16810The older Southern States?
16810The question is settled?
16810The question,"Which is the greater, the State or the Sisterhood of States?"
16810The same is true, I suppose, of his wife and children?
16810The size does not depreciate the quality, then?
16810Their capital is hired in New Orleans?
16810There are five schools?
16810There are no middlemen, really; you transact this business for them?
16810There is no prejudice of that kind?
16810There is no strong tendency in that way, I suppose?
16810There is really no established market price?
16810There were two men came through here last week, one night, and said''You see this picture?''
16810These plantations?
16810They are not owners of alluvial lands?
16810They, I suppose are raised for exportation from the State?
16810This is the Irish potato you speak of, not the sweet?
16810Those are educated in public schools?
16810To how large an extent are they now abandoned?
16810To what do you attribute that improvidence on the part of the negro laborer?
16810To what extent is Northern capital availing itself of opportunity to invest in these plantations?
16810To what market?
16810Under what possible system, save in a grievous dearth of laborers, can such labor be well off, and incompetence and indifference draw high wages?
16810Under what system are the laborers in your section employed?
16810Under what system do you work?
16810Under what system do you work?
16810Under what systems are the laborers in your section employed?
16810Until 1869 you had been a resident of South Carolina?
16810Upon these plantations is there any crop raised for consumption anywhere but upon the plantations, save the cotton?
16810Upon what price per acre do you think those lands would pay, one year with another, an interest of 6 per cent?
16810Was it the puissance of the barbarian arms or the corruption and enervation of the character of her people which worked the downfall of Rome?
16810What are the chances of its dividing, and of the white vote dividing?
16810What are the principal crops there?
16810What avail the tireless labor of the machine and the mountains of material it places upon the market, if there are no purchasers?
16810What became of them?
16810What chance is there of the planter securing white labor to carry on these plantations?
16810What compensation does a teacher get?
16810What danger is there of strikes?
16810What danger is there of strikes?
16810What division is made between labor and capital of their joint production when you work on shares?
16810What division is made between labor and capital of their joint production when you work on shares?
16810What do you think of his intellectual and moral qualities and his capacity for development?
16810What does it avail us that our stores and granaries are overstocked, if the people are unable to buy?
16810What has become of those who went to Kansas?
16810What is a recognized aristocracy, such as England maintains?
16810What is it?
16810What is left to the tenant after he pays this$ 10 an acre?
16810What is the condition of the laborers in your section?
16810What is the condition of the laborers in your section?
16810What is the fact as to a progressive disintegration of the solid Republican or solid negro vote of the South?
16810What is the feeling between the laborers, colored and white, and the owners of the land and of capital at the South?
16810What is the home market price?
16810What is the matter?"
16810What is the nativity of those teachers, as a rule?
16810What is the necessity, and in what degree is it difficult for those residing along the river banks to protect themselves?
16810What is the relation existing between the planters and their employees?
16810What is the relation existing between the planters and their employers?
16810What is your own judgment?
16810What kinds of fruit?
16810What portions of the North have you visited within the last few years?
16810What prevents their being cleared up and put into cultivation?
16810What proportion of the colored children attend school, do you think?
16810What proportion of the taxable property of the county would that have been?
16810What prospect is there of a division in that regard; to what extent does it exist, or is it going on?
16810What right have I to create debts for my grandson or granddaughter?
16810What the colored boy, what all boys of the country need, is_ industrial not ornamental_ education; shall they have it?
16810What vital principle affecting our citizenship is championed by the National Republican party of to- day?
16810What we call up North a common school education?
16810What zest can there be in this bit of manhood?
16810When did you remove from South Carolina?
16810When hired for wages what is paid?
16810When hired for wages what is paid?
16810When you rent what division is made?
16810When you rent, what division is made?
16810Where in all this is there anything for the educational improvement of the black laborer just where he needs education most?
16810Where is the proprietor himself usually resident?
16810Where is there any proper provision for such an education?
16810Where is this ulcer located?
16810Which will prove the more successful small holder, the black or the white?
16810Which, on the whole, is the most profitable crop to raise of potatoes?
16810Who pay the heavy taxes levied upon the people to support the privileged classes of England?
16810Why is it that ten men in Ireland produce no more than four men produce in England?
16810Why?
16810Why?
16810Will it come by standing solidly opposed to the sentiment, the culture, the statesmanship, and the possession of the soil and wealth of the South?
16810Will this result in the ownership of the alluvial lands being transferred to the negro?
16810With what amount of accumulation will a negro get up and go to the hills?
16810Would you judge that one- half the cultivated surface of Arkansas is made up of the larger plantations?
16810You are his grandson, then?
16810You are left to yourselves now, are you not?
16810You are speaking now of the alluvial lands?
16810You buy the ready- made clothing largely for the population in general, I suppose?
16810You have no idea of the extent of those lands?
16810You mean that immigration from Europe is being employed on the plantations?
16810You speak both of your own plantation and of other plantations as well as your own in that regard?
16810You think the war of sections is pretty much over?
16810Your question, therefore, reduces itself to, What is the condition of the negroes?
16810_ Was_, do I say?
22796And from whence come you?
22796And what, at your age, could induce you to cross the mountains, my friend?
22796And why the devil did n''t they use them up?
22796At what distance is the nearest blacksmith''s forge?
22796But when did she disclose her sex to you?
22796But why ca n''t you say whether you will or will not? 22796 But you speak English like a native: how is that?"
22796Can you have this horse taken down there to get the two hind shoes put on?
22796How did you find that out, sir?
22796How''s that, Pat?
22796Is n''t it a noble sight intirely? 22796 Is n''t it illegant, sir?"
22796It''s provoking too,added my good- humoured manager, who was quite a philosopher in his vocation;"for it''s a pretty theatre, is n''t it?"
22796Just escaped from poor Ireland,replied the senior brother; adding,"and whither are you now bound?"
22796Madame, then, is not Spanish?
22796Maybe you''ve seen a fine aisy- goin''road betune Cork and Cove?
22796No; does it rain that hard, though?
22796Pray, have you a smithy in this neighbourhood?
22796We have not much more of this Cedar Swamp to get through, I hope?
22796We''ve then done with swamps, I hope, my friend?
22796Well, will you carry him down yourself?
22796What is this name of the country we are now passing?
22796What the plague can be the reason they wo n''t come for_ once_, at least, Mr. J.? 22796 What was you about that you did n''t hear the coach?
22796Addressing the rearmost, I inquired,"Pray, sir, do you chance to know which of the houses opposite is Mr. Southard''s, the senator from New Jersey?"
22796After a long pause, pointing to the coiled- up sleeper, I ventured on a second inquiry, saying,"Man,--he sick?"
22796And what is Cato''s?
22796But surely you and I have met before now,--more than once too, or I am greatly mistaken?"
22796Daily did I ask myself for a whole week"Will it walk again?"
22796Does the canal run far through it?"
22796From twelve o''clock until two, the inmates either visit or receive visitors: between these hours, the question,"Are the ladies at home?"
22796Had n''t you better postpone the business_ sine die_?"
22796Have you any objection to taking the horse down?"
22796Maybe it was the rain made such a noise you could n''t?"
22796Mr. Power, is it yerself, sir?
22796Our senior companion, Mr. P----, was provided with a bed- chamber; and what could the heart of weary traveller wish for more?
22796Poorish stuff, I calculate: but_ you_ hav''nt got the dyspepsy, have you, Major?"
22796Sure you must have know''d us?"
22796The women especially pay dearly, I fear, for their sunny possessions; and what return can compensate for loss of health?
22796What was to be done?
22796Why then, it may be asked, are these your only reasons?
22796and who is Cato?
22796does he think he knows about all this better than_ us_?"
22796exclaimed I,"is it possible that you contemplated scrambling your way back to give this finny gentleman the freedom of the river?"
22796want a carriage?"
22796was n''t it the last ten miles I ever toed of Irish ground?
22796was the whole purpose of our hard ride to be defeated by the dislocation of a few loose planks?
27579But why,cried Douglas,"can not this government go on as the fathers left it, as it has gone on for more than a century?"
27579Did not Sumner live there?
27579Had not Boston closed her Faneuil Hall upon the aged Webster?
27579If the Supreme Court should decide against the right of a State to prohibit slavery, would he acquiesce?
27579Now that the Pacific barred our way to the westward, who could say that we might not turn, or ought not to turn, northward or southward?
27579To which of these groups should Douglas join himself?
27579Would Douglas vote to admit Kansas with less than 93,000 inhabitants if she presented a free state constitution?
27579Would he vote to acquire fresh territory without regard to its effect on the slavery dispute?
19966''Ah, my friend,''he said mysteriously,''you know what it is, do you not? 19966 ''And you will join them?''
19966''But how about the police, the Federal and State troops, supposed to be in instant readiness?'' 19966 ''By the way,''said he, blinking at me through his thick glasses,''there is just a bit of nervousness in your make- up, is n''t there?
19966''Can Ah Moy walk home with pletty lady?'' 19966 ''Do you see that hussy in the ruff over there?
19966''He kissed me again and again... How can I go on?... 19966 ''Hoi Sing?''
19966''How dare you say such a thing to me? 19966 ''How do you know that we are from the Hill?''
19966''How much?'' 19966 ''How''re you?
19966''Hush,''I whispered,''do n''t you hear it? 19966 ''In New York, eh?
19966''Know him? 19966 ''Marse Edwin, Marse Edwin, do n''t yer know yer ole black mammy?
19966''Marse Livingstone,''he asked huskily,''whar has you been wif de horses?'' 19966 ''Now, Colonel,''said I, in my most persuasive tones,''ca n''t you make up your mind to join us in this thing?
19966''Oh, are n''t these excursions perfectly lovely, Ruby?'' 19966 ''Oh, what''s the use of your going on like that?
19966''Oo- Chow?'' 19966 ''Pardon me, friend,''whined my companion, stepping out in front of him,''but ca n''t you give a fellow a lift?
19966''Plomise?'' 19966 ''Really?''
19966''Regularly buncoed, eh?'' 19966 ''So what more could I say?
19966''The Thirteenth Commandment''? 19966 ''The what?''
19966''This is quite enough for me, or any other good American; but, Senor, tell me about your father and the Senorita, your sister; are they well? 19966 ''We have all had a tedious two weeks of it, have n''t we?
19966''What did he say?'' 19966 ''What do you think of it?''
19966''What would the faculty of Jay think of their Seymour, could they but gaze upon him now? 19966 ''What''s the matter with the money?''
19966''What''s the matter, Uncle Ashby?'' 19966 ''What''s the name of your place?''
19966''What?'' 19966 ''When did you come down?
19966''Which one first?'' 19966 ''Who the devil is Abner McNamee?''
19966''Why so?'' 19966 ''Why?''
19966''You sweet thing,''chirped Ruby,''it knew how thirsty we were, did n''t it? 19966 A little off your feed,"as Regina says; liver out of shape-- something of that sort, eh?''
19966And another of the boys limping by, foot- sore and weary, was accosted by this same angry dame,''You ran, did you? 19966 Did you notice his small hands and rather classic profile?
19966Do I? 19966 How so?"
19966How''s that?
19966Miss de Dear? 19966 So you have had a taste of Union prisons, eh?"
19966Well, Colonel, how do you feel now?
19966Well?
19966What have you here? 19966 When was it?
19966Who are you, I say, and what are you doing on this strictly private outfit?
19966Who was dealing?
19966Why, at Bull Run; do n''t you remember Bull Run?
19966''Ai n''t this dust awful?
19966''Ai n''t you afraid you''ll get into trouble?
19966''Am I dreaming again?
19966''That''s real funny, ai n''t it?
19966''Twath only the other night he thaid----What will I have?
19966''Whar- izz- yer?''
19966''What on earth are you so excited about?''
19966''What would these great social forces say?''
19966''What''s the game-- this McNamee business?
19966''Where could she have gone?
19966*****"Later, when we had made our report to the police, and I was guiding the Judge home, I asked:"Who is this de Dear?
19966--or something like that-- all very childish and grandiloquent, but we kept our word, did n''t we?
19966A college man, too, no doubt; but what does that signify?
19966Again I ask, am I dreaming?
19966Ai n''t he the ugly one?
19966Ai n''t it a shame?
19966Ai n''t it simply grand, Mag?
19966All my innate modesty began to assert itself; and is not this the surest protection of the innocent?
19966Am I dreaming?
19966Am I on the boards again?
19966And how long have you been in Washington?
19966And the Parsee?
19966And then-- then?''
19966And what can I say to you, friend of friends?
19966And what could I do to save him?
19966And you air a bride?''
19966And you know what that means, do n''t you, Pearl?''
19966And you will, dearest?"
19966Are we quite safe here?
19966Are you crazy?
19966Besides,''she added thoughtfully, reverting to his unlucky remark,''have n''t you a wife in China?''
19966Born in Newark, New Jersey, deah boy, I assure you-- right back of the gas- house; what?
19966But what cared they, crack- brained as they were?
19966But what next, what next?''
19966But what''s the use of hot- airing like this?
19966But, boys, need I remind you that these resolutions were adopted unanimously?
19966Ca n''t you give us a touch of New York in yours?"
19966Ca n''t you see our position in the matter?''
19966Can it be only stage mon----?
19966Can it be real?
19966Can you beat it?
19966Did I look as old as that?
19966Did not Muggsy Walker-- across the street-- salute his sweetheart in the same manner?
19966Did they ever move the Darragh woman''s picture out of the room?"
19966Do n''t you hear it?''
19966Do n''t you know that the finger of scorn will be pointed at you all the rest of your life?''
19966Do n''t you think I can keep a secret?
19966Do you hear?
19966Do you hear?
19966Do you hear?
19966Do you suppose that mere walls of steel and granite could withstand the fury of such a mob as this great city now holds, straining at its leash?
19966Do you think I am a fool?''
19966Do you think her father is keeping her?
19966Got on your nerves, eh?
19966Had he not frequently observed big Policeman Ryan kiss the red- haired widow who kept the lodging- house around on Missouri Avenue?
19966Have n''t you often heard that sound, Senator?
19966Have you forgotten your promise to the Cuban girl?
19966He was certainly not''born to blush unseen, nor waste his sweetness on the desert air,''eh?"
19966Hobson''s choice, eh?
19966How could I forget it?
19966How dare you speak to me anyway?
19966How is my old friend Alejandro Menendez?''
19966How long will you be down, Patsy?''
19966How''re you?''
19966Humbug, eh?''
19966I distinctly heard the Parsee say,''Who are the blaggards ye''ve brought here wid ye?''
19966I rather think you will do us no harm, eh?''
19966I reckon you have something up your sleeve that will surprise us, eh?"
19966I say, what time is it?''
19966I''ve been up against him, and so has Bull; ai n''t you, Nathan?"
19966Is n''t it Hoi Kee?''
19966Is n''t it because you want to be a better man, and to lead a good and useful life?
19966Is n''t this a monumental rake- off for a non- profesh?
19966It is a long journey, and a hard; and who can say when I will return?
19966It is n''t justice, and it is n''t law; but, boys, we''ve got to save that fellow''s life-- now, have n''t we?''
19966It''s a goodish bit from here to the Hill, ai n''t it?''
19966Let the old man alone, wo n''t you?"
19966Look here; is n''t this a windfall?
19966Money do n''t cut no ice this trip, though it_ is_ a mighty handy thing to have a jinglin''in your jeans-- ain''t it?
19966My poor Marse Edwin,''she wailed,''why did yer do it?
19966N''est''ce pas?''
19966Not so bad for a moment''s effort before breakfast, eh?
19966Not so bad for a moment''s effort before breakfast, eh?''
19966Now what do you think of_ that_?''
19966Now would n''t that jar you?
19966Now you''ll let us put you up, wo n''t you?
19966Oh, I remember now; it happened twice-- three times-- or was it three times?
19966Oh, if he were only here now, would n''t he get me out of this?''
19966Perhaps you will dine with us?
19966Providence''s ways is certainly beyond us-- ain''t they?
19966Robson a filibuster?
19966Robson?
19966Sale?''
19966Senator, may I trouble you to depress the business end of that syphon?
19966Senator, what is the best poker hand you ever held?"
19966Shall the Pearl of the Antilles fall to Germany, France, or England?''
19966Shall we not be loyal to- day?
19966Sleep in New York?
19966So you have realized your ambition?
19966Some poor devil hears it once_ too_ often, every now and then, does n''t he?
19966Strange, is it not?
19966That''s my story, and it ai n''t a very startling one after all, is it?"
19966That''s perfectly reasonable, is it not?
19966The Senate?
19966The White House?
19966The World, the great World at large, the Press, the Pulpit?''
19966The air was full of them-- making a noise like''Whar- izz- yer?''
19966The letter began abruptly, and ran as follows:"''Ah, senor, have you forgotten Saratoga, and the little Mercedes?
19966These togs o''mine were handed out to me by an old pal-- a cockney valet-- and the accent goes with''em, do n''t ye know?''
19966This last scrape was the worst of all; was it not?
19966To_ him_ I told nothing, for he was proud of me, and should I have killed him?
19966Understand?''
19966Was it not somewhat in the nature of a surprise?"
19966What do you come to the school for?
19966What good does it do to fuss over things we ca n''t help?''
19966What is there left for us to do but carry out the law?
19966What next?
19966What say you, Sammy boy?"
19966What would my pupils say?
19966What''ll you have to eat?
19966What''s the trouble?
19966What''s the use of waiting for a fellow to die before immortalizing him in marble or bronze?
19966Where did you get him?
19966Where did you know her?"
19966Where did you learn such words?
19966Where is your gratitude?"
19966Who are you, sir?"
19966Who do you want to marry?
19966Who is he?
19966Who is she?
19966Who knows?''
19966Who on earth is it then?''
19966Who''d''a''thought it?''
19966Why did yer do it?
19966Why did yer kill him?
19966Why did you run?''
19966Why do I hate her?
19966Why do n''t you fellows vary your song and dance-- just for luck?
19966Why have you thus deserted the lifelong friend of your father?''
19966Why, he is the biggest man in the House-- a great swell-- money to throw at the birds; and he''s been a throwin''it, hey?''
19966Will there never be any let up?
19966Worse by far than the affairs with the little Italian, or the fat Princess, eh, Bobby, my boy?
19966Would I have kissed you else?
19966Would n''t that everlastingly unsettle you?
19966Yes?
19966You are not afraid to speak out, eh?''
19966You could turn me over to the first cop that heaves in sight, and there''s one over there now-- why do n''t you do it?
19966You get a little dippy toward morning, do n''t you?
19966You hear me?
19966You know we are living in New York this winter?''
19966You remember Archie-- and the day he was drowned?
19966You shiver and shake----""For drinks?"
19966You''ve all heard of him-- haven''t yer?
19966You''ve twenty- three cents, hey?
19966Youth, my dear, is a great thing; what is there to compare with it?
19966and still higher?
19966he pointed upward,''higher yet?
26422If there should be another battle to- morrow,he said,"with what am I to fight it?"
26422Who run?
26422Whom can we send against him?
26422Will the troops stand?
26422)?--_A._ To God''s grace and temperate habits.
26422?--_A._ I eat very little, and take concentrated food.
26422All who had a heart and soul in Italy were up and doing, and could Italy''s greatest heart and soul remain beyond the seas?
26422Collingwood, on the other hand, said to his captain,"Rotherham, what would Nelson give to be here?"
26422His character has been subjected to that ordeal, and who can point to any spot upon it?
26422How could he resist the mighty spell of the past?
26422If General Washington had had a Mr. Davis over him, could he have accomplished what he did?
26422Is there still room for me, think you?"
26422Mrs. Wayne indignantly exclaimed,"Did you expect to find General Wayne in a feather- bed?
26422Pleased with this indication of military ambition, the duke suddenly inquired one day,"What can I do for you, Churchill, as a first step to fortune?"
26422Relating his reminiscences of that period, in reply to the question,"Do you retain pleasant recollections of cadet life?"
26422Shall I hoist it?"
26422There was an effort to board the Serapis, which was repulsed, when Captain Pearson called out,"Has your ship struck?"
26422Where else in history is a great man to be found whose whole life was one such blameless record of duty nobly done?
26422Will blushing glory hide the tale of shame?
26422Will you not, then, own with me, that they surpass all the heroes of former ages?"
26422[ TN]] How shall we describe the"Incomparable,"the extraordinary compound of so many brilliant and repulsive qualities?
26422_ Q._ How many hours did you spend in the open air?
27953CHAPTER IV THE PANIC OF 1873"Are not all the great communities of the Western World growing more corrupt as they grow in wealth?"
27953Is it, or is it not,"he asked,"a result of democracy?
27953Is ours a''government of the people by the people for the people,''or... for the benefit of knaves at the cost of fools?"
27953Under which will you enlist?"
27953What are we up here for?"
23321How long halt ye between two opinions? 23321 Is not my word like as a fire?
23321Is not the whole land before thee? 23321 Was it as big as my head?"
23321Was it as big as my two fists?
23321Who hath despised the day of small things?
23321Whoso hath this world''s goods and seeth his brother in need and shutteth up his bowels of compassion from him, how dwelleth the love of God in him?
233211872?
233211890 27 Wheelock Oak Hill 1868 1869 1893 30 25 Goodland Hebron 1868 1872 1890 12 22 Frogville New Hope 1869?
233211890 38 21?
233214. Who are the principal persons?
23321Are you using your spare moments each day for some good purpose, that will promote your best interests?
23321Aunt Dinah:"How long hab you dis set of dishes?"
23321Bishop:"Well, Mr. Jones, how do you like your preacher?"
23321But when he is asked,"What are your monthly savings?"
23321Choose ye this day whom ye will serve?
23321During the week that has passed, have you refrained entirely from the use of profane or quarrelsome words and actions?
23321Foulon, an official grown gray in treachery and iniquity, when asked,"What will the people do?"
23321Have you been uniformly respectful and obedient to all of your teachers?
23321He loves to put the treasure of His grace into the feeble, that the world may be compelled to ask,"whence hath this man power?"
23321Is the American negro, after centuries of slavery, that kept the race in an infantile condition, capable of development and self support?
23321Know ye not that ye are the temple of God and that the spirit of God dwelleth in you?
23321Mike:"Do ye believe in the recall of judges, Pat?"
23321Now it happened that no one present had ever led a meeting, and the first question to be settled was,"who should lead the meeting?"
23321Rufus Choate, the eminent statesman and jurist in one of his orations very emphatically exclaimed:"Banish the Bible from our public schools?
23321Satan said of him,"Doth Job fear God for nought?"
23321Shall this be the outcome of the work at Oak Hill, now that the rural districts are supplied with public schools and teachers?
23321What caused this difference?
23321What duty to perform?
23321What example to follow?
23321What is the principal subject?
23321What prayer to echo?
23321What promise to proclaim?
23321What teaching about Christ?
23321What the leading lessons?
23321What to avoid?
23321When he is asked the same question,"What are your monthly wages and what your monthly savings?"
23321When near home Dr. Beatty inquired,"Matthew, how would you like to go to school and get an education?"
23321When she was leaving the hotel he solicitously inquired,"Do you carry a gun?"
23321When the lawyers failed to enable him to describe it''s size the judge asked:"Was it as big as my fist?"
23321Where will he get his money?
23321Which the best verse?
23321Who will furnish it to him?
23321says:"Will some of you select something to sing?"
23097I appeal to my colleague,he asked,"when did I ever before object to any bill which he was attempting to pass?"
23097What is the alleged cause for this invasion of the rights and authority of the Government of the United States? 23097 Will Cooley take it?"
23097An old soldier came up to speak to me, and glancing down toward the other end of the table, he asked:"Is n''t that old Harris of Tennessee?"
23097And why?
23097Are we to inaugurate this Mexican system in the United States of America?
23097Can we permit nations foreign to us to collect revenues off our products, the fruits of our industry?
23097Can we submit to taxation without representation?
23097Do you really think that position will make votes for us this fall among the farmers?
23097General Grant, hearing us, came into the room and said,"Julia, do n''t you remember that we received cards to the wedding?"
23097Harrison is likely to have a pledged delegation from Indiana, but what good will it do him?
23097He said:"And suppose after all that death does end all?
23097How can we stand this loss of blood and men?
23097How is that to be made good?
23097How many farmers''votes will that give us?
23097I inquired of him:"Who else are you going to appoint on that Commission?"
23097I met Lincoln on the street one day, and said:"Mr. Lincoln, is it true that Douglas has a majority of the Legislature?"
23097I said in opening:"Has Congress any power or authority, under the Constitution, over treaties?
23097If this state of things is allowed to go on, how long before you will have the guillotine in active operation?
23097Is it an honest commission honestly selected by the President of the United States as against a railroad company?
23097Is it the President of the United States as against a corporation?
23097Might we not, if things had turned differently, drifted into chaos and revolution?
23097Morrill did so in these words:"Vest, what is the matter?
23097Senators to support?
23097Shall the Nation endure it longer?
23097Shall we struggle on and on until the welcome day comes when his term shall expire?
23097So Chandler went up to Proctor, and said:"Proctor, do n''t you like me?"
23097That obstacle having been finally removed, the question which next arose was: What route should be selected?
23097The President asked,"What is it about?"
23097The court asked,"Who is Captain McClellan?"
23097The question is often asked,"Who has succeeded Aldrich as leader of the Senate?"
23097The question was:"Should the bill pass the veto of the President regardless thereof?"
23097The vote was taken in the Senate:"Shall the Civil Rights bill pass the veto of the President to the contrary notwithstanding?"
23097Then what is the proposition?
23097What are these arguments?
23097What evidence has been presented that they are insecure?
23097What is the attempt now being made?
23097When in the whole history of this Government have they stood on so firm a basis?
23097When was the Fugitive Slave Law executed with more fidelity than since the inauguration of the present incumbent of the Presidential office?
23097and turning to his Secretary of State, he added,"Seward, you remember my old friend Stuart?
28350Do you see why this trip at this time was a brave act, and one by which Ad- ams ran a great risk of los- ing his life?
28350Was this not a brave act?
28350What should he do?
21196Ai nt you a buster?
21196And what is that, pray tell me, love, that paddles off so fast?
21196And you say you''re an American?
21196Ay, is it so?
21196Bailed out, was he?
21196Bettina,said she, addressing her maid in a voice as clouded and rich as the south wind on an à � olian,"how am I to- day?"
21196But what kind of perishable things?
21196Fiddlesticks, is it, sir? 21196 From what part of America?"
21196Had the sufferin''s he had undergone made him delerious?
21196Have you two barns?
21196How do you expect to get over the river when you go back?
21196Lady Albina,said I, in my softest tone,"how are you?"
21196My dear,said I to Mrs. Sparrowgrass,"where did you get these fine potatoes?"
21196My dear,said Mrs. Sparrowgrass,"why do n''t you sell that boat?"
21196On their heads?
21196Sell it? 21196 Throw that in my face agin, will you?
21196Town?
21196What State?
21196What has become of your pontoon train?
21196What was that?
21196What''s that?
21196What,replied Bill,"do you mean to say you do n''t know what a hanthem is?"
21196Where are we now, sir? 21196 Where do you usually put the horses of clergymen who come to see your master?"
21196Who sold the best apples in your town?
21196Who told you that I swore?
21196Why dassent you?
21196Why did you leave their communion, Mr. Dickson, if I may be permitted to ask?
21196Why not? 21196 Why,"says he,"how would the rest of the wimmin round Jonesville feel if I should pick out one woman and wait on her?"
21196Yes, sir; nice ones, ai n''t they?
21196You ai n''t got nuffin''more to say?
21196You ai n''t? 21196 You are not going to waste your ground on muskmelons?"
21196You want a passage to America?
21196*****_ Old Gentleman_( to driver of street- car):"My friend, what do you do with your wages every week-- put part of it in the savings bank?"
21196--What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around?
21196A catbird?
21196Am I to be sacrificed, broiled, roasted, for the sake of the increased vigor of a few vegetables?
21196And now, Melissy Bedott, you ai n''t to have nothin''more to dew with them gals-- d''ye hear?
21196And where''s Kier?
21196Before the whole set school to boot---- What evil genius put you to''t?"
21196Besides, there were two bolted doors and double- deafened floors between us; how could she recognize my voice, even if she did hear it?
21196But at last a wonderful diamond ring, An infant Kohinoor, did the thing, And, sighing with love, or something the same,( What''s in a name?)
21196But my wife Polly, says she,''What on airth are you thinkin''of, Deacon?
21196But what kind of an explanation could I make to him?
21196But when the blow was struck, when I had passed''em by and invited some other, some happier woman, how would them slighted ones feel?
21196But who was to give me back my peas?
21196But why harrow the feelings by lifting the curtain From these scenes of woe?
21196Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and Deaconess dropped away, Children and grandchildren-- where were they?
21196Dickson?"
21196Dis razor hurt you, sah?"
21196Do you see that tree there?"
21196For what says the ballad?
21196Had the sufferin''s of the night, added to the trials of the day, made him crazy?
21196He give the old mare a awful cut and says he:"I''d like to know what you want to be so aggravatin''for?"
21196Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a spring- like way?
21196His shipmate listened for awhile, and then said:"I say, Bill, what''s a hanthem?"
21196How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When, through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell?
21196How did he git thar?
21196How didst thou acquire this paramount honor and dignity?"
21196How do you s''pose I can do anything with you a- tossin''round so?"
21196How do you s''pose they would enjoy the day, seein''me with another woman, and they droopin''round without me?
21196I says to him in stern tones:"Is this pleasure, Josiah Allen?"
21196I should like to know what arthly reason you had to s''pose old Crane was agreeable to me?
21196In what other painful event of life has a good man so little sympathy as when overcome with sleep in meeting time?
21196Is this the way you answer the question about keepin''the Lord''s day?
21196It skairt him awfully, and says he,"What does ail you, Samantha?
21196JAMES T. FIELDS THE OWL- CRITIC A Lesson to Fault- finders"Who stuffed that white owl?"
21196MR. C."Well, then, I want to know if yu''re willing I should have Melissy?"
21196One day I saw Mr. Bates walking along, and I hailed him:"Bates, those are your cows there, I believe?"
21196One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"What might it be that you''ve got in the box?"
21196Out spoke the ancient fisherman:"Oh, what was that, my daughter?"
21196Pray, what do you know of a woman''s necessities?
21196Putting my head out of the carriage, I said in a petulant and weary tone,''Do you want to see me?''
21196Recollect wut fun we he d, you''n I on''Ezry Hollis, Up there to Waltham plain last fall, ahavin''the Cornwallis?
21196Says I,"What is the matter, Josiah Allen?
21196Scrutinizing it closely, he turned to the widow and in a low tone asked,''Who sent the pick?''"
21196See-- how long''s Miss Crane ben dead?
21196Somebody ought to get up before the dew is off( why do n''t the dew stay on till after a reasonable breakfast?)
21196Step up an''take a nipper, sir; I''m dreffle glad to see ye;"But now it''s,"Ware''s my eppylet?
21196The fowls of the air have peas; but what has man?
21196Thought ye left me with agreeable company, hey?
21196Wal, I guess I had set there ten minutes or more, when all of a sudden I thought, Where is Josiah?
21196Want Melissy, dew ye?
21196We ca n''t never choose him o''course-- thet''s flat; Guess we shall hev to come round( do n''t you?)
21196Well, what''s_ he_ good for?"
21196What are you off here for?"
21196What can be done with five or six o''clock in town?
21196What if I was?
21196What if my trousers are shabby and worn?
21196What if, seconds hence When I am very old, yon shimmering doom Comes drawing down and down, till all things end?"
21196What is a garden for?
21196What is the matter?"
21196What may not be done at those hours in the country?
21196What''s that in the corner there?"
21196When the flow of language was exhausted he said:"Are you troo?"
21196Where ish de himmelstrahlende Stern---- De shtar of de shpirit''s light?
21196Where ish de lofely golden cloud Dat float on de mountain''s prow?
21196Who ever heard of a comet without a tail, I should like to know?
21196Why did n''t you stay till mornin''?
21196Why, Cappen-- did ye ever hear of such a piece of audacity in all yer born days?
21196With the hoe, the rake, the dibble, the spade, the watering- pot?
21196Wo n''t Stewart, or some of our dry- goods importers, Take a contract for clothing our wives and our daughters?
21196Wo n''t some kind philanthropist, seeing that aid is So needed at once by these indigent ladies, Take charge of the matter?
21196Wo n''t somebody, moved by this touching description, Come forward to- morrow and head a subscription?
21196Wut shall we du?
21196You could n''t come here a minute, could you, without a lot of other wimmen tight to your heels?"
21196You was in a awful takin''to come with''em, and what will they think to see you act so?"
21196[_ Exit Mr. Crane._(_ Enter Melissa, accompanied by Captain Canoot._)"Good- evenin'', Cappen Well, Melissy, hum at last, hey?
21196_ She_: Did n''t you?
21196ai n''t it terrible?
21196are you not a member of the African church?"
21196who said you would n''t?"
21196who would rise at dawn to hear the skylark if a catbird were about after breakfast?
28386''What appointment?''
28386He besought Grant not to stay in Washington, but to come back to the Mississippi Valley,"the seat of coming empire, and from the West where[ when?]
26424Is life so dear or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery? 26424 What shall I do?
26424When the fire is beginning to kindle, and your heart growing warm, propound these questions to it: Who is this invader? 26424 And how did he use them? 26424 Are they equally propitious? 26424 But how about direct taxation, the manly sacrifice of free peoples, the plummet by which to sound the enlightenment of a nation? 26424 Have I a competent knowledge of him? 26424 He hastened to M. Thiers''s house, and asked him whether he would accept the presidency of a provisional government? 26424 I agree with you that the law is well calculated to draw forth the powers of the mind, but what are its effects on the heart? 26424 Is he a gambler, a spendthrift, or drunkard? 26424 Is he a man of good character; a man of sense? 26424 Is his fortune sufficient to maintain me in the manner I have been accustomed to live, and my sisters do live? 26424 Is it possible to have a nobler epitaph pronounced on one than that-- and pronounced by such a man? 26424 Let her marry, and what is the consequence? 26424 Now, what is the clew to this comedy of errors? 26424 The General asked,By what route?"
26424What has been his walk in life?
26424What is it that gentlemen wish?
26424What is the something to be?
26424What were those instincts?
26424What would they have?
26424Who would, consequently, deny the possibility at least, of Bismarck''s being so misunderstood, by friend and foe, at this present moment?
26424Why?
26424and is he one to whom my friends can have no reasonable objection?
22037Is he for one currency for the bondholders and another and different currency for the people? 22037 Is he for the bondholders or the people?
22037Shall we all live happily together, or shall we hate each other, and quarrel and bear malice? 22037 Advising the people? 22037 And why do I say this? 22037 But how can they become political questions, now that they are acquiesced in by almost the entire people of the country?
22037But why was there such a purpose?
22037By an issue of more paper redeemable in coin?
22037Can any Governor of any State say that he has done a better business?
22037Can not men see the difference between opposing the adoption of a measure and yielding when it has been adopted, and opposition has become useless?"
22037Can permanency and stability be secured in the civil service of the Republic in any other certain way than by a constitutional amendment?
22037Can you get men to enlist now at any price?"
22037Can you pass an act of Congress that will avoid it?
22037Colonel McCook says:"How can I answer for all the future?
22037Did they expect to make money plenty by an issue of more coin?
22037Do I state too strongly the mischievous, the fatal tendency of these proceedings?
22037Do you remember we once had black laws in Ohio which kept the colored men out of the State?
22037Do you want two million more of men to go forth to this war as the Crusaders went to the sepulcher at Jerusalem?
22037Four more years of war, do you tell me, when the first four, with every advantage, has failed?
22037Four years more of war?
22037Good as you think you are, are you good enough absolutely to govern another man without that other man''s consent?
22037Has the time come when the country can afford to trust the Democratic party on these questions?
22037He sent over the wires to his adjutant, then at Charleston, the message:"Are there any steamboats at Charleston?"
22037He was asked:"Are these amendments never again to become political questions?"
22037How can I answer as to all the future?
22037How can I tell what the Democracy of New York or any other State may do?
22037How can I tell what the Democracy of New York or any other State may do?"
22037How can we get rid of it?
22037If the negro is to stay here, and it is desirable to have him do so, what is the duty of the intelligent white man toward him?
22037In the Sidney speech, Mr. Vallandigham says, also:"What will you have now?
22037In the course of this speech Governor Hayes said:"When the rebellion broke out, what was its chance for success?
22037Is n''t that right?
22037Is n''t that right?
22037Is n''t that right?
22037Is not that true?
22037Is there any voter thinks that is too much-- more than he will want?"
22037Is this sound either in law or logic?
22037Judge Thurman, where are you at this time?
22037Need I ask any old Jackson Democrat what is his duty when the Union is at stake?
22037Need I pause to inquire who would receive encouragement, or whose spirits would be depressed, on reading these remarkable sentences?
22037News that a convention representing nearly one- half of the people of the North had concluded that the war was a failure?
22037Now, Judge Thurman, how does your conduct square with it?
22037Now, do n''t you see there is no way by which one man can give consent to be governed by another man in a republican government except by the ballot?
22037Now, in that contest, where are you, Judge Thurman?
22037Now, in what condition were those ten rebel States?
22037Now, on what did the conspirators who plotted the destruction of the Union and the establishment of a Southern Confederacy rely?
22037Now, that is all true-- that is all correct; but how does my friend Judge Thurman find any justification for the rebellion in that?
22037Now, too, that the hearts of one- half of the people are turned away from war, and intent upon the arts of peace?
22037Now, what is it that Mr. Lincoln said?
22037Now, what is this dangerous provision?
22037On the 15th of July, what else had happened?
22037On the authority of the National government he says:"Now, sir, what force of arms can compel a State to do that which she has agreed to do?
22037On what ground did it stand?
22037Shall the crown of valor be withheld by a free people that was once bestowed by a Scottish king?
22037So I would say to the friends of the public schools:"How do the enemies of universal education vote?"
22037Suppose that amendment was repealed; what would prevent Kentucky from denying suffrage to colored citizens?
22037Suppose they did-- suppose they belonged to the same party before the war-- is that any defense of his conduct during the war?
22037Taking the beginning of 1863, how stands the conflict?
22037To secure that he gave up all the country from Manassas down to Richmond and a large part of the valley.... How about the Southern campaign?
22037What are its claims on honest Democrats?
22037What good news?
22037What guaranties of success have you?
22037What has been surrendered to obtain that?
22037What is he advising them to do?
22037What is that Constitution?
22037What is that great issue?
22037What is the right of revolution?
22037What was the fact?
22037What was the key- note of that canvass?
22037What was the result of this advice to the people?
22037What was their condition with respect to the preservation of order, the suppression of crime, and the redress of private grievances?
22037What will be the consequence?
22037What, then, do I say to the Union men?
22037When ought we to stop talking about that record, when leading men come before the people?
22037When shall we stop talking about it?
22037Where did the Democrats of Kentucky, in their canvass, stand on the new departure?
22037Who began the agitation of this subject?
22037Who do the enemies of the Union want elected?
22037Who repealed those laws?
22037Who sounded it?
22037Why did they do it?
22037Why did they say I should not vote?
22037Why is it agitated?
22037Why what did they mean by their platform?
22037Will Judge Thurman define his position, for thousands of votes may depend upon it?"
26339230,replies the person addressed,"Is n''t that correct?"
26339Is n''t that rather a low calling?
26339What was your father''s calling?
26339You are in the negro minstrel business, I believe?
26339*** Mistress: Did the fisherman who stopped here this morning have frog legs?
26339Are we not at the perpetual mercy of evil men and powers, which blind fair reason?
26339Are we not dazzled by pomp and show?
26339Are we, then, arbiters of our own fate?
26339Are we, then, so soulless in our innocent pleasures?
26339But, which one of you ladies turned the cup?
26339Deception-- intrigue-- house of sickness-- see the crosses and losses?
26339Did we not all cry out,"Oh, what a wonderful cup-- a king, a king with a crown?"
26339Do you grasp some of the leading ideas?
26339Do you know what is your birth stone?
26339Do you see his hat?
26339Do you see the broad sky- scenes?
26339Do you see the standing well- poised form of a woman?
26339Do you see the_ jeweled ring_ with the light flashing for you?
26339Do you want that mysterious thing that is called"good luck?"
26339Done that?
26339Dullwum-- How do you make that out?
26339Fennicus-- They''re mound builders, are n''t they?
26339HAVE A PEANUT?
26339Hark?
26339How is it to be read?
26339How then can we be held in blame for the committal of even some desperate acts?
26339How will you comfort her when sorrows come to you?
26339I wonder if you can do it?"
26339In what month were you born?
26339Listen, friends, are there not better objects everywhere?
26339Madam, how is one to overcome nature?
26339Now, as this is all free play, will you please tell me if this leading figure defines any of your conditions truthfully, as to politics?
26339Now, see you the large moon- faced man from over the deep water?
26339Now, what figure have you got?"
26339See the head?
26339See the little_ dog_, how angry, and the_ cat_, with her back up, and the other animal with a spring?
26339See the young girl-- no doubt your daughter-- under the beautiful fruit trees?
26339See you the ocean?
26339See you the separate roads, with the harsh wind blowing the leafless branches of the trees?
26339See you the_ shaft_, draped like a funeral pall across the cup?
26339See you these faces?
26339The mules and the whole team?
26901For, how can you free your country,said Petion,"if you do n''t free all the people in it?"
26901So do I,replied the Duke;"but do you think that in the present condition of France it would be advisable for us to adopt it?"
26901What would you have me do?
26901Where do the rebels get their powder?
26901Another story has it that when the physician put a handglass to the lips of the dying man and said,"Can you hiss( siffler)?"
26901As bullets penetrated the walls of the Pope''s ante- chamber, Pio Nono exclaimed:"Has Heaven no lightning?"
26901If this bill shall be thrown out by a narrow majority and the scale should be turned by the votes of the prelates, what would be their situation?
26901If thou regret''st thy youth, why live?
26901Is this too ambitious?"
26901Proudhon carried Etienne Cadet''s"Icarian"theories so far that in his famous book,"What is Property?"
26901The first message,"What hath God wrought?"
26901The offended beau retaliated one day, when some of his friends saluted the Prince on Rotten Row, by asking,"Who is your fat friend?"
26901The question now was no longer,"What will the Lords do?"
26901Until I have executed this, I have no peace; and what can comfort me until I know that I have with upright will set my life at stake?
26901What could I revive of Napoleon?
26901What will he do then?
26901When objections were raised that he was a heretic, the Holy Father asked:"Is there any doubt that Thorvaldsen is the greatest sculptor in Rome?"
26901Where is a man in the Church since the time of Constantine who has at one stroke enfranchised six millions of souls?"
26901Where shall I find a chief to ride The jungle paths with me?
26901Why?
26901Will he bring to his assistance the force of the bayonet?
26901[ Sidenote: Meagre literary remains] It was Sydney Smith, too, who asked the famous question:"Who ever reads an American book?"
26901but,"What will be done with the Lords?"
26901would the angels laugh to mark A bright soul driven, Fiend- goaded, down the endless dark, From hope and heaven?
2704Did I lower my voice when I came to that part of my speech?
2704And if men shirk their duty should they not come under some law of compulsion?
2704But had he not been struck down too for England?
2704But how to end the system?
2704Could Cornwallis hold out?
2704Could any one point to a single person who before war broke out had known British tyranny?
2704Could it be possible that he was not going to make aid to Burgoyne his chief purpose?
2704Could it be that he would attack Boston?
2704Did not the colonies themselves admit that it had the right to control their trade overseas?
2704He asked North:"Are you resolved at the hour of danger to desert me?"
2704How could he dominate men whose short term of service was expiring and who had to be coaxed to renew it?
2704If George III was a despot what of Louis XVI, who had not even an elected Parliament to restrain him?
2704If Ticonderoga why not Quebec?
2704In July he had sailed to the mouth of the Delaware, with Philadelphia near, but he had then sailed away again, and why?
2704It was said that a united British Empire could defy the world, but why should America defy the world?
2704Of what advantage was it to remain connected with Great Britain?
2704Or was his goal Charleston?
2704Suddenly a soldier was shot dead by his side, and, when he saw the man quiet at his feet, he said,"Is Death nothing but this?"
2704The question which he asked anxiously shows what was in his mind:"Did the militia fight?"
2704True, Britain paid the bill in money but why not?
2704Was a whole continent in America to be governed by an island a thousand leagues away?
2704Was he to remain with his whole force at New York until the time should come to push up the river to meet Burgoyne?
2704Was it not to impose tyranny and slavery to tell a people that their property would be taken by force if they did not choose to give it?
2704Was not the British Parliament supreme over the whole Empire?
2704Was she not the old enemy who had so long harassed the frontiers of New England and New York?
2704Were the American colonies free to govern themselves as they liked or might their government in the last analysis be regulated by Great Britain?
2704What authority and decision could be expected from an officer of the peasant type, elected by his own men?
2704What free man would not rather die than yield on such a point?
2704What suffering could any one point to as the result of the tax on tea?
2704Where were the oppressed?
2704Who made up the armies led by the British generals in America?
2704Who should he be?
2704Why did they not move?
2704Why should not they agree to bear it?
2704Why should not they pay some share of the cost of their own security?
28633Has your ship struck?
28633How old,Napoleon asked,"was Paul Jones when he died?"
28633Are then the Continental ships of war to depend on sale of their prizes for the daily dinner of their men?
28633It would have been said:''Was he not forewarned by Captain Cottineau and others?''"
28633When they came within range of one another they hoisted their colors almost at the same time, but the Drake hailed:--"What ship is that?"
27716A little later he was found standing, gazing intently at the portrait of the old gentleman, and when asked,"Why such sudden interest?"
27716Did he punish Argus for that?
27716Did n''t you tell me to let it down''by the fall''?
27716Do you remember"Nana,"in_ Peter Pan_?
27716General Grant looked around and noticing the walnut trees said,"Why not turn walnut around and call it"Tunlaw"?"
27716I wonder if he was on duty at the hospital in the Seminary down the street?
27716I wonder if it was from this old tavern that that brilliant but erratic statesman went out across the Chain Bridge to fight his duel with Henry Clay?
27716Is it a wonder she was n''t greatly beloved?
27716Load it carefully on the hand truck, wheel it to the window and let it down''by the fall''--do you get that straight?"
27716Philip Barton Key William Thornton Do you suppose that Mr. Semmes had his tavern in this place for only one month?
27716Said the angry boss,"Now, what the devil have you done?"
27716She ends with,"What are the young people coming to?"
27716Some other boys thought they would like the same privilege and asked for it, but she told me she always asked,"Are you a friend of my little cousin?"
27716The morning after its receipt the father burst into the doctor''s office in a rage,"What did he mean by sending him a bill?
27716Then there was a great knocking on the door-- a window was raised and a voice called:"Who is that?"
27716Was there ever a more wonderful display of six stalwart handsome brothers?
27716Was this paragon discovered in old George Town and taken to Boston for keeps?
27716Who was Gay Street named for?
27716Will you confer with Mr. Buchanan on receipt of this and try to get me permission to give the invitations as I propose?
27716he replied,"Where is the''burb''on his nose?"
28394O Pennsylvania,he cries,"what hast thou cost me?
28394What is this, friend James, that I hear of thee?
28394When,cried Penn,"and where?
28394Dost thou think to escape his fierce wrath and dreadful vengeance for thy ungodly and illegal persecution of his poor children?
28394How is Sir William?''"
28394Presently Fox, seeing him without it, said,"William, where is thy sword?"
28394is''t you?
17237''Do n''t you want to see him?'' 17237 ''Do you want to buy a horse?''
17237''Hain''t you a little reckless, young feller?'' 17237 ''How are you going to get there?''
17237''How did ye get here?'' 17237 ''How''s that?''
17237''Me?'' 17237 ''What is it then?''
17237''What you goin''to do?'' 17237 ''What''s all this erbout?''
17237''What''s that?'' 17237 ''What''s the trouble?''
17237''What''s your hurry?'' 17237 ''What''s your name?''
17237''Which o''you is Samson Traylor?'' 17237 Abe, have ye learned the_ Cotter''s Saturday Night_?"
17237Ai n''t that enough to break a man''s heart?
17237Ai n''t ye comin''in?
17237All the way in that wagon?
17237And buy a few corner lots?
17237And he offered to pay you to come here and burn this house and run Traylor out of the county, did n''t he?
17237And the young people a chance to play checkers?
17237And you''ve quit farmin''?
17237Ann,Bim called in a moment,"had I better put on my red dress or my blue?"
17237Annabel, do you remember this man?
17237Any Indians?
17237Any mail?
17237Any plug tobaccer?
17237Anything for me?
17237Are you a Christian?
17237Are you going over there?
17237Are you hungry?
17237Are you sure that you can stand an all day''s journey?
17237Billy, how long have we been together?
17237But are you not afraid of the plague?
17237Can I go with you?
17237Can I not stay you with flagons?
17237Can ye shoulder it?
17237Can you be there at six in the morning?
17237Come all the way from Vermont?
17237Could you stand it to be talked to and scolded by a couple of girls till you did n''t care what happened to you?
17237Did I ever tell you what Uncle Jerry Holman said of his bull calf? 17237 Did any one ever see a lovelier girl than this?"
17237Did it ever occur to you that every living creature has its home? 17237 Did you ever dream of a long legged, brindle cat with yellow eyes and a blue tail?"
17237Did you ever ride a horse sitting backwards-- when you''re going one way and looking another and you do n''t know what''s coming?
17237Did you ever see a fairy going to mill on a butterfly''s back?
17237Did you get a good price?
17237Did you get along all right?
17237Did you see Annabel?
17237Did you see him jump in?
17237Did you tell her?
17237Do I remember you?
17237Do n''t ye hear''em askin''us to stop? 17237 Do n''t you know?"
17237Do n''t you think that our bonds would sell in the East?
17237Do ye mean that angel o''God in a white dress that takes keer o''the sick?
17237Do ye remember how the little girl clung to the wagon?
17237Do you hear from Bim Kelso?
17237Do you hear from Bim?
17237Do you know anything about this young Missourian who is shining up to Bim?
17237Do you know of anybody who''ll give ye anything for what you own here?
17237Do you like it better than Judge?
17237Do you like this gown?
17237Do you play on the flute?
17237Do you really and honestly want to marry me? 17237 Do you still want to be a lawyer?"
17237Do you think I''m afraid of_ you_?
17237Do you think so?
17237Do you-- love-- some other man?
17237Does it eat''em up?
17237Does it hurt anybody?
17237Fat?
17237Fine or superfine?
17237Has he been out here to see you?
17237Have a good night?
17237Have any of the notes been paid?
17237Have they any guns with them?
17237Have you any water here?
17237Have you come out to hang me?
17237Have you come through Honey Creek settlement?
17237Have you decided where to go?
17237Have you got a razor?
17237Have you got a snare drum?
17237Have you heard from Bim or any of the Kelsos?
17237Have you heard from home?
17237Have you learned that last noble flight of his in the reply to Hayne as you promised?
17237How are the lungs, Doctor?
17237How are you gettin''along?
17237How are you getting on with the books?
17237How d''y do?
17237How far do you call it to the sycamore woods?
17237How far is it?
17237How is Henry?
17237How shall we rassle?
17237How''s business?
17237I have always felt sorry for any kind of a slave?
17237I''m lucky to find you and Abe and Joe all up and waiting for me,he said as he shook their hands"How is mother?"
17237If he would do that to his wife, what treatment could you expect for his niggers?
17237Is Freeman Collar here?
17237Is dis Mistah Traylor?
17237Is he cruel to his wife?
17237Is he going to marry the Rutledge girl?
17237Is he good- looking?
17237Is it founded on fact?
17237Is n''t that like Bim?
17237Is n''t that the way we have to travel in this world whether we''re going to love or to mill?
17237Is that your house?
17237Is the coast clear?
17237Is the plague getting worse?
17237Is there any house where I could find help and shelter for you?
17237Is there any reason why I should n''t?
17237Is there anything I can do for you?
17237Is there anything else that I seem to need?
17237It is n''t fair to you, is it? 17237 It''s worth a fortune, now-- ain''t it?"
17237May I not hope that you will change your mind?
17237Mis''Traylor, where did you git your man?
17237Mother, do you think I look like a baby?
17237Mr. Kelso, did you ever hear what Eb Zane said about the general subject of sons- in- law?
17237Mr. Nuckles, how did you happen to become a minister?
17237No, why?
17237No?
17237Sarah, did ye get a good look at it?
17237Say, do n''t you know that you are standing in the center of a large and promising city?
17237Say, who''s that?
17237Shall you spend the summer in New Salem?
17237Son of Elijah Brimstead?
17237Still true to your old love?
17237That''s like Bim, is n''t it?
17237The brokers in Chicago got the cash and you got the notes?
17237The poor vandering Jew has gome back ag''in-- hey? 17237 Then you took that long walk just to advertise your honesty-- to induce people to call you''Honest Abe''as they have begun to do?"
17237To whom are we indebted?
17237Vell- vat is it?
17237Was there ever a fairer maid in spite of all her troubles? 17237 Well, Mary, have n''t you found the fortunate young man yet?"
17237Well, sir, what is it about?
17237Well, what do you think of Henry''s plans?
17237Well, what''s the news?
17237Well, you''ve found them, have you?
17237What are they doing?
17237What are we to do?
17237What are you going to do now that you have sold out?
17237What are you roaring at?
17237What become of the third nigger?
17237What can I do about it?
17237What can I do for you?
17237What can I do for you?
17237What do ye want o''me?
17237What do ye want o''me?
17237What do you think of him?
17237What do you think of it?
17237What does he do with''em?
17237What does it do?
17237What for?
17237What happened?
17237What has Davis done to you?
17237What is it?
17237What is that?
17237What is that?
17237What is the charge?
17237What kind of a girl is she?
17237What kind of a girl is she?
17237What kind of a looking man is he?
17237What kind of a man is he?
17237What makes you think so?
17237What was that poetry you learned for the church party?
17237What was that, father?
17237What will be my part?
17237What''s a secretary?
17237What''s behind you is before you and the faster you go the more danger you''re in?
17237What''s he done?
17237What''s that?
17237What''s the matter?
17237What''s the name of this place?
17237What''s yer name? 17237 What''s yer name?"
17237Where are you going?
17237Where did ye come from?
17237Where do ye hail from?
17237Where do you live?
17237Where ye bound?
17237Where''s the growin''?
17237Where''s your mother?
17237Who are you?
17237Who has done this?
17237Who is that big sucker who grabbed my friend?
17237Who takes care of you?
17237Who told you to come here?
17237Who we goin''to visit?
17237Whose house is this?
17237Why did n''t you let me know of your troubles?
17237Why did you disguise yourself before you came in?
17237Why do n''t she leave him?
17237Why do n''t you leave Joe here while you''re gone to Chicago?
17237Why not?
17237Why not?
17237Why so?
17237Why, Abe, where have you been?
17237Why?
17237Why?
17237Why?
17237Why?
17237Why?
17237Why?
17237Why?
17237Why?
17237Will you heat up a little water for us to wash with?
17237Will you make me a promise?
17237With these clothes that have just been hauled out of a saddle- bag?
17237Wonder why we do n''t see no bears?
17237Would I have to sacrifice any of my principles?
17237Would you like to stay?
17237Would you mind if I called you mother?
17237Would you mind if I kissed you?
17237You are that now, are n''t you?
17237You do n''t mean to tell me that Harry has been killed?
17237You like fun-- don''t you?
17237You''re not expecting to meet Bim Kelso?
17237You? 17237 ''Who you''fraid of?'' 17237 Abe smiled and asked:Do you want a title?"
17237Abe, could n''t you help get the timber out in a hurry so we can have a raising within a week?
17237Able''s sister, Mary Owens?"
17237After a moment of silence Lincoln added:"What is your ambition?"
17237Ai n''t there some one that dast come up an''collar me?
17237Ai n''t ye wore out?"
17237As Samson and Harry were making their farewells, Annabel asked the latter:"May I whisper something in your ear?"
17237As she sings in the valleys below?"
17237Can you stand right where you are and marry us?"
17237Could n''t you come along?"
17237Did you ever see an elephant talking with a cricket?"
17237Did you read that Harry had been killed?"
17237Do n''t it rile ye up to think of a man like that bein''bought and sold and pounded around like a steer?
17237Do n''t that prove my case?"
17237Do n''t you hear it now?
17237Do n''t you hear my clothes say somet''ing?"
17237Do n''t you hear the fond tale Of the sweet nightingale As she sings in the valleys below-- As she sings in the valleys below?"
17237Do n''t you hear the fond tale of the sweet nightingale As she sings in the valleys below?
17237Do n''t you think, taking me just as I am, you could care for me a little?"
17237Do you like cows?"
17237Do you like yellow hair?"
17237Do you not hear the birds singing in the meadows?"
17237Does she love him?"
17237God takes pretty good care of us-- don''t He?"
17237Has n''t he written you this summer?"
17237Have either of you seen McNamar since he got back?"
17237Have n''t you let''em know about your bad luck?"
17237Have you ever seen a''Colonel''Lukins or a Bap McNoll in woman''s dress?"
17237Have you got any work to give me?
17237His wife asked him:"''Are you drunk or crazy or a fool?''
17237How are the children?"
17237How could one speak of a sweet and noble passion in such attire?
17237How did you get here?"
17237How long ye been travelin''?
17237How would you like a little Marseilles waistcoating?"
17237I do n''t want to wait forever to be really and truly loved, do I?"
17237I may save a dozen souls from hell-- who knows?"
17237I suppose he has other creditors in Tazewell County?"
17237Is Elizabeth Ranney married yet, and how does the minister get along with his new wife?
17237Is he going to the spelling school?"
17237Is n''t it?"
17237Lincoln scratched his head thoughtfully and asked:"Billy, had n''t we better withdraw that plea?
17237Louis?"
17237Louis?"
17237May I come?"
17237She turned to Samson Traylor and asked wistfully,"Do you suppose he would play with me?"
17237Suddenly a man touched his shoulder with a hearty"Howdy, Abe?"
17237Suddenly he asked:"Say, did you take partic''lar notice o''that yaller nigger?"
17237Then Harry asked:"What have you done with the third slave?"
17237Then Samson turned to Brimstead and asked:"Look here, Henry Brimstead, are you a drinking man?
17237Then after a little silence she pleaded:"You do n''t think that, do you, Abe?"
17237Then he went up to Traylor and said:"What did you do with my niggers, you dirty sucker?''
17237Then she asked timidly:"Do you play on the flute?"
17237Then, sir, we know very little about you, and may I be pardoned if I add that it does not recommend you?"
17237There was a wonderful and touching dignity in her voice and manner when she asked:"Why did n''t he write to me?"
17237They call him Honest Abe, do n''t they?"
17237To whom?"
17237Were the slaves they carried the property of Biggs?
17237What can I do to help you along?"
17237What does God care for General Jackson?
17237What in the world was it?"
17237What is your answer?
17237What motherly heart could resist the silent appeal of children''s faces or fail to understand it?
17237What part of the East do you hail from?"
17237What put that into your head?"
17237What shall I say of his words save that it seemed to me that the voice of God was in them?
17237What time is it?''
17237When that was over he said:"''Now, boys, be you ready to accept Christ and a good breakfast?
17237Where do Samson Traylor live?"
17237Where is Annabel?"
17237Who knows?"
17237Who''s going to be raided?"
17237Why did you do it?"
17237Why do you wish to keep it a secret?"
17237Will you go with us next week?"
17237Would you care to be a General?"
17237You would n''t dare kiss him I guess?''
28067Are our social adjustments such as to facilitate, or at least not interfere with it?
28067Are we sure that the political experience of England proves the wisdom of an independent judiciary?
28067Are you sure that your Federal judiciary will act thus?
28067But how were those imposed by the Constitution on the general government itself to be enforced?
28067Do they make the question of success or failure, survival or elimination, depend upon individual fitness or unfitness?
28067Does a majority vote for a party indicate that the majority approve of the entire platform of that party?
28067Does a popular majority for a party mean that the majority approve of the policies for which that party professes to stand?
28067Does it seek to crystallize and secure a definite expression of public opinion at the polls, or is it so constructed as to prevent it?
28067Does the platform of the American political party serve this purpose?
28067How, then, was this change in the attitude of the public brought about?
28067Is free government, then, being tried here under the conditions most favorable to its success?
28067Is progress achieved only through the preservation of the fit and the elimination of the unfit?
28067Is that judiciary as well constructed, and as independent of the other branches, as our state judiciary?
28067Is the evolution of a higher human type the same kind of a process as that of a higher animal or vegetable type?
28067Is the use made of this argument from analogy warranted by the facts in the case?
28067What, then, can be done to make that body an organ of democracy?
28067Where are your landmarks in this government?
28067Why did not the framers of that document clearly define the relation of the Federal to the state courts?
27478[ 62] The questions, then, whose answers give the key to the whole Baconian philosophy, may be put briefly thus-- What are[ v.03 p.0147] forms? 27478 (?) 27478 727 Sargon, usurper 722 Sennacherib, his son 705 Esar- haddon, his son 681 Assur- bani- pal, his son 668 Assur- etil- ilani- yukin, his son? 27478 A man was only bound to serve so many( six?) 27478 AYRER, JAKOB(?-1605), German dramatist, of whose life little is known. 27478 AZURARA, GOMES EANNES DE(?-1474), the second notable Portuguese chronicler in order of date. 27478 Are the forms, then, forces? 27478 Assur- sum- lisir? 27478 But is this a view of delight only and not of discovery? 27478 First, what need to dissemble? 27478 How far, then, is such defence or explanation admissible and satisfactory? 27478 How is it that he shares with Descartes the honour of inaugurating modern philosophy? 27478 In tragedy, he asks, who would be Ion of Chios rather than Sophocles; or in lyric poetry, Bacchylides rather than Pindar? 27478 Is it original? 27478 Is it valuable? 27478 Is truth ever barren? 27478 Or was it to be incorporated whole? 27478 Shall he not as well discern the riches of nature''s warehouse as the beauty of her shop? 27478 Shall he not be able thereby to produce worthy effects, and to endow the life of man with infinite commodities? 27478 Sin- sarra- uzur( Sarakos)? 27478 The Code recognizes complete private ownership in land, but apparently extends the right to hold land to votaries, merchants( and resident aliens?). 27478 Thirdly, what matter, I ask, if the description of the instances should fill six times as many volumes as Pliny''s_ History_? 27478 Ussi(? 27478 Was there a_ genuine_ Lucas- Passion? 27478 Were only its German provinces to be included? 27478 What idea had Bacon of science, and how is his method connected with it? 27478 Whence should this be? 27478 _ Dynasty of Sisku(?) 27478 and how is it that knowledge of them solves both the theoretical and the practical problem of science? 27478 of contentment and not of benefit? 27853 He rode right into our men,"feelingly relates a Confederate soldier,"then stopping suddenly, called out,"''What troops are these?''"
27853Shall we be quitting, Jamie?
27853And Wood Thrush, sweet, tell me,--that throbbing and humming, Is it march at the double quick or wild bees that hum?
27853And that rumble that shakes like an earthquake coming-- Tell me, O Hermit Thrush, thunder or drum?
27853And where is that land who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more?
27853Art thou a flecking, brave Bluebird, of sky light, Or the sough of a minor wove into a beam?
27853But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate?
27853Captain Pearson, noting the situation, called,"Have you struck your colors?"
27853For the parry who needs?
27853He determined to hold his position, and called out,"What troops are those?"
27853Oh, Hermit Thrush, Hermit Thrush, thou of the eye bright, Bird, or the spirit of song in a dream?
27853Page 75: General Packenham[Pakenham] heroically waved his troops Page 80: As fair and free as now[now?]
27853Turning to the duchess, the commodore asked if she recalled his promise to lay a frigate at her feet one day?
27853Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine?
27853Was that a bugle note far up the bend, Where the murk waters flush and the white bars glisten, Or dove cooing dove into love notes that blend?
27853What might ensue?
27853What might not ensue?
27853What would have been the result to the Confederate cause had the great leader not fallen that first day, who can say?
27853Who bends his keen, approving glance Where down the gorgeous line of France Shine knightly star and plume of snow?
27853Why, birds, do you sing it?__ And, woodland, why held you the echo, to ring it?_ Spring on the Tennessee; hark, Bluebird, listen!
27853Why, birds, do you sing it?__ And, woodland, why held you the echo, to ring it?_ Spring on the Tennessee; hark, Bluebird, listen!
27853Would it be there at another sunrise?
27853Would the Stars and Stripes, the symbol of the New Republic across the sea, be recognized by salute?
27853Would the strife end then and there?
27853YORKTOWN FROM Yorktown''s ruins, ranked and still, Two lines stretch far o''er vale and hill: Who curbs his steed at head of one?
27853[ Illustration:"WHAT TROOPS ARE THESE?"]
29244''And what could that be for?''
29244''Only two of you, and could you not agree-- what did you quarrel about?''
29244G. T.[ 4] Mr. McWhorter writes me that two others were Jesse Hughes and John Cutright( corruption of Cartwright?
29244That worse than savage monster, tauntingly replied,"how can I?
29244What must have been the obduracy of those, who could remain inflexible in their doom of death, amid such scenes as these?
29244Why then should you?
28456Am I not always your wife?
28456And how large a handful would the birthday child like?
28456And who are you,was the general cry,"that you dare to speak with such boldness to us?"
28456Shall we speak of such trifles at such a time?
28456Tell me,she said to him one day,"whether my Antoinette will be happy?"
28456With my broken wing how can I succeed?
28456A gleam of joy lighted her pale face when he came to her bedside, but perceiving his emotion she asked,"Am I then so very ill?"
28456Bennett motioned Stanley to a seat, and after a moment''s pause, asked:"Will you go to Africa and find Livingstone?"
28456But of what advantage was it for mankind that the cows of Gloucestershire possessed a matter thus singularly powerful?
28456But where should he learn?
28456Could you go out yourself and take charge of everything?
28456He was silent; then demanded,"How could you make war on me?"
28456Here is a subject for debating clubs: Was the interest of the country best served by Frémont''s withdrawal from the canvass of 1864?
28456How could it be otherwise when nothing in the world is indifferent to me?
28456How were persons living at a distance to derive benefit from this great discovery?
28456Is the Tau learning to read with mamma?
28456On October 30th, the_ Times_ republished from the_ Examiner_ a letter, headed,"Who is Miss Nightingale?"
28456Stanley was bronzed and aged by sun and storm, and Bennett, surprised, abruptly asked,"Who are you?"
28456Then, touching her gauze robe, asked,"Is it crêpe?"
28456They told her that couriers had been despatched for the king, and she asked anxiously,"Will he soon come?"
28456Trials we must have, but what are they if we are together?"
28456Would you like to serve Him?
28456Would you not like to work for Him among men?
28456in such an hour as this can the queen sleep?
26507But did they not train their children?
26507After eighteen years of experience and observation, what is the result?
26507Am I arguing against the teaching of instrumental music to the Negroes in that community?
26507An important question often asked is, Does the white man in the South want the Negro to improve his present condition?
26507And does the Southern white man want him to improve it?
26507And what is the objection?
26507And why not?
26507But how much of it is brought to a focus along lines of practical work?
26507But it is asked, Would you confine the Negro to agriculture, mechanics, and domestic arts, etc.?
26507But what is the remedy for this condition?
26507But what is the trouble?
26507Can I not stay a little later, and help you?''
26507Can this be done?
26507Can this be done?
26507During the first fifty or one hundred years of the life of any people are not the economic occupations always given the greater attention?
26507Having touched upon some of the weak points of the Negro, what are his strong characteristics?
26507How will she execute this trust?
26507I ask, Who blasted the life of this young man?
26507In cities of the South like Atlanta, how many coloured mechanical engineers are there?
26507In the life of our Republic, when he has had the opportunity to choose, has it been the better or worse part?
26507On whose hands does his lifeblood rest?
26507That is all; but what does it mean?
26507The world is looking for the person who is thoughtful, who will say at the close of work hours:''Is there not something else I can do for you?
26507This being the case, how can the black man in the South improve his present condition?
26507What are the causes of this partial failure, and what lessons has it taught that we may use in regard to the future treatment of the Negro in America?
26507What bearing will all this have upon the Negro''s place in the South as a citizen and in the enjoyment of the privileges which our government confers?
26507What happened?
26507What is it?
26507What is the explanation of this?
26507What is the object of all this outlay?
26507What is the permanent value of the Hampton and Tuskegee system of training to the South, in a broader sense?
26507What is to be the end of all this?
26507What was the task the North asked the South to perform?
26507Why?
26507Will he occupy it?
26507Will he"cast down his bucket where he is"?
26507Will his friends North and South encourage him and prepare him to occupy it?
26507Will your convention set an example to the world in this respect?
26507how many architects?
26507how many civil engineers?
26507how many house decorators?
26507of the coloured people depend upon agriculture, how many men are there who are well grounded in the principles and practices of scientific farming?
26507or dairy work?
26507or floriculture?
26507or fruit culture?
26507or how many machinists?
26069Did I dodge, when, as soon as landing in Georgia, I traveled all night and spoke all next day against these blighting measures? 26069 General,"said Lieutenant Irvin,"what do you think?
26069How about drinking, General?
26069Joe Deas,she said,"are you a fool?
26069Senators, is it just? 26069 The great question is, Shall Georgia govern the corporations or the corporations govern Georgia?
26069Then why not be baptized, General?
26069Was it not the intention of the legislature to prevent the collection of just such claims as these you now bring?
26069Well, my friend, there are several there that I do not like: now what are you going to do about it?
26069What did this party demand, and what did it get?
26069What do I want you to do?
26069What is it that we of the South ask? 26069 What,"said he,"do I see before me?
26069Where is General Toombs?
26069Who is responsible for the murder, treason, and arson of John Brown? 26069 Who is that with you?"
26069Who would say that he had not earned his money? 26069 Why do you think so?"
26069Young man,retorted Colonel Smith,"what is your name?"
26069Am I a freeman?
26069Are they not just?
26069Are they not right?
26069Deas had been discussing politics with Toombs, and his sister asked him if he knew to whom he had been talking all night?
26069Do n''t you know that is General Toombs?"
26069Do we ask what we are not willing on our side to grant to them?
26069Do we make any unjust or unequal demands on the North?
26069Have both governments formed designs that can not be accomplished in peace, and which seek opportunity and shelter in the confusion and panic of war?"
26069He threw himself before page 122: possible typo he did run for Congress and scored[should be scorned?]
26069He would reply,"Where was the authority, in so many words, to build lighthouses?
26069How did they become possessed of greater rights, in this or any other respect, than the people of Utah?
26069I know everything looks worse and worse on our side of the ocean, but when will it be any better?
26069Is my State a free State?
26069Is this state of things to last forever?
26069Lieutenant Irvin:"But has no one passed or stopped here, answering my description?"
26069Mr. Hale:"Who made it?"
26069Once, when Senator Oliver P. Morton asked General Toombs why he did not petition Congress for pardon, Toombs quietly answered,"Pardon for what?
26069Refuse them, and what then?
26069Senator Toombs read the letter and, looking up in a dazed way, asked,"And who in the devil is Joe Brown?"
26069Shall we not restrain this tax- gatherer who has no judge but himself, no limit but his avarice?
26069Someone called out,"When will Charles Sumner be allowed to speak in the South?"
26069Submit?
26069The Augusta_ Chronicle and Sentinel_, a leading Union organ, took up the charge and asked:"What of it?
26069The Democrats had asked where was the authority to charter a bank?
26069The question is just the same: Is it right, is it just, is it the policy of this country to enlarge its territory by conquest?
26069Well, what can we do?
26069What beyond that?
26069What can we do?
26069What do these rebels demand?
26069What do they want to live for?"
26069What, then, am I to do?
26069What, then, must be the judgment of a war for plunder?"
26069Where were you when I was riding up and down your line rallying your troops?
26069Who is to fill the place of the great Kentuckian?
26069Who is to take the place of the distinguished Carolinian?"
26069Will that satisfy the honorable senator from Kentucky?
26069suppose the Yankees find us to- day; what will you do?"
29482But before he even alights Franklin cries out,"Sir,_ is_ Philadelphia taken?"
29482Do you think of anything at present, in which the Junto may be serviceable to mankind, to their country, to their friends, or to themselves?
29482Have you lately observed any encroachment on the just liberties of the people?
29482In what manner can the Junto, or any of them, assist you in any of your honorable designs?"
29482Into what companies will he hereafter go with an unembarrassed face, or the honest intrepidity of virtue?
29482Where could patriotism and fortitude of character better be learnt than in Plutarch?
29482Why did you not tell me there were ladies here?''
29482_ Q._"How would the Americans receive a future tax, imposed on the same principle as the Stamp Act?"
29482_ Q._"What is their temper now?"
29482_ Q._"What was the temper of America towards Great Britain before the year 1763?"
29482_ Q._"Would the colonists prefer to forego the collection of debts by legal process rather than use stamped paper?"
29482mon Dieu, where is Franklin?
10947''My son, are you not human?'' 10947 Ah, signal?"
10947Ah-- er-- not the finest bourbon whiskey, selected by a Kentucky friend? 10947 Ai n''t you- all done been to bed at all?"
10947Air you a- goin''t''scribble that there three thou- san''on a piece o''paper?
10947All right?
10947And after that signal?
10947And how did you know we were in Washington?
10947And is he to be given up to?
10947And so that is_ your_ view?
10947And the little ones-- quite well, I hope, too?
10947And what do I know of Aurelia or any other girl?
10947And what for would ye go upstairs?
10947And what is mulled wine made with?
10947And when may I have the pleasure of seeing her?
10947And you have the lozenge?
10947And-- er-- may I ask the nature of the case?
10947Any mail for us this morning, Lydia, dear?
10947Are you hurt?
10947Ay,said another boy,"what''s your thought like?"
10947Balaam? 10947 But do n''t you think they''re nice people?"
10947But now do n''t you want to buy a bonnet or a cloak to carry home to your wife?
10947But what is it-- anything bothering you?
10947By the way, you do n''t happen to know Maud and Dorothy Partridge, of Baltimore, do you? 10947 By the way, you do n''t happen to know the Whitleys, of Washington, do you?
10947Can we ask a question, Judge?
10947Cattle? 10947 Could I be misanthropical when I saw such fidelity, and dignity, and simplicity?
10947Delightful spot, is n''t it?
10947Den maybe you vill have de kindness to show me de sixty lot vich I have bought, vid de valuarble vatare privalege?
10947Den vill you be so good as to take de East River off de top of my lot?
10947Did you say one hundred, sir? 10947 Do n''t you see Webster_ ers_ in the words cent_er_ and theat_er_?
10947Do n''t you see?
10947Do n''t you think it''s queer?
10947Do n''t you''member Cindy''s Mose, Mars''Pendleton, what''migrated''mediately after de war?
10947Do you consider that a safe boat?
10947Do you know--he broke out all at once--"why they do n''t take steppes in Tartary for establishing Insane Hospitals?"
10947Do you reckon you could?
10947Do you think that picture is fairer than the one you saw of Colonel Calhoun last night?
10947Do you want to advertise the copy by exhibiting the original coat?
10947Do?
10947Does he know you''ve got this one?
10947Does it come near here?
10947Does it go over that bridge?
10947Does that mean that you''re still hanging around here to begin over and make a call?
10947Even if she is,observed Mrs. Morland,"are polish of manners and cultivation of mind confined exclusively to persons of that class?"
10947Five hundred? 10947 Fool who?"
10947For the Lord sakes, Elder Brown, what ails you? 10947 Funny?"
10947Good morning, Mr. Riggles,said the Superintendent,"Anything fresh this morning?
10947Hannah, you do n''t mean it?
10947Has he been paid for bringing you here?
10947Have you yours?
10947Honey,said Gideon--"Honey, yo''ain''mad, is yo''?"
10947How dared you be so saucy to the master?
10947How does that sound, Major, for a first- nighter?
10947How is this?
10947How long did you say this canal is?
10947How much did you give for him?
10947How much do you want for that jug and its contents?
10947How much for the furniture for the week?
10947How much is coming to me?
10947How much?
10947Howdy, boys; how are you?
10947I hope you are well?
10947I suppose,he said, gloomily,"you have documentary evidence-- written promises and protestations-- er-- er-- love- letters, in fact?"
10947I wonder if we could n''t scare up a little session of dollar limit?
10947If he spells leather_ lether_, and feather_ fether_, is n''t there danger that he''ll give us a_ bad spell of weather_? 10947 If you still love him?"
10947Is Mr. Thomas in?
10947Is it for sale?
10947Is it so grievous a fate, to see?
10947Is it this gentleman-- Mr. Adoniram K. Hotchkiss-- who-- er-- promised marriage?
10947Is it too much?
10947Is n''t that rather a heavy load?
10947Is that so?
10947Is this it?
10947It is n''t so bad after all, is it, Podington? 10947 It will make no difference,"I said:"I can call at the office in the morning and apologize; in the meantime what can be the matter with the clock?"
10947May I be of assistance?
10947Misteh, how long yo''-all reckon this train goin''to be?
10947Mr. Tutt,said he, laughing,"if we go for a bit of exercise will you guarantee us the possession of our rooms when we come back?"
10947No money?
10947No-- why, what''s the matter?
10947Not in his usual way?--er-- no reproaches out of the hymn- book?--or the sacred writings?
10947Nothing but the house?
10947Nothing the matter, Gideon, is there? 10947 Nothing was said about the furniture, was there?"
10947Now where can we make ourselves comfortable with this furniture?
10947Of course,said the Colonel, confidently,"there is strongly presumptive and corroborative evidence?
10947Oh, if it''s so easy, why did n''t you do it yourself?
10947On the girls?
10947Pardon me-- I understand there are no letters; may I know the way in which he formulated his declaration and promises?
10947Pork- chop, eh? 10947 Ralph,"sternly demanded his father,"you do n''t mean to tell us that you let the Van Kamps jockey us out of those rooms after all?"
10947Really, now,exclaimed little Sister Green, the doctor''s wife,"do you think it is the deacon who needs urging?"
10947S''pose I''d better go into your house and try to wash it off? 10947 Safe?"
10947Say he did n''t even shake hands, Marann? 10947 Say them words, Marann?"
10947Say, you are Gideon, ai n''t you?
10947Shall I hitch him on again, sir?
10947Shall I take the trouble off your hands?
10947Shall we go upstairs?
10947So you gave five hundred dollars for him, did you?
10947So you prefer_ Cane_ to_ A bell_, do you?
10947Suppose, as a starter, that we have Mrs. Van Kamp give a shiver party down in the barn?
10947The what?
10947Then what does this impertinent nonsense mean? 10947 Then you''ll fight him tooth and nail?"
10947Then-- I say-- these here new folk that you''n''your wife seem so mighty taken up with-- d''ye know anything about''em?
10947Und you acknowledge tat you pe te blind dronk und te vool?
10947Und you ave pelief in_ me_, te Angel of te Odd?
10947Und you pelief, ten,he inquired,"at te last?
10947Vare shall I go to, eh?
10947Vat dat you say, sure?
10947Very well, I thank you,said he, after the eating elements were adjusted;"and you?"
10947Was he mad when you told him?
10947Was it thick and wide?
10947Was you ever struck in the mud in a balloon?
10947Well, did you ever?
10947Well, sir, I hope you like your purchase?
10947Well, sir, what can I do for you?
10947Well, what do you suppose? 10947 Were there any endearments-- er-- caresses-- er-- such as taking your hand-- er-- clasping your waist?"
10947What are the Van Kamps paying you for those three rooms?
10947What did you say then?
10947What do yo''care?
10947What do you ask for meals and lodging until this time to- morrow?
10947What do you mean?
10947What do you mean?
10947What do you mean?
10947What is it?
10947What is orthography?
10947What mule, Hannah?
10947What right have you to accuse either this young lady or myself of flirting? 10947 What should I want coarse- hand for?"
10947What street was it?
10947What will he do?
10947What you goin''to talk about?
10947What''s a composer?
10947What''s all this about?
10947What''s the matter, Champe?
10947When yo''comin''back? 10947 Where is it, I say?
10947Which do you call it? 10947 Which?"
10947Who are you, pray?
10947Who collects the money to defray the expenses of the last campaign in Italy?
10947Who is yo'', man?
10947Who pe you,he asked,"und what der teuffel you pe do dare?"
10947Who wins now?
10947Why ca n''t we make things a little more comfortable for all concerned?
10947Why did n''t you lay on the card?
10947Why did you give it up?
10947Why do n''t you go and talk to the girls, Rossie?
10947Why is his way of spelling like the floor of an oven? 10947 Why, how is that, Old Joe?"
10947Why, matter o''course, Matt; what you think? 10947 Will you hear''em now-- now I''m here?"
10947Will you take the rocking- chair, ma''am?
10947William,said he,"how long have you had this horse?"
10947William,said she, very gently,"where is the mule?"
10947With your collar and boots all dirty?
10947Wo n''t two do ye? 10947 Wo n''t you''light, Master?"
10947Yo''ain''grievin''foh yo''ma?
10947You did, did you? 10947 You do n''t happen to know Billy Evans, of Boston, do you?"
10947You do n''t happen to know Peyson Kingsley, of Philadelphia, do you?
10947You do n''t happen to know the Gately''s, of New York, do you?
10947You do n''t happen to know the Tylers, of Parkersburg, do you?
10947You here? 10947 You poor dear, did I abuse you?"
10947You see this old hat?
10947You think Matt Pike ai n''t tryin''to settle with your pa with a dollar? 10947 You were there?
10947You will come and dine with us, Titbottom?
10947You''d wear a necktie-- wouldn''t you?
10947Your client? 10947 Zaidee kin do that straight enough, I reckon,"said the woman;"what I want to know first is, kin you take the case?"
10947_ Mon ami_, are you acquaint vid dis part of de country-- eh?
10947_ Quoene sit historia Reformationis in Ungariâ?_quoth Haliburton, after some thought.
10947_ Should you think_,she asked me,"that a man would climb the Matterhorn the very first year he was married?"
10947''Do n''t drink nor smoke?''
109471, vainly:"Very well, thank you; and you?"
10947A hundred?"
10947After a pause he added, delicately:"But were these attentions-- er-- confined to-- er--- sacred precincts?
10947Ai n''t that so?
10947Aimez- vous la danse?
10947Aimez- vous la musique?
10947An''you ca n''t git the sev''n hundr''d dollars?"
10947And as Titbottom opened the door, I heard the low words:"And Preciosa?"
10947And if you do make them wait awhile, where''s the harm?
10947And the deacon?
10947And why?
10947And why?
10947And will you also send the wagon for my trunks?"
10947And you?"
10947Any Conundrum?"
10947Are you hurt?"
10947Are you thinking of buying her?"
10947Arter that-- off and on----""One moment,"interrupted the astounded Colonel;"do you mean Hotchkiss the President of the Ditch Company?"
10947As I will explain later, those are merely symbols of the Church--""Of wot?"
10947As she sat with folded hands her eyes fell upon-- what?
10947At this unusual request the visitors looked much amazed, and Mrs. Watkinson replied to him,"Whip you, my best Joseph-- for what cause?
10947Balaam?"
10947Beautiful lots-- valuable water privileges-- shall I say one hundred for you?"
10947Berger?"
10947Brown?"
10947But a public officer, Pink, when jooty call on him to go, he got to go; in fack he got to_ goth_, as the Scripture say, ai n''t that so?"
10947But can you not divide the evening, by passing a part of it with her and then finishing with me?"
10947But do ye_ know_ them?"
10947But in regard to the distinct promise of marriage-- was there-- er-- no_ other_ expression?"
10947But where were they?
10947But-- er-- my dear lady, need we go as far as that?
10947Ca n''t you get forward and cast off that line?"
10947Ca n''t you give us something like''_ His Wife''s Deceased Sister_''?"
10947Ca n''t you steer him by shouting''Gee''and''Haw''?"
10947Can a man be too far- sighted?
10947Can not this affair be settled-- er-- out of court?
10947Can we wonder that Master Horner determined to make his empire good as far as it went?
10947Can you-- unless you are one of those people who frame that interesting document and hang it upon their drawing- room walls?
10947Come now, Benny-- how does it begin?
10947Comment se va madame votre mère?
10947Could a young schoolmaster think of feruling a girl with her hair in ringlets and a gold ring on her finger?
10947Did he meet you elsewhere?"
10947Did he-- er-- give any reason for it?
10947Did n''t you?
10947Do I hear some critics exclaiming that there is nothing remarkable about_ How the Widow Won the Deacon_, the story by Lampton included in this volume?
10947Do n''t you think it would be wiser for me to walk home, William?
10947Do not you think so, ma''am?"
10947Do they look as if they had been accustomed to a life of pleasure?"
10947Do you carry anything to bail her out with?"
10947Do you know?
10947Do you mean you have taken her case?
10947Do you s''pose yo''could let me have a little money to- night, Misteh Stuhk?"
10947Ever had any champagne, Gideon?"
10947Finally he closed his book, glanced about him, and observed absently:"So you boys were to spend the night?"
10947Gentle reader, do you remember Monsieur Poopoo?
10947Give it up?
10947Got a pencil?"
10947Harry Stillwell Edwards( 1855-), a native of Georgia, together with Sarah Barnwell Elliott(?
10947Have we called on any girls?"
10947Her eyes again answered that she expected he would, but she added, simply,"When?"
10947His name on one side of a window, his birthplace upon the other-- what could be more tastefully appropriate?
10947How did I play Uncle Mose?
10947How much cotton will you raise?"
10947How much do you want?
10947How much do you want?"
10947How much for them?
10947How much?"
10947How should she?
10947How''s crops?"
10947How''s that?"
10947How''s your health?
10947I ca n''t do what?"
10947I''ve got a wad of white chewing- gum; would you flat it out and stick it over the collar button?
10947If a man leaves for an hour, twenty"correspondents"may be howling,"Where was Mr. Prendergast when the Oregon bill passed?"
10947If the complexion of his politics were not accounted for by his being_ an eager_ person himself?
10947If you please to let my bundles stay untell I come back--""Ca n''t I show you something?
10947Is life only a game of blind- man''s- buff?
10947Is n''t he a fine horse?
10947Is n''t there a law or something to that effect?"
10947Is that a train?"
10947Is that fa''r, er is it not fa''r?"
10947Is that so, or is it not?"
10947Is that the best you can think of?
10947It is a party ye''re expecting?
10947Marchman?"
10947May I ask to whom you are engaged this evening?
10947Mowzer?"
10947Need I say that I refer to that amazing compound of likeableness and sharp practices, Get- Rich- Quick Wallingford?
10947No?
10947Not feeling sick or anything?"
10947Now as to the p''ints o''absentees, my business as dep''ty sheriff has took me away from this inconsider''ble town freckwent, hain''t it?"
10947Now that seems queer, does n''t it?"
10947Now there ca n''t be no apartment- house on two sides of the same street, kin they?"
10947Now what I ask of_ you_, and I do n''t want you to take it as in no ways_ personal_, is-- hev you your merridge- license with you?"
10947Now, Pink, I were to have credics for my absentees''cordin''to transion an''single- meal bo''ders an''sleepers; ai n''t that so?"
10947One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"What might be that you''ve got in the box?"
10947Or show any cause?"
10947Perhaps you can give me-- er-- a brief outline of the affair?"
10947Presently the Patriarch asked again:"Why was M. Berger authorized to go to the dances given to the Prince?"
10947Reckon your mother would let me?"
10947Shall we go?"
10947She followed them into the dining- room to kiss and feed him, with an absent"Howdy, Abner; how''s your mother?"
10947Should he give away his brilliant inside information, drawn from the_ Hints and Helps_ book, and be rivalled in the glory of his manners and bearing?
10947Some eye?
10947Something I can do for you?"
10947Sure?"
10947The Major stepped to the door and called:"Lydie, dear, will you come?"
10947The elder then promised to send his cotton to the warehouse to be sold in the fall, and with a curt"Anything else?"
10947The same gallery- boy shouted,"How''s your mother?"
10947The subjoined Conundrum is not allowed: Why is Hasty Pudding like the Prince?
10947The visitor stared vacantly at him, and said, slowly:"And what good is that goin''to do_ us_?"
10947Then, as he looked at their startled faces:"I''m right, am I not?
10947There''s a porch to cross after you go up the steps-- does it say anything about that?"
10947This was merely Stockton''s turning to account his own somewhat similar experience with the editors after his story,_ The Lady or the Tiger_?
10947Three times eleben make thirty- three, do n''t it?"
10947Twenty- eight dinners at half a dollar makes fourteen dollars, do n''t it?
10947Twice certified, who should dare doubt his competency?
10947Von leetle bird in de hand he vorth two in de tree,_ c''est vrai_--eh?"
10947Was it chance or fate that brought Elder Brown in front of a bar?
10947Watkinson?"
10947We- feel- we- must- be- going,''like you said you would?
10947Well, what''s_ he_ good for?"
10947Were others cognizant of this?
10947Were there any witnesses?"
10947What do you say?''
10947What fault have you imagined?
10947What for?
10947What game is too small for the close- woven net of a coquette?
10947What next?
10947What of the widow?
10947What should a caller lay upon her?
10947What was the hurry?
10947What was your bad thought?"
10947What will he do when he gets up?"
10947What woman''s heart ever failed to soften at sight of a new bonnet?
10947What would the old lady say?
10947What yer mean?
10947What you do to him?"
10947What you want to know where Matt Pike''s gone for, Marann?"
10947What''d I do?
10947What''d I say?
10947What''d I tell you?
10947What''s likely to happen after we get rid of the card?"
10947What''s the news in the country?
10947What- all''s yo''name?"
10947What--""And the little wife?"
10947What?
10947When did you tell the coachman to come for us?"
10947Where is he and his old plug?"
10947Where is_ your_ marriage- license, married reader?
10947Where was she?
10947Where you goin'', Ab?"
10947Whether Wendell_ Fillips_ were not a reduced copy of John_ Knocks_?
10947Whether a New York_ Feuilletoniste_ is not the same thing as a_ Fellow down East_?
10947Who could tell what might or might not happen?
10947Why am I summoned here?"
10947Why cattle?"
10947Why did n''t he wait till another time when the deacon was alone, as he was?
10947Why do n''t you take off your life- preserver and let that other man put it on his head?"
10947Why do n''t you untie your shoes?
10947Why is a-- a-- a-- like a-- a-- a--?
10947Why should he not pass on alone, perfectly composed, and reap the field of glory unsupported?
10947Why, man, where is Balaam?"
10947Will it soot a sorter redheaded''ooman?"
10947Will that do ye?"
10947Will you pe take de odder pottle, or''ave you pe got zober yet, and come to your zenzes?"
10947Will you, Pink Fluker?"
10947William James Lampton(?-1917), who was known to many of his admirers as Will Lampton or as W.J.L.
10947Yo''heah me, chile?"
10947You are to spent the night?"
10947You do n''t want to carry all that money around, do you?"
10947You do n''t''member Uncle Mose, child?"
10947You have rightly guessed that the question means,"What is the history of the Reformation in Hungary?"]
10947You pelief, ten, in te possibility of te odd?"
10947You see the holler there?
10947You want to rent th''hull place, back lot an''all?"
10947You''ll give him fits?--and you''ll make him pay?
10947You''ll tell the whole story your own way?
10947You''member dem colts, Mars''Pendleton?"
10947You, the counsel for the Ditch Company?"
10947and what is it you are talking about?"
10947do you take me for a shicken?"
10947exclaimed Buller, with a sudden squirm in his seat,"what is that I hear?
10947for the life of me ca n''t I make you hear?
10947he cried, highly incensed,"vat I pe do mit te wing?
10947he said; and immediately asked,"Why is Douglas like the earth?"
10947how could you?
10947my wife cried, as Mrs. Brede sobbed on her shoulder,"why_ did n''t_ you tell us?"
10947of droll cross- purposes?
10947really_?
10947said I with much dignity, although somewhat puzzled;"how did you get here?
10947said I,"what do you mean?
10947she said eagerly;"you''ll show him up?
10947what did you do it for?
10947what do you mean by coming home and insulting your wife?"
10947where have you ben?"
10947where is it?"
10947why do n''t you bring out the letters?"
29003Argentina will take some of our markets from us, but what are they?
29003How are we to adapt ourselves to this new condition?
29003How are we to utilize this opportunity?
29003How can this defect be remedied?
29003Mr. Minister, will you permit me the honor of asking all to join me in drinking to the health of His Excellency the President of Peru?
29003So how can the people of the United States help feeling a friendship and sympathy for the people of Argentina?
29003There is the happiness of life; and what is trade if it does not bring happiness to life?
29003We can not fail to ask ourselves sometimes the question, What will be the end of our civilization?
29003What action ought our Government to take for the accomplishment of this just purpose?
29003What is the object of the society?
29003Whence comes the change?
29003Why is it that Americans have substantially retired from the foreign transport service?
29003Why is it?
29003Why should you not live in peace and harmony?
29003Why, then, have we retired from this field in which we were once conspicuously successful?
29003Will all that we do come to naught?
29003Will the palaces we build be the problem of the antiquarians in some future century?
29003With such dignified sentiments resounding in our ears, have we not reason to be proud of our guest?
10370''Has she no other lover?'' 10370 Ai n''t she pretty?"
10370Ai n''t there no way to get out of it, Fernando?
10370Am I better than those who risk their lives for me?
10370An''so this is the place where ye make peace?
10370And have ye got the job all before ye, Sukey?
10370And have you called on Sir George?
10370And still a- coming?
10370And they offered you none?
10370And ye do n''t mind it if it''s a thrifle of an adventure, do yez?
10370And your wife, can you describe her?
10370Are they gaining on us?
10370Are ye fer war or peace?
10370Are ye going to declare war, Misther Madison? 10370 Are you a deserter?"
10370Are you for war or peace?
10370Are you homesick already, Sukey?
10370Are you pleased to see me?
10370Are you quite ready now?
10370Are you the prisident?
10370Are you wounded?
10370Arrangements? 10370 Be hard o''hearin''?
10370But artillery?
10370But can we get along without it?
10370But her father-- her mother?
10370But in the past?
10370But the academy?
10370But who are these young men?
10370But would it be for the flag, or revenge?
10370But, Terrence, the most serious question is, what are we going to do?
10370But, Terrence, what are we to do?
10370Ca n''t you sink the ship?
10370Can I speak freely?
10370Can anything be seen of the_ Xenophon_?
10370Can that be possible?
10370Can we go in her?
10370Can you describe how he looked then?
10370Can you see them yet?
10370Captain Lane, do you mind telling me all about the finding of her?
10370Captain, are you hit?
10370Captain, do ye remember the little girl at Mariana five years ago, the one yersilf and the Englishman were about to break heads over?
10370Cut yer hammock, indade?
10370Did General Winder send you to defend the town?
10370Did either of you ever meet Captain Snipes?
10370Did he never come aboard the_ Macedonian_ again?
10370Did he recognize you?
10370Did they not pay you?
10370Did you aim at the spot you hit?
10370Did you ever meet with such a jolly fellow?
10370Did you hear of him?
10370Did you know Thomas Matson of his majesty''s ship_ Spit- Fire? 10370 Did you lose any of your men in the skirmish?"
10370Did you see him after we left Mariana?
10370Did you talk with her, Sukey?
10370Did you talk with her, Sukey?
10370Do I look like I war a Britisher? 10370 Do n''t the government promise protection to its citizens?
10370Do n''t you know their names?
10370Do they allow him here?
10370Do we gain on them?
10370Do yez want to see the prisident, really?
10370Do yez want to see the prisident?
10370Do you hear?
10370Do you know Robert Fulton?
10370Do you see anything?
10370Do you think I am afraid to meet him again?
10370Do you?
10370Does he ever come here?
10370Father, you talk so strangely; what do you mean?
10370Fernando,said the mother laying aside her knitting and taking off her glasses and wiping them,"do you really mean to go?"
10370Has he any chance of promotion, sir?
10370Have n''t you sweeps which we could work?
10370Have you heard of her?
10370Have you heard of him?
10370Have you no arms in the boat?
10370Home?
10370How are we to get out of this any way?
10370How are we to save Washington without an army?
10370How can you skip from one side o''the earth to the other as easily as a flea can cross a hammock? 10370 How far are they away?"
10370How far is it to Mud Island?
10370How is little Morgianna this morning?
10370How is the night?
10370How long will it take to reach Baltimore, captain?
10370How many men have you capable of bearing arms, Captain Lane?
10370How many men have you?
10370How?
10370I beg pardon, gintlemen, but this is Captain Conkerall? 10370 If duty calls me--""But have you no friends,"she asked slowly,"no friends here, whom you would like to see after the war is over?"
10370Is he in command?
10370Is he your friend?
10370Is recess something to eat?
10370Is she married?
10370Is this Mr. Fernando Stevens?
10370Is this all you have to say?
10370Is this the town you were spakin''about?
10370It is only a polite way of inviting me to her wedding,he thought; then he asked:"Will you be here?"
10370Job, where have you come from?
10370Know Lieutenant Matson? 10370 Lieutenant Matson, do you wish to insult me?"
10370May I ask if you have not been engaged all along to Lieutenant Matson?
10370Miss Lane, how did you learn this?
10370Mister Magrew, be ye a man o''honor?
10370Morgianna, do you not love me?
10370Morgianna? 10370 Morgianna?"
10370Mother, would you have me stay?
10370Must be generals by the clothes they wear?
10370My child, the plunderers have sacked other towns and insulted the inhabitants, and why not ours?
10370No; ca n''t I be a lawyer, or a doctor, or a preacher as well there as here? 10370 Oh, it''s you, is it?"
10370Pray who is Lieutenant Matson?
10370Say, Fernando, I ought to count three or four for that one, should n''t I?
10370Say, Fernando, ai n''t that fellow on the big horse General Packenham?
10370Say, Fernando, do yez mark how Misther St. Mark stares at Miss Morgianna?
10370Say, Fernando,said Sukey,"those fellows are officers, ai n''t they?"
10370Say, what''s that, shipmate?
10370So ye''ve heard it at last, me frind?
10370So yer for peace?
10370So you are going away?
10370Sukey, how is all this to end?
10370Terrence, are you telling me the truth?
10370Terrence,said Fernando in a half whisper,"Ca n''t we find a more comfortable place than this to live in?"
10370The_ Xenophon_? 10370 Then how can we escape?"
10370Then how did you know she was not married?
10370Then how did you know she was not married?
10370Then, Morgianna, who was it?
10370They are not married yet?
10370They made you no offers?
10370Want me, Capen? 10370 Was he a free mason?"
10370Was he married then?
10370Was he not promoted?
10370Was n''t the fight fair?
10370We''ll pay ye, wo n''t we, Misther Madison?
10370We''ve downed one redcoat in fair light; what more do ye want, bad luck to ye?
10370Well, me boy, ye''re not dead yet, are ye?
10370Well, was any action taken on your report?
10370What ails you, Terrence?
10370What am I wanted for?
10370What are ye thinkin''of, Fernando?
10370What be ye goin''to see the prisident about?
10370What boat is that?
10370What d''you want to go there for?
10370What did you ask?
10370What do Drake and Smoot, whom I represent, care for sailors like yourself? 10370 What do you mean, father?"
10370What do you say now, old fellow?
10370What do you want to sink for?
10370What do you want, father?
10370What does this mean, Terrence?
10370What for?
10370What have you to ask?
10370What is amiss?
10370What is her name, captain?
10370What is her name?
10370What is it shootin''at?
10370What is it? 10370 What is it?"
10370What is it?
10370What is it?
10370What is that, Sukey?
10370What is that?
10370What is the promise?
10370What is your business?
10370What meeting?
10370What place is it?
10370What proofs have you of the perfidy of Great Britain?
10370What proofs have you?
10370What show can he have?
10370What station do you mean, sir?
10370What strange providence has brought me here?
10370What the d--- l are you stopping for?
10370What the divil ails the boy?
10370What the divil be ye goin''to Washington City for, me boy?
10370What the divil''s the difference? 10370 What was all that catterwaulin''and yellin''about down at the river?"
10370What was the temper of the people of New England?
10370What will you do?
10370What would they have done with us, Terrence, had they captured us?
10370What''s the matter, Morgianna?
10370What''s the need of worryin''yer brains out over Latin, Greek and astronomy, when there''s my amount of fun to be had? 10370 What?
10370What?
10370What?
10370When and where were you impressed?
10370When is what to come off?
10370When was it broken off?
10370When you had such a good chance, why did n''t you aim higher?
10370When?
10370When?
10370When?
10370Where are we, Terrence?
10370Where are you from?
10370Where away?
10370Where away?
10370Where did you find her and when?
10370Where is he?
10370Where is my husband?
10370Where was he?
10370Where?
10370Where?
10370Whither do you go?
10370Who are you, misther?
10370Who are you?
10370Who be ye?
10370Who cut my hammock down?
10370Who has attacked us?
10370Who is he?
10370Who is that shootin''?
10370Who lives in the great house on the hill?
10370Who?
10370Who?
10370Why are you cheering? 10370 Why did n''t you escape sooner?"
10370Why did the lieutenant challenge me, when the captain was the injured party?
10370Why do you oppose the war?
10370Why not put in there?
10370Why should I favor it?
10370Why should they quarrel over that?
10370Why were you not at your station, sir?
10370Why, have you not heard that he is already in command of a ship? 10370 Why, la sakes, they did n''t think Fernando was goin''to miss, did they?"
10370Why, me boy, what d''ye mane?
10370Why?
10370Why?
10370Why?
10370Why?
10370Why?
10370Will he die?
10370Will she be at the ball, Terrence?
10370Will you ever come back, major?
10370Will you make me a promise?
10370Will you produce them, so I may judge what they are?
10370Will you tell me the maiden name of your wife?
10370Without danger of arrest or imprisonment?
10370Wo n''t they give me time to eat my breakfast?
10370Wo n''t you alight and come into the house?
10370Wo n''t you be with me when it is done?
10370Wo n''t your education be lost there?
10370Wonder if that thing I saw with a stovepipe in it was a steamboat?
10370Would n''t it be better to take hatchets and blaze the corners of the houses as we go along?
10370Would they dare follow us on shore?
10370Yes, we kin; but, hang it, how am I a- goin''to git back to Baltimore?
10370You are probably not aware of the true motive which induced me to heave you to?
10370You did so?
10370You do n''t say, sir?
10370You knew her at sight?
10370You mean Morgianna Lane, Terrence?
10370You saw Morgianna, Sukey, how did she look?
10370''7"Who?"
10370A thousand times he had said to himself:"Oh, why can I not forget her?
10370After a few moments, he asked:"What was the name of your brother- in- law''s ship?"
10370After a long silence Fernando asked:"Is he married?"
10370After a moment''s silence, she asked:"Father, is n''t Lieutenant Matson on the_ Xenophon_?"
10370After several efforts in which he found the old malady of something rising in his throat returning, he said:"But, Morgianna, was he not your lover?"
10370All day long he had buoyed himself up with an indistinct idea that she would certainly say,"Do n''t go,"or"Do n''t leave us,"or"Why do you go?"
10370Are ye a good shot?"
10370Are your guns in order?"
10370At this Morgianna, who had been ministering to the wounded, entered and said:"Are they not enemies?"
10370Bacon?"
10370Can you make out her colors?"
10370Captain Lane asked the Cornish fisherman to be seated and asked:"What have you seen, Tris?"
10370Commodore Rodgers, being aboard the_ President_, hailed the sloop and asked:"What sloop is that?"
10370Could he ever return to his home and face his Christian mother?
10370Could he ever return to the school?
10370Could this be true?
10370Do n''t she cleave the water?"
10370Do n''t ye see I''m getting him out of yer way?"
10370Do n''t you know the papers are full of it?
10370Do n''t you see the netting has been cut?"
10370Do ye?
10370Do you accept it?"
10370Do you know him, Lieutenant Matson?"
10370Do you think dar is any Angler Sacksun blood in dese veins?"
10370Do you think there is any chance?"
10370Examining them carefully, he asked:"What do you ask for these papers?"
10370Fernando and Morgianna, during the course of the evening, found themselves alone, and he ventured to ask:"Is Lieutenant Matson in America?"
10370Fernando heaved another sigh and asked:"Did he say-- did he say anything about her?
10370Fernando heaved another sigh and asked:"Did he say-- did he say anything about her?"
10370Fernando turned his face away to hide his confusion and said half aloud:"Have I been a fool all along?
10370Fernando turned to him and asked,"What do you think of it now?"
10370Fernando, who was anything but sleepy, asked:"Where did you see her, Terrence?"
10370Fernando, who was in total ignorance of the manner in which the uniform was procured, asked:"How did you get them?"
10370For a long time, Fernando was silent, and then he said:"When will it take place, Terrence?"
10370Good gracious, what did the man expect?
10370Had she really asked about him?
10370Has he a daughter?"
10370Has the_ Xenophon_ commenced the bombardment yet?"
10370Have not they set the murdherin''haythin to killin''innocent women and children on the frontier, and have they surrendered the posts as they should?"
10370Have you any thing to say?"
10370Have you sent the prisoners to Baltimore?"
10370He was lost in wonder and amazement and was first aroused from his reverie by the young man at his side saying:"Do n''t she bate the divil?"
10370Helm, the wife of Lieutenant Helm, with his face the picture of dread and despair, asked:"Do you think they will take our lives?
10370Henry?"
10370How are we going to Baltimore?"
10370How are yourself and family?"
10370I scarce dared to think you loved me, but it was some one,--who stood in my way?"
10370I was flattered and cajoled for awhile, and introduced into the highest circles of society; but what did I want of society?
10370If it was not the lieutenant, then who in the name of reason was it?"
10370If she did n''t, why did she ask about ye the very first chance she had?
10370Is it yersilf safe afther all?"
10370Is n''t there a town above on this coast?"
10370Is not the blissed stars and stripes insulted by the British?
10370Is that old chaise a sign of health or prosperity?"
10370It was Morgianna''s-- to whom else could it belong?
10370It was Sukey, and going to his berth Terrence asked:"What''s the matter, Sukey?"
10370Let me see, Misther Williams, what''s the nearest port?
10370Morgianna, dearest, have you nothing to say to me?"
10370Mounting the earthworks, Captain Lane asked:"Do you come in peace or in war?"
10370Now what weapons do ye want?"
10370Now who could have done that?
10370Quartermaster, are the gratings rigged?"
10370Remember her?
10370Slowly rising, he said:"Do yez set up yer riches aginst the poor lads, better than yerself, who are dyin''by the hundreds in British slavery?
10370Stop an''tell me who you are?"
10370Sukey who had come out hastened to his side and reading his thoughts said:"Now do n''t you wish you had aimed higher?"
10370Sukey, who had entered during their conversation, said:"Oh, Fernando, why did n''t you aim higher and blow his head off?"
10370Sure, have n''t ye read the Baltimore papers?
10370Terrence obtained an interview with the president and said:"Misther Madison, why the divil did yez pay him such a price?
10370Terrence was sitting aft the main cabin smoking a cigar, when the ensign, approaching, asked:"Where is Lieutenant Matson?
10370Terrence, do you mean a duel?"
10370The captain said to Boseley:"What is your distance?"
10370The old man, drawing rein close by Fernando, said:"Mornin'', Fernando, how''s all?"
10370The wounded man saw him, and said:"I am very thirsty, sir, will you please give me a drop?"
10370There''s goin''to be a big ball given at the mayor''s, and d''ye remimber the darlint little craythur ye met on the street that day?"
10370Turning to Morgianna, he asked:"Will you be afraid to remain here, my gem o''the sea?"
10370Whar ye gwine?"
10370What are the lives of a few sailors-- common fellows-- compared to the rich commerce we enjoy with England?
10370What had occasioned this change?
10370What is the life or happiness of such a low creature as yourself to the prosperity of Strong, Palmer or Griswold?
10370What name should he give her?
10370What say you, comrades?"
10370What school should he enter?
10370What was the matter?
10370What will she say, what will she think, when she knows it is I who came to defend her?"
10370When about to start from the inn, Sukey asked:"Say, Fernando, how are we goin''to find our way back?"
10370When he descended the captain asked:"What is she?"
10370When they were alone, Sukey pointed to the mud heaps and duck pools and gravely asked:"Do they show the poetry and picturesk of which she speaks?
10370When they were closeted in the president''s private office, Mr. Madison asked:"Now, sir, who are you, and what is your business?"
10370Where is that Irishman who gets you into so many funny scrapes?"
10370Where was it?
10370Which of his boys was he going to send?
10370Whipping his horse alongside the president, he cried:"Misther Madison, was n''t that as illegant a knock down as iver a man saw in all his life?
10370Who has arrived?"
10370Who is the wretch?"
10370Why dwell on the horrors of the River Raisin?
10370Will it be too much to ask you to attend to this?
10370Will ye go?"
10370Will you give these men direction in regard to the works?"
10370Will you take them?
10370Will you undertake the defence of the town?"
10370With a speaking trumpet, the commodore once more hailed the sloop with:"What sloop is that?"
10370With an oath, the captain cried:"Do you contradict my officer?
10370Wo n''t you come to tea this evening?
10370Would he ever see her again, or was she only the evening star, which had risen on the last hours of his existence?
10370Would he stay on the island all night?"
10370Would wonders never cease?
10370Would you injure him now, when he comes to pay me a friendly visit?"
10370Would you like to see the greatest lunatic out of Bedlam?
10370[ Illustration:"DO YOU THINK DAR IS ANY ANGLER SAXUN BLOOD IN DESE VEINS?"]
10370am it you?"
10370and Sukey drawled out:"Who''ll take keer o''me?"
10370do I look like a Britisher?"
10370do ye set up the riches of New England against the life of men because they are poor?"
10370do you see her?"
10370growled Sukey,"why do they follow us so persistently?"
10370he cried,"why do you risk your life here?"
10370massa Stevens, am dat you?"
10370no-- she is the girl at Mariana, is n''t she?"
10370or"Why do you leave us?"
10370was not Lieutenant Matson in command of that vessel?"
10370what arrangements?"
10370whom have they attacked?"
10370why did God make woman so?
10370wo n''t we fight?"
10370ye goin''dar?"
10370you''ve been chalking your face, hain''t ye?"
3032''Ai n''t I right, General?''
3032What happened when men went into the wilderness to live?
3032When the sessions were over, a lady asked Franklin:"Well, Doctor, what have we got, a republic or a monarchy?"
3032Why should they, when they were only registering the will or the wishes of their superiors?
3032]), spoken of in one of your letters?"
3032and shall we part with it so soon?
19927''''Air of flags;''ow you name eet?
19927''''Tel?
19927''''There is no hope?''
19927''Ah?''
19927''Am I not to stay here?''
19927''And all you will give is five dollars per acre?''
19927''And what would you think now, R----, if I were to marry her?''
19927''Ary borry boutà © re spikinglish?''
19927''Been washing your hands?''
19927''But if I should offer you ten dollars an acre for the next hundred- acre- lot, do n''t you think you could manage to let me have it?''
19927''But that''s contrary to Scripture?''
19927''But_ Ã   propos_ of Nature, you never paint a picture directly from her, do you?''
19927''Can you tell me where the bath is?''
19927''Can you tell me where the bath is?''
19927''Can_ you_ tell me where the bath is?''
19927''David, how much has he in bank on private account?''
19927''Did n''t he tell the gentleman that you were a particular friend of mine, and had met me by appointment at Captain B----''s?''
19927''Did n''t you say,''Soup or all fish?''''
19927''Did you ever?''
19927''Did you tell him how you cast off that poor girl?
19927''Do n''t you want any thing, my dear?''
19927''Do you find that in the Bible, Lazarus?''
19927''Do you think I am an old hunks, Joel, because I did not feel able to undertake Ellen''s support?
19927''Do you think that is all the lands are really worth?''
19927''Do you think the white could labor as well as the black, on the rice and cotton- fields?''
19927''Do your seven field- hands produce enough''dip''to keep your still a running?''
19927''Does the Colonel teach that to his negroes?''
19927''Du with''em?
19927''Good as new-- never better in my life-- how goes the world with you?''
19927''Have n''t you been on the Pincio?''
19927''Have you any children?''
19927''Have you been here long?''
19927''He has got an aunt,''said the other;''had n''t we better write to her?''
19927''How did you know that, madam?''
19927''How do you propose to be paid?''
19927''How is Sarah?''
19927''How many have you, madam?''
19927''How so?''
19927''How was it Cragin?''
19927''I do n''t understand your frivolity-- what do you mean?''
19927''I want a bath,''said Van Brick,''which way?''
19927''Is it where they boil water for the English?''
19927''Is there any one here to help?''
19927''Is thet all ye knows?''
19927''Is this woman your wife?''
19927''Is your wife a South- Carolina woman?''
19927''Is your wife up there married again?''
19927''Kill harself''case har man war shot by thet han''som overseer uv yourn?''
19927''Massa K--,''said the latter, getting down and coming to me,''Whar am dey?''
19927''May I ask why you dead- color your canvas blue, and then make your drawing in black outline?''
19927''Mother insists on my taking supper with her-- will you go now, sir?''
19927''No it doan''t; do it, Aggy?''
19927''No, not largely; how much is he overdrawn, David?''
19927''Nothing else?''
19927''Ow arr you toe- day, my dear?''
19927''Raphael?
19927''Sort o''likely gal, thet, warn''t she?''
19927''Spect you''ll make it all right in the morning, hey?''
19927''Tell me, my little man,''I said,''who taught you all these things?''
19927''The Chesterfield of oil- colors?''
19927''The bath?''
19927''The signore is English?''
19927''Then you think the blacks would work better if free?''
19927''Thet arn''t all; what''s th''rest?''
19927''Too much for the son of a man worth a million?
19927''Truly it doth, Binks; but thou wilt grant me that thine is a_ rare_ exception?''
19927''Very well, Cragin, how are you?''
19927''Warm water, I suppose?''
19927''Was that an improvisatore?''
19927''Well, then, brother Noggs, what hast thou to say to a beef- steak?
19927''What NAME, I say?''
19927''What der_ ye_ knows''bout th''ab''lisheners?
19927''What do you tell them such things for?''
19927''What do you think best to do with him?''
19927''What do you think of the middle of the street now?''
19927''What has brought you to Boston?''
19927''What have you said to Maclean, Maris& Co., about the gum- copal?''
19927''What is the color of the sky?
19927''What is there against the young woman?''
19927''What name, sir?''
19927''What will the North gain if it conquers the South?
19927''What would you do with them, if they were_ really_ free?''
19927''What''s yer name?''
19927''When you are gazing at the stars do you see your boots?''
19927''Who made ye?''
19927''Why should n''t he marry Lizzie?''
19927''Why should we prevent it?''
19927''Why so, my son?''
19927''Why, bless me, Mr. Kirke, is that you?''
19927''Would n''t he?''
19927''Yas, yas, massa,''replied the negro, springing nimbly forward, and taking the horses by the bridles,''an''rub''em down, massa?''
19927''You are very good, sir,''I replied;''how did you hear of it?''
19927''You could n''t have learned_ that_ yourself; did n''t your''massa''teach you?''
19927''You do not think we have lived right, do you?''
19927''You feel better now?''
19927''You will take Ellen with you, I suppose?''
19927''_ Can I do any thing for you_?''
19927''_ No more?_''Alas!
19927***** Do our readers remember a beautiful poem on Gottschalk''s playing--_Los ojos Criollos_--which appeared some time since in the_ Home Journal_?
19927***** Reader, have you in your house a_ vivarium_ or_ aquarium_, or any other variety of animal curiosity- shop, under care of the younger members?
19927--HAS A MAN A RIGHT TO USE AN OLD PUN IN MAKING A NEW JOKE?
19927--WHO EVER GAVE A SATISFACTORY EXCUSE FOR AN INOPPORTUNE LAUGH?
19927--how full that thrilling word of pity and alarm--''You here?
199272?''
19927A great ole feller thet, warn''t he?
19927All four answered;''Who knows?''
19927All this time, what of Joel Burns?
19927An''whot der ye s''poze she sed?
19927And the question is, how to best aid this element in its progress?
19927Are not Ariel, Puck, Oberon, real characters, though but''beings of the mind''?
19927Are not the feelings awakened on viewing a beautiful sunset, as real as your satisfaction after eating roast- beef?
19927Are you English?''
19927Are you a lover?
19927Are you glad, Joel?''
19927Are you poor, and dragging out a dull, base life, more sluggishly than your abilities deserve?
19927As I was lighting it, he said:''Ye''ve got a good''oman, hev ye?''
19927Astor, how much do you consider yourself worth?''
19927Before I could reply, Mr. Hallet, rather sharply, asked:''Have you finished your letters for the steamer?''
19927Bote,''ave you saw that bu- tee- fool creechure with''air of flags?''...
19927But Sukey, whar''s th''young uns?''
19927But how shall I describe the pale, sweet beauty of the face of the drowned girl, as she lay there, her eyes closed, and her lips parted, as in prayer?
19927But who has not heard of families with sons in either army, especially on the border, in Philadelphia, and Baltimore?
19927By the way,''he added,''did you not meet with some little obstruction at Conwayboro, on your way up?''
19927Ca n''t this be arranged?''
19927Call not these claims Satanic, They''re far beyond your ken: How can a low mechanic Know aught of gentlemen?
19927Cotton to?
19927D''ye see that little nig thar?''
19927Did ye ever see sech a critter?''
19927Did you ever see such a look as that?
19927Did you tell him how you forced her on the street?
19927Do I hear fifty pesos, cinquante Thaler ge- bid pour this here bully gun?
19927Do I recognize any?...
19927Do many of your neighbors think as you do?''
19927Do n''t you know the landlord has the first claim on every thing till his bill is paid?
19927Do n''t you know, too, you are simply doing the town business, and if you have any claim, the town must pay you for it?''
19927Do you know any theengs?''
19927Do you question my check for thirty thousand dollars?''
19927Do you think we have lived right, Joel?''
19927Doan''t I tell ye thet, Lazarus?''
19927Does a great historical painter use the model?
19927Does not thy rule fail thee there?''
19927Going to the bedside of his little patient:''How do you feel, my child?''
19927Hallet?''
19927Has your life been stained-- by misfortune or your own faults?
19927Have n''t I my own children to look after?
19927Have not some things been made useless-- in your sense of the term-- that they might be preserved from destruction?
19927Have you been two weeks in Rome, and not found out that?
19927He puts the sperit inter''i m: doan''t we see it in hosses an''critters an''sech like?
19927How can I tell you if her face be fair, While the gay sunshine of her smile is there?
19927How can I tell you of a brilliant mind, When every word she speaks is angel- kind?
19927How did he do?
19927How do you manage them without whipping?''
19927How many circulars do tally with facts?
19927I axed al thet, an''what der ye think she sed?
19927I have two sons in the army, she thought; what if they were weary and wounded like these?
19927Is it about Fort Donelson, Where Floyd''skedaddled,''_ minus_ gun, Packed up his traps and stole away By night-- as he had done by day?
19927Is it at Charleston?
19927Is it at Nashville, Tennessee, Once more a city of the free, Where Isham Harris and his tools Thieved just two millions from the schools?
19927Is it at Natchez, high or low, Or Newbern, where the pine- trees grow?
19927Is it not blue?
19927Is it too late to repair that fatal error?''
19927Is it where ladies''dip''and snuff, And white men feed on dirt enough?
19927Is not the sky as real as the mountain that pierces it?
19927Is only what is gross real?
19927Is there more reality in the chink of the dollar than in''the music of the spheres''?
19927Is''t at Montgomery, where in May Hell''s blackest tricks were put in play, Where right and might were overruled, And people into treason fooled?
19927Is''t where the James goes rolling by Used- up plantations worn and dry, Where planters lash and negroes breed, And folks on oyster memories feed?
19927Is''t where the Mississippi runs His mighty course for many suns, To where New- Orleans fills the flat?
19927K----?''
19927Largely?''
19927Mitey sqeemish thet, warn''t it?
19927Moonlight expresses to the eye--_silence_....''All this unreal?''
19927Morning after morning, the question was put by the whole village:''Is Mr. Burns alive?''
19927Mr. McDonogh, is it you?
19927Need I describe her voice, so melting sweet?
19927No more?
19927Now, I''m not going to complain of this''plain wholesome,''though the butter is sometimes strong, the lamb(?)
19927Observing it, my host said:''Aggy-- showin''yer colors?
19927Of what did he stand convicted, and wherefore?
19927On the other hand, what is more noble and dignified than the turban, with its snowy white folds, or its varied hues of green or red?
19927Other artists see Naychure, but_ how_ do they see her?
19927Seeing this, she remarked:''Yer from th''North, sir, arn''t ye?''
19927Ses I:''Ye mean th''''oman''s got ter gwo ter th''hi''est bider?''
19927Should he make haste to push on the schemes which his sickness had brought to a stand?
19927So he has got his mill a- going, has he?
19927Tell me, Caper, what idea does even that rough sketch of Venice awake in your imaginative faculties, and all that?''
19927The dear old creed of our fathers;_ old_ creed, did I say?
19927The hands of your clock may be so turned around that they will point to the wrong figures; does that change the time?
19927The thought of his daughter was the only comfort left, but she might be taken-- then_ what_?
19927The universe God?
19927Then he added, after a moment''s pause,''Will you help me to get them into the wagon?''
19927This CHI LO SA, or,''who knows?''
19927Too much to pay for starving his mother, and turning him adrift at six years old?
19927Up comes the carriage; wide open the doors of the house: Madame descends... How is this?...
19927WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
19927WHAT''S in a name?
19927Was Joel Burns a dishonest man?
19927Was he not kind- hearted, generous, loving toward his wife, affectionate to his child, charitable and public- spirited?
19927What a vast investment in wampum would such a weapon be?
19927What are WE to benefit by a victory of either?''
19927What are the relations between me and my Maker?
19927What did he mean by that?
19927What did that mean?
19927What is poetry?
19927What makes my pictures sought for by the high and the low, wealthy?
19927What use?
19927What was he to do?
19927What will the South make?
19927What would the worthy mother say to this transformation of her shop, as by some act of magic?
19927What''s this?
19927What?
19927What_ is_ she, then-- this gem without a flaw?
19927When will the alarm- bell in the clock of Roman time ring out its awaking peal?
19927When you get what is coming to me, wo n''t_ that_ help you?
19927Where in the Southron''s Fatherland Is that last ditch-- his final stand?
19927Where in the Southron''s Fatherland Is that last ditch-- his final stand?
19927Where in the Southron''s Fatherland Is that last ditch-- his final stand?
19927Where in the Southron''s Fatherland Is that last ditch-- his final stand?
19927Where in the Southron''s Fatherland Is that last ditch-- his final stand?
19927Where in the Southron''s Fatherland Is that''last ditch,''his final stand?
19927Where in the Southron''s Fatherland_ Is_ that last ditch-- his final stand?
19927Where in the Southron''s fatherland Is that last ditch-- his final stand?
19927Where''s your hotel?''
19927Who can read lines like these without thinking of our concert- saloons and other facilities of vice?
19927Who has not often been doubly irritated by the removal of his source of irritation?
19927Who has translated the murmur of the summer wind among the pines as''No more?''
19927Who is more discursive than the Autocrat, the Czar of table- talkers; and whose productions are more charming or wiser?
19927Who was John McDonogh, the maker of the foregoing will, and contriver of such a grand scheme of charity?
19927Who''d buy one of their pictures when he might have a Turner for the same price?
19927Why does any one see more?
19927Why is it that some can only be fluent from the point of a pen, while others can only address their fellows effectively by word of mouth?
19927Why should n''t he, with the amount of money he had?
19927Why, how did you get up- stairs at night?''
19927Why, that is a clear Americanism; where did you pick it up?''
19927With all his privation, who ever heard a poor man designated as a_ miser_?
19927Ye never seed one; what d''ye''spose the''luk like?''
19927Ye''r Union gal-- hey?''
19927You do n''t talk to your neighbors in this way?''
19927You or''the world''?
19927You will teach Sarah to live right, wo n''t you?''
19927You''ll forgive me for being so cruel to you, wo n''t you?''
19927_ Capellatura di lino?_''''Oh!
19927_ what''s_ his name?
19927answered the wag,''do n''t you see that those rural musicians of yours will be regarded as country- band of war?''
19927but because I_ am_ prudent and do my duty, ca n''t I show some kindness to my poor brother''s only child?
19927but who taught you to read?''
19927can it be That falsehood, sin and tyranny, Though eighteen hundred years be past, Still roar and revel wild and fast?
19927do you talk politics with your negroes?''
19927have you two wives?''
19927how for years on her knees she vainly plead for a paltry pittance to keep her child from starving and herself from sin?
19927how old is the dead Time, whose age the distant town- clock is tolling?
19927how was it?''
19927how you drove her from you with curses, when she prayed you to save her from the pit of infamy into which you had plunged her?
19927my sweetest mother here?''
19927not a delightful eight?
19927you do wrong to ask of them:''What use?''
19927you mean tow- head?''
19927your''missus''did?''
28415ACT I. WASHINGTON: Mother, it is decided that I should go to sea, is it not?
28415Abe Lincoln what do you think of that?
28415Are we willing to accept Mr. Clay''s clause in this Compromise?
28415But when shall we be stronger?
28415COLUMBUS: See the land, Luis?
28415DANIEL: What shall we do with him?
28415Do you promise?
28415FREMONT: General Flores, General Vallejo, General Pico, and Californians: You know why you have been called to this meeting?
28415HANKS: Gee, I am tired, are n''t you?
28415He said to a friend:"Did you vote for me?"
28415Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
28415Is there anything more to say on the subject, gentlemen?
28415Is there anything to say on the matter, gentlemen?
28415Is this right?
28415LUIS: What think you, Don Christopher?
28415Lincoln?)
28415Look in that direction, seest thou aught uncommon?
28415MEN OF HOUSE: Why should we fight England?
28415MR. SEWARD: What is the matter, Mr. Lincoln?
28415Mr. Jefferson have you?
28415Must we stand such treatment?
28415ONE OF THE GIRLS: Have you ever heard the story of Lydia Darrah?
28415PENN: Friend Charles, why dost thou remove thy hat?
28415Q. ISABELLA: You have come to us to talk about a shorter way to India?
28415QUEEN: Heard you ever the like, my Lords?
28415QUEEN: Permission to wear thine own cloak, thou silly boy?
28415QUEEN: Raleigh?
28415QUEEN: Will you take a vow to use the riches you obtain to help drive out the Turks from the Holy City of Jerusalem?
28415RALEIGH: May it please your majesty, but if it became me to choose-- QUEEN: Thou wouldst have gold?
28415SECOND MAN OF HOUSE: Why not send petitions to the King asking him to send his two armies out of Boston?
28415STANDISH: You talk English?
28415Shall the people of Boston be slaves or shall the thirteen colonies fight to save that town?
28415Shall we be so cruel as to kill him?
28415Shall we be so selfish as to take from him the life that God gave him?
28415Shall we land here?
28415Shall we stand this or demand our rights?
28415Shall we stand this?
28415Strange is it not?
28415UNION SOLDIER SPEAKS TO OFFICER WITH LEE: Why is it that you and your General are in full dress uniform?
28415VAN BUREN: You are an explorer of note, Mr. Fremont?
28415WASHINGTON: May I go out with the boys, mother?
28415WASHINGTON: Well, mother, if I give up my plans of going to sea and go back to school, what shall I do?
28415What have you found, Standish?
28415What is thy name and birth?
28415What then?
28415What you reading?
28415Who shall it be?
28415Who volunteers to go with me?
28415Will it be next year, or next week?
28415Will you undertake a journey to the Rocky Mountains and bring back a report of that country?
28415to?
27250A man who takes a holiday at Trouville or Dieppe is not confronted on his return with the question,''When is your book on France going to appear?''
27250And if we did ask him to bring his wife, how many wives would he bring?
27250Are these the amiable and pacific relations which will unite England and America, when Englishmen can get to America in a day?
27250Are you an atheist?''
27250Assuming all the desperate composure of Slim Jim himself, I replied,''You mean you are connected with the police authorities here, do n''t you?
27250But because I know that Bilge is only Bilge, shall I stoop to the profanity of saying that fire is only fire?
27250But is my American critic really ready to treat the sacrifice of blood in the same way as the sacrifice of beer?
27250But perhaps a better answer would be that given to W. T. Stead when he circulated the rhetorical question,''Shall I slay my brother Boer?''
27250But right in what?
27250But the English are not always saying, either in romance or reality,''What''s to be done, if our food is being poisoned by all these baronets?''
27250But what are those rights?
27250But what did it write on Belshazzar''s wall?...
27250But what would be the good of imaginative logic to prove the madness of such people, when they themselves praise it for being mad?
27250Can it be possible that he brought it from Virginia, where the cigarettes come from?
27250Can we say in any special sense nowadays that clergymen, as such, make a poison out of the blood of the martyrs?
27250Can we say it in anything like the real sense, in which we do say that yellow journalists make a poison out of the blood of the soldiers?
27250I suppose most of your people are agricultural, are n''t they?''
27250If he was a lunatic who thought he was an astronomer, why did he have a badge to prove he was a detective?
27250If the police insist on his wearing clothes, will he recognise the authority of the police?
27250If there are no rights of men, what are the rights of nations?
27250If_ Martin Chuzzlewit_ makes America a lunatic asylum, what in the world does it make England?
27250In short, as in the American formula, is he a polygamist?
27250In short, as in the American formula, is he an anarchist?
27250Is Mr. Campbell content with a Prohibition which is another name for Privilege?
27250Is bloodshed to be as prolonged and protracted as Prohibition?
27250Is the Hairy Ainu content with hair, or does he wear any clothes?
27250Is the normal noncombatant to shed his gore as often as he misses his drink?
27250O, hidden face of man, whereover The years have woven a viewless veil, If thou wert verily man''s lover What did thy love or blood avail?
27250One of the questions on the paper was,''Are you an anarchist?''
27250Only, if war is the exception, why should Prohibition be the rule?
27250Shall I blaspheme crimson stars any more than crimson sunsets, or deny that those moons are golden any more than that this grass is green?
27250Take that innocent question,''Are you an anarchist?''
27250The inquisitor, in his more than morbid curiosity, had then written down,''Are you a polygamist?''
27250Then there was the question,''Are you in favour of subverting the government of the United States by force?''
27250To which a detached philosopher would naturally feel inclined to answer,''What the devil has that to do with you?
27250Was he a detective?
27250Was he a wandering lunatic?
27250Was he an astronomer?
27250What has become of all those ideal figures from the Wise Man of the Stoics to the democratic Deist of the eighteenth century?
27250Which has most to do with shekels to- day, the priests or the politicians?
27250Who and what was that man?
27250Why not wear his uniform, if he was resolved to show every stranger in the street his badge?
27250Why should the world take the chains off the black man when it was just putting them on the white?
27250Would etiquette require us to ask him to bring his wife?
27250_ Is the Atlantic Narrowing?_ A certain kind of question is asked very earnestly in our time.
27250or''Are you a philanthropist?''
27250which is intrinsically quite as impudent as''Are you an optimist?''
3036Ca n''t I do what I want with my own?
3036But whither?
3036Where was the Erie stock to come from?
3036Who was Harriman?
16321A good bit of money?
16321And very pretty, is she not?
16321And what did you say to him-- for saving this house and all our lives?
16321And you do n''t like him very well?
16321Another visitor? 16321 Anybody in your light, you think?
16321Are you sure they are flirting?
16321Because I disagree with her? 16321 But if he won''t-- I wonder whether I ever could have the brass to do it?
16321But not at once, surely?
16321But what I mean is, if a young lady likes a young gentleman pretty well, how is she going to find out for sure whether he likes her?
16321But what good would that do me? 16321 But what you goin''to do about it?"
16321But why?
16321But you surely do not intend to give up riding altogether?
16321Can you sketch and talk too?
16321Captain Farnham,she said,"when are you going to give that lawn- tennis party you promised so long ago?
16321Captain,he said, saluting Farnham,"vot I shall do mit dis schnide?"
16321Certainly-- what is it? 16321 Could I have a few moments''conversation with you, sir?"
16321Did that bold thing go to call on him alone?
16321Did they like it?
16321Do I understand it will be without expense to my-- to the city government?
16321Do n''t all the men you know love you?
16321Do n''t you know?
16321Do n''t you think he would like it better if you would write?
16321Do you doubt it, Monsieur?
16321Do you expect to give in?
16321Do you wish to see the prettiest thing you ever saw in your lives? 16321 Gettin''pretty hot, ai n''t it?"
16321Has anything ever been said against her?
16321Have some more?
16321Have they done anything new?
16321Have you got it ready?
16321Have you got them?
16321Have you heard the news?
16321Have you heered about Brother Bowersox?
16321Have you spoke to Mattie yet?
16321He evidently thinks nothing of it, and why should I?
16321He had not got away?
16321He is pretty well off, ai n''t he?
16321Here, behind your right elbow, where I can look over your shoulder and observe the work as it goes on?
16321How dare you?
16321How long have you known this?
16321How many of you do this?
16321How''d you get along at Farnham''s?
16321How''ll_ she_ like it?
16321I am sure Mr. Farnham will not object to taking care of you a little while; and if he has n''t the time, Fergus will bring you home-- hm, Fergus?
16321I suppose he may come in here?
16321I wanted to ask how you would like me as a son- in- law?
16321I wonder if father has sent him to me-- and how many more has he got in reserve there in the shop? 16321 I wonder whether I have mended matters?
16321I would n''t take no advantage of a friend; but if Sam''s got no chance, as you say, why should n''t I try? 16321 Is he dead?"
16321Is that all?
16321Keen savey?
16321Mamma,she asked,"did he say''Where is Alice?''
16321Mattie,he said one evening, when they happened to be alone together,"when are you and Sam going to make a match?"
16321NOW DO YOU REMEMBER?
16321Not this, sir?
16321Now may I ask you to do a very disagreeable thing? 16321 Now you are going to side against me, are you?
16321Now, look here,he pleaded,"you ai n''t a- going to take it that way, are you?
16321Now, what a foolish question that is I''d like to know who built his greenhouses, ef I did n''t?
16321Now, where shall I sit?
16321Now, who do you think is going to believe that?
16321Oh, Alice, what is this?
16321Oh, Alice,the poor lady whimpered,"why do you talk so wildly?
16321Oh, dear, no; how could you think so?
16321Oh, you did? 16321 Oh, you do?"
16321Say, Sam, you know Christy Fore, that hauls for the Safe Company? 16321 Say, mind your own business, wo n''t you?"
16321See here,roared Sam,"are you crazy or am I?
16321Shall I bring you back a Jinrickishaw?
16321Shall I not bring you the loot of a temple or two? 16321 Shall we go into the house?"
16321So glad to see you-- one sees so little of you-- I can hardly believe my good fortune-- how have I this honor?
16321So it''s all done, is it? 16321 So you''ve finished, have you?
16321Temple,he said,"how did you ever pick up this wine; and, if you will excuse the question, how did you know it when you got it?"
16321That elegant young fellow who leads germans? 16321 That''s very pretty talk, Mr. Offitt; but where is all this wealth to come from?"
16321The Indian women cook well, do they not?
16321They have caught him, then?
16321They have got the one I dropped from the window?
16321They have?
16321This is between us, ai n''t it?
16321Trying to catch flies?
16321Very well, Mr. Paul Pry, what was it?
16321Vot''s dish?
16321Well, I motion that we stop talkin''and commence doin''----"Do you suggest that a committee be appointed for that purpose?
16321Well, of all the owdacious villains ever I struck---- Who do you think it is?
16321Well, what do you want?
16321Well, what of it?
16321Well, what on earth are you doing here? 16321 Well, what''s the chance, and what would you do with it, ef you had it?"
16321Well, what''s the matter?
16321Well, what_ have_ you got to say?
16321Well, who''s got anything to say against my daughter?
16321Well, why?
16321Well, you are president of the Library Board, ai n''t you?
16321Were you wishing to see me about anything in particular?
16321What about the mill hands?
16321What are we, anyhow?
16321What are you doin''?
16321What becomes of this money?
16321What could Temple want to see me about''most particular''?
16321What did she say?
16321What did that mean?
16321What did you make that infernal racket with?
16321What did you want to see me about tonight?
16321What do you mean?
16321What do you want of our names?
16321What do you want?
16321What in the world is that-- but, no matter what it is-- tell me, are you really going so soon?
16321What is it?
16321What is it?
16321What is your special line of reform?
16321What of that?
16321What shall I do?
16321What shall I do?
16321What shall I say to him? 16321 What sort of fellow is he?"
16321What sort will you have?
16321What will become of that beautiful girl? 16321 What will it amount to?"
16321What will they do if the strike should last?
16321What would you like?
16321What young person?
16321What''s all this?
16321What''s the use of calling names? 16321 What, you are engaged?"
16321What?
16321Where d''you get it?
16321Where did he live?
16321Where have you been, anyhow?
16321Where was you ever in that business?
16321Where was you last night from ten to eleven?
16321Where''s the other one you was talking about?
16321Who has identified this money? 16321 Who is it?
16321Who was that?
16321Who would have thought,he mused,"that Sam had such a devil of a temper?
16321Who''s afraid of half a dozen cops?
16321Who?
16321Why are you carrying it around all day?
16321Why can you ask? 16321 Why did n''t he come in?"
16321Why did n''t you say so, then?
16321Why did n''t you stay out all night?
16321Why do n''t you go to the mayor?
16321Why is n''t this a good chance?
16321Why not all live together? 16321 Why not?
16321Why should I go back? 16321 Why should I not allow myself this indulgence?"
16321Why should that be? 16321 Why should you not give Miss Dallas herself an opportunity to decline the Tio Pepe?"
16321Why would you like that?
16321Why, Alice, what has got into you?
16321Why, Mattie, how''s your head?
16321Why, do n''t you understand me? 16321 Why, where are you going?"
16321Why, why, why did mamma tell me that horrid story? 16321 Wo n''t you go and take a walk by the Bluff?"
16321Yes, of course, but who knows it? 16321 Yes, yes,"she continued;"but have you any good news for me?"
16321You and your wife would like to board with us when you are married? 16321 You are not hurt, are you, mamma dear?"
16321You are quite sure you can do that?
16321You did decline, then?
16321You do love me, do you not?
16321You have not seen him since last night?
16321You know this is the genuine stuff, then?
16321You must have heard of my father, General Offitt, of Georgy? 16321 You think her really improved?"
16321You was, was you?
16321You''ll never tell?
16321You''ve been in Spain, have n''t you?
16321_ How_ do you know?
16321_ Mais, qu''est- ce que vous avez donc?_asked Euphrasia.
16321''Orders from where?''
16321''What''s that?''
16321A moment after, the same voice said,"Have you got him?"
16321A wild fancy assailed him for an instant-- was he killed in jumping from the window?
16321Aber, Herr Gott, was machen Sie denn damit?"
16321Above all, what could be done for her by a young and unmarried man?
16321An aggressive feeling of disapproval of young Furrey took possession of him, and he said, sharply:"What a very agreeable young man Mr. Furrey is?"
16321And I suppose you do n''t want to part with your last child-- now, do you?
16321And say, tell me, ai n''t there a back way out?
16321And who would the prettiest girl in Buffland prefer, you or the loafer?
16321And you intend to let Mr. Loafer have it all his own way?"
16321Any other fellow takin''your wind?"
16321Are you going home now?
16321Are you horse- thieves?"
16321Arthur, will you please light that burner nearest you?"
16321As he passed by the door of the shop, Saul hailed him and said with a smile,"What luck?"
16321As she went out, she said,"May I pick a flower as I go?"
16321Because she puts up her beauty for a higher bidder than any------""Now, shet up, will you?"
16321Belding?"
16321Bowersox turned to Offitt and said,"Why in---- did you let him go?
16321Budsey evidently regarded him with no favorable eye; he said to Sleeny,"This person says he comes from Matchin''s; do you know him?"
16321But he smiled to himself,"Why should I care for Sam''s reputation?"
16321But she had neither the dignity nor the training required for the occasion, and all the reply she found was:"Oh, Mr. Offitt, how can you say so?"
16321But she said,"You will stay till father comes, wo n''t you?"
16321But tell me, how is your club getting on?"
16321But what business is all this of mine?
16321But what can you do alone?
16321But what could be done for such a girl, so pretty, so uncultivated, so vulgarly fantastic?
16321But what do I know about men?
16321But what shall I do?
16321But where is the gate?"
16321Can you assist me in identifying them?"
16321Can you detail a few policemen to patrol Algonquin Avenue, in case of a serious disturbance?"
16321Captain Farnham, how shall I ever thank you?
16321Could it be possible-- and all that money-- where did it come from?
16321D''ye hear me?"
16321Did he say nothing but''Alice''?"
16321Did you ever see anything like it?"
16321Did you go and punish him for me-- tell me that?"
16321Did you notice just now?
16321Do they begin by saying,''Have you been very gay lately?''"
16321Do you hear me?
16321Do you hear me?
16321Do you not know?
16321Do you think they are strikin''a match?"
16321Does she pay you for her board?"
16321Farnham at this addressed the last speaker and said,"Can you tell me what all this means?
16321Farnham bowed, and rejoined:"My name is----"She laughed outright, and said:"I know well enough what your name is, or why should I have come here?
16321Farnham gave no indication of his surprise at this burst of candor, but asked:"What do you propose?"
16321Farnham gave way to the next comer, and said to Mr. Temple, who had pressed his hand in silence:"Did you want to see me for anything special to- day?"
16321Farnham picked up a small photograph from the table near him, and said:"Do you recognize this?"
16321Farnham thought he saw, and, after assenting to Pennybaker''s eager demand,"That''s all solid?"
16321Farnham turned to Alice, who was still standing, and said,"Alice, my own love, can you not give me one word of hope to carry with me?
16321Farnham was attacked and nearly murdered last night, and if you did n''t do it who did?
16321Farnham?"
16321Had Mattie given her word to this slab- sided, lanky fellow?
16321Had she given Sam Sleeny the mitten for him?
16321Had the shock deprived her of reason?
16321Have you any tools for me?"
16321Have you not sense enough to see how your ferocious attack on the witness damages you?
16321He cabled back,''What shall I pay?''
16321He exclaimed,"Why, who does she know that''s got money?"
16321He is entered for the races there, you know, and I did n''t want, by--------, to miss my engagements, understand?
16321He looks almost as if he were asleep, does he not?
16321He put many an extra stroke of fine work upon the servants''rooms he finished, thinking:"Who knows but my Mattie may live here sometime?"
16321He said,"Can you put an advertisement for me in your afternoon editions?"
16321He spoke out with quick and passionate earnestness:"Must I tell you then?
16321He stared at Offitt blankly, and said,"Why, what are you givin''me now?"
16321He stood before her without speaking, until she raised her eyes, and said sharply:"Well, Sam, what''s the matter?"
16321He waited until they were gone, and then said:"Bolty, have you two dozen repeating rifles?"
16321He was fingering at them when Sam seized him by the shoulder, and said:"Look here, Andy, what_ is_ your game, anyhow?
16321His look of exultation caused Saul to say,"All settled, eh?"
16321His voice sounded weak and distant as he said:"Now you will go with me, wo n''t you?"
16321How about them marks on the door and the ladder?
16321How can I breathe the same air with him, blushing like a peony whenever I think of him, and turning pale with shame when I hear his name?
16321How can I separate myself from you?"
16321How can a young lady find out whether a young gentleman is in love with her or not?
16321How did he dare know I was n''t nearsighted?
16321How do the young men amuse young ladies nowadays?
16321I ai n''t that kind; I j''ined to do somethin'';--what''s to be done?"
16321I wonder if she will go with me when I come tonight-- ready?
16321I wonder whether he would make me mind?
16321I wonder whether it is for herself or for some''Committee''?
16321I wonder who the lawyer is that does the indicting of people?"
16321I wonder whom she will care about here?
16321I would n''t stand no chance at all against you-- hum?"
16321I''ve got to speak it out, raw and plain, have I?
16321If I am not to be your wife, I must never see you again; you know that, do n''t you?"
16321If I lay the money at your feet, will you go with me?
16321If it''s a fair question, how do you make your livin''?"
16321Is it generally known in the city?"
16321Is it necessary?"
16321Is the fair one unkind?"
16321Is there a fire in the drawing- room?"
16321Is there any chance of getting one of those places?
16321It''s like breaking your heart- strings, now, ai n''t it?"
16321It''s up the spout, do you hear?"
16321Its query is, How does heart meet heart in mutual knowledge?"
16321Last night the drama of Algonquin Avenue was supplemented by the tragedy of Dean Street, and the public, aghast, demands''What next?''
16321Mattie, will you tell me good- by?"
16321May I ask a favor of you?"
16321My dear sir, why should that be?"
16321No chance for Sam?"
16321No?
16321Now, Sam was precisely of the breed described by his friend, but what man ever lived who knew he was altogether ordinary?
16321Now, gentlemen, is there anything I can do?"
16321One evening she said to her father:"Did you ever see Captain Farnham?"
16321One of them turned to me and insolently inquired,''Do you own this street, or have you just got a lien on it?''
16321Only----""Only what?"
16321Pennybaker repeated his question a little anxiously:"That''s all solid, ai n''t it?"
16321Pretty, was she?
16321Returning to the shadow by the house, Farnham''s first question was,"Is anybody hurt?"
16321She blushed and stammered, and then, rushing at it with desperation, she said:"That money-- where did you get it?"
16321She finished, with a loud nourish of merriment, and then asked:"Did you ever hear anything so funny in your life?"
16321She heard a timid rap at her door, and asked, sharply:"Who''s there?"
16321She kissed him and said gently,"Now do you remember?"
16321She lifted a bright glance through her tears and said, like a happy child to whom a new game has been proposed,"What shall we try?"
16321She said to herself,"How can I live, hating a man as I hate that Captain Farnham?
16321She stared at him an instant and said:"Where?"
16321Temple''s?"
16321That ugly creature who went up with Alice for the money-- you caught him?
16321That you, Sam?
16321That''s all solid, ai n''t it?"
16321The man handed him his ticket without any reply, but turned to a friend beside him, and said,"Who is that cheeky brother that knows me so well?"
16321The_ Bale- Fire_ began its leader with the impressive sentence:"Has a carnival of crime set in amongst us?
16321Then Arthur came and caught me by the shoulder, and almost shook me, and said,''Where is Alice?''
16321Then a loud voice said:"Hello, Andy, you asleep?"
16321Then she advanced with shy grace and took Arthur''s hand, and asked:"Do you begin to feel quite strong again?"
16321Then turning to Matchin, he said, with professional severity,"What door did he generally come in by?"
16321Then, striving desperately to add something more gracious, she stammered,"Mamma will be very----""Glad to see me in the drawing room?"
16321They are having lively times over there, are they not?"
16321They may all be-- but I did not think-- what business have I thinking about it?
16321To go with me to the Morgue and see the remains of what I am now sure is the real criminal?"
16321Was n''t it too perfectly ridiculous?"
16321Was this to be a mere afternoon call after all, with no combat and no victory?
16321What am I to do about that, I should like to know?"
16321What business is it of yours, anyway?"
16321What can I do for you?"
16321What do you mean?"
16321What do you think of that?"
16321What do you want of him?
16321What does it lack?"
16321What is it you want, and how can I be of service to you?"
16321What is there about Bowersox?"
16321What shall I do if he never speaks to me again?"
16321What shall I do?"
16321What was the occasion of this assault?"
16321What would you think of a thousand dollars a month?"
16321What''s up?"
16321What_ does_ a man want,"she asked, with her head thrown back and her nostrils dilated,"when he do n''t want me?"
16321When Mrs. Matchin was asked, after that ceremony,"Who she was named for?"
16321When did I see you last?"
16321When he attacked her one day with the brusque exclamation,"Well, Mattie, what''s all this blame foolishness your ma''s being tellin''me?"
16321When he had concluded he was shown the hammer which had been picked up on the floor at Farnham''s, and was asked,"Is that the hammer you refer to?"
16321Where can her eyes be?
16321Where can the---- thing be?
16321Where do women keep their eyes?
16321Where is he, by the way?"
16321Where the devil is it?"
16321Where''s Bott?
16321Where''s Sam?"
16321Who can answer for this young lady?
16321Who is it?"
16321Who is the best man,"he asked, with honest frankness,"you, or some high- steppin''snob whose daddy has left him the means to be a loafer all his days?
16321Who is the man who shall ever kiss her between those straight brows?
16321Why are you in such a terrible hurry?"
16321Why can not you wait a while?"
16321Why do n''t you come in?"
16321Why do n''t you see?"
16321Why should he put me down that way?
16321Why?"
16321Will you give it your approval?"
16321Will you go?"
16321Will you join her now?"
16321You see?"
16321You surely do not intend----""To strike Saul for a divvy?
16321You think it''s horrid that I should say so, do n''t you?
16321You thought I meant_ you?_"Bott went out of the door like a whipped hound, with pale face and hanging head.
16321You''re not one of the common kind of cattle that think of nothin''but their fodder and stall-- are you?"
16321and you, Mr. Temple?
16321answered Maud, negligently,"you heard everything, did you?
16321he asked,--"spelling, or civil service?"
16321he began, with a jolly facetiousness,"what''s your noble game this evenin''?
16321is that you?
16321said Farnham, as they seated themselves,"how long has it taken you to grow to that stature?
16321said the widow:"why are you not at home?
16321that''s his window, ai n''t it?"
16321why did I not think of that?
20819Am I vain of my dress?
20819Am I wrong in this supposition?
20819An eminent writer asks,"Who ever saw a handsome talented woman?"
20819And how could it be otherwise, if all girls should marry in their girlhood?
20819And now the question with every young woman should be, How do I feel about my dress?
20819And what are they?
20819And when reared what are they?
20819Are they vigorous and healthy?
20819Are you not taken captives by the glitter of Dress?
20819Are you protected from the winter''s cold, from wind and wet at all points, as you should be?
20819Are your forms permitted to expand as God designed them?
20819Are your organs and limbs and muscles permitted their full and proper play?
20819But how is it with our girls?
20819But it may be asked, what we call an early Marriage?
20819But really, why is it sadder than to die by inches on the guillotine of Fashion?
20819But what are they compared to a human soul?
20819But why?
20819By the side of such how will stand the fashionable mother?
20819Can they eat well, sleep well, work well, walk well, bear well the changes of climate, endure heat and cold, toil and fatigue, trial and study?
20819Can you breathe freely and easily the proper amount of air to oxygenate your blood and give you health and strength?
20819Dependent men are ninnies, why should not dependent women be?
20819Do effects follow their causes?
20819Do the girls understand this?
20819Do they answer the ends of Dress?
20819Do young women propose for themselves the strong virtue of womanhood, which is an impregnable fortress of righteous principle?
20819Does He ask more than what is reasonable?
20819Does my love of Dress interfere with the true objects of woman- life?
20819Else why their perpetual unrest, their longing, dissatisfied condition of mind?
20819First: Do our modes of Dress injure our bodies?
20819Has he laid a necessity upon woman''s nature that this beauty shall last but an hour?
20819Have I any thing to do in its attainments?
20819Have we any moral right thus to abuse our bodies, thus to commit a snail- working suicide?
20819How can another know what you want in a companion?
20819How can there be genius and talent where Fashion molds the will and cuts the life to a pattern?
20819How can there be greatness where Fashion shapes the growth and prescribes its bounds?
20819How can there be individual identity where Fashion rules?
20819How can there be wisdom where Fashion dictates the mode of thought and the form of utterance?
20819How can we help loving him?
20819How can you look upon any thing beautiful, or contemplate the sense of Beauty within you, without reverent feelings toward God the Giver of all?
20819How can you look upon your own forms or see your features in a mirror, without thinking of Him who made you thus?
20819How could woman be any thing with the whole world against her?
20819How is it with our young women?
20819How, than, should she feel toward that Father?
20819If boys can not be any thing with such a training, how can the girls be?
20819If it is unkindness to the boys, why is it not unkindness to the girls?
20819If so, then why not give woman opportunities such as are necessary to develop her powers and form her character?
20819If their mothers did not, who did?
20819If their mothers had been wise and forcible, as they should have been, would the children have been so easily led astray?
20819If they had the influence they ought to have, would they be so?
20819If woman was rightly educated, who could tell what a race of men would grow up to people the coming ages?
20819If women had that influence which some attribute to them, would these things be so?
20819In this light, how stands the tawdry foolery of Fashion?
20819Is Beauty an evil in itself considered?
20819Is Beauty connected with less natural endowments of mind, less kindness of heart?
20819Is Beauty uncongenial to talent and worth?
20819Is it a duty to be good?
20819Is it a matter too bright in my eye-- a subject too important in my mind?
20819Is it a wonder that you have so many weaknesses and pains and saddening afflictions upon you?
20819Is it irreverence thus to speak?
20819Is it morally corrupting?
20819Is it proper for youth to do so?
20819Is it so?
20819Is life a preparation for eternity?
20819Is one really more respected, more beloved, more received into the arms of the good, more caressed by the worthy, for being fashionable?
20819Is the Girlhood of to- day a fit preparation for the duties that will devolve upon the women of the next generation?
20819Is there a great object in my being?
20819Is there any more important question for young women to consider than this?
20819Is there not a call for a more active religion, a more powerful impulse in behalf of morality?
20819Is there not a need of more vigorous virtue in woman?
20819Is your blood in no way impeded in its life- mission through your bodies?
20819It is this:"How can we love a being we have not seen?
20819It requires Employment to develop men, why should not it to develop women?
20819Now if it will spoil the boys, why will it not spoil the girls?
20819Now let me ask, Does not your love of Dress lead you from the great ends of woman- life?
20819Now let us ask whether our present modes of Dress are thus brought under the direction of religious principles?
20819Now of what avail will a good character be without health to apply its forces to the work of life?
20819Now, I ask again, and you shall be judges, young women, if your modes of Dress do not injure your bodies?
20819Now, how can children know whether this harmony exists, when their own characters are unformed, their powers undeveloped?
20819Shall not the wife and mother retain the beauty and health of the girl?
20819Shall not the woman retain the physical integrity of the girl?
20819Shall we look thoughtlessly upon these nurseries of immortal fruits?
20819Shall we pollute and degrade the Homes in which we dwell?
20819Shall we send out from them unholy influences to corrupt the world?
20819Take God away from his works, and where would they be?
20819The question should hang all the time written in blazing capitals in the firmament of each soul,"How am I educating?"
20819The second question is, Do our ideas of Dress corrupt our hearts?
20819The wisest and best in early adult life can be none too well prepared for the great duties of married life-- how can children be prepared?
20819Then is not the idea of Home important?
20819Then why should we not be free and use our own reason for our own purposes and give others the same privilege?
20819They all wear silk, cotton, linen, yet who knows the history of either one of these articles of apparel?
20819They are as richly endowed with mind as any other fifty girls in town, but how would they show it?
20819They have all had their countenances daguerreotyped, yet who knows how it is done?
20819Those strings which bind so closely your chests, do they not impede your breathing, and thus weaken your lungs and corrupt your systems?
20819To what end?
20819We are educating all the time, and the question with us should be, How do we educate ourselves?
20819We can not make men without Employment; how can we expect to make women?
20819We must seek, else how shall we find them?
20819We send our girls to these schools to be educated; but educated for what?
20819We study astronomy in all our schools, but where is a class instructed in the economy of health?
20819What are they, what can they be, under such circumstances?
20819What can she do with life?
20819What do they even amount to, but weaker scions of the old stock?
20819What do they expect to be and do when they are women?
20819What do they know of mechanics, science, literature, government, theology, history, reform-- the great questions that stir the world of mind?
20819What do they live for?
20819What does your Beauty avail you unless you are beautiful in spirit, lovely in character, useful in life?
20819What is a church out of Fashion?
20819What is an ephemeral flower or an age- lasting star compared with glorious reason, with eternal love, with deathless benevolence, and conscience?
20819What is beauty and physical womanhood to Fashion?
20819What is it but a breath of poison to the young?
20819What is there in our highly civilized life that escapes the palsying touch of Fashion?
20819What is womanhood?
20819What manner of men and women do we make of ourselves?
20819What matters it, so far as the guilt is concerned, whether we kill ourselves in a minute or a year, a year or an age?
20819What of all that?
20819What reverent soul does not love to look at God in his works?
20819What shall we say then, is he not a lover of Beauty?
20819What were the material universe with all its sublime grandeur and awe- inspiring magnificence with no soul to gaze upon it?
20819What woman would not rather have a nervous debility than dispense with hot coffee and strong tea?
20819What would heaven be to us without our mother, our brothers and sisters, the dear home- companions of our hearts?
20819What would they do?
20819What would they talk about?
20819What would they think about?
20819What young woman enters heartily into the best aims and highest hopes of the young man with whom she associates?
20819When God calls for her stewardship, how can she answer with any honor to herself?
20819Where are the mothers who teach their boys to chew, and smoke, and swear?
20819Where are the mothers who will acknowledge that they made the characters of these people?
20819Who can doubt that Dress is a matter properly coming within purview of religion?
20819Who ever heard of a fashionable woman''s child exhibiting any virtue or power of mind for which it became eminent?
20819Who goes there?
20819Who knows but the sewing, cooking, washing, and much else that woman now does, will in a great measure be done by machinery?
20819Who shall heed this cry of wicked, wasting humanity, if young woman does not?
20819Who will be the mothers of genius and wisdom, of the manhood and womanhood that shall redeem mankind?
20819Who would not rather fade at twenty- five, and die at thirty, than to be out of the Fashion?
20819Who would sacrifice it for every earthly good?
20819Why am I?
20819Why are so many young men reckless, drunken, profane, and lawless?
20819Why be such slavish conformists, and brand as traitors or heretics all who differ from our party or church?
20819Why confine every limb and muscle of its body?
20819Why do I live?
20819Why do they not?
20819Why does it imprison itself in close, hot rooms?
20819Why engirdle its waist in warmth and cordage, and expose its feet to every storm and frost, to mud and snow?
20819Why have civilized men closed all their colleges and universities against women?
20819Why have they deprived her of power, and compelled her to submit to man in all the relations of life?
20819Why have they shut almost every avenue to public usefulness, to honorable distinction, to virtuous endeavor, against woman?
20819Why is it so?
20819Why is it so?
20819Why is it so?
20819Why is it?
20819Why is not a woman who is equally useless?
20819Why live on a diet that no brute could bear?
20819Why may they not be carried into womanhood?
20819Why should any woman think to live without religion?
20819Why should it not be so with a young woman?
20819Why should she excuse herself?
20819Why should she not adorn her mind, develop her powers, live to a high purpose, act well a noble part, do and be according to her capacity?
20819Why should the boys grow up with a great and good purpose before them, while the girls grow up for nothing?
20819Why should we dissipate it in an hour?
20819Why should we excuse her on account of her riches?
20819Why, then, is Girlhood so prodigal of its health and strength?
20819Why, then, is it not preserved?
20819Will young women heed the call?
20819Women are asking,"What shall we do?
20819Would the roses not return to their cheeks, the full, swelling beauties of woman''s strength to their forms?
20819Would we find the path of_ duty_?
20819Yet what is Fashion, what does it amount to?
20819_ Dress_, what is it?
20819_ Food_, what is it good for if it is not in Fashion?
20819a Father we have not known?
20819a God we can not comprehend?"
20819and through that beauty is not carried up to God the beautiful and bountiful author of it all?
20819and what place does the fashionable woman take?
20819how individual taste, individual opinion, individual virtue and character?
20819sold bond- slaves to your bonnets and shoes?
20819to do those deeds of darkness which the sun refuses to shine upon?
20819to drink, and brawl, and fight?
20819what is all the world without it?
20819with even those she loved best, and in whose judgment she most confided, all the time reminding her of her mental weakness and inferiority?
3040Do you think I could get$ 200,000?
3040What occupation?
3040What religion?
3040After some reflection, the cartoonist asked:"Do n''t you think I could get$ 500,000 to make that trip?"
3040Having explained the origin of the term in English and colonial politics, he cried:"And what is the present but the same contest in another form?
3040How could Tammany regain its power, and that usually within two years, after such disclosures as we have seen?
3040The New York Evening Post described him as"gazing round, with wild anxiety furiously inquiring,''how are vacancies to be obtained?''"
3040Tweed smiled and asked,"Well, what are you going to do about it?"
19154A wound, I suppose?
19154Am I badly hurt, Dan?
19154Am I to go with you, sah?
19154Am dey all gone, sah?
19154And I s''pose the moon will show de way at night, massa?
19154And how came you to enter the army, Tony?
19154And how shall I know your ship?
19154And is he much hurt, sir?
19154And now you are going to be with us for three months, Vincent?
19154And now, doctor, how much am I in debt to you? 19154 And when are you thinking of getting married, Vincent?"
19154And who do you suppose all those men are?
19154And who is this officer, Lucy?
19154And wo n''t you let me pay for the man''s passage, captain? 19154 And you want to get out of the way without questions being asked, I understand?"
19154Any news?
19154Anything de matter, sah?
19154Are they all like this?
19154Are we allowed to bring a servant with us?
19154Are you awake, Marse Wingfield?
19154Are you the same officer, sir, who escaped from Elmira?
19154Are you thinking of going out to the Orangery again soon, mother?
19154Are you using that sailboat of yours at present, Harry? 19154 But I thought you had made up your mind that you would rather stop at home, Vincent?"
19154But has Petersburg fallen?
19154But how did you get through the lines? 19154 But how do they live, Dan?"
19154But how we find de York River, massa? 19154 But suppose they wo n''t work at all, even for wages, Vincent?"
19154But where are the others?
19154But why should he? 19154 By the way, do you know where his clothes were sent to?"
19154Ca n''t you do something for me, Sam Smith? 19154 Ca n''t you see he is breathing, and did you not hear him groan when I examined his side?
19154Can I see Dinah, sah?
19154Can you spare me two hours now?
19154Cucumbers to- day, sah? 19154 Did either of you girls put it away, or where can it have been stowed?"
19154Did you tell him that, now?
19154Dinah,Vincent said,"has your boy gone to bed?"
19154Do n''t you know me, aunts?
19154Do n''t you know nobody is allowed to pass through the lines?
19154Do n''t you see we are dying of curiosity?
19154Do you know what train he went by?
19154Do you remember, about a month ago, a man named Pearson being here?
19154Do you see that little black thing two miles ahead of us? 19154 Do you suppose we are going to give in to five men?
19154Do you suppose, sir,Mrs. Wingfield asked angrily,"that I am the sort of person to give shelter to runaway slaves?"
19154Do you think that boy is as foolish as he seems?
19154Do you want a meal? 19154 Doctor,"she said,"I want you to come out to see someone who is very ill.""What is the matter with him?
19154Got a neighbor''s patch handy, eh?
19154Greenbacks, I suppose?
19154Hab you brought de stuff?
19154Hallo, you, sir, what the deuce are you doing here?
19154Have I been asleep long?
19154Have you any idea where he went when he left here?
19154Have you any news for us?
19154Have you fixed upon any plan?
19154Have you got him?
19154How am dat, how am dat?
19154How are you getting on, lads? 19154 How are you, Tony?"
19154How did Jonas take his dismissal, mother?
19154How did you miss the straight road?
19154How do you think you would be able to find your way a dark night like this? 19154 How far are we from the mouth of the York River?"
19154How far is it to Porter''s?
19154How have you got on?
19154How long dis go on, you tink, sah?
19154How long will it be, doctor, do you think?
19154How shall we find our way back, Marse Vincent?
19154How you get dem?
19154I am ready to aid you in any way I can,the sheriff said when he concluded;"but the question is, where has the fellow got to?
19154I suppose that''s what you carried the clothes in?
19154I think that it will be better; and will you please call me Vincent? 19154 Is he dead, sah?"
19154Is it Tony, sah; for de Lord''s sake, is it Tony?
19154Is it about a lady?
19154Is she older than you, Vincent?
19154Is that so?
19154Is that so?
19154Is that you, Longmore? 19154 Is the general in?"
19154Is there anything else you will want? 19154 Mother,"he said,"can you put me up for a couple of days?
19154Mr. Renfrew,he said,"I want some money; can you lend it me?"
19154Not much to look at, are they? 19154 Now then, what do you want?"
19154Now which way, Vincent? 19154 Now, Dan, what is the next move?"
19154Now, Miss Kingston, which do you think is our best course? 19154 Now, Vincent, what offer do you make for the letter?
19154Now, gentlemen,the auctioneer said,"surely you are not going to let this desirable piece of property go for seven fifty?
19154Oh, that''s it, is it?
19154Plantation liquor?
19154Sergeant Newson, am you dere?
19154Shall I go, sah?
19154Shall we make some broth for him?
19154Shall we take de horses, sah?
19154To wait for what?
19154Treachery?
19154Union or not Union, I mean to talk it, and I want to know who is going to prevent me?
19154Want to get through the lines, eh?
19154Was Lee''s force all engaged yesterday?
19154Was he always alone, or did he have many people here to see him?
19154Was he, sir? 19154 Well, Dan, have you obtained any news?"
19154Well, Dan, what''s your news?
19154Well, what is it, sergeant?
19154Well, what is the piece of news?
19154What am I to do, Chloe?
19154What am you going to do, Miss Lucy?
19154What are they going to do that for?
19154What are you doing here?
19154What are you laughing at?
19154What are you spying about here?
19154What do you say, Chloe?
19154What do you want for them, boy?
19154What do you want, there?
19154What for?
19154What had we better do, Vincent?
19154What has happened, nurse?
19154What have you been doing to that fellow Andrew Jackson?
19154What is it, Chloe?
19154What is it, Dan?
19154What is it, stranger?
19154What is the thing? 19154 What is the time, mother?"
19154What is your name, sir, and who are you?
19154What is your news, Dan?
19154What name?
19154What on earth do you want money for? 19154 What on earth do you want to buy a slave for?
19154What ought we to ask for these?
19154What plantation liquor like?
19154What sort of thing?
19154What treachery has he been guilty of? 19154 What will you do?"
19154What''s it like?
19154What''s the matter, Dan? 19154 What, have n''t you got one now?"
19154When did he come to you?
19154When do you leave for the front, Captain Wingfield?
19154When we going on, sah?
19154Where are the girls, mother?
19154Where are you going to, and where have you come from?
19154Where do you come from, lad?
19154Where have we got to now, sah?
19154Where is he now?
19154Where is it, mother?
19154Who are you, sir?
19154Who is it?
19154Who told dem dat?
19154Why did n''t he come on board before I started?
19154Why did you not bring him in?
19154Why did you not cross by the bridge?
19154Why did you not tell me that you wanted the money, instead of going to Mr. Renfrew? 19154 Why should you not stay here till then, Mr. Wingfield?
19154Why you not leave dem black clothes behind, sah? 19154 Why, Vincent, where have you been all this time?"
19154Will anyone else make an offer?
19154Will you take him?
19154Will you take your letter again?
19154You are a Confederate?
19154You are not going away again to- night, Vincent, surely?
19154You belong to the cavalry?
19154You ca n''t find out where his luggage was checked for?
19154You did n''t s''pose I was coming along shouting and whistling, Sergeant Newson? 19154 You do n''t know where he went to from here, I suppose?"
19154You do n''t know whether he has any friends anywhere in the Confederacy to whom he would be likely to go?
19154You do n''t think my patient would ill- treat his slaves?
19154You do not think there is any probability of the ultimate success of our cause?
19154You have got promoted?
19154You have got your six- shooters with you, I suppose, because you are likely as not to have to use them?
19154You have no idea, I suppose, Dan, as to which way he is likely to go?
19154You know what the consequence would be if you were caught?
19154You mean he is a negro?
19154You recommember taking some tings to station for a tall man with gray goatee, Pomp?
19154Am I not wounded?"
19154And it was you who beat that man and threw his revolver out of the window?
19154And now, what can I do for you, sir?
19154And what should he say now when the negro wrote to claim her?
19154And you, Lucy, do you think you could care for me?"
19154Are you going to get rid of it at Camden to- morrow?"
19154Are you one of them?"
19154At last Vincent, who had been half an hour without speaking said:"Are you sorry our journey is just over, Lucy?"
19154Been fighting-- eh?
19154Besides, what can I do in a town?
19154But how in the world did you two manage to travel alone all that distance and get through the Federal lines?"
19154But is not your brother here?
19154But, in the first place, which line do you mean to take?"
19154Ca n''t you manage to bring me a little here?"
19154Can you let me have the money?
19154Did I not hear a few months since that you bought Wildfire?
19154Did anyone ever see such a bare place?"
19154Did you ever tell the people you lodged with anything about the disguise?"
19154Do n''t you think so, Ada?"
19154Do you know the plantation of Mr. Furniss, on the Pamunky, near Coal Harbor?"
19154Do you know what has become of him since he left you?"
19154Do you mean to keep it here or move it higher up the river, where it would be more handy for you, perhaps?"
19154Do you not know that I love you?"
19154Do you want to buy any?
19154Does n''t ye want any fowl?"
19154Ef dose slave- hunters ca n''t find people in de swamps what chance you tink dose soldiers have?
19154Has no one got a full canteen?"
19154Has your servant got any warm water?"
19154Have we your permission to see this woman and to question her?"
19154Have you a rifle, Captain Wingfield?"
19154Have you got proof of what you say?"
19154Have you heard of any more of my old chums being killed since I was taken prisoner at Antietam?"
19154Have you seen him?"
19154How about the others?"
19154How am do prisoner?"
19154How are all the old house hands, and how is Dinah?
19154How are they getting on?
19154How did you manage it?"
19154How does it feel now?"
19154How far have you brought this dispatch, sir?"
19154How far is it away?"
19154How far is it from the next bridge on the south, and are there any Federal troops there?"
19154How long ago did this happen?"
19154How much do you want?"
19154How was that?"
19154However, as to the boat, can you give me instructions where to find it, and is it light enough for two men to carry?"
19154I suppose it''s in the water?"
19154I suppose she could get another?"
19154I suppose you did n''t keep it many days?"
19154I suppose, doctor, I can be moved at once?"
19154If I do not come back to- night, can you find anyone you can trust to take this piece of paper round to Richmond?
19154In that case how would he manage to approach him, and what means would he use to direct the attention of the sentries in another direction?
19154Is anything the matter?"
19154Is there anything I can do?"
19154Me say to him,''Can you read?''
19154Mrs. Wingfield exclaimed, starting up,"what has happened to you?
19154My dear child, where have you sprung from?"
19154Now gentlemen, what shall we say for this desirable lot?"
19154Now is there anything I can do?
19154Now, Maria, who has got boats that have n''t been taken?"
19154Now, is there anything as I can do to help you?"
19154Now, mister, may I ask where you have come from and where you are going to?"
19154Now, sir, what do you think of the lookout?"
19154Now, what are your ideas as to the roads?"
19154Now, where are the clothes?"
19154Pretty well, I hope?"
19154Shall we, Chloe?"
19154She has told you, I hope, that she has been good enough to promise to be my wife some day?"
19154So you fought under Jackson and Stuart, did you?
19154So you managed to cheat the Yankees altogether?"
19154Tell him I will see that his wife does not get into bad hands, I suppose they will sell the baby too?"
19154The first question is-- where are we to get a boat?
19154The question is how badly he is hurt, and what can be done for him?
19154The question is, What is to become of you?
19154The question is-- how are we to get across?"
19154Upon what day do you sail?"
19154Vincent paid him the amount, saying carelessly,"I think I have plenty of time to catch the train for the East?"
19154Vincent''s question,"Dinah, where are you?"
19154Well, do you feel ready for your breakfast?"
19154Well, have you done now?"
19154Well, what success have you had?"
19154What are you dressed up like that for?
19154What are you going to do with him if you get him free?
19154What are you looking at?"
19154What be they a- doing?
19154What can I do for you?"
19154What can I gib you?"
19154What day do you say they got here?"
19154What dey say to you?
19154What do you say?
19154What does he say, ma''am?
19154What good take dem wid you?"
19154What hab you to do wid one side or de oder?"
19154What has happened?"
19154What have you got left, Dan?"
19154What have you got to say to the charge?"
19154What is this?"
19154What made you take those two darkies along with you?
19154What money have you left?"
19154What on earth can have influenced you to act in such a mad- brained way?"
19154What on earth have you done that for?"
19154What shall you do now?"
19154What sort of lines are they?
19154What sort of man is Johnston?
19154What was de man like?"
19154What was de name of dat man, sah, you was speaking of?"
19154What would you have done, Vincent?"
19154What you want ob dem?
19154What''s the matter between you?"
19154When did you arrive from the front?"
19154When will you start?"
19154Where does your mother live, boy?"
19154Where have you sprung from, and when did you arrive?"
19154Where you come from?"
19154Whereber you get dat spirit?"
19154Which do you advise?"
19154Who could have dreamed, when I got up in the morning, that all this would take place before night?
19154Who is she, and what is she like?"
19154Who would you like to take?"
19154Wildfire was not hurt, I hope?"
19154Will de compass tell you dat?"
19154Will you come and breakfast with me at half- past eight?
19154Will you give me an order for my horse and myself to be taken?"
19154Will you kindly tell me what is de address writ on this paper?"
19154Will you please tell me on what day he left?"
19154Wingfield?"
19154You are not a pair of runaway lovers, are you?"
19154You are not hurt, massa?"
19154You are sure you have got everything of value, Miss Kingston?"
19154You do n''t know anything about the name of the place?"
19154You know the place pretty well, do n''t you, Tony?"
19154You like to see him, sah?"
19154You see it yourself, do n''t you, mother?"
19154You will not leave before that, will you?"
19154You will send a line to the old people, major, wo n''t you, and say I died doing my duty?
19154and if you want it why do n''t you ask your mother for it?
19154and they are after you?"
19154and what is it you want me for?"
19154are we for duty, captain?"
19154did you discover at last that he was a scamp?"
19154or is it him or her?"
19154the woman exclaimed;"what do you want to do that for?"
29608But what can you do? 29608 How much do you weigh, colonel?"
29608How much will you take for all there is in the cup?
29608Mr.----,said he one morning when the officers were grouped in front of his tent in response to''officers''call,''"Mr.----, have you gloves, sir?"
29608Now you know it is a rebel, do n''t you?
29608Well,said I,"have you recovered and are you ready for duty?"
29608What is the position?
29608Where did I meet you?
29608Why do you leave the hospital, then?
29608You prefer to perform your duties as a good soldier, then?
29608All wondered if the end had really come, or was it yet afar off?
29608But where was Dahlgren?
29608How about Mexico and Maximilian?
29608I said to him:"Colonel, what would you do if you were in my place?"
29608In the meantime, what was the infantry doing?
29608May it not then be said with truth that he was"distant and detached"and"without orders that contemplate the contingency?"
29608The officers were introduced, one by one, and Mr. Lincoln gave each hand a shake as he uttered a perfunctory, but kindly,"How do you do?"
29608There was a cordial shaking of hands and after the first friendly greetings had been exchanged I said:"But what does this mean?
29608What has been going on in the valley?
29608Where is Mosby?
29608Where was the enemy?
29608Where were the two divisions of Gibbon, posted for the very purpose of looking out for Longstreet?
29608While he was there a man named Mattoon, a good soldier, came up, and seeing Halleck, jumped over with the exclamation,"What are you doing here?"
29608Who can say how much it had to do in stopping the further progress of Early''s attack?
29608Who comes there?"
29608Why not put hoops on and make them into barrels?
29608Why then wonder if historians differ also?
29608Why try to prolong the war and cause further useless bloodshed?"
29608Would Lee allow that and go on to Baltimore, or turn and meet the army that Hooker was massing against him?
29608Would he?
15263And now, fellow- citizens, you may ask, what is our object in thus exhibiting to you the alarming influence of the slave power? 15263 But are not the old slaves well cared for by their masters?"
15263Can anything be done for the rescue of this girl from the kidnappers? 15263 Can you read?"
15263Describe your father?
15263Did you belong to the Baptist Church?
15263Did you ever have any chance of schooling?
15263Did you ever hear of the Underground Rail Road?
15263Did you ever live with him?
15263Did you feel that the preaching you heard was the true Gospel?
15263Did you have to find yourself?
15263Did you live with her?
15263Do not the mills of God grind exceedingly fine? 15263 Do you ever expect to see them again?"
15263Do you think that many of the slaves are anxious about their Freedom?
15263Find them yourself?
15263From York? 15263 Had you a wife?"
15263Had you any children?
15263Have I yearned for a mother''s love? 15263 Have you ever seen it before?"
15263His whole set?
15263How about Sunday clothing?
15263How about a house to live in?
15263How could you make so much money?
15263How did Moore come by you?
15263How did you like him?
15263How do you manage to make a little extra money?
15263How does he treat them?
15263How have you been getting along in Canada? 15263 How have you been treated?"
15263How have you had it in slavery?
15263How have you lived then?
15263How long ago was that?
15263How many servants had she?
15263How many slaves did he own?
15263How many?
15263How much did your master receive a year for your hire?
15263How old are you?
15263How then,said I,"could you put yourself in the care of that sailor, who was a stranger to you, and leave your parents?"
15263How were you treated by your master and mistress?
15263How would you like to be free?
15263I can not but sometimes ask in my closet meditations: O God of mercy and love, why permittest Thou these things? 15263 I suppose you smoke and chew at any rate?"
15263In what other particulars have you been treated hard?
15263My father,said I,"has long been one of your first doctors, and do you think it right for him to sell my mother and his children in this way?"
15263Now do n''t you keep late hours at night and swear occasionally?
15263Suppose you are sick who pays your doctor''s bill?
15263Suppose your master was to appear before you, and offer you the privilege of returning to Slavery or death on the spot, which would be your choice?
15263Then how do you know that he belongs to you?
15263To whom did you belong?
15263Was he a member of any church?
15263Were his family members of church, too?
15263Were not your parents kind to you, and did you not love them?
15263Were you born a slave?
15263Were you not afraid of being captured on the way, of being devoured by the abolitionists, or of freezing and starving in Canada?
15263What are you doing here?
15263What are your impressions from what little you have seen of Freedom?
15263What business did Milton Hawkins follow?
15263What business did your master follow?
15263What did he do?
15263What do you mean by being treated badly?
15263What do you think of Slavery any how?
15263What has become of Harriet Tubman?
15263What have you been employed at in Richmond?
15263What is the reason you ca n''t get up the hill faster?
15263What is your name?
15263What is your name?
15263What kind of a looking man was he?
15263What kind of a man was William Parker?
15263What kind of a man was he?
15263What kind of a woman was she?
15263What kind of family had he?
15263What kind of preaching does he give them?
15263What made you leave, Charles?
15263What put it into your head to leave?
15263What put it into your head to leave?
15263What was the name of your master?
15263What was your master''s name?
15263Where are they?
15263Where are you from then?
15263Where did he live?
15263Where did you live then?
15263Where is he from?
15263Who held you in bondage, and how have you been treated?
15263Who was your father?
15263Why did you despise him?
15263Why did you leave then?
15263Why did you leave your master?
15263Why did you leave, John?
15263Why did you leave?
15263Why did you not remain then?
15263Why?
15263Will two hundred dollars do?
15263With whom?
15263Would your owner be apt to pursue you?
15263_ How long, O God, how long_?
15263''How came there was no more work done that day?''
15263''What are you going to do with it?''
15263''What are you lecturing about?''
15263''Why could n''t you sold me to some of the neighbors?''
15263''Why?
15263), becoming the promenading companion of a colored man?
15263*** Can you spare a little time from your book to just take a peep at some of our Alabama people?
15263***** Now, what man among them, professes to have seen this woman for twenty- one years?
15263***** What causes the delay of that book, the History of Peter Still''s Family, etc.?
15263*****"You wonder why her sister, E., my loved and faithful friend, seems to be so much less known among anti- slavery people than Abbie?
15263Abram''s master, Milton Hawkins, lived at Wilmington, N.C.""What prompted you to escape?"
15263After all, friend, do we not belong to one of the best branches of the human race?
15263After she does what she can in P., will you give her the proper direction about getting to New York and to Mr. Tappan''s?
15263Again he was asked,"What kind of a man was your master?"
15263Also how comes on the Underground Rail Road?
15263Am I naughty, being a professed non- resistant, to advise this poor fellow to serve Father Abraham?
15263Amongst other questions, he was asked:"Do you regret having attempted to escape from slavery?"
15263And even now the scale may still seem to oscillate between the contending parties, and some may say, Why does not God give us full and quick victory?
15263And for the sake of these few and uncertain years, shall we push off this present trouble upon our children, who have to stay here a little longer?
15263And now my dear- slave- holder, who with you are bound and fast hastening to judgment?
15263And what pray is that?
15263And who could then have risen?
15263And who need speak of the Zambesi and Dr. Livingston, or of Central or Eastern Africa; of India, or Australia, or of the prolific West India Islands?
15263Another question suggests itself-- how has this great matter been accomplished?
15263Are we not near in spirit?
15263Art thou not thinking, dear friend, of asking your people to emigrate to the African Coast, or the West India Islands?
15263At all events, could you not so reduce the price as to place it in the power of Peter''s relatives and friends to raise the means for their purchase?
15263At that instant one of my friends cried out--''Where is the man that betrayed us?''
15263At the moment of recognition she sprang up, overwhelming him with her manifestations of delight, crying:"You Dr. Fussell?
15263But was not such an event worthy the awakening of every power-- the congratulation of every faculty?
15263But what right had a negro, which white slave- holders were"bound to respect?"
15263But who laughs now at this irresistible reform?
15263By whom?
15263Can I depend on it?
15263Can I, in your opinion, depend on the"P. Boy,"and when?
15263Can it not be done?
15263Can not you send to me something that will be of benefit to him, or send it direct to him?
15263Can nothing be done for such cases?
15263Can slaves take care of themselves?"
15263Can they refer to any marks by which to identify this person?
15263Can you not give me the particulars?
15263Can you tell me where Sarah King is, who was at your house when I was there?
15263Can you tell me?
15263Can you think of anything for any of these?
15263Co. Is it doing good business?
15263Coming up to him, I cried out, Lord, master, have you sold me?
15263Did God make me to be a slave?
15263Did any of them know that you were going to leave?
15263Did he contribute anything to it stamped with the signature of so clear an individuality that no other man could have contributed quite the same?
15263Did n''t he preach?
15263Did not even Northern men, superior in education and wealth, fear to say their souls were their own in the same presence?
15263Did the English peers or peeresses?
15263Did the representatives of any other country have their notions of propriety shocked by the matter?
15263Did there ever live one who had less of that"fear of man which bringeth a snare,"than himself?
15263Do I not owe you on the old bill( pledge)?
15263Do I understand him to say we have no right to determine this matter judicially?
15263Do any tidings reach you of our friend, Frederick Douglass?
15263Do n''t you know they are after you?
15263Do n''t you remember me?
15263Do they help in the good cause?
15263Do they, with the exception of the first witness examined, state even the time when she left?
15263Do we not believe that the United States leads the cause of human freedom?
15263Do we wish to array the Free states against the Slave states in hostile strife?
15263Do we wish to excite in your bosoms feelings of hatred against citizens of a common country?
15263Do you ever have any Underground Rail Road passengers now?
15263Do you imagine that there is one among your hearers who does not agree with you?
15263Do you know any promising young man who would accept my scholarship?
15263Do you know what the gathering means?
15263Do you like the country?"
15263Do you need any money?
15263Do you need anything for that?
15263Does the counsel mean to say that in the case of a fugitive from justice he is not bound to satisfy the judge before whom, the question is heard?
15263Fear you not that iron rod With which he breaks his foes?
15263Fee''s daughter?"
15263Fountain?
15263Gentlest of spirits!--not for thee Our tears are shed, our sighs are given: Why mourn to know thou art a free Partaker of the joys of Heaven?
15263Great- hearted philanthropist, what heroism could exceed thy own?
15263Had not hunger and cruelty and prostitution done their work, and left her an entire wreck for life?
15263Had you a mother and father, brothers and sisters?
15263Had you not better keep the little one in P. till the other is taken there?
15263Had you seen a feeble lambkin, Shrinking from a wolf so bold, Would ye not to shield the trembler, In your arms have made its fold?
15263Has not this suffering been overshadowed by the glory that gathered around the brave old man?...
15263Has thee seen, or heard anything of her lately?
15263Have they produced the letter written by this kidnapper, showing how he described her?
15263Have we then a nest of Abolition scoundrels among us?
15263Have you a son ready for college?
15263Have you had plenty of work, made some money, and taken care of yourself?"
15263He then asked me if he might search the house?
15263He was called out, when Loguen said, in a rather reproving and excited tone,"What are you doing here; did n''t I tell you to be off to Canada?
15263He was next asked,"Had you a wife and family?"
15263How could she refuse?
15263How did I fare?
15263How did you make up your mind to leave your wife and child in Slavery?
15263How do they appear before you?
15263How does this strike you?
15263How is it that any great matter is accomplished?
15263How long must wrongs like these go unredressed?
15263How many other men in the United States, under similar circumstances, would have been thus faithful?
15263I always had it in my mind to leave, but I was''jubus'',( dubious?)
15263I ask if this grand passage of the inspired writer may not be applied to that heroic band who have made America the perpetual home of freedom?
15263I asked him if he believed Hardcastle would keep his promise?
15263I can say I was once happy, but never will be again, until I see her; because what is freedom to me, when I know that my wife is in slavery?
15263I forgot to inquire of Dr. T. who is the head of your Vigilance Committee, whom I may address concerning other and further operations?
15263I made it from the start, and always, my own case, thus: Did I want to be a slave?
15263I ought to say, that I have no doubt but there were good reasons for the P. Boy''s going to Richmond instead of W.;_ but what can they be_?
15263I suppose you know me?
15263IS SHE STILL RUNNING WITH BLEEDING FEET?
15263If a man pursues the only course that will bring peace to his own mind, is he deserving of any credit therefor?
15263If he promises to come here next trip, will he come, or go to Richmond?
15263If it is asked"how?"
15263If it was an insult, why not resent it, as became high- spirited Americans?
15263If so, should we send to New York, Philadelphia, or where else?
15263If the entire family can not be purchased or freed, what can Vina and her daughter be purchased for?
15263Impartial men, are they?
15263In comparison with the method and measure of such a conviction, what matters its specific form?
15263In one of her letters she thus alluded to a traveler:"I saw a passenger_ per_ the Underground Rail Road yesterday; did he arrive safely?
15263In reply I remarked:"Do they belong to you, Sir?"
15263In speaking of the good treatment he had always met with, a member of the Committee remarked,"You must be akin to some one of your master''s family?"
15263Indeed, who could close his eyes and ears to the plaintive cries of such a mother?
15263Is he doing anything for the cause?
15263Is it safe for her to remain in your city or anywhere else in our"free land?"
15263Is money needed to help those escaping?
15263Is not the love of God and man ingrained in every line of this writing?
15263Is not the reward worth striving for at any cost?
15263Is she dark or light?"
15263Is that you?
15263Is there any fund from which a pittance could be spared to help these poor creatures?
15263Is there no ray of hope in that?
15263Is this possible?
15263It is so with men, why should it be different with women?
15263Kline replied,"Do you really think so?"
15263Maria, is that you?
15263Men of Cleveland, had a vulture Sought a timid dove for prey, Would you not, with human pity, Drive the gory bird away?
15263Miles gritted his teeth and felt very indignant, but what could he do?
15263Moreover, if it is fitting that woman should dress in every color of the rainbow, why not man also?
15263My child, is it you?
15263My wife and children, dearer to me than my heart''s blood, were they made for the auction- block?
15263Nay, are we not under a law to do the base work of bloodhounds, hunting the panting fugitives for freedom?
15263No sooner was the old man within the enclosures than he asked Dinah,"Whose child is that?"
15263Now what is all this about?
15263Now, my dear sir, after this recapitulation, can you not see that I have reason for great embarrassment?
15263O, what will the end be?
15263Observing that Lizzie( Nat''s wife) looked pretty decided and resolute, a member of the committee remarked,"Would your wife fight for freedom?"
15263Oh, God, what shall I do, or what can I do for him?
15263Oh, could slavery exist long if it did not sit on a commercial throne?
15263Oh, how can we pamper our appetites upon luxuries drawn from reluctant fingers?
15263Oh, was it not dreadful?...
15263Oh, when will we have a government strong enough to make human life safe?
15263On addressing Mr. W. he held out the letter and inquired:"Are you the author of this letter, sir?"
15263On our way to the boarding- house, the gentleman said to me:''Is this your son with you?''
15263On the proclamation of General Fremont, the passages from her pen are worthy to be long remembered:"Well, what think you of the war?
15263Or who adhered more heroically to his convictions of duty in the face of deadly peril and certain suffering?
15263Or who combined more moral courage with exceeding tenderness of spirit?
15263Or who gave himself more unreservedly, or with greater disinterestedness, to the service of bleeding humanity?
15263Or who took more joyfully the spoiling of his goods as the penalty of his sympathy for the hunted fugitive?
15263Or would it not be advisable to send them there?
15263Or would your brother''s son, Peter or Levin, like to have the benefit of it?
15263Our neighbor asked,"How do you like her?"
15263Please answer as correctly as you can the following questions:""How old are you?"
15263Poor thing, was there anything in the future for her?
15263Rising up in his box, he reached out his hand, saying,"How do you do, gentlemen?"
15263Said a brother,"If you can not get your family, what will you do?
15263Say, have you an arm like God, That you his will oppose?
15263Shall I call it an edifice or an improvised meeting- house?
15263Shall we not wash your back and neck for you?
15263She stopped until we came to the gate; the tears were rolling from her eyes, and she exclaimed:''Ann Maria, is it you?''
15263Should we not, therefore, endeavor to let its history gladden the earth?
15263Some time since Breckinridge, in writing to Sumner, asks, if I rightly remember, What is the fate of a few negroes to me or mine?
15263Still, I am under ten thousand obligation to you for your kindness when shall I ever repay?
15263TO WHOM IN ALL THIS WIDE LAND OF FREEDOM SHALL SHE FLEE AND FIND SAFETY?
15263Tappan?"
15263The constable asked me if they were in my house?
15263The first words to the mother were:"Are you traveling?"
15263The last item in his charge against Wright, suggested certain questions:"How have you been used?"
15263The question was then asked the owner of the barn by one of the men, if he harbored runaway negroes in his barn?
15263The writer turned to him and inquired,"I suppose you are the person that the Dr. went to Washington after, are you not?"
15263There are two small boxes and two large ones; we have them all secure; what had better be done?
15263There may be, perhaps, those who ask what is this triumph of which I speak?
15263There was an affirmative reply, and E. inquired,"How does thee find it?"
15263This step looked exceedingly hard, but what else could the poor fellow do?
15263Tyler?"
15263Was it not rather strange that he did not want to return to his"kind- hearted old mistress?"
15263Was there ever a more perfect train of evidence exhibited to prove the identity of a person, than on the present occasion?
15263We confess that we began to wonder, and we asked a fine- looking man before us,"What is her color?
15263We had given you up; O, what will your aunt say?
15263Well, did you ever expect to see this day?
15263Were not these reflections enough to incapacitate the Doctor for the time being, for cool thought as to how he should best guard against the enemy?
15263What do abolitionists think of it?
15263What does the gentleman say further?
15263What does the"powder boy"think of it?
15263What is political action?
15263What is the news in the city?
15263What prompted James to leave such pleasant quarters?
15263What shall I do with them?
15263What, is the use of harping upon this subject Sunday after Sunday?
15263When will our first of August come?
15263Where could be found in history a more noble and daring struggle for Freedom?
15263Where is Southern Slavery now?
15263Which was correct, Bill or his master?
15263Who are His lambs?
15263Who can know unfailing inward energy except through this new birth?
15263Who could refrain from aiding on to freedom children honored in such a heroic parent?
15263Who has forgotten the imprisonment of Mrs. Douglass for this offense?
15263Who has not admired the sagacity with which his inquiries were dictated, and the tact and acumen with which he managed every part of his cause?
15263Who has not been struck with his expressive glances toward the judge, when a doubtful point arose in the investigation of the case?
15263Who would not commend such a mistress for the punctuality, if nothing more?
15263Who would not help these generous- hearted men, who are devoting their whole energies to the well- being of the crushed and downtrodden?
15263Who would want an office, if no opportunity should turn up whereby proof could be adduced of adequate qualifications to meet emergencies?
15263Why did you not send them more things?
15263Why do n''t they do so?
15263Why is it before you, taking your time day after day?
15263Why not, in time, become"merchants and princes,"in those countries?
15263Why should it not shine?
15263Why then did the Dr. bring you here?"
15263Why, let me ask, is not the full light allowed to shine on this case?
15263Will I not see him and you at the anniversary in New York?
15263Will that little boy of seven years have to travel on foot to Canada?
15263Will you act for him, as if you was in slavery yourself, and I sincerely believe that he will come out of that condition?
15263Will you answer my questions with some explicitness, and without delay?
15263Will you come North and live with your relatives?"
15263Will you please write me when convenient and tell me what you hear about those who I fear are suffering as the result of their kindness to me?
15263Will you please write to some careful person there?
15263Will you tell me how many you have sent over to Canada?
15263William smarted frequently; but what could he do?
15263William,''said I,''do you think we would give her up?''
15263Willson, now- a- days?
15263Willson?
15263With an oath he would say,''now do n''t you love me?''
15263Would it be well for me, entertaining such sentiments, to sit down and write an account of my sacrifices?
15263Would it not be the best way to get those in Norristown under your own care?
15263Would it not be well to make a habit, in the evening in particular, of you, who are marked men, going about in little companies?
15263Would not W. Goodell''s book be of use?
15263Would not a like lot of Cumberland coal always sell in Philadelphia?
15263Would the strong arm of a brother have been welcome?
15263Would you give up and go back and work at your trade( dress- making)?
15263Yet let us see how it was received by the most Christian(?)
15263You Dr. Fussell?
15263You have been brought to America, not emigrated to it, and who on earth has any possible right to send you away?
15263[ A] OR HIDES SHE IN SOME COLD CAVE, TO REST AND STARVE?
15263[ Illustration:] With her knowledge of the practical wickedness of the system, how could she be satisfied?
15263and what is thy opinion?
15263do you take a little sometimes?"
15263how deplorable their situation; where will they go to, when cold weather comes?
15263is this a Christian land, and are Christians thus forced to flee for their liberty?"
15263my son Isaac, is this you,& c.?"
15263or for the grammar school?
15263why should not the expatriated blacks go to free countries and grow produce for themselves and for everybody who requires it?
18707And whose words are you so gaily murdering?
18707Are there no other Catholics to do things?
18707Did he ever go down to the Grotto?
18707Do you see that fire?
18707How do you know,retorts Shaw,"it is not Herbert Spencer I have not read?
18707How tall are you and what do you weigh?
18707I must have left it behind, darling, but I brought back the ties, did n''t I? 18707 Is George Bernard Shaw a coming peril?"
18707Is a man proud of losing his hearing, eyesight or sense of smell? 18707 Of course you know,"Annie Firmin wrote to me,"that Aunt Marie never liked Frances?
18707Was it hard for him to walk?
18707Was it of widowhood?
18707What books?
18707What did Frances die of?
18707What did he say about my ear?
18707What did he talk to you about?
18707What has really happened during the last seven days and nights? 18707 What would you say if I turned the world upside down and set my foot upon the sun and the moon?"
18707Where did he go to church?
18707Why are you cutting out that one?
18707Why did n''t you buy some more?
18707Will you take care of me?
18707_ HIS LORDSHIP-- Did Mr. Chesterton charge the witness with being a traitor? 18707 ''Are they still-- all out at places?'' 18707 ''Hast thou sent the Rain upon the Earth?'' 18707 ''The what?'' 18707 ( 1) How am I? 18707 ( 10) How far is it to Babylon? 18707 ( 2) Am I going away at Easter? 18707 ( 6) Does my hair want cutting? 18707 (? 18707 )_ PRINCESS: Why should we patch this pirate up again? 18707 *** Wild: Can you point to one success except Marconi in the whole of your career? 18707 A MAN BORN ON THE EARTH Perhaps there has been some mistake How does he know he has come to the right place? 18707 A correspondence that seemed likely to drag on forever ended abruptly with Wells asking about the Fall,Tell me, did it really happen?"
18707A few of the lectures and debates of these years were:"Is Journalism Justifiable?
18707A picture cover like that of Punch might stand even that test if it were good enough; but where are you to find your Doyle?
18707After a lecture in Philadelphia a lady asked him,"Mr. Chesterton, what makes women talk so much?"
18707After all, what did such things matter?
18707After all, why should we object to be boiled?
18707Again I may submissively ask:"Whose is the Paradox?"
18707And anyhow what about Belloc?
18707And as to lost documents-- What of the ministers''dealings in shares?
18707And how can we put a fair price on what is at once a worry and a pleasure?
18707And if a mother can not trust her child easily to God Almighty, shall I be so mean as to be angry because she can not trust it easily to me?
18707And in another letter: A cosmos one day being rebuked by a pessimist replied,"How can you who revile me consent to speak by my machinery?
18707And is there any man who doubts that you will be sympathetic with the Jewish International?
18707And the essence of the difference was this: the modern Socialist is saying,"What will society do?"
18707And then you wonder-- is this illumination light on Blake or simply light on Chesterton?
18707And what was the remedy?
18707And, by the way, is ditchwater dull?
18707Are all who called the Chinese slaves to be sued by all who did n''t?
18707Are they henceforth to make game of everything that is said and done in the name of England in the affairs of Europe?
18707Are two Hypotheticals of the forms,_ If A, then B_, and_ If A then not B_ compatible?"
18707Are we to lose the War which we have already won?
18707Are we to set up as the standing representative of England a man who is a standing joke against England?
18707Are you quite mad?
18707As I turn to the story of the weekly paper rising again from its ashes I ask myself the question I have often asked: was it worth while?
18707As we waved goodbye after their departing train my mother said thoughtfully:"Frances did rather play off Jerusalem against Rome, did n''t she?"
18707At a debate with Dr. Horace T. Bridges of the Ethical Cultural Society on"Is Psychology a Curse?"
18707At question period he was asked:"Why is Dean Inge gloomy?"
18707Belloc also, in a letter extolling the Faith, asked"what else would print civilised stuff in Australasia?"
18707Belloc declares that everyone says to him"Who discovered Chesterton?"
18707But does not Mr. Blatchford see the other side of the fact?
18707But is there not for the thinker an asceticism of the mind, very searching, very purifying?
18707But it was in the newspapers that you were last month in Warsaw; why in Heaven''s sake did you not come to Prague on this occasion?
18707But much more fundamental was the constantly recurrent question: When is the League going to begin to do something?
18707But she sees a new element in your life, wholly from outside-- is it not natural, given her temperament, that you should find her perturbed?
18707But the question does recur; what is the good of being good in that way?
18707But were the shares his?
18707But were they as clear to the whole world?
18707But who would perform that illegal operation: the stopping of Stevenson?
18707But why do you say that Christ did it and has left no Christians who do it?
18707CHAPTER X Who is G.K.C.?
18707Can any human being read the record of this recurrent motif and reconcile it with Mrs. Cecil''s picture?
18707Can anything be more absurd than the idea of a man cheering alone in his back bedroom?
18707Can we imagine Gilbert cooking or even ordering sausages, getting beer to the flat, designing or discovering the studio?
18707Carson: And therefore you do not accuse him of anything dishonest or dishonourable?
18707Carson: Do you accuse the Postmaster General of dishonesty or corruption?
18707Carson: I must repeat my question, do you accuse the Postmaster- General of anything dishonest or dishonourable?
18707Carson: You have not that opinion now?
18707Charles Rowley of the Ancoats Brotherhood received a wire, reply paid, from Snow Hill Station, Birmingham:"Am I coming to you tonight or what?"
18707Chesterton?"
18707Damn it all( excuse me) what can one be but frivolous about serious things?
18707Deep in the tablets of our hearts he writes that yearning still, The longing that His hand hath wrought shall not his hand fulfil?
18707Did I ever quote you a sentence of Bernard Holland on the subject of Kenelm Henry Digby when the latter was received?
18707Did the tendency to find good in his opponents, did Chesterton''s universal charity deaden, as Belloc believes, the effect of his writing?
18707Did you see my letter in Tuesday''s_ Times?_ Magnificent!
18707Do I seem to be raving?
18707Do n''t you sometimes find it convenient, even in my case, that your friends are less touchy than you are?
18707Do not the words of Jesus ring Like nails knocked into a board In his father''s workshop?
18707Do you care to come and see the fun?
18707Do you have joy without a cause, Yea, faith without a hope?
18707Do you or do you not accuse him?
18707Do you realize that it is £250 at pre- war rates, and subject to heavy taxation: net £375--pre- war 182- 10- 0?
18707Do you think all this kind of thing frivolous?
18707Do you think it would be possible to make Belloc write a comedy?
18707Do you want her?"
18707First, in whose eyes but ours has the Party System lost credit?
18707Fourth,"Is Democracy compatible with Parliamentary Government?"
18707Gilbert had, as we have seen, originally intended to call the book_ What''s Wrong?_ laying some emphasis on the note of interrogation.
18707Gilbert repeated the phrase and said eagerly:"He would n''t say it unless he meant it, would he?"
18707Gilbert was fond of asking in the_ New Witness_ of people who expressed admiration for Lloyd George:"Which George do you mean?"
18707God sets the problem, God tells the story, but can those know Him who are characters in His story, who are working out His problem?
18707Had we anything to do with the making of this ardent, eager, indefatigable creature?
18707Had we known all this we should have been asking ourselves even more definitely: What will the experts say?
18707Has any Catholic ever explained the philosophic meaning of Transubstantiation to the Great old Irish Man of English Letters?
18707Has it ever occurred to you how much a good citizen would have to love you in order to tolerate you?
18707Have n''t I always shown a reasonable civility to you and your brother and Belloc?
18707Have n''t I betrayed at times a certain affection for you?
18707Have n''t I on the whole behaved decently to you?
18707Have we got that down?
18707Have you ever known what it is to walk along a road in such a frame of mind that you thought you might meet God at any turn of the path?
18707He had intended to call the book,"What''s Wrong?"
18707He only said,"But shall I not find in evil a life of its own?
18707He said"What shall I lecture on?"
18707He said,''Oh did you want tennis- balls?''
18707He uttered the pedantic reply,"Where do you want to go to?"
18707His own youngest son, a small boy, had left the room for a moment when Wells exclaimed:"Where''s Frank?
18707How and where can these two incommensurates find a meeting place?
18707How can I get hold of it?
18707How can it be broad to be the same thing to everyone, and narrow to be everything to someone?
18707How can money dig?
18707How could a real Tory co- operate in construction with a genuine Radical?
18707How if Christianity was yet more maddening because it was yet more precious?
18707How then could this indifference be thrown off: How could the returning manhood of the nation be given a true democracy: was there still hope?
18707How would you like it if she were to publish a magazine and call it Fanny''s First Paper?
18707How, the_ New Witness_ asked, could members of such families feel the same about the war as an Englishman?
18707I asked''Where?''
18707I feel in His mercy He will, even if death is the end of it-- or the beginning shall I say?
18707I feel like Elijah( was n''t it?)
18707I pointed it out to him, and he said:''Do you think it matters?''
18707I remember he asked Gilbert,"Do you like babies?"
18707I said,''Are these tennis- balls?''
18707I say: have you written to Thring yet?
18707If the Christian God really made the human race, would not the human race tend to rumours and perversions of the Christian God?
18707If the centre of our life is a certain fact, would not people far from the centre have a muddled version of that fact?
18707If we are so made that a Son of God must deliver us, is it odd that Patagonians should dream of a Son of God?
18707In October another meeting of the central branch was held in Essex Hall to debate"Have We Lost Liberty?"
18707In an article entitled_ Is It Too Late?_ he defined this pessimism as"a paralysis of the mind; an impotence intrinsically unworthy of a free man."
18707In the Notebook he had written: BOOTLACES Once I looked down at my bootlaces Who gave me my bootlaces?
18707In the Notebook he had written: NORTH BERWICK On the sands I romped with children Do you blame me that I did not improve myself By bottling anemones?
18707In the last part of the book,"Education or the Mistake about the Child,"he put the unanswerable question: How are we to give what we have not got?
18707Is God compatible with Church Government?
18707Is he in the house of his fathers or has he come unto a strange land?"
18707Is it a man or a woman?
18707Is it not a part of the most fundamental of all antinomies-- the greatness and the littleness of man?
18707Is it one long dead or yet to come?
18707Is not Shaw''s explanation at once fascinating and probable?
18707Is that all right?
18707Is that definite?
18707Is that plain?
18707Is there a Mincing Mind, of which a mincing voice is the outward and visible warning?"
18707Is there any man who doubts that the Jewish International is unsympathetic with that full national demand?
18707Is there anything you hold sacred?
18707Is there no pity due to those who undergo these?
18707Isaacs: In companies?
18707It was just at this time that she wrote to tell Father O''Connor that Gilbert said to her"Did you think I was going to die?"
18707It was not allowed to object to Mr. Herbert Gladstone( or is it Lord Gladstone?
18707Just how scandalous_ was_ the Marconi scandal?
18707Life is a problem: who sets it?
18707Life is a story: who tells it?
18707May he be forgiven for speaking of them at length and with pride?
18707Meanwhile, as not wholly unconnected with the serious things, could you possibly do me a great favour?
18707Meanwhile, what was Gilbert doing about his work at University College?
18707Mid darkening care and clinging sin they sought their unknown home, Yet ne''er the perfect glory came-- Lord, will it ever come?
18707Mr. Chesterton said it reminded him of an old Irishwoman:''Why do n''t you get out sideways?''
18707My life is a howling waste-- but what matter?
18707My necktie is on the wrong way up: my bootlaces trail half- way down Fleet St. Why not?
18707Now, however, I am becoming personal( how else can I be sincere?).
18707Oh who would not want such a wonderful thing As the pleasure of hearing the Eskimos sing?
18707Or Bentley?"
18707Or did they belong to the English Company?
18707PRINCESS: If you lay there, would he let you escape?
18707Please, would you be so kind to tell me, if it shall be possible for you to come next year to Prague?
18707Potatoes, for example, are better boiled than raw-- why should we fear to be boiled into new shapes in the cauldron?
18707Scene at Beaconsfield:"What on earth have you done with your dress- suit, Gilbert?"
18707Shall I say of him, to whom I owe so much, let the day perish wherein he was born?
18707Sister Madeleva:"Did he like the campus?"
18707Sister Madeleva:"Did he walk on the campus and see the students?"
18707Sister Madeleva:"What did he do for recreation?"
18707Someone asked,"Did he ever get grouchy?"
18707St. Theresa said the hardest penance was easier than mental prayer: was not much of Gilbert''s thought a contemplation?
18707Suppose you had your choice of not reading a book by Belloc and not reading one by Spencer which would you choose?
18707Surely Chesterton had this same inconsistency, as it were, in reverse?
18707THE COSMIC FACTORIES What are little boys made of?
18707That is n''t_ our_ Chesterton, is it?"
18707The boils that shine and burrow, The sores that slough and bleed-- The leprosy of Naaman On thee and all thy seed?
18707The bootmaker?
18707The gigantic figure of Sunday before whom they all tremble turns from the chief of the anarchists, chief of the destructive forces, into-- what?
18707The next question that arises is-- whom am I engaged to?
18707The question of my youth undoubtedly was: how far can a Catholic go on the road to Socialism?
18707The question was becoming insistent: when would there be enough money for Frances and Gilbert to get married?
18707The real problem is-- can the lion lie down with the lamb and still retain his royal ferocity?
18707The rebuke died on my lips: why get angry with the poor old aunts of Higgins demanding the destruction of their unconceived and inconceivable babies?
18707The_ Louisville Post_ reported that Henry James, being asked on a visit to his native country,"What do you think of Chesterton in England?"
18707There is a phrase used at the end, spoken by Sunday:"Can ye drink from the cup that I drink of?"
18707These things are easier written than said, but you know it is true, do n''t you?
18707Thou mirror of uprightness, What ails thee at thy vows, What means the risen whiteness Of skin between thy brows?
18707Thus, in this first instance, when learned sceptics come to me and say,"Are you aware that the Kaffirs have a sort of Incarnation?"
18707To Johnnie--"Did he take the lecture business seriously?"
18707True, nobody read them; but was that my fault?
18707Two of his intimate friends, finding at this time a notebook full of these horrible drawings, asked one another,"Is Chesterton going mad?"
18707Was Chesterton for once undertaking a task beyond his knowledge?
18707Was G.K. serious or merely posing, was he a great man or a mountebank, was he clear or obscure, was he a genius or a charlatan?
18707Was it Chesterton himself who christened it"Baring, Overbearing and Past Bearing?"
18707Was it accurately reported?
18707We do not feel that it is so beautiful now-- why?
18707Were St. Paul''s epistles an Apologia pro Vita Sua?
18707Were the Trades Unions, from lack of leadership and confusion of thought, beginning to accept the Servile State?
18707Were the people of England losing the appetite for freedom and for property?
18707Were they in now?
18707What about that play?
18707What and where and when is"Uncommon Sense about the War?"
18707What are these athletes worth if, after all their athletics, they can not scratch up such a thing as a natural appetite?
18707What are these laws?
18707What are we to say of those who have to take an anaesthetic before they can face pleasure?
18707What can be more fundamental than food, drink, and children?
18707What did I ever do that I should be given bootlaces?
18707What did a week mean for most of them?
18707What did it really mean?
18707What do you say to a severe course of Walt Whitman-- or will marriage make him see people?
18707What do you say?
18707What does it matter?
18707What happened to Swift''s Gulliver-- that most fierce attack upon the human race?
18707What is Incarnation?
18707What is man, that thou regardest him?
18707What makes a man essentially English?
18707What more can any man want?"
18707What more does man require?
18707What more natural than that they should think of me as a man not afraid to call himself an atheist and able to hold his own on the platform?
18707What must this pain of adjustment not have been to a mind almost continuously creative?
18707What of that?
18707What of the money?
18707What of those, who when faced with the terrors of mayonnaise eggs or sardines, can only utter a faint cry for brandy?
18707What price the first- hand?
18707What shall we say of him who prides himself on beginning as an intellectual cripple and ending as an intellectual corpse?
18707What was meant by the Servile State?
18707What was to be done about it?
18707What would be likely to be the effect of the sudden dropping into a dreadfully evil century of a dreadfully perfect truth?
18707What would happen if a star from heaven really fell into the slimy and bloody pool of a hopeless and decaying humanity?
18707What would happen if a world baser than the world of Sade were confronted with a gospel purer than the gospel of Rousseau?
18707What''s the reason?
18707When all their lights grow dark, their lives grow gray, What will those widows and those orphans say?
18707When one''s attempts at reformation are"not much believed in"what other course is open but a contemptuous relapse into liberty?
18707Where ought I to be?"
18707Who are we, to whom this cup of human life has been given, to ask for more?
18707Who gave the bootmaker himself?
18707Why am I allowed two?
18707Why are not all men aware of the uniqueness of Man among the animals and the uniqueness of the Church among religions?
18707Why did he do it?
18707Why do you say there is no chance for this normal property and liberty?
18707Why do you think of these things as small?
18707Why do you think of these things as small?
18707Why does no one say their wives dragged them away?
18707Why had he not asked to be heard sooner by the Committee?
18707Why had he not earlier asked the Committee to hear the story of the American shares?
18707Why is it an answer to say we must do that to make them Distributists?
18707Why is it possible for Mrs. Cecil to declare that he was the greater editor, to imply that he was the greater man?
18707Why is the memory of Cecil Chesterton alive today?
18707Why not a sermon on that?
18707Why not a whole comedy of cross purposes based on the notion of a priest with a knowledge of evil deeper than that of the criminal he is converting?
18707Why not do George Fox, who was released from the prisons in which Protestant England was doing its best to murder him, by the Catholic Charles II?
18707Why should He be?
18707Why should an evening waistcoat have four large white pearl buttons and why should he look that peculiar shape?
18707Why should you always win and win in vain?
18707Why was this possible?
18707Why, after all, should I charge more than sixpence for a work it was so exuberant to write?
18707Will you forgive me, dearest, if I reel off to the only soul that can be trusted to enjoy my enjoyment, a kind of report of the meeting?
18707Will you take care of me?
18707Would any human life have been long enough to develop them all?
18707Would you undertake six further fortnightly talks from January 16th onwards?
18707Yes?
18707Yet how many of the men who did learn seriously could have drawn those sketches, full of crazy energy and vitality?
18707You ask( in gruff, rumbling tones)"Who is Captain Webster?"
18707You might unite all High Churchmen on the High Church quarrel, but what authority is to unite them when the devil declares his next war on the world?
18707_ Ruler:_ Do you solemnly swear never to conceal a vital clue from the reader?
18707_ Ruler:_ Will you honour the King''s English?
18707_ What''s Wrong with the World?__ William Blake_.
18707and followed this with the question,"Does Father O''Connor know?"
18707are we observed?)
18707is it your firm desire to become a Member of the Detection Club?
18707they spake unto me by letter, saying,"Heard ye aught of him that is called Bentley?
18707while his prototype, as we read, said,"What shall I do?"
2836Did Stanton tell you I was a fool?
2836All criticism of Lincoln turns eventually on one question: Was he an opportunist?
2836And did Yancey play into its hands?
2836And what did the Secretary of the Treasury do?
2836And what of Lincoln?
2836And what was that ideal?
2836As a force in American history, what does he count for?
2836But could it be shown that the Laird ships were not really for a French purchaser?
2836But is Lord Charnwood justified in that surprising characterization?
2836But what became of the labor that had previously supplied the demand for luxuries?
2836But would this be true to that principle of"popular sovereignty"which was the very essence of the Kansas- Nebraska Act?
2836Can arms be sent here?"
2836Did he doubt his ability to hold his own?
2836Did he merely put things by, ignoring tomorrow until tomorrow should arrive?
2836Did it dare pass over without protest the establishment of monarchy on American soil by foreign arms?
2836Did it show a certain slackness, a certain aimlessness, at the bottom of his nature?
2836Did the Union dare risk war with France?
2836Had it, in a way, some sort of analogy-- to compare homespun with things Olympian-- to the vein of frivolity in the great Caesar?
2836He was met by the curt question,"Do you bring peace or war?"
2836How was political evasion to brave it?
2836If Congress could not restrict slavery in the territories, how could its creature, a territorial legislature do so?
2836If the convention decided, however, not to submit the constitution, would not Congress have the right to accept it and admit Kansas as a Mate?
2836In Shakespeare''s phrase, it was--"Under which king, Bezonian?
2836Must I shoot a simple- minded soldier boy who deserts, while I must not touch a hair of a wily agitator who induces him to desert?
2836Or is there some conceivable new outlet for this opposition of energy on the part of the sections, some new mode of permanent adjustment?
2836Or, if he could not do that, would he be able to extricate the country-- Heaven alone knew how!--without a terrible ordeal?
2836Should Southerners trust any longer the man who had evolved from the principle of let-''em- alone to the principle of double- dealing?
2836The task imposed upon the volume resolves itself, at bottom, into just two questions: Why was there a war?
2836This was law, the expression of the highest tribunal of the Republic; what more was to be said?
2836Though the country at that time did not fully appreciate this aspect of the situation, who now can doubt that Lincoln did?
2836To his own question,"Where is the remedy?"
2836Was capital, like men, to become frankly sectional or would it remain impersonal, careless how nations rose or fell, so long as dividends continued?
2836Was he fatalistic?
2836Was he troubled?
2836Was his sad smile his refuge?
2836Was its commercial life sound?
2836Was organized capital deliberately exploiting slavery?
2836Was the commercial management of the North creditable to the Government and an honor to the people?
2836Was there then what we should call today a slave"interest"?
2836What about the Monroe Doctrine?
2836What became of the workmen?
2836What explains his vast success?
2836What then, was the public Lincoln?
2836What would the great dying Whig party leave behind it?
2836What, now, had Lincoln to say to the people of the North?
2836Where would Northern capital stand in the reorganization of parties?
2836Which course should they take?
2836Who paid the soldiers?
2836Who supplemented their meager pay and supported their families?
2836Who, in the last analysis, provided all these supplies?
2836Why did not millions of rounds of cartridges fall like manna out of the sky?
2836Why did not the crowds of volunteers become armies at a word of command?
2836Why was the Lincoln Government successful?
2836Why were the soldiers not armed?
2836Will you not embrace it?
2836Would he prevent war?
2836Would it be true to the principle that each locality should decide for itself between slavery and freedom?
2836Would their sporting sense of politics as a gigantic game carry him through successfully?
28384And why not? 28384 But surely, Count, you would not presume to dispute Mr. Webster''s opinion on a question of constitutional law?"
28384Does n''t she intend to finish her education?
28384From where?
28384I must go,impatiently remarked the Lieutenant, mounting his horse;"what shall I report to the General?"
28384My Heavens, Mr. Satan, am I then doomed to return to Newark?
28384Newark?
28384And pray who were there?
28384By being that, may I not flatter myself I have some claims upon their benevolence if not upon their justice?
28384Can comeliness of form or face so fair With kindliness of word or deed compare?
28384Can they be dissevered?
28384Can you believe that a vivid memory can turn back so many years?
28384Do you know of any opportunity?
28384Everett?"
28384Fish say?"
28384His facetious rejoinder was:"Was ever the Father of his Country so defamed?"
28384I inquired:"What is wrong, Captain?"
28384In my astonishment I said:"Where?"
28384May I not ask that State, especially you, sir, their Governor, to fulfil in some respects the engagements entered into by their predecessors?
28384May I request you to accept this humble but sincere tribute to the memory of a most valued friend?
28384More than once as I passed him he accosted me with the interrogative,"Are you Nancy Hazard''s brat?"
28384Much to the amusement of the guests whom he met, his salutation was:"Would you know me?"
28384Now I ask you candidly, have we retrograded in matters of taste or become less loyal to the true spirit of our Republican institutions?
28384Oh, home of my boyhood, why must I depart?
28384Only a short period had elapsed when several mounted officers dashed up our driveway and anxiously inquired:"Where are the guards?"
28384Referring at once to"Uncle James,"he inquired:"Who is that man?"
28384Soon after her birth, several Chinese asked me:"How many girls do you keep?"
28384Sumner?"
28384The insignia of the society is an orange ribbon bearing the words inscribed in black:"Should auld acquaintance be forgot?"
28384The quick response was:"I must first know the circumstances of the case; but what have you been doing?"
28384This suggests, although remotely, the inquiry heard many years ago:"Have we a Bourbon among us?"
28384Upon receiving a favorable response, she asked:"Why is His Holiness, the Pope, like a goose?"
28384Was it for glory or was it for pelf, Or just for the pleasure of quoting yourself?"
28384Wend you with the world to- night?
28384Wend you with the world to- night?
28384Wend you with the world to- night?
28384Wend you with the world to- night?
28384Wend you with the world to- night?
28384What the bright sparkling of the finest eye To the soft soothing of a kind reply?
28384What, said he, do n''t you want to see it if it is in writing& genuine?
28384Who wadna draw the sword?
28384Who wadna up and rally, At their royal prince''s word?
28384Why do n''t they work?''
28384Will you excuse me if, from a sincere desire for your success, I go farther& touch upon matters not political, or at least not wholly so?
28384dear Kneeland, pray what do you mean By such a fat book on the subject of Lien?
28384for is not my sorrow a twin sorrow?
28384quintessence divine New joys entrance my soul while thou art mine; Who takes?
28384who takes thee not?
3034Am I going to stand by and see them take my wife and sell her?
3034What title can you give?
3034Would not even you, sir, do the same, in my place?
3034And what was done about it?
3034And why the ungovernable hilarity over the demand that its"efficiency"should never be impaired?
3034But how explain this strange inconsistency?
3034California had thus been saved to freedom; why not all other Territories?
3034Can you blame me?"
3034How many families of your town would take in a negro man or woman, teach them, bear with them, and seek to make them Christians?
3034How many families that would board them?
3034How many merchants would take Adolph, if I wanted to make him a clerk; or mechanics, if I wanted to teach him a trade?
3034If I wanted to put Jane and Rosa to a school, how many schools are there in the Northern States that would take them in?
3034In the meantime, where was Marshal Werkman of Iowa City?
3034My father addressed the slaves pleasantly and then asked,''Well, boys, why do they chain you?''
3034St. Clair, speaking to Miss Ophelia, his New England cousin, says:"If we emancipate, are you willing to educate?
3034Sumner''s quick reply was,"Is thy servant a dog that he should do this thing?"
3034Then, turning to the committee, he began,"Mr. Chairman, are you prepared to attempt to put them on?"
3034Was he of the same mind as the deputy marshal who had accompanied Colonel Sumner?
3034What is in the story to call forth such commendation from the cold- blooded English statesman?
3034What was the effect of the publication?
3034When despairing African fugitives do the same thing-- it is-- what IS it?"
3034Why was there this demand that a law which every one knew had proved a complete failure should be made a permanent part of the Constitution?
20025''James,''said she-- you know how she says''James''?
20025''James,''says she,''is that you?'' 20025 And Mercedes?
20025And have him lose his course in college?
20025And he does n''t know his own mind-- and he has n''t been to see her for-- how long was it, Mercy?
20025And so this is our Miss Mercy again? 20025 And the little girl?"
20025And when counted?
20025And why the devil is the train so late? 20025 Are n''t you coming down?"
20025At eight o''clock; do you hear?
20025But can you prove it? 20025 But how did you come to know him?"
20025But perhaps you have never heard of your old grandfather?
20025But where is the court- room?
20025But you will tell me where she is?
20025But, Jamie,said Mr. James kindly,"what will you do?
20025But-- after all, why not ask her?
20025Can I do anything for ye, mither? 20025 Can I see him?"
20025Can ye give it me?
20025Can you tell me where to find him?
20025Change its charter?
20025Confound it, sir,said the father,"it''s the making it good to Jamie, not the making it good to us, that counts,--don''t you see?"
20025Dear me, I hope he is not dead?
20025Did the old lady find out about the bronze Venus?
20025Did you hear,said another, a young lawyer,"how they have treated him?
20025Did you notice how spruced up and young the poor fellow was? 20025 Did you tell my mother of your resolve to try again, sir?"
20025Did your father take you to sea?
20025Displeasing to me? 20025 Do n''t you know I swore out a warrant against you?"
20025Do n''t you see it''s because the boy fell in love with his Mercedes?
20025Do ye no love the lass enough?
20025Do you know the facts, sir?
20025Do you know what he wants?
20025Do you know why he lost the place?
20025Do you notice he''s rather looking younger?
20025Do you remember him?
20025Do you still love him, dear?
20025Does he go to your house,--Salem Street?
20025Done?
20025Gay people?
20025Harley Bowdoin? 20025 Has Miss Mercy-- has Miss McMurtagh encouraged him?"
20025Has he not been home? 20025 Has he told_ you_?"
20025Have n''t I a copy of the verses you addressed to Miss Sally White when you were rusticated under Parson White at Clapboardtrees?
20025Have n''t I, my dear?
20025Have n''t you been there yet? 20025 Have they no nurse?"
20025Have you a citation for him?
20025Have you seen him?
20025Have you the key?
20025Have you told my wife?
20025He has no occupation?
20025He wants?
20025His granddaughter-- a fortune?
20025How about state rights? 20025 How about the Union, sir?"
20025How far has it gone?
20025How is Jamie?
20025How is Mercedes?
20025How many children has the governor got in there to- day?
20025How the h----l should I know? 20025 I may-- I need hardly ask you to forget this?"
20025I thought it must be on its way,said the second bookkeeper;"have n''t you noticed his looks lately?"
20025I trust we are not disturbing important business, sir?
20025I wonder if he left her poor?
20025In Worcester Square? 20025 Is he to live with you, then?"
20025Is it because you are going away? 20025 Is there a clerk here,--one James McMurtagh?"
20025Is this the office of James Bowdoin''s Sons?
20025James?
20025Jamie, my son-- have ye never thought o''marryin''her your own sel''? 20025 Jamie, why should I count it?"
20025Jamie,he said,"if you should ever need more money,--a good deal of money, I mean,--you will come to me, wo n''t you?
20025Looks as if he might have stepped out of one of Dickens''s novels, does he not?
20025Made it good? 20025 Made what good?"
20025Man alive, why did n''t you let him take the money, that day down the wharf, and take the girl yourself? 20025 Master Harley wull ha''told ye?
20025May I tell my mother, sir?
20025May we congratulate her?
20025Mon, why did n''t ye ask me for it? 20025 No; what should I see the fellow for?"
20025None whatever? 20025 Not go back?
20025Not in my home? 20025 Nothing wrong in his accounts, I hope?"
20025Now, Jamie, how the devil am I to make her?
20025Oh, I am, am I? 20025 Oh, Jamie,"she sobbed( she was suffered to call him Jamie),"why did n''t you give me gloves?"
20025Oh, she is, is she?
20025Oh, you do, do you?
20025Old fellow, why do n''t you have a vacation,--just a few days? 20025 One child?
20025Perhaps I will, sir; and if I do, what of it? 20025 Sam Dowse''s daughter?"
20025Shall we join the ladies?
20025Sheriff Clark, do you know those fellows are all miserable loafers?
20025Since when do the courts of Massachusetts ask permission of a pack of slave- hunters whether they shall sit or not?
20025So, sir, it was you kicking up that devil of a dust outside there, was it?
20025Spanish doubloons?
20025Still there?
20025Still working, Jamie?
20025Tell me, Jamie, can I help you in anything?
20025The child told you this?
20025Then no one else knows it?
20025There is no doubt about his being dead?
20025They ca n''t?
20025To Europe?
20025To whose account?
20025Too small?
20025Trouble? 20025 Two hundred dollars?
20025Well, sir, and what are you spying about for? 20025 What are these?"
20025What are they saying?
20025What are you doing here, sir?
20025What do I care about Andrew Jackson?
20025What do_ you_ want, sir?
20025What good did that do us? 20025 What has David done?
20025What if it were, sir?
20025What is it, Jamie? 20025 What is it, Jamie?"
20025What is it, John?
20025What is it-- Jamie? 20025 What is it?
20025What is that?
20025What is your name?
20025What is your objection to proceeding without him?
20025What shall I do with the money?
20025What the devil is the cable for?
20025What was his name? 20025 What was his name?"
20025What''ll become of Jamie?
20025What''ll ye be doin''of her after I''m gone? 20025 What''s the matter here?"
20025What''s the matter, Jamie? 20025 What''s the matter?"
20025Where is McMurtagh?
20025Where?
20025Which of those two is the slave?
20025Who is it?
20025Who the h----l are you?
20025Why do n''t you call your kind friend father, since you call old McMurtagh grandpa?
20025Why do n''t you take the one- forty and meet her at Worcester? 20025 Why does he have New Orleans newspapers?"
20025Why not? 20025 Why should he write to me?"
20025Ye''ll na be closing the old counting- room?
20025Ye''ll not be telling Mercy?
20025You do n''t want to go to Paris, to Rome,--to make the grand tour like a gentleman, in short, as I did long before I was your age?
20025You do suspect him, then?
20025You feel sure that he was going to Havana?
20025You once said, sir, years ago( do you remember? 20025 ''James, are you ill?'' 20025 *****Now why the deuce ca n''t he say what he''s found and who''s with him?"
20025A good nice dancing- party, now?"
20025After all, what was his life, or his future, yes, or his honor, worth to any one?
20025And Harleston knows"--"Do you suppose he knows as well as I do, who have lived with you for fifty years?"
20025And do you know what he said?
20025And the one in Salem Street?"
20025And what is that to you?"
20025As he entered the office,"Has he told you?"
20025But how could he do so, now that he had this present from him?
20025But how did you ever know the d----d business was short?"
20025But what do you think of old Jamie?"
20025But what were you doing?"
20025But why did you not go back with Mercedes?"
20025Ca n''t stay to luncheon?
20025Can you make a story of such a life?
20025Clair?"
20025Clair?"
20025Could not Jamie borrow it, even?
20025Could you send it for me?
20025Dare we even say it was less real?
20025Dear, dear, what could be done for St. Clair, as he called himself?
20025Did n''t I hear of you at another Abolition meeting yesterday?
20025Did the teller find it out?"
20025Do n''t you send him occasionally to New York?"
20025Do we live in the sovereign State of Massachusetts, or do we not, I should like to know?"
20025Do ye suppose they didna count their money the nicht?"
20025Do you mean to say you''d walk into-- into a bank all alone?"
20025Do you not know where he is?"
20025Do you suppose I ca n''t be trusted with a matter of two hundred dollars?"
20025Do you suppose she''s with him?"
20025Does old Jamie give you an allowance?
20025Does she get them?
20025Else why do not they stop it sooner?
20025Forgive me-- do you forgive me?"
20025Had he not loved her?
20025Hang it, what was his name?"
20025Have you any objections?"
20025Have you anything to tell me?"
20025Have you come for a vacation?"
20025He certainly seems very ill.""Ah, James,"said the old man,"why did you laugh that day?
20025His memory, when he died, what mattered it to any one but Mercedes herself?
20025How could he have forgotten it?
20025How could he tell-- now-- when so nearly saved?
20025How could he urge his lady to repel the advances of this man without being open to the charge of selfishness, of jealousy?
20025How could spring have come in a night?
20025How does a man live whose heart rules his soul, and is broken; whose conscience rules his head, and is dishonored?
20025How does the man live, now?"
20025How is she?"
20025How old is he?"
20025How, then, did Jamie live?
20025I could do that myself, if-- if"--"Perhaps ye''ll be having the money about ye now?"
20025I have got a house for you"--"Perhaps, sir, you have even got me a wife?"
20025I hope she is well?"
20025I know he has done something"--"Nothing-- nothing is wrong, dear; I assure you"--"Then why are you so hard to him?
20025I suppose you''re proud you were adopting her?"
20025I took?
20025I''ll-- I''ll"--"Perhaps, sir,"says Mr. James,"you''ll wait and marry her yourself?"
20025In God''s name, why did he not borrow it, ask me for it?
20025Is McMurtagh yet well enough to work?"
20025Is n''t your name Mercedes?"
20025It had been so from about the time she must have died; dare one suppose he knew it?
20025It was as if the mother, who had so darkened( or shall we, after all, say lightened?)
20025Love was the best thing in the world; then why did it make the misery of it?
20025McMurtagh?"
20025Money- getting, love of self, love,--is not that quite all?
20025Mr. Bowdoin growled something that sounded like,"What if it is?"
20025No more trouble about that ship Maine Lady?
20025Now, here''s the keys, d''ye see?
20025Odd or Even?
20025Perhaps he had left her money?
20025Perhaps she might get on for a year-- if he wrote?
20025Perhaps you''d like to poke your nose in there?"
20025Pinckney, of Providence, I believe?''
20025She never played for her own pleasure; and what was the use of practicing now?
20025Should he borrow of Mr. Bowdoin?
20025So the next day, to Jamie, Mr. James, just as his mouth was open about the last shipment from Bordeaux:--"Well, what is it, Jamie?
20025Something about Miss Mercedes?"
20025The fellow started like a criminal; then recognizing the poor clerk,"Oh, it''s you, is it?"
20025The messenger went, first asking,"Can I help you with the safe?"
20025Then, as if to change the subject,"Did you see old Jamie after he left, yesterday?"
20025Was it not a species of selfishness-- like his presumption in loving her-- to care so for his own good name?
20025Was n''t it fair and square in the child to come down here?
20025Was there no way?
20025What business is that of ours?"
20025What could he do to find her lovers, a husband?
20025What could he do to give her friends of her own age?
20025What could he do?
20025What did it matter?
20025What is his name?"
20025What use was a piano among such as Hughson?
20025What''ll become of the new house?"
20025When is she coming?"
20025Where else has the child a home?"
20025Where was-- What world was this?
20025Where?
20025Which account was least likely to be drawn upon?
20025Why ca n''t you leave them both where a wise Providence placed them?
20025Why do n''t you chase the oranges, my dear?"
20025Why not let me take her there?"
20025Why not?
20025Why the devil do n''t you?"
20025Why was it that old Jamie, who should by rights have had his heart broken, was happier than fortunate David?
20025Why were women so impatient of each other?
20025Why will you not put the money in the business?"
20025Would not Mrs. Hughson put out the light?
20025Would you like a written statement?"
20025can you prove it?"
20025he cried( Mr. Bowdoin had always called Jamie so since he came into the bank),"will you kindly step down to my counting- room?
20025said he; and then,"Como se llama V.?"
20025who makes all that noise?"
3092When shall I be again at the Château of Candiac, with my plantations, my oaks, my oil mill, my mulberry trees? 3092 Had the provisions then been taken by the English? 3092 Had they reached that last mighty barrier of snow- capped peaks, rugged valleys, and torrential streams, beyond which lay the sea? 3092 Moving slowly as they did, could they have traveled from the distant Rockies from the time in January when they turned back? 3092 Was it the Rocky Mountains which they saw? 3092 Whence came the money? 3092 Where were the means to come from for this costly work of building forts? 3092 Who better to lead such an expedition than the brother of the new favorite whose success might discredit the husband of the old one? 3092 Women and children suffered fearful privations-- but what did such things matter in view of the high politics of the priest and of France? 3099 If, therefore, on leaving our harbors we are certainly to lose them, is it not better as to vessels, cargoes, and seamen, to keep them at home?
3099Were we able to prevent their going in and out, or stop them from taking our trade and our storeships even in sight of our garrisons?
31068***** What is the rightful place in history of the fiery horseman in front of the White House?
31068And who so likely to take the rôle as the patriotic and warlike general of the Tennessee militia?
31068Could frontiersmen who had never fought together before, who had never seen the face of a civilized foe, withstand the conquerors of Napoleon?
31068Did he prove himself worthy of the place and power he held?
31068His followers might ably defend his course on public questions, but what was it all worth if the people kept on shouting,"Hurrah for Jackson"?
31068The first question was, Who is to succeed Monroe?
31068and the next question, Who is to succeed the successor of Monroe?
3073117 Does the bold savage color of this picture affright us?
3073And the windowpanes?
3073And was it any wonder that they now doubted the love the parent State professed to feel for them?
3073As for the puerile threat of blood, had their quality really so soon become obliterated from the memory of North Carolina?
3073Cornstalk, in irony, demanded of them; No?
3073He may have put the question to them in the biblical words, Whither shall I flee?
3073He sees ahead-- the days of his great explorations and warfare, the discovery of Kentucky?
3073If Daniel be beside her, what does she see when she looks at him?
3073Or were these, the ethical tenets of almost all uncorrupted primitive tribes, transmitted from the Indian strain and association?
3073Shall we first kill all our women and children and then 126 fight till we ourselves are slain?
3073Surrender to those damned banditti?
3073What of the man?
3073Who is there to mourn for Logan?
3073Who shall venture to say it is not better worth preserving than many a classic?
3073Would we veil it?
30747And whither does the looking glass lead?
30747And who, pray, was William Sewell?
30747Blisters may be employed for the mitigation of pain, and perhaps ought not to be omitted when... is either fever[?]
30747Did the two meet in the City Tavern, in the market square, or upon that first day''s march of six miles when the troops bivouacked for the night?
30747Every proper old mansion should have a ghost-- and what could be nicer than an American patriot-- blue coat and cocked hat?
30747Is it possible that"1 Blue cloth coat with vellam holes"[75] related to his military service as major of Virginia militia?
30747L''ENVOI Where is the great seaport that was Alexandria?
30747Such sum as you may think me entitled to for last year as well as the percent you will oblige me by placing in the hands of Mr. Thomas Majore[?]
30747The cause I shall communicate, after rallying you for neglecting the means that introduced her to his favour which... to say truth were in[?]
30747The same Elizabeth?
30747Was Spring Gardens a young ladies academy as well as oysterhouse, tavern and jockey club?
30747What could be more natural than Mr. Hodgson looking up his friends, the Lees, on his arrival in Virginia?
30747Where the great docks, wharves and warehouses that lined the water front?
30747a present of delicious Cake, and potted Woodcocks; that wrought such wonders[?]
3038How is it possible,she exclaimed,"that at such an income we can support ourselves decently and honestly?"
3038And how is it to gain this all- embracing control?
3038And what plottings went on behind those locked and guarded doors?
3038Are you a party follower?
3038Are you tired of slavery-- of drudging for others-- of poverty and its attendant miseries?
3038Chairman: You want something better to eat and to wear, and better houses to live in?
3038During all these changes in the economic order, the interest of the laborer centered in one question: What return would he receive for his toil?
3038For example, a handbill distributed everywhere in 1846 asked: Are you an American citizen?
3038How is this contemplated revolution to be achieved?
3038Is the operator of a linotype machine a typesetter?
3038Labor and Politics 220 Bibliographical Note 261 Index 265 THE ARMIES OF LABOR?
3038The Armies of Labor By Samuel P. Orth A Chronicle of the Organized Wage- Earners Volume 40 of the Chronicles of America Series?
3038We came here because we were opposed, and what have we gained?
3038What does the world yet owe to American physicians or surgeons?
3038What have they done in mathematics?
3038What new constellations have been discovered by the telescopes of Americans?
3038What new substances have their chemists discovered?
3038Who drinks out of American glasses?
3038Who shall adjust the machinery in elevators-- the Machinists or Elevator Constructors?
3038Who shall have control over the coopers who work in breweries-- the Brewery Workers or the Coopers''Union?
3038Why not take enough of your property to provide yourself a home?
3038Why not vote yourself a farm?
3038Why should rulers like Mr. Gompers and Mr. Furuseth ¹ go to Congress?
3038Would you free your country and the sons of toil everywhere from the heartless, irresponsible mastery of the aristocracy of avarice?
3038or eats from American plates?
3038or goes to an American play?
3038or looks at an American picture or statue?
3038or sleeps in American blankets?"
3038or wears American coats or gowns?
3038or what old ones have they analyzed?
26278But,said the man,"where are the Egyptians?"
26278Science has certainly made some advancement, but where is the warrant for the boastingof sciolists of modern times?
26278Whither are we tending?
26278Who can tell?
26278***** What is the difference between getting more out of a thing than there is in it and creating something out of nothing?
26278*****"If the religious foundations and sanctions of morality are to be given up, what is to be substituted for them?"
26278--_Origin of Species, p. 100._ How are we to reconcile the conflicting ideas in this speculation?
26278264, 266, 413._ Do the facts sustain this assumption?
26278Are millions of years adequate as a cause, when associated with all the forces known in nature, to produce new species and extirpate old ones?
26278Are there no spiritual wants consequent upon the nature of mind?
26278BLIND FORCE OR INTELLIGENCE, WHICH?
26278But how was it?
26278By what other means do we distinguish between the rational and the insane?
26278Can I comprehended the infinite?
26278Can you get more out of a thing than there is in it?
26278Can you see across?
26278Could they think more freely?
26278Do we attribute all the mercies of physical life to a supreme intelligence?
26278Do we comprehend all that belongs to the physical sciences?
26278Do we comprehend matter?
26278Do you doubt this?
26278Do you say I am lost in God?
26278Do you say matter is infinite?
26278Do you see?
26278Do you use the old cry that all outside of matter belongs to the"unknown"and"unknowable?"
26278Does matter pass out of being with death?
26278Does this pass out of being with death?
26278Errors are found in all the histories of humanity; shall we therefore discard science and civil government?
26278Has he ever given it a name?
26278Has science no prerogatives above the physical?
26278Has such a revelation been made?
26278Have men made no mistakes in science?
26278How could this be made?
26278How do unbelievers manage such objections to the hypothesis that chemical laws explain everything in vegetable life?
26278How does this look by the side of the last quotation from Darwin?
26278How is all this accounted for?
26278How is it now?
26278How is this?
26278How much must I know?
26278How often do we hear men say,"Science is progressive?"
26278I know that I know, but do I comprehend that knowledge?
26278Is it a blind force that anticipates growth in the plant, and lays away food, in the tissues, for future use?
26278Is it necessary to the greatest good of the greatest number?
26278Is it not a dangerous thing to make God a liar?
26278Is it not a great insult?
26278Is it not strange that dying men will reject the motive of life?
26278Is it reasonable to allow that this revelation could be given by the spirit of God through holy men?
26278Is there a place in man''s physical nature for bread and meat, for food of every variety that man''s soul desires?
26278Is there an end in view that has governed in the great question of evolution of species, and the survival of the fittest?
26278Is there any agreement among unbelievers which would serve as a model for us poor souls to imitate?
26278Is there certain knowledge of missing links?
26278Is there life without antecedent life, etc.?
26278Is there no evidence of design here?
26278Is there no liability to mental suffering?
26278Is there not one species having its likeness represented by a species in the distant past?
26278Is there such a thing as jurisprudence?
26278Is there such a thing as morality carried into public relations?
26278Is this true?
26278It was a wonderful gain?
26278Lost(?)
26278May we not estimate civil government and religion both by the blood they have cost?
26278No service to whom?
26278Or, if you prefer it, what is the architect?
26278Reader,"how readest thou?"
26278SHALL WE ABANDON OUR RELIGION?
26278Shall we condemn Christianity on account of man''s failures?
26278Shall we discourage his honest efforts by keeping those failures always before him?
26278Shall we keep his many deviations from truth and principle before him in order to cause greater deviations?
26278Shall we on this account condemn all that in which man has and does progress?
26278Shall we repudiate on account of mistakes?
26278That is, in his philosophy, the"vital force is produced by the organism,"and the"organism is produced by the vital principle?"
26278The question is often asked,"Why were they not continued throughout the Christian dispensation?"
26278The question was asked,"Where are the Israelites?"
26278Then why the opposition?
26278There is nothing speculative(?)
26278They have been very true(?)
26278This orator asks the questions,"Whence came we?"
26278Those empty vessels of ours, hearts"endowed with inexhaustible hope,"must turn away from the grave(?)
26278To what end?
26278Was it blind force or intelligence, which?
26278Was it reasonable to expect a revelation from God?
26278We should ask no questions(?)
26278Well, how is it with the past?
26278Well, is there any better agreement among politicians, or in civil governments?
26278Were the people without a religious nature?
26278Were they both evolved from the same unit?
26278Were they in any sense better off?
26278What becomes of evolution?
26278What becomes of natural selection?
26278What becomes of the doctrine of the survival of the fittest?
26278What does Darwin know about the origin of life and mind?
26278What has unbelief to give to the people of our age more than it offered centuries ago?
26278What is the estimate placed upon it by the best minds of America?
26278What is the value of the religion of Christ?
26278What kind of a being must I be to know that"no message ever reached man from beyond the grave?"
26278What natural law is violated in"Partheno Genesis?"
26278What power is that which lies behind chemical affinities, and controls them with direct reference to organic being?
26278What will become of yon dry leaf, torn from its parent stem by this wintry blast?
26278When you ask an evolutionist for the links connecting new and old species, as he is pleased to denominate them, you receive the satisfactory(?)
26278Whence came we?
26278Where have last summer''s roses gone?
26278Where is the difficulty?
26278Where is the justice and goodness of God in the bloody wars of Israel?
26278Where is the morality and righteousness of the wars of which we read?
26278Where is the righteousness of capital punishment?
26278Where shall we find them?
26278Whither are we tending?
26278Who is the architect?
26278Who will"deliver"the unbelievers of our country"from this dead body?"
26278Why affirm the eternity of matter and deny the eternity of spirit?
26278Why do men strenuously avoid contradictory propositions?
26278Why not find a few of the missing links there?
26278Why should it be different with the young plant?
26278Why should it perish with it?
26278Why?
26278Why?
26278Will some bold unbeliever answer?
26278Will you accept it and experience the fact?
26278Will you dethrone the Creator?
26278or shall we turn misanthropists?
26278who can tell?
22030''Refectory,''what is a''refectory''? 22030 And did the old Romans really play at roulette, and was_ that_ one of their tables?"
22030And do you like ale?
22030And how do you do with them?
22030And how is it that he has kept his house?
22030And what difference,I said,"can one white hair make to any friend?"
22030And what dost thou expect, son Hassard?
22030And what is that?
22030And what of this?
22030And who has been passing you through a bark- mill that you look so ground- up?
22030And you ai n''t a major in the Confederate service?
22030And you ai n''t had no goings on with the rebels up the river to bring back the Confederacy here?
22030Brigham,I said in Spanish,"_ es la mano o el navajo_?"
22030But how in Heaven''s name,cried the girl,"could she_ know_ that_ you_ spoke Gitano?"
22030But how would_ you_ like, my dear, if you were of the lower orders, to wear a dress which proclaimed it?
22030Could you point him out to me?
22030Did you understand_ that_?
22030General Whipple,I replied,"is this town under military occupation in time of war, or is it not?"
22030German, or Irish, or what?
22030Got any land over?
22030How many fingers, be jabers? 22030 How much did it cost?"
22030I''ve got a present for her; are you going that way?
22030In the name of Heaven, who and what are you?
22030Is dot der Karl Leland vot dranslate de_ Reisebilder_? 22030 Is that all?"
22030No; what was it?
22030Och, Jamie, ye shtupid crature, Sure ye''re the divil''s son; How many fingers''load, thin, Did ye putt in this d--- d ould gun?
22030Shall I open the window?
22030Sir,said the lady,"do_ I look_ like an impostor?"
22030Then how much_ will_ you give, master?
22030Then who the devil are you, and where do you belong?
22030Then,he answered,"why do n''t you_ drink_ ale?"
22030What can I do to thank you?
22030What do you think of this?
22030What do you want?
22030What is the number of her room?
22030What makes you think so?
22030Where are you going so late by night?
22030Where is old Liz?
22030Where the devil did you get this?
22030Why not?
22030Why?
22030Yes, first- rate; geologer''s certificate; can you put it on the market?
22030Yes,he replied,"and how was it that you_ chanced_ to read that book?
22030_ Konnen Sie auch Deutsch sprechen_?
22030_ Pen a mandy_,_ Priscilla Cooper_,_ sa buti me sosti del tute for adovo pustini vashtini_?
22030_ Que diable_,_ mon ami_,_ faistu ici dans cette galere_?
22030_ You_ look like an officer,she said to Captain Colton,"and so does_ that_ one, but what is_ he_?"
22030( I_ think_ he said"will you be?")
22030( Tell me, Priscilla Cooper, how much should I give you for those woollen gloves?)
22030( road), or"Do you know Sam Smith?"
22030("How do you call that?")
22030A fellow- passenger asked me,"Is that your book?"
22030About this time( 1826?)
22030After a time he said,"Why do n''t you look at that picture?"
22030After all had departed, and I was smoking alone with Sir Charles, he said--"Well, what did you think of Dore?"
22030Aghast at such a tremendous feat, one who remained, asked,"Who in God''s wrath are you?--haven''t you a name?"
22030And being asked,"Wherefore this unrestrained hilarity?"
22030And seeing that my companion had a pair, he said scornfully:"Dave Goshorn, what do_ you_ know about such things?
22030And we conquered; but_ how_?
22030And what did I ever have to do with that Tower?
22030And where did I learn that?
22030And why?
22030Attaches of an opera company-- ladies''-maids who had made the grand tour-- who knows?
22030But hearing his victim groan, he was returning, when he met another servant, who said,"Juan, where are you going?"
22030But how to begin?
22030But she added triumphantly,"What do you say when I tell you that I had my_ cheque- book_?
22030But what on airth--""But are you for us, or against?"
22030Can you tell the difference between the_ Aschkenazim_ and the_ Sephardim_ by their eyes?
22030Could he refer me to some leading authority in the University, known to him, who would give me advice?
22030Did a Jew ever hear of Moses, or an American of General Washington?
22030Did you ever hear of him?"
22030Do any of you fellows know of a good governor for Mauritius?"
22030Do n''t you see the difference?"
22030Do you call_ that_ sitting up?
22030Do you know Grindstone Knob and a white house with green windows at its foot?"
22030Do you know what those men came here for?
22030Do you not remember hearing from our position at Carlisle the guns of that great battle-- the turning- point of the war?
22030Do you see that fat man laughing so heartily in the pit?
22030Do you see that great square tent?"
22030Does the reader remember the scene in"The Bohemian Girl"in which the dandy Count examines the nasty knife left behind by the gypsy Devilshoof?
22030Great was the amazement and delight of the Kaws, who roared with laughter, and their chief curiously inquired,"_ You_ Kaw?"
22030Had Jim surmised, by that marvellous intuition of character which blacks possess, that I had in me"the mystery"?
22030Hassard heard the whizz, and cried,"What''s that?"
22030He laughed, and said,"Do you find the result required in ale?"
22030He looked at me and said,"How long have you been in Chicago?"
22030He looked utterly amazed, and inquired,"What the devil did you think I said?"
22030Here Mr. Carlyle, looking utterly amazed and startled, though not at all angry, said, for the first time, in broad Scotch--"Whot''s_ thot_ ye say?"
22030Hillburn Jones, does thee know?
22030How could I have possessed it if I had not a right to draw?"
22030I answered,''My dear little woman, what does a candle or two signify to you?
22030I asked of the Indian,"_ Wa go nin- iu_?"
22030I explained, when he laughed heartily, and told me that his question was,"Has there been any firing here before?"
22030I forget who that was: was it Pischek?
22030I gazed at him in utter astonishment, as if I would say,"What manner of man art thou?"
22030I had read in_ Sartor Resartus_,"If a man reads, shall he not be learned?"
22030I have heard my mother say that as a girl she had a tame crow who was named Tom, and that he could distinctly cry the word"What?"
22030I nivir putt in a wan; Did ye think I''d be afther jammin''Me fingers into a gun?"
22030I remarked,"Then why the devil seek to overcome them?
22030I said abruptly,"I come from Mr.------; where are your trunks?"
22030Indeed, I can still recall it after sixty years:--"Who can tell me where Weinsberg lies?
22030Is it not a maxim of war, that he who strives to defend a defenceless place must be put to death?
22030Is it not more noble and sensible to yield where resistance is in vain, than to fight to the end?
22030Is it true that you''re a great friend of Jeff Davis?"
22030Is not a collection of such vases like a library?"
22030It was just opposite a very quaint old- fashioned collection of many little dwellings in one( modelled after the Fuggerei of Augsburg?)
22030Joseph Widdifield, does thee?"
22030Leland?"
22030May I here venture to mention that he always declared that my later poem of"Breitmann and the Pope"was the best Macaronic poem which he had ever read?
22030Now what I want to know is, if you''re_ not_ French, how came the_ whole_ of you to know it?"
22030One day George said--"Of course you have no Indian blood in you, Mr. Leland; but were n''t you a great deal among''em when you were young?"
22030One day I heard a lady say very meaningly,"I suppose that you know what kind of books he has_ and how he obtained them_?"
22030One day he said to me,"Why do n''t you publish your''Breitmann Ballads?''
22030One morning George asked me in confidence,"Mr. Leland, you''re not all French, are you?"
22030One morning I called, and after some deliberation he said,"You are a lawyer, are you not?"
22030Rozprava pochesky?
22030Seeing that I was one of them, one said to me,"Sir, where shall we make a barricade?"
22030She replied,"Oh, yes,"and then added naively,"but was n''t it really_ alt a humbug_?"
22030Should I go back and hang--- up over his own door?
22030So I called in Spanish,"Adonde venga usted?"
22030Some time after I met her magnificently dressed, and I said,''Sally, where do you live now?''
22030The official stared, and said--"Do I understand that you formally demand the keys?"
22030Thinking he had said,"Were you ever under fire before?"
22030Thus, I needed only say,"Seen any of the Coopers or Bosvilles lately on the drum?"
22030To which I replied,"Well, what is to pay?"
22030To which I replied,"What the devil do you want here, anyhow?"
22030Well, and what, O tourist, dost thou travel_ for_?
22030Whar do all dem books come from?
22030What am I to do?"
22030What business had you to come over my hedge into my field to steal my blackberries?"
22030What shall I do?"
22030What shall I do?"
22030What''s set_ you_ to gittin''deer''s horns?
22030What''s the reason?"
22030When I replied,"Only enough to pay my passage,"he replied,"Is that all?"
22030When I returned my teacher said--"Now, Mr. Leland, can you repeat accurately_ word for word_ what Mr. Dimpfel said?"
22030When Tom was walking about in the garden, if called, he would reply"What?"
22030When the proof was finished"Horace"said to me--"How is John Forney getting on?"
22030Where am I now?''
22030Which suggested to me the idea,"Does the public, then, generally believe that poets look like their heroes?"
22030Who makes all our boots an''clothes and sends us tea an''everythin''?
22030Who that lives in London ever goes to see the Tower?
22030Why did n''t they go to one of the other gentlemen?
22030Why not give in like a man?"
22030With a very grave expression he asked me,"Do n''t the gals in_ your_ part of the country allays break for the woods when they see_ you_ a- coming?"
22030[ Is it to be hand, or knife?]
22030_ Et depuisse- quand_,_ s''il vous plait_?"
22030_ Mais ou sont les neiges d''antan_, or the ducats of Panurge?
22030_ Mais ou sont les neiges d''antan_?
22030_ Quien sabe_?
22030_ Ya- hinzeer_--_wa Yahud_--_yin uldeen ak_?"
22030_ be_ you one of our people?"
22030daggers and whisky, and all kinds of beautiful things flying around for Brigham, but what am_ I_ to have?"
22030he cried,"you do n''t mean to shoot at him?"
22030he exclaimed,"kin you tell me where a chap could get some ammynition?"
22030replied,"Is it not enough to make a man laugh to see the Devil running away with two clergymen?"
22030what have you been saying to that Indian?"
22030what the devil are you doing here?"
22030where did you ever learn to talk Italian?"
22030{ 266a}"Do you remember the night we spent at the forge?
29558Any of you got any matches?
29558Did you ever get lost in the woods?
29558Then how is it that we never see any?
29558Whence did he come? 29558 Will you hear it through once more?"
29558( tr)]{ 369} Hat Size of hat Size of linen collar worn Answer following questions plainly: Age?
29558And his father seeing the wonder in the mother''s eyes, said,"Whence came he from?"
29558And the stars not as an astronomer, but as a traveler?
29558And where is that band who so vauntingly swore,''Mid the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country they''d leave us no more?
29558At night he cried to the moon"Whither?"
29558At the close of dinner one day, my father turned everybody out of the cabin, locked the door, and said to me:"David, what do you mean to be?"
29558But does a strong boy need a stimulant?
29558But what enemy?
29558But which owl?
29558Coffee and Tea Should a boy drink coffee or tea?
29558Could you use the above gases to extinguish fire?
29558Did you ever see the newt roll her eggs in small leaves, or the caddis fly make a case of bits of stick, leaves, and sand?
29558Do these things appeal to you?
29558Do you believe in loyalty, courage, and kindness?
29558Do you desire the knowledge to help the wounded quickly, and to make yourself cool and self- reliant in an emergency?
29558Do you love the woods?
29558Do you understand?
29558Do you wish to have all- round, well- developed muscles, not those of a great athlete, but those of a sound body that will not fail you?
29558Do you wish to learn the trees as the forester knows them?
29558Ever tasted one?
29558Had n''t you better give him that match?"
29558Have you anything for me?
29558Height?
29558How to Make Fire by Rubbing Sticks"How do the Indians make a fire without matches?"
29558How?
29558In the morning he stood on a mountain top and stretching out his hands cried,"Whence?"
29558O say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
29558Shall I use it to get a new course from the compass, or shall we make a fire and stay here till morning?"
29558So also on the plains, the old folks would ask the children at night,"Can you see the pappoose on the old squaw''s back?"
29558That''s my fate is it?
29558Weight?
29558What compound is formed when carbon is burned in air?
29558What does it mean?
29558What is a stimulant and what does it do?
29558What is that which the breeze, o''er the towering steep, As it fitfully blows, half conceals, half discloses?
29558What scout can add to this list?
29558Which track belongs to which bird?
29558Whither was he going?
29558Why can baking soda be used to put out a small fire?
29558Why did life burst into leaf and flower with the coming of spring?
29558Why did the child become a man and the man grow old and die?"
29558Why did the sun rise and set?
29558Why do n''t you laugh, and make us all laugh too, And keep us mortals all from getting blue?
29558Why do n''t you laugh?
29558Why lift extra weight when tramping?
29558Why will fresh plaster harden quicker by burning charcoal in an open vessel near it?
29558Would you like to be an expert camper who can always make himself comfortable out of doors, and a swimmer that fears no waters?
29558Would{ xii} you like to form habits that will surely make your success in life?
29558[ Illustration: Tracks; Walking, Trotting, Canter, Galloping, Lame Horse Walking: Which leg is the lame in?]
29558{ 358} The Star- Spangled Banner O Say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hail''d at the twilight''s last gleaming?
29558{ 401} Do You Know This Manual From Cover To Cover?
3098Do you think so, Sir?
3098But how were cargoes to reach these vessels from the vast regions beyond the Great Lakes?
3098But what of this West for whose commerce the great struggle was being waged?
3098If roads and canals would not serve the city on the Chesapeake, what of the railroad on which so many experiments were being made in England?
3098Is there any young fellow of the present time, who aspires to take the place of a stoker?
3098Now, with canals building to the north of her and canals to the south of her, what of her prestige and future?
3098Were their efforts to keep the Chesapeake metropolis in the lead to be set at naught?
3098What land canoes could compete with the flotillas that brought their priceless cargoes of furs each year to Montreal and Quebec?
3098Where are you, O rattling Quicksilver, O swift Defiance?
3098Where are you, charioteers?
31594Silent?
31594What bedews the starry emblem, With the startling shade of crimson?
31594What broad stream pursues its flowing, Through the fateful, dark camera?
28831Are we to resort to the sword when we get defeated at the ballot box?
28831Are you really ready to incur this guilt?
28831Are you united at home-- are you free from the apprehension of civil discord, with all its fearful consequences?
28831But if you were assembled in general convention, which would you think the safest depository of this discretionary power in the last resort?
28831Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
28831Can it be that Providence has not connected the permanent felicity of a nation with its virtue?
28831Can the States, who magnanimously surrendered their title to the territories of the West, recall the grant?
28831Can those sacrifices be recalled?
28831Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
28831Did the name of Washington sanction, did the States deliberately ratify, such an anomaly in the history of fundamental legislation?
28831Did they never get beaten before?
28831Did we pledge ourselves to the support of an airy nothing-- a bubble that must be blown away by the first breath of disaffection?
28831Do our neighboring republics, every day suffering some new revolution or contending with some new insurrection-- do they excite your envy?
28831For what do you throw away these inestimable blessings-- for what would you exchange your share in the advantages and honor of the Union?
28831How often may bad purposes be falsely imputed?
28831If your leaders could succeed in establishing a separation, what would be your situation?
28831In how many cases are they concealed by false professions?
28831In how many is no declaration of motive made?
28831In our present differences is either party without faith of being in the right?
28831Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before?
28831Is it true, then, that any right, plainly written in the Constitution has been denied?
28831Is the unconstitutionality of these laws of that description?
28831Is there a doubt whether a common government can embrace so large a sphere?
28831Is there any better or equal hope in the world?
28831Is there such perfect identity of interests among the States to compose a new Union as to produce harmony only, and prevent renewed secession?
28831Must Congress protect slavery in the Territories?
28831One party to a contract may violate it-- break it, so to speak; but does it not require all to lawfully rescind it?
28831Shall fugitives from labor be surrendered by national or by State authorities?
28831Shall there be a free port in one State, and enormous duties in another?
28831Then what reason have they?
28831Was our devotion paid to the wretched, inefficient, clumsy contrivance, which this new doctrine would make it?
28831Were we mistaken, my countrymen, in attaching this importance to the Constitution of our country?
28831What act has been omitted to be done?
28831What are they?
28831What cause, what excuse do disunionists give us for breaking up the best Government on which the sun of heaven ever shed its rays?
28831What evidence do they present of this?
28831What good cause have they now that has not existed under every Administration?
28831Where breathes the foe but falls before us?
28831Which is the most discreet disposition of the power?
28831Who is to make the scrutiny?
28831Who that is a sincere friend to it can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?
28831Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation?
28831Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground?
28831Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people?
28831Will it not be their wisdom to rely for the preservation of these advantages on the Union by which they were procured?
28831Will they not henceforth be deaf to those advisers, if such there are, who would sever them from their brethren and connect them with aliens?
28831Will you hazard so desperate a step, while any portion of the ills you fly from, have no real existence?
28831Will you risk the commission of so fearful a mistake?
28831Will you, while the certain ills you fly to, are greater than all the real ones you fly from?
28831With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us?
28831Would it not be well to ascertain why we do it?
28831Would you add a clause giving it to each of the States, or would you sanction the wise provisions already made by your Constitution?
28831it is rendered impossible by its vices?
31793Why should I rust in inactivity?
314A_ Lady''s Experiences in the Wild West in 1883_, London( 1883?
314At a pause the bishop shook his long, wise head and remarked,"My son, when DO you get time to think?"
314But knowledge of what?
314Do I contradict myself?
314Figureless and with more human interest is_ Prairie Experiences in Handling Cattle and Sheep_, by Major W. Shepherd( of England), London?
314In an article entitled"What Ideas Are Safe?"
314In_ Our Southwest_, Erna Fergusson has a whole chapter on"What is the Southwest?"
314With Boyce House''s earlier_ Were You in Ranger?_, this book gives a contemporary picture of the gushing days of oil, money, and humanity.
314_ Cow- Boys and Colonels: Narrative of a Journey across the Prairie and over the Black Hills of Dakota_, London, 1887; New York( 1888?).
31156); for"weak move"a note of interrogation(?).
311562, II, 12, 13;_ Germania_, 30- 31; Strabo p. 291 f. CHAUCER, GEOFFREY Life(?
31156: H(?
31156Another variety of yell is illustrated by that of the School of Practical Science of Toronto University:"Who are we?
31156CHETTLE, HENRY( 1564?-1607?
31156Ca n''t you guess?
31156He characterized the verses as"wonderful for their harmony and spirit,"and added,"Give me leave to ask you where Rowley''s poems are to be had?
31156It now remains to be asked-- what are the laws which govern the action of these forces?
31156One of the oldest examples of these personal cheers is:"Who was George Washington?
31990A short while thereafter a party of Confederates rode up, wearing the blue overcoats which effectually(?)
31990Upon arriving at the clover field, he looked around for Marr but not finding him, asked one of his men,"Where is your captain?"
29952Hans Breitman gife a barty-- Vhere ish dot barty now?
29952Shall gravitation cease when you go by?
29952To which of these religions do you specially adhere?
29952What''s your business, stranger, in these parts?
29952But does romance disappear from the farm with machinery and scientific agriculture?
29952But how much of this humor, after all, is either essentially universal in its scope or else a matter of mere stage- setting and machinery?
29952But just what subtle racial differentiation had been at work, since William Hawthorne migrated to Massachusetts with Winthrop in 1630?
29952But precisely what national traits are to be discovered in this eminent fellow- countryman of ours?
29952Did the colonist need a tool?
29952Does not the_ Autocrat of the Breakfast Table_ itself presuppose the existence of a truly cultivated society?
29952Does this make Nathaniel Hawthorne merely an"Englishman with a difference,"as Mr. Kipling, born in India, is an"Englishman with a difference"?
29952Enjoying the thing liberty, have we been therefore less concerned with the idea?
29952Has our literature kept equal pace with our thinking and feeling?
29952He betrays it in this striking passage from his_ Journal_, about the sculptor Greenough:--"What interest has Greenough to make a good statue?
29952Is there, then, a distinctly American type of humor and satire?
29952National smugness and conceit, the impatience crystallized in the phrase,"What have we got to do with abroad?"
29952Next, what is right, just, lawful for my crowd?
29952Or is it simply another illustration of the defective passion of American literature?
29952Shall we enter the preoccupation plea once more?
29952The farm expands over the wolf''s den, the Indian becomes a blacksmith, but do the gross and material instincts ultimately triumph?
29952The first instinct, perhaps, is to ask what is right, just, lawful, for me?
29952The sole question is,"Are you on the Lord''s side?"
29952This vast series of kaleidoscopic changes which we call America; has it produced a humor of its own?
29952Toward what tangible symbols of the invisible did their eyes instinctively turn?
29952Was Hawthorne, then, simply an Englishman living in America?
29952Were not such heroes, impossible as they would have been in any other civilized country, perfectly illuminative of your national state of mind?"
29952What are the causes of American romance, the circumstances and qualities that have produced the romantic element in American life and character?
29952What is it which contradicts, inhibits, or negatives the romantic tendency?
29952What is the evidence?
29952What is the use of battling for one''s own opinions when one can already see that the multitude is on the other side?
29952When you meet a bore or a hypocrite or a plain rascal, is it better to chastise him with laughter or to flay him with shining fury?
29952Who cares whether it is good?
29952Why should New Jersey, for example, be more ridiculous than Delaware?
29952Why should the suburban dweller of every city be regarded with humorous condescension by the man who is compelled to sleep within the city limits?
29952Why?
29952Will an author choose to address the selected guests or the casual crowd?
29952Yet when one asks the great Russian,"What am I to do as a member of this fellowship?"
29952Yet who does not know that the inherent instinct for political order may be accompanied by mental disorderliness?
2329And Betts Shoreham has nothing to do with all this dread?
2329And did they take any, Mr. Bobbinet? 2329 And have n''t all girls mothers?
2329And the DEAREST? 2329 And to whom will that difference belong?"
2329And what did it cost, pray? 2329 And why not?
2329And you will take her without a cent, you say?
2329And you, Mademoiselle Hennequin; I hope you, too, were agreeably entertained?
2329And your family name is not Hennequin?
2329And, pray, sir, how can that handkerchief have brought about any such result?
2329At home!--is there, indeed? 2329 But why not, Julia?"
2329By the dozen, or by the gross, sir?
2329Ca n''t I persuade you to take THIS?
2329Consequences!--may I ask, sir, to what consequences you allude?
2329Did I, sir? 2329 Did he?"
2329Does this wish, then, extend to the plural number?
2329Hang it,THOUGHT Tom, again,"who knows?
2329Has my grandmother asked for me, Nathalie?
2329Horses and carriages, of course? 2329 How much, sir?
2329I hope YOU enjoyed yourself better, Julia?
2329Is Miss Monson addicted to such VERY high spirits?
2329It meant to FILL, as they call it, does it not?
2329It''s all common property, Monson-- but, what have become of your sister and Mademoiselle Hennequin? 2329 Love?
2329Mademoiselle Hennequin, for mercy''s sake, be as frank and simple as I know your nature prompts-- DO you, CAN you love me?
2329No money, mademoiselle? 2329 No?"
2329Now, Mr. Thurston, I believe I understand this matter,said the father, in a very business- like manner;"you wish to marry my daughter?"
2329Pray, sir, may I ask,Mr. Monson now coming in,"did you pay for Jule''s handkerchief?
2329Referred? 2329 Shall I send it, Miss Eudosia; or do n''t you like to trust it out of your sight?"
2329Style? 2329 Tell me the worst at once-- is it true, HAVE you failed?"
2329Tell me, mon cher cousin,said Adrienne, smiling through her tears--"were your grand- parents, my good uncle and aunt, were they happy?
2329Then, so far as she herself is concerned, you wish me to understand that she accepts you?
2329This shows that you are, in truth, a lover of plain- dealing, Mr. Thurston-- and now, as to the handkerchief?
2329What CAN be the matter, Ma?
2329What have we here?
2329What is Betts Shoreham to me, or what am I to Betts Shoreham? 2329 What is the matter now, Jack?"
2329What say the YOUNG gentlemen to this?
2329What, alone with my daughter''s fine pocket- handkerchief? 2329 What, weary of beautiful dresses?
2329When does your lease end, mademoiselle?
2329When may I tell Mrs. Thoughtful, then, that you will send it to her?
2329Who else can it be, then?
2329Who is the lady to whom Mr. Shoreham is so devoue this evening?
2329Who is your BOSS, pocket- handkerchief?
2329Why do n''t Charley, then, take her himself? 2329 Why should I say''yes,''when it can lead to no good result?"
2329Why so, chere Clara?
2329Why, Mr. W., that is downright monarchical, is it not?
2329Why, they are NOT in''statu quo''--but in a''semper eadem''--I beg pardon, do you understand Latin?
2329Would it suit you, madame,she asked, as if dreading a repulse,"to part with one of these?"
2329Yes, I see you are feminine, by your ornaments-- still, you might tell a fellow who is your boss?
2329You do not expect to sell it at what it cost?
2329You mean, Henry, that you have failed?
2329You will not deny, Clara, that any thing which is fettered is not free? 2329 You would not have a young lady use her pocket- handkerchief like a snuffy old nurse, Clara?"
2329And that freedom is the greatest blessing of this happy country; and that trade ought to be as free as any thing else?"
2329And what state is your militia actually in?"
2329And why should she?
2329And you are referred?"
2329Are you European, also?"
2329Bobbinet?"
2329But what were you about to say of political economy?
2329But you are of foreign birth, ma''am, I should think by your dress and appearance?"
2329But, possibly, you do not wish to hear the calculation-- ladies, generally, dislike figures?"
2329But, why should this handkerchief awaken any feeling in you, monsieur?
2329COLONEL Silky?
2329Could it be that the grateful girl still intended to make her offering to the Duchesse de d''Angouleme?
2329Do you call a handkerchief with such lace, and all this magnificent work on it, and which cost a HUNDRED DOLLARS, foolish?
2329Do you call a pocket- handkerchief useless?"
2329Do you think she has an aristocratic air?"
2329Eudosia said,"that every person in Mrs. Trotter''s rooms should stare so at me, this evening?
2329Every thing on a genteel and liberal scale?"
2329Had we not better remain under the influence of the poetical star?"
2329Have you thought of your price, mademoiselle?"
2329Here it is; what do you think of my choice?"
2329How could such a thing be USED, for instance?"
2329How much fortune do you think will be necessary to make such a couple happy, at starting in the world?
2329How much is it?
2329I dare say your Pa is worth as much as that?"
2329I did hope that no sister of MINE would run into any such foolish extravagance-- do you own it, Jule?"
2329I do n''t remember the name-- which of OUR editors is he?"
2329I suppose you include dinners, sir, and a manly competition with one''s fellow citizens, in real New York form?"
2329I suppose your Pa makes you study political economy, my dear?"
2329I wonder if it be patriotic to say, OUR winters?"
2329In the name of heaven, how are we to bury your grandmother?"
2329Is Louis Philippe likely to maintain the throne, in France?"
2329Is it foolish to have money, or to be thought rich?"
2329It will say,''of what use are all my excellent lessons in taste and prudence, if an elder sister''s example is to counteract them?''
2329Julie is no ghost, though she is sometimes so delicate and ethereal, and as for Henny--""Who?"
2329Let me see-- had I best begin to screw him up in this interview, or wait for the next?
2329Monson?"
2329Mr. Thurston-- and of what is it your pleasure to accuse me of being the image?"
2329My father says it is----""What?
2329Now, does not this alter the matter about the pocket- handkerchief?
2329Now, how much do you guess?"
2329Of course you know what that means?"
2329Of what USE is a pocket- handkerchief like this?
2329Pray, what may that mean in particular?"
2329Shoreham?"
2329Shoreham?"
2329Surely-- surely-- this is not your work, mademoiselle?"
2329That she was a little addicted to this weakness, is true-- who ever knew a commissionaire that was not?
2329Thurston?"
2329Thurston?"
2329Was their union blessed?"
2329What am I to understand, sir, by your being referred?"
2329What do you think Pa is worth?"
2329What do you think of THIS?"
2329What is a BOSS?"
2329What is the price?"
2329What say you, mademoiselle-- will you accept the forty five francs, or would you prefer seeing the marchande de mode?"
2329What was it to me whether I were a modest plant, of half a cubit in stature, or the proudest oak of the forest-- man or vegetable?
2329What young man will dare to choose a wife from among young ladies who expend so much money on their pocket- handkerchiefs?"
2329What, just when I''ve paid a hundred dollars for a pocket- handkerchief?
2329Whom do you think I could mean, else?
2329Why ca n''t we aim higher at once, and get such girls as the Burtons, for instance?"
2329Will you have the goodness to explain this matter to me?"
2329Will you have the goodness to explain what you mean by that''yes?''"
2329You are not about to enact the Moor, in your days of wooing?"
2329You mean, to keep a liberal and gentlemanly establishment, as would become your son- in- law?"
2329You must have observed something very peculiar in my language, at the commencement of this exceedingly interesting dialogue?"
2329You own this handkerchief?"
2329commenced the mother--"and so the general has it all to answer for-- why did you let him give so many notes for you?"
2329exclaimed John Monson, in surprise;"has Miss Flowergarden made a call, and is this her card?"
2329exclaimed the wife--"YOU up at this hour?--what CAN have happened?
2329what HAS come to our door?"
2329who entered the room at that instant--"is this bit of a rag yours, or is it not more likely to be Henny''s?"
2329who, even in this extravagant and reckless country, could be found to pay such a price?
2329{ Mais, le malle...= But, what about your trunk, sir?}
2329{ en famille= at home}"I''m sure I can scarcely be grateful enough, my dear fellow-- but, you do not call her so to her face?"
2329{ preferred= promoted}"What has Honor brought you NOW?"
2329{ tant soit peu= an ever so tiny amount}"What is the''yes,''of which you speak,"she inquired,"and, on which you seem to lay so much stress?"
2329{''statu quo''= in the same state as always( Latin)}"And the newspapers-- and the news-- and the politics?"
29145Amontillado? 29145 And ez that the kind o''chirpin''these critters keep up?"
29145And the motto?
29145Died?
29145Do I understand you that he''s been bucking agin faro with the money that you raised on hash? 29145 Do you mean to say that you''ve been givin''all the money you made here to this A1 first- class cherubim?"
29145How about the doctors?
29145How long have you had that cough?
29145How?
29145How?
29145Niter?
29145Say?
29145Well?
29145Well?
29145What can she want here?
29145What servants,says Jeremy Taylor,"shall we have to wait upon us in the grave?
29145Whither?
29145Who,says Sir Thomas Browne,"knows the fate of his bones, or how often he is to be buried?
29145You? 29145 A mason?
29145A pipe?
29145And what did she do?"
29145And, after all, why not?
29145Are they not partly right?
29145Are, then, the sculptured urn and storied monument nothing more than symbols of family pride?
29145But is it not getting late?
29145But who else?
29145Can it break down the distinction of virtue and vice?
29145Can it confound the good with the bad?
29145Coleridge, Samuel Taylor; biographical note on, V, 70; articles by-- does fortune favor fools?
29145Did I talk all this off to the schoolmistress?
29145For what are the classics but the noblest recorded thoughts of man?
29145Have his powers been wasted?
29145How could they seem other than vulgar and hateful?
29145How much new thought have we contributed to the common stock?
29145How shall I explain or understand?
29145I OF DOCTORS, LAWYERS, AND MINISTERS[9]"What is your general estimate of doctors, lawyers, and ministers?"
29145If not, how explain the charm with which he dominates in all tongues, even under the disenchantment of translation?
29145If the bell rings, why should we run?
29145If the tone of the uncultivated American has too often the arrogance of the barbarian, is not that of the cultivated as often vulgarly apologetic?
29145Is his life therefore lost?
29145Is it a pretty shell?
29145Is it a satisfactory shell?
29145Is it certain that we shall be ashamed of a bankruptcy of honor, if we can only keep the letter of our bond?
29145Is it not the highest art of a republic to make men of flesh and blood, and not the marble ideals of such?
29145Is that a cemetery coming into view yonder, with its ghostly architecture of obelisks and broken columns and huddled headstones?
29145Isabel, does it take all this to get us plain republicans to Albany in comfort and safety, or are we really a nation of princes in disguise?
29145No?
29145Prue says that brides are always beautiful, and I, who remember Prue herself upon her wedding- day-- how can I deny it?
29145Sez I,"Fair youth, do you know what I''d do with you if you was my sun?"
29145Shall I tell you some things the Professor said the other day?"
29145Suppose what I''d said to you was the frozen truth, and you knowed it, would that have been the square thing to play on you?"
29145The roar of laughter that greeted this frank confession was broken by a quiet voice asking,"And what did you say?"
29145The_ Edinburgh Review_ never would have thought of asking,"Who reads a Russian book?"
29145Was it that they expected too much from the mere miracle of freedom?
29145What company has that lonely lake, I pray?
29145What did I say to the schoolmistress?
29145What had wealth to do there?
29145Who hath the oracle of his ashes, or whither they are to be scattered?"
29145Why should it crowd the dust of the great?
29145Why should we knock under and go with the stream?
29145Will they not be awaiting us at the palazzo, the Lady Fortunato and the rest?
29145Would she not be looking, by the morrow''s night, upon a subjugated England, a reenslaved Holland-- upon the downfall of civil and religious liberty?
29145You do n''t think I should expect any woman to listen to such a sentence as that long one, without giving her a chance to put in a word?
29145You hear me?"
29145You keep school, do n''t you?
29145all that is truly great, and pure, and godlike, with all that is scorned, and sinful, and degraded?
29145and you makin''the hash?"
29145the noble with the base?
29145what friends to visit us?
31641Can we be sure that the same result was not obtained on the old chalumeau before keys were added, by partially uncovering the hole for the thumb?
31641How was this amazing transformation brought about?
31641Of"Hullo, my fancie, whither wilt thou go?"
31641See Taylor,_ Authentic Memoirs of Mrs Clarke_; Clarke(?
31641The treatise_ Who is the Rich Man that is Saved?_ is an admirable exposition of the narrative contained in St Mark''s Gospel x.
12369About Mehetabel?
12369Ah, mon Dieu,''tis provoking--(she talks a little English).--"Why, what is the matter, Pauline: what is provoking?"
12369And I was n''t frozen to death in the tower?
12369And he is dead?
12369And he is n''t conceited, is he?
12369And he never asked her?
12369And if he wishes to be paid, notwithstanding?
12369And so you are never going to speak to me again?
12369And the Empress?
12369And the King of Rome?
12369And what business had you there? 12369 And what doth the pander of the Sybarite within the dusty halls of learning?"
12369And what, in the devil''s name, brings Cosmo Ruggieri hither?
12369And when was this, Ellen? 12369 And who are you?"
12369And who may be this Phoenix-- this Gargantua of intellect-- who is to vanquish us all, as Panurge did Thaumast, the Englishman?
12369And who then?
12369And you are not going to stay and talk to me?
12369Away with Elizabeth of England,cried a scholar of Cluny:"what doth her representative here?
12369But I did n''t bring him up on a lightning- rod, did I? 12369 But tell me, then, where I am?"
12369But the monk?
12369But what do you want here, at the Corners? 12369 But, Hilary, suppose he were to find me lying down here behind you, hiding?"
12369But,said he, summoning up his recollections,"they did not shoot me, then?"
12369Dear heart,he said once,"What is''t ails thee?"
12369Do n''t I find it a little slow up here at the Corners? 12369 Do you mean you are glad I was disgraced before the whole school?"
12369Do you think he sees me?
12369Does he see you?
12369Else, wherefore our rejoinder to his cartels?
12369For what purpose?
12369Had n''t you better lie down, too?
12369Have you forgotten it?
12369How could you fool me, Hilary? 12369 How dare you say so, when he''s got both his eyes?
12369How is the Emperor?
12369How much will pay them off, and restore your credit?
12369How? 12369 I say, what do you want, down there?"
12369In debt, Amy: what do you mean?
12369Is Mr. Clay to be in court to- day?
12369Is he coming this way?
12369Is it not so?
12369Is it permitted for a matron to arm a youthful knight? 12369 Is it time to get up now?"
12369Is n''t this a hotel?
12369Is not Crichton victorious?
12369Is that all?
12369Is that all?
12369Is this permitted, lady?
12369May I inquire_ why_ he did n''t marry Mehetabel?
12369Now, then?
12369Now?
12369Oh-- something to lean on-- a help-- where? 12369 Sha n''t I?"
12369Silas? 12369 Since Robert told his story to your uncle, or before?"
12369The Prince Imperial? 12369 The Saviour?"
12369The altar- piece? 12369 The lady you were engaged to?"
12369Then answer me, Ellen, this moment, and distinctly: for what purpose were you seeking Mrs. Langford''s cottage by that forbidden path, and when?
12369Then you will not answer? 12369 This is mere mockery, Ellen: how dare I believe even this poor evidence of repentance, with the recollection of your past conduct?
12369Used them-- and for what?
12369Well, Mr. Jaffrey, how''s Andy this evening?
12369Well,methinks I hear Betsey and Lucy say,"what is cousin''s dress?"
12369What business has he here with his suite, on occasions like to the present?
12369What do I care,said he,"if a couple of hundred babblers of deputies put one king in place of another?
12369What do you call this chicken- coop of a town?
12369What do you think of having Andy enter West Point, when he''s old enough?
12369What do you want heah, Aun''Charlotte?
12369What does she say?
12369What doth the jealous- pated slayer of his wife and unborn child within the reach of free- spoken voices, and mayhap of well- directed blades? 12369 What doth the wrinkled old dealer in the black art hope to learn from us?
12369What is going on there?
12369What is more cheerful, now, in the fall of the year, than an open wood- fire? 12369 What is that?"
12369What news of the cholera did the stage coach bring this mohning?
12369What shall I do?
12369What the devil are your sub- prefects to me? 12369 What title hath the Abbé de Brantôme to a seat among us?"
12369What to us is a president of Parliament, or a governor of the city?
12369What''s the matter?
12369What, run away?
12369When can I see you again-- soon?
12369Who''s going to keep me?
12369Who? 12369 Why did you tell me that you were poor?
12369Why has my uniform been taken off? 12369 Why, do n''t you love walking?"
12369Why, where am I?
12369Why?
12369Will you be there?
12369Will you come?
12369Will you confess, Ellen, if I stay? 12369 Will you let me?"
12369Will you?
12369Would you own his body if he_ should_ die?
12369You are sure there are no more?
12369You are the servant?
12369You''re a civil engineer, are you?
12369***** But say, dost thou not adore and prize The illustrious and rich black pudding?
12369--"And the other children, where are they?"
12369--''And girls, are you contented to be in service?''
12369... ACT V-- SCENE II AEGISTHUS-- CLYTEMNESTRA_ Aegis._--Hast thou performed the deed?
12369... Cassandra chosen as my rival?
12369... Flagitious woman, dost thou grasp the sword?
12369... My wife?..
12369... Orestes?
12369... Wilt thou Murder my son?
12369... but how?
12369... my mother?
12369AMY''S VALLEY OF HUMILIATION From''Little Women''"That boy is a perfect Cyclops, is n''t he?"
12369AN ERECHITE''S LAMENT How long, O my Lady, shall the strong enemy hold thy sanctuary?
12369AN INVITATION Why wait we for the torches''lights?
12369And Freedom''s hand protect the impartial bard?
12369And for the sake of this love have I no right to even a thought of yours?
12369And is it true?...
12369And public Justice sanctify the award?
12369And shall I let him live Who cares not for my love?
12369And shall we not run into dissensions among ourselves?
12369And she?
12369And what should we expect to find on those first shores?
12369And where is found me A limit to these sorrows?
12369And where is the degree of vice or immorality which shall deprive the citizen of the right to supplicate for a boon, or to pray for mercy?
12369And will not many men have many minds?
12369And yet what word do I say?
12369Anu looked at him and mourned:-- And now, Adapa, wherefore Has thou not eaten or drunken?
12369Anu opened his mouth and spake, Said to the gods his children:-- Who will conquer Zu?
12369Are limes the fashion now?
12369Are n''t they pretty?"
12369Are not these, O_ Mirzah_, Habitations worth contending for?
12369Are they his fellow- hunters, or his associates in old athletic sports?
12369Are you all done?
12369Are you all done?"
12369Are you hid?"
12369As I was walking with him last Night, he asked me how I liked the good Man whom I have just now mentioned?
12369Atrides knows it all?
12369But pray, says he, you that are a Critick, is this Play according to your Dramatick Rules, as you call them?
12369But should you not rather send into exile this common pest of the Greeks?
12369But the question is, Do their changes tend to follow any regular and definite order?
12369But what do I behold?
12369But what is that to us?
12369But what more was she to do or say now?
12369But who approaches?
12369But who is this lady?
12369But who revealed our love?
12369By what hand?
12369CASSANDRA Hither, whither, Phoebus?
12369CHORUS Well, what of Phoebus, maiden?
12369COWARDS/* In the deep circle of Siddim hast thou seen, Under the shining skies of Palestine, The sinister glitter of the Lake of Asphalt?
12369Can any government be free which is not administered by general stated laws?
12369Can loving children e''er reprove With murmurs, whom they trust and love?
12369Can we suppose that characteristics like these have been communicated from one animal to another?
12369Children of my country, what tempest has thrown you upon this inhospitable shore?"
12369Come, come along: what is the matter with you?"
12369DISPUTATION BETWEEN PEPIN, THE MOST NOBLE AND ROYAL YOUTH, AND ALBINUS THE SCHOLASTIC_ Pepin_--What is writing?
12369Did ever any kingdom or State regain its liberty, when once it was invaded, without bloodshed?
12369Did he foresee his own fate?
12369Did you ever, my dear Betsey, see a person in real life such as your imagination formed of Sir Charles Grandison?
12369Didst thou commit the murder?
12369Do n''t you know?
12369Do n''t you like limes?"
12369Do not you prefer the conversation of the world to the chirping of birds, and the splendor of a court to the rude aspect of an uncultivated desert?
12369Do you hear those little chirps and twitters coming out of that piece of apple- wood?
12369Do you suppose, little sister, that I want to keep all fifteen at home like so many cabbages in a single bed?"
12369Does Life appear miserable, that gives thee Opportunities of earning such a Reward?
12369Does it say, that, before presenting a petition, you shall look into it and see whether it comes from the virtuous, and the great, and the mighty?
12369Don''I see''em settin''''roun''dese taverns f''om mohnin''till night?"
12369Eleven year old, was n''t he?
12369For one needs must rear The heedless infant like an animal,( How can it else be?)
12369Fougas threw the mirror to the ground, and cried out:--"What is that you are telling me?
12369France is still the queen of the world, is she not?"
12369God vainly knocked at my heart''s door until the children fell ill. Oh, what would become of me if these flowers were gathered?
12369Has n''t your father any valuables?
12369Has n''t your mother any jewelry that you can get hold of?
12369Hath he cast his own horoscope?
12369Have these ladies any messages to give me for him?"
12369He cast a wistful look toward the apples in the chimney:"My old wife, little sister?"
12369Help me, thy nest is as broad as the earth, Thy snare is like the heavens, Who can escape out of thy net?
12369Her heart beat wildly; she longed unspeakably-- but for what?
12369How can I, being on intimate terms, as it were, with thousands and thousands of people?
12369How can you be generous in deeds if you are so avaricious in words?
12369How could I think that she stood in need of help on whom Heaven had showered its best gifts?
12369How is it that I appear to see two?
12369How many leagues is it to Dantzic?"
12369How much am I offahed foh ole King Sol''mon?"
12369How much, then, am I offahed foh the vagrant?
12369How much, then, is bid foh''i m?"
12369How much, then, to staht''i m?
12369How shall we be governed so as to retain our liberties?
12369I look in at a door.... A_ patio!_ How shall I describe a_ patio?_ It is not a court, nor a garden, nor a room; but it is all three things combined.
12369I protest, I think I never saw a more graceful, comely person; but how comes it about, I beseech you, that you should live so much better than I?
12369I sting cheerily In my bright days, But now all wearily Chaunt I my lays; Sorrowing tearfully, Saddest of men, Can I sing cheerfully, As I could then?
12369I was constrained To bring the news myself, that now my life Is irrecoverably forfeited To the king''s vengeance..._ Cly._--What is this I hear?
12369I yearned for them so much that I grew ill-- don''t you think it was so, mon père?
12369I''ve been sick, then?"
12369II What strain was his in that Crimean war?
12369INVITATION How long wilt stand outside and cower?
12369If I''m silent--?
12369If a form of government is to be established here, what one will be assumed?
12369If we separate from Britain, what code of laws will be established?
12369If you wanted to see her, why did you not go the usual way?
12369In France?"
12369In future, if you will have me called, I will take my meals at the usual_ table d''hôte._""At the what?"
12369In the mean time, who am I, sure enough?"
12369In the salt sea can ye find, When ye list to start an hunt, With your hounds, the hart or hind?
12369In what does this disputation concern them?
12369Is Death to be feared, that will convey thee to so happy an Existence?
12369Is my ignorance to suggest knowledge to the learned Abélard?
12369Is never Youth austere?
12369Is there any othah bid?
12369Is there any reason to believe that the modification runs from any one color toward any other?
12369Is there no maiden to do such inspiring office?"
12369It is true, your resolutions, as a body, have hitherto had the force of laws; but will they continue to have?
12369Lachmu and Lachamu heard and were afraid, The Igigi all lamented sore: What change has come about that she thus hates us?
12369Men of every name, what do they know?
12369Not_ ten_ dollahs?
12369Now that I''ve known you a year, how much better off am I for it, I should like to ask?
12369Now why has this kind of galium yellow flowers, while its near kinsman yonder has them snowy white?
12369O Adapa, wherefore lookest thou thus, For whom wearest thou apparel of mourning?
12369O Latium, oft by faithless sons betrayed!--''Twas then-- What frenzy on thy reason stole?
12369O restless Fancy, whither wouldst thou fare?
12369O woman, What dost thou here, dissolved in useless tears?
12369ON A SERMON AGAINST GLORY COME then, tell me, sage divine, Is it an offense to own That our bosoms e''er incline Toward immortal Glory''s throne?
12369Of what use was it all?
12369Once more, will you speak?
12369Or did an unknown helper at this moment scatter the fear in her heart?
12369Or will you not seize upon him as a thief, and avenge yourself upon him whose mouthings have enabled him to bear full sail through our commonwealth?
12369Or, take as an example the web- footed family: Do not all the geese and the innumerable host of ducks quack?
12369Owing to an unpremeditatedly funny collocation of title and author, the lettering read as follows:--"Who am I?
12369Pray, how do you like the situation of it?"
12369SCENE IV CLYTEMNESTRA-- AESGISTHUS_ Cly._--What have I done?
12369Seeks he a spouse for her among our schools?
12369Sewell?
12369Shall I be thy assassin?...
12369Shall I let thee, Who only dost deserve my love, be dragged To cruel death?
12369Shall not each Muse a wreath of shame bestow?
12369Shall tempest, blight, or chill Turn all felicity to scathe and scorn?
12369Shall wave on wave of flow''rs, full tide of corn, O''erflow the world, then fruited Autumn fill Hedgerow and garth?
12369Shall we regard her passport?
12369She then demanded:--"How long have they been in your possession?"
12369She was dying;--would he forgive her?
12369She, however, said,"Mrs. Adams, have you got into your house?
12369Should your People in Tragedy always talk to be understood?
12369Since when?"
12369So says the legend, and who would not believe it?
12369Suppose I did likewise?"
12369TENNYSON( 1890) I Shakespeare and Milton-- what third blazoned name Shall lips of after ages link to these?
12369THE STATE What constitutes a State?
12369THE WINTER PEAR Is always Age severe?
12369The Dog answered very bluntly,"Why, you may live as well, if you will do the same for it that I do."--"Indeed?
12369The eagle opened his mouth and spake to Etana:-- Wherefore art thou come?
12369The following may serve as specimens:--"What is that which becomes pregnant without conceiving, fat without eating?"
12369The gods Tammuz and Iszida will see thee and ask:-- Why lookest thou thus, Adapa, For whom wearest thou garments of mourning?
12369The man so great, so honored, so beloved?
12369The winged impetuous spirit, the white flame That was her soul once, whither has it flown?
12369Then Adar opened his mouth and spake, Spake to the warlike Bel:-- Who but Ea knew it?
12369This Curio, hated and despised by all?
12369This is the law even of despotism; and what does your law say?
12369This patient slave by tinsel chains allured?
12369This wretched suitor for a boon abjured?
12369To Anu his father''s command Ramman answered and spake:-- My father, who shall come to the inaccessible mound?
12369To his messenger Ila- Abrat Anu then spake thus:-- Why for seven days long Blows the Southwind no more on the earth?
12369To tell this in our own country would be considered as extravagance; but would they send a person here in a public character to be a public jest?
12369Voltaire taught him to scoff and disbelieve, to demand"à quoi bon?"
12369Was it because of the tears she had shed?
12369Was it not so, my hidalgo?"
12369Well, then, is n''t there any family silver in your house?
12369What accidents have brought you so far from our native soil?
12369What can be done with it?
12369What can be done?
12369What do you want me to do?"
12369What fearful and mysterious difficulties have you been led into to call for either?
12369What have I done?...
12369What impious counsel?
12369What is the Reason, said I, that the Tide I see rises out of a thick Mist at one End, and again loses itself in a thick Mist at the other?
12369What is this big raw- boned animal next you?"
12369What philosopher, what king, could rival your fame?
12369What promise for the season newly born?
12369What sayst thou, Capéte?"
12369What shall we offer him?
12369What spells unsinewed thy determined soul?-- Is this the man in Freedom''s cause approved?
12369What then must they mean to me?
12369What tho''nor real Voice nor Sound Amid their radiant Orbs be found?
12369What though, in solemn Silence, all Move round the dark terrestrial Ball?
12369What to us is the bearer of a cup and ball?
12369What village, city, kingdom, was not on fire to see you?
12369What were the notes you found?"
12369What would you do with them in the mountains?"
12369What''s your business?
12369When Socrates, rebuked with this secret quip:"And art thou so arrogant( sayeth he) and so hautie in heart for that which is no parcell of the world?"
12369When a man has made a competency, what does he want more?
12369When he came, Anu at him looked, saying, O Adapa, Why hast thou broken the Southwind''s wing?
12369When he was gone, Amy, who had been pensive all the evening, said suddenly, as if busy over some new idea:--"Is Laurie an accomplished boy?"
12369When the atlas was placed before him, he at once cried out with profound disdain,"That France?"
12369When you appeared in public, who did not run to behold you?
12369Whence didst thou learn it?
12369Where am I?
12369Where am I?...
12369Where are the words I spake to thee?
12369Where could a Christian find a more peaceful grave than in the society of holy women, consecrated by God?
12369Where did you find them?"
12369Where is he now?"
12369Where is such a law to be found?
12369Where is the heart- felt worth and weight of soul, Which labor could not stop, nor fear control?
12369Where the calm triumphs of an honest cause?
12369Where the delightful taste of just applause?
12369Where the known dignity, the stamp of awe, Which, half abashed, the proud and venal saw?
12369Where was she to turn?
12369Where will this billow hurl me?
12369Where, in the land of free- men, was the right of petition ever placed on the exclusive basis of morality and virtue?
12369Where?
12369Which is the greater, Mozart or Beethoven?
12369Who are these two gods who from the earth have vanished?
12369Who are these two gods who from the earth have vanished?
12369Who are you, anyway?"
12369Who fell himself to work his country''s fall?
12369Who is like unto Zu among the gods thy sons?
12369Who mixed the infernal potion of Charles the Ninth?
12369Who shall frame these laws?
12369Who taught the American thrush to sing like his European relative?
12369Who to the monarch breathe thy name but she?
12369Who will give them force and energy?
12369Who with better right?
12369Why did ye lyingly Think such a thing, Seeing how flyingly Wealth may take wing?
12369Why did your songs to me, World- loving men, Say joy belongs to me Ever as then?
12369Why is Carolina so much better furnished than any other State, and at so reasonable prices?
12369Why is this?
12369Why, O keeper, takest thou away the earrings of my ears?
12369Why, O keeper, takest thou away the great crown of my head?
12369Why, then, not put it out of the power of the vicious and the lawless to use us with cruelty and indignity with impunity?
12369Will gold and silver remedy this evil?
12369Will it be left to our Assemblies to choose one?
12369Will ye seek within the wood Red gold on the green trees tall?
12369Will you do this, Ellen?"
12369Would he have preserved this esteem among men of worth, if they had regarded him as a dangerous writer?
12369Would ye on some hill- top set, When ye list to catch a trout, Or a carp, your fishing- net?
12369You did not put a lamp there?
12369_ Aegis._--Hast thou not Thy mind o''erwhelmed with horror?
12369_ Aegis._--Thou withdraw thyself From him?
12369_ Aegis._--To speak of thee, Who but Electra to her father dare?
12369_ Aegis_.--But the king lives surrounded by his friends: What sword would find a passage to his heart?
12369_ Aegis_.--How canst thou Of me demand it?
12369_ Aegis_.--How?
12369_ Aegis_.--Shouldst thou repent?
12369_ Aegis_.--Was not thine the counsel?
12369_ Aegis_.--Wouldst have the courage?
12369_ Cly._--But... the courage... strength?
12369_ Cly._--Must I then with this trembling hand of mine Plunge... in my husband''s heart... the sword?
12369_ Cly._--Thou here?
12369_ Cly._--What other step remains for me to take?
12369_ Cly._--What then may it be?
12369_ Cly_.--Aegisthus..._ Aegis._--What do I behold?
12369_ Cly_.--And ought I This to believe?...
12369_ Cly_.--But certain?
12369_ Cly_.--Horror?
12369_ Cly_.--How Canst thou hide it from me?
12369_ Cly_.--What do I hear?
12369_ Cly_.--What said''st thou?
12369_ Cly_.--What sword?
12369_ Cly_.--What wicked fury from Avernus''shore, Aegisthus, guides thy steps?
12369_ Clytemnestra_--If there be need of death, we both will die!-- But is there nothing left to try ere this?
12369_ Pepin_--What are rivers?
12369_ Pepin_--What are the heavens?
12369_ Pepin_--What are the stars?
12369_ Pepin_--What generates language?
12369_ Pepin_--What is autumn?
12369_ Pepin_--What is cold?
12369_ Pepin_--What is day?
12369_ Pepin_--What is death?
12369_ Pepin_--What is fire?
12369_ Pepin_--What is fog?
12369_ Pepin_--What is frost?
12369_ Pepin_--What is language?
12369_ Pepin_--What is life?
12369_ Pepin_--What is light?
12369_ Pepin_--What is man like?
12369_ Pepin_--What is man?
12369_ Pepin_--What is rain?
12369_ Pepin_--What is snow?
12369_ Pepin_--What is spring?
12369_ Pepin_--What is summer?
12369_ Pepin_--What is the air?
12369_ Pepin_--What is the earth?
12369_ Pepin_--What is the moon?
12369_ Pepin_--What is the sea?
12369_ Pepin_--What is the sun?
12369_ Pepin_--What is the tongue?
12369_ Pepin_--What is water?
12369_ Pepin_--What is wind?
12369_ Pepin_--What is winter?
12369cried Fougas, escaping from the hands of M. Nibor so as to seize Léon by the collar,"was it you, you rascal, that hurt my ear?"
12369cried Père Antoine starting,"and is it a palm?"
12369for her wild free forest out there, where she ran around quick as a deer?
12369has Andy sawed off the legs of the old spinet?"
12369hear me... Agamemnon to our love... And to thy life?
12369hear me... Perhaps Atrides Has not resolved..._ Aegis._--What boots this hesitation?...
12369in Winter, dead and dark, Where can poor Robin go?
12369no...._ Aegis._--Dost thou desire Me, or Atrides, dead?
12369or for what?
12369said Mr. Sewell, sharply,"what are you whispering about?"
12369said he:"am I bleeding?"
12369says one of them,"brother, do you make hanging of a sheep?"
12369what fine talking is this?"
12369what have I promised thee?
12369what is that?"
12369what wouldst thou do?
12369where?
12369where?"
27977That is you,and meaning"How do you do?"
27977You been make a light yarraman this morning?
27977You yacka wood? 27977 ` Never been christened?''
27977/?
27977?/ 1849.
27977A very common answer from a converted native, accused of theft, was,` How can that be?
27977A. J. Boyd,` Old Colonials,''p. 76:"Did I ever get stuck- up?
27977A. L. Gordon,` Bush Ballads,''p. 23:"What''s up with our super to- night?
27977Aileen smiled something like her old self for a minute, and said,` That comes natural to you now, Dick, does n''t it?''
27977B. Paterson,` Man from Snowy River,''p. 10:"But maybe you''re only a Johnnie, And do n''t know a horse from a hoe?
27977B. Stephens,` Black Gin,''p. 61:"Lay aside thy nullah- nullahs Is there war betwixt us two?"
27977C. Harpur,` Poems,''p. 78:"Why roar the bull- frogs in the tea- tree marsh?"
27977C. P. Hodgson,` Reminiscences of Australia,''p. 77:"How far had these ideas been acted upon by the Colonists of Austral Asia?"
27977C. stricta?
27977C. tenuissima?
27977Can they hibernate?
27977Did I go hut- keeping?
27977Did you ever know a hut- keeper cook for sixty shearers?''"
27977Do bullocks eat pigs in this country?''
27977Do you know what` planting''is?
27977From Greek HARPA?
27977G. 7, p. 87:"Were not all your hapu present when the money was paid?
27977Gilbert Parker,` Pierre and his People,''p. 242:"The wallaby track?
27977H. Kingsley,` Geoffrey Hamlyn,''p. 211:"` What are these men that we are going to see?''
27977Has it, then, disappeared?
27977Have you found or seen the horses this morning?
27977How is the Waler''s off fore- leg?"
27977I stared for a bit and then burst out laughing. It was a rum go, was n''t it?
27977I wonder, will you-- now that you''re a knight?"
27977In reply to the question"Has so- and- so left the township?
27977Is it a love of mischief for mischief''s sake?
27977Is it delusion or distance?"
27977Is there not a wide distinction between blackbird- hunting and a legitimate labour- trade, if such a thing is to be carried on?
27977Is this singular or plural?]
27977J. Keighley,` Who are You?''
27977J. St. V. Welch, in` Australasian Insurance and Banking Record,''May 19, p. 376:"Whence comes the larrikin?
27977Keighley,` Who are You?''
27977Keighley,` Who are You?''
27977Keighley,` Who are you?''
27977Modern:"Visitor,--`Where''s your Mother?''
27977Often used in the Land Courts in the question:"Who are your tupuna?"
27977Oh, wherefore would they eat the muscles?"
27977Or did the namer first shoot the bird and count?"
27977Or is"pay the shout"a variant of"pay the shot,"or tavern reckoning?
27977Or, as is more probable, were the names mere corruptions of aboriginal words now lost?"
27977Probably the early sailors introduced attached meaning of devil from the Maori saying,` Are you not afraid to travel at night?''
27977Rolf Boldrewood,` A Colonial Reformer,''p. 82:"` What is the meaning of` out on the wallaby''?''
27977Rolf Boldrewood,` Colonial Reformer,''c. x. p. 96( 1890):"` What can you do, young man?''
27977Rolf Boldrewood,` Robbery under Arms,''p. 55:"Is it French or Queensland blacks''yabber?
27977Ross,` Hobart- town Almanack,''p. 75[ Article said by Sir Joseph Hooker( Jan. 26, 1897) to be by Mr. Ronald Gunn]:"Casuarina torulosa?
27977Sir George Stephen, Q.C.,` Larrikinism,''a Lecture reported in` Prahran Telegraph,''Sept. 23, p. 3, col. 1: What is Larrikinism?
27977Surely no man, however old, can be an identity?
27977THE LAW OF HOBSON- JOBSON Is Austral English a corruption?
27977That means the fastest shearer-- the man who runs rings round the rest, eh?"
27977The Police Magistrate, Mr. Sturt, did not quite catch the word--"A what, Sergeant?"
27977To get labourers honestly if they could, but, if not, any way?"
27977To what man or country the honour of this invention belongs, who can tell?
27977Trevelyan,` Dawk Bungalow,''p. 223[ Yule''s` Hobson Jobson'']:"Well, young Shaver, have you seen the horses?
27977Wanderer,` Beauteous Terrorist, etc., p. 60:"And have we no visions pleasant Of the playful lyre- tail''d pheasant?"
27977Was it a guess?
27977Was the first of the list any relative of the Minnesota lawyer who holds strange views about a great cryptogram in Shakespeare''s plays?
27977Was the last of the three any relative of the eminent soldier who won the battles of Sobraon and Ferozeshah?
27977Were they growers or buyers of timber?
27977What did he allude to?
27977What is a Nut?
27977What is this I find?
27977What may it be?
27977White,` Voyage to New South Wales,''p. 229:"Tea Tree of New South Wales,< i> Melaleuca(?)
27977You do n''t know what that is?
27977[ Query, eighteenth century?]
27977[?
27977[` O.E.D.,''from which this quotation is taken, puts(?)
27977` A sundowner?''
27977` Afraid of them?''
27977` Do they take a day''s work?''
27977` Melbourne Argus,''June 14th, p. 4, col. 2:"` Did you go hut- keeping then?''
27977` Melbourne Punch'':"What''ll bark?
27977` Pay?''
27977` The Argus,''Jan. 9, p. 14, col. 2:"And will you wear a boxer that is in a battered state?
27977` What does your lordship suppose a wallaby to be?''
27977` What for you come alonga black fella camp?''"
27977` What?''
27977a sort of` half- horse, half- alligator,''haunting the wide rushy swamps and lagoons of the interior?"
27977and planters?"
27977exclaimed Ernest;` what kind of cattle do you call those?
27977for a wet blanket, a fireless camp, and all the other etceteras of the stockman''s life?"
27977he chanted gloomily:-- Oh, wherefore would they eat the muscles?
27977if your children grow up duffers and planters?"
27977or was it an original mistake on the part of Banks or Cook?
27977p. 187:"` Were you ever on a buck- jumper?''
27977p. 238:"What do you say if I go run- hunting with you?"
27977p. 27:"How can I calm this infantile corroboree?"
27977p. 308:"Making as much noise as if you''d hired the bell- man for a roll- up?"
27977p. 49:"Ca n''t you get your canaries off the track here for about a quarter of an hour, and let my mob of cattle pass?"
27977p. 71:"Is there not very much that the Australian may well be proud of, and may we not commend him for a spice of blow?"
27977why do n''t you call them pools or ponds?''
27977why not Centralia; for West Australia, Westralia; for New South Wales, Eastralia?"
32017They are running, are they not?
32017( Doctor Taylor, what think you of this?)
32017A comrade paused over him and said--"Can I do anything for you?"
32017Does any comrade know anything about Lieutenant McKean''s burial?
32017How would prohibition and Methodism go?
32017Who shall decide when doctors disagree?
32017Why did not the dying man die?
32017Wo n''t I stay with you?"
32017Wo n''t I stay with you?"
23771Afraid?
23771Air you goin''to school to- day?
23771And are you ready to do what the good order of the school requires?
23771And so he got you to ask?
23771And what are you going to do?
23771And you, Benjamin?
23771Are you tired?
23771But Gray is a rich man, is n''t he?
23771But what made you think of it?
23771But where''s your stove?
23771Ca n''t we collect something from Gray?
23771Can you cipher?
23771Can you read?
23771Can you run well?
23771Could n''t we move to Port William?
23771Could you go down to Port William?
23771Did n''t I dells you I''d gill you some day if you did n''t gwit vitin''mit oder poys, a''ready?
23771Did n''t you ever hear about Davy Crockett''s''coon?
23771Do n''t you know any house, or any place, where we could keep''bach''together?
23771Do n''t you?
23771Do you know where the county clerk''s office is?
23771Have you any explanation to give of your conduct yesterday?
23771Have you been here all night?
23771Have you ever been to school?
23771Have you got your lessons?
23771Have you seen any more Indians?
23771Honor bright?
23771How could the master know that Jack and Columbus did not do it themselves?
23771How could we? 23771 How could you tell the answer, then?"
23771How do Indians howl?
23771How old are you?
23771How soon can you come?
23771How''s Columbus? 23771 How?"
23771How?
23771I say, Greeny, how did you get so brown?
23771I say, Jack,said Riley,"how did you know who put the powder in the stove?
23771I suppose I''ll do for a pet owl, wo n''t I?
23771I suppose they know the way, do n''t they? 23771 In multiplication?"
23771In the first reader?
23771Is he sick?
23771Is it yours, Pewee?
23771Is that your full name?
23771Long division?
23771Now,said the master to Jack,"will you tell me who put that gunpowder in the stove?
23771Oh, but how did you know that I put down sixty- four?
23771Oh, it''s Jack Dudley, is it?
23771Oh, you''ve come down, have you?
23771Oh,cried Johnny Meline,"where did you get that?"
23771Pet Owl? 23771 Peter Rose, have you anything to say?"
23771Play Anthony- over? 23771 So you''ve been fighting, have you?"
23771Step over a string a foot high, when he did n''t know it was there?
23771Stove?
23771That''s the way you get your top- strings, is it, Will? 23771 Well, greenhorn from the Wildcat, where''s the black sheep you stole that suit of clothes from?"
23771Well, what if I do milk my mother''s cow? 23771 What are you treading on my toes for, you impudent young rascal?"
23771What did you run away for, when you saw me? 23771 What do they call you?"
23771What is it, Columbus?
23771What is it?
23771What is your name?
23771What kind of work?
23771What makes you so savage?
23771What''s the matter now, Lummy?
23771What''s the matter?
23771What, mother?
23771What-- wh-- what is that?
23771When do you go home?
23771When the''coon saw him taking aim, it said:''Is that you, Crockett? 23771 Where did you get supper last night?"
23771Where did you get this?
23771Where do you live?
23771Where have you been living?
23771Where have you been?
23771Where is it?
23771Which is the one that''ll run ag''in''me?
23771Who offered it?
23771Why did n''t you put it there?
23771Why did n''t you tell who did it?
23771Why do n''t you come up to the front, like a man?
23771Why do n''t you give Will Riley as good as he sends?
23771Why do n''t you take that to the professor?
23771Why do n''t you try to corner me? 23771 Why do you take up your work when I tell you not to?"
23771Why, Jack, what''s the matter?
23771Why, what''s the matter? 23771 Why?"
23771Will you defend him if I hit him?
23771Wot you doin''down dare in de dirt wunst a''ready? 23771 Would you like to make five dollars?"
23771You are?
23771You do? 23771 You milk the cow at your house, do you?
23771You stood your ground the best of all, did n''t you?
23771You think you ca n''t do it, then?
23771You''ll quit when I say''enough,''wo n''t you?
23771You''re not giving us the name of Noah''s ark, are you?
23771You_ do_?
23771_ You_ do?
23771_ You_ know, do you? 23771 And if you do n''t bend your twig, what''ll become of your boy?
23771But he did care, else why should his voice choke in that way?
23771But what are you going to do with it?"
23771But what could he do?
23771But what do you want?"
23771But you do n''t mean that he is to abuse me, while I am not allowed to answer back a word?"
23771But you wo n''t let him, will you, Jack, you good old fellow?"
23771Did Columbus tell you?"
23771Did ever stove- pipe go together without trouble?
23771Did n''t the Bible or somebody say:''Just as the twig is bent the boy''s inclined?''
23771Do n''t you think, if you coaxed her, she would lend you twenty- five dollars till New Year''s, to help me go to school one more term?"
23771Do you hear?"
23771Do you know how to read?"
23771Do you think I''m ashamed of it?
23771Finding Jack in despair over some of his"sums,"he said:"Why do n''t you ask Susan Lanham to show you?
23771For how could you get money out of a man who was nothing in law but an agent for his wife?
23771Have you one?"
23771Hey?"
23771How could you see?
23771How, indeed, can anybody play Anthony- over in a crowded city?
23771I do n''t milk anybody''s cow but ours, do I?
23771If you want to fight, why do n''t you fight somebody your own size?
23771Is he sick?"
23771Is this yours?"
23771Now, why do n''t you make us fellows behave?
23771Or, was it the property of some dead uncle or cousin, and was he to find a fortune, like the hero of a cheap story?
23771There we should have to pay rent, and where is the money to come from?"
23771What could have become of it?
23771What did a boy that had lived on Wildcat Creek, in the Indian Reserve, know about playing bull- pen, or prisoner''s base, or shinny?
23771What do you say?"
23771What do you think, Pewee, of fellows that put powder in a stove where they might blow up a lot of little children?
23771What would the master say?
23771What''s the matter?"
23771When the boys were in the boat ready to start, Mr. Kane said to Bob:"You would n''t mind working for me this summer at the regular price?"
23771Where''s your apron?"
23771Who are you?"
23771Who milked your cow this morning, Pewee?"
23771Who put it there?
23771Who was it?"
23771Why did Mr. Beal, the lawyer, not appear at the consultation?
23771Why did n''t you begin at that eend of the subjick?
23771Why did n''t you walk up and tell, and save that little fellow a beating?"
23771Why had she changed her mind since yesterday?
23771Why is that?"
23771Why would n''t the widow sell?
23771Would Jack go?
23771You here?
23771You think you can scare me, do you?"
23771you''re not afraid of a girl?"
22926''In my own land?''
22926''It may be, in after years; who can tell?''
22926''My mistress,''he said, taking the ring and placing it upon his finger,''what have I done that you should be thus kind to me?''
22926''Need I go farther to satisfy you of the temper and character of the notes, and the views of their author?
22926''Shall we never meet again?''
22926''What are these bags for?''
22926''What has your mistress for dinner to- day?''
22926''What have they ever done for us, that we should worship or pray to them?
22926''Where is the Seventh?''
22926''Where?''
22926''Which thing?''
22926''Who can tell which is right?
22926''You know him, Cleotos?''
22926(_ She is seen opening a barred door, and wears a great bunch of keys at her girdle._) Are you a relation of the countess?
22926A fight in Baltimore?
22926Am I really awake?
22926And if not, to what things does the right of amendment extend?
22926And if there was a fault, was n''t it in the addition of a trifle too much lemon peel?
22926And so interpreting, will any one say that slavery is compatible with the principles of the Declaration of Independence?
22926And though I might continue kind to you, who can answer for it that I should live to be kind to the end?
22926And yet, at the same time, it appeared to him as though he must have known it all the while; for how could he comprehend his blindness?
22926Are not Danish princesses always beautiful?
22926Are the enemy attacking the navy yard?
22926Art thou dreaming, that thou thus tossest about thy white arms, and sufferest no covering to remain around thee?
22926Before the great problem, How shall the evils which attend our domestic service be removed?
22926But by what right have they done so?
22926But if we do not keep a theological boy to read our Greek and Hebrew for us, then what do we keep one for?
22926But why should he, of all slaves in Rome, find such kindly treatment?
22926Can a greater literary outrage be imagined?
22926Can anything be clearer?
22926Contents: When are the Dead Raised?
22926Death mimics life, and life feigns death: What parts them but a fleeting breath?
22926Did I say there was but one drawback to my pleasure?
22926Did Stephens ever go farther?
22926Did the sad face of the dead calm the fears of the living?
22926Do the sacred writers mention the creation of two human races, one endowed with merely an animal nature, the other possessing a spiritual nature?
22926Do you suffer, Mary?
22926Does the Bible allow us any margin on which to base such a belief?
22926Does the day already break?
22926Evil spirit, why dost thou mock and torture me?
22926For how may this article be reconciled with the theory of a compact?
22926For what is the object of government?
22926George Stanislaus, wilt thou receive holy unction?
22926Has she left the castle?
22926Have you Hecker''s flour, Beebe''s range, hot and cold water, stationary tubs, oilcloth on the floor, dumb waiter?''
22926Have you been taken suddenly ill, my dear?
22926Here we were poor and lowly together; and have they not dragged us apart?
22926How can I follow thee through this abyss?
22926How can I live, my love, so far from thee, Since far from thee my spirit droops and dies?
22926How may we explain so monstrous a pretence?
22926How, then, could we meet each other better hereafter than now?
22926Hungry, too?
22926If so, he must submit; but of what avail, then, was all her previous kindness?
22926If thou art beautiful above all other beauty; a thought above all other thoughts-- why tarriest thou no longer than a wish a fading vision?
22926In anger, or in mockery, wert thou made?
22926Is it possible more grossly to violate the rights of the dead?
22926Is the carriage at the door?
22926Is this the best evidence of patriotism?
22926Mary, will you not come home with me to see our child?
22926Mary-- do you know me?
22926Nay, need there be a parting at all?
22926Now what is the principle upon which every good business man manages his affairs?
22926Now, I ask, what sort of a fitting can a girl receive in a shop for the serious business of homekeeping?
22926Of what dost thou think?
22926Or, in other words, Ought liberty to become part of the supreme law of the land?
22926Or, to make the question intelligible to those among us who speak the Sweden- borgian tongue, what''uses does he perform?''
22926Ought the idea of the nation to be now, at last, incorporated into the law of the nation, and so made a fixed fact of the nation''s history?
22926Say, lads, have ye heard of bold Averill''s raid?
22926Shall I offer her my arm?
22926Shall I rise and get anything for you?
22926Shall we let the opportunity slip?
22926Shall we permit it a chance to be revived?
22926Should she repress him?
22926Tell me, what dost thou thyself feel?
22926Tetter, do n''t you mean to fall in at all?''
22926The male adopted citizen, fawned upon by demagogues for his vote, is''as good as anybody;''and why not Bridget and Katrina?
22926The question, plainly stated, is: Ought the Constitution to be amended so as to abolish slavery throughout the United States?
22926The second?
22926There is some one above us, suffering from strange and incurable madness; is it not so?
22926There were sixty- five canteens; where''s the other sixty?''
22926Therefore it is that the question, in reference to any measure, Is it constitutional?
22926Thou wak''st!--must I go?
22926WHO KNOWS?
22926Was it a command or a blessing?
22926Was this to be their only parting?
22926What are you saying, Mary?
22926What can be the matter with him?
22926What can have happened here?
22926What does he here?
22926What does the world consider a proper tie?
22926What dost thou create?
22926What had he ever done to deserve it?
22926What is it, Henry?
22926What is that?
22926What is that?
22926What is the matter?
22926What is to prevent the introduction of just such a system of accountability in the family economy?
22926What of the common lot of woman in the state hymeneal?
22926What though the form of the treacherous Leta may then have faded from his memory as completely as though he had never seen her?
22926What was that word, at which the younger bent his head with reverent gesture?
22926What, indeed, could he say?
22926What, then, is the principle of amendment in our Constitution, and what are its provisions?
22926Where am I?...
22926Where are those seventy- five thousand?
22926Where are thy wings?
22926Where are we going?
22926Where art thou?
22926Where is she gone?
22926Where is she to be found?
22926Where is the Seventh?
22926Where is the countess?
22926Where is thy father, tell me, George?
22926Which is you, and which the board floor?
22926Who can paint the terrors of that winter retreat of the French from Moscow?
22926Who is there left, my love, for me to see, Since beauty is concentrate in thine eyes?
22926Who knows but the hope that we bury to- day May be the seed of success to- morrow?
22926Who was thy creator?
22926Why do n''t they take us out and let us whip the enemy, and go back to our business?''
22926Why do we go down Pennsylvania Avenue?
22926Why do you deny that they were men like us?
22926Why dost thou linger?
22926Why is this?
22926Why look to them for blessings in a future state, when they have done us such evil in the present life?
22926Why not?
22926Why should he thus peril his life In public?''
22926Will relief never come?
22926Wilt thou follow me, if I fly near to lead thee on?
22926_ A._ The first?
22926_ A._ What theory, then, must we adopt respecting these human- shaped fossils?
22926_ B._ Well, then; answer me this: Were the men whose remains are now being discovered, of a spiritual nature, and endowed with minds?
22926hast Thou in very truth sanctified the ties which link two bodies into one?
22926have I not grown like yourself?
22926how you goin''to fassen''em?
22926love, give scorn; for if love thou shouldst give, How could I love thee in thy sight, and live?
22926what do I see?
22926whence comest thou?
22926wilt thou renounce the devil and all his works?
22926you think-- was there ever anything like this?
22926Ã � none''s pleasant and sympathetic tones may have again melted into his heart as warmly as when first whispered at Ostia?
32141Have any of the readers of GARDEN AND FOREST ever met with spontaneous hybrids?
32141Is it best to thin out the growth or allow the trees to crowd and shade the feebler ones slowly to death?
32141Then why not do so?
20647''''And are you going there again?''
20647''''And then?''
20647''''My country?
20647''''Where?''
20647''''Whom does it concern?''
20647''''You do not?
20647''An''have n''t ye had any bread to- day, sonny?''
20647''And ca n''t you make her a cup of tea, and a little chicken- broth?
20647''And how do you do this morning, my daughter?''
20647''And how many do you?''
20647''And pray, can you tell me, Mister Buller, if it''s a positive fact that the man has been so long as they say, at work on the thing?''
20647''And that is the reason you went to John?
20647''And what will become of you, when she is dead?''
20647''And who brought me?''
20647''And_ where_ am I, ma''am?''
20647''Are you busy this morning?
20647''Are you hurt much, Hope?''
20647''But if I were willing to undertake it?''
20647''But to return: Where was I?
20647''But what_ can_ you do with the Southerners?''
20647''But whom have you got, father,''( she always called him''father,'')''for so important a situation?''
20647''But you were thinking of me?''
20647''Ca n''t we get a glass of wine round here?''
20647''Ca n''t you give her another room?
20647''Can it be?''
20647''Did you say she was sick?''
20647''Do you know,''asked Uncle Bill,''if it was in a temperance family all that time?''
20647''Do you wish to see me?''
20647''For the Banger?''
20647''Got a cold?''
20647''Got a fever?''
20647''Has she had a physician?''
20647''Have I given you a strange and fearful picture?
20647''Have you?''
20647''How do you feel to- night, Fanny?''
20647''How long have I been here?''
20647''How many does Deacon Giles own?''
20647''How?''
20647''I am not acquent zat word, demprance-- wot it means?''
20647''I will, my good boy; but tell me, have you no father?''
20647''Is it possible?
20647''It must be so,''she said,''else why were you led here?
20647''Kiss whom?''
20647''Myself, or some other?''
20647''Sarah, how old are you?''
20647''Shall there not be clouds as well as sunshine?''
20647''Sweet or dry?''
20647''Thee knows John, then?''
20647''Tis an old legend, and a touching one: What then?
20647''Wat in----''s the use a sendin''them things to a feller fur, unless they give him the rum with''em?''
20647''What ails the young woman?''
20647''What do you ask for the picture?''
20647''What do you know of him?''
20647''What do you suppose they are meant for?''
20647''What is my name?''
20647''What?''
20647''What_ can_ you be thinking of not to remember I am seventeen?''
20647''When will he come back, sir?''
20647''Where does thee live?''
20647''Where does your mother live, my boy?''
20647''Where?''
20647''Who is he?''
20647''Who is this sick person?''
20647''Why are you not friends?''
20647''Why ca n''t thee stay with John?''
20647''Why not?''
20647''Why so?
20647''Why, Martin, what under heaven can have affected you in this manner?
20647''Would n''t you like to return to France?''
20647''Would you lose a leg for it, Hope?''
20647''You ask where?
20647''You have seen Mr. Shodd lately, I should think?''
20647''_ Who_ told you so?''
20647( This sentence I know is not grammatical; who cares?)
20647A moment after, not seeing the little boy, I asked:''Where is your son?''
20647After a while the old gentleman asked:''What brought thee here, young woman?''
20647After such a champion as this, could the fair Bostonians have the heart to assail Mr. Trollope?
20647An''t them come- a- mile flowers?''
20647And as he walked he mused aloud, as was his custom, addressing himself in the second person,''Hopeful, what do you think of it?
20647And how do you like the Hotel Minerva?
20647And in the hour of triumph where will the pro- slavery traitors be then?
20647And of our code of honesty-- that for which Englishmen are most to be commended-- what is truly said of us?
20647And when at last the torch of life grows dim, Shall sweet birds o''er them chant a burial- hymn, Or decent pity veil the stiffening limb?
20647Are not negroes habitually enslaved by each other in Africa?
20647Are we not enabled by it to supply the world with Cotton and Tobacco and ourselves with Rice and Sugar?
20647Are we to arm the blacks by and by, or wait till they shall have planted another corn- crop for the enemy?
20647Are you afraid of worms, or only of_ shoulder- straps_?''
20647As I closed the outer door, a small voice at my elbow, in a tone broken by sobs, said:''Sir-- will you-- please, sir-- will you buy some ballads?''
20647But England was''strong;''why should she have desired sympathy?
20647But European intervention?
20647But has n''t Franky grown?
20647But how are you to get over that mountain just before you?
20647But may we, in conclusion, beg sundry kind correspondents to have patience?
20647But must his being ever after be like the lonely Polar Sea on which no bark was ever launched?
20647But was he really_ guilty_?
20647But what do you intend to do here?
20647But what has_ The Channings_ of all this in it?
20647But what proportion of unmarried dames will there be, if drafting continues, and the war becomes a permanent annual subject of draft?
20647But why need I tell of her grief, her agony, her despair?
20647But will not this prove a two- stool system of relief, between which the disbanded soldier would fall to the ground?
20647But will that be the end?
20647By whom, then?
20647Can not the North play the entire game, and shake out the bag, as well as the South?
20647Can we plead other than guilty, when even now a Senator of the United States stands convicted of a miserable betrayal of his office?
20647Charles G. Leland, 466 Was He Successful?
20647Christie gently laid her hand upon his shoulder, and spoke, slowly and calmly:''Hopeful, your soul was not in that leg, was it?''
20647Could I not serve you as an assistant?
20647Could she,_ should_ she have seen him STARVE?
20647Could that be_ her_ child?
20647Did he deserve to be set up as this scarecrow in English story?
20647Did he do it himself or was it done for him?
20647Did you ever cross a rapid stream on an unhewn foot- log?
20647Do n''t you hear?
20647Do you expect no good-- are there for you no treasures there?
20647Do you know him?''
20647Do you know the Duke of Bigghed is in town?''
20647Do you think she wanted to choke Welter?
20647Does not their enslavement here secure an aggregate of labor and production that would else be unattainable?
20647Does not this look like self- maintenance?
20647For has not the law thundered from Sinai,''Thou shalt not steal''?
20647Hand me that portfolio, will you?
20647Has he not done more for the Federal Government than any white man of the Gulf States?
20647Has martial law no virtue?
20647Has not metaphor been sounded through every note of its key- board, to strike out all that is base whereunto to liken it?
20647Have you any one you can send?''
20647Have you seen the last copy of_ Galignani_?
20647His daughter had set her heart on having it, he said, and could a gentleman refuse a lady any thing?
20647His only reply, however, to the appeal, was to ask:''How old are you?''
20647How did I come to be smart enough to suggest such a thing to him?
20647How has she obtained food?''
20647How long are the American people to allow this pool of iniquity to stagnate, and sap the vitals of the nation?
20647How was it with him whom English readers love to call the''myriad- minded?''
20647How with him who sang''of man''s first disobedience''and exodus from Eden?
20647I turned to the woman who had admitted me, and in a very low tone said:''I never saw a person die; is she not dying?''
20647I wonther_ who_ folks do n''t complain about, now- a- days?
20647If a stranger is in the shop, he will hold it out admiringly, and ask:''Do you know what I call that?
20647If it had been in a drinking- house, some body falling under the table would have seen it-- wouldn''t they?''
20647If thus it has been with those who sit highest and fastest on Parnassus-- the crowned kings of mind-- how has it been with the mere nobility?
20647In conversation he asked him:''How long have you been in Rome?''
20647Is he not more than self- maintaining?
20647Is it their one madness?
20647Is n''t he a handsome boy?
20647Is not that a long story?''
20647Is not this arguing in a circle?
20647Is not_ all_ drudgery repulsive?
20647Is she dying?''
20647Is there a thinking American who denies the truth of this?
20647It''s a naughty word, is n''t it, Mr. Rocjean?
20647Joel Burns, I presume?''
20647Mr. Trollope, who has never been on a Southern plantation, or Frederick Law Olmsted?
20647Must not some grovel that others may soar?
20647Must there not always be a foundation to every grand and towering structure?
20647My little guide rang the bell, and in a moment a panel of the door opened, and a shrill voice asked:''Who''s there?''
20647Not appearing to notice the noises, the doctor asked:''Who is this woman?''
20647One only thought had taken possession of her: how could she throw off the mighty load that was pressing on her soul?
20647Or shall the omen fail, and, rooting out All that has marked its life with fear and doubt, The child spring up to manhood with a shout?
20647Over and above this, Charles enjoyed from this estate and from what Lord Saltire( Satire?)
20647Said what?
20647Shall I lacerate a feeling, or tread upon ground made sacred by a grief, if I do so?''
20647Shall he too look on what I have to reveal, or will you behold it alone?''
20647Shall it be murdered in the gloomy wood?
20647Shall it lie down at last, all weak and faint, Its blood dried up with treason''s fever- taint, And offer up its soul in said complaint?
20647Shall we inspire the soldiers by promising them cotton- lands now, or wait till we get to the street of By and By, which leads to the house of Never?
20647She wept as she said:''And you will tell her how much I love her-- how grateful I am to her?''
20647So that in other days, when far and wide Other lost children have for succor cried, The one now periled may be help and guide?
20647Taking it in mine, I asked:''Do you feel better?''
20647The North has never wished for physical aid from England; but does Mr. Trollope remember what Mrs. Browning has so nobly and humanely written?
20647The man stared at me a moment in amazement, then said:''An''do ye know''em, sir?''
20647The servility removed, in what are the two dissimilar?
20647Their feeble voices through the dusk may call, And on the ears of busy mortals fall, But who will hear, save God above us all?
20647Then he asked, in a voice low, quavering and broken:''Is it gone?''
20647They are exhausting, annihilating themselves; and by whom will the vacancy be filled?
20647They want more soldiers, eh?
20647Thirty years''work, and the result?
20647Thus saith the poet doctor of his Alma Mater:''Pray, who was on the Catalogue When college was begun?
20647Tillman is a negro; the best pilots of the South are negroes: are_ they_ not self- maintaining?
20647True, plagiarism is nowhere distinctly forbidden by Moses; but have not critics judicially pronounced it author-_theft_?
20647WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
20647WAS HE SUCCESSFUL?
20647Was ever woman in this humor won?''
20647Was there ever stated a more palpable fallacy?
20647What do you say to goin''?
20647What do you want?''
20647What doctor will you have?''
20647What does it mean?
20647What had you named him?''
20647What has happened to my country?''
20647What is it that grieves you?
20647What means it when the people Are prompt with blood and gold, That this devil- born rebellion Is growing two years old?
20647What, then, should she do?
20647What_ will_ become of him when I''m gone?''
20647When in one day of our war- growth The South are growing two?
20647When shall I call again, sir?''
20647Where am I, ma''am?''
20647Where could she go?
20647Where?
20647Where?''
20647Who can longer fail to realize that''there is a God who judgeth in the earth?''
20647Who dares to talk of party, And the coming President, When the rebels threaten''bolder raids,''And all the land is rent?
20647Who did the deed?
20647Who is there to hinder?''
20647Who knows?
20647Who more than glances at the_ finis_, who studies the plain word stamped on the seal?
20647Who sends you out on such a night as this to sell ballads?''
20647Whom are we to believe?
20647Why ever gleam thy black eyes sadly on me?
20647Why ever rings thy sweet voice in my ear?
20647Why have n''t ye bin here to- day?''
20647Why looks thy pale face from the drifting foam-- Dashed by the wild sea on this distant shore-- Or from the white clouds does it beckon me?
20647Why was he thus singled out for the anathema of four centuries?
20647Why was his stone coffin degraded into a tavern- trough, and his remains tossed out no man knew where?
20647Why was the naked corpse of one who fell fighting valiantly, thrown rudely on a horse''s back?
20647Why, that is about the number dying in a generation-- and these have passed away while it was being completed?
20647Why?
20647Will America heed the voice of Europe, as well as of her best friends at home, before it is too late?
20647Will nothing rouse the Northmen To see what they can do?
20647Will the WOMEN of America take no active part in this movement?
20647Will wolfish Hates forego their evil work, Nor Envy''s vultures in the branches perk, Nor Slander''s snakes within the verdure lurk?
20647Wo n''t you have more of the broth?''
20647Worcester is lost, and with it a kingdom: is he to be henceforth a crownless king and a hunted fugitive, or has the future its compensations?
20647Wot you see under ze pant?''
20647Would negroes be employed in the army if they were as Mr. Trollope pictures them?
20647Would we like to have our victory now, or wait till we get it?
20647Yet must it not be performed?
20647You are very sick; it hurts you to speak?''
20647You ben long time in Rome, sare?''
20647You call him Franky, do you?''
20647You have?
20647You knew what a good, Christian young man he is, and you thought he would aid you?''
20647You know grate pantaire, Mistaire Leaf, as lives in ze Ripetta?
20647_ None_ self- maintaining?
20647a little fellow like you selling ballads at this time of night?''
20647and were_ you_ betrothed to_ him_?''
20647and when did he come-- and where is the Duchess?
20647and when it rises in_ all_ its force, who shall withstand it?
20647but Hiram, do you not see you are permitting an element of falsehood to creep in and leaven your whole nature?
20647did I do that?''
20647exclaimed Mr. Russell, laying down his spectacles;''what does thee mean, Edmund?''
20647friend?
20647how could that glib and ready lie come so aptly to your lips?
20647how long?
20647she thought,''can he both walk and talk?''
20647what''s this, David?''
20647you don''know how much twicet two is?''
26754''Madam,''said the gentleman who gave her the money,''why do you come to a saloon? 26754 By whom was Magna Charta exacted from King John at Runnymede?"
26754From what king,etc., etc.?
26754From whom was,etc., etc.?
26754Has she bought a shawl?
26754How did the Assyrian come down?
26754Is Mother Day particular about the sort of shawl she will buy?
26754Like what animal did?
26754Mr. Wolcott, did you not tell the people of the United States that free silver over there meant anarchy and lost confidence?
26754What is that?
26754When?
26754Where was Magna Charta,etc., etc.?
26754Where?
26754Which Mrs. Day will buy a shawl?
26754Who came down?
26754Who is to blame for adulterating goods?
26754Who will buy any shawl?
26754Who?
26754Why?
26754Ah, my friends, is not the reason for the change evident to any one who will look at the matter?
26754And after all, what use is this pride of appearance, for which so much is risked, so much is suffered?
26754And what amount of money do the gold standard people want?
26754And what have we to oppose to them?
26754And what is meant by man?
26754And who prosper by hard times?
26754Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation?
26754Are you then your own master?
26754At what period in our history was that privilege taken from Americans?
26754But what can we say of the people of Mexico and the United States?
26754But when shall we be stronger?
26754Ca n''t some of you help her a little?''
26754Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it?
26754Can you tell any way to prevent the outside windows frosting in cold weather?
26754Certainly the Indian presents the idea of advancing forward, while the New York Sun man is advancing(?)
26754Do it to- day!_ If you were a servant, would you not be ashamed that a good master should catch you idle?
26754Do you ask what that feature is?
26754Do you want to hear about the anarchy part of this question?
26754Does not the answer immediately echo that we would be today English?
26754Draw What does a dentist do?
26754Finally, what is this statue of Justice but the image of law?
26754Has Great Britain an enemy in this quarter of the world to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
26754Has not a crowd in the open air as much right to hiss as to cheer?
26754Have we anything new to offer upon the subject?
26754Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love?
26754How is it today?
26754How much more that is necessary do we spend in sleep?
26754How shall we ever be able to pay them?
26754I doubt na, whiles, but thou may thieve; What then?
26754I want to ask you, what would have been the result if our forefathers in 1776 had adopted any other spirit than this?
26754If he takes it away it will not flood this country, will it?
26754If the gold standard is a good thing, why try to get rid of it?
26754International bimetallic commissioners were sent to the foreign countries to procure this great international agreement, and did they get it?
26754Is it not, I ask, strange that George Washington, who fought so bravely for independence, should have signed a law for repudiation and anarchy?
26754Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
26754Is it too late, temperance men?
26754Is life so dear or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
26754Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
26754Is this the part of wise men engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty?
26754It is n''t a proper place for a lady, and why are you driven to such a step?''
26754May we not here ask, to what mankind was the earth given?
26754Methinks I hear some of you say,"Must a man afford himself no leisure?"
26754Mr. Wolcott, did not you say bimetallism in the United States meant repudiation?
26754Now suppose we wanted to repeal that law, could we repeal it by international agreement?
26754Now, if he gives it to us, will not you Republicans be willing to take your share?
26754Now, my Republican friends, do n''t you believe that?
26754Seek''st thou the plashy brink Of weedy lake, or marge of river wide, Or where the rocking billows rise and sink On the chafed ocean side?
26754Shall I do so?''
26754Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
26754Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication?
26754Shall we try argument?
26754So what signifies_ wishing_ and_ hoping_ for better times?
26754Stepping up to the bar, and addressing the proprietor, who happened to be present, she said:"''Sir, can you assist me?
26754The New York Sun came to the defense of the boys in an editorial, from which the following is an extract: What did these students really do?
26754The financial men of England would then say to Mr. Wolcott, did you say that bimetallism in the United States meant 50-cent dollars?
26754Then I ask, whose business will measure the amount under such a law?
26754Then the Englishman would reply,"Would not international bimetallism mean international repudiation?"
26754Then we will have a government of_ all_ the people, by_ all_ the people, and for_ all_ the people.--If not this plan, what next?
26754Thus,"What was exacted by the barons from King John at Runnymede?"
26754WHAT NEXT?
26754We appeal not only to the students; we appeal to business men who have been terrorized by the financial-- what may I call it?
26754What do you weigh with?
26754What does the mental picture of scales suggest?
26754What is a butterfly?
26754What is it that gentlemen wish?
26754What say you, Lincoln Republicans?
26754What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted?
26754What would they have?
26754What would you advise us to do?"
26754What, I ask you, would you think of your prize fighter then?
26754Whither, mid''st falling dew, While glow the heavens with the last steps of day, Far through their rosy depths, dost thou pursue Thy solitary way?
26754Why are we here idle?
26754Why does he not tell us what he is going to do if he fails to secure an international agreement?
26754Why is it that the broker or the bond buyer does not write in his application that he has a personal interest in the gold standard?
26754Why is it that these men want to throw upon the wage earners whatever odium there may be in using his vote to protect his personal interests?
26754Why is it that within three months such a change has come over the country?
26754Why this change?
26754Why?
26754Will it be the next week, or the next year?
26754Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
26754Will you tell me by whose business they wish to measure the volume of money?
26754Wo n''t these heavy taxes quite ruin the country?
26754Wo n''t you Democrats willingly receive your share?
26754Would not that kind of literature hurt the cause instead of helping it?
26754You will ask, what is to be done where pigs have it?
26754_ But dost thou love life?
3093Are Americans not British subjects? 3093 Can you agree,"asked Grenville,"on the proportions each colony should raise?"
3093If our trade may be taxed,so the instructions ran,"why not our lands?
3093Is it not enough,asked Valerius Poplicola in the Gazette"to have a Governor... pensioned by those on whom his existence depends?
3093We can live on acorns; but will we?
3093What is the reason, Mr. Adams, that you New- England men oppose our measures of reconciliation? 3093 Will you choose such committees?
3093''What can be your reasons?''
3093''Why will you not?
3093''Why?''
3093And had not the New York Assembly been suspended by act of Parliament?
3093And indeed to whose interest would it be to have an English company granted a monopoly of a thriving branch of American trade?
3093And it might well be asked what would wear it out and"disunite us more than the decay of all business?
3093And were not the new duties to be used to pay governors and judges, thus by subtle indirection undermining the very basis of legislative independence?
3093Are they not Englishmen?
3093But how comes it that the King needs to be checked?
3093But the colonies have an interest distinct from the interest of the nation; and shall the Parliament be at once party and judge?
3093Can he not be trusted?
3093Can we not handle the olive branch and the sword as well as Lord North?
3093Had not arms been taken up for the purpose precisely of disposing their adversaries"to reconciliation on reasonable terms"?
3093Is Mr. Zubly hinting at independence even before the King has replied to the petition?
3093Is all this extravagant?
3093Is it not the soundest Policy?
3093Is it wild?
3093Must they then submit to the Townshend duties?
3093Or are they only Englishmen when they solicit protection, but not Englishmen when taxes are required to enable this country to protect them?"
3093Or were they to go on trying cases, enforcing the collection of debts, and probating wills precisely as if no Stamp Act had ever been heard of?
3093The Eve of the Revolution By Carl Becker A Chronicle of the Breach with England Volume 11 of the Chronicles of America Series?
3093Were the courts to be closed on the ground that no legal business could be done without stamped papers?
3093Why not now?
3093Why not the produce of our lands, and everything we possess or make use of?
3093Will you submit to them should they be chosen by the weak, foolish, turbulent part of the... people?
20126''Bout how much dew you expect she''ll pan out?
20126''Whereabouts might it be, if I ai n''t asking too much?'' 20126 Ai n''t thar no other way of gettin''down thar intew that thar canyon?"
20126All got plenty of powder and lead?
20126An''the skunks are a- calculatin''on findin''th''camp unguarded?
20126An''you''ve got that map, an''that hunk of gold with you?
20126And did the parties you scattered through the country find any gold?
20126And do you think you can find that canyon again?
20126And the miner told you that the bottom of the cave was covered with gold nuggets like this?
20126And this queer skin map tells you how to find this wonderful Cave of Gold?
20126And you are both willing to make oath that you saw these two young men, who are little more than boys, commit the awful crime of murder?
20126And you say that there are thousands of other nuggets where this came from?
20126And-- and do you suppose they were trying to find out about that skin map and the Cave of Gold?
20126Are you going to wash that pan of dirt, Dick?
20126Ay, Hank?
20126Ben tellin''th''yunks all''bout th''Great Discovery, I reckon?
20126But that other man? 20126 But, are we to be proven guilty on the evidence of those two men alone, whom I am almost certain committed the crime themselves?"
20126But, do you happen to know of any miners in town who are going to Hangtown? 20126 But, how do you get the gold out of the cradle?"
20126But, what matters the past now? 20126 But, where is this wonderful skin map and that big gold nugget?"
20126But, young man,and the frown on his face deepened,"how comes it that you are here, against my express commands?
20126But,and she started to her feet excitedly,"was n''t your father''s last letter sent from Hangtown?
20126But-- but what difference could a little rain make? 20126 Ca n''t you see that everyone is armed with a pick and shovel and gold- pan?
20126Can we go to one side of Humbug Canyon and hit the trail to the Cave of Gold again beyond?
20126Coleman send you for something?
20126Did he-- did he get the skin map?
20126Did they get the gold?
20126Did you discover anything that would lead you to surmise who committed the crime?
20126Did you hear that, Sal?
20126Did you see or hear anything suspicious during your watch?
20126Did you?
20126Did-- Did th''old miner say an''thing''bout whar he found his gold afore he died?
20126Do n''t look much as if we''d thrown th''cunnin''devils off our trail, does it?
20126Do the prisoners wish to ask the witness any questions?
20126Do you hear that, Spike?
20126Do you know this murdered miner''s name?
20126Do you reckon we can make Sacramento City tew- night?
20126Do you suppose we''d betray those we love?
20126Do you think it necessary for us to post guards over the camp nights?
20126Do you wish a trial by jury?
20126Do you, gentlemen of the jury, wish to ask the witness any questions?
20126Ever see a cradle work before?
20126Found it?
20126Gentlemen of the jury, are you ready to render your verdict?
20126Gentlemen, how shall the case be tried?
20126Give up that map to a couple of the biggest cowards and cut- throats in California? 20126 Going to clean up soon?"
20126Had to come to the diggings with the rest, did you? 20126 Have n''t two reputable witnesses sworn that they saw the prisoners kill the man?
20126Have the prisoners any questions they wish to ask the witness?
20126Have you any witnesses, other than your fellow prisoner, to testify to the truth of your statements?
20126Have you gone clean crazy, Bud Randolph, to speak of murder and robbery like that?
20126How did I happen to discover the gold?
20126How did he describe them? 20126 How did she pan out tew- day, Dick?"
20126How did you kill him?
20126How far is it to your home and to your mother?
20126How much on it did he git? 20126 How often dew you clean up a day?"
20126How-- how did this get here?
20126How?
20126I reckon we can find the trail all right again-- Hi, there, Pedro, what sort of a heathenish charm is that you are making?
20126I reckon you can already feel th''rope a- tightenin''''round y''ur neck, ca n''t you, Bill? 20126 I wonder if we can make our old camping- ground to- night?"
20126I wonder if''twouldn''t be a good thing tew take Pedro''long? 20126 Is not our word, at least, as good as theirs?"
20126Is there any? 20126 Is there, is there any gold?"
20126Is-- is he dead?
20126Jest follered y''ur head, did you?
20126John Stackpole, did anyone here ever hear of a feller by th''name of John Stackpole?
20126Lose much?
20126Now, what might be th''trouble with that arm?
20126Now, what might those fellows be doing there? 20126 Now, what shall we do about that?"
20126Now, where are our dads and the rest?
20126Now,and he turned quickly to Holt,"did n''t you say that thar Mexican skunk, Pedro, had gone tew git th''rest of th''gang?"
20126Oh, come, this ai n''t no hold up game, is it, ladies?
20126Quick,and Fremont bent over him,"will you tell all, all that you know of this horrible affair, if we will save your neck?"
20126Say, but this gold- digging is no fun, no matter how you do it, is it?
20126Say, dew you know who that feller is who has j''ined grub with you?
20126Say, what do you suppose I have to pay the fellow who washes the dishes? 20126 Say,"and Ham turned to Conroyal,"why ca n''t we give them th''same kind of a s''prise they was a- calculatin''on givin''us?
20126See that big sycamore over yonder?
20126See that rock?
20126Shall we risk it?
20126Shall we shoot?
20126Shall we take the Mexican on his own terms?
20126Shore you remember th''trail?
20126So you''re one of th''skunks that''s a- tryin''tew git them tew boys hanged, be you? 20126 Sure th''gold ai n''t petered out yit?"
20126Then he is still alive?
20126Tryin''to turn th''tables on us, be you?
20126Want to back out?
20126We ca n''t let her go without a song, can we, boys?
20126We, too, would like to see how it pans out, would n''t we Thure?
20126Well, if you are satisfied, what are you kicking for? 20126 Well, they do n''t put on much style, do they?"
20126Well, what have they done?
20126What did he swear to?
20126What does this mean?
20126What has happened?
20126What have the young men done?
20126What is it you would like to know?
20126What is the crime the prisoners are charged with?
20126What is the trouble?
20126What is the trouble?
20126What is your name and business?
20126What is your name and business?
20126What is your name and present business?
20126What might it be doin''thar?
20126What might thar be queer''bout it?
20126What shall our answer be?
20126What''s bitin''you?
20126What''s happened?
20126What''s the trouble, Pedro? 20126 What-- what can be the trouble?"
20126What-- what did he look like?
20126What-- what was it?
20126What?
20126When?
20126Where are those witnesses? 20126 Where are you goin''tew take''em?"
20126Where, where is the fire?
20126Who accuses them?
20126Who did it?
20126Who did it?
20126Who makes the accusation?
20126Who shot him?
20126Who''s got th''candles?
20126Why do you accuse these two young men of murder?
20126Why,continued the alcalde,"did you not make your presence known to these two men, at least after the murderers had ridden off?
20126Will we, Ruth?
20126Will you-- will you promise to give me the first gold nugget you pick up in this wonderful cave?
20126Wo n''t expectin''nobudy, was you, Con?
20126Wonder how they like it?
20126Would you like to ask the witness any questions?
20126You''re sart''in th''bag ai n''t thar?
20126Young man, do you realize that you are telling a very improbable- sounding story? 20126 ''Bout how much longer will it take us tew git tew that thar canyon?
20126A- tryin''tew git yur necks stretched, you blamed idgits?
20126Ai n''t we Spike?"
20126And we can start, ca n''t we, to- morrow morning?"
20126And what can be offered in disproof of all this?
20126And what could they do or say to disprove their testimony?
20126And wo n''t Ruth and Iola stare, when we throw down the hide of_ El Feroz_ in front of them to- night?"
20126Anybody here know anything about the region around Humbug Canyon?"
20126Are you with us?"
20126But is n''t it heavy?"
20126But wo n''t mother''s eyes open when she hears that?"
20126But, did n''t he say something about a map, a skin map, that would tell us how to find the cave?"
20126But, what could he mean?
20126But, what could they do?
20126But, what if the alcalde should order them searched and the map be found?
20126CHAPTER XXVI THE CATASTROPHE"Now, the question is, what shall we do with our captives?"
20126Ca n''t we wait here a little while and watch them work it?"
20126Ca n''t you see how the limb is bending and shaking?"
20126Ca n''t you see the curs set Dickson''s house on fire on purpose to get us out of the way?"
20126Could this be the miner''s Cave of Gold?
20126Did n''t one of them find a buttom that has been proven to belong to the coat of one of the prisoners on the very spot where the man was killed?
20126Did n''t you notice it?"
20126Did you get near enough to them to recognize them again, should you see them?"
20126Did you hear that?"
20126Did you see these two men plainly enough to recognize them should you see them again?"
20126Do I have your promise?"
20126Do we look like boys who would kill a man?
20126Do you all understand?"
20126Do you realize that your expression amounts almost to a confession of guilt?"
20126Do you suppose it is true or, just one of the queer notions that sometimes come to the dying?"
20126Do you suppose we fooled Ugger and his gang and threw them off our trail last night?"
20126Everybody ready?"
20126Flapjacks getting busy?"
20126For, now at the very moment they were about to explore the mysteries of the dead miner''s wonderful Cave of Gold, who would care to be left behind?
20126Guilty; or, not guilty?"
20126Have you any further evidence to give?
20126He''d have th''gold, not you, would n''t he?"
20126How could they now hope to throw Ugger and his men off their trail, when all their efforts so far had been in vain?
20126How could they prove their innocence, when they did not have a single witness to appear in their defense?
20126How does it strike you?"
20126How does she feel, Hank?"
20126How does th''propersition strike you, men?"
20126I do n''t remember of hearing our brothers say anything about a message, do you?"
20126I wonder if we ca n''t do something to hurry them up?"
20126I--""And you found this hunk of gold on the floor of that cave?"
20126If I could but live, I''d-- But, what''s the use?"
20126If they only had time to send home-- But, even if they had witnesses from home, what could they prove?
20126In an instant every man in the camp was on his feet, his rifle in his hands, calling excitedly:"What is the trouble?"
20126Is it Indians?"
20126Is it worth a Hundred Thousand Dollars?"
20126Is there any?"
20126Is there anyone in Sacramento City that knows either of you two boys?"
20126It is yes, is n''t it, mother?
20126Let us have a look at them?"
20126No wonder that Mexican Juan thought_ El Feroz_ was protected by the devil!--Hello, what is the matter now?"
20126No wonder the unfortunate boys were tempted to give up the skin map; for what is gold, when weighed in the balance against life?
20126Now I call that decent, do n''t you, Spike?"
20126Now what might you be dewin''down thar?"
20126Now, dew you reckon them skunks are on th''watch an''will try tew foller us?"
20126Now, how about the guard?"
20126Now, how comes it that you are in Sacramento City, Ham?"
20126Now, how much do you suppose those eggs cost me a dozen?"
20126Now, whar might that be, if I may be so bold as tew ask?"
20126Now, what are you proposin''of dewin''?
20126Now, what do you think about the truth of the miner''s yarn?
20126Now, which shall it be?"
20126Now,"and her eyes looked wonderingly at the bags of gold,"how much is all that gold worth?
20126Oh, Ruth,"and a look of horror came into Iola''s face,"do you suppose they will start on the trail of Thure and Bud and try to get the map from them?
20126Or, shall we defy them, and march straight for the canyon, without any effort to hide our trail?"
20126Queer how th''gold gits intew th''blood an''makes all humans tarnal idgits, now ai n''t it?"
20126Rekerlect that time down in Sante FÃ ©, when you was a- goin''tew skin a nigger alive, an''wanted tew kill tew boys for interferin''?
20126Say, but wo n''t the Mexicans and the Indians think we are great hunters now?
20126Say, but wo n''t we give them a big surprise?"
20126See that opening between those two mountains?"
20126Shall we start back for the diggings in the morning?
20126Shall we try again to fool them, by not going straight to the canyon to- day and see if we ca n''t slip into it to- night without being seen?
20126Si, señors?"
20126So me an''Spike are th''true murderers, be we?
20126That''s what I''d like tew know, Tim Perkins?
20126Under such circumstances what shall we do?
20126Visions?--Visions of what that morning meant to a gold- mad world?
20126Wal, this is sum unexpected an''s''prisin'', ai n''t it Spike?"
20126Was it gold?
20126We all understand that, do n''t we?"
20126We can go to the mines now, ca n''t we, mother?"
20126We can go to the mines now, ca n''t we, mother?"
20126Well, what do you think about doing as they ask, and leaving the map under the stone?
20126Whar are th''witnesses?"
20126What can have happened?
20126What can it be?"
20126What dew you think, Steeltrap?"
20126What do you make out of it all anyway?"
20126What do you say, Rad?"
20126What do you say, Thure?"
20126What do you think we had better do, Ham?"
20126What does all this excitement mean?
20126What good would that do you?
20126What had happened to him?
20126What had happened to him?
20126What has happened?"
20126What has happened?"
20126What have you to say to the accusation?
20126What is the use of going over exactly the same ground that we have already been over many times?
20126What was he doing, Uncle Frank?"
20126What was he seeing?
20126What was to be done?
20126What would you like to know?"
20126What you doin''here?"
20126What''s your idea, Rad?"
20126When the two horns of a dilemma are both equally long and sharp, how, then, can the peril be avoided?
20126Where is Pedro?"
20126Where is that other man?"
20126Where''ll we hide?"
20126Where''s Mollie?"
20126Who are they after?"
20126Who is willing to offer himself up as a sacrifice to the good of the public?"
20126Who seen''em dew it?
20126Who will stand guard first?"
20126Why do you hesitate?"
20126Why had the two men accused them thus publicly of the murder of the miner?
20126Why had they run this risk of turning suspicion against themselves?
20126Why have you deserted your trust?"
20126Why?"
20126Wo n''t you wait and see how it pans out?"
20126You are not afraid of getting wet, are you?"
20126You have n''t heard Thure and me wishing that we were girls, have you?"
20126You remember my telling you all about it, do n''t you, Mollie?"
20126You remember that queer- shaped scar over one of his eyes, do n''t you?"
20126You remember, do n''t you, Bud?"
20126You say that you found the miner, John Stackpole, found him wounded?"
20126You see--""Where''ll we find them?"
20126You will never tell a word of it to anybody, will you girls?
20126an''how did he git in thar?
20126and Tim Perkins turned anxiously to Thure, by whose side he was riding,"dew you reckon all them folks are bound for the diggin''s?"
18304''A carbuncle, eh?'' 18304 ''Den what is youah duties den?''
18304''How does it feel now?'' 18304 ''No,''says the fellow;''what would I want it for?''
18304''What do you do with them pipes?'' 18304 ''What sword, General?''
18304''What''s that?'' 18304 ''What''s the use,''he said,''of being a steamboat captain if you ca n''t tell people to go to hell?''"
18304About other things?
18304And supposing they do?
18304Any news?
18304Any valuation?
18304Anything else?
18304Are n''t you afraid to stay here with your family?
18304Are there supposed to be any ghosts in this house?
18304Are they so fond of Emerson down here?
18304Are you a suffragist?
18304As you do?
18304Auntie,she said,"was Sheridan a Northerner or a Southerner?"
18304But ca n''t people who are religious have a good time?
18304But do n''t you think,my fair inquisitor continued,"that the southern girls pile on the accent awfully, because they know it pleases men?"
18304But how am I to get in the saddle if he keeps doing that?
18304But how does she get their money?
18304But in the city itself?
18304But in this case--_what_?
18304But then, what better reason could they have for doing so?
18304But why not?
18304But why?
18304But you could n''t very well do that, could you?
18304Can you think, while you are doing this?
18304Did n''t you come for the senior dramatics?
18304Did n''t you notice all these people with ribbons on them? 18304 Did you ever hear such egotism?"
18304Did you read it?
18304Do they let the convicts go around unguarded?
18304Do you like it?
18304Do you mean to say you button those idiotic little buttons?
18304Do you mean to say,she demanded of Captain Nettie,"that you think women have n''t got as much sense as men?"
18304Do you think it will, if I explain that it is just a traveling fair?
18304Do you think your sister will let us come to- morrow for breakfast?
18304Does he always do like that?
18304Eloise,one Charles Town young lady asked another,"what''s that monument out in front of your house with the number twenty- one on it?"
18304Entyis a general question:_ Are n''t you?
18304Feelin''pretty good''s mawnin'', is you? 18304 For what?"
18304From overwork?
18304Got your tickets?
18304Had breakfast?
18304He means he does n''t want me to ride him?
18304How big?
18304How does Ah know, boss? 18304 How does it seem?"
18304How does she manage it?
18304How far away is the theater?
18304How long a swim was it to shore?
18304How long shall you stay in Baltimore?
18304How many cans do you fill in a day?
18304How many inhabitants?
18304How many people did you say?
18304How would it be,I suggested,"if I were to print that statement in my book?"
18304I suppose there is some sort of symbolism about it?
18304I suppose we''d better let the cab go?
18304I suppose,I said to our charming cicerone,"that the family name is spelled''B- o- w- f- e- e''?"
18304I thought,said Violet- eyes as we accelerated our pace,"that you prided yourself on always having time to spare?"
18304I wonder if we will ever go on such a trip as this again?
18304I wonder why I do n''t seem to stay around it more?
18304Inter-_resting_? 18304 Is it interesting?"
18304Is n''t it wonderful?
18304Is she bad-- bad and beautiful and alluring?
18304Is she pretty?
18304Is she rich?
18304Is there any message?
18304Is there anything I can do? 18304 Late for what?"
18304Like what?
18304May I ask your name?
18304May I speak to one of them?
18304My sister has just been there, and she--"Where to?
18304Not surely?
18304Now, what do you want to talk like that for?
18304Oh, you_ do_?
18304Perhaps,I ventured,"perhaps you know how to make a horse single- foot?"
18304Right_ in_ the city?
18304Say,he demanded,"what kinda man dis United States engineer is, anyhow?
18304Senior dramatics where?
18304Shall we take a taxi?
18304Speaking of food products,said my companion,"I wonder if we could hurry up the lunch?"
18304Surely, you''re not going to_ draw_ it?
18304Surely,I faltered,"you can let us have one small room?"
18304That building?
18304The Roden?
18304The kid went to San Francisco with it, did n''t he?
18304Then,I said, abandoning hope,"perhaps you will suggest some other hotel?"
18304There was a good deal of gambling, too, was n''t there?
18304Usually I do,I answered,"but in this case--""What car?"
18304Want your picture taken, old man?
18304We''ll see you at breakfast, then?
18304Well, how can we go if you do n''t know what place it is?
18304Well, how many do you claim?
18304Well, if you do n''t mind my asking, what_ do_ you want?
18304Well,cries the Middle- Westerner,"Mrs. Jones is n''t here yet, is she?
18304Well,he answered,"I reckon we do, do n''t we?"
18304Well,he answered,"ai n''t it true?
18304Well,he gave in, with an air of pained patience,"what shall I say, then?
18304Well,he said to Harris,"I could use_ some_ of my salary-- if you''re sure it wo n''t be any inconvenience?"
18304Well,one of us asked presently,"what happened?"
18304Well,said one, surveying the smoking crater,"what do you think of it?"
18304Well,said the boy, with a grin,"I got ta sell things, ai n''t I?
18304Well?
18304Wha''you- all goin''to?
18304What about me?
18304What about surf- bathing?
18304What are you going to show us?
18304What are you going to sketch?
18304What day''s this?
18304What did they do?
18304What did you do?
18304What do you do with yourself?
18304What do you drink?
18304What do you mean?
18304What do you want to lie like that for, boy?
18304What foh you want t''know what tahme it is?
18304What have they been doing?
18304What is it?
18304What is the population?
18304What is there to see?
18304What is your history?
18304What kind of exercise would you take?
18304What kind of horse do you like?
18304What makes you think that?
18304What name?
18304What of?
18304What shall we do?
18304What sort of man is he?
18304What train, boss?
18304What you- all fussin''raound heah for, this mownin''?
18304What''s become of old man Whitney, over to Fayetteville?
18304What''s her name?
18304What''s the matter with him?
18304What''s the matter?
18304Wheh do you come from?
18304When you were n''t exercising would you go and have a good time?
18304When you write about it: Are you going to write about it as a realist, a mystic, or a romanticist?
18304When your young lady, in Virginia, asked,''Do you- all take sugar?'' 18304 Where are you- all from?"
18304Where?
18304Which horse do you think you''d like?
18304Which house?
18304Which train, boss?
18304Who''s going with me?
18304Why did you put that objectionable article in your paper?
18304Why do n''t you come with me now?
18304Why not come and see?
18304Why not?
18304Why not?
18304Why not?
18304Why not?
18304Why?
18304Would you- all like to ride to- day?
18304You intend to print such pictures and say that they represent the normal life of this city?
18304You mean she ca n''t come to- night?
18304You say there are a million people here?
18304You say they take on the lunches at Covin now?
18304You wait for madame?
18304You were saying,reminded Violet- eyes,"that your sister--?"
18304You''re going away?
18304You''re going to make me go over there_ alone_?
18304You''re here, are you?
18304_ You_ live there?
18304''Have n''t you got any?''
18304''Have n''t you got any?''
18304''His collar bone, eh?
18304''What for?''
18304( To the wife): What did he do, Mandy?
18304--I wondah what kin be de mattuh wid ouh State?
18304A lady would ask him:"Have you any fish to- day?"
18304A train has killed a cow, and a negro witness is being examined by a justice of the peace: JUSTICE-- Uncle John, did you see what killed Sam''s cow?
18304After we were seated, I looked at the one nearest me, and said:"Well, what will you- all have?"
18304And how could she have expected me to say how he took his after- dinner coffee?
18304And is not soot a measure of success?
18304And when his day off comes and he puts on citizen''s clothing and goes out for a good time, where do you suppose he goes?
18304And why is it so in the case of commonplace cities, commercial cities, and ugly, sordid cities?
18304And why not?
18304And yet-- Is it always pleasant to be virtuous?
18304Another instance is the following: I was once approached by a beggar in Atlanta, who saluted me thus:"Say, mister, ca n''t you- all give me a nickel?"
18304Are n''t you coming to see her?"
18304Are they tempted by the unfamiliar signs on passing street cars?
18304Are we to ignore all these wonders of the city?
18304Are you athletic?
18304As we would start to dance the lady would say:"You- all ah strangehs, ahn''t you?"
18304Bell?"
18304But are n''t you ashamed of having tripped up such a pretty creature on a point of dialect?"
18304But do n''t you love this scent I wear?
18304But how is one to communicate such humanitarian ideas to a big, stupid, wilful, perverse, diabolical creature like a horse?
18304But what could the management do?
18304By the way, what is the name of your neighbor next door?"
18304CHAPTER IX ARE WE STANDARDIZED?
18304CHAPTER LII MISS"JAX"AND SOME FLORIDA GOSSIP"Or mebbe you''re intendin''of Investments?
18304CHAPTER LIV ASSORTED AND RESORTED FLORIDA"Some year or more ago, I s''pose, I roamed from Maine to Floridy, And,--see where them Palmettoes grows?
18304Ca n''t you?
18304Can most travelers, I wonder, enjoy as I do a solitary walk, by night, through the mysterious streets of a strange city?
18304Can you make love?"
18304Carried a little farther what would it mean?
18304Di''n''Ah have ma eahs stuff''wid it?
18304Di''n''Ah have ma eyes covuhed wi''dat fiffy dollahs?
18304Did I give him the nickel?
18304Did he grieve that his old friends failed to call When the earthquake come and swallered all?
18304Did he moan an''sigh?
18304Did he set an''cry An''cuss the harricane sweepin''by?
18304Did n''t you use it in the singular?"
18304Did n''t you?
18304Do n''t I keep you amused?
18304Do n''t I let you do as you please?
18304Do n''t I put my warm red lips to yours?
18304Do n''t I take you from the northern cold and slush?
18304Do n''t they like men to be strong, resolute, determined, like heroes in the moving pictures?
18304Do n''t they like to see a man handle matters with dash?
18304Do n''t women like to be surprised?
18304Do n''t you adore my tropical winter sea, my gardens, my palm trees, my moonlight, and my music?
18304Do n''t you love to look at me?
18304Do not women remember some things longer than men remember them?
18304Do they rejoice in streets the names of which they have not heard before?
18304Do they wish to trail them, let the trail lead to a prize fight, to a church sociable, to a fire, to a fashionable ball, or to the ends of the world?
18304Do they yearn to board those cars and be transported by them into the mystic caverns of the night?
18304Do you gamble?
18304Do you go boating on the St. John''s River?
18304Do you play or sing?
18304Do you wish to talk of birth control, social hygiene, and sex attraction?
18304Does a long row of lights lure them, block by block, toward distances unknown?
18304Eichelberger?"
18304Enty you duh gwine come shum?"
18304For does not every progressive American city yearn to bristle with factory chimneys, even as a summer resort folder bristles with exclamation points?
18304Govan, I suppose my sword is gone?''
18304Have n''t I built a siding for your private car, and made an anchorage for your yacht?
18304Have you ever noticed how cities sometimes seem to have their own especial colors?
18304He hollah:''Who thar?''
18304He was kill'', Ah don''s''pose it wuz a week befo''we got to Wash''n, D.C.""How did you happen to come all the way back?"
18304Hence it happens that if, speaking of a Palm Beach millionaire, you ask:"How did he make it?"
18304His watch chain evidently caught the eye of the prisoner, who spoke in a wistful tone, demanding:"What tahme is it, brotha?"
18304Hotel?
18304How could she have meant to include him?
18304How did she do it?
18304How do you propose to treat it?"
18304How many beautiful women are there?"
18304I said to myself,"Do n''t you see what a hundred dollars will do?"
18304I turned quickly to my friends, who were in conversation behind me, and asked:"Speaking of ghosts-- did you see that door open?"
18304I want to ask:"What happens if she finds out that you_ ca n''t_ ride her?
18304I would ask my local grocer,''Will you- all sell me some sugar this morning?''
18304If an extra kit bag be required for the use of both, who shall pay for it and own it at the journey''s end?
18304Is he been one Voodoo?"
18304Is it always delightful to be where pious people, naïve people, people who love simple pastimes, are enjoying themselves?
18304Is it because they are volatile, changeful, baffling?
18304Is it perhaps because the nature of all cities is so complicated?
18304Is n''t it?_ etc.
18304Is there anything in particular you wish to see?"
18304It is recorded that, near the end, he asked his son:"Am I dragging my anchors?"
18304JUSTICE-- What was it, Uncle John?
18304Lost is our freedom When we submit to women so: Why do we need''em When, in their best, they work our woe?
18304Of the circumstances of the signing the late Robert C. Winthrop of Boston gave the following description:"Will you sign?"
18304Or again, which man shall occupy the lower berth in a Pullman drawing- room, and which shall try to sleep upon the shelf- like couch?
18304Or is it only that they are the mothers of great families of men?
18304Or shall we reverse the order?
18304Or when there is but one lower left, which shall take the upper?
18304Or yet again, if there be but one cheap heavy overcoat in a shop, and both desire to own that coat, which one shall have the right of purchase?
18304Or, again, you might--""What''s the matter with the people in the big yellow and white house surrounded by palm trees?
18304Orange- plantin''?
18304Otherwise where will the cadets sit?"
18304Perhaps her carnival proves her frivolous?
18304Perhaps she is wrong to be gay?
18304Perhaps she ought not to continue to hold a carnival each year?
18304Pine?
18304Shall I add that you are unavoidably detained?"
18304Shall we fail to visit the curious old tenements and stables surrounding the barnyard which once was the_ remise_ of the old Orleans Hotel?
18304Shall we neglect old Metaire cemetery, with its graves built above ground in the days when drainage was less perfect?
18304Shall we not go to Sazerac''s for a cocktail, or to Ramos''for one of those delectable gin- fizzes suggesting an Olympian soda- fountain drink?
18304She ca n''t use the chairs_ now_, can she, if she is n''t here?"
18304She hope that maybe the gentlemans will be in Baltimore nex''week?
18304She looked surprised, I thought, but what of that?
18304She--""Perhaps,"said my companion, recovering,"we can drive her to the train?"
18304Silk hats?"
18304THE JUDGE( severely)--Was-- you--_drunk_?
18304THE JUDGE-- How old are you, Sam?
18304THE JUDGE-- Where you from?
18304THE JUDGE-- Where''s that prisoner?
18304THE WIFE( looking contemptuously at her spouse)--Drunk?
18304That is, if a lady is asked:"Are you going out this winter?"
18304That''s fair, ai n''t it?"
18304The case goes as follows: JUDGE CRUTCHFIELD-- Drunk?
18304The other: THE JUDGE-- What''s your name?
18304Then he continued:"Do you remember where we are to be taken to- morrow?"
18304Then, as the train left them behind, I repeated my question:"How did your work go?"
18304Then, because the Hardware Convention was being held in town at the time, she would continue:"Ah reckon you- all ah hahdware men?"
18304Then, with the sweetly resigned philosophy of Palm Beach, you add:"Oh, well, what does it matter?
18304They are all for you, dearie-- so why should n''t you pay?
18304This time I did not reply, but asked:"Did you finish both sketches?"
18304Thus,"You shum, enty?"
18304To be sure, we went to bed every morning, but what is the use in doing that if you also get up every morning?
18304Train?
18304Was ever before an orphan homesick for an orphans''home?
18304Was not London?
18304Was not Rome burned?
18304Well, suh, what you think this Gawge done?
18304Well, then, dearie, what is all your money for?''
18304What above This yea''th_ can_ be your line?..."
18304What can they do?
18304What does she do then?"
18304What is this?
18304What kinda man is dat, anyhow?
18304What pictures have you made here?"
18304What were women to us?
18304What will it be two years hence?"
18304What you- all mean hintin''raound''baout St. Petuhsbuhg?
18304What''s the harm in it?"
18304What?
18304What?
18304When the chair was running free again, one of us inquired of the chairman:"What would you do if you had a million dollars?"
18304Where did they all sleep?
18304Where, in the North, we would ask a friend,"How are things out your way?"
18304Which man is to take the big, bright corner room, and which the little room that faces on the court and is fragrant of the bakery below?
18304Who knows?
18304Who lives beyond her?"
18304Who shall pay for this meal and who for that?
18304Who shall take home from a dance the girl both want to take, and who shall escort the unattractive one who resides in a remote suburb?
18304Who shall tip the bell boy for bringing up the bags, or the porter for taking down the trunks?
18304Who would imagine, seeing it to- day, that busy Granby Street had ever been a street of fine residences?
18304Whom did she mean by"we"?
18304Why did n''t father know the two young men who sat last night at the next table in the dining room?
18304Why is this so, even though the city be named for a man, or for a masculine saint?
18304Why should n''t I go there?"
18304Would it not be equally logical to say that the man who serves himself best serves the country best?
18304Would you like me to attack him on that line also?"
18304Yes?"
18304You sho you knows youah duties?''
18304You would want your boy to have your sword, would n''t you?"
18304You''re from No''th Ca''lina, ai n''t you?
18304_ Mais que voulez- vous?
18304a Charlestonian may inquire,"How are things out your_ side_?"
18304and C?"
18304it means definitely,"Are you going to the St. Cecilia balls?"
18304may mean,_ You see him_--_her_--or_ it_?
18304meaning his establishment, collectively, although I addressed him personally; but I would_ not_ ask my only servant,''Have you- all milked the cow?''"
18304or Sanitarium?
18304or"How are you, gentlemen?"
18304or_ You see what he_--_she_--or_ it_--_is doing_, or_ has done_?
18304says the visitor, rising and looking for his hat"You say hers is the third large house from here?"
18304sometimes sounds like"Woi?"
14362A hundred guineas, five hundred?
14362A_ signal_? 14362 Ah, and this is part of the drill?"
14362Ah?
14362Ai n''t got his bellyful o''fightin''yit?
14362Am I intruding?
14362And Belknap was content to do this?
14362And again I ask you, why are you here, when you are supposed to be in South Carolina?
14362And he?
14362And now, Jack,said my wire- haired old friend to me at last,"when do you ride to Albemarle?
14362And one may make mad love to any?
14362And shall I never know, in all the world?
14362And she agreed? 14362 And that will be your home?"
14362And what is it, then, John Cowles, that women call''wrong''?
14362And what is this scar on thy neck-- thee did not tell me when thee wrote, Jack, what ails thee?
14362And when?
14362And who is that dangerous flirt you were talking about a moment ago?
14362And will you keep it?
14362And yet you match against me? 14362 And you will never come back to quiet old Virginia, where plodding farmers go on as their fathers did a hundred years ago?"
14362And your father?
14362And, in your belief, that wedding should go on?
14362Are n''t you ashamed, all of you? 14362 Are we, then, only creatures, puppets, toys?"
14362Are you aware, sir, of the seriousness of what you have done?
14362Are you game-- can you do this, Miss Meriwether?
14362Are you in pain?
14362At dinner to- night, then?
14362At least, then, you are unmarried, Jack?
14362Because I am in your power, John Cowles?
14362Because by accident you have learned that I am a comely woman, as you are a strong man, normal, because I am fit to love, not ill to look at? 14362 Besides, as to the Sheratons, Jack,"she began again--"I do not wish to say one word to hurt thy feelings, but Miss Grace--""What about Miss Grace?"
14362Bread? 14362 Broth?"
14362But I hope you are not hurt in any way?
14362But could n''t funds be raised somehow, even yet?
14362But does not the trail cut off the bend, and run straight west?
14362But if I do not sign this?
14362But if the Government takes action?
14362But if you had ever signed words like these with any_ other_ woman, then it would not be our marriage nor our troth, would it, John Cowles?
14362But now I must know-- would you love me anywhere, in any circumstances, in spite of all? 14362 But now as to this Ellen?
14362But tell me, when is the wedding to be?
14362But what more?
14362But what-- what_ is_ it?
14362But you believe me, Jack? 14362 But you,"I ventured,"will always live with the Army?"
14362But your vow-- your promise?
14362By Jove,he broke out at length, flushing as he turned to me,"it is hard for a fellow to tell sometimes what''s right, is n''t it?
14362Can you forgive me?
14362Can you go?
14362Can you not give it, then? 14362 Could I use any of this money with clean conscience?"
14362Could it honorably be employed in the discharging of the debt Orme left on my family?
14362Could n''t you tell me something of how she will look?
14362Could we?
14362Could you want such a man?
14362Could you?
14362Did he die?
14362Did n''t God join you in holy wedlock, Mandy?
14362Did n''t you hear me? 14362 Did she run away from you?"
14362Did that man make the first break at you?
14362Did you marry that girl-- what was her name-- Miss Sheraton?
14362Did you promise him to keep your promise, Jack?
14362Did you see my boy, Andy Jackson?
14362Divorced, eh?
14362Do I not know that? 14362 Do you believe in the Indian telegraph now?"
14362Do you not see the yellow?
14362Do you really want to know?
14362Do you regret then that she brought me through-- that I owe my life to her?
14362Do you remember meeting me down at Jefferson?
14362Do you suggest that?
14362Do you suppose Mr. Cowles is engaged?
14362Do you think I could be?
14362Does the wound hurt you?
14362Does your father know of his peculiar hours?
14362Ellen who?
14362Ellen,I said,"do you indeed love me?"
14362Gentlemen, is it all agreed?
14362Git out of the way, man-- how can I see how to shoot if you bob your head acrost my sights all the time?
14362Going away again?
14362Has anything happened?
14362Has she suggested it?
14362Have you any news?
14362Have you heard from Leesburg, Washington?
14362Have you leave?
14362Have you never taken a little adventure of this sort yourself?
14362Have you told her-- have you told this to my girl?
14362He''ll not be back?
14362How are you coming on?
14362How can I tell?
14362How could that be?
14362How did you eat?
14362How did you know it?
14362How is the patient getting along?
14362How long will you remember me this time-- me or my clothes, Mr. Cowles? 14362 How many''s there of you?"
14362How on earth did you get here? 14362 How should I know?
14362How should I know? 14362 How''s the girl?
14362How?
14362I presume it to be understood that each may employ such charge as he prefers, and that each shall load his own piece?
14362I say, have you kept your other promise to me?
14362I see-- and they have some sort of an offer as well-- eh?
14362I suppose that you rarely came into our county either, but went down the Shenandoah when you journeyed to Washington?
14362If I give you parole,he asked,"will you believe me, and let us talk freely?"
14362If I killed him,said I, finally,"how would it better her case?
14362If you were just where I am,asked Harry Sheraton, slowly,"what would you do?
14362Impossible? 14362 In sickness or in health?"
14362Indeed, and to whom, pray?
14362Indeed, sir?
14362Is he dead, too, my dear woman?
14362Is it a fever? 14362 Is it agreed?"
14362Is it not well to wait?
14362Is it, indeed?
14362Is that so?
14362Is the case ready for argument?
14362It is Miss Meriwether? 14362 It is not because I am in your power?"
14362It is, can_ you_ forgive_ me_?
14362Jack,she said,"why should we wait?"
14362John Cowles, of Virginia,she said simply,"now tell me, how shall I mend this broken kettle?"
14362Judge Reeves,she cried,"what are you doing there?"
14362Just for the sake of saying you have done so?
14362Married?
14362Meaning yourself?
14362Meaning?
14362Miss Meriwether, is this your emblem indeed-- this red heart? 14362 Money against your horse?"
14362My good woman,said I, somewhat amused by her methods of action and speech,"do you mind telling me what is your name?"
14362My promise? 14362 No doubt your family know every one in this part of the country?"
14362Now it stops beating, does it not?
14362Now then, which one is she?
14362Now, I wonder who is this Ellen?
14362Now, now, my dear Miss Ellen,began Stevenson,"ca n''t you be a good fellow and run back home?
14362Now, shall we go back?
14362Now, the question comes, to which of these worlds belongs John Cowles? 14362 Now, whut''d you do if a man was to kivver you like I''m a- doin''now?"
14362Orme,said I,"Mr. Gordon Orme?
14362Say, mister, mebbe that''s yore wife back there in the kebbin in the middle of the boat?
14362Say, mister,said she,"how tall are you?"
14362Shall the firing be with the single barrel, or with both barrels?
14362Shall we go back to camp?
14362Silly, do you want me to put your hand in hers? 14362 So you did not hear my little effort the other night?"
14362Sport, great sport, is n''t it?
14362Suppose she does love you-- do I not love you more? 14362 Tell me, Jack Cowles,"she said,"is there anything in the world you are afraid to do?"
14362Tell me, have you seen those feats? 14362 Tell me, what in the world are you doing here?"
14362The Court being, as it were, broke, will some one be so good as to lend the Court a silver coin? 14362 The light then was that of some servant?"
14362The question only is, has my punishment been enough, or can it be enough? 14362 Then Captain Orme was quite mistaken?"
14362Then it is to be war?
14362Then it was Ellen?
14362Then we two are all the people left in the world, John Cowles? 14362 Then what is it?"
14362Then which do you choose, sir?
14362Then why did you go there so often all last year?
14362Then you knew I was a Quaker? 14362 Then, Mr. Cowles, you do not care to go back down the valley, and to return to the girl in Virginia?"
14362To how many have you said that?
14362To leave the County?
14362To leave the State?
14362Under which flag, then, for you?
14362Wanted me?
14362What are the Sioux doing so far east?
14362What became of your last husband, Mandy?
14362What boundary do we use, gentlemen?
14362What could he do?
14362What did she say?
14362What do you know about surgery?
14362What do you mean, Jack?
14362What do you mean?
14362What do you mean?
14362What do you say to me, John Cowles? 14362 What do you see?"
14362What does this mean?
14362What good would that do?
14362What has happened?
14362What is it?
14362What is it?
14362What is it?
14362What is marriage, John Cowles?
14362What is wrong?
14362What shall we do? 14362 What shall we do?"
14362What shall we do?
14362What was that?
14362What would happen then?
14362What ye skeered of? 14362 What''d them men have to do with it?
14362What''s that, my good fellow?
14362What''s the mystery? 14362 What''s up?"
14362What''s wrong?
14362What, has Kitty talked?
14362What? 14362 When is this wedding to be?"
14362When one does not love a girl, and sees no happiness in the thought of living with her all his life, what squares that, Harry, in your opinion?
14362When we have escaped,she went on,"if ever we do escape, then this will still be our troth, will it not, John Cowles?"
14362Where are you going?
14362Where d''ye suppose it was unlessen at our_ ho_tel? 14362 Where did you learn the trick?"
14362Where is Colonel Meriwether?
14362Where shall I shoot it?
14362Where you go?
14362Who are you?
14362Who is in there?
14362Who''d have thought the Sioux would be this far east?
14362Who''s the other?
14362Whut business is this here of yores?
14362Whut you all doin''down there?
14362Why could they not remain as they are?
14362Why did you not come on to the settlements? 14362 Why did you not tell me?
14362Why do you ask me? 14362 Why do you blind the poor fellow?"
14362Why do you say that?
14362Why do you think I belong to the Army?
14362Why should we not have done what-- what is it that you mean?
14362Why should you not both have done so?
14362Why, then?
14362Why?
14362Will you be ready?
14362Will you make me a promise?
14362Will you make me one promise?
14362Will you promise me to do one thing you have already promised to do?
14362With a special reference to Army officers born in the South?
14362Witnesses?
14362Wo n''t I do?
14362Would you like it?
14362Would you like to have a little match at our birds?
14362Yes, but how did you get here yourself-- you were not on my boat?
14362Yes, who''s the tall one?
14362Yes? 14362 Yes?"
14362Yes?
14362You a kunnel?
14362You are John Cowles, sir, then?
14362You are from Washington?
14362You are playing some deeper game than I know?
14362You did-- and alone? 14362 You do not ask that now?"
14362You feel it beat?
14362You know his breeding?
14362You know of Grace Sheraton, back there?
14362You object? 14362 You refuse to do what you have planned to do?
14362You spoke of pigeon shooting,said Orme lazily,"Blue rocks, I imagine?"
14362You wish him?
14362You, Aunt Mandy?
14362Young man, what do you propose to do in regard to my daughter? 14362 Your father is Mr. John Cowles, of Cowles''Farms?"
14362Your son, Andrew Jackson?
14362_ Who_ came with you, Aunt Mandy?
14362After all, Jack, you are young, and so is--""Ellen?"
14362Am I good enough for you, Ellen?
14362Am I your shadow, Mr. Cowles, or are you mine?
14362An''whut you doin''out here?"
14362And in what arm?"
14362And she-- Ellen-- the girl I had seen and loved in the desert silences?
14362And then to me,"You do n''t know Benjie?
14362And what will be the result when the South, plus England, fights these tariff makers over here?
14362And, I say, you did meet the savages, did n''t you?"
14362Are n''t you, Annie?"
14362Are we not as well off as those?"
14362Are you a married man?"
14362Are you pleased to tell me what will settle this debt between us?"
14362Auberry, ca n''t you find me a bit of sinew somewhere, and perhaps a needle of some sort?"
14362Aunt Mandy, where was all this?"
14362But I trust nothing has been done as yet--""You trust not?
14362But now what shall we do?"
14362But presently I asked him,"Have you no word for me from her?"
14362But say, who''s that a- comin''down the street there in that little sawed- off wagon?"
14362But shall we not have them bring us one of these juleps of the country?
14362But tell me, why did not your father himself come out?"
14362But then, how could he find us, little as we are, in this big country?
14362But what of me that night?
14362But whither?
14362But who was I that I should judge him?
14362But wo n''t you promise what I''ve asked?
14362But you know my black horse, Mr. Orme, that you fancied?"
14362CHAPTER XXIX THE GARDEN Soon now we would be able to travel; but whither, and for what purpose?
14362Ca n''t you catch him?"
14362Came out from Leavenworth with you, I suppose?"
14362Can marriage be of but two?"
14362Can not a woman be free as much as a man?
14362Can you-- could you--""Can you yourself forgive this?"
14362Colonel Meriwether,"I cried out at length,"you are not regretting that I brought her through?"
14362Could the wild freedom of this life have worked a similar spell on her?
14362Could we go on?"
14362Could you promise me, clean and solemn?
14362Could you promise me-- in that way?
14362Cowles, what do you know about that man?"
14362Cowles?"
14362Cowles?"
14362Did n''t I_ hear_ him-- didn''t you hear him_ admit_ it?"
14362Did n''t you know I married ole man Auberry?
14362Did you ever know me to break parole?"
14362Did you hear me?"
14362Do n''t you see them fixing up the dancing platform on Parade?
14362Do n''t you suppose all the world will_ talk_?
14362Do we love because we are but creatures?
14362Do you expect me to tolerate that sort of thing from you?"
14362Do you figure that I am a woman because you are a man?
14362Do you forgive me?
14362Do you shoot, sir?"
14362Do you suspect me of putting out a beacon light for a cheap night adventure with some man?
14362Does thee think thee can handle all three of these activities in combination?''
14362Ellen Meriwether accepted him on such terms?"
14362Ever do anything at it?"
14362Few of us are all we ought to be, but why?
14362Has she spoken to you in any way that might lead you to think she would prefer our engagement to be broken?"
14362Have I not right as much as you?
14362Have you been sick?
14362Have you not been free?"
14362Have you saw airy buffeler?
14362He had given me-- what?
14362How could I inflict upon her a still more poignant suffering than this physical one?
14362How could you be expected to understand what it took me years to learn?
14362How old is your father, my good fellow?"
14362How shall I know_ her_?"
14362How should it be known that we were almost within touch of the great highway of the West, now again thronging with wagon trains?
14362How''d you git away out here ahead of us?
14362I had delved deep as I might in law, and history and literature, seeking to solve, as I might-- what?
14362I infer that he has advised you of the condition of our joint business matters?"
14362I must make another home for myself, and for--""For me?"
14362I presume Captain Orme told you?"
14362I say, Cowles, could n''t you do that for me?
14362I suppose you talked it over with him?"
14362I''m sure he will join us to- night?"
14362Indeed, how should you know?
14362Is he away in the West?
14362Is he here again?
14362Is it because you know I am human, and young, and fit for love?
14362Is it not all wild and free?"
14362Is it not so?"
14362Is it of the church?"
14362Is it proof?"
14362Is it your wound again?"
14362Is my girl sick?"
14362Is my parole ended?"
14362Is n''t it curious?"
14362Is n''t it funny how these things go?
14362Is n''t it glorious, here on the Plains?
14362Is n''t that your business?"
14362Is that satisfactory?"
14362Is that understood, gentlemen?"
14362Is that why?
14362Is there any one who wishes to back me, perhaps, or to back Mr. Cowles?
14362Is this Thy will?"
14362It asked of me, as though he spoke:"Are you, then, game to the core?
14362It could not have been a signal?"
14362It is not necessary for me to explain to you the full nature of it--""Then she has sent for me?"
14362Jack, you remember Jennie Williams, across under Catoctin?"
14362Kitty has talked again?
14362Kitty?"
14362Look, is n''t it nicely done?"
14362Matt, look at him, is n''t he old, and sour, and solemn?"
14362Mrs. Stevenson, will you allow this sort of talk?"
14362Must I live here always-- must I settle down and be simply a farmer forever?
14362Now since I have come so far to see you and have found you out so soon, why do you not confess that you are Miss Ellen?
14362Now what is an''indenture''?
14362Now, I wonder if indeed you did meet Ellen?
14362Now, may I go?
14362Now, why was it you did not take up these matters with Colonel Meriwether?
14362Once more, whither was my folly carrying me?
14362Or was it because she was keen, shrewd and in control of herself, able to make plans to her own advantage?
14362Orme?"
14362Perhaps you have heard of exchangeable personalities?"
14362See, is n''t it fine?"
14362Setting aside all my own acts in other matters, why can you not remember at least so much as that?
14362Shall I admire you and give you another chance, or shall I kill you now?"
14362Shall it then be war?"
14362She was glad that she might now be more free, needing some manner of friend; but she was still-- what?
14362Should I wait here, or at Leavenworth; or should I go on still farther west?
14362Since I did not, and since, therefore, you owe me something for that fact, what do you say about it yourself, my friend?"
14362Sport?
14362Stevenson?"
14362Suppose we leave the debt unsettled until we meet some time?
14362Suppose you were in the case of that other young man who loves her?
14362Tell me, Jack, did you quarrel?
14362Tell me, are you a skilled wrestler?"
14362Tell me, who are you, and what are you, and what are you doing in this country?"
14362Thank you,"to Williams,"and now, gentlemen, will you toss for the order of precedence?"
14362That what a woman prizes is not right, is not good?
14362The first one was-- what shall I say?
14362Thee is older-- what has come to thee, my son?"
14362Their superiors?
14362Then why should not you and I try to forget?
14362Until you meet another?"
14362Was it not true?
14362Was it that I again was at her side, that old associations awakened?
14362What are you doing here?"
14362What are you trying to cover up?"
14362What can we do?
14362What chance have we men against such weapons?
14362What could I do after that?
14362What did he say to you when you saw him?"
14362What did he tell you?"
14362What did you expect?"
14362What do you mean?
14362What do you mean?"
14362What do you wish?
14362What had I brought to this girl''s creed of life, heretofore always so sweet and usual?
14362What had come of all my studies?
14362What is he doing out here?"
14362What matters it that you suffer or that I suffer?
14362What say the words of the law?
14362What shall we do?"
14362What was I coming to, I, John Cowles, this morning when the bees droned fat and the flowers made fragrant all the air?
14362What was he doing here in our quiet country community?
14362What was his errand?
14362What was it that sat upon her face-- melancholy, or fear, or sorrow, or resentment?
14362What wonder the saying that no Army man ever passed St. Louis without leaving a heart, or taking one with him?
14362What would be right for him?"
14362What''s wrong, Doctor?
14362What-- a judge of the Supreme Court?"
14362When I am old, will you cast me off?
14362Where all you goin'', anyhow?
14362Where is your husband?
14362Where they at?"
14362Where was the old world I had left behind me?
14362Where will England side when the break comes?
14362Where''d you all be now if it was n''t for me?"
14362Whether by plan of her own or not, I can not say, but it softened to a more gentle-- shall I say a more beseeching look?
14362Whut business is it o''yourn, anyhow?
14362Whut''s the word of a man to a woman?
14362Whut''s the word of a woman to a man?
14362Why are we made the way we are?"
14362Why barter and dicker over any woman with another man?
14362Why do you abuse him in this way?"
14362Why was Orme there?"
14362Why, then, had she kept it, why had she brought it home with her?
14362Why?"
14362Will you gentlemen present me?"
14362Wo n''t you promise?"
14362Would any one else like to lay a little something?
14362You do love me?"
14362You do promise to keep your promise?
14362You feel your honor too deeply touched?
14362You, sir, what''s wrong?
14362_ And, then I felt my face grow ashy cold and pale in one sudden breath!_"But why do you look so sad?"
14362_ Are you to blame_?"
14362are they feats, or simply lies?"
14362she exclaimed, reaching out a hand against a tree trunk to steady herself,"Your leavings?
14362she murmured,"what shall we do?
32539Are not the cases somewhat similar?
32539Like so many young birds holding their little heads above their nests, would these sweet little children ask us,"Have you any candy for me?"
32539What place is this?
32539Who can tell the future size of the Crescent City?
22591All our reverses, our despondence, our despairs,said Curtis,"bring us to the inevitable issue, shall not the blacks strike for their freedom?
22591But how did they exhibit their hatred of corruption? 22591 But why should slaves be excluded?"
22591But, sir, am I on that account to indulge my individual resentment in the prostration of my private and political adversary? 22591 Could anything but a desire to buy the South at the presidential shambles dictate such an outrage?
22591Do the business interests of the country dread a return of the Democratic party to power? 22591 Do you not think matters may be adjusted at Baltimore?"
22591Do you still think Seward ought to be excused?
22591Do you think the South will secede?
22591Does that statement cover appointments?
22591Even if Judge Robertson''s name should be sent in?
22591For what is this convention held?
22591Have we got to surrender a page of the next_ Weekly_ to Raymond''s bore of an address?
22591Have you no enemy in front? 22591 How long is this procession?"
22591How so?
22591If the platform is not a matter of much consequence,he demanded,"why press that question to the disruption of the party?
22591If they were,he asked,"how and when did they become so?
22591If you do not nominate Seward, where will you get your money?
22591Is Mr. Lincoln honest?
22591Seward,replied Weed,"is it not better to be alive in a carriage with me than to be dead and set up in bronze?
22591Shall I tell you what this collision means? 22591 Shall we take the American party?"
22591The question is simply this,he said;"Shall we have compromise_ after_ war, or compromise_ without_ war?"
22591Then who are you?
22591What are we coming to,asked Senator Trumbull of Illinois,"if arrests may be made at the whim or the caprice of a cabinet minister?
22591What is the annual amount of patronage of the national government in this State?
22591When in conversation with Conkling, I mentioned Blaine''s remark, he said,''Do you believe one word of that?'' 22591 Where is my friend George?"
22591Who are these men who, in newspapers or elsewhere, are cracking their whips over me and playing schoolmaster to the party? 22591 Who''s Clark?"
22591Why does he persist in giving them weapons with which they may defeat his renomination? 22591 Why should we now make any concessions to them?
22591Why surrender before the battle for fear of having to surrender after the battle? 22591 Why,"he asked,"should I exclude the foreigner to- day?
22591Will you sanction it?
22591With what great measure of statesmanship is his name conspicuously identified? 22591 [ 1163] Why, then, it was asked, did Greeley''s friends put him into a contest already settled?
22591[ 1611] Convertible into what kind of coin? 22591 ''Major,''I said,''is there anything non- committal about that?'' 22591 ''Then you do n''t know what happened at Batavia yesterday?'' 22591 ''What, then,''you say;''can nothing be done for freedom because the public conscience is inert?'' 22591 ''Who is he?'' 22591 ''You have been east?'' 22591 After Van Buren had reported, the question arose, should the Comptroller be sustained, or should the report of Van Buren''s committee be accepted? 22591 After the two conventions adjourned the question of chiefest interest was, would Tilden seek the nomination at Cincinnati? 22591 And is it not needed when its taking helps us and hurts our enemy? 22591 And what have I to lose by withdrawing and leaving the party unembarrassed? 22591 Are they making sacrifices, when they do that which is required by the common welfare? 22591 Besides, if he intended to withdraw, why did Kelly assemble his convention? 22591 But the party-- the country? 22591 But those who clung to the party organisation, what did they do? 22591 But were there no beneficial results, no accruing advantages, to himself? 22591 But why did he not say so? 22591 But why should negroes do anything for us, if we will do nothing for them? 22591 By what specific act, at what precise time, did any one of those States take itself out of the American Union? 22591 Can you afford to erect such a government of blacks over the white men of this continent? 22591 Can you safely deny us these things?
22591Coin of depreciated value, or the fixed monetary standard of the commercial world?
22591Could he have it?
22591Could one be made at the close of the session?
22591Did he not attain, in the sixteen years, a high position, world- wide reputation, and an ample fortune?
22591Did men from the interior of the State understand that Hoffman for governor means a ring magnate for United Sates senator?
22591Did they say that liberty was suspended?
22591Did they say that men might be deprived of the right of trial by jury?
22591Did they say that men might be torn from their homes by midnight intruders?...
22591Did they wish to humiliate him?
22591Did you notice the nominations sent in yesterday?
22591Do you comprehend the terrible significance of those words?
22591Do you not think, in the struggle for the Union, that the withdrawal of negro help from the enemy weakens his resistance to you?
22591Do you think the people would sustain us if we undertook to throw it away?
22591Do you think we, who represent this majority, will throw it away?
22591Do you want to make traitors out of loyal men?
22591Does he want the Rebels routed, or would he prefer to have them conciliated?"
22591Does not every man know that we must have a united North to triumph?
22591Does the doctrine that in war laws are silent, please them when put in practice in the streets of New York?"
22591Grave doubt obtained as to the government''s physical ability to succour the fort, but, assuming it possible, was it wise as a political measure?
22591Have you any States to spare?
22591Hold that Constitution, and liberties, and laws are suspended?
22591How can you blame the South for hesitating when you hesitate?
22591If secession be not lawful, then, what is it?
22591If slaves are property, is there any question that by the law of war such property, both of enemies and friends, may be taken when needed?
22591If so, to which faction?
22591If we will do what?
22591If, as you pretend, you wish the blacks of this State to have the ballot, why do you not give it to them?
22591In this crisis may not some other person bear away the palm?
22591Is he a man to make a reputation while his country is in danger?
22591Is it a man to go to a convention representing others, and then determine as he individually prefers what he will do?
22591Is it for that five hundred men, the selected pride of the Republican party of this State, have come here to meet together?
22591Is there a senator upon the other side who to- day will agree that we shall have equal enjoyment of the territories of the United States?
22591Is there one who will deny that we have equally paid in their purchases, and equally bled in their acquisition in war?
22591It is true they say we are all on one platform, but when did we get there?
22591May not this contest have a similar result?
22591Members recognised each other by the casual inquiry,"Have you seen Sam?"
22591Now, the question is, whom shall we place upon the altar as a vicarious sacrifice?
22591On July 27, 1854, the New York_ Independent_ asked:"Shall we have a new party?
22591Or shall we do as our fathers did under circumstances of like trial, when they battled against the powers of a crown?
22591Perhaps you would like the nomination for Vice- President?"
22591Preserve it?
22591Senators no longer exchanged their impressions, or asked"How long?"
22591Shall we report ourselves to the Whig party?
22591Shall we unite ourselves to the Democratic party?
22591Should he follow such a precedent and save his party, perhaps his country, from the dire ills so vividly portrayed by Hamilton?
22591Should it be Bigelow for a third term, or Beach, the choice of the ring?
22591Should it be the old ticket or a new one?
22591Suppose refugees from the South and peace men from the North hold a convention of the States, how can their action keep Lee out of Pennsylvania?
22591Ten days later, in the midst of riot and bloodshed, the_ World_ said:"Will the insensate men at Washington now give ear to our warnings?
22591That what negroes can do as soldiers leaves so much less for white soldiers to do?
22591The Hards who are so stern in defending the aggressions, and in rebuking the Administration through whose agency they are committed?
22591The people of Mississippi ask, what is the construction of the platform of 1856?
22591The question in 1820 was, shall the canal be built?
22591The question was, should they strike out the only resolution having the slightest significance in the minority report?
22591The question was, would the State be safer in the hands of a well- known Democratic statesman like Dix than in the control of Fenton and the Radicals?
22591Then, is this the observance of your contract?
22591They ask which is right and which is wrong?
22591Was it by the ordinance of secession?
22591Were the men who made these exposures renominated?
22591Were their arms victorious?
22591What are his present opinions about the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia?''
22591What became of the gentlemen who seceded?
22591What could he say, therefore, that would settle anything?
22591What further need, then, for bleeding our exhausted treasury?
22591What is it but nullification by the wholesale?
22591What is it but the same party which has led in the commission of all those aggressions, and claims exclusively the political benefits?
22591What is it-- this secession?
22591What is the use of a delegate?
22591What makes it so?
22591What would be the effect of the other plan?
22591What would happen if our ships were suffered to go to Europe and the Indies?
22591What, then, is the meaning and purpose of constantly accusing Republicans of this State of unfriendly bias?
22591When he laughingly inquired,''Who?''
22591Where is it?
22591Whose is the fault if the Union be dissolved?
22591Why better_ after_ the retraction than_ before_ the issue?
22591Why did you not tell us in the beginning of this debate that the whole fight was against the man and not upon the platform?
22591Why do n''t you talk with him?"
22591Why should we continue a war from the prosecution of which we have nothing to gain, they asked?
22591Why should we love a government that has no dignity and no power?
22591Why should we preserve it, if it would be the thing these gentlemen would make it?
22591Why, then, go to all this trouble, when a complete organisation is at hand ready for use?
22591Why, then, it was asked, did he advocate Dix the day before?
22591Will it have the necessary information?
22591Will she sacrifice her commerce, her wealth, her population, her character, in order to strengthen the arm of her oppressors?
22591Will that restore them?
22591Will the States agree to surrender?
22591Will the election of Cleveland increase it?
22591Will the general government have leisure to examine the state laws?
22591Will there be a vacancy in the Board of Regents this winter?
22591Will they now believe that defiance of law in the rulers breeds defiance of law in the people?
22591Will you give them control in the United States Senate and thus in fact disfranchise the North?
22591Would Kelly himself be the first to commit this unpardonable sin?
22591Would the chair include these contested delegations in the roll- call?
22591You will ask impatiently,''Has he a heart?''
22591[ 1063] Suddenly the President changed his tone to one of amnesty and reconciliation, and in answering the question,"who has influenced him?"
22591[ Footnote 1574: Curtis declined chiefly from the motive ascribed in Lowell''s lines:"At courts, in senates, who so fit to serve?
22591[ Footnote 785:"Do you pretend to know more about military affairs than General Scott?
22591and if they, on the promise of freedom, stake their lives to save the Union, shall the promise not be kept?
22591and upon whose authority did he withdraw Dix''s name?
22591exclaimed Seward, in astonishment;"then who is governor?"
22591or the Softs who protest against the aggressions, while they sustain and invigorate the Administration?
22591or"What next?"
19995A hard, woody stem, a green, robust leaf, a delicate, odorous flower, Mr. Dudley, what is it all but an expression of New England character?
19995Afraid of what?
19995Altered?
19995Am I much changed?
19995And are not engaged to any one?
19995And did she seem confused?
19995And do you know, Everett, what it is you have done?--how wrong you have been?
19995And so keep your memory green?
19995And that they had left their wedding- dresses upon the boughs? 19995 And what then?"
19995And who and what is that,he said,--"sitting a little apart there,--that strange, wild- looking girl?"
19995And you?
19995Are you so very busy, dear Yone,he said, without noticing Lu,"that you can not drive with me to- day?"
19995Are you to be married?
19995But how under heaven,says the innocent priest,"has it ever got into your head that I can know the five numbers which are to issue in the lottery?"
19995But if you loved him?
19995But what are you making such a change for? 19995 By the way,"said the friend,"did you see that your three numbers came up in the lottery this morning?"
19995Ca n''t I do as well, uncle?
19995Ca n''t it be repaired?
19995Dead friendships, Miss Rachel? 19995 Did you care so much for fretful, crabbed Aunt Willoughby?"
19995Did you choose it purposely, Louise?
19995Do I look like a woman who would take a man''s love at second hand?
19995Do I look so wretchedly?
19995Do I love you? 19995 Do you mean to say you have become a Dissenter?"
19995Do you suppose it will be like?
19995Going?
19995Have you finished your tirade?
19995Have you informed Lady Beauchamp of your intention of becoming a merchant''s clerk? 19995 Have you the trailing- arbutus there?"
19995Have you wished for me, Rachel?
19995How are your ladies? 19995 How came you ever to take a fancy to this place?
19995How do you get over_ that_? 19995 If you let the dam down, can you push the waters back again?
19995In the next place, what do you propose to do?
19995Is it true? 19995 Is it you, Rachel?"
19995Is not Tuscany the garden of Italy? 19995 Is that the way you feel towards all your friends?"
19995It''s a noble thing to do; but have you considered how it will affect your future? 19995 Louise, are you offended with me?"
19995Me? 19995 Miss Willoughby,"said he, turning and looking directly past me,"may I paint you?"
19995No; but may I try?
19995Not see you again, Rachel?
19995Not write? 19995 Offended, Rose, with you?"
19995Oh!--And the pink one, three seats from her? 19995 Oh, I suppose you intend to make a large fortune in a twelvemonth, and then return and marry?"
19995Rachel,he whispered,"the only woman I ever did or ever can love, will you send me away again?"
19995Right, you foolish girl? 19995 Since he loves beauty so, why does he not love me?"
19995Since your Eminence commands me, I will,said the old man;"but what numbers?"
19995So you mean to forget me altogether?
19995To what purpose? 19995 Was I wrong?
19995Well, Sir,--what has made you so much better, or so much worse, since then, as to alter your opinion of the calling?
19995Well, my dear Everett, what is all this that I hear about you? 19995 What have I done, what am I,"he would oftentimes say,"that I should be saved and sustained and_ loved_ by you, Everett?"
19995What is it to be in a dream?
19995When I come back, you''ll sing my songs? 19995 Who is that girl in ringlets,--the fourth in the third row on the right?"
19995Who will buy a_ pianeta_,he cries,"with the numbers sure to bring him a prize?
19995Whom is she speaking with? 19995 Why did n''t I marry them, then?"
19995Why sorry?
19995Why, my dear little soul,said Mr. Bernard,"what are you worried about?
19995Why, what''s the matter, my dear?
19995Will you come?
19995Will you enter a profession? 19995 Will you let a woman''s strength shame you?"
19995Would you stay long, Louise?
19995You and I have been sisters, have we not? 19995 You are not bruised, Miss Willoughby?"
19995You belong to nothing, then? 19995 You did n''t play them?"
19995You do n''t say so? 19995 You do n''t suppose I have not my child''s happiness at heart in all I plan and purpose?
19995You loved me once; you love me now, Louise, if I were free?
19995You must have been corresponding with the young man all this time?
19995You prefer, then, to be called Pipetta?
19995You want me to say how much I love Vaughan Rose?
19995You wo n''t touch them again? 19995 You''ll write to me, Miss Rachel?"
19995You, darling? 19995 _ You_ heard him?
19995--even as, in the innocent faith of childhood, I pondered ten minutes upon"Who was the father of Zebedee''s children?"
19995Am I crazed with opiates?
19995Am I right?"
19995And are n''t you glad of it?
19995And what is a flower that blows on a grave?
19995And who comes after?"
19995Another?
19995Are any of these decimal?
19995Are n''t there any hidden relations between us and certain substances?
19995Are not their gradations produced by the following multiplications: 1 x 5 x 2 x 2- 1/2 x 2 x 2 x 2- 1/2 x 2 x 2 x 2, and 1 x 3 x 100?
19995Are there any things in Nature that exist by tens, that associate by tens, that separate into tenths?
19995Are there any things that are sold by tens, or by tenths?
19995Are you_ quite_ a fool?"
19995B. became only the pretext of a mystery, and I signed myself by my full name, the question naturally arose,--"Who_ is_ Matilda Muffin?"
19995Because I write the anguish and suffering of an elderly widow with a drunken husband, am I therefore meek and of middle age, the slave of a rum- jug?
19995Because Rollo is virtuous, shall there be no more mud- cakes and ale?
19995Blarsaye?
19995But are you sure that you are glad to see me?"
19995But he didn''t,--he didn''t"----"Did n''t what, my boy?"
19995But how to execute a treaty between these wild Children of the Mist and respectable diplomatic Englishmen?
19995But if the base ten agrees with nothing, over, on, or under the earth, can it be the best for scientific use?
19995But must I say farewell here?"
19995But when we inquire, To what end?
19995But where have you been these four weeks, that I have n''t got speech with you?"
19995But where, I ask, does that imp find the aforesaid poet, when he goes to get the seventh stanza of the"Lonely Heart"?
19995But wo n''t you write at all?"
19995Ca n''t you hear me?
19995Can I have been, by any dexterity known to man, of mind or body, such a various creature, such a polycorporate animal, as you make me to be?
19995Can you believe that he will slip from me and return to one in better harmony with him?
19995Could I give him up thus?
19995Could he have seen her?
19995Could n''t I sit out under the shadow of the beech- trees, as well as in that hot room?
19995Could n''t the old house content you?"
19995Could n''t they get you into a snug berth?
19995Did I say I could live just on the memory of that summer?
19995Did I say I would not lose him?
19995Did he succeed?
19995Did he wound me?
19995Did she come then?
19995Do n''t you like the notion of my lady- visitors?"
19995Do not these six grades, irregular as they are, give to our coins their principal convenience?
19995Do our children of the year 1860 ever read a book called"The Pilgrim''s Progress"?
19995Do you love me?"
19995Do you mean to tell me that you seriously think of this Canada scheme?"
19995Do you mean to tell me you would decline this career because it promises to put an end to your difficulties?
19995Do you take me for a heathen?"
19995Does simplicity require such trash as this?
19995Does sound flash?
19995Does that show that he is properly supplied with reading matter?
19995Does the President believe this theory of Mexican settlement will be accepted by the world?
19995Escape?
19995Had Rose seen the pantomime?
19995Half- past one?
19995Haow''s your haälth?"
19995Happy, then, ten years?
19995Have I been asleep?
19995Have I dozed again?
19995Have I spoken?
19995Have we, in the hour of our success, been invariably true to the promises made in the hour of our necessities?
19995Here was triumph for the prudent father,--desolation to the loving woman,--and to Everett, what?
19995His Eminence paused and reflected;--at last he said,"Why not buy a ticket in the lottery?"
19995His reasons,--might she ask?
19995How Could He Help It?
19995How could I hold out to do my duty, if I were tempted any farther?
19995How could it live away from the sea?"
19995How long could I live and lose nothing?
19995How long did my eyes swim on his?
19995How should a book for children be written?
19995How?"
19995I almost feared to let him image me on canvas, do you know?
19995I am the last of the Willoughbys, a decayed race, and from such strong decay what blossom less gorgeous should spring?
19995I leave it to any candid mind, what would be the result to literature, if such a course were pursued?
19995I rubbed a little yellow smoke out of them,--a cloud that hung between him and the world, so that he saw only me,--at least----What am I dreaming of?
19995I said,"Othello''s occupation''s gone?"
19995If I risk it, I may lose it,--and that lost, what can I do?"
19995If one happy chance can bring a fortune, who will spend laborious days to gain a competence?
19995If they should be overthrown, as probably would be their fate, where would be the"security"for which we are to pay so highly in blood and gold?
19995In business, who ever thinks of a half as two- fourths, or three- sixths, much less as two- and- a- half- fifths, or three- and- a- half- sevenths?
19995Is any one?
19995Is it all watching and grief?"
19995Is it near morning?
19995Is it so?
19995Is it worth while to have lived?
19995Is n''t everybody better for lavishing love?
19995Is n''t her happiness worth some consideration?"
19995Is n''t that good common sense?"
19995Is that sound doctrine?
19995Is that what you are fluttering about so for?"
19995Is there anyone who thinks that youth has monopolized all the passion of life, all the rapture, all the wild despair?
19995Is there no one to save me?
19995It is to be, then?"
19995It''s not pain, is it?"
19995Likewise I am used to hear people say,"I suppose you do n''t waste your valuable time in sewing?"
19995Look about and what do you see?
19995Looks bright; anything in her?"
19995Louise, if the earth were dazzled aside from her constant pole- star to worship some bewildering comet, would she be more forlorn than I?"
19995Must I suffer any more?
19995Must we have no more pennyworths of sense to such a monstrous quantity of verbiage than Mr. Abbott gives us here?
19995My life- yarn spins against some other yarn, catches the fibres, and twists into the very heart"----"So far?"
19995No dream within dream?
19995No one here?
19995No swarm of souls about me?
19995Now I ask you, have_ you_ such a chance?
19995Oh, why not all things crash to ruin with me?
19995Padre mio!_ what will it cost you?"
19995Rose had loved me from that first day.--You scarcely hear what I say, I talk so low and fast?
19995Shall I wear them?"
19995Should n''t you think that Oberon had held high court here over- night?"
19995Suppose my head cracks and rings and reels with a great ache that stupefies me?
19995Surely you feel that?
19995That would not do; and besides, what was the need of pity, when he had consoled himself?
19995The amber gods?
19995The answer of the servant was,"I have given my best years to the service of your Eminence,--I am too old to labor,--what shall I do?"
19995The great Free- Soil principle is good for their hearts, if not for their clothes; and which is it more important to have clean?
19995The only thing Lu ever said to me about this was,--"Do n''t you think Rose a little altered, Yone, since he came home?"
19995The superabundance is all very fine, of the costliest kind; but was Clarence any the better for being done to death in Malmsey instead of water?
19995Then what does he mean by saying octagons and hexagons are very regular?
19995Then why do we claim that our coins are decimal?
19995These amulets stumbling round again?
19995They are so small, they might be lost in this long, dark room; why not the pain too, the point of pain, I?
19995Throb after throb,--is it going to peal forever?
19995Time''s going, Signori,--who buys?
19995Too warm for the mountains?"
19995Useless things?
19995Was I not fortunate to find it?"
19995Was n''t she an angel?
19995Was that why you were afraid to show yourself to me?"
19995We might have decimal coins by dropping all but cents, dimes, dollars, and eagles; but the question is not, What we might have, but, What have we?
19995Wequashim, my moonlight, say, Wilt thou go with me, or stay?"
19995Were you bewitched, that you stood here so still?"
19995What are you to do?
19995What can I do for her?
19995What comparison could match them?
19995What do you mean?
19995What do you say to my plan?
19995What do you say to that?"
19995What figures are these that now appear?
19995What figures do you see?
19995What have they to do with open- work stockings?
19995What is this in my hands?
19995What makes you look so dark?
19995What more hostile than focal concentration and obscure decomposition?
19995What should she do?
19995What sympathy can there be between my florid health, my rank, redundant life, and any wasting disease of death?
19995What time can it be?
19995What was my witchcraft?"
19995What was that?
19995What''s amiss with you?"
19995What''s the use of sending little locks of wool across to keep them acquainted?
19995What, after all, constitutes a"good moral"?
19995What, then, is the most convenient gradation?
19995When can you be ordained?"
19995Where are your senses, man?"
19995Where courts are organized as they are in Naples, who but a fool would trust to them?
19995Where is he?
19995Where is my father?
19995Where, then, would be the restoration of order, of which this Mexican writer has so much to say?
19995Who could have such hair but I?
19995Who knows what a fortune he''ll get till he tries?
19995Who said anything about ten years?
19995Who was with her?
19995Why I alone singled for this curse?
19995Why cling fixed on a point five minutes before the first quarter struck?
19995Why did n''t you all go to the lake, as you planned last night?"
19995Why do I think the word?
19995Why is he away, when they know I die?
19995Why must the long, silent look with which he met her the day I got my amber strike back on me now so vindictively?
19995Why not?"
19995Why should I be injured, any more than you?"
19995Why should I care?
19995Why should they?
19995Why, child, why tempt Providence?
19995Why, then, did not the hands move?
19995Why, then, should this one merit be omitted, as our children grow a little older?
19995Will he ever find himself with that love lost, this love exhausted, only his art left him?
19995Will that teach a child to admire courage and activity?
19995Will the time ever come when the Fourth of July shall have the same double claim to the reverence of mankind?
19995Will you believe it?
19995Will you take time to consider?
19995Will you talk to Rosa about it, first?"
19995With his romantic, transcendental notions, what_ would_ become of him, when he had his own way to make in the world?
19995Wo n''t it be delicious?"
19995Wo n''t it be strange, in that great Hereafter, to hunt up our own fibres, and return other people''s?
19995Wo n''t she turn and see?
19995Would I advise her?
19995Would that man let anything upon earth stand between him and a woman that loved him?
19995Yes, death finds me more beautiful than life made me; but have I lost nothing?
19995You are coming?
19995You are not afraid to do that?"
19995You are not_ very_ angry, are you?
19995You believe in nothing, I suppose?"
19995You do n''t play at your friendships, do you?
19995You do n''t suppose they find much joy in the fellowship of brown pine pins and sad, gray mosses, do you?
19995You do not like amber?
19995You feel with me in this matter?"
19995You think it strange I do n''t delay?
19995You, with neither fortune nor profession,--how do you propose to live?
19995and what makes you spend so much money on it?"
19995and when will Miss Lucy come to ride out with me?"
19995can I not escape?
19995can it be at all suited to commercial purposes?
19995do you spend the night on the balcony?"
19995he might as well have painted the sun; and who could do that?
19995is n''t she interesting?
19995no help?
19995or am I dying?
19995or"Come, naow, a''n''t ye''shamed?"
19995quoth Waldron,"leave a child Christian- born to heathens wild?
19995what was this thing I had become?
19995what''s that?"
19995who buys?"
329751651?
32975A controversy on a doctrinal point--"Did God die on Calvary?"
32975The choice lay with the community of Medina; so much was understood; but whom were they to choose?
32975of Portugal revived the work of Henry the Navigator, he sent out Cam( about midsummer(?)
10234''Ow''l you trade?
10234''Tite Poulette?
10234An''you godd some mo''chillen?
10234And I suppose then your poor mother grew angry, eh?
10234And break the law?
10234And could I be whiter than I am?
10234And did I say something wrong or-- foolish?
10234And do you think I would cheat you now?
10234And heir to your wealth, for example?
10234And if I did?
10234And now you do not know what to do with her?
10234And that was--?
10234And we has both been bad enough in our times eh, Charlie?
10234And we''d have rid him on a rail, would n''t we?
10234And you and me is mighty close?
10234And you got the pass?
10234And you say,said the Secretary,"the old black man has been going by here alone?
10234And you think that was growin''out of the holy- water?
10234Are they going to wrench the tops off with hatchet and chisel?
10234Ask for w''at?
10234Because for what?
10234Boat- a you canno''help- a, eh? 10234 Bud, anny''ow, Madame, wad you thing?"
10234Bud, w''ere dad Madjor Shaughnessy?
10234But did you ever hear any one scream like that girl did?
10234But he''s got some blame good blood, too, ai n''t it?
10234But how do you know he is a pirate?
10234But how is your mother?
10234But how shall it be?
10234But how, Maman?
10234But how? 10234 But is it good news you have, or bad?"
10234But me,continued Charlie,"me,--I''m got le Compte De Charleu''s blood in me, any''ow,--a litt''bit, any''ow, ai n''t it?"
10234But oo, Miché?
10234But wait, papa, I had just now something to speak of--"Well?"
10234But why did you never tell me?
10234But you will not, dearie, will you?
10234But, General,she said,"had I not a beautiful bouquet of ladies on my balcony this morning?"
10234But,said the girl, shading her face from the lamp and speaking with some suddenness,"why have you not sent word to him by some other person?"
10234Colossus, will you do ez I tell you, or shell I hev to strike you, saw?
10234D- theze talkin''''bou'',answered the young man;"d- theze coffee- howces noth a goo''plaze- a fore hore, eh?"
10234De_ house!_ What you ask for it?
10234Did I say the book of nature is a catechism? 10234 Did n''t Mazaro tell ye why I did n''t come?"
10234Did you go to his office, dear mother?
10234Did you see the ghost?
10234Did you?
10234Do you know her?
10234Do you think so? 10234 Does it appear to be turning cool?"
10234Does she look like you, Madame Delphine?
10234Eh?
10234Eh?
10234Eh?
10234Eh?
10234For de''ouse?
10234For what you want him, eh? 10234 For what?"
10234General, tell me true; did you not force this quarrel into your son''s hand? 10234 Have they caught a real live rat?"
10234Have you something to say to us?
10234He in the homespun?
10234He is out, I think, is he not? 10234 He never would allow me-- but you-- why did you not ask me?
10234He says:''Why you do n''t want?''
10234His name?
10234His son? 10234 How I''m goin''to come dere?"
10234How d''dyou know my name was Jones?
10234How do we know?
10234How do you know?
10234How do you know?
10234How do you propose to handle the subject?
10234How is that?
10234How long?
10234How much Belles Demoiselles hoes me now?
10234How?
10234How?
10234I am going there myself,said he;"but why do you want to see Jean Thompson, Madame Delphine?"
10234I give you a great deal of trouble, eh, Madame John?
10234I kin mague you de troub''to kib dad will fo''me Miché Vignevielle?
10234I suppose she is a sweet, good daughter?
10234I suppose you will want to see my lill''girl?
10234If I knew Monsieur John?
10234If I think you did right? 10234 If it arrive to me to die"--"Yez?"
10234If you could be-- my wife, dearie?
10234In a word,said Evariste Varrillat, the physician,"you think we are partly to blame for the omission of many of your Paternosters, eh?"
10234Is all going well, papa?
10234Is dad so, Madame Carraze? 10234 Is dad so, Père Jerome?"
10234Is dat reason enough for you? 10234 Is he alive?"
10234Is he as good as you, Jools?
10234Is that goin''well with my friend Charlie?
10234Is that possible?
10234Is that so?
10234Is that true, Madame?
10234Is that you, White?
10234Is what?
10234Jools, Jools, your eyes is darkened-- oh I Jools, Where''s my pore old niggah?
10234Jules who?
10234Kookoo, for the rent?
10234Lafitte? 10234 Lag she been you''h- own?"
10234Madame Delphine, you saw dat man?
10234Madame John, that young lady-- is she your daughter?
10234Madame John?
10234Madame,he weakly whispered,"I was delirious last night?"
10234Madame,said Monsieur Vignevielle,"wad pud you bout so hearly dis morning?"
10234Make? 10234 Maman?"
10234Marry''Sieur George? 10234 Mazaro tol''you?"
10234More trouble?
10234Mr. Poquelin,he said with a conciliatory smile,"tell me, is it your house that our Creole citizens tell such odd stories about?"
10234Never visite?
10234Never w''at?
10234No, my child,he responded,"I am sure it is not true: I am sure it is all false; but why do I find you out of bed so late, little bird?
10234No? 10234 No?
10234No? 10234 Nobody here?"
10234Non? 10234 Not the whole plantation, Charlie; only"--"I do n''t care,"said Charlie;"we easy can fix dat_ Mais_, what for you do n''t want to keep him?
10234Oh, my mother, what have you done?
10234Oh, yes; all right; I keep my word; we do n''t goin''to play no tricks, eh?
10234Old Charlie,said he, gazing fondly at his house,"You and me is both old, eh?"
10234Old man,whispered the failing invalid,"is it caving yet?"
10234Pauline, my child,he said with tremulous voice,"if Manuel''s story is all false, in the name of Heaven how could you think he was going to tell it?"
10234Sell Belles Demoiselles to you?
10234Senor;he paused,--"eez a- vary bath- a fore- a you thaughter, eh?"
10234Shall it not be,''Tite Poulette?
10234She''s a good lill''chile, eh?
10234Sing?
10234So she said,answered Madame Délicieuse,"and I asked her,''how brave?''
10234Ten t''ousand dollah for dis house? 10234 That it''do n''t worse w''ile?''"
10234That''s what make you so rich, eh, Charlie?
10234The city-- it has not much sickness at present?
10234The city-- it is healthy?
10234The old fraud,they say--"pretends to live in a haunted house, does he?
10234There is to be a bull- fight? 10234 They think you will be elected?"
10234They_ are_ heavy, as ye say, and that''s the very reason-- I say that''s the very reason why I staid away, ye see, eh? 10234 Thou wilt not have my love,''Tite Poulette?"
10234Thou wilt not, beautiful?
10234To me?
10234To see me?
10234To the virgin?
10234To who is he speak----?
10234W''at you lookin''?
10234W''at?
10234W''at?
10234Wad you goin''mague?
10234Wad you wand?
10234Wait for w''at?
10234Was it courting sin to go?
10234Was it she who was with you last Sunday?
10234We like a clean parlor, my daughter, even though no one is ever coming to see us, eh?
10234Well kept?
10234Well, Maman?
10234Well, den, w''at I shall do wid_ it?_"Any thing!
10234Well, my son, have you seen that newspaper? 10234 Well, old man Charlie, what you say: my house for yours,--like you said,--eh, Charlie?"
10234Well, sir?
10234Well, then, why do n''t he build when the public need demands it? 10234 Well, you know,"said Jones--"where''s Colossus?
10234Well?
10234Well?
10234What a lie? 10234 What are they doing, dear?"
10234What are you going to tell him?
10234What d''ye mean?
10234What did he say?
10234What did they try to do?
10234What do you hask for it?
10234What has she forgotten?
10234What have you been doing?
10234What is it you call this thing where an old man marries a young girl, and you come out with horns and--"_ Charivari_?"
10234What is it, Clarisse?
10234What is it?
10234What is it?
10234What is that, papa?
10234What is the difficulty?
10234What is the matter?
10234What is the matter?
10234What time?
10234What will you do with them?
10234What will you take for the''ouse?
10234What will you?
10234What will you?
10234What will you_ take?_"Oh! 10234 What you want to bet?"
10234What you want?
10234What you would_ take_ for the whole block?
10234What''s that?
10234What, not for embroidery?
10234What?
10234What?
10234What?
10234When has he ever staid away three nights together before?
10234Where is your mother now?
10234Where?
10234Where?
10234While I was gone?
10234Who is hurt?
10234Who knows,continued the speaker,"but Senor Benito, though strong and sound and har''ly thirty- seven"--here all smiled--"may be taken ill tomorrow?"
10234Who knows,the young Irishman proceeded to inquire,"I say, who knows but Pedro, they re, may be struck wid a fever?"
10234Who knows?
10234Who''s goin''to throw me? 10234 Why do n''t they come here?"
10234Why do you cry?
10234Why do you not found hospitals and asylums at once,asked the attorney, at another time, with a vexed laugh,"and get the credit of it?"
10234Why do you not make him_ your_ banker, also, Madame Delphine?
10234Why not?
10234Why not?
10234Why, did you not see? 10234 Why, my dear child, I was just saying, we like a clean"-- But the daughter was desperate:"Oh, tell me, my mother,_ who_ is coming?"
10234Why?
10234Will you?
10234With you, Madame? 10234 Yes?"
10234You do n''t believe it? 10234 You do n''t mean an old_ tyrant_?"
10234You dunno wad I mean, Madame Carraze?
10234You have a little boy?
10234You know he has a quick and fearful temper;and"why does he cover his loss with mystery?"
10234You know something else,he said;"you know that the Major loves you, or you think so: is it not true?"
10234You never dreamed of that, eh?
10234You sawed''i m? 10234 You thing?"
10234You want to buy her?
10234You want to make strit pass yond''?
10234You will come firz by you''se''f?
10234You wish to know his name?
10234You''ave one lill''gal, Madame Carraze?
10234You''re bound to win?
10234_ Chérie_,said Madame Delphine on one of those evenings,"why do you dream so much?"
10234_ Mais_, fo''w''y?
10234_ Mais_, w''at de matter, Posson Jone''?
10234_ Mais_, what could make it else? 10234 _ Miché?_""You know w''at I goin''do wid dis money?"
10234_ Miché?_"You know w''at I goin''do wid dis money?
10234_ Non, non!_ I do n''t want,--the speaker paused to breathe--"ow is collection?"
10234_ Non?_he asked.
10234_ Parlez- vous français_?
10234_ Qui ci ca_? 10234 _ Qui ci pa?_"called Madame Delphine, in a frightened voice, as the two stood up, holding to each other.
10234''Brave?''
10234''But what did his son do?''
10234''Do you know, Madame, why his father is angry so long?''
10234''For what?''
10234''Has the gentleman a heart as well as a hand?''
10234''How can that be?''
10234''Is it jealousy?''"
10234''Stealing from the dead?''
10234''Very well, why?''--''Why?
10234--And, General,--what could I say?"
10234--Who is coming here this evening?
10234--a long whistle--"is that pos- si- ble?--and Monsieur John knew it?--encouraged it?--eh, well, eh, well!--But-- can I believe you, Madame John?
10234--the Colonel raised his voice to suit his kinsman''s deafness,--"how is those times with my friend Charlie?"
10234A bitter smile came upon the old man''s face:"_ Pardon, Monsieur_, you is not_ le Gouverneur_?"
10234A letter by a Dutchman in French!--what can be made of it in English?
10234Ah!--but why say again she was lovely?
10234Ah, my child, do you blush?
10234Ai n''t it?''
10234And another time:--"If I will let you tell me something?
10234And do you go to my church, Madame----?"
10234And he left you so much as that, Madame John?
10234And now what did this mean?
10234And she?
10234And should he still try to lead him into the pitfall he had dug?
10234And was no one punished?
10234And what you''ll do wid old Charlie''s house, eh?
10234And who was this Madame John?
10234And why, the old wretch?
10234And you had it all in that naughty bank?
10234Another question came more timidly:"Do-- do you think he knows_ him_?"
10234Are you armed?
10234But fo''w''y you lill''gal lose doze hapetide?"
10234But if not, whom would his son select to perform those friendly offices indispensable in polite quarrels?
10234But if some of your sick shall call?"
10234But what said she, Madame?"
10234But what think you, my son?"
10234But why did you not ask me, his old playmate?
10234But why did you not ask me?
10234But, if you have some bad news"--"Your son took your quarrel on his hands, eh?"
10234Can it be?
10234Cayetano?"
10234Colossus and this boy can go to the kitchen.--Now, Colossus, what_ air_ you a- beckonin''at me faw?"
10234Could it be that Mazaro was about to speak for Galahad?
10234Could it be that she was going to the_ Salle de Condé_?
10234Could that trunk contain treasure?
10234Dat all right?
10234Daz ze way, ai n''t it?''
10234Did you not?"
10234Do n''t you hear them?"
10234Do you love her?
10234Do you not see?
10234Do you think I am a child, to be trifled with-- a horse to be teased?
10234Do you understand me?"
10234Fight?
10234Fo''w''y dad is?"
10234For what you tell me''What a lie?''
10234Had he mistaken?
10234Have they killed a so- long snake?
10234He allowed a few moments more to pass, and then asked:"_ N''est- ce- pas_, Madame Delphine?
10234He arrested the maid on the last step:"Your mistress, she goin''_ pour marier_''Sieur George?
10234He had heard of Madame John''s daughter, and had hoped once to see her, but did not but could this be she?
10234He rose and walked once across the room, returned, and said, in the Creole dialect:"Is he a good man-- without doubt?"
10234He slowly said:"Is dad possib'', Madame Delphine?"
10234He started to resume his walk, but turned to her again and said:"Why did they make that law?
10234He took pains to speak first, saying, in a re- assuring tone, and in the language he had last heard her use:"''Ow I kin serve you, Madame?"
10234How can I help you?"
10234How can we speak of him as a law- breaker who might have saved him from that name?"
10234I am proud to tell you so now; is it not so?"
10234I know,''out- a she gettin''marry, eh?"
10234I said,''think you General Villivicencio will not rather be the very man most certain to respect a son who has the courage to be his own master?
10234I want you do somesin for me, eh?"
10234I was afraid you might not know that old Poquelin was sick, you know, but you''re not going there, are you?"
10234If I want you to fight?
10234Indeed, when have they not differed?
10234Is a man in a fit?
10234Is it coming back?
10234Is it peering in at the sleeping mute?
10234Is n''t it?"
10234Is she any thing to you?
10234Is that something to bring the rose to your cheek?
10234Is that yo''yallah boy, Jools?
10234Is there nothing dreadful in that?
10234Is this his quest, or is it lunacy?
10234Is''Tite Poulette your own child?"
10234It seems like a special provi_dence_.--Jools, do you believe in a special provi_dence?_"Jules said he did.
10234It was only Injin Charlie; but had not the De Charleu blood just spoken out in him?
10234It''s the on''yest time I ever been from home; now you would n''t of believed that, would you?
10234Jools?
10234Kristian Koppig, why did you not mind your own business?
10234Look- ut heer, sissy, why ar''n''t ye in the maternal arms of the Café des Exilés?"
10234Madame Carraze,"he said, partly extending his hand,"you see?
10234Madame Delphine was not prepared for the movement, and on that account repeated her question:"What are you thinking about?"
10234Madame resumed:"I said,''I do not deny that Mossy is a noble gentleman;''--I had to say that, had I not, General?"
10234Many fine gentlemen at the ball ask me often,''How is your daughter, Madame John?''".
10234Money?
10234Mossy, is it possible you have not heard of the attack upon me, which has surprised and exasperated the city this morning?"
10234My dear sur, do ye s''pose I wud talk about the goddess-- I mean, yer daughter-- to the likes o''Mazaro-- I say to the likes o''Mazaro?"
10234Not marrie''Sieur George?
10234Not to the charge of them who stoned him?
10234Nothing else tempted; could that avail?
10234Oh, Père Jerome, what shall I do?
10234Oh, what does he want with a poor fool of a son who will do only as he says?
10234Oh, where is there any room, in this world of common disgrace, for pride?
10234Oo it was?"
10234Pauline, treasure, what shall I do with thee?
10234Poquelin?"
10234Posson Jone'', is that something to cry, because a man get sometime a litt''bit intoxicate?
10234Père Jerome laid his hat upon a chest of drawers, sat down opposite her, and said, as he wiped his kindly face:"Well, Madame Carraze?"
10234Père Jerome waited a little before replying; then he said, very gently:"I suppose dad muss''ave been by accyden'', Madame Delphine?"
10234Shall such encroachments be endured?
10234She''s a lill small gal?"
10234Smuggler-- patriot-- where was the difference?
10234Some half- priest, half- woman?
10234Some of those Américains, I suppose, knew it; but who would ever ask them?
10234Some spectacled book- worm?
10234Some think it was Jean Lafitte, the famous; you have heard of him?
10234The exiles?
10234The father looked one instant in her face, then rose with an exclamation:"Where is my son?
10234The law did not stop her from being that; and now, when she wants to be a white man''s good and honest wife, shall that law stop her?
10234The many did look in his face, and, as he looked in theirs, he read the silent question:"Where is thy brother Abel?"
10234The old man asked in his simplicity:"Madjor Shaughnessy?"
10234The old man glared sternly upon the speaker, and with immovable features said:"You do n''t see me trade some Guinea nigga''?"
10234The"fine gentyman"longed to blaspheme-- but before old Charlie!--in the name of pride, how could he?
10234Their landlord never got but one question answered by the middle- aged maid:"Madame, he feared, was a litt''bit embarrass''_ pour_ money, eh?"
10234Then she began to say something else, stopped, and with much nervousness asked:"Père Jerome, what was the name of that man?"
10234Thinking of this, what could she do?
10234To each new- comer he put the same question:"Did you come here to go to old Poquelin''s?"
10234To whose charge then?
10234W''en we have say we going make_ le charivari_, do you want that we hall tell a lie?
10234Was it the voice of a human?
10234Was there no cause for quarrel, after all?
10234We''ve no business to- night, eh Mazaro?"
10234Well, I win''it by a specious providence, ai n''t it?"
10234What I want wid money, den?
10234What I''ll do wid Belles Demoiselles?
10234What are you, that you should treat me so?
10234What became of them, do you ask?
10234What could a landlord do but smile?
10234What do they want?"
10234What does he live in that unneighborly way for?"
10234What harm could he see in it?
10234What has happened?
10234What is that?"
10234What might one call yo''name?
10234What should the words be?
10234What then?
10234What will this silly neighborhood say?
10234What you doin''here?
10234What you want to bet?"
10234What?
10234What?"
10234Whence could it come?
10234Where I''m goin''to fin''one priest to make like dat?
10234Where are you going, Madame Delphine?"
10234Where shall I hide thee?"
10234Where''s de''ouse what Monsieur le Compte give your grace- gran- muzzer?
10234Who cares for gates or doors?
10234Who could take a jet white wife?
10234Who in this street would carry my note, and not wink and grin over it with low surmises?
10234Why do n''t you shivaree him?"
10234Why does she not come to our ball- room with you?"
10234Why you do n''t buy somewheres else?"
10234Why you do n''t stay dare youse''f?"
10234Why you do n''t stay where you be halways''appy?
10234Why you do n''t stay where you halways be''appy?
10234Will she espy the dark form in the deep shade of the orange, and, with one piercing scream, wheel and vanish?
10234Will she stop?
10234Will she turn aside?
10234Would he push it, as his wo nt was?
10234Yet he lives, and shall live-- may live to forget you, who knows?
10234Yet there was a pretext left"the rooms must need repairs?"
10234Yon sink bickause I make a little playfool wiz zis tin pan zat I am_ dhonk_?"
10234You call Manuel Mazaro one liar?"
10234You know w''ere''s dad''ouse of Miché Jean Tomkin?
10234You see dis money-- w''at I win las''night?
10234You think he will love him less for healing instead of killing?
10234You think it was nothing?
10234You will let me say so?
10234You will not be offended with the old playmate of your son?"
10234_ Can it be_?
10234_ Is_ that brave, Madame Délicieuse, or is it not?''
10234_ Mais comment_?"
10234_ Mais,_ why you ca n''t cheer up an''be''appy?
10234_ Mais_, if I keep dis money, you know where it goin''be to- night?"
10234and if he has made dreadful haste and proved his courage?"
10234and why not?
10234and why not?"
10234asked Galahad;"I say, wut''s the use o''that?"
10234but you make a fool of yourself, ai n''t it?"
10234can it be that the dead do walk?"
10234cried the parson, bounding up with radiant face--"is that so, Jools?"
10234dear,"said the mother, her face beaming with fun--"What can it be, Maman?"
10234do n''t you know?
10234do you thing I would go again''my conscien''?
10234from which race do they want to keep my daughter separate?
10234is it possible?"
10234ma mère, qui vini''ci ce soir_?"
10234said Charlie;"from where you come from dis time of to- night?"
10234shall a man make hisse''f to be the more sorry because the money he los''is not his?
10234she is not-- don''t you know, mother?
10234the blind people say,''How is that, that General Villivicencio should be dissatisfied with his son?
10234very good, truly, but-- you_ say_ you have it; but where is it?
10234what have I done?"
10234what is it?"
10234where did you get the money?"
10234why not?"
10234you have not written it in English, is it, son?"
21508''And what do you know''bout hounds?'' 21508 ''Coldest, did you say?
21508''Run, did you say? 21508 Albert Calina?
21508As the girls got opposite Uncle Brack, he threw his stick in front of them and they exclaimed,Is dat you, Uncle Brack?
21508Aunt Mariah, you home?
21508Bend dat lazy, good- fer- nothing back so as I wo n''t git you wet all de way down your belly, you hear me? 21508 Booker Washington?
21508Bury live? 21508 Conch?
21508Could I tell you''bout de times before de war? 21508 Did they take good care of the slaves when their babies were born?"
21508Do I know of anybody what sees ghosts? 21508 Do n''t you remember I came to see you one morning, and you told me all about old times?"
21508Do n''t you think that was fair?
21508Do they come back? 21508 Do you think it would have been better if the Negroes had never left Africa?"
21508Does you know dat de poplar leaves was wet afo''de meal pone was put in it? 21508 Fadder take me out woods night time( What you say, Primus?)
21508Gabe Knox? 21508 Handful back yet?"
21508How I dressed? 21508 How come I a slave of Marse Preston?
21508How did you happen to go to Beaufort, Auntie? 21508 How does we mark shoat?
21508How many chillun I got? 21508 How much been task?
21508How old I is? 21508 How old I is?"
21508Howdy, Lucy, what is you and dat youngun been, anyhow?'' 21508 I cut out a suit for my master,"she said proudly--"pants, and a waistcoat-- you know?"
21508If you were fed and clothed by him, should n''t he be paid for your work?
21508Missus, what you brought me?
21508Nigger, what dat you is done gone and got on dat clean shirt? 21508 Now I repeats de question: Does you think I''s a fool just''cause I''s born on dat fust day of April, 1852?
21508Now what you want with old Jane? 21508 Oh yes, you wants to know where''bouts John T. Rhett live in Columbia?
21508Paul wanted to preach but nedder of us had no learnin''an''I say to Paul,''Does you think you got nough learnin''to lead a flock of people? 21508 Right now, I oldest one from Longwood to Prospect-- see dere?
21508Salem Baptist? 21508 Squirrel creek?
21508Tell me one thing, Susan, you have lived a long time, do you think the young people of today are better or worse than in the old days?
21508Tom Duncan? 21508 Turrectly she say,''You ca n''t say"Marse Henry", Miss?
21508Welcome Beas? 21508 Well, just what is it you want to hear about, Missus?"
21508Were most of the masters kind?
21508What dat? 21508 What have I been doing since I grew up?
21508What is you frettin''bout so?
21508What kind of house us live in at slavery time? 21508 Whippin''s?
21508Who I b''long to? 21508 Who dat come here wid you?
21508Who was de overseers? 21508 You ask if I knows R. Goodwin Rhett of Charleston?
21508You asks if my man( husband) has come down from de Heyward family of de Combahee River slaves? 21508 You gimme a nickel or dime?
21508You know how old I am? 21508 You say what schoolin''de slaves got?
21508You say you''re parted from your husband? 21508 You wants me to tell you all what I''members''bout slavery in slavery time?
21508''Bout social conditions?
21508''How you this mornin''Miss Mary Ann?''
21508''Member how I show you how to call de doodles from de sand?
21508''Round two years old-- now how old dat make me, Miss?
21508''Whar was you carrying it?''
21508''What was de tatooin''?''
21508''What you doin''under heah?''
21508''Where Mahams Ward and John J. Woodward?
21508( Aside to his wife)"Stella, if that man come there, see that sack there?
21508( Aunt Stella and Lula arriving from fishing trip)"What ketch?"
21508( He pronounces it Dater-- long Italian''A'') Chillun, ai n''t find duh plum, enty?
21508( I always heard it''Toad on a tussock''--and you?)
21508( MOM ELLEN SINGS***) BONE BAGGUM( Bag o''bones?)
21508( To Mr. Tarbox) Uncle Ben:"Down by Gallie?"
21508( is n''t it so?)
2150874?
21508< tb> Uncle Ben Reminisces"Fore freedom?
21508A potato hill?"
21508Abraham Lincoln?
21508Ai n''t I tell you I BEEN here?
21508Ai n''t we got house and rations there?
21508And what you think of dis?
21508Aunt Stella was asked''Why do n''t you have lights, Aunt Stella?''
21508Ben:"Ai n''t you mash''em?"
21508Ben:"Pretty, enty?"
21508Benn seventy- odd years since Freedom, ai n''t it, Cap?
21508Boss say,''Why don''you go back to work?''
21508Can I?
21508Chillun say,"What coming?
21508Date, December 26, 1937 MOM RYER EMMANUEL EX- SLAVE, AGE 78"Well, how you feelin dis mornin, honey?
21508Date, June 28, 1937 HECTOR GODBOLD Ex- Slave, 87 Years"What you gwine do wid me?
21508De old man reply:''Good strike, did you say?
21508De tracks I ride on?
21508De youngest, Miss Martha, marry Col. McBee of Greenville, S.C."Does I''members''bout de Yankees?
21508Den Miss Ross say,''Do my little niggers want some bread to gnaw on?''
21508Dey been bringing my things out to me-- is dat what you''se doing, setting down here by me?
21508Dey had catechism what dey teach you en she say,''Charlie, who made you?''
21508Dey went to her an''dey say;''Where is all de white people gold an''silver?''
21508Did n''t you hear me tell you not to git dat new shirt all red?
21508Did you ever read''bout foots of ghosts?
21508Did you ever see one?"
21508Do n''t you''member us playin''in de sand in front of de old Harrison house?
21508Does I hate Mr. Blunt?
21508Does she do right by me?
21508Does you know Miss Mattie Martin, which was de secretary of Governor Ansel?
21508Does you know them?
21508Dropsy?
21508Fall out?
21508Flagg storm?
21508Fore freedom?
21508Grand- chillun?
21508Guntharpe, you follows me night and mornin''to dis pigpen; do you happen to be in love wid one of these pigs?
21508He de one w''at gib us freedom, enty?
21508He duh last----"Andrew Johnson?
21508He hab he self to look out for, enty?
21508He say,''Which one is dat dat you wishes, Sir?''
21508He''lowed,''Gus, you is jes''''bout de oldes''nigger in dis county, ai n''t you?''
21508Him fust, solemn lak, ask to see de marster and ask him if he object to him pursuing Miss Martha, in de light of becomin''his son- in- law?
21508How I is?
21508How Miss Sue gettin along over dere to Marion?
21508How come you ai n''t gone to the bacco?"
21508How dat you ask?
21508How did you cross?
21508How did you get up here?"
21508How is I gwine to ever teach you anything, when you act jest like a nigger from some pore white trashes poor land?''
21508How long you is been married, honey?
21508How many girl?
21508How many times I been married?
21508How old I is?
21508How was it?
21508How you is?
21508Huh-- nigger git back cut in slabery time, enty?
21508I am six feet, four inches in height, and he looked up at me as we walked along and asked quizzically:''How long should a man''s legs be?''
21508I axes,"Who is that?"
21508I fuss cause it cold and say''how you going to send me out wid no shoe, and it cold?''
21508I give him most a book, and what he give me?
21508I got both blood, so how I going to quarrel wid either side?"
21508I leave it wid you if dere''s any dese times?
21508I remember I would be dere wid my mammy en old Missus would say,''Judy, whe''Hester?
21508I remember, all us chillun was playin round bout de step one day whe''Miss Ross was settin en she ax dat yellow child, say,''Who your papa?''
21508I would say he is de coldest trailer of your pack?''
21508I''member one song he sung dat was like dis:"Lord, Lord, Heaven-- Sweet Heaven, Lord, Lord, Heaven-- Sweet Heaven, How long will it be?
21508I''member when my ma was dyin''I beg um not to leabe me, she say:''Wha''I got yuh, wha''I want tuh stay yuh fuh?
21508If I die, would you help my chillun bury me?''
21508If you do n''t believe they loved him what they all cry, and scream, and holler for when dey hear he dead?
21508In de end, will it be settle by hate or by de policy of, love your neighbor, as you do yourself?
21508Is you ever heard of sech a thing as a lady like dat not knowing Mr. Blease?
21508Isaac take the gun an''point it at the man an''ax''i m,"you know wha''in dis gun?"
21508Jefferson Davis?
21508Lillie:"Aunt Stella, ai n''t you fraid when Uncle Ben stay out all night?"
21508Lillie:"RIDE you on it, Uncle Ben?"
21508Lillie:"What?"
21508Marse Ed P. Mobley hold up his hand and say:''See dis stiff finger?
21508Marse Ed P. say:''Was de little minnow dead or''live when you found him in de belly of de 119th fish?
21508Marse Jim Mobley say:''Well, you all know what I done at Gettysburg?
21508Marse Tom say:''What is de name of dis dog?
21508Mary Gary:"You fix, Uncle Ben?"
21508Melia Holmes?
21508Mr. Buck say,''Aunt Mariah, know your birth?''
21508Mr. Dick say,''Hello, Edmund, how come dem mules so po''when you got good corn everywhar-- what, you stealing corn, too?''
21508My mamma took me en come on to de house en when Miss Jane see dat leg, she say,"Cindy, what de matter?"
21508Nigger ai n''t no more den chicken and animal, enty?
21508No they do n''t run, why?
21508No?
21508Not that Missus?"
21508Old Missus would say,''Ain''I got a pretty crop of little niggers comin on?''
21508Old marster laugh and say:''Jim, can you beat dat?''
21508Old marster say:''It was a whale of a fish, was n''t it, grandson?''
21508One I like best?"
21508Pauline:"How you catch''em?"
21508Pauline:"What yinnah nuse for bait?"
21508Pauline:"You ai n''t fix?"
21508Pillows?
21508Right there to Oaks sea- sho after them people done that murdering with that man?
21508Ring Smith, did you say, Doctor?
21508Say, Can I go to town and swear gainst my slave?"
21508Say,''Ma, yunnah couldn''do nothin?''
21508See Aunt Ellen white cap yonder?"
21508See um sell slabe?
21508She turnt''round to my young Marster John and say:''John, can you beat dat?''
21508Stella:"Revents had it wuz a man in a cypress tree and seven-- how much wuz it?
21508Stella:( To Uncle Ben)"What you tink bout it?
21508Tell me now, honor bright, ca n''t she out run anything in these parts?''
21508That big one?
21508They are not taught how to work, how do you expect them to work when they ai n''t taught to work?
21508They had a special catechism for de slaves, dat asked us who made you, what He made you out of, and what He made you for?
21508They put a pistol right in my forehead and say:''I got to have your money, where is it?''
21508This is one of the songs wen''use to sing,''Goin''to carry dis body To the grave- yard, Grave- yard don''you know me?
21508Twelve?
21508Uncle Ben continues:"Storm?
21508Uncle Ben say,''Look here, young nigger, do n''t you know dat I ai n''t got no business gwine out in no night dew-- what ails you nohow?''
21508Uncle Ben:"Ai n''t see nobody else?"
21508Uncle Ben:"Nobody else?"
21508Visitor:"Are you one of the neighbors who take such good care of Aunt Ellen?"
21508Visitor:"Aunt Ellen home?"
21508Visitor:"Aunt Ellen, how could you cook on the flat?"
21508Visitor:"Like a potato bank?
21508Visitor:"Miss Bernice who?"
21508W''at I t''ink''bout slabery?
21508Was I always blind?
21508We people?
21508Well, ai n''t it?
21508Well, what you reckon?
21508What I do wid de money?
21508What I means by pattybility?
21508What am I bid for dis one?
21508What coming, Grandma?"
21508What coming?
21508What de matter, honey, you don''loves to smell dem chitlin I got boilin dere on de stove?
21508What de slaves gwine buy land wid den, Captain?
21508What for you laughin''''bout?
21508What her''vorce him for?
21508What is it?
21508What ole lady Abbie gwine to say to ye when she see you done gone and act like you ai n''t never seed no quality befo''?
21508What people say?
21508What they eat?
21508What you do?"
21508What you see?"
21508What you think happened to de poor gal?
21508What you think of dat?
21508What you think''bout dat?
21508When I got to the white man in charge, he eye me and zay:''What damn rebel did you slave for?''
21508When freedom come, de master come to us and told us de damn Yankees done freed us,''what you gwinter do?
21508When him git back in de chair, him say:''Zebulon, what you got to say?''
21508When we had all make over her, we say to her den:''Well why did n''t you bring de sack of meat''long wid you?''
21508Where was I born?
21508Where we going to?
21508Who did it?
21508Who do you put your trust in?
21508Who it was?
21508Who knows?
21508Why did n''t dey cook''em on de stove in de house?
21508Why you keep that church door lock Sunday and not let the Missus out?"
21508Wright?''
21508Yes, mam, I sets down en prays when others sleep en I say,''Lord, what gwine happen?
21508You know what I see?
21508You know what them two white fowl do?
21508You know whe''dat is, don''you?
21508You never heard''bout dat ghost?
21508You say me?"
21508You say you would like to have one''bout Thanksgivin''Day?"
21508You talk ME?''
21508You tink a man truss to go in cypress hollow wid rattle- snake?"
21508You wants to know if we had any parties for pastime?
21508You''members comin''down when I was a young man and you was a boy?
21508You''members your Aunt Roxie dat marry Marse Ed D. Mobley, her fust cousin, do n''t you?
29187And her boats?
29187And is not that what is understood by''LOVE TO GOD, AND LOVE TO MAN?''
29187And the Molly, Strand?
29187And the famous defence?
29187And what does Miss Caroline think of my attack on lace and diamonds?
29187And what will be my daughter''s fate?
29187And when was that?
29187And why?
29187And without dog and gun?
29187But do you not enjoy the pleasure of this scene? 29187 But is lace really such a luxury?"
29187But which way are you going?
29187Can the heart of a person break to pieces?
29187Did I give thee life to cloud it-- life to poison every breath? 29187 Do n''t you know me, my prince?"
29187Do you know what is going on here?
29187Do you think, ma''ma,asked Caroline,"that he has much feeling?"
29187Hardly looking for game here?
29187How come on the man- of- war''s men?
29187In the course of the evening the doctor cried out,''Have you read Sardanapalus?'' 29187 Ma''ma,"said Caroline,"did you observe that lady?"
29187May I ask what that_ something_ is, which you think assists us to appreciate the beauty of a landscape?
29187Mr. Williams, was not the young woman walking rapidly away?
29187O, beneficent Fairy Violetta,exclaimed the prince,"what shall I do with this pestiferous caitiff, who minds neither hanging nor drowning?"
29187Remember? 29187 Shall I fling thee forth to struggle with a never- sparing world; Knowing every eye will scorn thee, every lip at thee be curled?
29187Shall I rob thee of thy birthright-- rob thee of thy noble name, Of our old ancestral castle, and our fathers''deeds of fame? 29187 Shall I yield my broad estates, my castles and my manor lands, To the harpies of the law, to hold them with unhallowed hands?
29187Sir, may I speak?
29187So we have,said Mrs. Clifford;"but why should we go back-- you certainly do n''t mean to buy any--?"
29187What can I do?
29187What is it?
29187What is the meaning of this?
29187What news astern, boatswain?
29187What news from the man- of- war''s men, boatswain? 29187 What want you here?"
29187You see him-- what good will that do? 29187 ''Right; and you could n''t sleep a wink after it?'' 29187 And do you now talk to me of''respectability,''and''connections,''and such nonsense? 29187 And what would the good minister say? 29187 As his guards approached the gates-- did she sink or did they rise? 29187 At length the lady, compassionating his perplexity, again anxiously asked--Do you remember a certain little gold- fish?"
29187But does this alter the principle?
29187But how could Parson Hinton be so blind?
29187But what of that?
29187But wherefore do I linger here?
29187But why in English?
29187But why watch her with more interest than all the"well behaved"of his school?
29187But ye''ll not take the life of a Christian woman widout giving her so much as one minute to say her prayers?"
29187Call I in vain thy spirit?
29187Canst thou glance o''er a region so lovely as this, And no bright ray of pleasure enliven thine eyes?
29187Did he hear her?
29187Did he tremble at their sentence?
29187Do I seek thee all in vain?
29187Do they still stand down on a mere wreck?"
29187Do you not hate me, my prince, for being such a termagant?"
29187Do you not, while looking abroad from some eminence, feel a sensation different from what you experience while walking on the turnpike?"
29187Do you think we would be guilty of stealing?
29187How could he know until he had tried?
29187How was it to do so?
29187I was received by my father with affectionate welcome, and-- and what else shall I say?
29187I was young and active in those days, and somewhat bold withal; and without a spice of danger, where were the pleasure or excitement of adventure?
29187If such was their power upon an old scholar like Parr, what must have been their influence upon younger and more inflammable minds?
29187If you let this one go, whom can you punish?
29187Is it possible he does not know what has passed?
29187Is it possible that the poet did not know the apparent diameter of the moon to be greater than that of the sun?
29187Is it the ravenous panther, fierce for blood, Seeking the village?
29187Is that a spot Of shadow flickering in some transient breeze?
29187Is there any thing said in the defence?"
29187Know thee, budding bloom of beauty, withering in thy youth away-- Feel thy infant promise fading-- see thy falcon- eye decay?
29187Like the star from the misty blue?
29187Say what are thy pleasures-- or whence is thy bliss, In thy breast can no movements of sympathy rise?
29187Shall I never hear thy accent In music fall again?
29187Shall I send my youthful heir forth with a stain upon his crest?
29187Shall we go to see the grave?"
29187Switches above and bark below, what could the unfortunate Mathew Mizzle do but surrender himself a prisoner of war?
29187Tell me, was it all-- all-- all?
29187Tell me?
29187The lady received his scrutiny with smiles of modest pleasure, and at length repeated her question--"Do you not know me, my prince?"
29187The statue will not be forth coming-- but will you have the model, after which the undug block was to have been chiseled?
29187The truth of thy sailor Should lessen thy wo: The wave could not chill it That stifled his breath; Pure_ love_--can aught kill it?
29187The youngest leaves must fall, When summer beams have ceased to play; And may not sorrow spread her pall, When joy, and hope, and love decay?
29187Was he dreaming?
29187Was it real?
29187What business had Mizzle there in Switzerland, lurking near the walls of Altorf?
29187What is the rationale of Metre, whether the classical hexameter or the English heroic?"
29187What is the ship about?"
29187What say you to the assets?
29187What to him was earth or heaven, when his soul was sick with shame?
29187What to him was wind or tempest, when his brain was seared with flame?
29187Where are there fields more delightfully drest, In a verdure still fresh''ning with every shower?
29187Where is the prisoner?
29187Who are you?--and where are your references?"
29187Who shall presume to scrutinize the judgments, or pry into the secrets of the Inscrutable?
29187Why didst thou cross my pathway, Oh soul so pure and true?
29187Why drop the unavailing tear?
29187Why lingerest thou ever to gaze on that star, Sinking low in the west e''er the twilight is o''er?
29187Why turns thy cheek paler These tidings to know?
29187Would you have me-- me, a warrior, like a coward plead for life?
29187[ Illustration] How could he help it?
29187added Jennings, with one of his worst sneers,"do you know that also?"
29187and what have policemen to do with this lady?
29187are you there, my friend?"
29187art not_ thou_ my little gold- fish?"
29187cried the voice of Franklin, as he grasped him by the throat,"who are you?"
29187exclaimed the prince eagerly--"What dost thou mean?
29187my prince, what are you about?
29187said Mrs. Clifford, looking at her watch,"do you know how late it is?
29187so grand and awful in yonder little ray, What thought dare seek to fathom the blaze of thy full day?
29187was it all a falsehood?
29187was it to punish such vain, such sinful, such senseless, and inordinate repinings?
29187who will weep, In after seasons, when thou too art gone, Within this grot, where shadowy memories keep Their watch above the realm they keep alone?
29187with thy mother''s Saxon eye-- Shall my hand, too, strike thee lifeless?
16138''Oncet, when he seemed kinder softened, I ast him squar,Ai n''t you her husband?"
16138''Poor?'' 16138 ''What the mischief is a basket- boarder?''
16138''Who is Mr. Crompton, and how did he know about the child?'' 16138 And Mr. Howard will have everything?"
16138And Peter,he said, in a lower tone of voice,"what do you think?
16138And did you send for him?
16138And wo n''t you come back?
16138And you think this is it?
16138Are there no papers anywhere to tell us who they were?
16138Are you buying it for yourself?
16138Are you crazy?
16138Are you sure he is the right kind of friend for you?
16138Buy her? 16138 By Jove, did n''t she bear the cutting of that boot like a hero, and how is she ever to get to school with that ankle?"
16138Ca n''t he wipe his hands on de table cloth, for oncet?
16138Can I do anything for you?
16138Can I do it? 16138 Could n''t you done drap a tear''case your mother is lyin''here?"
16138Day after to- morrow, is n''t it? 16138 Did he ever beat you?--or what did the wretch do?
16138Did he?
16138Did she kiss you?
16138Did she think of it? 16138 Did you ever cut up at school?"
16138Do n''t you know what a Rummage Sale is?
16138Do you feel like a daisy?
16138Do you know anything of them? 16138 Do you remember it, and did you know the Pope and the King?"
16138Do you think I care who your family are, or how queer they are? 16138 Do you think it ought to bring more?"
16138Do you think she is dead?
16138Doan''you know me, Miss Dory? 16138 Doan''you''member it, Miss Dory?"
16138Faw de Lawd''s sake, is he yer beau?
16138For goodness''sake, what can have happened?
16138For shoo? 16138 For the Lord''s sake, who be you?"
16138For the pity sakes and the old Harry, are you moving a furniture store, or what?
16138Gentleman? 16138 Have you a mind to go to church?"
16138Have you had a sprained ankle, too?
16138He did? 16138 How am I to get there?"
16138How do I know? 16138 How do you like it?"
16138I actually hearn that this chap,--what the deuce was his name? 16138 I did n''t know he was opposed to me personally,"Eloise said, and Mrs. Biggs replied,"Of course not; how could he be?
16138I did n''t know your trousers were going,Peter suggested, and the Colonel answered curtly,"Who said they were, you blockhead?
16138I say,he began, edging up to the girl in charge,"ca n''t you take out a piece or two and let me have it for twenty cents?
16138I''specs you are right,Jake said meekly;"but it''ll be mighty hard, an''what''s gwine to become of Mandy Ann?
16138If you are not my father, who and what was my mother?
16138Is Mr. Howard going?
16138Is she dead?
16138Is your mistress at home?
16138It is my mother''s, but how came it here?
16138It would not do to send them back and upset her, and is n''t there a verse somewhere in the Bible about taking what the gods give ye?
16138Know''d her? 16138 Miss Amy,"he said,"I wonder if you have n''t a pair of half- worn boots for the young lady at Mrs. Biggs''s?
16138Miss Smith, the normal? 16138 Mrs. Biggs,"she said at last,"have you a handkerchief you can loan me?"
16138Must you take that off now?
16138My mother was a Cracker? 16138 Naturally I shall keep your place in school, so I owe you something for the business, do n''t you see?"
16138New York, mabby? 16138 Oh, his card?
16138Oh,she said,"you wanted it for that?
16138Ought she to have a doctor?
16138The one in York State, I s''pose, and not t''other one across the seas?
16138The what?
16138Then you are my grandfather?
16138Wall, I s''pose you''re takin''a little pleasure trip like the rest of us?
16138Wall, now, do n''t chew tobacky? 16138 Was it my father?"
16138Was it my mother?
16138Well?
16138Were you there?'' 16138 Whar is he?"
16138Whar is''ee?
16138What business had she in the carriage? 16138 What can he want now?
16138What chairs?
16138What child?
16138What did you give?
16138What do you think of it?
16138What have you on it? 16138 What is it?
16138What is it?
16138What is the Formula?
16138What is your plan now?
16138What persuasion?
16138What possessed her?
16138What shall I put on it?
16138What shall we do?
16138What was the business?
16138What''s comin''? 16138 What''s up now?"
16138Where did you get my mother''s cloak?
16138Who are coming?
16138Who did you say she was? 16138 Who is Jake?"
16138Who is it? 16138 Who is she, and where did she come from?"
16138Who said I wanted you to beat''em down? 16138 Who under heavens would buy an old stock, and why?"
16138Who was the man?
16138Who?
16138Why could n''t she write her whole name? 16138 Why did n''t you write and tell me?
16138Why not stay on her then? 16138 Why not?"
16138Why, Jake,Jack exclaimed,"do n''t you see those letters may tell us where Miss Lucy lived in Georgia?
16138Would you like to have me get married?
16138Yes, I''ll come, but how?
16138Yes, but how are we to see a squat roof with lalocks and pineys on this beastly night?
16138Yes, but the baby,--where did it die, and when?
16138Yes, but what is a little money to you or me, if she really needs a doctor?
16138Yes, but where is the shock to come from, hedged round as she is from every rough wind or care?
16138Yes, but- er, what- er shall I bid?
16138Yes, who''s nigger be I? 16138 You ai n''t goin''to be beat by Tom Walker, be you?"
16138You are the new schoolmarm, ai n''t you? 16138 You mean proper?
16138You mean she''ll have nothin''?
16138You mean you belong to Miss Dora''s grandmother?
16138You remember the doll house you bought her when she was a little girl?
16138You say she is lovely?
16138Ai n''t it a beauty?"
16138Ai n''t you glad''twas Mr. Harcourt bought you instead of t''other?"
16138Ai n''t you her husband?"
16138Amy took her up tenderly, saying,"Do you think anybody will buy her?"
16138An''what do you think?
16138And what will he do with a child?
16138And you want me to swear that I seen Eudory married?
16138Any particular thing you want?"
16138Anybody sick or dead?"
16138Are we in Florida?"
16138Are we to take her in a hand chair, as we carried her that night in the rain?"
16138Are you an idiot, and have none of them common sense?"
16138Are you cold?"
16138Are you crazy?"
16138Are you glad?"
16138Are you going?"
16138Are you he?
16138Are you in great pain?"
16138Are you my father?"
16138Are you satisfied?"
16138Are you sorry?"
16138At sight of the dray he stopped suddenly, and then went swiftly forward to the cart, and said to Jack,"Goin''to take her out in that?"
16138Be you crazy?
16138Be you her?"
16138Biggs?"
16138Biggs?"
16138But are you sure you ought to go?
16138But do you think I have forgotten that I had a mother?
16138But he must bear it, and when, as he did not at once respond to her question, she said,"Has you done brung me sumptin''?"
16138But of whom?
16138But what could he do?
16138But where was that apron?
16138But why did she think you dead?"
16138But, Mandy Ann held her back and whispered,"Ca n''t you done''have yerself at yer mammy''s funeral an''we the only mourners?"
16138CHAPTER XVI THE AUCTION"Astonishing, is n''t it, where all the stuff comes from?
16138Ca n''t we take her?
16138Ca n''t you congratulate me?"
16138Ca n''t you?"
16138Can I walk there when the storm is over?
16138Chicago?
16138Crackers and niggers?
16138Crossing his legs and planting his big hat on his knees, he went on:"You are from the North, I calculate?"
16138Did my uncle leave a will?"
16138Did n''t she die a natural death?"
16138Did she tell you?"
16138Did they fit her?"
16138Did you say thirty?"
16138Do I hear more?
16138Do n''t you know a man from a woman?
16138Do you believe she will ever be any better?"
16138Do you catch on, and call me a scamp with your Puritanical notions?
16138Do you dance, or be you a perfessor?"
16138Do you hear?
16138Do you hear?
16138Do you hear?"
16138Do you hear?"
16138Do you know what a book is?"
16138Do you know where she lives?"
16138Do you mean Eliza Ann?
16138Do you think he will?"
16138Do you think it will be long before I can walk?"
16138Do you think she''d take them?"
16138Do you think you could_ lick_ me?"
16138Do you?
16138Doan let him ever know peace of min''till he owns the''ittle girl; though, dear Lawd, what should we do without her-- me an''Jake?"
16138Doan you go for to marry him, Miss Dory, will you?"
16138Doan''you feel it, honey?"
16138Doan''you''member it, honey,--an''doan''you member me?
16138Does grandmother know?
16138Does you know you''s got on my ring?
16138Finding Ruby Ann alone, he began,"I say, do you make any sales before the thing opens?"
16138For a moment the Colonel seemed agitated, and taking the book from the child he said,"Can I have it?"
16138From Boston, I reckon?"
16138Going to Amy''s room, she walked in unannounced, and asked,"Be you goin''home with me, or goin''to stay?"
16138Going to Jake, she said,"Ai n''t thar somethin''''bout a ring in that pra''r book you got in Richmon''an''reads on Sundays?"
16138Grasping her mother''s arm Eloise cried,"Oh, mother, what is this you are saying, and why have I never heard it before?"
16138Had Miss Smith ever heard of her?
16138Hain''t you been to meetin''?"
16138Hardy?"
16138Has ole Miss got a baby?"
16138Has she never spoken of me?"
16138Has she no name?"
16138Has the Rummage come up there?
16138Have a chew?"
16138Have you an idee?
16138Have you forgotten?"
16138Have you read it?"
16138He did not say this in so many words, but Mandy Ann understood him and asked,"Ai n''t she to carry nothin''?"
16138He gave it to you?"
16138He kissed her again, while she whispered,"Oh, Jack, how can you, with all the people looking on?
16138He met Jack occasionally, and always received a bow of recognition and a cheery"How are you, Tom?"
16138He pointed the latter poem out to Eloise, who said,"Will you give me this book?"
16138He was from the North?"
16138Here are a few of the questions: First, What is logic?
16138His first move was the offer of tobacco, with the words:"How d''ye, sir?
16138How did any one know what germs were lurking in old clothes?
16138How did he look?
16138How did we get here?"
16138How did you know we were coming?"
16138How do I know?
16138How does she look?
16138How far is it?"
16138How in thunder can that be, when I''m sitting in the wheel, and how came Tom Walker, the biggest rascal in town, by my chairs, or Tim Biggs either?"
16138How old did Eloise think she was?
16138How the devil came she by it?
16138Howard asked, and Eloise replied,"I asked him, and his eyes looked yes, and when I said,''You are my grandfather?''
16138Howard?"
16138I ast what I should put on it, an''he said,"What was on her coffin plate?"
16138I b''lieve in a drink when you are dry, but Lord land, whar''s the sense of_ reelin''_?
16138I ca n''t help it if my uncle made no will and did not marry Amy''s mother, and I do n''t believe he did, or why was he silent so many years?"
16138I could n''t help it,''case you''s gen''rally pullin''an''haulin''an''kickin''me to git away, but you''members me, an''Judy, wid dis kind of face?"
16138I did n''t know you really cared for her that way; but, I say, are n''t you coming to dinner?
16138I do n''t call that religion; do you?
16138I do n''t know; do you?
16138I do n''t see it, do you?"
16138I reckons, though, she was n''t''belobed,''or why was he so dogon mean to her?"
16138I s''pose you''ll live here?"
16138I s''pose you''ve had trouble in your family?"
16138I said''For the poor,''and it''s for a public library, is n''t it?"
16138I shall not forget it; but why do you tremble so?
16138I suppose his berth is ready?"
16138I''longs to myself, but what of Mandy Ann?"
16138I''longs to myself, but who''s she''long to, now ole Miss an''young Miss is dead?"
16138I''se done comed home an''thar''s a gemman to see you?
16138In my s''prise I said,"What''s dat ar?
16138Is it far?"
16138Is it right?"
16138Is it wrong?"
16138Is it you for shu''?"
16138Is our house afire?"
16138Is she for sale, and how is she going?
16138Is that what you want?"
16138Is that wicked?
16138Is that you?
16138Is you gwine to take her right away?"
16138Is you gwine to take her?"
16138Jack asked, and Mrs. Biggs replied,"A doctor?
16138Jack asked, and Mrs. Biggs replied,"Was you born yesterday, or when?
16138Jack said in his cheery way as he came up with the boy, whose ungracious answer was,"How do you know my name is Tom?"
16138Jack, who was in the room, and who had read Mr. Mason''s letter to his son, suggested,"The''Hatty''?"
16138Kin I do somethin''for you?"
16138Maybe I''m tirin''you?''
16138Muss you go?
16138No one present knew of Judy''s sale at the Rummage, and no one could reply to the question,"Whar is she?"
16138No?
16138No?
16138Of course she''s poor; but what do I care for that?
16138Oh, what shall I do?"
16138Once when Amy was from the room a moment she bent close to the Colonel and said,"You are my mother''s father?"
16138Perhaps he would dismiss her altogether, and take another in her place, and then--"What shall I do?"
16138Peter had shut it and stood with his back against it, as the Colonel went on,"What in thunder is all that racket in the attic?
16138Peter picked it up and handed it to him, saying,"Can I help you, sir?"
16138Recognizing Mr. Mason, she gave him a hearty"How d''ye, Mas''r Mason?"
16138Say, when are you going to begin?
16138Second, Why does the wind usually stop blowing when the sun goes down?
16138Shall I have any trouble in finding him, do you think?"
16138Shall I write to Palatka and inquire?"
16138Shall we double right up and shame''em by sayin''a dollar?
16138She ca n''t afford to pay many doctor''s bills, and I ask you again, how is she to get to school?"
16138She could n''t larn, an''de Lord took her whar dey do n''t ask what you knows,--only dis: does you lub de Lord?
16138She put both hands on his arm to force him from the room, while he laughed and said,"Did you think I would let you go to Florida alone?
16138She raised the very old Harry sometimes, but she got into our hearts somehow, did n''t she?"
16138She says to me, says she,''Does you know whar de chile''s fader is?''
16138She was listening, of course, but sprang to her feet as the two appeared, and said in response to her mistress''s"What are you doing here?"
16138She was very tired, and slept soundly without once waking, and her first question in the morning was,"Is it to- morrow, and are we in Florida?"
16138She''s a little quar-- dem Harrises--"Here he stopped suddenly, and asked,"Is you cole?"
16138Smith?"
16138Some difference in our height, is n''t there?
16138That Jack would buy it he did not for a moment dream, for what could he do with it?
16138That sounds rather poetical, do n''t it?
16138That was my mother?"
16138The las''day, that you look so skeered?"
16138Then he fixed his eyes on Eloise with a questioning glance, which made her say to him,"Do you know me?"
16138Then, glancing at Mandy Ann, he asked as he had asked before,"An''what''bout Mandy Ann?
16138There was a great ridge in the Colonel''s forehead, between his eyes, as he repeated,"Her good name?"
16138There was a touching pathos in Jakey''s voice as he sang, and it was intensified when he asked,"Doan''you''member me, honey?"
16138There were other faces round us-- dusky ones-- negroes, were n''t they?"
16138They did n''t expect anything of you, a stranger, of course?"
16138Thinking him an official, she seized his arm and said,"Oh, please, sir, tell me is there any one here from Mrs. Biggs''s, or any way to get there?"
16138To whom does she belong, I mean?"
16138Understand?"
16138Was Jack there too?
16138Was he back in the palmetto clearing, standing in the moonlight with Dora, and exacting a promise from her which broke her heart?
16138Was he going to squeeze her hands, too?
16138Was he trying to reveal a secret kept so many years, and which was planting his pillow with thorns?
16138Was n''t he my father?"
16138Was n''t it a cabin?"
16138Was the child going to be queer, too, and did she show it in her eyes?
16138Was your mother in a lunatic asylum?"
16138Were they Harrises, or what?"
16138Whar am I gwine?"
16138Whar did you come from?"
16138Whar is he?"
16138Whar is she?"
16138Whar''d you think?
16138Whar''s he from?"
16138What ails you?"
16138What am I to do?"
16138What brought you here?"
16138What brought you?"
16138What did Ruby Ann know?
16138What did she get out of you?"
16138What did she mean?"
16138What did the dying man want to say?
16138What do you say?
16138What do you think he does right before folks, in plain sight, sittin''on the piazza?"
16138What do you think of that for a minister of the gospel?"
16138What do you want?"
16138What else is she going to send?"
16138What happened her, I wonder?
16138What happened her?"
16138What has happened, and where is the carriage?"
16138What has happened?
16138What is a Cracker?"
16138What is her name?
16138What is her name?"
16138What is she to me?
16138What shal I do wid de chile?
16138What was its name?"
16138What will you do?"
16138What''s the matter, and how under the sun are you goin''alone, limpin''as you do?
16138What''s the matter?"
16138When are we going home?"
16138When can we go?"
16138When is it to be?"
16138When will that be?
16138When?"
16138Where are we?"
16138Where are you hurt?"
16138Where did she get the wheel, I''d like to know?
16138Where does she want to go?
16138Where is she?"
16138Where is the old lady?"
16138Where was it?
16138Where''s Mandy Ann?"
16138Where''s Tim?"
16138Who does she''long to, now Miss Dory an''ole Miss is both dead?
16138Who in thunder is that knocking at the door?
16138Who is Miss Dory?
16138Who is goin''to take care of her, I''d like to know?"
16138Who is head of this tomfoolery?"
16138Who is old Miss?
16138Who is she, you ask?
16138Who is she?
16138Who is she?"
16138Who says four?"
16138Who was going to buy such truck?
16138Who was it, and where is she?
16138Who was she, he wondered, and who was the old man beside her, who held himself so proudly?
16138Who''s gwine ter buy yer?"
16138Who''s he?
16138Why are you not attending to your business?
16138Why did he do it?"
16138Why did n''t she never war it afore an''let it be known?"
16138Why did n''t she take the''bus, and if the''bus was n''t there, why did n''t she--?"
16138Why did she come in such a storm?
16138Why have you been across the lake twice this morning?"
16138Why not have a lace ruffle?
16138Will nothing ever rouse her out of her apathy?
16138Will she give that away?"
16138Will twenty thousand be enough, or too much?"
16138Will you do it for me?"
16138Will you gim me your caird?"
16138Will you see the Colonel instead?"
16138Will you, Eloise?
16138Wo n''t you, Ruby Ann?"
16138Would Ruby Ann swaller her pride and be a substitute?
16138Would any one be there to meet her, or any conveyance, and if not, how was she to find her way to Mrs. Biggs?
16138Would you know''d her?"
16138You b''lieve me, Jake?"
16138You did n''t suppose I came to see Mrs. Biggs, did you?
16138You do n''t care to see them receive their diplomas?''
16138You do n''t mean you was born there?"
16138You found one, then?"
16138You have heard the news?"
16138You have n''t seen her yet?"
16138You members it?"
16138You wants to see Miss Dory?
16138You will come?"
16138You wo n''t sell me, shoo'',"Mandy Ann said, and her mistress replied,"Sell you?
16138You would n''t be wantin''me an Mandy Ann to go wid you?
16138You''se found it?"
16138an''says I,''S''posin''I do?''
16138and did you ever know such an infernal storm?
16138and what will the Colonel say?"
16138and who is Mandy Ann the Colonel is to buy?
16138he asked, and the Colonel replied,"What was on her coffin?"
16138she asked, and Peter replied,"Who should I buy it for?
16138the Colonel said, and Amy asked,"Does she want anything?"
16138why did n''t she send a pair of boots?
32423Canst thou draw leviathan with a hook? 32423 Is it a part of speech?"
32423+ Catholic, B, D, F( A, C, E?)
324231219?
32423:"That men may know God by whom they were created,"--the Heidelberg catechism has:"What is thy only comfort in life and death?"
32423A second asks"Is it ridiculous?"
32423And here the question arises-- Can we vindicate in a reflective or mediate process this spontaneous apprehension of reality?
32423And how is this impersonality or absoluteness of the conditions of knowledge to be established?
32423And is coming, B, C, D, E, F; and is about to come, A;+ again, A, C, D, E, F(B?
32423But what is the number of those laws?
32423CRICHTON, JAMES( 1560-?
32423Epigram often selects the couplet as the vehicle of its sharpened arrows, as in Sir John Harington''s"Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason?
32423He asks, is it not simpler to believe that there was a definite type in the background?
32423How can you deny the reality of that which you do not know?
32423If not, how do you know it and its object which are identical?
32423It may be asked, Can history have that which is not in the individual consciousness?
32423It may well be asked, why did the fall of a place, at first almost unfortified, bring the master of the Russian empire to his knees?
32423The pertinent question remains, has the study and development of criminology served any useful purpose?
32423The writer of the Oratorian Commentary( Theodulf of Orleans?)
32423They are apparently the most generalized and primitive of all( placental?)
32423This continued throughout the Dark Ages, until the 13th century, when rhythmical treatises, of which the_ Labyrinthus_ of Eberhard( 1212?)
32423This section of his works opens with the famous aspiration--"What shall I do to be for ever known, And make the coming age my own?"
32423While Calvin began sternly with the question:"What is the chief end of human life?"
32423Why, it may be asked, is it that one county excels in the game while another has no place whatever in the history of cricket?
32423or his tongue with a cord which thou lettest down?...
26960''Now do you see the yard- arm-- and understand the thing?'' 26960 ''What is it makes the vessel roll?
26960Ah, Captain Skinner, it is you, eh? 26960 An''with two others in er''launch?
26960And if I refuse?
26960And you were wounded?
26960Are you all well?
26960But, hello--he continued,"what sail is that?"
26960Ca n''t I go, too?
26960Can I not go by?
26960Captain Paul,asked the Judge,"are you, in conscience, satisfied that you used no more force than was necessary to preserve discipline on your ship?"
26960Courage?
26960Did you ever see a harder crew than this? 26960 Did you ever see such a coward?"
26960Do I understand that a Spaniard has frightened you all? 26960 Does Captain Semmes surrender his ship?"
26960He ees een the soup, eh?
26960Help me haul up this boat, will yer? 26960 How am I to know that this particular ship is to go free?"
26960How many of your bushwhackers have I killed?
26960How''s this?
26960Is it not so? 26960 Is this not my vessel?"
26960May I come aboard?
26960May I return with this boat and crew in order to rescue the drowning?
26960Pray, my bold seaman,said he, turning to the Welsh captain,"what is this?"
26960Surrender?
26960Then what was it?
26960To- day?
26960What can I do?
26960What is this?
26960What mean you by this, sir?
26960What means this confusion?
26960What means this, sirrah?
26960What regiment and where stationed, pray?
26960What shall I do?
26960What ship is that?
26960What ship is that?
26960What ship is that?
26960What the deuce is the matter anyway?
26960What?
26960Where''yer papers, and where''yer bound to?
26960Who are you, you lubbers?
26960Who are you?
26960Who are you?
26960Who goes there? 26960 Who goes there?"
26960Will she come out and fight? 26960 Will she come out?"
26960Will you obey my orders?
26960Yer did n''t remove me to''er cursed man- o''-warsman, did yer? 26960 You remember me?"
26960_ Fell o''er the sea- end with Raleigh, to- day!_Where''s Rixey of Hampton; Smith of Rexhill?
26960( Who is there?)
26960A cry came from the black body,"What ship is that?"
26960A typical sea- dog: a brave fighter,-- Then, why not give three times three for John Paul Jones?
26960A voice came back,--also in English,"And what ship may you be?"
26960About eight in the morning a boat was seen approaching, and to the hail,--"Who goes there?"
26960Ahoy!_"Well, sea- dogs, where''s Thompson of Yarmouthport dock?
26960And now, Mr. Lafitte, it is high time that you led a decent life, for are you not a hero?
26960And this was the sentiment of all, for who does not love a voyage after gold and treasure?
26960And thus Mr. Fortunatus Wright was sought for, and was asked:"Will you take charge of a privateer for the British merchants of Leghorn?
26960And was not good fortune always with him?
26960And well might they cheer, for had they not won one of the pluckiest sea- fights of all history?
26960And were they not right?
26960And what of the Englishmen?
26960And what of the youthful and danger- loving Drake?
26960And what were they to do, now that they had been placed on deck?
26960And, forthwith, what do you think that he did,--?"
26960Are you ready?
26960As he did so, the first Lieutenant of the_ Serapis_ came up from below, and, looking at Captain Pearson, asked,"Has the enemy struck, sir?"
26960As they neared the merchantman a hail came through the blackness:"Qui est la?"
26960Besides,--it wo n''t hurt you!__ Give a tiger and three times three!_ THE VANISHED SAILORS Say, sailors, what''s happened to young Bill Jones?
26960But can a man of action keep still?
26960But can a pirate remain happy when not pirating?
26960But go easy like, will yer?
26960But how about the_ Glorioso_?
26960But how about those jealous courtiers?
26960But is not this the proper way to rear a sea- dog?
26960But the crew grew mutinous,--for had they not come out for plunder?
26960But then,--is this not life?
26960But was he not their own countryman?
26960But was his name not Fortunatus?
26960But what could one man do against many?
26960But what is Barrataria?
26960But what was that?
26960But who-- forsooth-- will hear of this in Europe?
26960But, were they hostile, or friendly?
26960Can you do it?"
26960Come, let us dine together?"
26960Could it not have been the_ Duke_, after all?
26960Did n''t it?
26960Did not Wellington say,"The battle of Waterloo was won upon the foot- ball grounds of Eton and Harrow?"
26960Did you ever hear of anything more atrocious?
26960Did you ever hear of such a fight with no man ever being slaughtered?
26960Do n''t you?
26960Do you think that you, yourself, could write as well as did this pirate?
26960Do you think that_ you_ could be as patriotic as Sir Walter Raleigh?
26960Do you want to see me do it?"
26960Have you ever seen a school of pollock chasing a school of smaller fry?
26960Have you ever seen them jump and splash, and thud upon the surface of the water?
26960He laughed,--but what was that?
26960Here is a brave fellow, but would you care to have his reputation, Monsieur?"
26960How many sailors have you got?''
26960How would you care to be Governor of the Bahamas?"
26960Instead of doing him honor, they imprisoned him; and was he not the noblest patriot of them all?
26960Is it any wonder that the gallant seaman was popular with his followers?
26960Is it not so to- day?
26960JEAN BART THE SCOURGE OF THE DUTCH( 1650- 1702)"''What means that canvas, Skipper?
26960Jones of Yarmouth; the bright- cheeked boy?
26960Jones who could handle a boat like a man, Jones, who would grapple a smack like a toy?
26960Joseph?"
26960Just stepped into one of the jolly- boats and peacefully drifted ashore on a dark night?
26960Lafitte?"
26960Let us see how he fared?
26960Now how is that for a swashbuckling privateer?
26960Now, do n''t you think that this fellow was a doughty sea rover?
26960Or had we let her escape from us with the treasure aboard, what would you have said then?"
26960Or, do you prefer to rot in a beastly English prison- ship?"
26960Particularly if_ you_ were treated as_ he_ was treated?
26960Perhaps a guard would be sent after him?
26960Perhaps-- even now-- men had discovered his absence and were hurrying to intercept him?
26960Pray, when, sir, did the rules of war allow glass to be used as ammunition?"
26960Prithee, kind sir, can you tell me where the crew from my vessel have gone to?"
26960ROBERT SURCOUF THE"SEA HOUND"FROM ST. MALO( 1773- 1827)_ Parlez- vous Français?_ Yes, Monsieur, I can speak like a native,--sure.
26960Shall that name be tarnished by defeat?
26960Shall we try to take her by surprise and thus acquire both gain and glory?
26960Shall_ he_ quaff of our golden vintage, shall_ he_ ride in the royal bus?
26960Shall_ he_ sit in the ranks with us?
26960Their crews were undoubtedly undisciplined and ill- used to shooting, else how could they have done so badly with the_ Boscawen_?
26960There''re cannon near her bow, And the bugler''s bloomin''clarion, it shrills a how- de- row?''
26960This patriotic leader of the rough- and- ready rovers of the sea?
26960Thus ended the magnificent(?)
26960WOODES ROGERS THE BRISTOL MARINER(?-1736)"If you want to win a lass, or a sea fight; do n''t cajole.
26960Walker turned to his officers and asked,"Gentlemen, shall we fight her?"
26960Want a pilot fer the Ganges?"
26960Was ever captain in a worse fix?"
26960Was it Zeno, or were these more galleons of the Genoese?
26960We have but twenty- four guns to her thirty- two, but are we to be awed by this show of force?
26960What did this mean for him?
26960What did we tell you?"
26960What do you think of this?
26960What hangs upon the breeze?
26960What looms upon our starboard bow?
26960What say you to that?"
26960What say you to this fight?
26960What say you, men?"
26960What ship is that?"
26960What sounds are these I hear?
26960What vessel is this?"
26960What was his end?
26960What was that?
26960When they had collected there, he said, with feeling:"I suppose each one of you is more than equal to one Englishman?
26960Where, yes, where was Zeno?
26960Who remembers the names of any of these titled nobles who held commissions from his Majesty, the King of France?
26960Who was this Venetian soldier, who, covered with the marks of battle, lay in his last sleep?
26960Who''d coasted and traded from London to Ryde, Huggins and Muggins, all seamen of worth, Who could jibe and could sail, sir, when combers were wide?
26960Who-- this hero of war''s alarms?
26960Why, where''s your courage?"
26960Will she continue to be?
26960Will you accept?
26960Will you chase these rascally Frenchmen?
26960Will you chastise these sea- robbers?"
26960Will you cripple their operations?
26960Will you join me?"
26960Will you therefore take your morning meal with me, to- morrow, in my own cabin, aboard my ship?
26960Would Captain Walker advance?
26960Would n''t you have done so if you had been a Frenchman?
26960Would not the men of Wall Street love such a fellow in these piping times of peace?
26960Would you not take a commission?"
26960Yer did n''t see that I got th''cat- o''-nine- tails on my back, did yer?
26960You seem to prefer them to the whites, so why not, pray?
26960_ Tenez!_ He had the money, at any rate, so why should he care?
26960_ That ill- born cuss?_ Par donc!
18572''And you love the rat?'' 18572 ''What''s that for?''
18572''Why do I love him?'' 18572 ''Why, my poor man, do you love that rat?''
18572Am I to have no voice in disposal of myself? 18572 And I have been of use to you, have n''t I, Uncle Pat?"
18572And Miss Harley: who is she?
18572And do you suppose I have been thinking of that?
18572And does the puppy think that I''ll give my consent?
18572And how are you to show it?
18572And how did you dig that up?
18572And if I do?
18572And is it not strange? 18572 And is that all?"
18572And no more talk of-- of forgeries?
18572And so,observed Mr. Slater, following a statement of Storri''s errand,"you want to be put next to a''peter- man, what we call a box- worker?"
18572And the question is,concluded Richard,"can we by any chance get hold of those French shares?"
18572And what State do you intend to honor as its Senator?
18572And what is to be our course?
18572And what is to be the end of this intrigue?
18572And when should the committee report?
18572And you declare Count Storri a thief engaged in robbing your Treasury?
18572And you do not love Miss Harley?
18572And you-- are you of those?
18572Are we to permit the foolish girl to throw herself away?
18572Are you hurt?
18572Are you injured?
18572Be you Steamboat Dan?
18572Bess, do you think that fair?
18572But are you sure that Storri is dead? 18572 But how will you restrain her?"
18572But is money, that is, much money, so important?
18572But is there gold enough to furnish all the money required?
18572But really, Bess,persisted Dorothy,"to put it this way: if your mamma insisted, would you give way and marry a man you did n''t love?"
18572But why do we lose our self- control?
18572But you do n''t think it''s Storri?
18572But you go there?
18572But you said''others''?
18572But,remonstrated Storri uneasily,"are you sure of this Steamboat Dan?"
18572Ca n''t you see Bess is laughing at you?
18572Can we get those French shares?
18572Can you give me, sir, some notion of what Talon& Trehawke are to have?
18572Can you tell me the punishment for forgery?
18572Dear, when did you name the_ Dorothy Storms_?
18572Did you not tell me to write your name? 18572 Do n''t you think it might be Count Storri?"
18572Do n''t you think now you''re a bit of a come- on?
18572Do n''t you think you might better tell her?
18572Do you know what that black- bearded man wanted in your place?
18572Do you love her?
18572Do you mean the report of Senator Hanway''s committee that is investigating Northern Consolidated?
18572Do you remember,asked Inspector Val,"how several weeks ago we visited the drain?"
18572Do you see where you forged my name?
18572Do you see?
18572Do you see?
18572Do you think, dear heart, I would tell anyone before I had told you?
18572Does my daughter decline your love?
18572Duty?
18572Flight?
18572Has Mr. Gwynn any family in England?
18572Have you no kiss for your Storri, my San Reve?
18572He has n''t doused his glim, has he?
18572He wo n''t stay long,said Senator Hanway;"but while he''s here, dear, wo n''t you take Mr. Storms into the library?"
18572Here we be,he said;"now what''s it all about?"
18572How can I compel her?
18572How did you know Bill was goin''to- morrow? 18572 How did your men come to be outside the door?"
18572How do I stand with those Harleys, my San Reve?
18572How do you expect to get away with the swag?
18572How do you know what Mr. Gwynn has done for him?
18572How do you stand with the Harleys? 18572 How much of a fund will you require?"
18572How shall I go to her?
18572I do n''t find any of it about?
18572If I had a fortune equal to Mr. Harley''s, you would not object, madam?
18572If it come to that,retorted Storri spitefully,"why did you leave Ottawa?"
18572If you do not love Miss Harley,said the flushed but logical San Reve,"why do you go there?
18572Indeed; and what may be the plan which results so much to the advantage of this country?
18572Inflame what?
18572Is Mr. Gwynn your relative?
18572Is it?
18572Is n''t he utterly English, and therefore utterly admirable?
18572Is she?
18572Is the Russian inside?
18572Marriage with Storri?
18572May I ask what has moved you to propose this compliment for the United States?
18572May I have a rose?
18572Me?
18572Might I ask whether you have a safe to blow or a crib to crack on your own private account? 18572 Mr. Storms, I believe?"
18572My San Reve, how can you ask? 18572 My dear Dorothy,"cried the other, surprised into deepest concern,"your mother did n''t see him kissing your fingers, did she?"
18572Newspaper work? 18572 No?"
18572Not forgetting to hide my name?
18572Now, how should I know, Bess? 18572 One thirtieth?"
18572Richard,said Mrs. Hanway- Harley,"what took Mr. Gwynn abroad?"
18572Scoundrel?
18572See what?
18572Stawms,whispered Mr. Fopling, tremulous with agitation,"if I''m as weak as this at your wedding, what do you weckon I''ll be at my own?
18572Storri on his knee?
18572Storri on his knee?
18572Storri, tell me; do you love this Miss Harley?
18572Storri, why did you bring me from Ottawa?
18572Storri? 18572 Tell me, dear, what am I to do?"
18572That is all you require?
18572That proves me your friend, does n''t it?
18572Then I am to understand that, should a day come when I can measure wealth with Mr. Harley, I may claim Dorothy as my own?
18572Then, Mr. Storms,returned Mrs. Hanway- Harley,"I ask you whether I would be justified in wedding my daughter to poverty?"
18572This bein''a stool ai n''t no hit with me,sighed Dan,"but will any sport show me how to sidestep it?"
18572Was n''t he wretchedly bold, Bess?
18572Was n''t it Virgil who wrote''What cares the wolf how many the sheep be''? 18572 Well, s''ppose I be?"
18572Well, then,observed Senator Hanway, looking right and left, being no one to face an angry woman,"why do n''t you let them marry?"
18572What am I to answer? 18572 What can we do?"
18572What can you do?
18572What does this lead to?
18572What for?
18572What have I done?
18572What is it?
18572What is it?
18572What is that?
18572What is the question?
18572What makes you so gloomy, Dorothy?
18572What matters that?
18572What place will you head the boat for when the job''s done?
18572What shall I do?
18572What should you expect?
18572What sort of ground is this?
18572What was it?
18572What were the last quotations on Anaconda stock?
18572What will he do with it?
18572What would you have?
18572What yacht was that?
18572What''s become of him, Inspector?
18572What''s next?
18572What''s the row?
18572When are the President and General Attorney of the Anaconda to be here?
18572When will you appoint the wedding?
18572Where else can you get one million for ten weeks''digging and a six- months''cruise in a yacht? 18572 Where now?"
18572Where then?
18572Wherein would lie the harm? 18572 Who are you?"
18572Who is your friend Gwynn?
18572Who knows?
18572Who so blooming, who so lovely, who so glorious as Dorothy?
18572Whom then?
18572Whom would I kill?
18572Whom would you kill, my San Reve?
18572Whom would you marry?
18572Why did I bring you here to- night?
18572Why do you object to him?
18572Why do you tie yourself to that draughting? 18572 Why not on marriage and wives?"
18572Why should you care?
18572Why, my San Reve,protested Storri,"and what has stirred your anger?"
18572Why?
18572Why?
18572Will it be much of a play?
18572Will there be a duel?
18572Will you have some tea?
18572Will you mind,said Inspector Val,"if I call a man from across the street?"
18572Will you send home then the body of a thief overtaken in the crime?
18572Will you shake hands Russian fashion?
18572Will you try grips with me?
18572Would it not be as wise,he argued,"to claim the public''s attention with some new unusual proposition?
18572Would it not be wise to imitate the gentleman and set a spy to dogging him? 18572 Yacht?"
18572Yes,went on the vindictive Storri in an exultant crow,"did you little people believe you were to laugh at Storri and pass unpunished?
18572Yes?
18572You are an owner in Northern Consolidated?
18572You are not ill?
18572You are to see my daughter? 18572 You love him?"
18572You want something desperate, eh?
18572You will believe me, darling?
18572You will see me to- morrow?
18572You wo n''t mind,said Richard diffidently,"if I make an amended proposition?"
18572You would n''t have me marry him, mamma?
18572Your father dead,said Storri, pretending a perking interest,"your father dead, my San Reve, what then became of you?"
18572A woman, then?
18572After all, is it a destiny beneath his jowlish fat deserts, that an American pig should become slave to a Russian noble?"
18572After all, why not?
18572After rubbing his nose irresolutely with a pen- holder, he said:"What can I do?"
18572Am I a pauper that my San Reve should work?
18572And for what?
18572And if her mother objects-- as she does object-- why not cure the objection with a trifle of truth?
18572And that morning armful of roses?
18572And the cogitations of Richard, if written down in words, would have read like this:"Why should I defer a dà © nouement that will rejoice them all?
18572And what fetched you out so cold an evening?"
18572And yet who would think of questioning Storri, so heroically rescuing life?
18572As Richard landed her, light as a leaf, within her father''s portals, she said in remonstrance:"What made you do it?
18572Bayard?"
18572But how can it be done?
18572But is n''t there a hint in this?"
18572But what could Mr. Harley offer for defense?
18572But what do you figger this Russian''s goin''to burn?"
18572But what should you expect in one who all his life has had about him the best society of England?"
18572But who shall tell how and when and where his fate will overtake him?
18572By the way, I hope Count Storri did not meet him?"
18572Can you not exercise a paternal authority to have your daughter receive my respectful visits?
18572Can you tell me what the committee will report?"
18572Chastise him?
18572Come now; do you go with me?"
18572Could a nobleman chastise a toad-- a reptile?
18572Could his San Reve procure him a ground- plan of the Treasury Building?
18572Could it be that Richard was Mr. Gwynn''s secretary?
18572Could she break the hold?
18572Did it ever occur to you that it will take some time to carry the gold down to the drain''s mouth?
18572Did you hear how he spoke of his benefactor?
18572Did you not see that odious Storri coming?"
18572Did you think to insult him and escape his vengeance?
18572Do I ask much?
18572Do society, I suppose?"
18572Do you follow?
18572Do you imagine Dorothy does n''t see you every time you walk this street?
18572Do you know how much gold money it takes to make a ton?"
18572Do you know how they were obtained?
18572Do you know what it will require?
18572Do you know when the finding may be looked for?
18572Do you know why we do n''t find Storri?
18572Do you realize what its capital must be?
18572Do you think I would break in upon your dreams, else?
18572Dorothy was a woman; and what woman could resist Storri?
18572Dorothy, still transfixed, turned with round eyes to Richard:"What was it you did?"
18572Forbidding Richard the door might of itself appear a meager matter, but who was to say what results might not spring from it?
18572Gold?
18572Gold?
18572Gwynn?"
18572Gwynn?"
18572Gwynn?"
18572Had Mr. Storms any expectations from Mr. Gwynn?
18572Had Storri made some soft advance, and had Dorothy repulsed him?
18572Had her love of politics gone cooling?
18572Had she not fought a gallant war with her mother for love of him?
18572Harley?"
18572Has the cherished Fopling gone astray?
18572Have you got my plan?"
18572He tells you that I am to have the assistance of the Anaconda?"
18572He was no one to retire or to rise with the birds; why should he?
18572How would it advantage a world to hear that he took her in his arms and held her close?
18572I ask you, in candor, does a gentleman arrest his wife''s father on a charge of forgery?
18572I say, Stawms, why do n''t you go into Wall Stweet and bweak the beggah?
18572I, as a child, was not afraid of a lion under the lash; am I now to fear a bear, a Russian bear, I, who am a woman?"
18572If you owned a bed of flowers, would you build a fence about it?
18572Inspector Val, without wasting time, began to ask questions:"Who shoved this note under the door?"
18572Is Storri so miserly that the idol of his heart must be a slave?"
18572Is a Russian-- is a nobleman to be at the beck of such vile little people?
18572Is it your plan to make the town your permanent residence?"
18572Is n''t word of eye as sacred as word of mouth?
18572Is that disgrace?
18572Is this a time to talk of collaring, and we no further than the threshold of the job?
18572It ran thus: R. Storms, Washington, D. C. What''s the matter?
18572It was necessary to tame that householder to docility, and what should achieve this sooner than a great fright?
18572It would promote friendship, and what was better than friendship between countries?
18572Meanwhile, what was there he might save from the situation as it stood?
18572Might not the public, being wholly engaged thereby, forget finance?"
18572Mr. Bayard?
18572Mr. Fopling has often struck me as volcanic; who shall say that he will not some day erupt?"
18572Mr. Harley might be disgraced, destroyed; but what then?
18572Must his heart be broken, and he not learn the secret or know the author of the blow?
18572Now how could the lady who writes you benefit by that?
18572Now what should be less complex than to have Benzine Bob set fire to the Harley house an hour before the time to sail?
18572Now whom would he tell?
18572Now why could n''t she have sent Storri by the same route?
18572Of what avail would be a call upon the Harleys?
18572Of what avail?
18572Of what worth now to tell you those sweetheart things that Richard and his angel said and did?
18572On Mr. Harley''s account?
18572On that point let me ask: How long can we count on being undisturbed after we''ve got to the gold?
18572On that point of question- putting, might he, Senator Gruff, impart a word of counsel?
18572Or, to phrase it this fashion, What ought I to do?"
18572Russia?
18572Sands?"
18572Shall he never pause for love?
18572Should he, Storri, who had been sighed for by the fairest of a dozen stately courts, receive defeat from a little American?
18572Should she disclose herself to Miss Harley?
18572Somebody must go, and why not Patrick Henry Hanway?
18572Storms?"
18572Storms?"
18572Suppose I was to rap?"
18572Talk reason to the public?
18572That''s all, Dan; have you got your orders straight?"
18572The caitiff Storms must then wait, eh?"
18572The query is, Would Mr. Gwynn be so amiably disposed as to move in the affair?
18572The question now is: Are you going with me?
18572The real question I wanted to ask is, Have you told her?
18572Then pushing straight for the point after methods of his own, he continued:"What is it the Anaconda Airline can do?
18572Then, turning to Mr. Harley:"You, of course, speak for Senator Hanway?"
18572Then, turning to him who was for softly buying his way out:"Do you imagine that what has happened was accident?
18572This staggered Richard; was his idol laughing at him?
18572To what regions would the happy pair migrate, and for what space?
18572Was a White House to be lost by such tawdry argument?
18572Was a nobleman, wealthy, young, handsome, on terms of comradeship with his Czar, to be refused?
18572Was he not compelling the proud Dorothy to receive his compliments, his glances, his sighs, his love?
18572Was it not Mr. Harley?
18572Was it not to sustain your deal in sugar?"
18572Was not Richard, the detestable, excluded, and the Harley door closed fast in his face?
18572Was not here a chance to remove Mrs. Hanway- Harley''s objection?
18572Was there any reason why he, Senator Hanway, should refrain from such a step?
18572Wealthy, handsome, brilliant, bold-- who could refuse his love?
18572Well, Mr. Duff,"as that worthy was ushered in,"what did you learn?
18572Were not Americans mad after Counts?
18572What am I to do?
18572What could be his secret tipped with terror?
18572What could there be about Storri''s ascendency over Mr. Harley to which a woman who loves Storri would object?
18572What does he demand?
18572What else could come?
18572What forger or what forger''s daughter has made such terms?
18572What if he should come philandering after Dorothy?
18572What if he were tender, what if he were true?
18572What if he were to steal away your bride?
18572What if it were to prove serious?"
18572What is it?
18572What is to be my attitude towards your daughter, while I am searching for that fortune?"
18572What manner of mystery was this?
18572What of Storri?"
18572What shall I do with the half- million taken from him?"
18572What shall we call it?
18572What should be the ransom?
18572What should be those gems of price which the metal box protected?
18572What should she do-- she and her poor love?
18572What should she do?
18572What stock could support itself against such a flood as that?
18572What then: Is Storri to despair?
18572What was he?
18572What was written concerning the mouths of babes and sucklings?
18572What were his relations with Mr. Gwynn?
18572What were those two demands?
18572What woman was ever withheld from wedding a man by the word of that man''s mistress?
18572What would have been the good?
18572What, beyond mere compliance with Storri''s wishes, might avert those calamities that seemed swinging in the air above him?
18572What, may I ask, do you call your duty in the premises?"
18572What, then, did that casket of carved bronze contain?
18572When Mrs. Hanway- Harley had left the room, and Miss Marklin and Dorothy were alone, the former said firmly:"Dorothy, who sent them?"
18572Where did Mr. Storms live?
18572Where is your letter to- night?
18572Where should such crawling, footless creatures be?"
18572Who could have offered deeper proof of it?
18572Who first spoke of Northern Consolidated?
18572Who is to know when Satan-- or a more benevolent spirit-- will be hiding behind the hedge to play good folk a marriage trick?
18572Who shall measure my demands when I have conquered?
18572Who should come swinging up the way but Richard?
18572Who should escort him through that latter grim, gray edifice but an Assistant Secretary?
18572Who suggested the"bear"raid?
18572Who taught you to ignore formalities?
18572Who was he?
18572Who was to measure the road''s lumber robberies, or those thefts of land?
18572Who were they from?
18572Who would dream of stopping him who was only taking the rescued fainting one to safe shelter and medical help?
18572Who would hear of her after that?"
18572Why are you, who are among the world''s five wealthiest men, so anxious to pretend poverty and hide your money- light beneath a bushel?"
18572Why at any time?
18572Why did not Dorothy come down to dinner?
18572Why do I come so far with my dreams?
18572Why does she write this letter?
18572Why not put the question to Mr. Storms?
18572Why not?
18572Why once a month?
18572Why once a week?
18572Why should I so honor them?
18572Why should Storri object to that?
18572Why should he?
18572Why should she not?
18572Why should the world know of the splendid gopher work of London Bill?
18572Why would n''t it be well to talk to the people in the same manner even if one did not adopt the theories expressed?
18572Why?
18572Will not our Dorothy laugh?
18572Would Mr. Fopling permit him the favor of his name?
18572Would a complete copy, verbatim, of the coming report of Senator Hanway''s committee on Northern Consolidated be of any service to you?"
18572Would a tunnel reach this treasure?
18572Would n''t it work injustice to the debtors of the land?"
18572Would the President and the General Attorney of the Anaconda Airline call again in an hour?
18572You recall the San Reve?--she who wrote the letter about those French shares?
18572You remember what I told you as to the plans of our friends to''bear''Northern Consolidated?
18572You see the point?"
18572You still go there?"
18572You will correct this; eh, you Harley-- you John Harley?"
18572You would come to Europe, no?"
18572am I to be thwarted, affronted, undone by a girl?
18572and Mr. Storms is not to see her?"
18572asked Mr. Duff;"do we follow him in and collar him?
18572did Richard imagine that Dorothy had been weeks over a trousseau to have it extinguished in the narrow compass of Senator Hanway''s study?
18572e._, kisses, when Richard appeared and took Bess''s labor of congratulation off her hands-- or should one say her lips?
18572exclaimed Mr. Harley, starting up and growing apoplectic with anger,"do you imagine that I''ll force my child into your arms?
18572gasped Dorothy, who had stood throughout the duel like one planet- struck;"what was it you did?"
18572he exclaimed,"is it you, my San Reve?
18572or do we just wait here?"
18572said London Bill, after the gin had appeared and disappeared;"what''s the argument you want to hand me?"
18572shall Storri be forever at some grind of business?
18572that she did n''t see you come in?
18572that she has n''t seen you to- day?
18572that she wo n''t invent some pretext for running over?
18572who shall talk of forgeries then?"
18572yes; but why ask Mr. Sands, printer, and Inspector Val of the police?
18572you Harley-- you John Harley, is it you?"
26640''Now, Sir,''I said to the keeper,''where is the humbug?'' 26640 ''Well, what is the matter with the house?''
26640''Well, why do n''t you show me some evidence of the haunted house?'' 26640 ''What?''
26640''Why?'' 26640 ''Will you go with me, and show me the road?''
26640( How do you spell your name?) 26640 A piece of this verdigris- preserve gooseberry pie, Madam?"
26640And can you influence me?
26640And chicoried the coffee?
26640And do they always show hands without thumbs?
26640And dusted the pepper?
26640And sanded the sugar?
26640Are you happy?
26640Are you often near me?
26640But I say Mister, what has them papers to do with a sperit communication?
26640But why did you not think of it?
26640Devour me?
26640Did I not tell you to write the names of deceazed relatives?
26640Do you like your tea with swill- milk, or without?
26640Do you prefer black tea, or Prussian- blue tea?
26640Fust rate, Colonel, how d''ye sell it?
26640Has the Queen given you no message for me?
26640Have a cup of pea- soup and chicory- coffee?
26640Have some sawdust on your meat, or do you prefer this flour and turmeric mustard?
26640Have you changed your religious notions since entering the spirit- world?
26640How many were present at your death?
26640How much is your claim?
26640Indeed?
26640Now laugh, will you, gentlemen? 26640 There, do you see what wonderful pencils these are?
26640These Golden Pigeons,I remarked,"are very common in California, I think I heard you say?
26640Three I am offered,says Mr. Auctioneer, and chattered on as before:"And a half, did you say, Sir?
26640Well, Colonel, how much yer got?
26640Well, wo n''t you say to the folks that I''m all right, and happy? 26640 Well,"said the ancient mariner,"if it wo n''t make any difference you can just as well do it, ca n''t you?"
26640What do you want?
26640What kind?
26640What were your last words?
26640What will you give me extra if I will travel and exhibit the bears every day for ten weeks?
26640When?
26640Where is it? 26640 Who are you?"
26640Who attended you in your last illness?
26640Why is no thumb visible?
26640Why, Tom, are you not a true friend to your party? 26640 Wo n''t you put a few more sugar- bugs in your ash- leaf tea?"
26640You serve too, wo n''t you? 26640 You will sell it for me again at once?"
26640( Did n''t you like vrows here?)
26640( Do all vrows make blunders?)
26640( Do n''t the clothes fit?)
26640( Do you think you were a good member?)
26640( Has your vrow got it?)
26640( How do you find yourself now, Hans?)
26640245 gullability changed to gullibility?
26640A dull, lazy smile crawled over the sober face of my German visitor, as he replied in a slow, guttural tone of voice:"What you think yourself?"
26640A fine drink this stramonium?
26640A man asked one of them how to get rich?
26640ALDERMAN.--"Oh, there is, is there?
26640Ah!--what is this?"
26640Almost his last words were:"Wo n''t Barnum open his eyes when he finds I have humbugged him by being buried in his new hunting- dress?"
26640And in return for all this kindness, what do Messrs. Boult and- so- forth want?
26640And in what business is there not humbug?
26640And who was the author?
26640And who''s the Princess Cariboo?"
26640Another fellow asked how he should cure his gout?
26640Are there a good many of these admirals in your country?"
26640But can there be any reasonable doubt about it?
26640But if the questions are of such a nature as the following, answers are generally obtained:"Are you happy?"
26640But need I explain to my own beloved countrymen that there is humbug in politics?
26640But what are these, to such geniuses as Rolleum and Digwell?
26640But what did he say about it?"
26640Can human credulity go further than to suppose that the departed still appear in the old clo''of their earthly wardrobe?
26640Can you show me Daniel Webster?
26640Can you show me John Adams?
26640Catching his meaning, I quickly answered:"I think it is a humbug?"
26640Could I have obtained such names if this were not a perfectly square thing?"
26640Did you ever behold a more striking likeness?"
26640Do n''t know me, do you?
26640Do none of you remember the Hydrarchos Sillimannii, that awful Alabama snake?
26640Do you tell me so?"
26640Does anybody go into a political campaign without it?
26640Does anybody suppose I am manufacturing this story?
26640Dropping that and taking another:"On this?"
26640For instance:"BROTHER SAMUEL:--Will you communicate with me through this medium?
26640For who knows, whether the consolation sought by the fair one, will always be such as her lover will approve?
26640Here is a message from George W. Gage, with some of the questions which he answered:"[ How do you like your new home?]
26640How am I going to support my family, I should like to know, if this law is allowed to stand?
26640How can it be otherwise, until we know more than we do at present, of the great mysteries of life and death?
26640How do you do?]
26640How many innocent mediums have been wronged?
26640I hope you and your wife are comfortable?"
26640I''m dead; ai n''t you afraid of me?
26640If he did so well with a mere nostrum, why should he not have gained riches and a less grotesque fame by the sale of a better article?
26640In a moment the door opened, and in came a fine large devil who angrily asked,"What do you call me for?"
26640Is anything further necessary to convince you what a peculiarly wicked and horrible humbug this fellow was?
26640Know George Lolley?
26640Now then, my friend, what did you drink this morning?
26640Now, how is it possible for people to be living among us here, who are fooled by such wretched balderdash as this?
26640One, did I hear?
26640Or-- does my friend Brittan himself want an engagement at the Museum?
26640Pay the money ourselves?
26640Perhaps some discouraged reader may ask, What can I eat?
26640Probably two millions of readers read the announcement, and asked,"Who is Genin, the hatter?"
26640Reads:"''Is there any remedy for this dreadful state of things?
26640Reads:"''Is there any remedy for this dreadful state of things?''"
26640Say two cents, wo nt yer?
26640Shall we no longer prove that the success of the party opposed to us will overwhelm the land in ruin?
26640The great question of all was, Who was the daddy?
26640The medium then seizes one of the"ballots,"and asks:"Is the spirit present whose name is on this?"
26640The tall and well- dressed young man with short hair pushed up and said:"Do n''t want it?
26640The"Spirit- Postmaster"fails to get answers to such questions as these:"Where did you die?"
26640This was not so unreasonable as it may seem; for if the man could not make rain when it was wanted, what was he good for?
26640Three shall I have?
26640Thus, for instance, discourseth the Ghost of Lolley:"How do?
26640Was it possible, then, that my imagination had done all this business, and that I had been cured by poisons which I supposed were Brandreth''s Pill?
26640What else does liquor do?)
26640What if he did lie?
26640What is it?
26640What is it?
26640What is petroleum to this?
26640What is the name and purpose of this curious knight- errant?
26640What mean this costume of by- gone centuries-- this golden chariot-- these richly caparisoned steeds?
26640What would have become of the celebrated Bug Powder man in those days?
26640What''s all this hullabaloo about?"
26640When do you expect my half- dozen pairs will arrive?"
26640Where?
26640Who are my defamers?
26640Why should he?
26640Why?
26640Would anybody naturally go and watch the Post Office at Bronxville, New York, for instance, as a particularly central location for business?
26640Yes: but are the French and Germans and English and Americans poor ignorant creatures too?
26640You called it Bourbon, or Cognac, or Old Otard, very likely, but what was it?
26640[ Did you?]
26640[ Was n''t you a medium?]
26640are no exaggerations of_ our_ candidate''s merits to be allowed?
26640being a question commonly asked the"spirits,"one of these gentlemen varied it by asking:"Are you hungry?"
26640exclaimed the"Squire,"raising his hands and rolling his eyes in utter amazement;"why, Tom, what office do you want?"
26640he exclaimed,"did I not tell you I had a new humbug that would double the sales of my pencils?
26640laugh, will you, gentlemen?
26640no depreciations of the_ other_ candidate?
26640said the lady;"What message should she give?"
22375Adèle''s mother,--was she lost?
22375Ah,_ Padrone_ can swear tolerably well without it, can he not, Giallo? 22375 And do you see any light, my son?"
22375And now, may I ask, my dear Colonel,said I, when he had finished,"why do n''t you, or rather why did n''t you tell Percy the whole story?"
22375And thou canst look at me, and tell me that? 22375 And what do you see, Reuben, my boy?"
22375And what hath his farriership prescribed? 22375 And where is that?
22375And you see it, my son?--Repentance, Justification by Faith, Adoption, Sanctification, Election?
22375And-- he was n''t lost?
22375Are you not tired? 22375 Are you ready there?"
22375Aunt Marian,--may I call you so?
22375But you will hear very soon?
22375But, dear Mr. Landor, what are you doing with that big book? 22375 By act?
22375By what right is_ messenger_ made out of_ message_?
22375Do you advise taking to the boats, then?
22375Do you play with or without the roquet- croquet?
22375Do you remember at all how he looked?
22375Does this make any difference to you, Charles?
22375I did believe,( what have I not believed?) 22375 If the girl is not good enough for you, why make a fool of her, and set her against a good husband?"
22375Is it really true? 22375 MY DEAR FRIEND,--Will you think it worth your while to transcribe the enclosed?
22375Mr. Landor, do you remember the young artist who called on you one day?
22375My good lass,said he,"tell me, where am I?
22375O, the painting is for you, is it?
22375Our sculptors and painters frequently take their subjects from antiquity; are our poets never to pass beyond the mediæval? 22375 So''t is for me, is it?"
22375Square, have they ordered a moniment yit for Miss Maverick?
22375Tell me, Monsieur,continued she, with a heat of language that excited his admiration,"what is it you believe there?
22375That would be the best thing to do, would it not? 22375 The young officer?
22375The''Packhorse''? 22375 There, what do you think of that?"
22375Think of it? 22375 Well, Mr. Landor, what do you think of the new poem?"
22375What are ye sighing about, ye foolish man?
22375What else? 22375 What have they done to you?
22375What is that you are making?
22375What is up?
22375What need is there, or was there, to cloud Percy''s life with such knowledge? 22375 What sonnet of Petrarca equals this?"
22375What, are_ you_ there still?
22375What, without a word?
22375What? 22375 Who asks you?
22375Who says?
22375Who should it be for, thou simple body? 22375 Why could n''t you come afore?"
22375Why not, Percy? 22375 Why wo n''t people say_ messager_?"
22375Why write_ bye_?
22375Why, what do I come here for twice a week, this two years past, if not for thee?
22375Will you obleege me, Mr. Johns? 22375 Wooing?
22375Would you allow him to make a sketch of you, Mr. Landor? 22375 Would your worship be private?
22375You are dressed like a widow?
22375You are quite sure he was not smitten with my face?
22375You have had letters from Robert?
22375You remember my governess, Madame Guyot?
22375You will forgive me all, Aunt?
22375''As it was in the beginning, is now, and ever shall be--''""But what about your cathedral?"
22375***** What is the price of a day''s labor in Lapland, where the sun never sets for six months?
22375*****"Have you nothing else for the old man to read?
22375Again, if a ball be accidentally stopped in its motion by a careless player or spectator, what shall be done?
22375And Doctor Johns?
22375And are not the rarest and most exquisite songsters wood- birds?
22375And did they not all envy you, and wonder when their distaffs were to whirl to the tread of their own ready feet?
22375And he bethinks himself,--does it lie somewhere under the harsh and dogmatic utterances of the Ashfield pulpit?
22375And if real, why may not the same lips declare it under the cathedral or the meeting- house roof?
22375And is he not grateful to the lovely Mrs. Asmodeus for the gentleness with which she holds him in her power?
22375And now what shall I read?
22375And what is a bird without its song?
22375And when he replied she was good enough for any man in England,"Then,"said she,"why not show your respect for her as Paul Carrick does?
22375And why should one be"original"because he handles a peck- measure, while another is_ comme il faut_ in wielding a yardstick?
22375And you are Puritan?
22375And, to be sure, who knew what might be in the future?
22375But I felt only for poor Robert, and how could I guess?"
22375But Landor has strange notions, has he not, Giallo?
22375But despair of the Republic?
22375But how is this?
22375But now I am going to Colonel Lunt''s a little while; shall I find you up when I come back?"
22375But what could I say?
22375But what would father do if I were to leave_ his_ house?
22375But, Auntie, tell me, am I a fool and a jackass?
22375Can I fetch you anything?"
22375Can naught be done?"
22375Come you from Cumberland?"
22375Could this be all hypocrisy?
22375Dare I mention it, that the lady opposite cleared her throat in like manner?
22375Did we bate one jot of heart or hope for that?
22375Do n''t you know never such a one?"
22375Do n''t you, Giallo?"
22375Do we not trust ourselves, in venturous mood, to the frail tenure of a single strand which sways''twixt heaven and earth?
22375Do we not wait for the stranger to speak?
22375Do you hear the murmur of the surf yonder?
22375Do you know the Pewees?
22375Do you see Vanitas at the other end of the car?
22375Does he look as though he carried about with him a"lengthening chain"?
22375Does he love her less?
22375Does it lie in the melodious aves, and under the robes of Rome?
22375Does she love him less?
22375Dost hear what I say?
22375Especially, why did n''t two such affectionate, tender- hearted persons as Colonel Lunt and his wife?
22375Have I not kept it well?"
22375Have you observed at what an early age the Partridge flies?
22375Have you seen the Partridge drum?
22375He sat down beside her, and said, kindly,"Why, sweetheart, what is amiss?"
22375He would put on his spectacles, exclaim,"What is this?"
22375How I wished he could have gone to the conflict with the thought of his true love warm at his heart?
22375How can I ever repay her?"
22375How shall I explain them?
22375How, for example, shall I interpret the following cases, occurring within my own experience and under my own observation?
22375How?"
22375If all can not be reduced into order, is that any reason why nothing should be done toward it?
22375If an accident happened in the great roistering family of eight or ten children,( and when was not something happening to some of us?)
22375If languages and men too are imperfect, must we never make an effort to bring them a few steps nearer to what is preferable?"
22375In all languages, ancient and modern, are there ten prose- writers at once harmonious, correct, and energetic?"
22375In what consisted this change in the man''s appearance, so signal that he trusted to it as a disguise?
22375Is a deer''s track like a sheep''s or a goat''s?
22375Is all our wooing to go for naught?"
22375Is it in both?
22375Is it my fault?
22375Is it not better that the blacks should be contented slaves than exasperated murderers or drunken vagabonds?
22375Is it not magnificent?
22375Is it not some subtle disguise of Satan, by which his poor boy is being cheated into repose?
22375Is it real?
22375Is it that it is possible to go too deep into all sciences, even croquet?
22375Is it the presence of Adèle that gives a new fervor, a kind of crazy inspiration to his talk?
22375Is not this the day I was to expect your visit?
22375Is she dead?
22375Is the truth between?
22375Landor puts the question,"Is the Dean ignorant that_ everywhere_ is one word, and_ where_ is no substantive?"
22375Landor?"
22375May I cut off a few stray hairs?"
22375Must the old creature lose his young friends as well as his old?
22375My dear Madam, did not Tommy''s father do the same foolish thing?
22375Next day came the doctor, and whispered softly to Mrs. Vint,"How are we all up stairs?"
22375Not waste my sympathy on a common goat?
22375Now was not that a compliment worth having?"
22375Putting out his foot one day, he said,"Who could suppose that that ugly old foot had ever been good- looking?
22375Suppose I begin with his novels?"
22375Tell me, Monsieur, does Adèle think this?"
22375The captain, indeed, is not over- alert or fitted for high emergencies; but what emergencies can belong to so placid a voyage?
22375The white flash of a sea- bird''s wing, Or gleam of slanting sail?
22375There are good points even in the spinster; when shall we learn that the best of us are not wholly good, nor the worst wholly bad?
22375There, now, is that a little better?"
22375This bird is a Warbler, plainly enough, from his habits and manner; but what kind of Warbler?
22375This is my pincushion, is it?"
22375Upon its conclusion, the reader exclaimed,''Is not that exactly what Cicero would have said?''
22375Was it best to reveal this last secret to Charles?
22375Was that the act of a lover?"
22375Well, it is a big name for him, is n''t it?
22375Were there not many loquacious conclaves held to sit in secret judgment thereon?
22375What but love of the good God?"
22375What can be more horrible than to see and hear a person talking with his mouth full?
22375What do you mean?"
22375What doctor?"
22375What flecks the outer gray beyond The sundown''s golden trail?
22375What good can come of your setting your heart on_ him_?
22375What if they see it in a picture?
22375What in the world came over the woman?
22375What is it closes the church door to her?
22375What is the horror against which your New England teachers would warn my poor Adèle?
22375What is this?
22375What makes thee in the haunts of home A wonder and a sign?
22375What was there in hat and coat thus to eclipse the whole personality of the man?
22375What weary doom of baffled quest, Thou sad sea- ghost, is thine?
22375What will you do next?
22375What, then, was the difficulty?
22375When do these creatures travel here?
22375Where shall the poor lady be buried?
22375Where were her eyes?
22375Whither be you going, with the face of a ghost?"
22375Whither bound?
22375Who deserved it so much?
22375Who is that for?"
22375Who is to pay it, I wonder?"
22375Why could not I have been taken, and he left?
22375Why not-- in God''s name-- charity?
22375Why, my good Nelly, how could ye be so hare- brained?
22375Why, whence come you that know not the''Packhorse,''nor yet Allerton township?
22375Wilt sing me a stave after all?"
22375Would you believe it?
22375Yardley?"
22375Yet do we not sometimes hang ourselves over cliffs from which a fall were worse than death?
22375Yet is it not a thing astonishing that I should ask you, a stranger, Monsieur, how my own child is looking?
22375You can not?
22375You do n''t carry any such?
22375You do n''t carry any such?
22375You do n''t know that you carry about any such?
22375You do n''t know what a Hircus Oepagrus is, Tommy?
22375You know your letters,--which proves that you are in your second childhood, does it not?"
22375You will believe me, Aunt Marian, and forgive me?"
22375and where is that?"
22375did n''t you think she liked me?"
22375do n''t you know the dear little woman has too much love for you, too much pride in you, to make a fright of herself, upon any consideration?
22375going to America?"
22375have you nothing American?"
22375how can you be so wicked?"
22375if you''ve no beard, how can you swear?"
22375is she living?
22375must he die?
22375not in Cumberland?"
22375or,''What could it have been?''
22375said Mercy;"are we to do naught for charity?"
22375what dangers on the main Can equal those that I sustain From stinted love and cold disdain?"
22375what did she say?"
22375what have I done?"
22375what is the old creature to do for reading- matter?"
22375what mystery is here?
22375what will become of Giallo and me?
22375what winds can happy prove That bear me far from her I love?
22375who cares?
22375who knows?"
22375why should we trouble her?
335501565?
33550Black Rod then strikes three times with his staff, and on being asked"Who is there?"
33550Hence the question arises, whence are derived thrombogen and thrombokinase?
33550In the last case it becomes coated with a greyish- black layer of an oxide( dioxide(?
21622And what is that?
21622Bennie? 21622 But how hast thou become a beggar?
21622But how,asked the duke,"came you by the knowledge of all these things?"
21622But what becomes of the American daughters,asked the English lady,"when there is no money left?"
21622But where shall I go?
21622But where will it end?
21622But who will take care of you?
21622Do you intend taking the dome of St. Paul''s for a gasometer?
21622Do you know him, then?
21622Do you know what God puts us on our backs for?
21622Do you know, sir,said a devotee of Mammon to John Bright,"that I am worth a million sterling?"
21622Do you understand geometry, Latin, and Newton?
21622Do you want anything?
21622Do you wish to live without a trial?
21622Do? 21622 Does one need to know anything more than the twenty- four letters, in order to learn everything else that one wishes?"
21622Fear?
21622Has Ali Hafed returned?
21622How did you acquire your great fortune?
21622How do you manage it, Dick?
21622How is this, Dick?
21622How shall I a habit break?
21622How shall I know when I have found the place?
21622Of what use is it?
21622Of what use?
21622Seest thou a man that is hasty in his words? 21622 Storms may howl around thee, Foes may hunt and hound thee: Shall they overpower thee?
21622Well, my child,said the President in pleasant, cheerful tones,"what do you want so bright and early this morning?"
21622Well, what shall I give you for your secret?
21622Well,said the commissary,"do n''t you know why we have given the contract to you?"
21622Wh-- what did you say?
21622What could you do?
21622What do you want of diamonds?
21622What does he know,said a sage,"who has not suffered?"
21622What is that you say, child? 21622 What is the use of a child?"
21622What is your business?
21622What name?
21622Who is Alexander?
21622Who is the richest of men,asked Socrates?
21622Who knocks?
21622Why charge me double?
21622Why do n''t you send in a bid?
21622Why do you lead such a solitary life?
21622Why does not America have fine sculptors?
21622Why not?
21622Why not?
21622Will any one explain how there can be a light without a wick?
21622Will he not make a great painter?
21622Will the sheriff sell me?
21622Will you give me ten years to learn to paint, and so entitle myself to the hand of your daughter?
21622Yours?
21622A hundred years hence what difference will it make whether you were rich or poor, a peer or a peasant?
21622A learned clergyman was thus accosted by an illiterate preacher who despised education:"Sir, you have been to college, I presume?"
21622After a few moments of silence the wife looked into his face and asked,"Will the sheriff sell you?"
21622After asking news of the battle the gentleman observed,"But you are wounded?"
21622All the world cries, Where is the man who will save us?
21622And of all heroes, what nobler ones than these, whose names shine from the pages of our missionary history?
21622Are n''t you afraid of the situation?
21622Are the results so distant that you delay the preparation in the hope that fortuitous good luck may make it unnecessary?
21622Are we tender, loving, self- denying, and honest, trying to fashion our frail life after that of the model man of Nazareth?
21622Are you an animal loaded with ingots, or a man filled with a purpose?
21622Arnold left only a few thousand dollars, but yet was he not one of the richest of men?
21622As Emerson says, Talleyrand''s question is ever the main one; not, is he rich?
21622As a rule, eccentricity is a badge of power, but how many women would not rather strangle their individuality than be tabooed by Mrs. Grundy?
21622Bruno was burned in Rome for revealing the heavens, and Versalius[ Transcriber''s note: Vesalius?]
21622But have these rivers therefore no influence?
21622But shall it therefore rot in the harbor?
21622But what difference may it not make whether you did what was right or what was wrong?
21622By any fascination of manner?
21622By eloquence?
21622By office?
21622By rank?
21622By talents?
21622By wealth?
21622By what was it, then?
21622Can anything be so elegant as to have few wants and to serve them one''s self?
21622Can he will strong enough, and hold whatever he undertakes with an iron grip?
21622Can you believe it?
21622Can you conceive anything more absurd?"
21622Compared with it, what are houses and lands, stocks and bonds?
21622Could you make all the looms work as smoothly as yours?"
21622Did Anna Dickinson leave the platform when the pistol bullets of the Molly Maguires flew about her head?
21622Did you ever see a man in anguish stand as if carved out of solid rock, mastering himself?
21622Did you ever see a man receive a flagrant insult, and only grow a little pale, bite his quivering lip, and then reply quietly?
21622Do you think yourself free?
21622Does any one wonder that such a youth succeeded?
21622Does competition trouble you?
21622Does it mean a broader manhood, a larger aim, a nobler ambition, or does it cry"More, more, more"?
21622Does it say to you,"Eat, drink, and be merry, for to- morrow we die"?
21622Does it speak to you of character?
21622Had he not been detained who can tell what the history of Great Britain would have been?
21622Has any scholar defined luck?
21622Has it built any cities?
21622Has it built any steamships, established any universities, any asylums, any hospitals?
21622Has it invented any telephones, any telegraphs?
21622Hast thou spent thy substance in riotous living?"
21622Have we no higher missions, no nobler destinies?
21622Have you a hot, passionate temper?
21622Have you never seen similar insensibility to danger in those whose habits are already dragging them to everlasting death?
21622Have you not seen one bearing a hopeless daily trial remain silent and never tell the world what cankered his home peace?
21622Hereditary bondsmen, know ye not Who would be free themselves must strike the blow?
21622Honors?
21622How came writers to be famous?
21622How can I develop myself into the grandest possible manhood?
21622How could I leave you?"
21622How could the poor boy, Elihu Burritt, working nearly all the daylight in a blacksmith''s shop, get an education?
21622How know we what lives a single thought retained from the dust of nameless graves may have lighted to renown?"
21622How many a round boy is hindered in the race by being forced into a square hole?
21622How many are fettered with ignorance, hampered by inhospitable surroundings, with the opposition of parents who do not understand them?
21622How many centuries of peace would have developed a Grant?
21622How many go bungling along from the lack of early discipline and drill in the vocation they have chosen?
21622How many have to feel their way to the goal, through the blindness of ignorance and lack of experience?
21622How many men would like to go to sleep beggars and wake up Rothschilds or Astors?
21622How many would fain go to bed dunces and wake up Solomons?
21622How many young men are weighted down with debt, with poverty, with the support of invalid parents or brothers and sisters, or friends?
21622How much do you think Homer got for his Iliad?
21622How to constitute one''s self a man?
21622How was this attained?
21622If he found abundant time for study, who may not?
21622If so, why does not luck make a fool speak words of wisdom; an ignoramus utter lectures on philosophy?
21622If such concentration of energy is necessary for the success of a Gladstone, what can we common mortals hope to accomplish by"scatteration?"
21622If this is so, why should not one be able, by his own efforts, to give this long- growing organ a particular bent, a peculiar character?
21622Is any argument needed to show the superiority of Pericles?
21622Is it a message of generosity or of meanness, breadth or narrowness?
21622Is it any wonder that our children start out with wrong ideals of life, with wrong ideas of what constitutes success?
21622Is it necessary to add that all difficulties yielded at last to such resolute determination?
21622Is it not large or small, stunted wild maize or well- developed ears, according to the conditions under which it has grown?
21622Is it, as has been suggested, a blind man''s buff among the laws?
21622Is luck that strange, nondescript fairy, that does all things among men that they can not account for?
21622Is there any man who would not have done the same?"
21622Is there no desirable thing left in this world but gold, luxury, and ease?
21622It is not a question of what some one else can do or become, which every youth should ask himself, but what can I do?
21622Like Horace Greeley, he could find no opening for a boy; but what of that?
21622Must not earth be rent Before her gems are found?
21622OPPORTUNITIES WHERE YOU ARE"How speaks the present hour?
21622Of what use is a man who knows a little of everything and not much of anything?
21622Opportunities?
21622Opportunities?
21622Poverty pinched this lad hard in his little garret study and his clothes were shabby, but what of that?
21622Shall we idolize our stomachs and our backs?
21622Shall we seek happiness through the sense of taste or of touch?
21622Shall we"disgrace the fair day by a pusillanimous preference of our bread to our freedom"?
21622The chief said,"Does the sun shine on your country, and the rain fall, and the grass grow?"
21622The chief then asked,"Are there any cattle?"
21622The corn that is now ripe, whence comes it, and what is it?
21622This is my world now; why should I envy others its mere legal possession?
21622Torture and death are awaiting me, but what are these to the shame of an infamous act, or the wounds of a guilty mind?
21622Was Garrison heard?
21622Was there any chance in Caesar''s crossing the Rubicon?
21622Were Beecher and Gough to be silenced by the rude English mobs that came to extinguish them?
21622What are the works of avarice compared with the names of Lincoln, Grant, or Garfield?
21622What brings the prisoner back the second, third, or fourth time?
21622What cared Christ for the jeers of the crowd?
21622What cared Wendell Phillips for rotten eggs, derisive scorn, and hisses?
21622What cares Henry L. Bulwer for the suffocating cough, even though he can scarcely speak above a whisper?
21622What chance had such a boy for distinction?
21622What chance had the young girl, Grace Darling, to distinguish herself, living on those barren lighthouse rocks alone with her aged parents?
21622What constitutes a state?
21622What could be more eloquent?
21622What could he do?
21622What does your money say to you: what message does it bring to you?
21622What good are powers, faculties, unless we can use them for a purpose?
21622What good would a chest of tools do a carpenter unless he could use them?
21622What had chance to do with Napoleon''s career, with Wellington''s, or Grant''s, or Von Moltke''s?
21622What had luck to do with Thermopylae, Trafalgar, Gettysburg?
21622What has chance ever done in the world?
21622What if a man should see his neighbor getting workmen and building materials together, and should say to him,"What are you building?"
21622What infirmity have I mastered to- day?
21622What is a man without a will?
21622What is luck?
21622What is more common than"unsuccessful geniuses,"or failures with"commanding talents"?
21622What is opportunity to a man who ca n''t use it?
21622What is the happiness of your life made up of?
21622What message does it bring you?
21622What more do I want?
21622What more glorious than a magnificent manhood, animated with the bounding spirits of overflowing health?
21622What power can poverty have over a home where loving hearts are beating with a consciousness of untold riches of head and heart?
21622What were impossibilities to such a resolute will?
21622What will she not do for the greatest of her creation?
21622What?"
21622When Stephen of Colonna fell into the hands of base assailants, and they asked him in derision,"Where is now your fortress?"
21622When does a man feel more a master of himself than when he has passed through a sudden and severe provocation in silence or in undisturbed good humor?
21622Where is that drum?
21622Where, thy true treasure?
21622Who can calculate the future of the smallest trifle when a mud crack swells to an Amazon, and the stealing of a penny may end on the scaffold?
21622Who can deny that where there is a will, as a rule, there''s a way?
21622Who can estimate the power of a well- lived life?
21622Who dares conduct his household or business affairs in his own way, and snap his fingers at Dame Grundy?
21622Who does not know that the act of a moment may cause a life''s regret?
21622Who is Bennie?"
21622Who is the favorite actor?
21622Who would not prefer to be a millionaire of character, of contentment, rather than possess nothing but the vulgar coins of a Croesus?
21622Why not economize before getting into debt instead of pinching afterwards?
21622Why should I scramble and struggle to get possession of a little portion of this earth?
21622Why should the will not be brought to bear upon the formation of the brain as well as of the backbone?"
21622Why should we wish to get rid of them?
21622Why were the Roman legionaries victorious?
21622You may leave your millions to your son, but have you really given him anything?
21622a ruse among the elements?
21622a trick of Dame Nature?
21622am I unable to perform a problem in algebra, and shall I go back to my class and confess my ignorance?
21622any chemist shown its composition?
21622any philosopher explained its nature?
21622but is he anybody?
21622does he stand for something?
21622exclaimed Rebecca,"how can they use it?
21622has he this or that faculty?
21622he asked, seeing that the youth was apparently thunderstruck,"is it you?"
21622heard of the death of Calvin he exclaimed with a sigh,"Ah, the strength of that proud heretic lay in-- riches?
21622is he committed?
21622is he of the establishment?
21622is he of the movement?
21622is he well- meaning?
21622or Dante for his Paradise?
21622said Aristides,"or has he in any way injured you?"
21622was he wise?
21622what passion opposed?
21622what temptation resisted?
21622what virtue acquired?"
21622work away; what is your competitor but a man?
33018And what happened to the old church itself?
33018And why did the town get its double name?
33018But who was Jack Jouett and what of his"greatest ride?"
33018Culpeper Minute Men Who can resist a story about the Revolutionary War?
33018Here was adventure, for who can resist exploring a cave?
33018Natural Bridge"Who first discovered Natural Bridge?"
33018The answer to the second question,"How high is it?,"is found on a Government bench which carries a brass plate,"1,150 feet above the sea."
33018The question was asked by one of the party,"Who is he?"
33018The question was asked,"Well, old gentleman, what''s your opinion?"
33018Their courage had returned, for was not the Great Spirit on their side?
33018What farsighted men started the movement which resulted in our national government''s making a great scenic park in Virginia?
33018Who dreamed the dream or had the first vision of the Skyline Drive?
33018Who were the trail blazers for these Scotch- Irish and Germans?
33018Who were their weavers, their shoemakers, tailors, tanners and wagon makers?
33018You know of the"Tom, Dick and Harry"trio of Winchester and its neighborhood, do n''t you?
33018is a question which nearly every one asks, and a second one is,"How high is it?"
3004But what did you mean to take?
3004Do political axioms on the Atlantic become problems when transferred to the shores of the Mississippi?
3004Is the motion seconded?
3004Then you mean that we shall construe it in our own way?
3004What are the eastern bounds of Louisiana?
3004Why,exclaimed Canning,"do you not KNOW that we have a claim?"
3004An American frigate do errands for this insignificant pirate?
3004And had he not intimated that the Americans would make the most of their bargain?
3004And how, pray, could due participation be obtained, if there were no removals?
3004And what, pray, was meant by incorporating this new province in the Union?
3004Besides, what would become of the British navy, if you listened to all the fine- spun arguments of landsmen?
3004But how and where?
3004But if the unpopular excise were abandoned, where was the needed revenue to be found?
3004But might not Louisiana include West Florida?
3004But now, having grasped the nettle firmly, what was the Administration to do with it?
3004But since Spain was confessedly unequal to the task, why not let France shoulder the responsibility?
3004But what was the President to do?
3004But what were the explanations which Vives demanded?
3004But what were the metes and bounds of this province which had been so often bought and sold?
3004But why should the commander of the American frigate have entertained suspicions?
3004By what process of reasoning had Livingston and Monroe reached this satisfying conclusion?
3004Could a compromise be effected between these stubborn representatives of East and West?
3004For what resources had the Government to meet invasion on three frontiers?
3004Had Talleyrand not professed ignorance of the eastern boundary?
3004Had the Administration become alarmed at the drain upon the treasury?
3004Had these stiffnecked Yankees no sense?
3004How are these uncomfortable facts to be explained?
3004How had it all happened?
3004Is he capable?
3004Is he faithful to the Constitution?"
3004Is the rod of British power to be forever suspended over our heads?
3004Now why not put an end to all friction by ceding the Floridas to the United States?
3004Or was he conscious of his own inability to play the role of War- President?
3004Or was it to be governed as a dependency?
3004Peace-- and nothing more?
3004Should the Americans yield this sine qua non, now that the first had been withdrawn?
3004Was Louisiana to be admitted into the Union as a State by President and Senate?
3004Was he aware of the woeful state of unpreparedness everywhere apparent and was he therefore desirous of delay?
3004Was he not now free from all the anxieties and worries of politics?
3004Was there not grave danger that West Florida would pass into the hands of a third and dangerous party?
3004Were these pious professions farcical?
3004What about those elemental rights of representation and election which had figured in the glorious contest for freedom?
3004What better time could there be to launch a filibustering expedition against Mexico?
3004What did they think of the proposal?
3004What else was government for?
3004What had His Majesty''s Government in mind when it referred to an Indian territory?
3004What had Laussat been instructed to take and give?
3004What is it?
3004What was the purpose of this journey and what did it accomplish?
3004What was this measure which was passed by Congress almost without discussion?
3004What was to be done with them?
3004What were the considerations which fixed the mind of the nation and of Congress upon war with Great Britain?
3004What would the United States give then?
3004What, in short, was Louisiana?
3004What, pray, did his Government mean by this act?
3004What, pray, were the United States?
3004Where was the authority which warranted the use of the army and navy to hold territory beyond the bounds of the United States?
3004Where would they meet?
3004Which should the President support?
3004Who could resist the charms of this young princess?
3004Why did he hesitate?
3004Why not accept the British right of navigation-- surely an unimportant point after all-- and ask for an express affirmation of fishery rights?
3004Why not assist Hamet to recover his throne?
3004Why not seize the opportunity and strike before the French legions occupied the country?
3004Why not, in frontier parlance, start a back- fire that would make Tripoli too hot for Yusuf?
3004Why, indeed?
3004Why?
3004With whom were they to negotiate?
3004Would Congress, asked the President, take under consideration the advisability of placing our forces on an equality with those of our adversaries?
3004Would Mr. Livingston think it over?
3004Would not intervention, indeed, be equivalent to an unprovoked attack on Spain, a declaration of war?
3004Would not one of the gentlemen be good enough to play or sing it?
3004Would the Americans be good enough to state the purport of their instructions?
3004Would the Duke take command of the forces in Canada?
3004Would the Federalists never forget that he was a"foreigner"?
3004by saying,"What are we not to lose by peace?
22433About the provisions-- how shall we get them?
22433And Dick Pearl?
22433And after that you were willing to declare that you had not assisted any one?
22433And my mother?
22433And we are to be punished only for this breaking away?
22433And when did you do those two?
22433And who from twelve till two?
22433Are you aware of the powers which the law lodges in the hands of the teacher?
22433Are you aware that published slanders of this kind subject those who utter them to a severe penalty?
22433Are you aware, Mr. Greene, that this island is not in the county of Adieno?
22433Are you going to mind what I say, or not?
22433Are you not willing that the truth should come out?
22433Are you one of those who ran away with the steamer?
22433Are you ready to tell the whole truth?
22433Are you satisfied, Thornton?
22433Are you the principal of the Parkville Liberal Institute, or am I?
22433Be you?
22433Because you are a good sailor, and know all about boats?
22433But what shall we do for provisions?
22433But where are you going?
22433By whose authority did you take the Adieno to Pine Island to- day?
22433Ca n''t we land at the boat pier, in front of the Institute?
22433Ca n''t you guess?
22433Can you imagine why Mr. Hardy was discharged?
22433Can you make her out, Ernest?
22433Can you prove it?
22433Can you prove that the boat is your property?
22433Can you steer her, commodore?
22433Did he say that?
22433Did he, though? 22433 Did n''t you miss Dorner and Murray?"
22433Did n''t you strike William Poodles?
22433Did n''t you turn your boat, and jerk the painter so as to throw me into the water?
22433Did n''t you, or did n''t Thornton, throw me over into the lake?
22433Did the fellows that came in these boats say anything to you about where they came from?
22433Did they leave any property for me?
22433Did they?
22433Did you consult the agent?
22433Did you make this confession?
22433Did you perform all the examples on your paper without any help?
22433Did you perform the examples on the examination paper without any assistance?
22433Did you request him to flog me?
22433Do n''t she move?
22433Do n''t you call that a fight, sir?
22433Do n''t you know the lake, and do n''t Vallington know all about the engine?
22433Do you allude to me alone?
22433Do you consider this a proper return for all I have done for you?
22433Do you expect me to receive the forced confession of Poodles and Pearl?
22433Do you generally leave your boat with steam up without an engineer?
22433Do you hear me?
22433Do you hear that?
22433Do you hear what I say?
22433Do you intend to go to school?
22433Do you intend to read me a lecture?
22433Do you suppose they would harm us?
22433Do you think it will be quite safe for us to go back to Parkville?
22433Do you threaten me?
22433Ernest, have you considered what you mean to do?
22433Have you anything to say, Pearl?
22433How came you here, Thornton?
22433How can you help it?
22433How can you help it?
22433How dare you resist?
22433How did it happen?
22433How have you fixed him?
22433How make my peace with him?
22433How many did you do yourself?
22433How much did you help him?
22433How much do they owe you?
22433I suppose you claim these row- boats too-- don''t you?
22433I''m Bill Poodles-- don''t you know me?
22433In what?
22433Is Thornton to be regarded as guilty only of breaking away, with the rest of us?
22433Is any of the party that came off that night present?
22433Is he dead?
22433Is n''t it a pity a man who knows so much, and is such a good teacher, should be a tyrant?
22433Is n''t it possible that there was some mistake in the matter of the quarrel between Thornton and Poodles?
22433Is that so?
22433Is this a proper way to express their dissatisfaction-- to take advantage of my absence to get up a riotous assembly?
22433May I ask what you intend to do, sir?
22433May I ask what you purpose to do?
22433May I ask whether we are to be punished equally?
22433May I inquire the object of this paper?
22433May I inquire, Mr. Parasyte, in what Thornton refused to obey you?
22433Mr. Greene,interposed Vallington,"will you allow me to look at your warrant?"
22433Now we have the steamer; what shall we do with her?
22433Now, fellows, what shall we do? 22433 Now, what''s to be done, commodore?"
22433So you meant to drown me-- did you?
22433Suppose I do n''t choose to do them?
22433Suppose the boat should burst her boiler-- where should we be?
22433Suppose we change our quarters?
22433The boats are secure-- are they?
22433Then you did request Mr. Parasyte to reduce me to subjection, as he expressed it?
22433They do-- do they?
22433Well, what do you want?
22433What are the fellows to do?
22433What are these circulars for?
22433What are we going to do?
22433What are you about, Thornton?
22433What are you going to do about it?
22433What are you going to do with that tiller?
22433What are you going to do?
22433What business had you on Pine Island?
22433What can I do for you?
22433What can he do?
22433What can he do?
22433What can they do? 22433 What can they do?"
22433What did Parasyte mean when he said your uncle wished him to flog you into subjection?
22433What did you bring her in here for? 22433 What did your uncle say to you when you went home?"
22433What do you mean to do?
22433What do you say to the parson?
22433What do you say, Bob?
22433What do you say, Ernest?
22433What do you want here?
22433What do you want?
22433What do you wish to know?
22433What does all this mean? 22433 What does all this mean?"
22433What does all this mean?
22433What does all this_ mean_?
22433What is Mr. Parasyte going to do about it?
22433What is he going to do?
22433What is it? 22433 What is it?"
22433What is she doing?
22433What is that?
22433What is the matter at the Institute? 22433 What odds does that make?"
22433What possible difference can it make to you whether we camp at Pine Island or at Cleaver Island?
22433What shall we do if it is?
22433What shall we do?
22433What shall we gain by moving?
22433What time shall you return?
22433What was it about?
22433What was that last bell for?
22433What will you do?
22433What would you have me do?
22433What''s the matter now?
22433What''s the use of talking?
22433What''s to be done? 22433 What?"
22433When did you perform them?
22433When shall we start?
22433Where are you going? 22433 Where do you suppose the deserters are?"
22433Where is Bill Poodles?
22433Where is my mother now?
22433Where is the lame man who had charge of the steamer?
22433Where shall we go?
22433Where shall we land?
22433Who are you?
22433Who are you?
22433Who called the fellows that were to relieve you?
22433Who had the east station from twelve till two?
22433Who says I helped Poodles?
22433Who stood at the south station?
22433Who struck the first blow in the affray on the pier with Thornton?
22433Who was it-- don''t you know?
22433Who will be engineer?
22433Who''s_ me_?
22433Who?
22433Why do you say it is n''t your fault, Thornton? 22433 Why me?"
22433Why not surrender?
22433Why not? 22433 Why not?
22433Why not?
22433Why not?
22433Why so? 22433 Will you be silent, or will you compel me to resort to that which I abhor-- to physical force?"
22433Will you come back, or I shall bring you back?
22433Will you confess now?
22433Will you get into her, sir?
22433Will you hear me, students?
22433Will you hear the evidence in my favor?
22433Will you land on Cleaver Island, or will you get into that boat?
22433Will you permit me to tell my story?
22433Will you please to tell me what it is?
22433Will you return or not?
22433Wo n''t you? 22433 You live there, and all you have to do is to go home; but what are the fellows who reside a hundred miles from there to do?"
22433You meant to drown me-- did you?
22433You refuse to perform the examples-- do you?
22433You struck the master?
22433You will not?
22433Are you all ready?"
22433Are you aware that he assaulted me with a deadly weapon?"
22433But what could we do?"
22433Did my father leave any property?"
22433Did n''t you pilot the steamer into this hole?"
22433Do n''t school keep to- day?"
22433Do n''t you see the Champion is full of men?"
22433Do you doubt my word, Mr. Hale?
22433Do you intend to apologize to Poodles, or not?"
22433Do you think I have not told you the truth?"
22433Do you want to run us all ashore?"
22433For his attack upon me, or for the lies he had told about me?
22433For what?
22433Had I done wrong so far as my fellow- student was concerned?
22433Have you any doubt that such is the case?"
22433Have you any news from the shore?"
22433Have you anything to say?"
22433How could I coax her to the top of the water?
22433How many of us shall go?"
22433How was that, Ernest?"
22433If she was dead, why might I not water the green sod above her grave with my tears, and plant the sweetest flowers by her tombstone?
22433If she was still living, why could I not go to her?
22433If the person was my mother, why should her very name be kept from me?
22433Is n''t it though?"
22433May I ask what you are going to do with yourself?"
22433Parasyte?"
22433Parasyte?"
22433Parasyte?"
22433Parasyte?"
22433Parasyte?"
22433Should I sacrifice myself in order to save my uncle''s money, or to prevent the debt from being imperilled?
22433Was I becoming obstinate and self- willed?
22433Was I refusing a reasonable service?
22433Was she in a proper place?
22433Was she kindly treated while overshadowed by her terrible infirmity?
22433Were you concerned in these disgraceful proceedings, Robert?"
22433What are you going to buy?"
22433What do I care what they think?"
22433What had become of the boats?
22433What harm will it do?"
22433What has happened?"
22433What possessed you to do such a thing?"
22433What put that idea into your head?"
22433What shall we do with this steamer?"
22433What shall we do?"
22433Who was the person that came to the cottage and quarrelled with him?
22433Why should he wish to conceal anything that related to my father and mother from me?
22433Will you do so?"
22433You had them all done but two when you met Thornton to- day noon?"
22433now do you see what you have done?"
22433what do you mean by denying it?"
23744Ah, my young friend,she said, turning gracefully toward him,"so you are pleased with my coffee- urn?
23744Battles?
23744But did you know that our ship was wrecked in the norther? 23744 Can you make out her flag?"
23744Can you walk? 23744 Captain Kemp,"he said to his companion,"will you be good enough to tell me why we are in the Nicholas Channel?"
23744Captain,he asked,"when can I go ashore?"
23744Carfora?
23744Chase, sir?
23744Did you not know? 23744 Do n''t you think the Mexicans have been lively enough since we left Perote?
23744Do you hear that? 23744 Father Crawford,"exclaimed one of the grown- up young men,"what is this about another letter from Edward?
23744Father''s regiment?
23744From there to there,said Lee,"how is it?"
23744General Tassara,said Ned,"is n''t our army bringing one?"
23744Have you any idea where we are just now?
23744How did you happen to be here?
23744How did your folks get so much of it?
23744How on earth are we to do it?
23744I knew you were wounded, but are you not getting well?
23744I saw the flags,he said,"and I heard some firing, but what on earth are they rejoicing over?
23744I shall not do so,said Ned, with his heart in his throat"But may I not tell them that General Santa Anna has checked the invasion at the north?
23744I wonder if there is anybody in there now?
23744I''m all right, but is n''t it awfully dangerous for you to be here?
23744Is he here? 23744 Is he in the city?"
23744Is it?
23744Letter?
23744Lieutenant, may I go now?
23744Meade,he demanded of one of them,"what do you think of that?"
23744Oh, my dear young friend,said Señora Tassara,"were you with the American army in all those battles?"
23744Seems to me I''ve heard of him somewhere, but who is Zuroaga? 23744 Señor Carfora?"
23744Señor,he asked, as soon as they were in the cabin,"how can I send a letter home?
23744Spy?
23744Think?
23744War?
23744Well, Ned Crawford,he muttered to himself,"that''s it, is it?
23744Well,hesitated Ned,"I understand that you must go, but what am I in danger of if I should stay here?"
23744What are they all here for?
23744What has become of them? 23744 What has brought him all the way from Vera Cruz?
23744What have you ever done against him?
23744What in all the world can he be up to?
23744What is that?
23744What is your errand to General Morales?
23744What on earth are we to do, then?
23744What on earth can be the matter?
23744What on earth do you mean?
23744What on earth do you want?
23744What''s in my head that I should overlook that? 23744 What''s that?"
23744What,he asked himself,"if any accident should touch off those barrels of powder down there?
23744Where are you from?
23744Where away?
23744Where did you come from? 23744 Where did you get them?
23744Why would n''t she?
23744Why,he thought,"if Santa Anna was so completely victorious, did he not make General Taylor surrender?"
23744You did n''t hit centre even then, eh?
23744You do n''t like the British flag, eh?
23744You have, have you?
23744A British ship chased by a Yankee cruiser?
23744A band of those mountain robbers came one night, and we had an awful fight with them--""Did you kill any of them?"
23744Are all the nations making a naval rendezvous in the Gulf of Mexico?"
23744Are either of the señoras at home?
23744Are there a great many of them?
23744Are those cannon coming right on into the city?"
23744Are we to chase?"
23744Are you a prisoner?"
23744Are you here, too?
23744Are you here?
23744Are you too tired to set out immediately?
23744As soon as they were shut in here by themselves, he turned fiercely upon the young despatch- bearer and demanded:"Have you said anything to those men?
23744At the end of another mile, he was saying to himself:"That field yonder is tobacco, is it?
23744But what did you mean about our being in the Nicholas Channel?
23744But what on earth are grenaditas and mangoes?
23744But what was all that in comparison with this in the way of strange and wild adventure?
23744Can we not help him?"
23744Can you not say that you are glad Señor Carfora was not drowned?"
23744Company?
23744Did you hear that?"
23744Do they know how to fight?
23744Do you believe in ghosts?
23744Do you know where that is?"
23744Do you really think the Americans will capture our capital?
23744Do you see that?
23744Do you suppose they have been wrecked?"
23744Does he know anything?"
23744Go ashore and hide?
23744Has anything happened?"
23744Has he come?
23744Has our army come?
23744Have you seen him?"
23744Have you told a living soul what you know about these tidings?"
23744Have your gringo generals been beaten again?
23744He may appear to come peaceably, but do I not know him?
23744He may do it, may he not, Aunt Mercedes?"
23744He merely responded:"Is that so?
23744He was shortly on deck again, to be heartily greeted by Captain Kemp with:"Hullo, my boy, where are all your ships of war?"
23744Hear that firing?"
23744How about the war?
23744How are you here, señor?"
23744How are you?"
23744How are you?"
23744How can that be?
23744How did that happen?"
23744How on earth did they come through the blockade, and how did they know where you are?"
23744How shall I ever get down?
23744How soon are we to set out?"
23744How''s mother?"
23744Is he on board?"
23744Is he your son?"
23744Is it not grand?"
23744Is she hurt?"
23744Is that where you live?"
23744Is the city taken?"
23744Is there any more news from the war?
23744Is there any news?"
23744Is this you?
23744Is your father''s regiment of that kind of men?"
23744It''s your first long ride?
23744May I be assured that you will then be ready to come to my house?"
23744Ned, did you have any idea that you were sitting over a Mexican powder- magazine?"
23744Not many minutes later, the two vessels were within hailing distance, and the stranger spoke first, in a tone of evident anxiety:"What ship is that?"
23744O Ned, my son, where are you?"
23744Oh, but am I not glad that General Zuroaga gave me that old telescope?
23744Oh, but wo n''t it be grand fun to make a complete tour of the mountains and of all the Pacific coast of Mexico?
23744Ought I not to say that he is now marching down to defend the capital, and that he is going to strengthen your army at Vera Cruz?
23744Stiff with so long a ride?
23744THE MOUNTAIN PASSES"Grant,"said Captain Lee,"what did Crawford say to you about that Cerro Gordo road?
23744Then we made our way through the mountains, and came here, and has n''t it been a curious kind of life ever since?
23744Then, however, he lost his prudence for a moment, and anxiously inquired:"Were any of you drowned?"
23744There could be no further conversation, for the_ Goshhawk_ was sweeping on out of hearing, but Ned Crawford exclaimed, indignantly:"Our army defeated?
23744This is the way that Cortes and his cavalry scared the Indians, is it?
23744Tired out?
23744UNDER FIRE"Where am I?"
23744WHAT DOES IT MEAN?"]
23744Were you there, in any of these battles?
23744What am I to do next?"
23744What are we to do now?"
23744What are you going to do?"
23744What did they come here for?
23744What do they mean by that dangerous cargo in the hold, and our being captured by American ships of war?
23744What do you think about it?"
23744What do you think of that?"
23744What do you want of me?"
23744What does it mean?"
23744What does it mean?"
23744What has that got to do with it?"
23744What if this horrible war should prove to be really a blessing to us?
23744What is it?
23744What is it?"
23744What shall we do?
23744What ship is that?"
23744What''s that for?"
23744What''s that?
23744Where are they?"
23744Where did you come from?"
23744Where have you been?
23744Where have you been?"
23744Where''s your friend Grant?
23744Which of these is my horse?
23744Who can tell?
23744Who dreamed of seeing you here?"
23744Who will it be?"
23744Why, then, he asked himself, should any of them, like Anita, for instance, be killed by cannon- shot or torn in pieces by bursting shells?
23744Will you be ready?"
23744Will you take care of him?
23744Would n''t it be likely to break and let go of an anchor, if it were pulled at too hard by a gale of wind?
23744Yankee boy that can speak Spanish, and that knows every corner of this miserable city?
23744You are back, at last, are you?
23744[ Illustration:"DO YOU SEE THAT?
23744and she held up both hands in astonishment, as she responded:"Letters from the United States?
23744are they getting ready for a fight?"
23744came back from them, half cheerfully, but one voice was heard to grumble:"It''s all right, is it?
23744exclaimed Ned, as he sprang away, but he went with a curious question rising in his mind:"What if a cable were more''n half cut through?
29368''And what have we to oppose to them? 29368 ''I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
29368They here? 29368 What will be the effect of this medicine?"
29368Who is he?
29368Why should we fetter commerce? 29368 [ 377] But, now, what were Patrick Henry''s objections to the new Constitution?
29368[ 384] Holding such objections to the proposed Constitution, what were Patrick Henry and his associates in the Virginia convention to do? 29368 ''And where,''he asked,''are our resources to meet such a conflict? 29368 508, 509. comma added after 508 Page 145 What would they have? 29368 Afraid of them? 29368 And does not this raise indignation in the breast of every true American? 29368 And still you have checks and guards; still you keep barriers-- pointed where? 29368 And what have you to oppose this force? 29368 And why was the direction of this important enterprise given to his subordinate, Colonel William Woodford, of the second regiment? 29368 And, sir, will the American spirit solely relieve you when this happens? 29368 Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation? 29368 As good citizens, as good men, what was left for them to do? 29368 As the news of them swept from colony to colony, why did they so stir men''s hearts to excitement, and even to alarm? 29368 But did the proposed Constitution embody such amendments? 29368 But is it practicable, by any human means, to liberate them without producing the most dreadful and ruinous consequences? 29368 But is not a confederacy of our States previously necessary? 29368 But is our case desperate? 29368 But pressed, allured, as she will be,--but, above all, ignorant of the great thing we mean to offer,--may we not lose her? 29368 But what was the contemporary significance of these resolutions? 29368 But when shall we be stronger? 29368 But why was not Patrick Henry in immediate command of them? 29368 But, sir, where is the existing force to punish him? 29368 CHAPTER II WAS HE ILLITERATE? 29368 Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it? 29368 Can he not, at the head of his army, beat down every opposition? 29368 Can it be thought that, with these sentiments, I should utter anything tending to prejudice General Marshall''s election? 29368 Do you ask how you are to get them? 29368 Even though he should reject its reasoning, and spurn the temptation with which it assailed him, should he merely burn it, and be silent? 29368 For how could this new Constitution be amended? 29368 Had the delegates who were sent to Philadelphia a power to propose a consolidated government, instead of a confederacy?
29368Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
29368Have we anything new to offer upon the subject?
29368Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love?
29368Her army, what is it?
29368Here is Mr. Speaker Harrison; you do n''t think he would have fled had it not been necessary?"
29368His patient took up the word:"You mean, doctor, that it will give relief, or will prove fatal immediately?"
29368How about her delegation in the lower house?
29368How comes Governor Johnstone there?
29368How should these execrable beings-- the defeated party in a long and most rancorous civil war-- be treated by the party which was at last victorious?
29368How was Patrick Henry to deal with such a letter as this?
29368If consolidation proves to be as mischievous to this country as it has been to other countries, what will the poor inhabitants of this country do?
29368Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
29368Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
29368Is not this a conduct of unexampled absurdity?
29368Is the author a Whig?
29368Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty?
29368Many of them were already in exile: should they be kept there?
29368Many were still in this country: should they be banished from it?
29368May not despair, anarchy, and final submission be the bitter fruits?
29368P. HENRY, JR. P. S. Will you and S. A. now and then write?
29368SHALL THE CONFEDERATION BE MADE STRONGER?
29368Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
29368Shall we resort to entreaty, and humble supplication?
29368Shall we try argument?
29368She is called upon now to abandon them, and dissolve that compact which secured them to her.... Will she do it?
29368Taking the vial in his hand, and looking at it for a moment, the dying man said:"I suppose, doctor, this is your last resort?"
29368WAS HE ILLITERATE?
29368Was it not likely that this appeal would be granted?
29368Were they to reject the measure outright?
29368What brought about this sudden and total revolution?
29368What is it that gentlemen wish?
29368What is the intellectual record of these nine years?
29368What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted?
29368What was it that gave such transcendent force to the eloquence of Henry?
29368What was that interpretation?
29368What was to be done about it?
29368What was to be done by Virginia?
29368What was to be done by her sister colonies?
29368What will then become of you and your rights?
29368What would they have?
29368What, then, was the opinion respecting slavery held by this great champion of the rights of man?
29368When he said,''Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?''
29368Where are your landmarks, your boundaries of colonies?
29368Where did Patrick Henry get such literary culture?
29368Where is the citizen of America who will dare to lift his hand against the father of his country?''
29368Which party was to succeed in stamping its impress the more strongly on the new plan for government in Virginia?
29368Why not be a lawyer?
29368Why not get a living by his tongue?
29368Why stand we here idle?
29368Why was Patrick Henry held back from this service,--the only active service then to be had in the field?
29368Why was their immediate passage resisted?
29368Why, then, were they objected to?
29368Will it be an unnatural consequence if they consider themselves absolved from every federal tie, and court some protection for their betrayed rights?
29368Will it be the next week, or the next year?
29368Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
29368Will not absolute despotism ensue?
29368Will not people complain,--"Ten thousand Virginians have not outweighed one thousand others?"
29368Would any one believe that I am master of slaves of my own purchase?
29368Your president may easily become king.... Where are your checks in this government?
29368[ 340] MS. CHAPTER XVII SHALL THE CONFEDERATION BE MADE STRONGER?
29368what are they?
32892''And I?'' 32892 Oh,_ ça!_"replied the charming South American, with a shrug:"Is that all?
32892But what can I do?
32892Can the stern patriot Clara''s suit deny?
32892Did you not bid me tempt God and die?
32892For instance, what could be more suggestive of utter simplicity than the diary of Abigail Foote, to which reference has just been made?
32892How oft have you eaten and drunk your own damnation?"
32892If in the history of these people a Queen Esther stands forth as a cruel monster, did not proud Rome produce a Messalina?
32892If the cold Puritans were not guiltless in this wise, what could be expected from the Cavaliers or the warm- blooded sons of France?
32892Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone?
32892Or need we go beyond the records of a later date of the people of one of the most cultured nations of Europe?
32892They were imperative in their instant demands; they must be satisfied; but how?
32892What symptoms of the workings of the devil could seem surer to a man of Mather''s prejudices and sympathies?
32892Where shall we place the blame?
32892Who could refuse a fairy, and above all the Blue Fairy?
32892Will they lay out their hair, and wear their false locks, their borders, and towers like comets about their heads?"
32892or have they none?
30956[ 100] Could stupidity go further? 30956 [ 99] How fares this petition read in the United States Senate on February 2, 1837?
30956And have we all not noted likewise?
30956And what did he pay for this immense stretch of territory?
30956And what was the price paid for this vast estate?
30956And what was their offense?
30956But Astor-- how did he fare?
30956But how were these State or Government authorizations, called charters, to be obtained?
30956But the sources of the large rentals that flowed into the exchequers of the landlords-- what were they?
30956But what did Girard do?
30956But what happened to the accused who was poor?
30956But what happened?
30956But, how, in a Government theoretically democratic and resting on popular suffrage, did the propertied interests get control of Government functions?
30956Could any fulsome effusion possibly surpass this?
30956Did any aspiring adventurer seek to leap at a bound to the exalted position of patroonship?
30956Did ever so lofty a soul live who was so misunderstood?
30956Did not the Federal Constitution prohibit States from giving the right to banks to issue money?
30956Did the Government protect them?
30956Did the Government step in and assist them?
30956For all this what was their pay?
30956For what?
30956Had not England established representative assemblies?
30956Having obtained the water grants and other land by fraud, what did the grantees next proceed to do?
30956How did the propertied classes meet this extension of suffrage throughout the United States?
30956How was it possible to have added the extraordinary sum of$ 125,000,000 in less than a decade and a half?
30956How were they able to sway the popular vote and make, or evade, laws?
30956If Astor was entitled to one- half of the value created by the collective industry of the community, why was he not entitled to all?
30956If it is a superior order of civilization, in what does this superiority consist?
30956If it possesses the many virtues that it is said to possess, what are these virtues?
30956Is it any wonder that the working class justly views"charitable"societies, and the spirit behind them, with intense suspicion and deep execration?
30956Now when the Indians complained, what happened?
30956On what ground?
30956Q.: But the rule is that he does not sell?
30956Q.: Do the Trinity people own a great deal of tenement property?
30956Q.: Do they comply with the law as other people do?
30956Q.: Have you the power to exact from them a statement of their rent rolls?
30956Q.: Is n''t it almost a saying in this community that the Astors buy and never sell?
30956Q.: Which is the good, and which is the bad?
30956The old man cried out from the middle of his blanket:"Has Mrs.---- paid that rent yet?"
30956Was Smith imprisoned for debt?
30956Was any criminal action ever instituted against these rich defrauders?
30956Was it an abhorrence of tenements, or a growing fastidiousness as to the methods?
30956Was there ever such magnificence of public spirit?
30956Were the bribers ever punished, their illicitly gotten charters declared forfeited, and themselves placed under the ban of virtuous society?
30956What became of them?
30956What did Astor pay his men for engaging in this degrading and dangerous business?
30956What do many of the workers who supply this revenue get?
30956What else could be expected from a Congress which represented the commercial and landholding classes?
30956What happened next?
30956What happened under this system?
30956What importance was to be attached to the propertyless?
30956What resulted?
30956What set of men do we find now in control of this railroad, doing with it as they please?
30956What was the result?
30956What was this effect?
30956What were the intrinsic circumstances of the means by which he bought land, now worth hundreds of millions of dollars?
30956What would the medieval baron have been without armed force?
30956What, indeed, became of them?
30956What, then, was the reason?
30956When the Indians were made maudlin drunk and bargained with for their furs were they paid in money?
30956Where did the money come from with which this railroad was built?
30956Where did these rents, the volume of which was so great that the surplus part of them went into other forms of investments, come from?
30956Wherefore this silence?
30956Who paid them and how did the tenants of these mammoth landlords live?
30956Why did they do this?
30956Why make the artificial division of one- half?
30956Why this partiality?
30956Why?
30956Yet why slur the practices of past generations when we to- day are confronted by the same perversions?
30956[ 93] WHERE WAS FRAUD ABSENT?
33000Colonel,said he,"can you capture that battery?"
33000He was all alone, was he? 33000 I wonder if that''s possible,"said Marshall, beginning to think his companion was right;"how can we find out?"
33000So it is in these times, but we''ll give it to you in gold, if you''ll show us where we can get a chance at the rebel; did you see him?
33000The Indians, men and women, were in high good humor, and why should they not be? 33000 What stronger evidence can be given,"he asked,"of the want of energy in our government than these disorders?
33000Who is Franklin Pierce?
33000Above all, had not"Old Hickory"won the battle of New Orleans, the most brilliant victory of the War of 1812?
33000And he was mounted on a black horse with a white star in his forehead, and he was going like a streak of lightning, was n''t he?"
33000And what did November tell?
33000But what American can not be convinced that he is pre- eminently fitted for the office?
33000Can it be the breeze of morning which sounds''click, click?''
33000Happening to look around, he asked:"What is that shining near your boot?"
33000If there is not a power in it to check them, what security has a man for his life, liberty, or property?
33000In the midst of the terrific fighting, when the_ Richard_ seemed doomed, Captain Pearson of the_ Serapis_ shouted:"Have you struck?"
33000It consisted of the words,"What hath God wrought?"
33000The salutation, when one member met another, was,"Have you seen Sam?"
33000We recall that one of the most popular songs began:"Oh, where, tell me where, was the log- cabin made?
33000What fate awaited it on the morrow?
33000What is that noise?
33000What shall we do with them?
33000What steps did she take to do so?
33000When that officer was brought into Hancock''s tent the latter extended his hand to his old acquaintance, exclaiming heartily,"How are you, Ned?"
33000While Washington lived and was willing thus to serve his country, what other name could be considered?
34304How many did you lose?
34304In reply to the question,''What is most needed?'' 34304 Of the 29,000 remaining how many must be helped and how long?
34304What''s the trouble?
34304You never heard of a man wanting an umbrella when it was n''t raining, did you?
34304''Do n''t you know what is burning over there?
34304Are men who go to prison totally bad?
34304Can you send some one down?"
34304Do you wonder I cry?
34304WHY SHOULD NOT GALVESTON BE REBUILT?
34304What do we need most?
34304What was there to do with?
34028GROSE, HOWARD B.,_ Aliens or Americans?_ Forward Mission Study Courses.
34028How can these qualities be produced in a race just emerged from slavery?
34028Nearly every question of social pathology may be resolved to this, Why does he not work?
34028Now what is the case in regard to these diseases?
34028Now, my friends, in the face of all these disadvantages, do you not think we are doing well to stay here as long as we do?"
34028Then why should he work?
34028What is the nature of this problem, and what are the forces available for its solution?
34028What shall be the nature of this education?
34028Why does he work?
34028[ 140] Grose,"Aliens or Americans?"
34028and, Do our social institutions offer free opportunity and high incentive to the youth of ability?
28328And he said, Hagar, Sarai''s maid, whence camest thou? 28328 And there was of the house of Saul a_ servant_, whose name was Ziba; and when they had called him unto David, the king said unto him, Art thou Ziba?
28328Then Pilate entered into the judgment- hall again, and called Jesus, and said unto him, Art thou the King of the Jews?... 28328 What do these facts prove?
2832821, says:"Art thou converted to Christ while thou art a slave-- the property of another person, and bought with his money?
28328After thus persecuting the saviour of his country,_ how can the Democratic party dare to call themselves his disciples_?''"
28328And how could it have been otherwise?
28328And is there no cause for alarm?
28328And what does that resolution endorse?
28328And why do we believe all this?
28328And why?
28328And why?
28328And why?
28328And why?
28328Are not these signs alarming?
28328Art thou called, being_ a servant_?
28328But did this justify_ Southern_ Democrats in_ dodging_ the question, and thereby electing a Black Republican Speaker?
28328But who is it that testifies that I have lied?
28328But, Doctor, why were you at Baltimore?
28328Can Rome change?
28328Can either civil or religious liberties rest secure on any other grounds?
28328Can men taking their stand on this Platform be the enemies of civil and religious liberties?
28328Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?
28328Did he lie out of the scrape?
28328Did not Mr. JEFFERSON propose to carry his opposition to foreigners much farther than the American party now do?
28328Did they carry with them"dark- lanterns?"
28328Do they believe that Gen. Washington, or Jackson, would have united with any association or order not purely American?
28328Do they not in vision behold its scattered fragments and contemplate new confederacies, with hosts of new offices and millions of spoil?
28328Do you suppose they are men of no reading or information?
28328Examine the Platform, and answer to your conscience the question: What true American head can disapprove-- what pure American heart can revolt?
28328G. Eastman_?
28328Had they"signs and grips,"other than those by which they made themselves known to the_ doorkeeper_?
28328Has she ever changed for the better?
28328Has she ever changed for the better?
28328How can we hope to carry the united South with such a record?
28328How does Mr. Buchanan stand upon the tariff?
28328How does he stand upon the French Spoliation bill, which President Polk and President Pierce vetoed?
28328How does he stand upon the Pacific Railroad?
28328How will the_ Free Trade Democracy_ of the South relish these"protecting duties"of an old Federal politician?
28328In fact, is there a single Federal measure except that of the United States Bank, upon which he is not recorded against Democratic principles?
28328In fine, is there no fear that in hoping for free- soil aid, we may not lose the few real friends the South has in the North?
28328In our own country, not a single Catholic is to be found associated with the order of Free Masons; and why?
28328Is he not one of the last men living to talk about a want of respectability on the part of any one?
28328Is not this_ favoritism_ to the foreigner, and_ discrimination_ against the native?
28328Is such the case with Mr. Buchanan?
28328Is the preservation of the Union a matter of any consequence to them?
28328Is the race any better off for having accepted her faith?
28328Is there any denial of the right of Congress to interfere upon the subject of slavery in the sixth resolution of the Philadelphia platform?
28328Is there any denial of the right of Congress to interfere with the subject of slavery in the sixth resolution of the( new) Philadelphia platform?"
28328Is there any non- intervention in the sixth resolution of the Philadelphia platform?
28328Is there no danger that in admitting the abolitionist Trumbull, we may not dishearten the gallant Douglass?
28328Is there no fear that in reinstating the free- soil Hickman, who is in favor of Reeder, we may not palsy the arm of Richardson?
28328It was time that the American people should have a character of their own, and where would they find it?
28328JAMES WILLIAMS, show how he held up JAMES BUCHANAN and others as an_ old Federalist of the first water_?
28328James M. Davis, a respectable mechanic, asked him if he would say that to Major Donelson''s face?
28328Johnson say so?
28328Johnson''s iniquitous Homestead Bill, but a bid for foreigners?
28328May not our government be more homogeneous, more peaceable, more durable?"
28328May we not exclaim,"Lord, what is man?"
28328Now, the inquiry is, how has slavery risen and thus spread over our whole earth?
28328Polk_, side by side, while he was consuming half his time in abuse of the Federal party?
28328Rather, can he say he has any other kind?
28328Shall Americans govern themselves, or shall Foreigners, unacquainted with our laws, and brought up under monarchical governments, rule?
28328Sir, do you suppose that the"Bishops, Elders, and other Ministers,"whom you have the impudence to address, are all fools?
28328Speaking of Mr. Wesley, you say:"If Wesley were alive, what would he think of your midnight plots, and open tirades against Papists?
28328The Lancaster_ Register_, published in the immediate vicinity of Mr. Buchanan''s residence, asks_ by whom_ was he elected?
28328They are beginning to ask''What has Protestantism done for the world?
28328To whose strategy was it owing that the once impregnable city was betrayed and surrounded, and its lofty battlements levelled with the dust?
28328Turn your face toward the Gulf of Mexico: what do you behold?
28328WHO IS ANDREW J. DONELSON?
28328WHO IS MILLARD FILLMORE?
28328Was there ever such_ glaring_ and_ actual_ proscription for the sake of religious and political creeds committed as by the present Administration?
28328Was this interfering in temporal matters?
28328Was this not interfering in temporal matters?
28328What are some of the reasons why you opposed it?
28328What care they for the Protestant religion, if the Catholics can only give them the numerical strength at the ballot- box?
28328What do you promise the country and yourselves, if Romanism proves successful in this contest?
28328What foul coalition circumvented you, and whose pestilential breath is now whispering in your ear?
28328What has she done to alleviate and elevate the down- trodden?
28328What is Popery in Roman Catholic Europe?
28328What is the consequence?
28328What is their offence?
28328What more do they prove?
28328What party is it that has brought about the desolation you behold?
28328What principle does this Foreign Democratic party hold, that an Old Line Whig, or a conservative man, North or South, does not disapprove?
28328What say the_ anti_-Americans to all these facts?
28328What was the ruin of old Rome?
28328What will our Democratic Protestant opposers of Know Nothing_ secret lodges_ say to this?
28328What will our Democratic advocates of Popery say to the principles of such an organization, and to its"horrible oaths?"
28328When did mental vision ever rest on such a scene?
28328When did she ever renounce these doctrines and practices?
28328When did she renounce her doctrines and practices?
28328Who does not feel that he is an American, and thankful to Heaven that his lot was cast in such a goodly land?
28328Who has forgotten the Plaquemines fraud in Louisiana?
28328Who has not heard of the abuse of Mr. Frelinghuysen for no other cause than that he was the President of the American Bible Society?
28328Who now feels like he was a party man, or a southern man, or a northern man?
28328Why is it not?
28328Why is it not?
28328Will Northern Nebraska men overlook this ignoring of Pierce and Douglass?
28328Will Southern Democrats overlook this record?
28328Will it be said that the right of trial by jury was a_ spiritual_ matter?
28328Will it be said that the tyranny of King John, and his oppressions, of which the barons justly complained, were_ spiritual_ matters?
28328Will it be said that this was not interfering with_ temporal_ matters?
28328Will the Sentinel say that he is sound, or justify his''low wages''speech?
28328Will they allow the saddle of Federal domination to be quietly thrown on their backs?
28328Wonder how many hen- roosts he robbed last summer?"
28328Would they wish to have their elections on that floor decided by a rabble?
28328are they not probable?
28328do you hear that?
28328do you hear that?
28328in favor of the manufacturer?"
34612( 2) How far were her claims of jurisdiction as to the seal fisheries recognized and conceded by Great Britain?
346121388?
34612And if so, what is the nature of the notions necessarily implied in the simplest knowledge of a_ thing_, as distinct from mere sense feeling?
34612Do not all these ideas, when held to represent something which exists absolutely apart from all knowledge of it, involve a contradiction?
34612He travelled again in 1715- 1720 as tutor to the only son of Dr St George Ashe(? 1658- 1718, bishop successively of Cloyne, Clogher and Derry).
34612Two romances from the French followed:_ The Boke of Duke Huon of Burdeux_( printed 1534?
31131Anybody hurt?
31131Are you the Great Spirit? 31131 Deliver the Indians of Philip?
31131Did you lead in the Custer fight?
31131I can talk to him; I can bring darkness between him and me; I can put the sun under my feet; and what white man can do this?
31131Is he a chief? 31131 Is he going back to the Powder River?"
31131Is this a chief who speaks to Mahtotohpa?
31131My father, you asked yesterday, who is Black- hawk? 31131 My father?"
31131Shall we fight the Americans, father?
31131The Gate of the Mountains, ai n''t it?
31131What are all these soldiers doing in this country?
31131What is the matter, Sacagawea?
31131What is wanted?
31131What person pretends to divide the land and put me on it?
31131What presents did he give you?
31131What will be done now?
31131What will be done to us at your town?
31131Where am I going?
31131Where are the Crow men? 31131 Where are those soldiers going?"
31131Where are you taking us, then?
31131Who are you, that you ask us to talk and then tell me I sha''n''t talk?
31131Who is it that has stuck down his lance, and defies the Cheyennes?
31131Who is that man, who enters our lodge and eats of our food and smokes of our tobacco?
31131Who is there to mourn for Logan?
31131Who is this Black- hawk?
31131Who is this pretended prophet who dares to speak for the great Creator? 31131 Who was there to mourn Logan"--the"friend of the white man?"
31131Why did you break your pipe, Sitting Bull?
31131Why do n''t they stay in their forts, where they belong? 31131 Why do you not go out and meet the Americans?
31131Why do you not tell the President?
31131Why do you not tie it to the lance, then?
31131Why do you not write a letter to him?
31131Why does not the President of the Seventeen Fires send us the greatest man in his nation?
31131Why have you not gone before the gates are shut, Catharine?
31131Why not?
31131Why,asked Pontiac, of Major Gladwyn,"do I see so many of my father''s young men standing in the street with their guns?"
31131You will not leave me, my brothers?
31131Are you going to let them take me away?
31131As for making the Indians one nation, had not the Seventeen Fires set an example when they united?
31131Besides--"Deliver the Indians of Philip?
31131Buffalo?
31131But what to do with Dagoi, who had only one leg and was weak from pain?
31131By what right does he appear in council?"
31131Captain Church called to his Indian, Peter, and asked him who that was that called so?
31131Captain Cresap: What did you kill my people on Yellow Creek for?
31131Could she still speak the Snake tongue?
31131Did she remember the trail to the country of the Snakes?
31131Did you ever deliver up to the Narragansetts any of the Narragansetts''enemies?
31131Did you make all these things, that you talk to us as though we were boys?
31131Did you make the grass to grow?
31131Did you make the rivers to run for us to drink?
31131Did you make the sun?
31131Did you make the world?
31131Does he dare to fight?"
31131Have not the English burned my people in their houses?
31131He and his friends went out; they killed the white murderer, and others; they came back and shouted to the council:"Why do you sit here like women?
31131He''s sighted Injuns, has n''t he?"
31131How can I go back blind, to my blind people?
31131How did you know where I was to be found?"
31131How many lodges?
31131How many people?
31131I would like to know why you come here?
31131Now that the British had lost the fight, what would happen to_ them_?
31131Now what of Catharine, who saved Detroit from Pontiac?
31131Now what to do?
31131Now, would the peace last?
31131Of what use was a white flag?
31131See?"
31131Should these Indians beyond the mountains remain in darkness?
31131Unless the Americans were whipped and the trail home was opened, how were his Indians ever to help the other Indians fight?
31131Was there a way across the mountains?
31131What have we done that you should wish us to stop?
31131Who is there to mourn for Logan?
31131Who may blame them?
31131Who was this thing that struck in the night and left no trail?
31131Why do you come here and ask for what you have already taken?
31131Why does he sit among the chiefs?
31131Why not?
31131Why then should I deliver up to them the Wampanoags?
31131Will you take action to intercept them?"
31131Would she like to go back to her own people?
31131Would the Snakes be friendly to the white men?
32702Are there no such machines?
32702B-- b-- but,stammered one of them,"how can we take it away?
32702Did you hear the news about Deering?
32702Do you see that machine?
32702Do you see these American machines?
32702Have n''t I seen you before?
32702Have you money to invest? 32702 How do you like the work, Jack?"
32702How many castings did your men make last year?
32702Ten minutes later the big fellow looked up from the catalogue and asked--''How much do you want for ten of these binders?'' 32702 Well,"said the other,"why ca n''t we fix a platform on the reaper, and have the grain carried up to us?"
32702What am I to do?
32702Why do n''t you use a scythe? 32702 ''Can you get me three thousand dollars by daylight to- morrow morning?'' 32702 ''Have you a thousand dollars in your pocket?'' 32702 At the time the International was organised, Stanley said to the others:What about the men?
32702Ca n''t you give us a cheque?"
32702Could the West have risen toward its present greatness if its billion acres had to be harvested by hand?
32702Could the railways alone, which produce nothing, have given us more food for less work-- the first necessity of a civilised democracy?
32702Could we have swung through four years of Civil War, as we did, without famine or national insolvency?
32702How can we save these twelve millions and completely Americanise the trade?
32702How could anything be more important to a three- dollar- a- day man than his job?
32702How?
32702If you would not in the case of a horse, why should you, in the case of a mower, reaper, or self- binding harvester?
32702Is there anything cheaper than bread?
32702It was a riotous game of"Farmer, farmer, who gets the farmer?"
32702Mr. McCormick turned to his wife and said,"Which shall it be?"
32702Or that Minnesota and the Dakotas( names that the world of his day had never heard) produce enough wheat to feed all the people of England?
32702Then he asked me--''Can these machines be made in Germany?''
32702What could be more essentially American, or more profitable to the human race?
32702What matter?
32702What sort of an American nation would we have, if we were still using such food- implements as the sickle and the flail?
32702Which is the International Harvester Company?
32702Why should their trains be pushed to one side and delayed, to expedite a mere consignment of freight?
32702Why?
32702Why?
32702Why?
32702Why?
32702Why?
21851FELLOW- CITIZENS:--Pardon me, and allow me to ask, why am I called upon to speak here to- day? 21851 How can this be done?
21851Now, old Uncle Joe, what did you come for?
21851Now, sir, who is responsible for this renewal of strife and controversy? 21851 Now, then, tell me, if you please, what possible result of good would follow the issuing of such a proclamation as you desire?
21851Shall I tell you what this collision means? 21851 What good would a proclamation of Emancipation from me do, especially as we are now situated?
21851Why not make the issue at once, which shall inspire every man that shoulders his musket with a noble purpose? 21851 Why,"they asked,"should he act with such palpable rashness, and thereby render more difficult and impossible the emancipation of the slaves?"
21851Will he oppose,asked Mr. Sumner,"at all times, without compromise, any further addition of slave- holding States?
21851[ 73] Now, then, what was the real issue between the Confederate States and the United States? 21851 _ Secondly._--Does Upper Canada possess superior advantages and conveniences to those held out in these United States or elsewhere?
21851''But, sir,''he cried,''do you mean to allow her to be put in jail?''
21851''But,''said the young man,''are you not her friend?''
21851''I desire him to answer whether he is opposed to the acquisition of any new territory unless slavery is first prohibited therein?''
21851''I desire him to answer whether he stands pledged to the prohibition of the slave- trade between the different States?''
21851''I desire to know whether Lincoln to- day stands, as he did in 1854, in favor of the unconditional repeal of the Fugitive- Slave Law?''
21851''I want to know whether he stands to- day pledged to the abolition of slavery in the District of Columbia?''
21851***** But what of the future?
21851*****"I am aware that many object to the severity of my language; but is there not cause for severity?
21851--the king of freedom?
21851:--Does Upper Canada possess superior advantages and conveniences to those held out in the United States or elsewhere?
21851:--Is there any certainty that we, as a people, will be compelled to leave this our native land, for a home in a distant region?
21851A private or an officer?
21851Abstract law?
21851After they had taken them prisoners?
21851And what does slavery ask for now?
21851And what had caused this belief?
21851And what is the verdict of history?
21851And what was the cause of this discontent?
21851And who can tell whether a larger force would have been more effective, or the night of the 24th more opportune?
21851And why should any man, North or South, object to this principle?
21851And, suppose they could be induced by a proclamation of freedom from me to throw themselves upon us, what should we do with them?
21851Another one was asked:"What is faith?"
21851Are the great principles of political freedom and of natural justice embodied in that Declaration of Independence, extended to us?
21851Are we, then, prepared to barter the liberty of our children for slaves for them?...
21851Are you sure they were wounded men, and not dead men, when they were put in there?
21851Are you sure this was done while the flag of truce was in?
21851As a political question, and a question of humanity, can I receive the services of a father and a mother and not take the children?
21851At what time of day was that?
21851At what time were you wounded?
21851Bitter as death?
21851Bitter?
21851But how did the Negro meet his master in battle?
21851But the men, what could they do?
21851But what did the battle cry of the loyal North,"_ The Union as it is_,"mean?
21851But what was the attitude of the Federal Government?
21851But what was to be done with the millions of Negroes at the South?
21851But what, I would ask, is the great, the single object of all our meetings and societies?
21851But why this change in the views of the President?
21851By what troops was the Fort attacked?
21851By what troops was the charge made?
21851Can he keep his position against the tendencies to amalgamation?
21851Can the Negro endure the sharp competition of American civilization?
21851Can we have work, and can we have our rights in Kansas?
21851Did he try to stop the shooting?
21851Did not the trustees of the Freedman''s Savings Bank and Trust Company violate their charter in establishing branch banks?
21851Did they do any thing to you after you surrendered?
21851Did they kill them before they burned them?
21851Did they say any thing while they were shooting?
21851Did they say why they shot you after you had surrendered?
21851Did they shoot you more than once?
21851Did they try to stop it?
21851Did you have any arms in your hand at the time they shot you?
21851Did you have any arms in your hands when they shot you?
21851Did you hear him say any thing?
21851Did you know Forrest?
21851Did you know Forrest?
21851Did you know any thing about their shooting men in the hospitals?
21851Did you notice any thing that took place while the flag of truce was in?
21851Did you notice how they were nailed?
21851Did you observe any effort on the part of their officers to suppress the murders?
21851Did you see any buildings burned?
21851Did you see any one shot the next day?
21851Did you see any others shot?
21851Did you see any rebel officers about there when this was going on?
21851Did you see any rebel officers about while this shooting was going on?
21851Did you see any thing of a flag of truce?
21851Did you see anybody else shot?
21851Did you see the flag of truce?
21851Did you see the man who shot you?
21851Did you see them burn?
21851Did you see them bury any body?
21851Did you see them kill any white men?
21851Do you know any thing of the fate of your Quartermaster, Lieutenant Akerstrom?
21851Do you know of any of our men in the hospital being murdered?
21851Do you know of any rebel officers going on board our gun- boat after she came up?
21851Do you know they were in there when the house was burned?
21851Do you know they were in there?
21851Do you know what became of the Quartermaster of your regiment, Lieutenant Akerstrom?
21851Do you know what officers of ours drank with them?
21851Do you mean, citizens, to mock me, by asking me to speak to- day?
21851Do you think of any thing else to state?
21851Does he say that he was in a position to see in case they had been mistreated?
21851Does he say that our soldiers were not inhumanly treated?
21851For who is there so cold, that a nation''s sympathy could not warm him?
21851Had Congress the authority to go outside of the Federal bankruptcy laws and create such special machinery for the settlement of a collapsed bank?
21851Has he been furnished with clothing, uniforms, etc., for such force?
21851Has he been furnished, by order of the Department of War, with arms to be placed in the hands of the slaves?
21851Have we any other object than to impress upon the community this one principle, that the_ colored man is a man_?
21851How can we ask our Southern brethren to make sacrifices, if we are not even willing to encounter inconveniences?
21851How can we feed and care for such a multitude?
21851How could they release him?
21851How could they retain him?
21851How did he stand fire?
21851How have these measures been received by the South?
21851How large was the boy?
21851How long did they keep shooting our men after they surrendered?
21851How many did you see in that condition?
21851How many did you see them kill after they had surrendered?
21851How many do you suppose you saw shot after they surrendered?
21851How many times were you shot?
21851How many white regiments do the same?
21851How much longer are they to be suffered to do it without remonstrance?
21851How near did they come up?
21851How near to you was the man who shot you under the ear?
21851How shall we sing the Lord''s song in a strange land?
21851How then could their professions of devotion to the Union be sincere?
21851How was he nailed?
21851I was lying a little way from a wounded negro, when a secesh soldier came up to him, and said:"What in hell are you doing here?"
21851If a Negro were useful in building rebel fortifications, why not in casting up defences for the Union army?
21851If on the sea, why not on the land?
21851If the Confederates had a right to arm Negroes and include them in their armies, why could not the Federal Government pursue the same policy?
21851If you do not intend so to do, will they be treated as prisoners of war?
21851In battle and on the battle- field do you intend to slaughter my men who fall into your hands?
21851Is not humanity susceptible of all the tender feelings of benevolence?
21851Is not legislation supreme-- and is not religion virtuous?
21851Is there a single court, or magistrate, or individual, that would be influenced by it there?
21851Now, what were the laws of the Southern States respecting Negroes in arms against white people?
21851One of them has, it is said, three thousand members(?).
21851P. MILES, Richmond, Va.:"Has the bill for the execution of Abolition prisoners, after January next, been passed?
21851Speaking of slavery, the reverend gentleman said:"Shall this magazine of danger be permitted to remain?
21851Suffer the wrongs which wring our inmost heart, To draw one throb of pity on thy part?
21851That gave them an advantage?
21851That these women were outraged and their children brained?
21851The Declaration of Independence?
21851The law of nations?
21851The old law of European pagans born of bloody and destroying wars?
21851The question was often asked: Why do n''t the Negroes rise at the South and exterminate their enslavers?
21851The secesh soldier said:"You want to fight us again, do you?
21851The secesh would be prying around there, and would come to a nigger, and say:"You ai n''t dead, are you?"
21851The simple question is: Shall we protect and insure the ordinary treatment of a prisoner of war?
21851This only raised the Bishop higher in their estimation, as their conclusion was, if such be the servant what must the master be?
21851Those were white men?
21851To what company and regiment do you belong?
21851To what company and regiment do you belong?
21851To what company did you belong?
21851To what is this change ascribable?
21851To what, sir, is all this ascribable?
21851To whom did he say that?
21851Under what officers did you serve?
21851Was Lieutenant Akerstrom shot before or after he had surrendered?
21851Was any thing said about it except what you said to the rebels?
21851Was he authorized by the Department to organize and muster into the army of the United States, as soldiers, the fugitive or captive slaves?
21851Was he killed?
21851Was his body burned?
21851Was it before or after you had surrendered?
21851Was it the officers that said that?
21851Was that before or after the Fort was taken?
21851Was the door fastened up?
21851Was there any alive?
21851Was there any one else there who saw that?
21851Was there any one shot in the hospital that day?
21851Was there any thing said about giving quarter?
21851Was your captain with you?
21851Were any of them alive?
21851Were any rebel officers there at the time this shooting was going on?
21851Were not persons"heretofore held in slavery"and"their descendants"preferred creditors?
21851Were our officers treating these rebel officers with attention?
21851Were you a slave?
21851Were you a soldier at Fort Pillow?
21851Were you at Fort Pillow at the fight there?
21851Were you at Fort Pillow, when it was attacked?
21851Were you in the fight at Fort Pillow?
21851Were you in the fight at Fort Pillow?
21851Were you in the fight at Fort Pillow?
21851Were you in the fight at Fort Pillow?
21851Were you in the late fight at Fort Pillow?
21851Were you wounded then?
21851Were you wounded there?
21851Were you wounded there?
21851What Colored man would have essayed to teach school on the frontiers fifty years ago?
21851What advance can we discover in them, of the recognition of the guarantees of the rights of the Colored men under the Constitutional Amendments?
21851What did he say?
21851What did the rest of them do?
21851What did they do then?
21851What did they do when the flag of truce was in?
21851What did you see done there?
21851What does it amount to if a man preach unless he feels what he preaches?
21851What has he received in return for these measures of conciliation and kindness?
21851What have I, or those I represent, to do with your national independence?
21851What is the response of our Government?
21851What is your rank and position?
21851What principle or human law was strong enough to support an institution of such cruel proportions?
21851What reason have we for permitting it to remain?
21851What should be done with the Negroes who sought the Union lines for protection from their masters?
21851What troops could have done better?
21851What_ could_ I do?
21851When did you see that?
21851When did you see that?
21851When did you surrender?
21851When shall we learn to use the full strength of the formidable ally who is only waiting for a summons to rally under the flag of the Union?
21851When the Court asked:"Guilty or not guilty?"
21851When was it that you saw them?
21851When were you shot?
21851When?
21851Where did you enlist?
21851Where did you enlist?
21851Where was the man?
21851Where were you raised?
21851Where were you raised?
21851Whether I had been furnished, by order of the War Department, with clothing, uniforms, arms, equipments, etc., for such a force?
21851Whether I had organized or was organizing a regiment of''fugitive slaves''in this department?
21851Whether any authority had been given to me from the War Department for such organization?
21851Who commanded your company?
21851Who commanded your regiment?
21851Who could solve the problem?
21851Who did that?
21851Who knows, but that it is a black hand which shall first plant the standard of the Republic upon the doomed ramparts of Port Hudson?
21851Who set the house on fire?
21851Who shot you?
21851Who so obdurate and dead to the claims of gratitude, that would not thankfully acknowledge such priceless benefits?
21851Who was your captain?
21851Who were this trio?
21851Why should not the negro contribute whatever is in his power for the cause in which he is as deeply interested as other men?
21851Will you not embrace it?
21851Will you not strive to meet me in that clime of unending sunshine?
21851Will you state what you saw there?
21851With a musket or pistol?
21851Would my word free the slaves, when I can not even enforce the Constitution in the Rebel States?
21851Would the world ever have known of Anderson?
21851Wounded negro men?
21851You know that they did go on board the"Platte Valley"and drink with some of our officers?
21851You say you saw them shoot negroes in the hospital the next morning?
21851_ Fourth_, this emancipation proclamation(?)
21851in a Christian land, Canst thou unblushing read this great command?
31884And do you owe him about the same that you do me?
31884And what would you advise me to do with it, sir?
31884And who in creation was Cleopatra?
31884But are you not enjoying yourself here, honey?
31884But do n''t you think the people here are very cordial, dawling?
31884Did you meet any other pleasant people last season?
31884Do you know,he asks,"anything of the best methods for feeding young orphan chickens?
31884Do you think so, Grover? 31884 Have you the currency with you to make the trade all cash?"
31884Oh, heavens,I cried, with a sudden pang of horror,"am I to be thus devoured by the fire fiend?
31884So you decided to select and furnish endosmose of oxygen to sufferers?
31884So you do n''t live in town?
31884Well, but how shall I get inside?
31884Well, what became of Miss McCracken?
31884Well, when did this desire to endosmose your fellow- man first break out on you?
31884Well,said I,"will you attend to that?"
31884What for?
31884Where do you live, anyway?
31884Why did n''t you get a policeman to escort you across?
31884Why,I exclaimed,"why do you wish to let in the glad sunlight of the gospel upon the heathen?"
31884''But are you not robbing yourself?''
31884''Why, Decker,''says Sage,''do n''t you know me?''
31884''Why,''she says,''do n''t you like merriment?''
31884All of them?"
31884And how can a court of law or an intelligent jury judge such a matter?
31884And is it not time, fellow citizens, that we pause to consider what is to be the future of the American?
31884And is there no one to help?
31884And what will be the result in the home- life of the oyster?
31884And what will ye build it of?"
31884But are we improving the oyster now?
31884But what was he to do with Esau?
31884Dear, patient reader, did you every try to ride a refractory hair- cloth lounge all night, bare back?
31884Did you ever get aboard a short, old- fashioned, black, hair- cloth lounge, with a disposition to buck?
31884Did you learn anything of Louis XV whilst in France?
31884Do you not think that a prize- fight could be thus provided for?
31884Do you own the house?"
31884Earnest Pendergast writes from Puyallup as follows:"Why do you not try to improve your appearance more?
31884He is writing a small ready- reference book on his side of the great problem,"Is Marriage a Failure?"
31884He looked up sadly at me with his one eye as who should say,"Have you got any more of that there red paint left?"
31884How is the name of the town pronounced?
31884I perspired very much, indeed, and so the bath was, in a measure, a success, but oh, what doth it profit a man to gain a bath if he lose his own soul?
31884Is there any way to prevent hens from stealing their nests and sitting on inanimate objects?
31884Is this a healthy fat which we are putting on him, or is it bloat?
31884Jumbles like"jevver"for"did you ever?"
31884Mertie Kersykes, Whatcom, Washington, writes as follows:"Dear Mr. Nye, does pugilists ever reform?
31884Pompadour?
31884The first question to ask ourselves is this: Was General Grant in the habit of calling in a thinker whenever he wanted anything done in that line?
31884What are your literary habits?"
31884What do we care that calumny crawls out of its hole, calumniates him a couple of times and then goes back?
31884What do we care that homely men grudge our candidate his symmetry of form and graceful upholstered carriage?
31884What do you think of Browning?
31884What encouragement is there for a man to come here and trade?
31884What is the result?
31884What orthoepy could replace lines like these?
31884When I looked around me I decided to murmur"Where am I at?"
31884Where do you buy your meat?"
31884Where will this all lead at last, I ask as a careful scientist?
31884Who is able, unless it be an intelligent jury, to arrive at the truth?
31884Who of us is now safe?
31884Who stated that my chance was best, And came and wept upon my breast, Only to knock me galley West?
31884Who then turned in and took my pelt?
31884Who told me of the joy he felt, While he upon my merits dwelt?
31884Who was the Dauphin?
31884Who was the first to make the claim That I would surely win the game, But now that Dennis is my name?
31884Who would believe that up in the dark corner of the gable end it harbors a large iron- gray hornets''nest with brocaded hornets in it?
31884Why do n''t you grow a mustache?"
31884Will you accept my humble challenge, so that I can go into training at once?
31884Will you assist me?
31884Will you do it?
31884Will you not accept the hospitality of my home?
31884Will you not aid me, a poor struggler in the great race for supremacy, to obtain that notice which the newspapers now so reluctantly yield?
31884Will you not, I ask, aid a struggler and panter for fame, who desires the eye of the public, even if his own be italicised at the same time?
31884[ Illustration:_ He looked up sadly at me with his one eye as who should say,"Have you got any more of that there red paint left?
19041''A pot of gold? 19041 ''Ahem-- gentlemen, what can I do for you?''
19041''Ai n''t they but one?'' 19041 ''Ai n''t you the liberal gink?''
19041''Ain''I tole you''bout dat, Miss Sally? 19041 ''An owner''s life has its trials and tribulations-- eh, my boy?''
19041''Are they runnin''poolrooms in the village?'' 19041 ''Are you certain?''
19041''Are you goin''to sell?'' 19041 ''Are you hep?''
19041''Are you hurt, Blister?'' 19041 ''Are you sure you wo n''t sell him?''
19041''Are you the owner of Count Noble, Mr.--er--?'' 19041 ''As receiver for the Park Company, Judge,''says Harry Evans,''can you tell us-- er-- who the buildings on these premises belong to?''
19041''At the post?'' 19041 ''Be they two of ye?''
19041''Blister,''he says,''do you ever tumble there''s two ringers in the New Awlins deal? 19041 ''Ca n''t you stop him sooner''n that?''
19041''Can you get him so he can walk?'' 19041 ''Can you tell an unsound one when you look at him?''
19041''Can you wise me up to a pony bazaar in this neck of the woods?'' 19041 ''Did Joe Nickel work him out for you?''
19041''Did n''t I give you a safety- pin to pin that money in your inside coat pocket?'' 19041 ''Did n''t he do it easy?''
19041''Did you get much out of it?
19041''Did you recognize him?'' 19041 ''Did-- did he still feed him sugar?''
19041''Do I look like I needs a plow?'' 19041 ''Do n''t you even know the difference between a horse and a dog?''
19041''Do n''t you trust me?'' 19041 ''Do you know Ferguson''s Macbeth?''
19041''Do you know who bought her?'' 19041 ''Do you mean to tell me, suh, the wonderful courage displayed by that mayah when the time came, was false?''
19041''Do you own him?'' 19041 ''Do you throw a crutch in with this one?''
19041''Does that let me in?'' 19041 ''Does you get a good price fur him?''
19041''Does you reccomember de name ob de swipe?'' 19041 ''Everything O. K. to- day, sir?''
19041''Going to enter him for the cup?'' 19041 ''Has Alf come yet?''
19041''He ai n''t never seen a barrier, I suppose?'' 19041 ''Hep to what?''
19041''Him?'' 19041 ''How about De Mott?''
19041''How about Sam Koons?'' 19041 ''How about the other horse?''
19041''How about this St. Louis guy?'' 19041 ''How did he happen to catch cold?''
19041''How did you get''em open?'' 19041 ''How did you know that horse was string- halted so quick?''
19041''How do you do?'' 19041 ''How do you get out?''
19041''How do you like him?'' 19041 ''How do you mean that?''
19041''How does eight thousand look to you?'' 19041 ''How far is it to the track?''
19041''How far?'' 19041 ''How much has he got left?''
19041''How much would be crowded towards the party you want, Saturday nights?'' 19041 ''How much you got on?''
19041''How was ye calkewlatin''to bet?'' 19041 ''How''bout him, boss?''
19041''How''s that?'' 19041 ''I beg pardon?''
19041''I guess I''m fired-- is that it?'' 19041 ''I s''pose you want to count fur game-- don''t you?''
19041''I thought you told me he was sound?'' 19041 ''I wonder where ole Pierpont''s at?''
19041''If I give you a rainbow, will you give me its equivalent?'' 19041 ''In heaven''s name what were you trying to do?''
19041''Is Mr. Sigsbee awaheh of the-- method you pursue with regahd to falsely stimulating his hawss?'' 19041 ''Is he fast?''
19041''Is he mannered?'' 19041 ''Is n''t he a darling?''
19041''Is n''t he?'' 19041 ''Is n''t he_ grand_?
19041''Is n''t it wonderful?'' 19041 ''Is she fast?''
19041''Is that Rainbow?'' 19041 ''Is that all she brought?''
19041''Is that all?'' 19041 ''Is that the best you have?''
19041''Is that what you call him?'' 19041 ''Is the practise allowed under present day racing rules?''
19041''Is the street- car runnin''?'' 19041 ''It''s that Davis cripple, ai n''t it?''
19041''Jones?'' 19041 ''Lead''em in where?''
19041''Let''s see your lease?'' 19041 ''Meanin''you?''
19041''Not that kid?'' 19041 ''Now, listen,''I says to her,''how long is this here panic goin''to last?''
19041''Oh, Blister,_ am_ I?'' 19041 ''Oh, will he?''
19041''On_ that_?'' 19041 ''Only a-- what?''
19041''Outside of that he''s all right, ai n''t he?'' 19041 ''Say, pardner,''I says,''do you ever bet a piece of money on a race?''
19041''Shall you see him again?'' 19041 ''So?''
19041''Take fur him?'' 19041 ''That may be so, but how about Tennessee?''
19041''That right?'' 19041 ''That would be a fair exchange, would it not?''
19041''That''s not a bad racing name, is it?'' 19041 ''Them''s to hold his legs on, ai n''t they?''
19041''To train, you mean?'' 19041 ''Uncle Jake,''says Miss Goodloe,''where is your twenty dollars you got for that tobacco you raised?''
19041''Up kind- a early, ai n''t you? 19041 ''Well, Blister, old scout, how''re they breakin''?''
19041''Well, I said I''d give it to you, did n''t I?'' 19041 ''Well, Mr. Belmont,''I says,''did you happen to give instructions to any more of your employees, your jockey, fur instance?''
19041''Well, Pierpont,''I says,''what''s the good word?'' 19041 ''Well, how long is this hundred goin''to last?''
19041''Well, whatever she does,''I says,''will she get here this mawnin''? 19041 ''Well, why ai n''t he here?''
19041''Well?'' 19041 ''Whar does you go so quick like?''
19041''Whar does you hol''dis convahsation at?'' 19041 ''What ails that young man?''
19041''What are you doing here?'' 19041 ''What are you goin''to do about this Elsy person?''
19041''What dead one''s name is on all them soovenirs?'' 19041 ''What did you ever buy_ him_ for?''
19041''What do you say to a jockey when you desire him to lose?'' 19041 ''What do you say when you require him to win?''
19041''What do you want him to do now? 19041 ''What do you want me fur?''
19041''What do you want with this hoss?'' 19041 ''What do_ you_ hire a jock fur?''
19041''What does he look like?'' 19041 ''What does he need a crutch for?''
19041''What does the boy wonder get fur swappin''mules with the Association?'' 19041 ''What else can I do?''
19041''What fur?'' 19041 ''What fur?''
19041''What horse do you wish to buy?'' 19041 ''What kind of shoemakers give this hoss his prep.?''
19041''What next?'' 19041 ''What sort of a horse would that be?''
19041''What th''hell are you laughin''at?'' 19041 ''What th''hell does that gassy Fishhead know about me?''
19041''What you goin''to bet on?'' 19041 ''What you goin''to do with him?''
19041''What you goin''to do with him?'' 19041 ''What you goin''to do with that?''
19041''What you got to kick at?'' 19041 ''What you standin''out in the rain fur?''
19041''What you want?'' 19041 ''What''ll you take fur him?''
19041''What''s he doin''with his mouth open at the end of that mile?'' 19041 ''What''s his name?''
19041''What''s on your mind, girlie?'' 19041 ''What''s sad about that?''
19041''What''s that?'' 19041 ''What''s that?''
19041''What''s the matter with the kid?'' 19041 ''What''s the matter, Liza?''
19041''What''s the matter?'' 19041 ''What''s the name of that dog?''
19041''What''s the record fur this race?'' 19041 ''What''s the use?''
19041''What''s wrong with him?'' 19041 ''What''s wrong with''em?''
19041''What?'' 19041 ''When does this colt sell?''
19041''When you go back to the track will you put me wise so I can win?'' 19041 ''When you train a hoss fur a guy you do like he says, do n''t you?''
19041''When?'' 19041 ''Where did you get the money?''
19041''Where does all this play on Alcyfras come from?'' 19041 ''Where does that door go to?''
19041''Where in hell and damnation have you been with these skates?'' 19041 ''Where we goin''?''
19041''Where''s Friendless now?'' 19041 ''Where''s she at now?''
19041''Where''s the lake?'' 19041 ''Where''s this farm at?''
19041''Who left the door open?'' 19041 ''Who owns the hawss that just trialed three- quahtahs in fohteen?''
19041''Who owns this colt?'' 19041 ''Who say she doan''like him?''
19041''Who schools him?'' 19041 ''Who signed it?''
19041''Who you callin''a smoke?'' 19041 ''Who''s Elsy?''
19041''Who''s burning this up on the ten mile wonder?'' 19041 ''Who''s ridin''this hoss?''
19041''Who''s your lawyer?'' 19041 ''Whose bale of hay do you think this is?''
19041''Why did n''t you let another boy ride?'' 19041 ''Why do n''t they slip him the coin?''
19041''Why do n''t ye git a lawyer that ai n''t got no autymobile?'' 19041 ''Why do n''t you can that choc''lit drop,''he says,''''n''put a white man up?''
19041''Why do n''t you give the lady some room?'' 19041 ''Why do n''t you go to school like you''d ought, Vincent?''
19041''Why do they call you Blister?'' 19041 ''Why, you''re a live one, ai n''t you?''
19041''Why, you_ ai n''t_ kiddin'', are you?'' 19041 ''Would you do me a favor?''
19041''You ain''tryin''to tell_ me_ what a fried cake is, is you?'' 19041 ''You an exercise- boy now?''
19041''You did n''t get the colt?'' 19041 ''You do n''t think this mare can beat Macbeth?''
19041''You gone dippy?'' 19041 ''You still got that sorrel hound?''
19041''You''re kiddin''me, ai n''t you?'' 19041 ''You''re levelin''with your hoss, ai n''t you?''
19041''You''re not a lady''s groom?'' 19041 ''You--_what_?''
19041''You?'' 19041 ''_ Do you mean the sky''s the limit_?''
19041''_ Sell him_?'' 19041 ''_ You goin''to race on the level all the time_?''
19041Ai n''t she full of race- hoss talk yet?
19041Ai n''t she the grand actor?
19041Are n''t you terribly excited?
19041Are you ill?
19041Been on a vacation?
19041But how does she beat him? 19041 By breeding?"
19041Ca n''t we have you for a week at Thistle Ridge?
19041Dey ain''left her at de post? 19041 Did you ever see Vincent ride?"
19041Did you ever see her again?
19041Do learnéd persons ever long for the_ wilderness_, and the_ bough_, and-- the other things?
19041Do you go to shows much?
19041Ever hear of Salvation?
19041Everything all right?
19041Has the young lady been hurt?
19041Heard the news about Hicky Rogers?
19041How can a child show anything like that?
19041How can you get horses with class?
19041How do you do it?
19041How fah back? 19041 How fah back?"
19041How is she?
19041How?
19041Is Salvation alive now?'' 19041 Is n''t that so, Mister Jones?
19041Likely- lookin''colt, ai n''t he? 19041 Listenin''to the knockers?"
19041No; is that a fact?
19041Not the great Hamilton?
19041Now, ai n''t that a hell of a name? 19041 Railroad man-- isn''t he?"
19041Ringing a horse must be a risky business?
19041Say, loan me the makin''s, will you, pal?
19041Say, they''ve got you goin''right, ai n''t they?
19041She do n''t handle like that fur us, does she, Chick?
19041Virginia, oh, Virginia, is n''t she a lamb?
19041Was his name Sanford, and did he wish to pat the mare?
19041Well, I brings out Salvation as a three- year- old,''n''what happens is quite a bunch of chatter-- want to hear it?
19041Well,I encouraged,"that''s natural, what of it?"
19041Were you ever ruled off the track?
19041Whar my baby at?
19041What are you going to do with that?
19041What hospital?
19041What if she ai n''t in front, Uncle Jake?
19041What shoeing?
19041What sort of jockey is Manders?
19041What''s this fur?'' 19041 What_ is_ her name?"
19041When was this?
19041Why do n''t they shoot him?
19041Why does he call her Jane?
19041Why have you put bars across the door of that stall?
19041Why on earth did you take him?
19041Why?
19041Why?
19041Why_ you_ win the derby once, did n''t you?
19041Yes?
19041You ai n''t meanin''a big strong guy like Chris manhandlin''a pore little filly? 19041 You did n''t like it?"
19041You here, too?
19041''''N''when he gets so he can stand it, how''d a trip to Europe do fur him?''
19041''A bit leggy-- isn''t he?''
19041''Ai n''t I been standin''here with these plugs fur a week?
19041''Ai n''t that a criminal act?''
19041''Ai n''t you gettin''a free ride?
19041''Anybody here?''
19041''Are you stuck on Chicago?''
19041''Are you sure?
19041''But how long would a guy last if he never broke a racin''rule?''
19041''Can you tell me if they have sold the mare, Mary Goodloe, yet?''
19041''Can you tell me where he is?''
19041''Did he leave a family?''
19041''Do I have to get my hair waved more''n''twict a week?''
19041''Do n''t you know it''s wicked not to give that colt a chance to show what he can do?''
19041''Do n''t you want me to saw the legs off the rest of them dogs to earn my five hundred?
19041''Do they think I''m a stiff?''
19041''Do we need a burglar''s kit, and some nitroglycerin, or does that class of crime come later?''
19041''Do you know anything about the runners?''
19041''Do you know?''
19041''Do you really believe he can win?''
19041''Do you think this grows on me?''
19041''Do you want to kill the colt?''
19041''Does she own him?
19041''How does that lay on your stummick?''
19041''How much?''
19041''How''s he bred?''
19041''I cyant rightly say you favohs plowin'', but howkum you ain''tendin''de sale?''
19041''I have n''t told you-- guess what I''ve been offered for Salvation?''
19041''I thought you said he won?''
19041''I wonder if he''d stand for a touch without getting too fresh?''
19041''I''m goin''over-- want to go''long?''
19041''If you sees a child in wrong, you tells him to beat it, do n''t you?
19041''Is n''t it time to allow him to win?''
19041''Is that what racin''in these things is like?''
19041''Lendin''me a helpin''hand, are you?''
19041''May I?''
19041''Now, why did you wish me to read those letters?''
19041''Now, would n''t that scald you?''
19041''Race him?''
19041''Say, are you ever goin''to let me work one of yer dogs out in place of that smoke?''
19041''That''s a bit raw-- don''t you think?
19041''The best is good enough fur you, ai n''t it?
19041''Through the lobby?
19041''Try and remember,''he says to me,''were n''t you told to bring these pretty horses here at three o''clock?''
19041''Whar his white foot at?''
19041''What are you standin''out in the rain with the dogs fur?
19041''What caused it?''
19041''What do you say, old pal?''
19041''What do you think I am-- a capper?''
19041''What do you think of that?''
19041''What do you wish?''
19041''What for?''
19041''What have Ah evah done to you to merit such treatment at yoh hands?''
19041''What kind of a trip do you call that?
19041''What leads you to believe you can find a hunter good enough to beat Macbeth?''
19041''What th''hell right have you got to be fussy with your eats?
19041''What you got fur game?''
19041''What you talkin''''bout?
19041''What you tryin''to do, kid me?''
19041''What''ll you do?''
19041''What''s bitin''you-- ain''t Friendless goin''to win a nice purse for him?''
19041''What''s that?''
19041''What''s the matter?''
19041''What''s the name of his horse?''
19041''What''s the owner''s name?''
19041''What''s your name?''
19041''What''ud you do with all that money?
19041''When did you see him?''
19041''When do you want me?''
19041''Where do you want to go?
19041''Where''ll you be?''
19041''Who was caretaker for the horse Friendless when he was racing?''
19041''Why are you so certain this Rainbow can beat him in a steeplechase?''
19041''Why do n''t you train''n''ride both?''
19041''Will you find Uncle Jake for me and tell him I wish to see him?''
19041''Would n''t you look immense with a doll on your staff?''
19041''Would you stand fur a ringer?''
19041''Yes, suh-- an''what mought yo''name be?''
19041''You know perfectly the money''s nothing to me, but why should I cut my own throat?
19041''You tryin''to hog_ it_ like you does game?''
19041''You want him?''
19041''You''d rather argue''n eat, would n''t you?''
19041''You_ will_ shoot off your face, wo n''t you?
19041''_ What do I hear_?''
19041Ai n''t I never told you?"
19041Ai n''t it, Harry?''
19041Ai n''t you_ never_ goin''to learn to keep that loud trap of yours closed?''
19041Am I correct in this supposition, suh?''
19041Am I correct, suh?''
19041And Mrs. Dillon, in a voice that reminded me of a frightened child, asked:"Where is Blister?"
19041And after a pause, his eyes shining:"Can you beat her?"
19041Aw- l- l right--_what do I hear_?''
19041Blister?''
19041Brown?''
19041But I dopes it out he''s sore at automobiles,"''What''s wrong with''em?''
19041But how about the boy?"
19041But what about you?''
19041But where was the blue and gold?
19041CLASS"What do you like in the handicap?"
19041Can you put me wise?''
19041Can you tell which horse is going to win, Blister?''
19041Did n''t you tell me you get fifty dollars a week for training one horse?"
19041Did you ever see a show?
19041Did you get off''n''shoot a butsy at the stretch bend?''
19041Did you know I owns him once myself?"
19041Did you take a poker to him, too?''
19041Dillon?''
19041Do n''t you know how to act when a gentleman slips you somethin''?''
19041Do you bring a fair day, too?''
19041Do you notice the boy gets her away wingin''''n''keeps her there all the trip?
19041Do you think I''m a mind- reader?''
19041Do you think a jock would school a two- year- old?"
19041Do you want to buy''em tickets at the box- office?
19041EXIT BUTSY"What''s all them rubes got ribbons on''em fur?"
19041Ferdy, you''ve had a awful time, ai n''t you?''
19041Gentlemen,''he says,''how many of you can say you ever owned a Kentucky Derby winner?
19041Have the days of the week anything to do with it?''
19041Have you done so?''
19041He''s good, ai n''t he, Joe?''
19041How fah back?"
19041How would you like to own him?''
19041I ai n''t told you yet-- who put you hep?''
19041I dote on_ The Rubaiyat_; do n''t you?"
19041I interrupted Blister long enough to inquire:"Do n''t they blister horses sometimes to cure them of lameness?"
19041I says,''Is that it?''
19041I steps up''n''says:"''Kin I see you private a minute, Joe?''
19041I--''"''Have you been watching the sale?''
19041If I cops the coin easy, like you figgers, why am I chambermaid to two dogs in a bum show at twenty- five per?
19041If you wants''em, why do n''t you come''n''tell me to lead''em in?
19041Is it a go?''
19041Is n''t this the one you and Uncle Jake raised on a bottle?"
19041Is there class to him?"
19041It ai n''t your child, is it?
19041Me?
19041New York?''
19041Now, gentlemen,''he says,''what am I offered for this grand old mare?
19041OLE MAN SANFORD"Do you happen to notice a old duck that comes to the stalls at Loueyville just after the derby?"
19041Sanford?''
19041See how nice that filly stands?
19041Stand on his head?''
19041Think he favors the old hoss any?"
19041Was he an old man with poor eyesight?''
19041Was it a railroad accident?"
19041Were their natures moved to the depths by an insulting counterfeit of greatness?''
19041What do you know about that?''
19041What do you say?"
19041What do you say?''
19041What do you want for him?
19041What do you want to make a crack about quittin''fur just as the game''s gettin''good?''
19041What does class mean?"
19041What got into Banks?''
19041What hoss_ is_ this?''
19041What method did you employ to make him remain so far in the rear?''
19041When did_ this_ happen?''
19041Where did you ever see a child display this quality?"
19041Where''s Très Jolie?"
19041Where_ have_ you been?''
19041Who has this remarkable horse?''
19041Who is dem Dillons, anyway?
19041Why do n''t you put''em up?''
19041Why do n''t you sleep in here with Bright Eyes, so''s not to disturb me?"
19041Why do n''t you try to get him to come out here?''
19041Why do you bring the horse here?''
19041Why?
19041Will any of you gentlemen indulge in a Cuban Beauty?''
19041Will you give him a work?''
19041Will you have orchestra chairs for''em or will front- row balcony do?
19041Would you like to git a- holt of a new roll?''
19041Yes-- How much will you take?''
19041You ai n''t got a ticket to- day, have you?''
19041You have heard me speak of Sweet Alice?''
19041You''ve heard of Hamilton?"
19041_ Cut out this rough stuff_--you got me?''
19041_ She''s_ brought you to it, has she?''
19041_ what do I hear_?''
19041_ what do I hear_?''
19041he ordered, and pointing to the panting mare:"Do n''t you think she''s earned a right to breath?"
19041he says,''you want to see a colt what am a colt?''
19041will you do your best for her sake?''
18183What can I do for hardy pears?
18183What crop do you consider the best green manure?
18183What experiments are being conducted by the University of Minnesota with orchard and other horticultural crops?
181831 and 2?
181831017 everbearing strawberry plants?
181834?
181835 What is Hardiness?
181838 How May University Farm and the Minnesota State Horticultural Society be Mutually Helpful in Developing the Farms and Homes of the Northwest?
18183A Member: Are your trees still as far apart as they were at first?
18183A Member: Common corn land, is that fit for raising asparagus?
18183A Member: Did I understand some one to say that the mulberry was not hardy?
18183A Member: Did you ever grow any Crusset Wax?
18183A Member: Do n''t they break right off from the main stalk in laying down?
18183A Member: Do n''t they form new branches on the sides when you pinch off the ends?
18183A Member: Do n''t you recommend testing your seeds before you plant them?
18183A Member: Do n''t you think in covering them with a plow you might disturb the roots?
18183A Member: Do you advise spraying for them?
18183A Member: Do you face both ends of the barrel?
18183A Member: Do you pack all one- size of apples in a barrel?
18183A Member: Do you use clear cider for vinegar?
18183A Member: Do you use very nearly the same size apples in a barrel, or do you put large ones at the top and bottom?
18183A Member: Does n''t most of that trouble arise from the low prices?
18183A Member: Does the German?
18183A Member: Have you ever tried mulching them with corn stalks?
18183A Member: Have you tried out the Baroness Schroeder?
18183A Member: How about cowpeas?
18183A Member: How about the hairy vetch?
18183A Member: How large do the trees have to be to be of benefit?
18183A Member: How many years have you maintained a bed?
18183A Member: How much distance would you allow for the roots?
18183A Member: How would you start a new planting?
18183A Member: I mean in preparing your patch for the new planting?
18183A Member: I mean seeds generally, corn, etc.?
18183A Member: I want to ask if many put salt on asparagus?
18183A Member: I would like to ask if a person on clay soil could use sawdust to work in?
18183A Member: I would like to ask if you have any difficulty in getting your cider vinegar up to the requirements of the law?
18183A Member: If you were going to do it again would you put them 30x30?
18183A Member: Is it practicable to grow soy beans in this soil?
18183A Member: Madam President, why should it not be the flag itself and not a picture of the flag?
18183A Member: The heavy land I suppose would n''t be good for it?
18183A Member: What are the majority of your forest trees?
18183A Member: What causes the rot in the iris?
18183A Member: What do these apple graders cost?
18183A Member: What fertilizer is good?
18183A Member: What grader do you recommend?
18183A Member: What is the best of the green kind?
18183A Member: What is the matter with the Hardy?
18183A Member: What kind is that?
18183A Member: What kind of heaters do you use?
18183A Member: What kind of varieties would you suggest for the ordinary home garden, best dozen varieties?
18183A Member: What sort of apples go to the canneries?
18183A Member: When do you cut those sucker canes?
18183A Member: When do you spray?
18183A Member: Where can ground bone be obtained?
18183A Member: Where do you buy your heaters?
18183A Member: Will it improve that land by fertilizing with top dressing?
18183A Member: With the soy bean do you have to plow in the whole of it?
18183A Member: Would it be practicable to feed soy beans in an orchard?
18183A Member: Would n''t fertilize the first season?
18183A Member: You do n''t ship them, so do n''t consider the packing?
18183A Member: You mean to say you could grow them for fifteen years without fertilizing?
18183A Member: Your manure would be all gone then?
18183A born farmer assumes that everybody knows how to handle a hoe or a plow, but why should they, not having had practical experience?
18183A good rainfall is one inch, which is a thousand barrels to the acre, so what can you do with a sprinkling cart?
18183A member: How far apart do you plant your beans in the row?
18183And spray them every year?
18183And the question naturally comes, why any new ones?
18183And what have we learned from the"summer in our garden?"
18183Another question: How many rows of trees make a good windbreak?
18183Are the anthers well or poorly formed?
18183Are the blossoms pistillate or staminate?
18183Are the children of the farmers looking forward with interest to farming as a business, and life in the country as attractive?
18183Are the petals large or small?
18183Are the petals pure white or slightly crimson?
18183Are the stamens long or short?
18183Are there any other questions?
18183Are there any other questions?
18183Are there any remarks?
18183Are there many fruit buds to the stalk, or but few?
18183Are there many runners, or few, or none?
18183Are they golden wax?
18183Are we sure, as has been said, that God forgot to put a soul in flowers?
18183Are you a member of the Garden Flower Society?
18183Are you ready for the question, that those gentlemen suggested be made honorary life members?
18183But how is it down here?
18183But where are they today?
18183But why do you come to me with this?
18183By advertising?
18183Ca n''t we make it an even hundred for this year?
18183Can they be gotten at a reasonable price, and can we mature them here?
18183Can they be successfully cultivated?
18183Can we use a deformed apple?
18183Can you think of the possibilities of Minnesota?
18183Did you attend the 1915 meeting of this association, held in the West Hotel, Minneapolis, four days, December 7- 10 inclusive?
18183Did you ever pass a farm home in the winter that was protected by a good evergreen grove and notice how beautiful it looked?
18183Did you ever sit down in your kingdom and see what a royal throne you occupied?
18183Did you ever think of the royal position of the florist and horticulturist?
18183Did you have any trouble like that?
18183Do n''t you glut the market unless you have cold storage?
18183Do n''t you think so, Mr. Brackett?
18183Do n''t you use dormant sprays?
18183Do n''t you want your name added to this life roll?
18183Do the children in your school know what flower is common in the northern part of the state as well as in the southern part of the state?
18183Do the new runners bear blossoms and fruit?
18183Do they need anything besides drainage?"
18183Do they understand the conditions required in the state and the purpose of the selection sufficiently well to enable them to select intelligently?
18183Do you find it the best way to hoe them after you get through cutting?
18183Do you know what the state flag of Minnesota looks like?
18183Do you plow them after you get them down or do you cover them with a shovel?
18183Do you really know what a delicious beverage can be made from the juice of rhubarb mixed in cool water?
18183Do you sell all the fruit you raise on the place?
18183Do you think I was gwine to have that money around the house wid dat strange nigger there?
18183Do you understand that?
18183Do you wish to ask him any questions?
18183Does it grow here?
18183Does it include simply marketing alone?
18183Ever troubled with the mice at your place, Mr. Weld?
18183First, what kind of covering?
18183For instance, do the canners in your country buy deformed apples-- I mean lacking in roundness?
18183Has any one tried anything new in the garden that will stand our climate?
18183Have they responded to Cultivation?
18183Have you had any difficulty in raising them?
18183Have you taken any photographs of your garden, its individual flowers, or wild flowers for our photographic contest?
18183Have you the following all ready for use?
18183Have you tried planting your bulbs with any of the ground cover plants that will take away the bare look that most bulb beds have?
18183He said:"Is that so?
18183He said:"Where are your passengers?"
18183He was trying to bore a beetle head and could not hold it; a foolish boy came along and said,"Why do n''t you put it in the hog trough?"
18183How Can the Garden Flower Society Co- operate with It?
18183How May the State University and the Horticultural Society Best Co- Operate?
18183How can those roots send up the golden tints, the snowy white and the red, and never have the colors mixed?
18183How do you get these bushy bushes to lie down?
18183How is it possible to pick out of the dull soil, Nature''s eternal drab, that brilliant color for your peony?
18183How many members have you?
18183How much of each?
18183How often do you hear concerning some gardener, that if he"only touches a thing, it is bound to live?"
18183How was that sweetness and purity ever extracted from the scentless soil?
18183I could not raise anything-- Mr. Alway: Did the plants grow?
18183I have another question here: What would you plant around the garden?
18183I submit to you the question: Are school children qualified to choose a flower as an emblem of the state?
18183I think I have reason to ask what would we have for apples today if there had not been any seedlings raised?
18183I would like to ask what success you have had with growing tritoma, the flame flower?
18183If he used that, why does he need props?
18183If so, when do they commence to bud and bloom?
18183In regard to iris, did any one have any trouble with their iris coming a little ahead of time last year and being frozen?
18183In regard to the variety proposition, is n''t it true that you are growing too many perishable apples in Minnesota?
18183Is Professor Mackintosh in the room?
18183Is anyone going to allow weeds to outdo him?
18183Is bone meal good?
18183Is he in the room?
18183Is it entirely the work for men?
18183Is it entirely the work for women?
18183Is it necessary to burn the tops when they are cut off?
18183Is n''t that considered a rather short- lived tree?
18183Is n''t this really a wonderful thing where so many are concerned, emphasizing as it does the large interest felt in the work of the society?
18183Is that sufficient for a winter protection without the straw or leaves?
18183Is the garden to receive the undivided attention of one or more members of each family, so that all members and guests may share its fruits?
18183Is the plum curculio causing much damage to the fruit growing industry of this country?
18183Is the receptacle on which the pistils sit well formed and capable of being developed into a perfect berry, or do they look ungainly in shape?
18183Is there any kind better than those two?
18183J. Kimball, Duluth Opening Song Trafford N. Jayne, Minneapolis Why Wake Up the Dreamers-- Aren''t They Getting Their Share?
18183May I ask if Mr. Peterson, of Chicago, is here?
18183Miss White: Madam President, if we could not vote as a society, could we not vote to recommend this resolution to the Horticultural Society?
18183Mr. Alway: Dandelions?
18183Mr. Alway: Did they make lots of runners?
18183Mr. Alway: Was it any deeper than that?
18183Mr. Anderson: Are your returns satisfactory shipping to the Minneapolis market?
18183Mr. Anderson: Do n''t you take out any dirt on the sides?
18183Mr. Anderson: Do you bend them north or south or any way?
18183Mr. Anderson: How far have you got yours planted apart?
18183Mr. Anderson: How late can you plant them and be sure of a crop?
18183Mr. Anderson: I would like to ask what you pay for beans for canning purposes?
18183Mr. Anderson: What are your gross receipts per acre for beans?
18183Mr. Anderson: Where are you located?
18183Mr. Andrews: Are the roots exposed in some cases?
18183Mr. Baldwin: How deep do you put the plant below the surface in transplanting?
18183Mr. Baldwin: You mean to say that putting manure on top makes the asparagus crooked?
18183Mr. Berry: Do you fertilize and how and when?
18183Mr. Brackett: Are they still in business?
18183Mr. Brackett: Have you ever found any ground with too much leaf mold on it to grow good strawberries?
18183Mr. Brackett: Have you got any pocket- gophers that do not make mounds?
18183Mr. Brackett: How many of those large limbs could you cut off in one year and graft?
18183Mr. Brackett: If you had Virginia trees twelve years old would you top- work them?
18183Mr. Brackett: In other words, they ca n''t pay over 35 or 30 cents a bushel?
18183Mr. Brackett: Is n''t that a general opinion in the West where they make a business of planting large orchards?
18183Mr. Brackett: Is that in the nursery row?
18183Mr. Brackett: Suppose the limbs were too big on the stock you are going to top- work, how would you do then?
18183Mr. Brackett: What age do you commence the grafting?
18183Mr. Brackett: What can a cannery afford to pay for apples?
18183Mr. Brackett: Where you put in more than one scion in a limb, is it feasible to leave more than one to grow?
18183Mr. Brackett: Would you advocate the extensive planting of apples in this climate?
18183Mr. Brackett: You showed the difference in size there, those top- worked and those not-- don''t you think that is because of cutting the top back?
18183Mr. Cadoo: Do angleworms hurt house plants?
18183Mr. Cashman: Have you had any experience in using orchard heaters to save plums in cold nights?
18183Mr. Cashman: You said a pressure of 200 pounds ought to be used?
18183Mr. Clausen: Do n''t you have trouble with the mice?
18183Mr. Cook: What number do you hold that red grape under?
18183Mr. Cook: Which is that for, for the brown rot?
18183Mr. Crawford: Can you raise asparagus successfully in the shade or a partial shade?
18183Mr. Crosby: How would you keep those scions?
18183Mr. Crosby: In getting scions are there any distinguishing marks between a vigorous scion and one not vigorous?
18183Mr. Crosby: What kind of a graft do you usually make?
18183Mr. Durand: What is the best spray for leaf- spot and rust in strawberries?
18183Mr. Dyer: Do you know anything about it?
18183Mr. Dyer: I would like to ask if you have ever used arsenate of lead for spraying plums?
18183Mr. Dyer: I would like to know about what quantity of arsenate of lead and lime- sulphur combined would you recommend?
18183Mr. Dyer: In connection with that I would like to ask if you have used or would recommend pulverized lime- sulphur?
18183Mr. Dyer: What pressure would you recommend in spraying for codling moth where arsenate of lead is used?
18183Mr. Erkel: Is the Duchess a good stock to graft onto?
18183Mr. Erkel: Would it be practical to use water shoots for scions?
18183Mr. Glenzke: What would be the consequence of the berries being planted after tomatoes had been planted there the year before?
18183Mr. Goudy: Did you ever try capsicum, sprinkling that on the heads?
18183Mr. Goudy: The cabbage butterfly, does that come from the same maggot?
18183Mr. Goudy: What do you do for that?
18183Mr. Goudy: What is your method of harvesting your beans?
18183Mr. Graves( Wisconsin): Do you use your black leaf 40 in conjunction with your Bordeaux or lime- sulphur?
18183Mr. Graves: Does n''t it counteract the result?
18183Mr. Graves: You say you got the same results from black leaf 40 in that mixture?
18183Mr. Hall: I would like to ask you what you spray with and when you spray?
18183Mr. Hansen: Do you know of any plum that has never had brown rot?
18183Mr. Hansen: What distance apart ought those apple trees to be?
18183Mr. Harrison: Any special rule about multiplying or dividing?
18183Mr. Hawkins: Has any one had experience in raising trollius?
18183Mr. Hawkins: Mrs. Gould, can you give us any enlightenment?
18183Mr. Hawkins: What would you recommend?
18183Mr. Horton: Have you ever carried over lime- sulphur from one year to another?
18183Mr. Horton: Is there much danger of evaporation so it would be too strong to use next year?
18183Mr. Horton: What proportion of the lime- sulphur and arsenate of lead do you use?
18183Mr. Horton: What would you advise for plants that are infected with aphis?
18183Mr. Horton: Would n''t you have an open space in those trees?
18183Mr. Horton: Would you have an open space outside of those twenty trees for the snow to lodge in?
18183Mr. Huestis: Do you know whether the mulberry is hardy in Minnesota or not?
18183Mr. Huestis: Do you think that it weakens the stem of the apples?
18183Mr. Huestis: Does Mr. Dunlap attribute the general dropping of apples to the scab fungus?
18183Mr. Huestis: How would the golden elder do as a hedge?
18183Mr. Ingersoll: Is there anything you can suggest to control the yellows in asters?
18183Mr. Ingersoll: You think that irregular watering might make any difference or very solid rooting?
18183Mr. Johnson: Is it doing well now?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Are those honest representations of the different apples from the dwarf and the standard?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Did you ever hear of them dying?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Do you find any trouble with too much protection for orchards?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Does it blight any?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Does spraying injure the bees?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Have you tested the Douglas spruce?
18183Mr. Kellogg: How do you get rid of the waste apples that would rot in the orchard?
18183Mr. Kellogg: How large were the wagons?
18183Mr. Kellogg: How soon do your dwarf trees pay for themselves?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Is n''t it better to dehorn it and get some new shoots to graft?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Is there such a thing as a pedigreed strawberry plant that is taken from runners?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Too big a growth on the graft is liable to be injured in the winter, is it not?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What did you use?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What do you know about the Surprise?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What is the best spray you know of, how often do you apply it and when?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What is the matter with the old Wilson strawberry?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What is your best windbreak?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What was the condition of that tree where Dartt put in four scions?
18183Mr. Kellogg: What was the trouble where I could n''t raise strawberries on new wood soil?
18183Mr. Kellogg: Would scions from bearing trees with the blossom buds on do you any good?
18183Mr. Kellogg: You have been surprised with it?
18183Mr. Latham: Do you wish to have the report read or have it published later?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Are the rings put on the outside or the inside of the trees?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Do I understand that you have to lay down and cover up those red raspberries?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Do you mulch the ground?
18183Mr. Ludlow: How far do you put them apart in the hedge row?
18183Mr. Ludlow: How many years is the planting of the King raspberry good for?
18183Mr. Ludlow: How old are your Wealthys?
18183Mr. Ludlow: I want to ask if you recommend the bamboo poles for general propping of trees?
18183Mr. Ludlow: I would like to know what you advise for that commercial orchard, what varieties?
18183Mr. Ludlow: It was n''t embalmed?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What has been your experience with the Ocheeda?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What is the difference between the brown rot and the plum pocket fungus?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What is your average cost per tree for thinning?
18183Mr. Ludlow: What peculiar method have you for keeping those apples?
18183Mr. Ludlow: When do you do that?
18183Mr. Ludlow: Would it be policy to leave that on and let the strawberries come up through, to keep them clean?
18183Mr. M''Clelland: Have you anything as good?
18183Mr. Maher: It spread too much?
18183Mr. Marien: I think that is a wax bean?
18183Mr. McCall: What is peat lacking in?
18183Mr. McClelland: What time do you uncover your strawberries?
18183Mr. McClelland: Will they come through the mulch all right?
18183Mr. Miller: I should think the germination of that seed would run out?
18183Mr. Miller: I suppose the idea of putting that in the bottom is that it is so hard to cultivate the manure on the top without doing as you mentioned?
18183Mr. Miller: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg if he advises covering the strawberries in the winter after snow has fallen and with what success?
18183Mr. Miller: In saving your seed from year to year, is there any danger of the seed running out in time?
18183Mr. Miller: Then you can use the black leaf forty?
18183Mr. Miller: What do you do for root aphis?
18183Mr. Moore: The radishes and turnips are attacked and the cabbages are not?
18183Mr. Moore: What variety do you raise?
18183Mr. Moore: Which do you raise, early cabbages?
18183Mr. Moyer: What do those black soils in the western part of the state need?
18183Mr. Pfeiffer: Your location is where?
18183Mr. Philips: Which was blighted, the Hibernal?
18183Mr. Rasmussen( Wisconsin): What trouble have you experienced with overhead irrigation with the strawberries in the bright sunshine?
18183Mr. Rasmussen: Did you say the same fly attacks the onion and the cabbage?
18183Mr. Rasmussen: What is the spray for the cabbage and onion maggot?
18183Mr. Reckstrom: Would bone do that was bought for the chickens?
18183Mr. Richardson: Did you ever know the plum pocket to come unless we had cold weather about the time of blossoming and lots of east wind?
18183Mr. Richardson: How many apple trees have you?
18183Mr. Richardson: How many growers are there in your neighborhood growing fruit commercially?
18183Mr. Richardson: Is the mulberry hardy with you?
18183Mr. Rogers: Do you plant in the hedge row or in the hill system?
18183Mr. Sauter: About how long would you cook them?
18183Mr. Sauter: And what next?
18183Mr. Sauter: Can the everbearing and the common varieties be planted together?
18183Mr. Sauter: Do n''t the flat ones bring a little more than the round ones?
18183Mr. Sauter: Do you cover the King?
18183Mr. Sauter: Do you have any trouble with those bursting the cans?
18183Mr. Sauter: How about the Globe?
18183Mr. Sauter: How does the powdered arsenate compare with the paste?
18183Mr. Sauter: How far apart must they be planted?
18183Mr. Sauter: How is the Malinda?
18183Mr. Sauter: How long must they stand dissolved?
18183Mr. Sauter: I want to set out 500 trees; what kind shall I set out?
18183Mr. Sauter: I would like to know which is the best beans for canning, the yellow or the green?
18183Mr. Sauter: Is it a good seller?
18183Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Malinda and the Northwest Greening all right?
18183Mr. Sauter: Is n''t the Okabena better than the Duchess?
18183Mr. Sauter: What do you know of the paper cartons instead of flower pots?
18183Mr. Sauter: What do you think of the Red Pear?
18183Mr. Sauter: What form of packing for apples will bring the best prices?
18183Mr. Sauter: What is your best raspberry?
18183Mr. Sauter: What kind do you think is the best for an early variety?
18183Mr. Sauter: What tomato do you find the best for canning?
18183Mr. Sauter: Which is the best, the flat or the round of the wax?
18183Mr. Sauter: You think it best for anybody with a small orchard to make his own lime- sulphur solution?
18183Mr. Simmons: What is the cost?
18183Mr. Stakman: Did the whole leaf turn brown?
18183Mr. Stakman: Did you spray?
18183Mr. Stakman: How strong did you use the lime- sulphur?
18183Mr. Stakman: The flower or leaf?
18183Mr. Stakman: There was a perfect crop of new leaves?
18183Mr. Stakman: Were you spraying for the pocket or brown rot?
18183Mr. Stakman: What did you use?
18183Mr. Stakman: What did you use?
18183Mr. Stakman: What does your oil cost?
18183Mr. Stakman: What kind of soil were they on?
18183Mr. Stakman: When did it happen?
18183Mr. Stakman: When did you spray?
18183Mr. Stakman: You did n''t get any injury to the plum trees?
18183Mr. Street: But the second year would you keep all of the growth in the graft?
18183Mr. Street: Have you had any experience in budding in August or first of September on those trees?
18183Mr. Street: How about the Brier''s Sweet crab?
18183Mr. Street: Would you put it on the top or bottom side of the limb?
18183Mr. Waldron: Did you have any red grapes growing there?
18183Mr. Waldron: Is n''t it as good now as it was?
18183Mr. Waldron: What do you think the male parent was of the red grape?
18183Mr. Wallace: Is the Patten Greening a good tree to graft onto?
18183Mr. Wedge: Forest soil or prairie?
18183Mr. Wedge: I would like to ask Mr. Kellogg and I think we would all be interested in knowing when he began growing strawberries?
18183Mr. Wellington: Have you been able to cross the European plum with the Japanese?
18183Mr. Whiting: That is a hard question, but is n''t it a fact that you grow too many Wealthys?
18183Mr. Willard: How thick do you leave those canes set apart in the row, how many in a foot?
18183Mr. Willard: I would like to ask the speaker, the way I understood him, why he could n''t raise as good strawberries on new ground as on old ground?
18183Mr. Willard: So it would be better to plant on old ground or old breaking than new?
18183Mr. Willard: You pinch the end of the tops, I think?
18183Mr. Willis: Would it improve the plants, fertilize the plants, this lime?
18183Mr. Wintersteen: The maggots that attack the radishes and turnips are the same as the cabbage maggot?
18183Mr. Wintersteen: Why is it I have no trouble with the cabbages, and yet I can raise no radishes or turnips in the same ground?
18183Mrs. Cadoo: Can you graft onto a Martha crab and have success with that?
18183Mrs. Countryman: Do you cover them winters?
18183Mrs. Countryman: Will yucca filamentosa ever blossom in a garden in St. Paul?
18183Mrs. Countryman: Would n''t the hollyhock come under the heading of being perennial but not a permanent perennial?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Did you ever try poisoning them?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Do you put a canvas over the tree or leave it uncovered?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Have they a string on the back?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Have you ever tried Golden Pod?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: How do you manage to get the farmers to bring them in?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: What vegetables do you can?
18183Mrs. Glenzke: Will you tell me the color of your beans?
18183Mrs. Gould: Will you make that motion?
18183Native Plants in the Garden Shall We Collect or Grow Our Native Plants?
18183Now, the distance apart?
18183Older: If you are going to mow it, why not mow the sweet clover same as the other?
18183Older: What do you consider the best to seed down with, clover or alfalfa?
18183Older: Where you have an orchard ten years old, is it best to seed it down or still continue to cultivate it?
18183Older: Which kind of seeding down would you prefer, what kind of clover?
18183One prominent Minnetonka fruit grower said this to me about them:"Mr. Cook, what is the use of making all of this fuss about these new plums?
18183Or does the success of it depend principally upon the varieties of fruit set out together with the after cultivation, pruning and spraying?
18183President Cashman: Anything further before we pass to the next subject?
18183President Reeves: Is Mr. Hegerle in the room?
18183Question: If the above treatment had been given every second or third row throughout orchard, what would the results have been?
18183SEND IN A NEW MEMBER.--Have you noticed the advertisement on the inside of the back cover page of this and also the January issues of our monthly?
18183Second, how much?
18183Some may ask, why not use the Virginia crab?
18183The President: Any one wish to make any comments on this report?
18183The President: Can you tell us something more about your experience in marketing direct?
18183The President: Do you accept that as a substitute?
18183The President: Do you add any Paris green at any time or arsenate of lead?
18183The President: Do you break off many canes by covering them?
18183The President: How did you get it?
18183The President: How is your wild strawberry?
18183The President: How many years ago?
18183The President: How much?
18183The President: I suppose that is automobile trade?
18183The President: Is Professor Waldron in the room?
18183The President: That is, 2- 1/2 pounds to 50 gallons of water with the other ingredients?
18183The President: What is the remedy, Mr. Kellogg?
18183The President: What temperature do you keep in your cellar?
18183The President: What will you do with the report of the treasurer?
18183The President: You have a heater in your cellar?
18183The President: You take out all the old wood every year?
18183The Reverend Mr. Reisenour(?)
18183The first question I will read is--"What would you advise about covering in the garden in a season like this?"
18183The mystery of the selection in this state is, why was a flower chosen which is not common to any part of the state?
18183The next question is--"Are the black peat or muck soils first class?
18183The next question is--"Should apple raisers use commercial fertilizers?"
18183The question with pears is, will they stand blight or not?
18183Then I thought,"What if I had planted forty acres?"
18183Then did you vow once more to destroy the beetles when you saw the roses begin to wither from punctures made by the beetle in the stem?
18183There is still room in this list for others, and why not instead of paying annual membership year after year make one payment and have done with it?
18183This thing is to go on, and how?
18183Tucker; 388 Gray, A. N., Marketing Fruit by Association; 27 H Hansen, Prof. N. E., What is Hardiness?
18183Virginia crab is an early bloomer, and would grafting it with Wealthy make it bloom earlier?
18183Was it the new soil?
18183Was it your idea that we report next year or that the plan be put in operation?
18183Was n''t that a great thing to make a fuss about?
18183We have members, I think, in every county of the state, have n''t we, President Cashman?
18183What about the farm and home garden for 1916?
18183What are the results?
18183What can we say about the crowning event of our meeting, the annual banquet?
18183What do we raise and how do we do it?
18183What is blight?
18183What is it and is there a remedy?"
18183What is the best in this country?
18183What is the occasion of this?
18183What is the reason?
18183What is the second one?
18183What is your opinion of the Delicious?
18183What shall I do?
18183What shall be done with the old bed?
18183What variety shall I choose?
18183What was the beginning of the civic league and the city beautiful?
18183What was the matter, was it the mixture or the sprayer?
18183What was the result?
18183What would be the consequence as to the white grub that follows the tomatoes, and other insects?
18183When do the berries begin to ripen?
18183Where is the grocer who would go back to those days, and where is the public that would patronize him?
18183Who are the people that are going to take your places?
18183Who can do better than that?
18183Who is to have a gold watch given him fifty years from now-- or given to her fifty years from now?
18183Who would have thought it possible that in spite of all the frost and cold rains we would get a pretty good crop of cherries?
18183Why Should We Grow Seedling Apples?
18183Why do n''t you come and enjoy this most entertaining event of the meeting?
18183Why not grow evergreens in the place of willows?
18183Why not others?
18183Will not each member make an especial effort to bring in a new member at that time or before?
18183Will some one enlighten me?
18183Will that be all right?
18183Will they take nitrogen the same as clover?
18183With over 2,000 varieties should n''t we be satisfied?
18183Would it be five or six years before I receive any benefit, or seven or eight years?
18183Would it be policy to put that on?
18183Would it be worth while to put that on or would that overdo the thing?
18183Would you want the Alsike clover or sweet clover for an apple orchard?
18183You have got to punish the whole on account of the few?
18183You may ask why?
18183You throw a heavy growth in there, which makes the fruit that much larger?
18183You would n''t put them all together?
18183[ Illustration: American Elm windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] Mr. Kellogg: What is the reason there are so few of them really blue?
18183[ Illustration: Norway Poplar windbreak at Devil''s Lake, N.D.] I have a question here: How long should a shelter- belt be cultivated?
15138''Whose daughter art thou?''
15138A little mo''of the cold ham, Cap''n?
15138A man of rectitude-- enshrined in the hearts of his fellow- citizens, popular and all that?
15138A school?
15138Allen? 15138 Allen?"
15138Allen?
15138And Garrison-- who was he?
15138And I suppose there ought to be a certain reciprocity in approval and disapproval?
15138And afterward?
15138And that is what you thought I came for?
15138And you are now about-- how old?
15138And you think he has done quite the fine thing about it-- it was what you would have had him do?
15138Andrew, who was Sylvia''s father? 15138 Are you a Madison man?"
15138Are you a reader of poetry?
15138Are you going downtown, Morton?
15138Are you sure she was married; did you find any proof of it?
15138As much as that?
15138Atwill-- Arthur P."Is he a son of that Ebenezer Atwill who used to be a professor in Asbury College?
15138Breweries? 15138 Bright girl, is she?"
15138But do you think he has any idea what Thatcher has up his sleeve?
15138But has Thatcher found the trout?
15138But how did you come to be the messenger? 15138 But if Aunt Sally leaves her all her money, just because she''s so bright, and educated, and cuts me off, then what would be the answer?"
15138But she wrote to you-- the letters would have given a clue of some kind?
15138But tell me, Sylvia:''Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion? 15138 But the break must have cost you something; have n''t you missed him just a little bit?"
15138But they help clear the air-- they serve a purpose?
15138But who had put him on the track? 15138 But you know who wrote it?"
15138But you tried other places besides Adams? 15138 By token of your Virgilian diversions shall I assume that you are a collegian, really or almost?"
15138Can you stand any more? 15138 Chances?"
15138College man?
15138Did he show any feeling-- indignation, pique, as he read the letter?
15138Did n''t you like Madison? 15138 Did you see any plumbers around the place?"
15138Did you see the paper-- to- day''s paper?
15138Different?
15138Dismissed? 15138 Do I know she''s expected?
15138Do I really have to be serious, Mr. Bassett? 15138 Do n''t you think a girl may be stylish and know a lot, too?"
15138Do n''t you think they''re worth working for?
15138Do you know algebra?
15138Do you think so? 15138 Do you think you could ever be proud of me?--that you might even care a little, some day?"
15138Efficiency?
15138Fitting yourself for one of the learned professions?
15138For the stars up there, for grass and trees, for the moon by night and the sun by day-- for the gracious gift of friends?
15138From Montgomery?
15138Glad Daniel got a licking?
15138Goin''to write Mort up, are you? 15138 Has anybody suspected it?"
15138Has n''t Dan got here yet? 15138 Have n''t got House Bill Ninety- five in your pockets have you?"
15138Have you spoken to Mr. Bassett? 15138 He does n''t have to do it, does he?
15138He said to- morrow, did he? 15138 He''s watching the team, ai n''t he, Sylvia?
15138Horses?
15138How are you? 15138 How do you figure that out, Sylvia?"
15138How is it, then, that newspapers away off in New York and Massachusetts speak of you in this outrageous fashion? 15138 How old is young, or how young is old?
15138How soon will Marian be home?
15138I have an errand with Mrs. Owen and I''ll wait, if you do n''t mind?
15138I know perfectly well this is n''t a good place to be serious in; but I laughed-- Do you really want to know?
15138I need only one thing, you say;--but what if it''s the thing I have n''t got?
15138I suppose there will be something for her; she''s not thrown on her own resources?
15138I suppose you shamed him out of it?
15138I was debasing him? 15138 I wonder whether Mrs. Owen will like me?"
15138I''m thirsty, Miss Garrison; which punch bowl do you recommend to a man of my temperate habits?
15138I''ve no doubt you did, Morton Bassett; but how do you suppose I could sleep when you were talking right under my window? 15138 If I withdraw my name, what will happen?"
15138If you had a vote,he persisted,"you would n''t vote for me?"
15138If you''re one of these rotten idealists, Harwood, what are you doing here with Bassett? 15138 In debt?"
15138Is Daniel going to speak?
15138Is that new building the college library?
15138Is that you, Mr. Bassett? 15138 Is this Professor Andrew Kelton?
15138Is this Professor Kelton''s? 15138 It is n''t just the fault of the girls that they do this, is it?
15138It must be a student-- are you sure he is n''t a student?
15138It''s a good deal a matter of imagination, is n''t it?
15138Just between ourselves, Dan, do you really think the Colonel''s straight?
15138Just what do you mean by that?
15138Just what happened to Edna, Andrew?
15138Look here, Sylvia, do n''t you need some money? 15138 May I ask just who you are and why on earth you brought me up here?"
15138Mediæval? 15138 Miss Sylvia, wo n''t you sit by me?"
15138News? 15138 No man is beyond reclamation, is he?
15138Not at me?
15138Oh, are n''t you going our way?
15138Oh, if I could only--"Only what?
15138Oh, the family idiot let you in, did he? 15138 Oh, why will you say that?
15138Oh, you explained it, did you?
15138Oh, you have, have you?
15138Out with it; just how did you manage it?
15138P.W.G.?
15138Shamed him? 15138 She was n''t hurt?
15138She wrote you a note or telephoned you?
15138Sit down, wo n''t you, and have a cigar?
15138So it is n''t Napoleon, and Grant and Custer any more? 15138 So that was it, was it?"
15138So there''s that, is there?
15138So without her you are at Thatcher''s mercy, are you? 15138 So you''re from the''Courier''?
15138So you''ve been having supper with the Wares, have you, while I ate here all by myself? 15138 So?
15138So? 15138 So?
15138Something that is n''t nice?
15138Sorry?
15138Sort of damned idealist yourself?
15138Suppose a girl like Marian had gone to college just as you did, what would it have done for her?
15138Sylvia?
15138That girl-- what girl?
15138That sounds as though I were about to take leave without settling my bill, does n''t it? 15138 That was when you were visiting Mrs. Owen at Waupegan?
15138That''s all right; but if you had to make a choice between Thatcher and Bassett?
15138That''s exactly what I want you to help me about? 15138 The Bassetts?
15138The Willings? 15138 The cotillion?"
15138The natural inference would be that I''m a bad man, would n''t it?
15138The old way?
15138The requirements for college are not really so difficult, I suppose?
15138Then do you think I do n''t satisfy him?
15138Then where do you place me in his scheme of things?
15138Then why did n''t you say so and be done with it?
15138Then you do n''t really know him?
15138Then-- you have done it?
15138There wo n''t be anything of that kind, will there, Dan?
15138They do n''t read much after they''re admitted, do they? 15138 To be sure; she does rather light up her time, does n''t she?"
15138Tutoring Blackford? 15138 Up there at the lake you knew I was unhappy; you knew things were n''t right with me?"
15138We''ve had good times, have n''t we, Sylvia? 15138 Well, Sally, how about Mort Bassett?"
15138Well, do n''t you think you''d like to get away from so much mathematics and learn things that will fit you to be entertaining and amusing? 15138 Well, she fixed that, too, after I cut loose from_ him_--you understand?
15138Well, sir, what are you going to do about it? 15138 Well, what part of the Army did you serve in?"
15138Well,he ejaculated,"damn it all, why not?"
15138Well,she remarked drearily,"so you have come back to face it, have you?"
15138Well; how are things going with you, young man?
15138Well?
15138What am I going to do?
15138What are you two talking so long about? 15138 What did he say?"
15138What did she say?
15138What did the trip cost you?
15138What did you say the woman''s name was, Ware?
15138What do you see?
15138What does that say there, that small gold print on the inside of the cover?
15138What kind of a time have you been having?
15138What would he want with an office anyway? 15138 What''s Allen doing?"
15138What''s this you''ve been reading? 15138 What_ is_ your name, dear?"
15138When did you see Daniel last?
15138When did you telegraph her?
15138When was that, Rose?
15138When''s Rose coming up?
15138Where do you go to school, Sylvia?
15138Who is Sylvia, what is she, That all the swains adore her?
15138Who is that preposterous fat man?
15138Who says so?
15138Who''s this rival who has made the higher education seem necessary for Morton Bassett''s daughter?
15138Whom were you talking to, Morton?
15138Whom? 15138 Why did n''t you meet the competition and go to college?
15138Why do n''t they keep on smoking?
15138Why do n''t you say all these things to your father?
15138Why should I waste prayers on that? 15138 Why should n''t I make myself uncomfortable for a little while?
15138Why should n''t she have her there if she wants her? 15138 Why?"
15138Will you kindly tell me just what you intended doing?
15138Will you shake hands with me?
15138Wo n''t you smoke? 15138 Wo n''t you try to see things a little brighter?
15138Wonder what that is, just across the farthest tip of that maple? 15138 Would you mind telling me just why you laughed?"
15138Yes, she takes it seriously; why should n''t she?
15138Yes; why did I laugh?
15138Yes? 15138 Yes?"
15138You are a kind of private secretary to the whole family, then; but you work at the law at the same time?
15138You are going to the Willings to come home with her?
15138You are not dancing?
15138You are staying here some time?
15138You are sure of the color, are you? 15138 You believe in Democracy, but you doubt sometimes whether the Democratic Party is really the custodian of the true faith of Democracy-- is that it?"
15138You believe in me; you have some faith left in me?
15138You did n''t see to- day''s papers? 15138 You did n''t write her a note or telephone her,--you did n''t do either, did you?"
15138You do n''t know Mort? 15138 You do n''t mean that you''re tired of the lake?"
15138You got matters fixed satisfactorily at Montgomery-- no trouble about your appointment?
15138You have n''t known Aunt Sally a great while, I judge, Sylvia? 15138 You like him; you believe in him?"
15138You mean every girl has that chance before her? 15138 You mean he did n''t jump on Morton as he might have done-- didn''t make a grand stand play of it?"
15138You mean that a woman has got to learn how to make her jelly jell? 15138 You mentioned to her, did you, my offer to help?"
15138You prefer it here-- is that the idea?
15138You probably saw my tip to Thatcher in the''Courier''? 15138 You remember that when we were up there on the Kankakee, John Ware told a story one night-- a mighty good story about an experience he had once?"
15138You saw that? 15138 You say,"she began haltingly,"there''s a friend of mine that I could help if I knew anything about your letter?
15138You tackled Greek just for fun, did you?
15138You think I am as bad as that?
15138You think Mr. Bassett might have had it; you have good reason for believing that?
15138You think that would be more interesting than boarding- school? 15138 You think, then, that I am not beyond reclamation-- that I might be saved-- pulled out of the mire?"
15138You think, then--?
15138You think,he said,"that I should go back and make a new start by a different route?
15138You thought your mother was jealous? 15138 You''re a Harrison County boy, are you?
15138You''re in Mr. Fitch''s office, are you?
15138You''re not very complimentary, are you, Hallie? 15138 You''re speaking of Mr. Allen Thatcher, are you, Miss Farrell?"
15138You''re what?
15138You''ve seen my picture- gallery before, Andrew? 15138 Your grandfather is n''t teaching at Madison now, I believe?"
15138_ Who is Sylvia_?
15138*****"So the old boy''s skipped, has he?"
15138Ah, who was Sylvia?
15138Akins?"
15138And Allen seems to find Marian''s society agreeable, more so, I fancy, than Harwood does;--why not speculate along that line?
15138And have n''t I had the finest teacher in the world, all to myself?"
15138And that''s very different, is n''t it?"
15138And what have we to do with leaders?
15138And why should not the People-- the poor, meek, long- suffering People, the"pee- pul"of familiar derision-- sometimes win?
15138And you knew Tom Hendricks?
15138And you know in that account of him you wrote in the''Courier''that I told you I had read on the other side that first time we met?
15138Are Hallie and Marian in town, Sylvia?"
15138Are you acquainted in Montgomery?"
15138Are you crazy about theatres?"
15138Are you on?"
15138Are you quite sure that Marian has made up her mind to marry you; that she really wants to marry anybody?"
15138Atwill?
15138Bassett frowned and he asked quickly:--"How much?"
15138Bassett?"
15138Bassett?"
15138Bassett?"
15138But even now Bassett had asked nothing of him; why should he harden his heart against the man who had been his friend?
15138But how did the drive go?"
15138But that''s in favor of college, I think; do n''t you?"
15138But what were we talking about, Sylvia?
15138But where''s Morton Bassett in all this?
15138But, bless me, what''s the use?"
15138By the way, I did n''t tell you that I expect to make some?
15138By the way, Mr. Harwood, what are you doing out there?"
15138By the way, how much are you seeing of Atwill?"
15138By the way, you probably know that Marian is going to college?"
15138CHAPTER II SYLVIA GOES VISITING"How old did you say you were, Sylvia?"
15138CHAPTER XXVI APRIL VISTAS"Is it_ possible_?
15138Ca n''t you shoot a little ginger into it?"
15138Can you imagine me fresh from Richelieu''s cabinet, with a trail of dead horses on the road behind me?
15138Canst thou bring forth Mazzaroth in his season?
15138Could it be possible that Aunt Sally looked upon Marian as one of those colts for whom the trainer could do nothing?
15138Cute of Thatcher?
15138Daniel, have you brought the papers from Andrew''s safety box over here?"
15138Did he obstruct the will of the people?
15138Did n''t I have a note from you, Aunt Sally, ordering me to send her up?
15138Did n''t you hear his name read?
15138Did they give it to me?
15138Did you ever know of Aunt Sally''s taking up any other girl?
15138Did you say you were from the''Courier''?
15138Did you telephone her or write a note?
15138Discipline?
15138Do n''t you know that she''s hung herself around Aunt Sally''s neck, and that she''s filling Aunt Sally''s head with all manner of wild ideas?
15138Do you get the idea?"
15138Do you get the idea?"
15138Do you know Thatcher-- Edward G.?
15138Do you mind telling me what you''re up to in this White River Canneries business?
15138Does it make any difference about the girl?
15138Does it pay to be rich?"
15138Does the old gentleman''s death leave the girl alone?"
15138Ever see him?"
15138Fitch broke in on the young man''s thoughts to say:--"By the way, you know where I live?
15138Had he not thrown off the Bassett yoke and trampled the lord of Fraser County underfoot?
15138Had she, indeed, come into the world in dishonor, and had she in truth known that far hill country, with its evergreens and glistening snows?
15138Harwood?"
15138Harwood?"
15138Harwood?"
15138Has n''t papa told you?"
15138Has she ever traveled over the country with Marian or shown any such interest in her own flesh and blood?"
15138Hast thou named the stars without a gun?"
15138Have we come to that?"
15138Have you ever thought what kind of a school you''d like to go to?"
15138He does n''t quite square with your ideals, is that it?"
15138He remarked with the diplomatic unconcern that it was best to employ with her:--"Refused the offer, did you, Miss Farrell?"
15138He was Bassett''s man; every one knew that now; but why should he not be Bassett''s man?
15138He''s rather more than a shadow on the screen?"
15138Hear about the sky- scraper we''re building in Elwood?
15138How about that, Morton?"
15138How are the neighbors?"
15138How are things at the college, Doctor Kelton?"
15138How are things going with you?"
15138How could you?"
15138How did Sylvia come to your hands?"
15138How dismissed, Aunt Sally?"
15138How do you and Morton get on?"
15138How do you like your job?"
15138How do you manage to live?"
15138How does the proposition strike you?"
15138How many constellations do you know?"
15138How much did you ask him for?"
15138How much does a college course cost for a girl?"
15138How much space do you think it was worth?"
15138How soon will Aunt Sally be back?
15138Hush!--are we quite alone?"
15138I do n''t believe you want to join Thatcher; the question is, do you want to stick to me?"
15138I do n''t see why silver money is n''t just as good as any other kind, do you?"
15138I forgot to tell one of the boys in the office to get her acknowledgment, but you''re a notary, are n''t you?
15138I guess that will be all right, Judge?"
15138I hope the girl is n''t wholly destitute?"
15138I mean, of course, do n''t you want to borrow some?"
15138I often wondered why you did n''t give it to me; wo n''t you lend it to me now?
15138I ought never to have left her down there, but what could I do?
15138I suppose I could n''t help you-- I mean about dad?
15138I think you share that feeling?"
15138I want you to tell''em down at the''Courier''office-- what''s his name?
15138I wonder how he ever picked_ her_ out of the bunch?"
15138I wonder how that is?
15138I wonder what she''s going to do?"
15138I''m not a Hoosier; are you?"
15138I''ve never been to school--""How on earth do you escape?"
15138If it were necessary to use that,--if every other resource failed,--would you use it?"
15138If you''re going back to the Sage of Monticello, how do you think he would answer that?"
15138Is Dan locked up inside there with some lucrative client?"
15138Is Thatcher in town now?"
15138Is n''t it funny?
15138Is that all?"
15138Is that superstition, Thatcher?
15138Is that the way it strikes you?"
15138Is that what you think?"
15138Is that what''s happened?"
15138Is that your notion?"
15138Is this the nearest way to the station?"
15138It is a fine thing at twenty- seven to find the doors of opportunity flung wide-- and had he not crossed the threshold and passed within the portal?
15138It''s a dreary evening, is n''t it?"
15138It''s all right now, is it?"
15138It''s odd, is n''t it?
15138Know Matthew Arnold''s poems?
15138Know Ragsdale?
15138Let me see, what was your daughter''s name?"
15138Let me see, you do know the Bassetts, do n''t you?"
15138Let me see,--your wife was one of those Posey County Evanses?
15138Marian used to run off from Miss Waring''s to cheer me up, mostly when her lessons were bad, was n''t it, Marian?"
15138Mrs. Bassett says you''re going to college this fall-- to Wellesley, is it?
15138Mrs. Owen wo n''t be back for several weeks, I suppose?"
15138Must have read it in the newspapers?"
15138My wagon here?
15138Not those Burton Willings?
15138Notice how cute I look in those pantalets-- ever see those things before?
15138Now, is n''t that terribly muggy?
15138Party about over?"
15138Put you in, did they?
15138Remember Matthew Arnold''s lines on Goethe?
15138Sha n''t we talk of something else?"
15138She ai n''t getting married, is she?"
15138She had wagered a box of caramels with her roommate that it was Allen; how dare he deny it and cause her to lose a dollar of her allowance?
15138She really takes it seriously, does she?"
15138She''s smart enough, I guess?"
15138So money is tight, is it?
15138So the boys are finding their way up here, are they?
15138So this is your granddaughter?
15138So you did n''t like the farm, and found a way out?
15138So you think college is a good thing for girls-- for a girl like Sylvia?"
15138Speaking of print, how did he come to let go of the''Courier,''and who owns that sheet anyway?
15138Still, Bassett had not been the sole culprit in that affair, and was not this sort of financiering typical of the time?
15138Sylvia isn''t"--she hesitated for an instant--"from what you say, Sylvia is n''t much like her mother?"
15138Sylvia, where on earth is our little Daniel?
15138Sylvia, with brightening eyes and a smile on her lips, answered:--"Knowest thou the ordinances of heaven?
15138That''s a clear proposition, is n''t it?"
15138The situation here is as it has been?"
15138There must be no mistake about that,--do you understand?"
15138There''s a lot of brains in Bassett''s head; you''ve noticed it?"
15138There''s really some property to administer, is there?"
15138There''s the irony of fate for you.--Where had I got to?
15138They had n''t heard of Hancock, and when somebody said Blaine, the teacher of the infant class in our Sunday School said Blaine who?
15138This was a shock in itself; but what fantastic nonsense was she uttering now?
15138To get into college you have to know algebra, do n''t you?"
15138Ware?"
15138Was I to call him or anything like that?"
15138Was Thomas Jefferson engaged in manipulating legislatures?
15138Was n''t there really a good deal of nonsense about the pies that mother used to make-- I wonder?
15138Was not the Colonel handsome, courteous, genial, eloquent, worthy of all admiration?
15138Was that your editorial yesterday on municipal government?
15138Was the chauffeur''s funeral largely attended?"
15138Was this merely her imagination that had been stirred, or was it indeed a recollection?
15138Well, just how are you coming on in the law?"
15138Well, what am I going to do with him?"
15138What did she look like?"
15138What did you say his name was, Morton?"
15138What do you suppose it''s all leading up to?"
15138What do you think about it?"
15138What do you think about it?"
15138What does the adorable do besides midnight lobsters?
15138What have you to report about your errand to Montgomery?"
15138What is the pleasure of the convention?"
15138What is there that troubles you about it, Allen?"
15138What kind of an establishment did he keep?"
15138What was the matter with it?"
15138What were you about to say?"
15138What''s he paying you, Daniel?"
15138What''s new?"
15138What''s she leaving for?"
15138What''s that you have there?"
15138What''s the Willings''address?"
15138What''s the answer, my lads, to Uncle Ike''s philosophy?"
15138What''s the matter with ducks?"
15138What''s your name, if you do n''t mind?"
15138What?
15138What_ are_ you doing it for?"
15138When he had concluded Fitch asked:--"Why have n''t you gone ahead and closed the matter?
15138When the minister returned to his seat Sylvia asked as she put down the book:--"Who was Elizabeth?"
15138Where is Marian?"
15138Where is he, please?"
15138Where''s Marian?"
15138Which one do you mean?"
15138Who gave you the letter?"
15138Who put you on?"
15138Who was Elizabeth?
15138Who was the chap that the sword hung over by a hair-- Damocles?
15138Who''s moved out?"
15138Why did n''t your father come to the convention even if he was n''t a delegate?
15138Why does n''t papa leave Fraserville and come to the city?
15138Why not the presidency?
15138Why should n''t I have used Mr. Harwood-- assuming that I did use him?"
15138Why should you make the serious mistake of asking a good man to do a bad thing?"
15138Why was she glad she had known before it was too late?
15138Will you please tell me what you have to talk to that girl about that you must whisper out there in the dark?"
15138Wo n''t you please come in?"
15138Wo n''t you sit down?"
15138You are careful not to let your legal studies get mixed with the newspaper work?"
15138You believe in the Devil, Daniel?"
15138You did n''t mention those Jewesses that I had such a row to get in?
15138You do n''t see that; you do n''t believe that?"
15138You ever acted?
15138You go in the morning?
15138You have n''t forgotten that?"
15138You know Mrs. Owen?
15138You know he does n''t cut loose very often; and--""And he jumped on the train and went to Chicago to snatch Marian away from the Willings?
15138You know that about him?"
15138You know that?"
15138You know what he''s after?"
15138You know who she is?
15138You never heard anything before?"
15138You probably know that Mrs. Owen went to Fraserville for Christmas with the Bassetts?
15138You read that in what followed?"
15138You remember that good story Ware told us that night up in the house- boat?
15138You say the girl is here in the house?"
15138You see what I mean, Daniel?
15138You spoke of stock; what''s that in?"
15138You understand--?"
15138You understand?
15138You went at her father''s instance, did you?"
15138You were a fighting man?"
15138You were getting acquainted with Marian about that time?"
15138You will agree, wo n''t you-- please?"
15138You''d better put on your white dress,--you brought one, did n''t you?
15138You''ll attend to meeting her?
15138You''re an educated woman, Sylvia; what''s going to come of all this?"
15138You''ve heard of Old John Brown?
15138You''ve noticed that''Hoosier Folks at Home''column in the''Courier''?
15138Your grandpa in speaking of you always says my granddaughter, and that does n''t tell anything, does it?"
15138Your note?
15138Your work?
15138can work where she pleases, ca n''t she?"
15138canst thou set the dominion thereof in the earth?"
15138or guide Arcturus with his sons?''"
32121''Is that all, captain?'' 32121 ''Why so?
32121''Why,''said she,''do you follow me?'' 32121 And did he ever get back to his family again?"
32121And pray,continued the interrogator,"when the devil carries off the prince, what will become of the archbishop?"
32121And you do n''t like the law business?
32121Aye, but suppose they should come back?
32121By the way, Louis,added he,"how do you get to Samoa, anyhow?"
32121Can it be done at the present depth?
32121Distances are pretty wide up there, ai n''t they?
32121Have you confessed yourself, brother,said the Templar,"and have you heard mass this morning, that you peril your life so frankly?"
32121How long have you been here?
32121Is there not,he asked,"even a pathway to it wide enough for an ass laden with gold?"
32121The day is against England, my lord,said Cedric in a marked tone;"are you not tempted to take the lance?"
32121The man turned back, and saw a woman with an ugly face, and, being greatly displeased, returned, and said:''Why should you tell me a falsehood?''
32121The woman answered''Neither did you tell_ me_ the truth; for, if you were in love with_ me_, why did you look back for another woman?''
32121What was that for?
32121Where was he going?
32121Why, Mr. Breese,asked the young scribe,"did you come to leave Wilson?"
32121Will you marry me?
32121= Cowper, William=( 1731- 1800), English poet:"Feel?
32121= Napoleon III= of France( 1803- 1873):"Were you at Sedan?"
32121= Raleigh, Sir Walter=( 1552- 1618), English courtier and navigator:"Why dost thou not strike?
32121A body that holds a man like Murray Crane, of Massachusetts?
32121And shall I ever betray that trust?
32121But where was Duluth?
32121But-- well, I do n''t think''twas a great deal of harm, For what should the maiden have found but an arm When she felt For her belt At the back?
32121Can the state, acting through officials, make this apportionment better than it can be made by competition?
32121Did Mr. Steffens''s printing of the news about Philadelphia do any harm to the inhabitants of that town?
32121Did it, or did it not, act as a battle- cry which spurred the good citizens and the newspapers of that town to action?
32121Does it afford a stimulus to the higher development of the civil servants?
32121Goethe''s Gretchen, the little bourgeoise, without apparent attractiveness, yet inspiring his mighty genius-- what is this mystery of man and woman?
32121HOW MUCH SOCIALISM DO OUR PEOPLE WANT?
32121He left Brooklyn and went West to study-- what do you suppose?
32121He said:"Do you want a rehearsal?"
32121Her hair is almost gray; Why will she train that winter curl In such a springlike way?
32121How can she lay her glasses down, And say she reads as well, When, through a double convex lens, She just makes out to spell?
32121How can this be?
32121I wonder if I am growing wise?
32121If you were suddenly asked to name the oldest city in the world which is still in a flourishing condition, what would be your answer?
32121Is it likely that any set of men can distribute the work or fix the compensation to the satisfaction of all?
32121Is the feeling a survival of anger at a race which rejected Jesus?
32121Modern British men and women, what are they?
32121Mr. Carleton met me, and came at me with the rather surprising question:"Can you play Bigelow''s part?"
32121Mr. Miller looked at his watch and said:"Can you catch the one o''clock train?"
32121On another occasion, when coming out of the House of Lords after opening the session, he said to the lord chancellor:"Did I deliver the speech well?"
32121On the other side, Norman Hapgood says, in_ Collier''s_: Who is doing most to make railroad and beef trust facts and problems understood?
32121Or is it based on desperate hostility toward a race which can succeed in business where a Gentile fails?
32121The Senate of the United States-- is it a treasonable body?
32121The shades of night are falling fast, But joy illumes his brow, He shoots ahead-- his trouble past, Pray who can catch him now?
32121What does it signify?"
32121What secrets of His central suns, Companion of the peak and pine, What secrets of the spheres are thine?
32121What was there about George Sand, save perhaps pretty good eyes, to send such men as Alfred de Musset and Friedrich Chopin absolutely crazy?
32121When I brought my wages to my mother she said:"''Levi, do you owe any of this money to anybody?
32121When he got her on the line he asked:"Is dat Miss Johnsing?"
32121Who is it, please?"
32121Why are you away from your regiment?''
32121Why is Parliament Street like a compendium?
32121Why is a man murdering his mother in a garret a worthy person?
32121Why?
32121Will you, therefore, have the goodness to give the bearer a check( in my wife''s name) for the amount of his contributions for the last two months?
32121Yes?
32121cried the deaf man,"has the fish- bell rung?
32121said my grandsire, as he shook Some powder in his pan,"What could this lovely creature do Against a desperate man?"
23660Is it the left wrist? 23660 Photograph of the Soul"184 THE PROBLEMS OF PSYCHICAL RESEARCH CHAPTER I IS PSYCHICAL RESEARCH A SCIENCE?
23660''Why should I be frightened?''
23660Again I repeat, the question is not: Is it possible?
23660Again, might not telepathy be facilitated if we chose individuals of the same general temperament?
23660And how can a thought be photographed?
23660And if a motor current can exist and travel in this manner, why not a sensory current?
23660And if so, what are they?
23660And if they do, what is the cause of them?
23660And once grasped, is it not self- evident, and does not all else follow in consequence?
23660And what is its object?
23660And why should not many more messages be received from the hundreds and thousands who die yearly, and who are doubtless longing to communicate?
23660Are there any facts, amid all this superstition and ignorance, tending to show that genuine supernormal phenomena ever occurred at all?
23660Are there any facts, then, that would seem to indicate that the soul might be photographed?
23660Are these entirely electrical and chemical forces, the neural impulses being mere electrical currents?
23660Are these raps due to exteriorized vital force?
23660Are they astrals or elementals?
23660Are they crystallizations of thought?
23660Are they projections from the body of the medium?
23660Are they the hands of a spirit, or mere exteriorizations from the body of the medium-- materializations, only partially independent?
23660Are they the hands of"spirits,"inhabitants of the"Great Beyond"?
23660But as to the further question:"What is the nature of the intelligence lying behind and controlling these phenomena?"
23660But if so, how could such waves get through the skull to act upon the brain direct?
23660But in that case, why is not the person with the more sensitive retina affected by it?
23660But is it there?
23660But still the question obtrudes: How came these figures there?
23660But what of the energy?
23660But what of those other( relatively rare) cases in which supernormal information, unknown to the sitter, is obtained?
23660But, I shall be asked, is there any evidence for such a theory?
23660Can it be altered at will?
23660Can it be photographed?
23660Can so many cases of so remarkable a character be attributed to chance?
23660Can that too be dissected?
23660Can these raps be controlled at will, or directed and controlled when the subject is under hypnosis?
23660Can this energy be directed at will?
23660Could it be collected and analysed, as was suggested in the case of the cold breeze issuing from the scar on Eusapia Palladino''s forehead?
23660Could it not impress delicate physical instruments?
23660Could such a race have existed?
23660Could"life"act otherwise?
23660Do such facts exist which tell in favour of M. Bergson''s theory as against the other?
23660Does it affect the atmosphere?
23660Does one consciousness stretch out, as it were, and grasp the other passive mind?
23660Does the psychic constitution of the communicator affect the results-- and if so, how?
23660For if we try to picture to ourselves the process of telepathy as taking place in some manner other than physical, how are we to conceive such action?
23660Further, it may be urged, what evidence have we that consciousness can exist apart from brain- functioning?
23660H. C. CONTENTS CHAPTER PAGE Preface v I Is Psychical Research a Science?
23660Have I, then, any theory to offer as to the nature of this power of life which is essentially new to physiology and biology?
23660Have giants of this character existed?
23660Have lens and light really nothing to do with their formation?
23660Have or have not the various personalities who have communicated through her entranced organism proved their personal identity?
23660Have we any evidence that the soul may be photographed-- say, at the moment of death?
23660How account for the facts?
23660How are we to account for such facts-- short of invoking some sort of mental interaction, through other than the ordinary channels of sense?
23660How are you, old chap?''
23660How can such an organism be built up?
23660How can we perform intelligent operations without intelligence?
23660How can_ will_ plastically mould matter in space?
23660How do the"spirits"manipulate the nervous organism, and particularly the brain, of the medium?
23660How does it manage to reflect light that affects the retina of one person and not the retina of another?
23660How does our author attempt to account for such a fact as this?
23660How does the medium''s mind affect the content of the communications-- and to what extent?
23660How does the sensitive perceive these impressions?
23660How has this progress been possible?
23660How is such action to be explained?
23660How much more difficult would it be if we were suddenly transplanted in_ another_ person''s body, and had to manipulate_ that_?
23660How was this?
23660How well could I hold a plough in stony ground and discuss protection and free- trade?"
23660How, then, are we to diagnose this condition when once it has been reached; and, when once diagnosed, how is it to be treated?
23660If both agent and percipient were placed in a strong magnetic or high- tension electric field, might not this in some way influence communication?
23660If both subjects were hypnotized, and the agent were told to"will"certain figures, etc., might not the percipient receive them more easily?
23660If objects can retain certain"influences"within them, what is their nature, and how are they retained?
23660If so, does this energy exude from the nerve termini, or is it connected only with the etheric body or double?
23660If so, how did it manage to move the board?
23660If so, where are these experiments recorded?
23660If this be so, I ask: Why should we allow the body to become diseased at all and thus necessitate its cure by mental or any other means?
23660If_ You_--then where am I, and who?"
23660In this way alone could we account for the facts; but even so, are they explained?
23660Inasmuch as man is connected with these lower organisms by an unbroken line of descent, why should not these factors explain man''s actions also?
23660Indeed, he sometimes used to annoy me by his indifference to what was going on...."[32] Does this look like suggestion?
23660Indeed, if true, what could be more terrible?
23660Is Psychical Research a Science?
23660Is it a physical breeze, or is it purely"psychical"?
23660Is it affected by passing a high- tension current through the body of the subject?
23660Is it connected with the phenomena of exteriorization of sensitivity or motivity?
23660Is it connected with the"astral"or"etheric body"?
23660Is the aura a form of physical radiation?
23660Is the medium''s spirit entirely removed from the body during the process of communication?
23660Is there any similarity between the two cases?
23660Is there not a connection between these phenomena and haunted houses?
23660It is useless to say beforehand whether or not such and such things are or are not possible; the question is: Do they exist?
23660May there not be psychical causation?
23660Now what about the_ connecting links_?
23660Of course the spiritual body would have to be material enough to reflect light waves, but where is the evidence that it is not?
23660Of what are they constituted?
23660Of what can they consist?
23660On what framework, so to speak, is the body constructed?
23660Once more: is"psychometry"a fact?
23660Or are there other forms of energy which experimental physiology has not as yet brought to light?
23660Out of what materials is it constructed?
23660Pictorially they are vile, but how came they there?
23660Presuming, then, that the movement or impelling force is the same in each instance, the question is: What is this force?
23660Shakespeare''s adage:"Who can minister to a mind diseased?"
23660Should we not apply the same laws to the phenomena of the nervous system, and institute a similar mode of experiment for the nervous energies?
23660Such a view of the case certainly gives a far greater dignity and power to the will; but is it true?
23660The facts, then; are they true or are they not?
23660The old objection:"Why must these things always be done in the dark?"
23660The question is: First, Do the facts occur?
23660The question now arises: Can these fluidic hands, which are thus exteriorized, move of their own volition, or must they remain stationary?
23660The question now arises: is the fluidic hand two- dimensioned?
23660The question then arises: Do the figures prove the causation of vital energy by food?
23660The question therefore remains: What happens in this trance state to render such results possible?
23660The question thus arises:_ What_ did the writing?
23660This theory( might we not say, this fact?)
23660To whom do they belong?
23660Travel- wearied, hubbub- dizzy, Would the simple Arab fain Get to sleep,--"But then on waking, How,"quoth he,"amid so many Waking, know myself again?"
23660Under what conditions can we conceive this transference?
23660Under what mental, physical, and, possibly, spiritual conditions does telepathy operate?
23660Upon what cells or centres do they operate?
23660Was I in my right mind?
23660Was he connected with machinery in life?
23660Was it a fainting fit coming on, epilepsy, paralysis-- possibly even death?
23660Was it a spirit?
23660Was it night, or had I been in some strange sleep?
23660Was there something amiss in my own hearing, then, that I could distinguish no word amidst these deeply emphasized tones?
23660Was this hallucination, or some vision of the unseen, coming in so unexpected fashion?
23660Were a series of experiments conducted to show which of the onlookers possessed the most sensitive eyes?
23660What are the forms of nervous energy which are employed?
23660What are they?
23660What becomes of the aura after death; and what changes, if any, does it undergo at the moment of death?
23660What degree of density can be attained?
23660What is happening in the brain-- especially in the psycho- motor centres-- when we move an arm by means of an act of will?
23660What is its condition when the subject is asleep?
23660What is its source?
23660What is the best mental condition of the agent?
23660What is the bond between the hand of the medium which makes a gesture in the direction of the table, and the table itself?
23660What is the condition of the communicator''s mind while communicating?
23660What is the connection between so- called"thought- forms"and materialized phantoms?
23660What is the good of ignoring that state, when it exists?
23660What is the nature of the intelligence animating the materialized figure?
23660What is the nature of the physical impact upon the table?
23660What is the nature of the trance, and what peculiarity within it renders these results possible?
23660What is the nature of the vital drain upon the medium and the sitters?
23660What is the nature of these fluidic hands?
23660What is the power which manipulates this matter?
23660What is the source of the information so often given?
23660What of dreams?
23660What part of us can perform conscious operations without our being conscious of them?
23660What produces them?
23660What was it?
23660What would be the effect of hypnotic trance?
23660What, then, is understood by the subconscious mind?
23660When the trance has been induced, however, how does the"spirit"succeed in imparting information to the medium''s brain and organism?
23660Where is the analogy in the two cases?
23660Where is the evidence that those with the most sensitive retinae were not the very ones who perceived, most perfectly, the spirit- hand?
23660Who and what is this Stranger?
23660Who directs and guides them?
23660Who does the writing?
23660Why are these communications so rare?
23660Why should the trance state have this effect?
23660Why such trouble with proper names?
23660Why this symbolism?
23660Why, then, is there so much mystery about it;_ why_ is it so extraordinary?
23660Will it affect the galvanometer needle, or other delicate electrical or physical instruments?
23660Would it not be more simple and more philosophical so to regulate the life that such diseased states and such cures are unnecessary?
23660[ 14] Is the interpretation correct?
23660[ 17] The question has been asked, What becomes of the potential energy contained in the food, if it is not converted into bodily energy?
23660[ 2] Might not this account for the fact that trance or"spirit control"practically never occurs during the hours of sleep?
23660[ 39] Why were Sir William Crookes''experiments with the spring balance not discussed, by the way, in this connection?
23660_ How_ do they communicate?
23660_ Why_ should the peculiar condition involved be instrumental in producing such striking results?
23660and how?
23660and if so, where is it, and what is it doing?
23660and what is the structure of the matter itself?
23660but, Is it a fact?
23660of the percipient?
23660or between the"charging- up"of a table or planchette board before it proceeds to answer questions and behave in the manner it is often reported to do?
25889How will the Yankees feel and act when the day of trial comes? 25889 How, my fellow- citizens, shall I single to your grateful hearts his pre- eminent worth?
25889If I were to make peace with everybody,he said,"what should I do with my corsairs?
25889Is there anything in the prospect of the interior state of the country, to encourage us to aggravate the dangers of a war? 25889 It is very early in the season for shad,"said the president;"how much did you pay for it?"
25889Ought our country,he said,"to remain in such cases dependent on foreign supply, precarious, because liable to be interrupted?
25889The liberty of the whole earth,he said,"was depending on the issue of the contest; and was ever such a prize won with so little innocent blood?
25889To whom then is the nation to appeal, if the president decides against a treaty?
25889V. If they have the right, is it expedient to do either, and which? 25889 What is to be done in the case of the_ Little Sarah_[ the original name of the_ Petite Democrat_] now at Chester?"
25889When the fire is beginning to kindle, and your heart growing warm, propound these questions to it:''Who is this invader? 25889 Whether this adjustment was consistent with our treaty with France?
25889While we were fixed in silent grief, Mrs. Washington, who was sitting at the foot of the bed, asked with a firm and collected voice,''Is he gone?'' 25889 Who is there that has forgotten the vales of Brandywine, the fields of Germantown, or the plains of Monmouth?
25889Why do they complain that the West Indies are not laid open? 25889 Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation?
25889Will our government be able to temper and restrain the turbulence of such a crisis? 25889 ''What has been his walk of life? 25889 --''Well, but do n''t you perceive that it is like to be so?'' 25889 An end did I say? 25889 And for what is this done? 25889 And is this, in the judgment even of my opposers, to execute, to preserve the constitution, and the public order? 25889 And shall I dare speak what I hope? 25889 And what a compliment does he pay to our understandings, when he recommends measures, in either alternative, impracticable in their nature? 25889 Are not their interests inseparably connected with those of their constituents? 25889 Are the United States obliged by good faith to consider the treaties heretofore made with France as applying to the present situation of the parties? 25889 Are there not other points which equally concern the southern states? 25889 At that time the question, Where shall the seat of the federal government be permanently located? 25889 Below all is the significant question,_ Which is best_?"
25889But how are they to be promoted?
25889But let me ask the late champions of our rights, will our nation bear it?
25889But who are they to defend?
25889By the rotation of appointment, must they not mingle frequently with the mass of citizens?
25889Can he be a friend to the army?
25889Can he be a friend to this country?
25889Can it be expected, then, that the southern or eastern parts of the empire will succeed in all their measures?
25889Can it be, that Providence has not connected the permanent felicity of a Nation with its Virtue?
25889Can they not love these soldiers who, after their example, repelled the enemies of their country?
25889Can we wonder that what little discretion Genet possessed was completely overborne by this tide of seeming popularity?"
25889Can you, then, consent to be the only sufferers by the Revolution, and, retiring from the field, grow old in poverty, wretchedness, and contempt?
25889Could Congress exert them for the detriment of the public, without injuring themselves in an equal or greater proportion?
25889Could the president affix his official seal to an act before it should be complete?
25889Could the senate be considered to have ratified the treaty before the insertion of the new article?
25889Could you lend them instantaneous funds sufficient to shelter them from English persecution?''
25889Do gentlemen rely on the state of peace because both nations will be more disposed to keep it?
25889Does the war in which France is engaged appear to be offensive or defensive on her part?
25889For what ties, let me ask, should we have upon those people?
25889For who has before seen a disciplined army formed at once from such raw materials?
25889Genet was surprised, and inquired if the Congress were not the sovereign?
25889Has Britain this means of influence?
25889Have I a competent knowledge of him?
25889Have not the interests of the people of that county varied, or the inhabitants been taught to believe so?
25889Have not the interests of these always been at variance?
25889Have we not this instant heard it urged against our envoy, that he was not ardent enough in his hatred of Great Britain?
25889He hesitated only when the question, Who shall be appointed?
25889He significantly asked, Who will dissolve the government?
25889He then looked at me again, and said,''Do you understand me?''
25889How can he answer it to his country?
25889How is this disorder in the machine to be rectified?
25889How is this to be effected?
25889I ask further, when such attempts have been made, whether they have not failed of success?
25889If all tyrants unite against a free people, should not all free people unite against tyrants?
25889If all was granted, would not a treaty of amity with Great Britain still be obnoxious?
25889If it is, what should be the_ particular_ object of such a call?
25889If of a mixed and equivocal character, does the guaranty, in any event, apply to such a war?
25889If received, shall it be absolutely without qualifications; and if with qualifications, of what kind?
25889If self- interest is their governing principle, will it forsake them, or be restrained by such an event?
25889If they have an option, would it be a breach of neutrality to consider the treaties still in operation?
25889Immediately after his inauguration, he inquired of Morris:"What are we to do with this heavy debt?"
25889In such a republic, who will exclude them from the rights of citizens, and the fruits of their labors?
25889Institutions grow up supported by the public purse; and to what object can it be dedicated with greater propriety?"
25889Is he a gambler, a spendthrift, or drunkard?
25889Is he a man of good character?
25889Is it advantageous to a republic to have a connection with a monarch?
25889Is it going off the ground of matter of fact to say, the rejection of the appropriation proceeds upon the doctrine of a civil war of the departments?
25889Is it necessary or advisable to call together the two houses of Congress, with a view to the present posture of European affairs?
25889Is there a doubt whether a common government can embrace so large a sphere?
25889Is this a chimera?
25889It is taken, and the question is,''What, under the circumstances, ought to be done?''
25889It was served for breakfast in the best style, and set before the president, who asked the steward,"What kind of fish is this?"
25889Let her marry, and what is the consequence?
25889May they either renounce them, or hold them suspended till the government of France shall be_ established_?
25889Nay, farther, would there not be some apparent foundation for the two former charges?
25889Or does it lay any other restraint upon them more than would apply to the ships of war with France?
25889Our understandings have been addressed, it is true, and with ability and effect; but, I demand, has any corner of the heart been unexplored?
25889Our wives, our children, our farms, and other property which we leave behind us?
25889Pray, would not the word curiosity answer as well?
25889Rather, is he not an insidious foe?
25889Referring to a former letter, she said:--"Has this letter reached you?
25889Religion and Morality enjoin this conduct; and can it be, that good policy does not equally enjoin it?
25889Shall I be called upon to offer my proofs?
25889Shall I be pardoned for saying its aspect was very different from what we now witness?
25889Shall I speak of his warlike achievements, all springing from obedience to his country''s will-- all directed to his country''s good?
25889Shall a friend and an enemy be treated with equal favor?
25889Shall a minister from the republic of France be received?
25889Shall it contain a declaration of neutrality, or not?
25889Shall neither gratitude nor resentment constitute a feature of the American character?"
25889Shall we cherish the spirit of peace, or show the energies of war?
25889Shall we make our adversary afraid of our strength, or dispose him, by the measures of resentment and broken faith, to respect our rights?
25889Should the future regent of France send a minister to the United States, ought he to be received?
25889The contrary will inevitably introduce confusion and serious mischiefs-- and for what?
25889The question arose at the beginning, and frequently recurred,"What limit has the convention in revising the Articles of Confederation?
25889The question was, Shall the report be made orally or in writing?
25889Then arose spontaneously in every mind the question,"Who shall command our army in this crisis?"
25889Then they deemed war nearly inevitable, and would not this adjustment have been considered, at that day, as a happy escape from the calamity?
25889Then, independently of other considerations, what would Virginia, and such other states as might be inclined to join her, gain by a separation?
25889They asked, scornfully,"What law had been offended, and under what statute was the indictment supported?
25889To bring the object we seek nearer?
25889Was it necessary that it should arrive to excite your interest?
25889Was it not always believed that there are some points which peculiarly interest the eastern states?
25889Was the act complete and final, so as to make it unnecessary to refer it back to that body?
25889What is the effect of a guaranty such as that to be found in the treaty of alliance between the United States and France?
25889What must the world think of such conduct, and of the government of the United States in submitting to it?
25889What shall it contain?
25889What should I do with my soldiers?
25889What then is to be done?
25889What will be the old age of this government, if it is thus already decrepit?"
25889When a measure passes by the proper authorities, shall it be stopped by force?
25889When shall we again behold such a Congress and such a president?"
25889When the cabinet had convened, the president submitted the question,"What shall be done with the treaty?"
25889When, before, was affection like this exhibited on earth?
25889Where is the Tacitus who shall write the history of its glorious actions and its abominable excesses?
25889Where shall I begin in opening to your view a character throughout sublime?
25889Where, then, can a man be found that would answer this description better than yourself?
25889Who has forgotten the philippics of 1794?
25889Who that is a sincere friend to it, can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?
25889Who then would enter into such a plot?
25889Why do they lament that any restriction is stipulated on the commerce of the East Indies?
25889Why do they pretend, that if they reject this, and insist upon more, more will be accomplished?
25889Why quit our own to stand on foreign ground?
25889Why was he, to whom the observances of sacred things were ever primary duties through life, without their consolations in his last moments?''
25889Why?
25889Will he not feel some dread that a change of system will reverse the scene?
25889Will it add, it is my duty to ask, to the patience and quiet of our citizens, to see their rights abandoned?
25889Will it not be their wisdom to rely for the preservation of these advantages on the UNION by which they were procured?
25889Will they let the casuists quibble away the very words, and adulterate the generous spirit of the constitution?
25889Will they not henceforth be deaf to those advisers, if such there are, who would sever them from their brethren, and connect them with aliens?
25889Will you-- may we flatter ourselves that, in a crisis so awful and important, you will accept the command of all our armies?
25889Would not the shock of that evil produce another, and shake down the feeble and then unbraced structure of our government?
25889Would they not, most unquestionably, be the weaker party?"
25889a man of sense?''
25889and has it power to prepare an entirely new system of government?"
25889and how the clamors against it, from New Hampshire to Georgia, can be accounted for?
25889because injuries and insults still harder to endure, will be mutually offered?...
25889exclaimed the Count d''Artois, one of Louis''s bad advisers,"do you make a motion for the states- general?"
25889for all this to the rent of the house in its original state, for the two years that I am to hold it?
25889for what purpose of interest or ambition?
25889is it rendered impossible by its vices?
25889or of a mixed and equivocal character?
25889said he,''not even a sentinel?
25889what can this writer have in view by recommending such measures?
35122Are you here for murder, or counterfeiting, or horse- stealing?
35122Last December I was thrust into an uncomfortable and disagreeable jail-- for what?
35122Nay, more, shall he tear her limb from limb, and give her flesh to dogs?
35122Shall the fair fruits of the tree of liberty perish, the branches torn off, and the roots burned with fire?
35122Shall the son strike with rude hands the mother that bore him?
35122Shall these high hopes perish?
35122Shall this light of the Nations go out in everlasting darkness?
35122The Old Dominion, what shall I say of her?
35122Where would I see a man who is base enough to sympathise with secession before I would vote for him for office?
35122You may think I speak harshly; but, after what I have seen and experienced among the rebels, how can I feel differently?
34253What further have you done?
34253What was accomplished?
34253What was the necessity,he asked,"for putting into the platform other questions which have never been made the tests of Democratic loyalty before?
34253Why was it wise to assail the Supreme Court of your country? 34253 ''If you meant what you said and said what you meant,''will some one explain that provision? 34253 As he said himself, he addressed the business men of the country in the following language:How much would you pay for insurance upon your business?
34253But are these to be regarded with contumely and addressed in terms of contempt?
34253Does the term"person"include not only natural persons but also artificial persons, namely, corporations?
34253Have you not undertaken enough, my good friends, now without seeking to put in this platform these unnecessary, foolish, and ridiculous things?"
34253Shall we, their descendants, when we have grown to 70,000,000, declare that we are less independent than our forefathers?
34253The question was really,"which of the several regions shall receive the most protection?"
34253Upon the side of the idle holders of idle capital, or upon the side of the struggling masses?
34253What are life, liberty, and property?
34253What are privileges and immunities?
34253What is due process of law?
34253What is the equal protection of the law?
34253What necessity was there for reviving this question?
34253Whenever before in the history of this country has devotion to an income tax been made the test of Democratic loyalty?
34253Why revive the disputed question of the policy and constitutionality of an income tax?...
34253Why?
34253Why?
34253Will some one tell what that clause means in this platform?
33756How do we know that Poe''s Raven was a dissipated bird? 33756 What does that mean?"
33756All the girls wear newspaper bustles to school now and Anna''s rattled to- day and Emma Wheeler heard it and said,"What''s the news, Anna?"
33756Anna says,"How can I ever write it?
33756As we went in with the crowd, we heard some one say,"Are they going to have tableaux?
33756He is the head of the firm Adams''Express Co. Anna asked them if they ever heard the conundrum"What was Eve made for?"
33756He queried"Parlez- vous Français?"
33756I raised the window and asked him what was the matter?
33756I shook my head and asked him"Parlez- vous Anglaise?"
33756I ventured to tell him by signs that I would like my picture taken and he held up two sizes of pictures and asked me"Le cabinet, le vignette?"
33756It begins,"I love it, I love it, and who shall dare to chide me for loving that old arm chair?"
33756My piece was,"Why, Phoebe, are you come so soon?
33756One was:"Why is a lady''s hair like the latest news?
33756Pretty soon we heard our big brass door knocker being pounded fast and Grandfather said,"Who''s there?"
33756She did not know that Anna''s opening sentence was,"How are you, sir?
33756Sometime I am going to speak,"How does the water come down at Ladore?"
33756That reminds me of a conundrum we had in_ The Snow Bird:_ What does Queen Victoria take her pills in?
33756This is my composition which I wrote:"Which of the seasons is the pleasantest?
33756We met a good many people and Grandfather bowed to them and said,"How do you do, neighbor?"
33756What is to be the result?
33756When I went to school this morning Juliet Ripley asked,"Where do you think Anna Richards is now?
33756When shall we see their like again?
33756When we came into the room he said to Grandmother,"Do you know what the doctors say?"
33756Where are your berries, child?"
33756[ By the way, how do we know that the Romans wore waterfalls?
33756_ November 22._--I wrote a composition to- day, and the subject was,"Which of the Seasons Is the Pleasantest?"
33756_ Sunday._--Mr. Noah T. Clarke is superintendent of our Sunday School now, and this morning he asked,"What is prayer?"
33756and next may I ask,"What English or American orator has on a similar occasion surpassed this address on the battlefield of Gettysburg?"
34977What,he asked from the pulpit,"are the great men of the country but receptacles of wrath, fountains of woe and trouble?
34977When may we visit you again?
34977Can we wonder that New Netherland did not secure a particularly learned and distinguished type of pedagogue in the early days?
34977How must a man speak or write, or what must he hear, read, or sing?
34977Jacob Milborne asks:''Is the fort open to receive me and my men?''
34977Or when must he laugh, so as to be secure from being taken up as a libeller?
34977Was East Jersey a{ 146} part of New York, or was it an independent province?
34977When the very crabs thus beckoned to empire, how could the Netherlander fail to respond to their invitation?
34977Who knew what Catholic designs might lurk behind this significant act?
34977_ Loockermans_:"For whom should I?"
35009''Can you build this bridge?'' 35009 ''Have you applied to General Halleck?''
35009''How is that?'' 35009 ''John,''said he,''did n''t you promise to let me do all the swearing of the regiment?''
35009''Madam, have you been to see the Post Surgeon at Alexandria about this matter?'' 35009 ''What church, madam?''
35009Did you ever see anything like it?
35009Giving her a very close and scrutinizing look, he said:"''Well, madam, what can I do for you?''
35009How much will you give to assist in building a hospital?"
35009It is contagious, I believe?"
35009One day as the lawyers were riding their horses along the road, some one said:"Where is Abe?"
35009The Judge overtook me and said:"''Hello, Lincoln, going to the court house?
35009The father said:"Do n''t you see that squirrel up there in the tree?"
33755And the Briton himself-- what became of him?
33755But how is one to describe the confused play of forces in a cyclone which has centres within centres?
33755But it could not be much, he thought, as he had all the nobles, and how could there be a rising{ 262} without nobles?
33755Could anything else have been expected?
33755Dismayed at the swiftness of the movement, England hesitated; but how could she{ 235} deny her colony the right of self- defence?
33755Had this people the right, or had they not the right to plant a State bearing a foreign flag, which should effectually bar the path to the north?
33755If engines could be made to plough through the water, why might they not also be made to walk the earth?
33755If such was the condition of the honest{ 153} working poor, what was that of the criminal?
33755Is England richer or poorer for this outpouring of blood and treasure?
33755Is it a wonder that there was always disorder and violence from a chronic tithe- war in Ireland, which it is said has cost a million of lives?
33755Is it strange that Sydney Smith said no abuse as great could be found in Timbuctoo?
33755Is it strange that the plantation in Massachusetts had fresh recruits?
33755Is not every type of English manhood explained by such an inheritance?
33755Or did the splendid heroism of Wallace, and the spirit it evoked in the people, awaken a slumbering patriotism in his own romantic soul?
33755Should the English Government allow a people fiercely antagonistic to itself to build up an unfriendly State on its border?
33755Then Banquo said,''How is it ye gaif to my companyeon not onlie landis and gret rentis, bot Kingdomes, and gevis me nocht?''
33755Was it not from their impious hands, that this new knowledge of the physical universe had been received?
33755Was it through a complicated struggle of forces, in which ambition played the greatest part?
33755Was it worth seven{ 271} years of such struggle to emancipate the land from a foreign tyranny, only to have it fall into a degrading domestic one?
33755Was the man mad?
33755Was there a man dismay''d?
33755What are we to conclude?
33755What did death matter, in form however terrible, to one who was to be so remembered nearly five centuries later by Scotland''s greatest bard?
33755What sort of a race were they?
33755What would be the need of a Parliament, if he did not require money?
33755Whether it was premeditated, or in the heat of passion, who could say?
33755Who was the Lady Cæsair, who fled with her household to Ireland from the coming deluge after being refused shelter by Noah?
33755With king so false, and with justice so polluted at its fountain, what hope was there for the people but in Revolution?
33755and who Nemehd, the next colonist from the East, who heads the royal procession of one hundred and eighteen kings?
35566Can our authorities not let well enough alone?
35566Can our engravers do nothing better than that?
35566ISSUE WITHOUT GRILLE( 1873?)
2179''What is it, then?'' 2179 A what?"
2179Ah, worruk, is it? 2179 Ai n''t he just lovely?"
2179All?
2179And Fisher has, I suppose?
2179And Sam drove the horses here for a bite?
2179And have HER read the melancholy details, and know that you were faithful and she was not?
2179And have a coroner''s inquest, and advertisements and all the facts in the papers?
2179And how are affairs at the National Capital, sir?
2179And so ye''ve had a baby left ye to keep you company? 2179 And them''s your relations?"
2179And what did YOU say?
2179And you did n''t make fun of me?
2179And you still love her?
2179And you talked with her about the baggage- checks?
2179And you will still be mother to the child?
2179And you''re not coming back?
2179And yourself, old fellow?
2179Are they worth fifteen?
2179Are you fond uv blackberries, Captain?
2179But YOU-- how will YOU return?
2179But did you hear him? 2179 But how came you here?"
2179But how is his general health?
2179But what do you intend to do here?
2179But what''s to become of me?
2179But what''s to become of the baby?
2179But where did you get the money?
2179But where is Pirate Jim?
2179But who are you, who speak thus?
2179But why?
2179By the way,said the secretary,"I think I have a letter here from somebody in your district asking an appointment, and referring to you?
2179Can he walk?
2179Could I serve him in any way?
2179Did n''t I say the Rooshin captain was a small, a very small man? 2179 Did ye kalkilate to walk six miles and back?"
2179Did you ever read that Portuguese Guide- book?
2179Did you ever see''em wash in the fountain in the square?
2179Do n''t ye see his memory''s dead, and lying there in the coffin with Mammy?
2179Do you forgive me, Bessy?
2179Do you know what position he has?
2179Do you mean to continue this folly all your life?
2179Do you think we wo n''t take good care of it?
2179Does he look like an insurance agent? 2179 Does his soul still yearn for the blood of the pale- faced teachers?
2179Eliza J. Sniffen,gasped Jenkins,"aged fourteen, red- haired, with a slight tendency to strabismus?"
2179Fire on him?
2179Got any tobacco?
2179HER child?
2179Had Gashwiler procured the appointment?
2179Have you any trade?
2179How could she have been so cruel, knowing his condition? 2179 How long?"
2179I beg your pardon?
2179I need not say that these were the days when we had not lost our carrying trade, when American bottoms--"Que est ce,''bot toom''?
2179I suppose I''d better take''em home, sir?
2179Is he a commissioner? 2179 Is this all you have come to say?"
2179It ai n''t thet ghost ag''in?
2179Last July?
2179May I ask what right you have to question me? 2179 Mebbee, young man,"he began gravely,"ye do n''t like Mammy Downey''s pies?"
2179Never?
2179Nor see it?
2179Oh, why? 2179 On YOUR invitation?"
2179On what occasion, and why?
2179Remus, Remus,where had I heard that name before?
2179Shine your boots, sir?
2179Stand up for fifteen minutes?
2179The mortgage was given as security for a note?
2179The wretch does not mean to leave us here alone?
2179Then I am to understand that this application is withdrawn?
2179Then he did save her?
2179Then it''s a go?
2179Then they were only play- actors, Joe Hall?
2179Then this is your final answer?
2179Trade, is it? 2179 WHO WAS MY QUIET FRIEND?"
2179Was Barlow as large as me?
2179Was it the murdered man''s ghost, Doctor?
2179Was n''t the captain''s clothes big for him?
2179Was there ever such egregious folly?
2179Well, I reckon one trail''s as good as another, and what hev ye got to say about it?
2179Well, where is the poor fellow now?
2179Well,began the elder lady in a high key,"after all this worry and trouble you have given us, James, have n''t you anything to say?
2179Whar is it to get it?
2179Whar?
2179What ess a''liner''?
2179What place is this?
2179What''s the matter?
2179What''s the time?
2179What?
2179Where''s Maria?
2179Where? 2179 Where?"
2179Who is your deliciously cool friend?
2179Who was the pale face?
2179Who?
2179Why did you think I was--''looney''?
2179Why is my brother''s heart sore against the book- peddler?
2179Why is the Great Chief sad?
2179Why?
2179Wot ghost?
2179Yes, why?
2179You did? 2179 You do n''t care to feel it?"
2179You have met her, then?
2179You have some papers, I suppose?
2179You think her coarse and illiterate?
2179You''ll wait for us, driver?
2179Your final answer?
2179''Are we not near Cave City?''
2179''Is n''t this what they call the haunted house?''
2179''The money?''
2179Ah, you young dogs, did n''t I hear about your scattering half- dollars on the stage the other night when that Eyetalian Papist was singin''?
2179Am I keeping you from your friends?
2179An ye''ll wait till to- morror?"
2179And he says,''You wo n''t blow on me?''
2179And how are the mills running, gin''rally, over at the Bar?"
2179And is n''t he perfectly lovely?
2179And what fer?
2179And who is he?"
2179And-- and-- do you remember the''Destruction of Sennacherib?''
2179As fur the colleens beyint in the kitchen, sure is n''t it betther they was helping your honor here than colloguing with themselves inside?"
2179At last a prominent banker sitting next to me turned to me with the awful question:"Why do n''t your friend try to realize on his life insurance?"
2179Bessy( yielding)--"As my teacher?"
2179Bessy--"And you''ll promise never to speak of it again?"
2179But Miss Bessy could not forego a certain feminine curiosity, and asked,--"Did they come with Sam Baker''s team?"
2179But look yar, do you ever use a doctor?"
2179But perhaps you prefer green, dear?"
2179But surely you do not object to my cousin Maria, the young lady?"
2179But the other day, when Cy Dunham died-- you disremember Cy Dunham?"
2179But why are you here?"
2179Come here, there; lie down, will you?"
2179Could the youth of America, conscious of their power and a literature of their own, tamely submit to this tyranny?
2179DRIFT FROM TWO SHORES by BRET HARTE CONTENTS THE MAN ON THE BEACH TWO SAINTS OF THE FOOT- HILLS"JINNY"ROGER CATRON''S FRIEND"WHO WAS MY QUIET FRIEND?"
2179Did not the scalping of two professors of geology in the Yale exploring party satisfy his warrior''s heart yesterday?
2179Did ye dream that all the while I was talkin''she was a meditatin''that?"
2179Did ye hear of the accident that happened to her?"
2179Did you ever see his wife?"
2179Did you see his livid face as he rose up at the name of blood?
2179Do I make myself clear?"
2179Do n''t ye, Jinny?
2179Do n''t you see?
2179Do ye folly me?"
2179Do you know-- have you the least idea what you are doing?
2179Do you take the''New York Sun''?"
2179Do you withdraw it?"
2179Down town?
2179Downey?
2179Eh, eh, you''re teachin''the old folks new tricks, are ye?
2179Eh?
2179Eh?
2179Eh?
2179Eh?
2179Finally, with his hand on the door- lock, he turned to Bessy and said,--"May I ask you an odd question, Miss Robinson?"
2179From which?"
2179Getting on to sundown, ai n''t it?
2179Had she his address?
2179Had they perished in the flames who shall say?
2179Hank-- Hank-- Fisher?"
2179Has he forgotten that Hayden and Clarence King are still to follow?
2179He looked at the ironical Dashboard with grave earnestness, and then said quietly:--"Then I reckon you would n''t mind showin''me in thar?"
2179He returned his watch to his pocket, toyed playfully with the chain, and remarked,"Kinder makes a man look fash''nable and wealthy, do n''t it?"
2179Heavens and earth!--do you know who I am?"
2179Hello-- wher yer goin''?"
2179Hey, boys?"
2179His right hand neighbor( curtly):"The fellah who wrote the Encyclopaedia and edits''The Sun''?
2179How are ye, Joe?
2179How would you like your old mother to make pies on grub wages?
2179How''s that?"
2179How''s things your way?"
2179I put it to you ez far- minded men,--ez free and easy men,--ez political economists,--ez this the kind of men to impoverish a county?"
2179I puts it to you ez men,--far- minded men,--ef this man was a pauper and debtor?
2179I saw him repeatedly beat and kick sick men--""Did you ever read Dana''s''Two Years before the Mast''?"
2179I trust you neither use whisky, tobacco, nor are ever profane?"
2179I was naturally anxious, you can readily comprehend, to see--""Certainly,""Of course,""Why should n''t you?"
2179I''m boring you-- am I not?"
2179If they should track me here?"
2179Is this an hour to give to wine and wassail?
2179It has been often asked by the idly curious, Why Avenger, and of what?
2179Maybe yer honor might know of a kill hereabout?"
2179Mebbe ye''ve heard your husband-- that is, your husband ez waz, Roger Catron-- speak o''me?"
2179Might you be telling me her name?"
2179Nevertheless he ventured to falter out:--"Has anything been done yet?"
2179Nevertheless, I ran away and went to sea--""To see-- what?"
2179No?
2179No?
2179No?
2179North( in the genuine simplicity of a refined nature)--"But how?"
2179North( white but hot)--"Why?"
2179Not clearly understanding her, he in turn asked,"Why?"
2179Now, what''s become of thet other$ 250?"
2179Of course you''ve read him?
2179Perhaps I might have seen an extract copied from the"Remus Sentinel"in the"Christian Recorder"of May 7, 1875?
2179Queer, ai n''t it?
2179Queer, was n''t it?
2179Say?"
2179See here, do n''t you think you might make a story out of it?"
2179Shall his own Mushymush bring him a botanist to- morrow?
2179So, if this yer watch is worth that, it''s about a square game, ai n''t it?"
2179The One Man( struck with a bright and aggressive thought):"Look yer, did ye ever notiss how, generally speakin'', onhandsome a corpse is?"
2179The Other Man( detaching himself languidly from the window):"Cy Dunham?"
2179The Other Man( feeling it was incumbent upon him to say something):"But why was he poplar ez an ondertaker?"
2179The Other Man( lazily recurring to the fading topic):"Well, what made him onpoplar?"
2179The Other Man( quietly):"How manniperlating?"
2179The Other Man:"But how did he lose his poplarity?"
2179The Patagonian( alive for information):"What ess this Dana, eh?"
2179The food and small change had disappeared, but the garments for the consumptive wife, where were they?
2179The various questions then agitating Remus,--"Is the doctrine of immortality consistent with an agricultural life?"
2179Then would he see the baby?
2179Then, what does that yellow dog do?
2179There was an awful excitement,--you''ve heard about it, may be?"
2179Was Sylvester intoxicated, or had the mysterious stranger mixed the"insane verb"with the family pottage?
2179Was it in a dream, or in one of those dim reveries of some previous existence to which the spirit of mankind is subject?
2179Was it the overflow of the backed- up waters of the river?
2179Was there aught to fly to?
2179Well-- what do you say?"
2179What am I to call you?"
2179What are we doing here in this blanked old mausoleum of Calaveras County, if it is n''t to find out something about''em, eh?"
2179What are you afraid of?
2179What are you staring at?"
2179What business did your friend follow in California?"
2179What could I oppose to this man''s quiet assurance?
2179What could he do to help her?
2179What if SHE were exposed to the fury of such a night as this?
2179What is it the Latin philosopher says?
2179What might not an intelligent lawyer make of it?
2179What name is it that blanches with terror the cheeks of the Patagonian navy?
2179What time is it?
2179What was she doing here, and where was Expectant?
2179What would the correct Sylvester say to me?
2179What''s your opinion, Judge, as a fair- minded legislator?"
2179When our captain blew out the brains of our quartermaster, one day--""That reminds me-- DID you read of that Georgia murder?"
2179Where did you leave off?
2179Which of his books do you like best?"
2179Which way are you going?
2179Who but the Pirate Prodigy-- the relentless Boy Scourer of Patagonian seas?
2179Who is it?
2179Who?
2179Why ca n''t you step into my carriage, and I''ll give you a lift, and we''ll talk on the way down?
2179Why did the Boy Chief turn pale, and clutch at the tent- pole for support?
2179Why do n''t you speak?
2179Why not talk to him?
2179Why, it''s nearly half- past two; how in h- ll shall we get through?
2179Why, then, this cowardly delay?"
2179Why, where should a ghost be?
2179With such bandogs to lie in wait for trespassers, should he not be grateful?
2179Without a dime novel or a''Young America,''how am I to keep up this Injin business?"
2179Ye know, I reckon, he was always sorter jealous of that thar shark--""May I venture to ask what your business is with me?"
2179Ye remember them slugs?"
2179You do n''t?
2179You''re that looney sort a''chap that lives alone over on the spit yonder, ai n''t ye?"
2179and I gets excited and peeps in, and may I be teetotally durned ef I did n''t see--""What?"
2179and,"Are round dances morally wrong?"
2179dead?"
2179eh?"
2179in three different keys, Roger Catron''s voice broke suddenly and sharply from his enwrappings:--"Dry up, you d-- d old fool, will you?"
2179look at him, will ye?
2179said the gentle May, with just the slightest trace of defiance in her sweet voice;"witty, my dear?
2179screamed Mrs. North;"is it not enough?"
2179that dried cuttle- fish, with nothing livin''about her but her eyes?
2179that was''way long in''33, was n''t it?
2179trust that poor critter to you?
2179was not that a gun-- No?
2179what HAVE you done with your shoes?"
2179what egregious folly you are committing?
2179what everybody is saying?
2179what is there about some women to make men love them so?"
2179what''s this?"
2179where was I?
2179why, do n''t you see that his heart is just breaking with pathos?
2179will you hear me?"
2179you get out here?
32514''How could you have seen me?'' 32514 ''Ride off from you?''
32514''You mean for me to come up there?'' 32514 And then?"
32514At worst it''s nothing more than a terrifying vision----"Think so?
32514D''ye remember Rowdy, my airedale terrier?
32514Did I understand correctly,_ Mademoiselle_? 32514 Did Nella hear me?"
32514Did no one ever tell you that the copperhead and moccasin are of close kind, my friend? 32514 Doctor Trowbridge, wo n''t you help me?"
32514How, in heaven''s name?
32514I ca n''t see the connection between----"Night and breaking dawn, perhaps?
32514Is she not beautiful?
32514Know we''ve always been crazy about each other, too; in grammar school, high school and college, do n''t you?
32514Nay, love, sweet love, art thou a worshipper and I a saint that thou should kneel to me?
32514Pledged to the dead? 32514 See, my lips are famishing for thine, and wilt thou waste thy kisses on my hands and feet and garment?
32514The so mysterious serpent came again, one may assume?
32514Then Julie''s really gone? 32514 U''m?"
32514What do you advise?
32514What was it she had said? 32514 What was that drink you gave Ned just before he left us?"
32514Where?
32514Why did n''t this snake- woman sting him in the hotel, or----"Do you recall what Julie said when first the snake appeared?
32514You are informing me,_ mon vieux_?
32514You assisted at both our débuts, I''ve been told; you''ve known Ned and me since we were a second old apiece, have n''t you?
32514You mean Ned Minton?
32514You mean she ran away?
32514You recognize the writing?
32514You see?
32514You wo n''t think me forward or unmaidenly?
32514_ Certainement_, why not?
32514_ Eh_, what is it you say?
32514''A masquerade?''
32514''How can you ask?''
32514''How could you doubt it?''
32514''Look at me, am I not veritably_ élégante_?''
32514''Silly one,''she chided,''did you think your Julie was unfaithful?''
32514''Where were you all this time?''
32514''Where were you?''
32514''You mean it?''
32514''You say your dog died suddenly-- in the house?''
32514*****"What did you stop behind to do?"
32514And the letter, may one read it?"
32514Did it not work marvelously?"
32514Do not you bring release for me, my Édouard?
32514Do not you like it; do you not love me, Édouard?''
32514Go back to a corpse, take her in my arms-- kiss her?"
32514Have not you heard some ophiologists maintain the moccasin is but a dark variety of copperhead?"
32514I''m going home tomorrow, and----''"''But you will come again?
32514If it''s an urgent case ye have there''s lots o''good young docthors in th''neighborhood, but Docthor Trowbridge----""Is he here?"
32514If this never- to- be- sufficiently- anathematized serpent which comes and goes like the_ boîte à surprise_--the how do you call him?
32514Is she all right?"
32514Lord, I thought I''d killed him when I saw the blood-- you do think he''ll come through all right, do n''t you, Doctor?"
32514O, coeur de mon coeur, c''est véritablement toi?_ Thou hast come willingly, unasked,_ petit amant_?"
32514O, coeur de mon coeur, c''est véritablement toi?_ Thou hast come willingly, unasked,_ petit amant_?"
32514Surely you will come again?''
32514That is better,_ n''est- ce- pas_?"
32514To Ned:"Have you seen this snake again since coming North?"
32514When a lad is set on being stubborn----""Will you go to work on him if I can get him here?"
32514Where had she come from?
32514Where had the snake gone?
32514Why did the moonlight seem to fade and flicker like a dying lamp?
32514You follow?
32514You recall it read,''_ Ici repose malheureusement_--here lies unhappily Julie d''Ayen''?
32514Your_ amoureux_--how do you say him?--sweetheart?--has shown a disposition toward unfaithfulness, yet you accuse him of romanticism?"
32514_ Comment cela?_"***** Ned raised himself unsteadily and balanced on the table edge.
32514_ Voilà, c''est très simple, n''est- ce- pas?_""You mean to say you understand all this?"
32514_ Voilà, c''est très simple, n''est- ce- pas?_""You mean to say you understand all this?"
3335How did it happen, Ben?
3335Well, but suppose he had n''t caught him?
3335What did you do to the gentleman, Ben?
3335What statesman in all history has done anything calling for so wide a view and for a purpose more lofty?
3335Where is''government by injunction''gone to? 3335 Why, Colonel, ca n''t I keep him for myself?"
3335You know Bixby, do n''t you? 3335 And will he bring me back a bear?
3335Did you ever do anything to deserve this?"
3335Does Mr. Wilson controvert either of these statements?
3335Does Mr. Wilson deny this?
3335Does Mr. Wilson deny this?
3335Does Mr. Wilson expect us to use algebraic signs?
3335Does Mr. Wilson pretend that Mr. Van Hise and Mr. Croly got their ideas from the Steel Corporation?
3335Exactly of what else could a platform consist?
3335Finally I said:"Now, Ben, how did you lose that half of your ear?"
3335Had he killed anybody?
3335Had he played faro?
3335Half an hour later somebody asked him,"Where''s father?"
3335Has not Mr. Roosevelt absorbed and sequestered every vestige of the Kansas City platform that had a shred of practical value?
3335Have I any pleasure at all that the wicked should die?
3335Have n''t you experienced it?
3335He responded,"You have made up your mind?"
3335He then said,"You know it means your ruin?"
3335How can I urge my daughters now to go and raise large families?
3335How did you do it?"
3335I answered,"So you''re fond of De Quincey, Senator?"
3335I pardoned him"; to which he responded,"I beg your pardon; you did what?"
3335I said,"What prisoner?"
3335If he does, then where else will he assert that we speak of monopoly as he says we do?
3335Is he ignorant of the fact that the Socialist party has long been against unlimited competition?
3335Now, tell me, how was it my fault?
3335One day I answered him,"The trouble with Rodney is that he misestimates his relations to cosmos"; to which he responded,"Cosmos-- Cosmos?
3335Said I,"Mr. Costigan, you seem to have a great deal of knowledge about this; how did it happen?"
3335To the question,"Are the conditions surrounding hired labor on the farm in your neighborhood satisfactory to the hired men?"
3335To the question,"Are the renters of farms in your neighborhood making a satisfactory living?"
3335To the question,"Are the sanitary conditions on the farms in your neighborhood satisfactory?"
3335To the question,"Is the supply of farm labor in your neighborhood satisfactory?"
3335To which the chairman replied:"Interruption?
3335Waiving the latter point, I said:"How did it happen?
3335What could he have accomplished compared with what Mr. Roosevelt has accomplished?
3335Why should people wonder that Mr. Bryan clings to silver?
3335Will Mr. Wilson deny this, or question it in any way?
3335Will you have this letter read by the commanding officer of each torpedo boat to his officers and crew?
3335saith the Lord God; and not that he should return from his ways and live?"
34702( 1605?).
34702( Irenaeus?).
347021175?)
3470218, and( Lactantius?)
3470235,"say ye not that there is yet a period of four months and harvest cometh?
3470235: which is to be taken literally, the"four months to harvest"( about January), or the"fields white to harvest"( about May)?
34702As to the personal identity of this John-- is he himself"the beloved disciple"?
34702At the other extreme Sir W. M. Ramsay(_ Was Christ Born at Bethlehem?_, 1898, pp.
34702Can the writer of the Apocalypse be the same as the writer of the Gospel and Epistles?
34702His work on the physiology of music(_ Wer ist musikalisch?_) was published after his death.
34702How could these various cases be met at once most simply and most effectually?
34702How far is the Gospel intended to be, and how far is it, in the strict sense historical?
34702How was this interval to be filled?
34702Is he its author or only the authority behind it?
34702Is he the apostle, the son of Zebedee or another?
34702Is their suffering consistent with the justice of God?
34702Is this figure correct?
34702Job is a righteous man, overwhelmed with undeserved misfortune; and thus the question is raised, Why do the righteous suffer?
34702Mace._--Fairness forbids us to omit the name of William( or Daniel?)
34702Then after fourteen years( from his conversion?
34702What has been the general effect of these new facts on traditional theories or critical conclusions?
34702What is the exact relation of John of Ephesus to the Gospel?
34702William Roper( 1496- 1578) wrote a touching life of his father- in- law, Sir Thomas More, and George Cavendish( 1500- 1561?
34702_ The Date of the Exodus._--Is it possible to determine this, even approximately, upon the basis of external data?
34702_ ka_, what?
34702_ raura_, Your Honour;_ i_, this;_ o_, that, he;_ je_, who;_ se_, he;_ ke_, who?
34702harrisi_ of the Galapagos, survive its quite recent discovery?
34702or from his last visit?)
20561''Mother wo n''t like it?'' 20561 And then I cried, and begged them to take me back to mamma; and Bridget held up a great stick, and said,''Do you see that?''
20561Came from the poor- house, did n''t you?
20561Cicely Hunt?
20561Combs? 20561 Corset lacings?"
20561Did n''t I tell your ladyship so?
20561Do n''t get a bench-- will you? 20561 Ear- rings?"
20561From the city, sure,said she;"would your leddyship give me a saxpence?"
20561How far have you come, to- day?
20561I like that, Miss Letty, or Hetty, or whatever you call yourself; but what''s that string round your neck for?--what''s on the end of it, hey?
20561I thought so,said I;"and now, supposing you had it, what would you do with it, my darling?"
20561I told her she''d catch it, mother, when you came down,said John;"see if she dare deny it?"
20561Is she gone a great_ way_ off? 20561 Is that your baby?"
20561Is that your mother?
20561Is your crust heavy?
20561Is your own mother alive?
20561Letty,said Mrs. Finley, seizing her by the shoulders and giving her a shake,"did you break that breakfast set?"
20561M- a-''a- m--mocked Mrs. Finley,"where''s your ears, child?
20561Ma''am?
20561Move your omnibus,--"Get out of the way, there,"--"Go ahead"--"What do you block up the street, for?"
20561Never mind the barrel,said I;"do you want this?
20561Now, where do you live, little pigeons?--got far to go?--toes all out your shoes here in January? 20561 Paste blacking?"
20561Pleasant sight, is it not?
20561See what_ I''ve_ done?
20561Sell it?
20561Well, suppose we hide behind those coats, and just as she comes along, both of us make a spring at her?--won''t that be fun?
20561Well, where''s the shop?
20561What are you thinking about, dear?
20561What do you do with the buttermilk?
20561What has she done? 20561 What is the matter, Bridget?"
20561What now?
20561What''s all this?
20561What,_ steal_?
20561When, Cicely?
20561Where''s my box?
20561Where, mother-- where shall I find him?
20561Who is Uncle Jolly?
20561Why did you hunt in that old barrel?
20561Will you keep hold of my hand all the time when it comes night? 20561 Wo n''t_ you_ take me to see my mamma,_ quick_?"
20561Would it, Jemmy? 20561 You shall?"
20561You wo n''t be naughty any more?
20561_ Did?_ Sakes alive! 20561 _ Nothing_ to be done?"
20561_ That_ your home? 20561 ''How do_ I_ know whether you have got any dinner or not?'' 20561 ''spose that bear had ate him up?
20561--"What''s to pay?"
20561--"Who''s killed?"
20561--giving her some old dresses,"and this loaf of bread, and this bit of money for your mother?"
20561--just as if Mr."They Say"did n''t see that they were perfectly delighted with him?
20561A little backwoods boy afraid?
20561After school was over he said to her,"Do you sing, Cicely?"
20561Ah, little Hans, who is it who saith,"Leave thy fatherless children with me; I will preserve them alive?"
20561And then the angry flush mounts to her temples, and she says,"Is there_ no law_ to punish these wicked rumsellers?"
20561And what was to become of little, innocent Rosa?
20561Answer me_ that_, Miss Hetty Letty?"
20561Are you not glad that there are good, true, kind hearts left in the world, who remember that Jesus said,"_ Feed my lambs_"?
20561Bless your blue eyes, how many stories high do you suppose I am?
20561But did it bring back the sweet, innocent look to her eyes?
20561But how did they get it?
20561But how was_ I_ to know that Mrs. Harris would turn out to be an old love of his?
20561But what do you suppose makes this new cook act so oddly when the bell rings?
20561But who was the"Friend"?
20561But-- there''s your little Charles-- he says to you on Saturday night,--"Mother, what day is it to- morrow?"
20561Buy anything, to- day, ma''am?"
20561CHILDREN, DID YOU EVER HEAR OF MR."THEY SAY?"
20561Ca n''t she get me_ ever_?"
20561Ca n''t they get me_ then_?"
20561Ca n''t we go into the kitchen?
20561Can any body be happy who makes up his mind to do wrong?
20561Can_ your_ father and mother be as sure of YOU?
20561Certainly;--didn''t I tell you that"_ farmers had hearts_?"
20561Cotton clothes on?
20561Did God ever forsake those who threw themselves on_ His_ great loving heart for comfort?
20561Did I tell you Betsey was"alone?"
20561Did cruel landlords ever again make their mamma tremble and cry?
20561Did he bite you?"
20561Did he tell Aunt Elsie about the bear?
20561Did it?
20561Did n''t I know that"the fairy"was the nice old man with silver locks?
20561Did n''t Uncle Jolly make them eat till he had tightened their apron strings?
20561Did n''t he bribe me to hold my tongue, by telling me that he would come and drink tea with me, so that he might get a peep at John and his mother?
20561Did n''t he come?
20561Did n''t she give me a good breakfast, though?"
20561Did n''t she steal you away?"
20561Did n''t they drink cider and crack nuts over the old fellow''s remains?
20561Did n''t they know how?
20561Did she give you all these?
20561Did they wear cotton shawls in January?
20561Did you ever hear of an Intelligence Office?
20561Did you ever live in a hotel?
20561Did you ever see a China- man?
20561Do n''t make me fold up my hands and keep my toes still, will you, Miss Kizzy?"
20561Do n''t she ever feel sorry, now I am away, that she used to nurse so much more than her share?
20561Do n''t you?
20561Do you know what that is?
20561Do you know what_ that_ means?
20561Do you like Indians?
20561Do you like to hear about poor people?
20561Do you like to see a_ man_ sewing, Charley?
20561Do you order them round, as if they were so many dray- horses?--or do you speak pleasantly to them when you desire they should wait on you?
20561Do you see that gun?
20561Do you suppose a frontier boy would take refuge under a woman''s apron?
20561Do you think that they can sleep peaceably at night?
20561Do you?
20561Harry, what do you think of that?
20561Has anybody seen my little Nelly?
20561Has n''t mother most done baking, Robert?
20561Have you seen anything of her?"
20561Have you weaned her yet?
20561He ought to have had a little world all to himself, had n''t he?
20561How came she here?
20561How can I describe to you that meeting, when I could n''t see it for my tears?
20561How can you be anything but the dullest and stupidest boy in the school?
20561How could she try to lean on reeds that bent and broke beneath her?
20561How do you suppose they''d like to change places with"children"that way?
20561How does Tabby do?
20561How many of my little readers have seen the Crystal Palace, in New- York?
20561How should you like every morning to have your nose washed_ up_, instead of_ down_?
20561How should you like not to be able to understand a word anybody there said to you, or not to be able to make_ them_ understand_ you_?
20561How should you like to be held so near the fire that your eyes were half scorched out of your head, while your nurse was reading a novel?
20561How should you like to be turned out( even of that miserable room) into the street, some stormy night, by a cruel landlord?
20561How should you like to crawl to the top stair,( just to look about a little,) and pitch heels over head from the top to the bottom?
20561How should you like to have a great fly light on your nose, and not know how to take aim at him, with your little, fat, useless fingers?
20561How should you like to have a pin put through your dress into your skin, and have to bear it all day till your clothes were taken off at night?
20561How should you like to reach out your hand for the pretty bright candle, and find out that it was way across the room, instead of close by?
20561How should you like to see_ your mother_ sit down on a door step, in the dark, dark night, and droop her weary head upon her bosom and_ die_?
20561How should you like to submit to have your toes tickled by all the little children who insisted upon"seeing the baby''s feet?"
20561How should_ you_ relish a raw potato for supper?
20561How was the_ old man_ to know why he loved John so well, and thought him one of the finest young men he had ever seen?
20561How was_ I_ to know that I was to turn out to be what I always so mortally hated-- a feminine match- maker?
20561How was_ John_ to know, when he felt such an irresistible impulse to be kind to the old man, that his hair had grown white loving his mother?
20561How will you meet them?
20561How would America look?
20561How would you like that?
20561How_ should_ she?
20561I do n''t know about trusting my old bones up those rickety stairs,--old bones are hard to mend; did you know that?"
20561I wonder how you treat the servants in your mother''s house?
20561I wonder if Betty knows much herself?
20561I wonder if I am a fool?
20561I wonder if anybody beside myself will get out doors to- day?
20561I wonder when I''m grown a man, if I shall have to look so nice all the time, and be so tired of doing nothing?
20561I wonder where all the little children are?
20561I wonder who lives over there?
20561I wonder why my mamma do n''t love her own little boy?
20561I''d like to know if children are to have their necks wrung like so many chickens, if they happen to"_ peep_?"
20561I''d like to know if they have n''t just as much right in the world as grown folks?
20561I''d like to know if, when they have a quarter given them to spend, they must_ always_ receive a bad shilling out of it at the stores, in"change"?
20561In the midst of all this plenty, did they forget"papa?"
20561Is n''t that good?
20561Is not that mamma screaming?
20561Is not that nice?
20561It is hard telling, is n''t it?
20561It would be good fun to play a trick on her and frighten her; would n''t it?
20561MATTY AND MABEL; OR, WHO IS RICH?--WHO IS POOR?
20561MY DEAR MAMMA GRIMALKIN: How_ could_ you let Miss Nipper take me away from you?
20561Must she die and leave her_ there_?
20561Nelly is not down by the river?
20561Nettie''s mother smile?_ Ah, yes; for_ Nettie''s_ golden head is pillowed on her breast.
20561No, I do n''t like these modern_ improvements_(?)
20561Nothing pretty to look at, is there?
20561Now tell me-- you were wishing all that bright money was_ yours_, were you not?"
20561Now, I''d just like to know if a smart little fellow like you is going to be made such a slave of, by a miserable little dirty roll of tobacco?"
20561Now, tell me, how came you to live with Bridget?"
20561Oh, how should she keep her little boys pure and unspotted?
20561Oh, my dear children, where could she have turned in that dark hour if not to_ Heaven_?
20561Oh, was n''t_ that_ an affair?
20561Oh, you little rogue-- come in here; where did you come from, hey?
20561One of the gentlemen who came in with the committee asked,"Who is that young girl who said her lessons so well?"
20561PAGE WHERE IS LITTLE NELLY?
20561Perhaps Kitty had fallen over a stone wall, and lamed her foot-- who knew?
20561Perhaps you will sometime come and see her, and_ then_ wo n''t we have a nice time telling stories?
20561Poor, merry, bright- eyed little Walter!--how can I tell the rest?
20561Robert took his little sister in his arms, and stroked her little black head, and kissed her cheek, and then he drew himself proudly up, saying,"Nina?
20561See that tall man with the black whiskers,( do n''t he look like papa?)
20561Shall I tell you how we tip- toed into the little egg- shell boats?
20561She has got_ her_ work cut out for the winter, has n''t she?
20561She is not at the neighbors?
20561She makes good cake, though, do n''t she, Louise?
20561So I tossed her the"saxpence,"and asked if the child had walked from the city( four miles) too?
20561Suppose I should tell you a story to_ make_ you understand it?
20561Tell you a story, Harry?
20561Tell you another story, Charley?
20561That''s it; now, how came you to be selling these things?
20561The little girl looked timidly at the woman, who took a good look at me out of her bold, saucy, black eyes, and asked,"Is it far you''ll be going?"
20561There now, did n''t I tell you so?
20561WHERE IS LITTLE NELLY?
20561Was n''t it very pitiful?
20561Was n''t that a merry New Year''s night in Uncle Jolly''s little parlor?
20561Was n''t that kind?
20561Was n''t the fire warm and bright?
20561Was not that very mean?
20561Was she happy there?
20561Was there ever a baby like that?
20561Was there ever anything like it?
20561Was_ that_ crushed mass of flesh and bone little Kitty?--_his_ Kitty?--all he had in the wide earth to love?
20561Well, what do you think I saw here in New- York to- day?
20561Well-- what do you think_ was_ to pay when they got there?
20561Were not the tea cakes nice?
20561Were their toes ever out of their shoes again?
20561Wern''t they furious?
20561What ails Georgey now?
20561What could it all mean?
20561What did he mean by that?
20561What did she see?
20561What do you see?
20561What do you think you would have done had the Indians come into your door?--scampered under the bed, or seized the gun and defended your mother?
20561What does he do for a living, Edith?"
20561What if she had said, with the unbeliever,"There is no God?"
20561What is the matter?
20561What is the use of having feet, if you ca n''t scamper with them?
20561What little darling ever could be afraid, when its hand was in_ mamma''s love clasp_?
20561What sort of children?
20561What sort of houses did they have there?
20561What was the reason?
20561What''s that?
20561What''s to be done now?
20561Where can my little pet be?
20561Where do I live?
20561Where is Nelly?
20561Where was Mrs. Simon?
20561Where?
20561Where_ is_ Nelly?
20561Where_ is_ our Nelly?
20561Where_ is_ the little stray waif?
20561Which do you like best, red, green, or blue?--plaids or stripes, hey?
20561Which story did you tell her, hey?"
20561Who arrayed the baby''s dainty little limbs for burial?
20561Who comforted poor Fannie then?
20561Who folded away from the weeping mother''s sight the useless caps and robes?
20561Who made that jacket for you, hey?
20561Who placed the tiny flowers between its waxen little fingers?
20561Who spoke words of cheer, while her own heart was breaking?--who, but_ Chloe_?
20561Who was_ he_?
20561Why are his lips so ashen white?
20561Why did God make_ her_ rich, and_ me_ poor?
20561Why did he clothe_ her_ like a butterfly, and_ me_ like a caterpillar?
20561Why did he let_ her_ ride in a carriage, and_ me_ go barefoot?
20561Why did my eyes fill?
20561Why do n''t Betsey speak to him?
20561Why do n''t_ he_ speak to Betsey?
20561Why does she get up and walk the floor as if afraid that sleep may overtake her?
20561Why does she sigh?
20561Why not?
20561Why?
20561Wo n''t the pretty face of her bring the shillings?''
20561Wo n''t you and I call on him, when we go to China?
20561Wo n''t you look pretty going to jail with your long black curls?
20561Wo n''t you tell Susy, or Mary, or Hatty, or Sammy, or Tommy, or even your pet Uncle Charley?
20561Wo n''t you tell-- certain true?
20561Wonder what ever became of that sister of mine who ran off with that poor artist?
20561Would n''t that be a joke?
20561Would they be good play- fellows?
20561Would you hunt the weary old man through the streets like some wild beast?
20561Would you taunt, and sneer, and shout in his ears,"Old crazy Tim"--"Old crazy Tim?"
20561Would you throw another stone at him, boys?
20561Yes; why not?
20561You did n''t know that good boys enjoy play much better than_ bad_ ones, did you?
20561You know the dark entry by the parlor door, Louise?"
20561You may, perhaps you will, ask with the Frenchman,"Vat for you_ want_ to swing a cat round?"
20561You pity Knud?
20561You would n''t have relished living in those days, would you?
20561_ Did n''t_ he jump?
20561_ Do you hear?_""Yes, ma''am,"said Letty, drawing a long sigh as Mrs. Finley closed the door.
20561_ Her_ mother?
20561_ So ought we!_ Are you tired of my sermon?
20561_ Two_ cups and saucers, thought I: pray, who shares this little room with that poor, pale tailor?
20561_ Why_ does she toil?
20561and did n''t I look as much astonished when he called, as if it had n''t been all settled two days previous?
20561and nobody to say,"Betsey, dear, here''s your favorite bit;"or,"Betsey, dear, where''s your appetite to- day?"
20561and these?
20561and these?"
20561and this?
20561and this?
20561and this?"
20561do n''t you know it is time you were preparing to go to school?"
20561gilt- edged or not gilt- edged?
20561hooks and eyes?
20561how?
20561needles?
20561oh, how can his father forget him?"
20561or take the misery out of her heart?
20561or_ would n''t_ they do it?
20561pins?
20561said Louise,"but wo n''t Mamma punish us?"
20561said the poor wife, fixing her eyes on her dying husband, and watching his spasms;"_ nothing_ to be done?
20561scissors?
20561spools?"
20561tape?
20561want any chimneys swept, ma''am?"
20561when?
20561who broke all those dishes, I say?"
20561who broke all those dishes?
35507What do you want?
35507As he pulled off his gloves and threw them in a corner, Uncle Bill said:"What the hell''s the matter, Jim?"
35507Consider it well, the Event, the thing which can be spoken of and recorded; is it not in all cases some disruption, some solution of continuity?
35507He said not a word, but took a piece of chalk and wrote like he was digging into the board,"Do you think so?"
35507In which saying, mad as it looks, may there not still be found some grain of reason?
35507Jim was white as death, and everybody listened, but he did n''t say anything more until Uncle Bill said:"War he beckonin'', Jim?"
35507Nay, when our oak flowered, or put on its leaves( its glad Events), what shout of proclamation could there be?
35507These things befell not, they were slowly done; not in an hour, but through the flight of days: what was to be said of it?
34086And if this step had been taken, and there had been no war, what then?
34086And without Jackson-- should we ever have had machine politics?
34086But while he was making these terrible admissions of his own duty, what was Buchanan doing?
34086By what means could the Confederacy have forestalled the North in the provision of a really effective navy?
34086Could she do that?
34086Doubtless many would have come forward gladly to claim the distinction and the legacy, but who was worthy of them?
34086Had Penn always been in this favorable position?
34086Had the discouragement and incredulity of his men affected him?
34086If this incident had not suggested and been followed by the Aulick- Perry expedition, what then?
34086Is it conceivable that northern sentiment would have permitted chattel slavery to continue?
34086Is it too much to say that the American republic would have been fatherless without Washington?
34086New Hampshire had refused to comply with the requisitions of the Confederation; why should it look with more favor on the Constitution?
34086Should we have had the New England migration at all, if England had continued its calm and homogeneous development under Elizabethan influences?
34086Was not war inevitable on that main question alone?
34086What about slavery?
34086What if Champlain had been more sagacious, and had made his stand on the coast of Massachusetts?
34086What if he had become a plantation and slave owner, and had thus subjected his boy Abraham to the overmastering influence of a southern environment?
34086What if he had come on and landed an army of trained veterans upon England''s undefended shores?
34086What then?
34086What was it that enabled Themistocles to win this decisive victory for Greece after disastrous defeats on land?
34086What was it that enabled the Greeks, in the crucial test, the ultimate contingency, to turn back the Persians and maintain their independence?
34086What was the rest of it?
34086What would have resulted?
34086What would the New England country and the people have been like, if Champlain had never turned back from Plymouth Bay?
34086When--_nombre de Dios!_--does the reader suppose that this invincible fleet, ready in January, really set sail from Coruña?
34086Who was the bravest man in England?
34086Why was his choice thus made?
34086Why?
34086Will she ever be able to escape them?
34086Would the western world have remained at the stage of cultivation in which we see Arabia to- day?
34086Would there be a ninth?
34473Do n''t you think,said General Lee,"that if my name is worth$ 50,000 a year, I ought to be very careful about taking care of it?"
34473(_ MAGRUDER enters._) Why, what''s the matter?
34473(_ ORDERLY enters and salutes._) LEE-- What is it?
34473(_ Pointing to him._) BUCK-- Be you Captain Lee?
34473(_ ROBERT helps her into the carriage._) ROBERT-- There, are you quite comfortable, mother?
344733RD CONFEDERATE-- Didn''t Marse Robert look wonderful when he went through that door?
34473After a moment Lee said,"Did you know those young men?
34473Are n''t you and I pardners?
34473BUCK-- Did you know the city gov''ment was n''t going to give you no money for your work?
34473BUCK--(_Pointing._) Do you see them cannons up there?
34473BUD-- Aw what''s the secret, Rob?
34473BUD-- Don''t you want to go, Rob?
34473But by this time he discovered that what others had taken for tents were,--well what do you suppose?
34473Ca n''t you just imagine how the heart of Lee was torn?
34473Could n''t you find him?
34473Did the Rebels shoot it off?
34473Do n''t you think most men who had been commanders- in- chief would have considered it beneath their dignity to accept a position like that?
34473Do you think it would be wise to move the Southern capital farther South?
34473FAT-- Well, how do you know you ca n''t if you have n''t even asked?
34473HILL-- What mistake is that General?
34473Have you asked your mother if you could go?
34473LEE-- Do you think I''d be kept from doing my duty by a pack of bullies and cowards?
34473LEE-- How can you say so?
34473MRS. JACKSON-- Good morning General, and how are all the family?
34473Northern troops on the other._ 1ST CONFEDERATE-- Their uniforms do n''t look much like ours, do they?
34473One without a cap._) LEE--(_Addressing prisoner without cap._) Where is your cap?
34473SAM-- Will you all go for to see''em, Marse Robert?
34473SCOTT-- But do you think slavery is just?
34473SCOTT-- But surely you could not desert the United States army?
34473SCOTT-- Is he ill?
34473SCOTT-- Then your sympathies are with the North?
34473SCOTT-- Which side do you think is more to blame?
34473SLATS-- Well say, ca n''t she stay home just for once?
34473SLATS-- Well what do you think she is, a mind reader or something?
34473SLATS-- Well, are n''t you going to ask her Rob?
34473These are Virginians and Georgians, sir-- men who have never failed-- and they will not fail now-- Will you boys?
34473We ai n''t helpless, see?
34473What can I do for you?
34473What greater success could come to any man than to be always a Christian and always a gentleman?
34473Who do you suppose the bride was?
34473Why should they care to see me?
32402But has it not always been this way?
32402Can you tell me what became of the man who galloped by here just ahead of us?
32402Do you mean the man on a black horse with a white star in its forehead?
32402Do you wish to fight?
32402For what, my dear friend?
32402Have you surrendered?
32402If that is the case,said Morse,"why could not words and sentences be sent in the same way?"
32402That boat move? 32402 Where did all these black men come from?"
32402Why ca n''t we?
32402Why, general, you are not alone?
32402Yes; do you not know of it?
32402And is it not better to read the true tale of how this was done than stories of the work of fairies and magicians?
32402And what thought has this brought into your mind?
32402But what could they do?
32402CHAPTER III THREE EARLY HEROES WHAT do you think of Captain John Smith, the hero of Virginia?
32402CHAPTER IX A HERO OF THE COLONIES DO you not think there are a great many interesting stories in American history?
32402CHAPTER VII ROYAL GOVERNORS AND LOYAL CAPTAINS DO any of my young readers know what is meant by a Charter?
32402CHAPTER XV THE VOYAGE OF OUR SHIP OF STATE HAVE any of my young readers ever been to Europe?
32402Did any of my readers ever try that?
32402Did any of my young readers ever see a Quaker?
32402Do any of you know why, or who the Cavaliers were?
32402Do you know what a revolution is?
32402Do you know what this meant?
32402Do you not think I am right in saying that the world has grown better as well as richer?
32402Do you not think a general ought to have two good legs when he has to run as often as Santa Anna had?
32402Do you not think it looked like a one- sided fight?
32402Do you not think that Captain Wadsworth was a bold and daring man, and one who knew just what to do in times of trouble?
32402Do you not think that Roger Williams was as brave a man as John Smith or Miles Standish, and as much of a hero?
32402Do you not think the North had a right to feel very much out of heart by this time?
32402Do you not think these fishermen were wiser than the Spaniards, who went everywhere seeking for gold, and finding very little of it?
32402Do you not think this a very pretty story?
32402Do you not think this was very cruel and unjust?
32402Do you not want to know something about these oldest Americans?
32402Do you not wish to know what became of it?
32402Do you remember the story of Canonicus and the snake skin, and that of Miles Standish and the chiefs?
32402Do you think those were"good old times"?
32402Do you think you would have enjoyed that?
32402Do you understand any better now?
32402Do you want to know who this young traveler was?
32402Does not this seem like magic?
32402Have any of you heard of the wonderful battle between the"Monitor"and the"Merrimac"?
32402Have you ever seen one of them?
32402Have you ever thought that the United States, as an independent nation, was born in Philadelphia?
32402He might sink or burn-- but give up the ship?
32402How many do you think we will have when the youngest readers of this book get to be old men and women?
32402How many of you have seen the lid of a kettle of boiling water keeping up its clatter as the steam lifts it and puffs out into the air?
32402How many of you would have worked as hard as he did to get an education?
32402Is it not all very wonderful?
32402Is not that a great gain to mankind?
32402Is not this as wonderful as the most marvelous fairy tale?
32402It was a terrible thing to do, was it not?
32402It was not good for much, was it?
32402Shall I tell you the whole story of this war?
32402Some of you may ask, what became of the old people of the country-- the Indians, who were spread all over the West?
32402That is a pretty long step, is n''t it?
32402The frigate"President"met the British sloop- of- war"Little Belt,"and hailed it, the captain calling through his trumpet,"What ship is that?"
32402Then she said:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?"
32402This is not so very hard to understand, is it?
32402This seems very absurd, does it not?
32402Was he not a man to dream of, a true hero?
32402Was it not a difficult position for so young a man?
32402Was not that a funny notion?
32402Was not that a great and glorious deed?
32402Was not this very cruel?
32402Was not this very harsh and unjust?
32402Was this not America?
32402What did they do?
32402What do any of my young readers know about the Delaware River?
32402What do you know about these Indians?
32402What do you think the brave Perry did then?
32402What do you think the people did?
32402What were these things?
32402What were they to do?
32402What will we see?
32402What would you have done if you had been in Balboa''s place, and wanted gold to pay your debts?
32402When it reached there, on May 24th, the first message sent was one which Miss Ellsworth had chosen from the Bible,"What hath God wrought?"
32402Where was Cornwallis during this time?
32402While all this was going on, what was becoming of the native people of the country, the Indians?
32402Who knows but that he was told there of what the Northmen had done?
32402Who shall be President?
32402Why?
32402Would you care to be told what took place afterwards?
32402he said, in great astonishment;"the passage of my bill?"
31272But think of my situation, and then ask your heart if I be_ without excuse_? 31272 Do you dress any special way when you write?"
31272Do you know that dull- eyed, gin- sodden lout leaning against the post out there is immeasurably your intellectual superior? 31272 Do you write any special time?"
31272Does n''t Mrs. M. do that?
31272Have you got it done? 31272 If you were a man,"said one girl to another,"and knew women as well as you do now, whom would you marry?"
31272Indeed,said the old woman,"and did you ask all the animals and plants?
31272Is it so wonderful?
31272Is your mistress at home?
31272Matter is indestructible,so the scientists say, but what of the love- letter that is reduced to ashes?
31272My arms await thee,she cries in her pleading,"Why wait for its coming, when I am thy needing?"
31272Then it takes you longer than it does most people, does n''t it?
31272Well, old fellow,I said,"did you do as you intended?"
31272Well,a man once said to me,"how much did you make out of your book this year?"
31272What do you write with-- a pen or a pencil?
31272What else did you say?
31272Where did it loiter so long? 31272 Why do you not shoot with the arrows at Balder?"
31272Why, can you write on a typewriter?
31272Why, do you have to go all over it, after it is done?
31272Would n''t it be easier to write it with a pencil first and then copy it?
31272You have to write it all out with a pencil, first, do n''t you?
31272''What,''said he,''Have you not forgiven God Almighty?''
31272A very small maiden with very bright eyes once came to her mother with the question:"Mamma, do you think I shall ever have a chance to get married?"
31272And what of the city apartment, which boasts a radiator and gas grate, but no chimney?
31272Are not organdies, dimities, and embroidered muslins fully as becoming to the women who trip daintily through the pages of men''s books?
31272Are the men whom we elect to public office our masters or our servants?
31272Are we to suppose that a wife is a woman who does general housework for board and clothes, with a few kind words thrown in?
31272Are we women such children that we can not deal wisely with our intellectual inferiors?"
31272At last I cried to her who held the book, So fair and calm she stood, I see her yet;"Why write these things within this book of Love?
31272Blue flannel, with cascades of white lace-- could anything be more attractive?
31272But what is poor Santa Claus to do when the chimney leads to the furnace?
31272Call the roll of the great and how many women''s names will be found there?
31272Dear little Love, may I come in And make you mine alone?
31272Do the charm and uncertainty of it ever fade?
31272Do you believe you could bear that patiently?
31272Do you ever think of these things?
31272Do you just sit down and do it?"
31272Do you remember the Spanish anecdote?
31272Do you think the cursed rats( at his instigation I suppose) did not eat up my pocket book, which was in my pocket, within an inch of my head?
31272Does Smith know the little red- headed girl who was on the piazza this morning?
31272Guests occasionally inquired,"What have you done to that maid of yours?"
31272Have n''t you found out that women are not particularly interested in anecdotes?
31272How often do you think she has planned little things to make your home- coming pleasant, which you have never noticed?
31272How would you like to have the graces of some other man continually dinned into your ears?
31272If love means harmony, why not try a little of it in the kitchen?
31272If she presses his ties, why should he not learn to iron her bits of fine lace?
31272Is it strange that the heart of the mother tightens with sudden pain?
31272Is n''t she?
31272Is n''t that a dear kimono?"
31272Is she not still in some cases a cave- dweller, while he roams the highways of the world?
31272It looks as well as many things which are commonly welded into dressing- sacks; then why this invidious distinction?
31272Just like the most of them after all, is n''t he?
31272Logical, is n''t it?
31272My friend(?)
31272Nay, start not, thy will Is yet supreme, for art thou not a man?
31272Red, now-- is anything prettier than red?
31272She asked, what shall"we"do about this or that?
31272She ca n''t sew, because it makes a pain between her shoulders, and indeed why should she sew when she has plenty of dressing- sacks?
31272Should we have had_ Hamlet_, if at the completion of the first act Mr. Shakespeare had given birth to twins, when he had made clothes for only one?
31272Should we not be proud because they consider us so much stronger and wiser than they?
31272That''s nice of him, is n''t it?
31272The girl turned pale, then the son said:"You''ll take the head of the table, wo n''t you, mother?"
31272The roses nod to the sound of the waves, And the bluebells sweet are ringing; Do you hear the music, Dorothy dear?
31272The song that the angels are singing?
31272What colour were the roses?
31272What dead fingers taught Thy music to awake in ecstasy Beyond our human dreams?
31272What do you do when it is done?"
31272What shall she wear?"
31272What though upon my finger gleams no ring, Save that cheap turquoise that I bought myself?
31272What wonder that she had no time for an afternoon tea?
31272What wonder that she yielded at last and promised to marry him?
31272What would have become of Spencer''s_ Data of Ethics_ if, while he was writing it, he had two dressmakers in the house?
31272When she did well, I praised her, as I had all along, but instead of saying,"Iss dat so?"
31272Whence, oh whence, comes this fondness for lawn?
31272Where were the authorities, and why was not"Miss Sallie"taken to the detention hospital, pending an inquiry into her sanity?
31272Who can say what momentous changes might have been wrought in history had Washington married his first love?
31272Why may we not pass onward and forget?"
31272Why should n''t I do something for you?"
31272Wilt thou not stay?
31272Yet, has your heart a tiny door Where I may peep within?
31272You do n''t mind, do you?"
31272dost thou hear?
31272instead of"what do_ you_ want?"
31272what shall"we"have for dinner?
26064After going into a war for humanity, were we so craven that we should seek freedom from further trouble at the expense of civilization?
26064After this flat contradiction of the court''s former dictum, what happened?
26064And next, shall we not probably fare best in the end if we try to profit somewhat by the experience others have had in like cases?
26064And why is life impossible to Americans in Manila and Cebu and Iloilo, but attractive to the throngs of Europeans who have built up those cities?
26064Are the American people to rise to the occasion?
26064Are the old energy and the old courage gone?
26064Are the people now lacking in the enterprise and vigor which Mr. Casserly claimed for them?
26064Are they to be as great as their country?
26064Are they to be our wards, objects of our duty and our care; or are they to be our full partners?
26064Are we content, for example, with the way we have dealt with the negro problem in the Southern States?
26064Are we not morally culpable and disgraced before the civilized world if we leave it as bad or worse?
26064Are we not, then, bound in honor and morals to see to it that the government which replaces Spanish rule is better?
26064Are we to be discouraged by the cry that the new possessions are worthless?
26064Are we to believe those men of to- day who tell us it is not worth crossing?
26064Because they are helpless and needy and on our hands, must we take them into partnership?
26064Because we are going to help them, are we bound to marry them?
26064Brushing aside, then, these bugbears, gentlemen, what are the obvious duties of the hour?
26064But does not this, if applied to the present situation, seem also to miss an important distinction?
26064But have the Californians of this generation abandoned the bridge?
26064But is it to the interest of the sincere and patriotic among the discontented to produce either result?
26064But is that all?
26064But is there not another question, more important, which first demands consideration?
26064But what does our experience show?
26064But what, then, are we going to do with Porto Rico?
26064But who believes he can stop the avalanche?
26064But why not turn over that commercial center and the island on which it is situated to the Tagals?
26064But would a wise man kick the stepping- stone away?
26064By what right do statesmen now venture to think that they can leave our national interests out of the account?
26064Can a nation with safety set such limits to its development?
26064Can there be a doubt of the duty to make the best of it?
26064Can we grow tobacco in Cuba, but not in Cebu; or rice in Louisiana, but not in Luzon?
26064Can we mine all over the world, from South Africa to the Klondike, but not in Palawan?
26064Can your Scott shipyards only turn out men- of- war?
26064Can your Senator Perkins only run ships that creep along the coast?
26064Cloud, and even come down, if they liked, to St. Paul and Minneapolis?
26064Did I hear a public opponent but personal friend over there murmur as his reply,"Not much of anything"?
26064Did Mr. Seward betray the Constitution and violate his oath in buying Alaska without the purpose of making it a State?
26064Did he himself, then, carry his own words to such extremes as these professed disciples now demand?
26064Did she deserve so badly of us that, even in a hurry, we should do this thing to her in the name of humanity?
26064Do we remember his birthday and forget his words?
26064Do you ask how?
26064Do you know of any other civilized nation of the first or even of the second class that would n''t jump at that option on the Philippines?
26064Does peace pacify?
26064Does protection protect?
26064Does the prospect alarm?
26064Has it grown old before its time; is its natural strength abated?
26064Has it?
26064Has our system been found weaker, then, than other forms of government, less adaptable to emergencies, and with people less fit to cope with them?
26064Has the race shriveled under these summer skies?
26064Has the soul of this people shrunk within them?
26064Have the grandsons so degenerated that they are incapable of colonizing at all, or of managing colonies?
26064Have the limits he scorned been since assigned, and do the Californians of to- day assent to the restriction?
26064Have we not a better and more urgent use for our time now than in showing why some of us would have liked them settled differently?
26064Have we the right to decide whether we shall hold or abandon the conquered territory, solely, or even mainly as a matter of national policy?
26064Have you considered for whom we hold these advantages in trust?
26064Have you considered what urgent need there will be for those new fields?
26064How can it be?
26064How could a government that put it down rest on the consent of Sulu?
26064How could men representing this country, jealous of its honor, or with an adequate comprehension either of its duty or its rights, do otherwise?
26064How else have these blessings been generally diffused?
26064How long do you expect to keep New Mexico out, or Oklahoma, or Arizona?
26064How often in the history of the world has barbarism been replaced by civilization without bloodshed?
26064How soon are our people going to flee from Arizona?
26064How was it then with some at the West who are discontented now?
26064How were our own liberty and justice established and diffused on this continent?
26064How?
26064II WAS IT TOO GOOD A TREATY?
26064In the absence, then, of any law- making power in the Territory, to what source must the people look for the laws by which they are to be governed?
26064In the debate with Mr. Calhoun in February, 1849, Mr. Webster said:"What is the Constitution of the United States?
26064Is China to be our model, or Great Britain?
26064Is a six- thousand- mile extension to a through line worthless?
26064Is it any one with the glorious history of this continental colonization bred in his bone and leaping in his blood?
26064Is it consistent with that spirit to hold territory permanently, or for long periods of time, without admitting it to the Union?
26064Is it for that pitiful result that a civilized and Christian people is giving up its sons and pouring out blood and treasure in Cuba?
26064Is it not evident that such was the case here?
26064Is it said that elsewhere on the Pacific we can do as well without a controlling political influence as with it?
26064Is it said that the commercial opportunities in the Orient, or at least in the Philippines, are overrated?
26064Is it said that this is Imperialism?
26064Is it said this danger is imaginary?
26064Is it said we could keep them out as we have kept out sparsely settled New Mexico?
26064Is our national motto to be,"Quixotic on the one hand, Chinese on the other"?
26064Is that the feast to be set before the laboring men of this country?
26064Is that the real inwardness of the Trojan horse pushed forward against our tariff wall, in the name of humanity, to suffering Porto Rico?
26064Is the broad ocean too deep for him or too wide?
26064Is there any need to debate whether the American people will abandon it now?
26064Must they be developed through the territorial stage into independent States in the Union?
26064Need we give it more attention now than Marshall did then?
26064Or did it entitle them to suppose that he could?
26064Or do you think it better that your Pacific railroad should end in the air?
26064Or, better still, are we to follow the instincts of our own people?
26064Said Mr. Webster:"What is Florida?
26064Senator Davis has asked?
26064Shall we trade them for something nearer home?
26064Since when did such a war become wrong?
26064Suppose Livingston had rejected the offer?
26064That being so, do those of you who regret it prefer to lose all influence over the outcome?
26064Thus men often say,"If you believe in liberty for yourself, why refuse it to the Tagals?"
26064To what corner of the world would they not need to carry their commerce?
26064WAS IT TOO GOOD A TREATY?
26064WAS IT TOO GOOD A TREATY?
26064Was Governor Haight alone, or was he in advance of his time?
26064Was it the demonstration that what we needed was to sit under the live- oaks and"develop the individual man,"nor dare to look beyond?
26064Well, if the elephant must be on our hands, what are we going to do with it?
26064Well, then, how shall the islands be treated?
26064Were we to be reproached for that?
26064What demands on tropical productions would they not make?
26064What do the American people in general, and without distinction of party, look to them for?
26064What have the Tagals done for us that we should treat them better and put them on a plane higher than any of these?
26064What holds a nation together, unless it be community of interests, character, and language, and contiguous territory?
26064What is this increase in the shipping at your wharves?
26064What luck did you have in keeping out others-- even Utah, with its bar sinister of the twin relic of barbarism?
26064What outlets for their adventurous youth would they not require?
26064What place was there in the American system for territories that were never to be States, for colonies, or for the rule of distant subject races?
26064What shall be the policy with which, when order has been inexorably restored, we begin our dealings with the new wards of the Nation?
26064What was to be done with them?
26064What wise man, at least, will take the risk of starting it?
26064What would more thoroughly insure its speedily flying to pieces than the lack of every one of these requisites?
26064What, then, can we do with them?
26064What, then, is the conclusion of the whole matter?
26064Which way do the interests of California and the city of San Francisco lie?
26064Which way do your interests lie?
26064Who dare say that a self- respecting Power could have sailed away from Manila and repudiated the responsibilities of its victorious belligerency?
26064Who disputes it now?
26064Who fancies that we could then keep San Domingo and Haiti out, or any West India island that applied, or our friends the Kanakas?
26064Who imagines that we can take in Porto Rico and keep out nearer islands when they come?
26064Who says so?
26064Who supposes that to be the liberty for which Aguinaldo is fighting?
26064Who thinks he can lay his hand on the rugged edge of the Muir Glacier and compel it to advance no farther?
26064Why did n''t you do it?"
26064Why distress ourselves with the thought that this is only the beginning, that it opens the door to unlimited expansion?
26064Why is every room taken in your big buildings?
26064Why mourn because of the precedent we are establishing?
26064Why mourn over our present course as a departure from the policy of the fathers?
26064Why, at the first Apache outbreak after the Gadsden Purchase, did we not hasten to turn over New Mexico and Arizona to_ their_ inhabitants?
26064Why?
26064Why?
26064Why?
26064Would a government that stopped that be without just powers till the slaveholders had conferred them at a popular election?
26064Would it be without just powers because the pirates did not vote in its favor?
26064Would this generation judge that they had been equal to their opportunities or their duties?
26064[ Sidenote: Does Debt Follow Sovereignty?]
26064[ Sidenote: Does Peace Pacify?]
26064[ Sidenote: Does the Monroe Doctrine Interfere?]
26064[ Sidenote: Has the State Lost Heart and Shriveled?]
26064[ Sidenote: Have they any Value?]
26064[ Sidenote: The Policy for our Dependencies] How shall we set about it?
26064[ Sidenote: The Trouble they Give-- are they Worth it?]
26064[ Sidenote: Where is your Real Interest?]
26064[ Sidenote: Why Take Sovereignty?]
26064[ Sidenote: Will the Constitution Permit Withholding Statehood?]
26064or who believes our grandchildren will be violating the Constitution in keeping it out?
26064or, if not, how govern or get rid of them?
33318''A woman''s? 33318 ''Do you still believe in the existence of the treasure?''
33318''What''s in they, Captain?'' 33318 Can you tell the names of any persons that you would make use of in your defense?"
33318Do you think I was a pirate?
33318Do you think William Moore was one of those that was for taking her?
33318Had you any discourse with Captain Kidd after this, about the man''s death?
33318Have you any more to say, Captain Kidd?
33318Have you those passes?
33318How does he know what he is charged with? 33318 How long was this ago?"
33318Might we venture to advance the theory that the Divine Rod was known and used nearly two thousand years ago? 33318 Mr. Kidd, do you know what you mean by matters of law?"
33318Was that the reason that he struck Moore, because this ship was not taken?
33318Was there a mutiny among the men?
33318What can he have counsel for before he has pleaded?
33318What matter of law can you have?
33318What ship was that which had the French passes?
33318What was the provocation for throwing the bucket?
33318What was the reason the blow was given to the gunner?
33318What were their names? 33318 What would you have counsel for?"
33318What''s that for?
33318When was this mutiny you speak of?
33318Where were they then?
33318Who hides it?
33318Why, is it hid all around?
33318Will you plead to the indictment?
33318Would you have me plead and not have my vindication by me?
33318You heard that one, Captain Elms, say they were French passes?
33318''And what then?''
33318''And,''says he,( the captain)''have I brought you to ruin?
33318''Damn you for villains, who are you, and from whence come you?''
33318''Heaven, you fool,''says Sutton,''Did you ever hear of any pirate going thither?
33318''What is to become of the country, plundered by land, plundered by sea?
33318''Why not, the brutes?
33318''Why,''says I,''may we take the ship because we are poor?''
33318At last he saw it and cried out with some agony:"''_ What is this?
33318Did Kidd have reason to suppose that she would take his gifts and try to befriend him?
33318Did you see their basnets glitter?''
33318Do they drive women in their gangs?''
33318Do you hear, Bradingham, what he says?"
33318He says,( Kidd),''Would you have had me take this ship?
33318How long have you had notice of your trial?"
33318Is not the cold- blooded murder inconceivable barbarity, and the burying the body over the treasure too dramatic and buccaneer- like?
33318Or might not the Spaniard have lied from love of lying and mystifying his simple shipmate, or might he not have been raving?
33318Says I,''How will you do that?''
33318Seaman Hugh Parrott was then called and asked by Kidd:"Do you know the reason why I struck Moore?"
33318Thereupon Kidd called Abel Owens, one of his sailors, and asked him:"Can you tell which way this bucket was thrown?"
33318These explorers finished when[ Transcriber''s note: what?]
33318Upon him saying this, says Captain Kidd,''Have I ruined you, ye dog?''
33318Was he discouraged?
33318What have you to say for yourself?"
33318What shall plead for them?
33318Whence comes this?_''And then with changed countenance they told him how and where they got it.
33318Where is the dazzling treasure of Samarcand?
33318Where is the wealth of Antioch, and where the jewels which Solomon gave the Queen of Sheba?
33318Who''d you reckon, Sunday- school superintendents?"
33318Why did he not tell it before?
33318_ My dear reader, do you wish me to speak candidly?
33318cries out Salem Dick;"What for, my jumpin''beau?
33318is there not yet a Room for Sovereign Grace to be display''d, in their Conversion and Salvation?
35693Shall I tell you what this collision means? 35693 After tracing the course of events recorded in the foregoing pages, the questions naturally arise-- What has been the result? 35693 Does any one suppose that a mere microscopic concession like this would alone appease a conscience wounded and lacerated by thesin of slavery?"
35693Mr. Howell says, when speaking of the Bible arguments in behalf of slavery:--"Give up my advocacy of abolition?
35693What has been the influence of these clerical fanatics?
35693What spirit of man ever stood upon earth with bolder front and wielded fiercer weapons?
35693what have the abolitionists gained?
3574716)| 5.5| 26.0| 5.00| 0.19| 10| 343|"| 0.06| 79|| 1893| Phillips| 22.0| 136.0| 402.00| 3.00| 28| 500?
35747In 1564 René de Laudonnière(?
35747One naturally inquires why the high speed of wings, and why the progressive increase of speed at their tips and posterior margins?
35747| 100?
35747| Ft.||||| 1879| Tatin| 6.2| 7.5| 3.85| 0.51| 18| 100?
35747| Steam| 5.6| 72?
35747|Compressed| 0.03| 110?
35747|| 1894| Maxim*| 50.0| 4000.0| 8000.00| 2.5| 36| 300?
35573A pension? 35573 And where might you be going?"
35573To Canada? 35573 What can a justice do,"he asks,"when the whole country combines against him?"
35573Where might you come from, friend?
35573Who is that tall Vermont colonel?
35573And of whom is your present army( I do not confine the question to this part of it, but will extend it to the whole) composed?
35573And what is that?"
35573And what might take you there?"
35573And what might you get a pension for, friend?"
35573Have n''t we waited long enough on them?
35573Shall I put him under guard?"
34768And who should lead in it if not ourselves?
34768Are we entered in the international handicap for the grand prize of empire and world- wide ascendancy?
34768Are we indeed a"menace to the world''s peace,"or only to those who would disturb that peace?
34768Are we to have part or lot in this complex assignment of duties?
34768As we have been, shall we so continue?
34768But how long is this to continue?
34768But if, on the other hand, we set up good government in the colonies, how long shall we be content with misrule at home?
34768But is that all?
34768But still the opponents of expansion continue to ask, What have we to do with China?
34768But with what result?
34768Can they do it?
34768Can we dodge those responsibilities?
34768How else are we to get it?
34768Is it hypocrisy or ignorance?
34768Is it imagined that we can administer colonies after this method?
34768Is this indictment too severe?
34768Kipling''s lines are apropos:"What should they know of England Who only England know?"
34768Not by any means that it is perfect-- what human institution is perfect?
34768Ought we to do so if we can?
34768What are we to do if that surplus be thrown back on our hands?
34768What is to be our policy toward those remote islands?--to retain them or to let them go?
34768What nobler business is there, for man or nation?
34768What of the year to come?
34768What of the years that stretch out before us as we approach the threshold of the new century?
34768When is that time to come?
34768Why should the United States concern itself to guard the"open door"in that empire, or to prevent the establishment of"spheres of influence?"
34768Will it even pay?
26963And a very pretty business you made of it, did n''t you, miss?
26963And desert your daughter?
26963And did you stay there?
26963And how did you find it there?
26963And is she there now?
26963And it''s bigger''n this, I''ll bet Ai n''t it, now?
26963And whom do you suspect of taking it?
26963And why not?
26963And you borrowed it? 26963 And,"said she, with a smile,"you are partly to blame; for how could I help comparing your behavior to me with his?
26963Are they so?
26963Aunt Margaret,--girls,said she,"do you know that, after all, you''ve got a thief in the house?
26963But surely, Count, you would not presume to dispute Mr. Webster''s opinion on a question of constitutional law?
26963But who was it?
26963But you do n''t mean to go with them to Europe, Lucretia?
26963Ca n''t you find sewing for Hepsy?
26963Can not you read, Rhoda?
26963Did you?
26963Do you love him?
26963Do you really think so?
26963Fanny wo n''t go, I suppose? 26963 For what offence, if you please?"
26963Hate him? 26963 Hate you, child?
26963Have you never gone to school?
26963How do I know? 26963 How long ago was that?"
26963How valuable?
26963Lucretia,said grandmother,"explain yourself; what do you mean now?"
26963Me, my lord?
26963Miss Dudley? 26963 Miss Morne, my dear, home a''-ready?
26963Ned,said I, as soon as I could get a word with him,"there is Joe Breck''s sister; where is Joe?"
26963No, no, no,said Griffith, deprecatingly;"but why did she not tell me?"
26963O, did n''t I see her at the window?
26963O, do n''t you know? 26963 O, you feel above looking at town- poor''s things, do n''t you?
26963On the fuddle?
26963One word: do you love him?
26963Postscript.--My poor friend, to what end think you I sent you down in the coach with her?
26963Rhoda,said I,"should n''t you like these on your bureau?
26963Sit beside you, Kate?
26963The best of care?
26963The pleurisy? 26963 To the poor- house?
26963Was his name Joseph?
26963Well,said he,"has this Carrick shown a sense of your goodness?"
26963What d''ye mean?
26963What did she say?
26963What did you do with it?
26963What do you say?
26963What is Rhoda?
26963What is amiss? 26963 What is that for?"
26963What pope or prelate now Performeth what Christ hight[28]?
26963What, would you we d a woman in my condition? 26963 What,"said she,"think you I''ll let you out of my sight?
26963Where did you get those swamp- pinks, Rhoda?
26963Where do you live?
26963Where is Joe?
26963Whither are you going? 26963 Who is Miss Reeny?"
26963Who is she?
26963Who made your dress, Rhoda?
26963Who was Jinny Collins, Rhoda?
26963Who''d have thought the little thing had so much spunk in her? 26963 Why I have come to you?
26963Why did you not come near me for ten days?
26963Why do you care to do such things, Rhoda?
26963Why in Cumberland more than in Lancashire?
26963Why not? 26963 Why not?
26963Why, what is amiss?
26963Why?
26963Will you be kind enough to explain?
26963You did n''t think so when you bought yourn, did you, now?
26963You do n''t?
26963You hain''t got any old things, coats and trousers and such, all worn out, have you? 26963 _ You_ to be_ my_ witness?"
26963''Fanny?''
26963***** What if it should be discovered to be all a mistake, that people, who were supposed to have died long ago, are really dead?
26963*****"Is it a dream?
26963Ambition is not for him, for ambition aspires; and what object has he to aspire to?
26963And if the well can be thus wrought on, what can be expected of the weak?
26963And is such a woman to be insulted?
26963And what must you think I am made of, to go from one man to another, like that?"
26963Are you not to be paid for telling us this romance?
26963At Leipzig the Allies alone had more guns than both armies had at Sadowa,--but what were the cannon of those days compared to those of these times?
26963At length he spoke:--"Don''t you think a young girl in the kitchen, to help Dorothy, would save a good many steps?"
26963Baggage?
26963Black Midnight''s feet wait on the shore, To bear me-- where?
26963Born slaves and hopelessly debased and ignorant, they began to ask the question,--"When Adam delved and Eve span, Who then was the gentleman?"
26963But how could I go?
26963But how could she get possession of what Belgium holds?
26963But what did Fanny think?
26963But where can I see Miss Newcome?"
26963But would it not be wrong to stay and see Jim?
26963Ca n''t you do anything to help me?"
26963Can you hear the sparrow in the lane Singing above the graves?
26963Can you make butter?"
26963Do you suppose I could?"
26963Does this explain all the Jerusalems which are scattered through our popular flora,--as Jerusalem Beans and Jerusalem Cherries?
26963Goin''to be in, a spell, now?"
26963Good, uncomplaining, patient, I had always seen her,--happy, how seldom!--when, indeed, till now?
26963Griffith started up, and cried,"What is wrong, in God''s name?"
26963Had you not better go on cross- examining the witness?
26963Hain''t it, now?"
26963Hath she not gone through grief enow?
26963Have you?"
26963He might have been Dictator had he pleased; but what, to a man wearied with authority and dignity, would dictatorship be worth?
26963How could I die and leave thee in doubt of my forgiveness, and my love?
26963How could I stay in Greenville?
26963I expect I''ll have to take your old gowns; hain''t you got any?
26963I made it every bit myself; ai n''t it going to be beautiful?"
26963I might be as sad as I would now; and who could wonder?
26963If I can clear you?
26963Is he who took the sword to perish by it?
26963Is the Prussian sovereign that stronger man of whose coming Croesus, that type of all prosperous sovereigns, was warned?
26963Is there nothing else?
26963Is this caricature?
26963It''s real gay, ai n''t it, now?"
26963May I ask what was, or is, the nature of your connection with him?
26963My husband alive?
26963My senses,--have they dropped asleep?
26963Only bag?
26963Perhaps I shall see Joe again; who knows?"
26963Said I,"For God''s sake speak the truth: what does G. G. stand for?"
26963See here, be I going to sleep with that colored woman?"
26963Seems as if I hearn tell your ma went off in a kind of a gallopin''decline, did n''t she?"
26963Shall you prove it to be his handwriting?
26963Should you like it?--and-- shall you remember?"
26963The Devil, he was busy at my ear, and whispered me,''If the fools in Cumberland hang her, what fault o''thine?
26963Then think of her virtues,"--(here the writer began to lose her temper,)--"where can you hope to find such another?
26963Then what makes you think he is Griffith Gaunt?
26963Trumpet notes Still mingle with a dreamy doubt Of Where?
26963Was n''t that his carriage at the door?
26963Wealth?
26963Well, now how do you know that this Thomas Leicester was Griffith Gaunt?
26963Were you his wife,--or his mistress?
26963What do_ you_ say?"
26963What has he made of me?
26963What hope could the Prussians have, a month before the march to Moscow was resolved upon?
26963What reason had I to give?
26963What right have you to lose blood for her?"
26963What say you, Brother Wiltshire?
26963What shall I do?"
26963What was the remedy?
26963What would have been the effect had the army and the influence of Brandenburg been placed at the disposal of Louis XIV.?
26963What, shall I take the place of God, and punish the evil- doers, because''t is me they wrong?
26963What, then, is the smallest thing of that reign?
26963What, would you rather be condemned for murder, than let me show them you are innocent?
26963Whenever she confessed a fault, she was sure to turn slyly round and say,"But what could one expect of me?
26963Where am I?
26963Who is she?"
26963Who shall say?
26963Why does he not come himself?"
26963Why not will we Christians Of Christ''s good be as kind As Jews, that be our lores- men[43]?
26963Why, sir, what do you seek in a wife?
26963Why, then, did Prussia give so firm but civil a negative in answer to his demand?
26963Why?"
26963Will you, dear Sir George?
26963Would n''t you, now?"
26963Would not this, in other words, be the separation of the intellect from the heart?
26963Ye of the sacred red right hand, Who count, around our camp- fire light, Dear names within the shadowy land, Why do ye whisper_ mine_ to- night?
26963You look at me: do you think I can not?
26963You saw him alive four days ago?
26963_ Am_ I?
26963_ Judge._ What is that?
26963_ Judge._ What is that?
26963_ Mercy._ Is this a place or a time for jesting?
26963_ Prisoner._ Do you know Mr. Griffith Gaunt?
26963_ Prisoner._ Do you know Thomas Leicester?
26963_ Prisoner._ Have you that writing?
26963_ Prisoner._ How was he shod?
26963_ Prisoner._ On foot, or on horseback?
26963_ Prisoner._ Was he at your place in October last?
26963_ Prisoner._ When did you see Mr. Gaunt last?
26963_ Prisoner._ Which way went he on leaving you?
26963_ Prisoner._ With boots on, or shoes?
26963_ Whitworth._ And there concerted this ingenious defence?
26963_ Whitworth._ And you mean to swear that Griffith Gaunt answered an advertisement inviting Thomas Leicester?
26963_ Whitworth._ For naught?
26963_ Whitworth._ Let me see your marriage- certificate, if you have one?
26963_ Whitworth._ O, he called himself Thomas Leicester, did he?
26963_ Whitworth._ What are you to receive for this evidence?
26963_ Whitworth._ What?
26963_ Whitworth._ Why, what is this?
26963_ Whitworth._ You do n''t know whether you were married to the man or not?
26963_ Whitworth._ You were in the prisoner''s company yesterday?
26963a wretch like me, Kate?
26963ai n''t it perfindiculur wonderful?"
26963and Whither?
26963and what would people think was my reason?
26963and you the one to come and tell me so?
26963borrowed jewelry?
26963family?
26963said grandmother, smiling,--"a diamond one?"
26963title?
26963to Lancaster?"
26963what are you doing there?"
26963what?
26963who could hope to see Fanny enjoying them for any length of time, till she had done with time?
26963who knows when you and I shall ever be together again?"
26963will the doctor come, do you think?
22036And first, ought this promise be fulfilled? 22036 Are McKinley and Butterworth candidates for Senator?"
22036But some of you may say, all this is very well, but what will you do to save the Union? 22036 Can I ask your favorable influence and co- operation?
22036Do you fear the event of the contest? 22036 Do you find anything in the Springfield speech to moderate or modify?"
22036Do you think the native planters, the wealthier classes, that is, favor annexation to the United States?
22036Do you think the public will be likely to respond largely to his efforts?
22036How can we avert a calamity at which humanity and civilization shudder? 22036 How do you account for the circulation of the reports that you are not entirely loyal to Sherman?"
22036I ask you, as the representative of a brave people, what shall we do? 22036 Is not the bill, as it passed, substantially the bill of the tariff commission?"
22036Is not this a good time to try the experiment of a Republican representative from the Louisville district? 22036 Is there no hope of persuasion of the southern people at large to see the justice of the demand for equal political rights?"
22036Is this to be only a dream? 22036 My Dear Sir:--Could you speak at Portland, Tuesday, July 23, and then during the same week at Augusta and Bangor-- say 25th-27th?
22036Now what is that something? 22036 Now, Mr. president, how shall it be done, and when shall it be done?
22036Now, if the south have free trade, how can you collect revenues in the eastern cities? 22036 Now, what are those general principles?
22036Now, what is this question? 22036 Should we undertake to say that the secretary did wrong in exceeding the limit at$ 356,000,000?
22036Suppose it to be conceded that the constitution should be amended, what amendment will satisfy the south? 22036 The only question will be, how can this be accomplished?
22036Then you say positively that you are not down here to look after your fences for a presidential boom in 1888?
22036Was there any urgent necessity for reducing taxes?
22036What about the persistent charge of unfriendliness to southern people and the accusation that you are shaking the bloody shirt?
22036What can we do for peace and conciliation? 22036 What do we propose to do now?
22036What have they done? 22036 What of Major McKinley''s election to Congress?"
22036What then is the law it is proposed to repeal? 22036 What then was done?
22036Where will be the four million slaves whom by your policy you have emancipated? 22036 Who among us would not be impressed by such scenes?
22036Why has not this obligation been performed? 22036 You do not admit that the two speeches are in two voices?"
22036You stand by the speech, then?
22036''Do you consider the price paid by the syndicate for these bonds as good?''
22036''Do you expect any opposition from Congress as the reply to this negotiation and the near probability of specie payments?''
22036''Has any man said,''he asked,''that Governor Foraker is a bad man; that he is not a good man?
22036''How much gold have you absolutely got for resumption to- day?''
22036''Is there any disadvantage in negotiating through the syndicate?''
22036''Must a government, of necessity, be too_ strong_ for the liberties of its own people, or too_ weak_ to maintain its own existence?''
22036''This is your third visit on the general object of resumption?
22036''Why,''says the speaker;''because he has brought greenbacks up to par value, and is in favor of honest money?''
22036''You do not anticipate that they will take the$ 10,000,000 and decline the other$ 40,000,000?''
22036''You failed to get the bank philosophers to get you the$ 50,000,000 of gold?''
22036A very eventful visit, is n''t it, in the story of our finances?''
22036Although it may not receive these notes for customs duties, why can it not receive these notes in payment of bonds?
22036And I here come to what I regard as a painful feature to discuss-- how have we redeemed our promise?
22036And from these columns are there not more than this small number that would rush upon even certain death at their country''s call?
22036And if the public creditor had no safety, what chance would the national banks-- creations of our own and subject to our will-- have in Congress?
22036And if we can reopen these questions, why not reopen the laws requiring the payment of either interest or principal of the public debt?
22036And why not?
22036And why should we?
22036Are the agencies and measures prescribed in the law sufficient for the purpose?
22036Are the grateful thanks of your countrymen and posterity no inducement to valorous acts?
22036Are they not yours as well as mine?
22036Are we bound to build up the interest of one section or one community at the expense of another or of the whole country?
22036Are we not dividing ourselves for their benefit?
22036Are we not in danger of quarreling about terms of conciliation, when traitors are overthrowing the government we wish to preserve?
22036Are we prepared now to fix a day when we will pay these notes in coin?
22036Are you all crazy?"
22036Are you aroused into madness by political defeat?
22036Are you cowards, that you would flee from an apprehension?
22036As they have decided in favor of a commission, why should we insist upon it that they shall do the work themselves?
22036At Toledo, when conversing with a gentleman about the condition of affairs in the south, I was asked"What are you going to do about it?"
22036Because we can not accomplish all that we have agreed to do in a given time, does that relieve us from the necessity of progressing in that direction?
22036Blaine died January 27, 1893. Who now living could pronounce such a eulogy?
22036But is there any similitude between the Governor of Ohio and the President of the United States?
22036But should be undertake to fix that as the legal limit?
22036But where does he find the power to issue a note in the constitution?
22036Ca n''t you come to Ohio and at once raise a regiment?
22036Ca n''t you meet me and ride some miles?
22036Can a separation take place without war?
22036Can we deposit our securities at the treasury here, as heretofore?"
22036Can we not go on in the same way in which we have gone on in the past?
22036Can we perform it?
22036Can you expect this''black Republican party,''as you please to call it, will yield to you what your northern Democratic associates dare not?
22036Continuing, I said:"Why for a third term?
22036Did the act of March 2, 1867, commonly known as the"tenure of office act,"confer this authority?
22036Do n''t you want to visit Mansfield?
22036Do we not deserve the best of every land?
22036Do you not know that the normal condition of such a state of affairs would be eternal, everlasting war?
22036Does any citizen of South Carolina allege that this government has done him wrong?
22036Does it rouse no generous and noble feelings in your breasts to be a guardian shield and avenging sword to your country?
22036Has it trespassed upon the rights of a single individual?
22036Has the feeling of sectionalism become stronger than love of country?
22036He said:"Is there any significance in this Columbus visit?"
22036He stared at Lord and demanded"Where in hell did you get that?"
22036How can I fight shadows?
22036How can a man prove himself innocent against an innuendo?
22036How can we travel on our future march of progress in Mexico, or on the high seas, or on the Pacific slope, without collision?
22036How could they be paid?
22036How long can we conduct such a war?
22036How must its existence be established?"
22036How shall this currency be replaced?
22036How should I fear it, when I am an example of a man serving on the fifth term of six years each?
22036How then, you may ask me, can these coins be made equal to each other?
22036I ask him now whether he is willing to withdraw the resolution for the purpose he has indicated, temporarily, or for any time?"
22036I ask whether it was just to quote the opinion without giving the disclaimer?
22036I ask you if you have not sins to repent of, if we have?
22036I quote my view of the action of the President:"Was not this act willfully violated by the President during the session of the Senate?
22036I replied:"I appeal to the Senator whether that is a fair statement of my argument?"
22036If I want to prove that Ohio people are migratory, what better evidence can I have than is afforded by the men who are here around me?
22036If he has a note which you promised to pay and can not, and he desires interest on that note by surrendering it, why should you not give it to him?
22036If not, what additional measures should be executed?
22036If so, shall the government resist?
22036If so, where will be the line?
22036If that was the process why issue them at all?
22036If the public honor can not protect our promise to the note holder, how shall it protect our promise to the bondholder?
22036If we can recall our promise to pay our notes outstanding why should we not issue more?
22036If we can reopen the question of the payment of our notes, why may we not reopen the question as to the payment of our bonds?
22036In leaving he said:"Tell me, did your trip here at this time have any reference to your fences, their building or repair?"
22036In reply to the question,"Will the Ohio delegates remain true to Sherman?"
22036In what kind of money?
22036Is it for this that you would continue in power a party that, by a long enjoyment of the patronage of the government, has become reckless and corrupt?
22036Is it likely that we will yield what our northern Democratic friends could not yield?
22036Is it nothing for your names to be enrolled on the list of fame?
22036Is it on a foreign sale that you are relying?"
22036Is it that we are to retire our greenback circulation?
22036Is it to defeat this noble policy that you would longer trust a broken- down, corrupt and demoralized administration?
22036Is it wise to recoin the old silver dollar with a view to exchange it for United States notes?"
22036Is it, that we are to have no paper money in circulation?
22036Is not the alternative given by the law?"
22036Is that good political economy?''
22036Is the act of 1869 any more sacred than the act of 1875?
22036Is the inability limited in its nature to long continued intellectual incapacity, or has it a broader import?
22036Is there no latent spark of patriot ardor that the wrongs and indignities of our country will kindle into a flame?
22036Is there no thirst in our bosoms for glory?
22036Is this the party which you would combine and conspire against, and to defeat which you would unite hostile elements?
22036It forces us to ask:''Is there, in all republics, this inherent and fatal weakness?''
22036May I ask if you used these words, and, if you did so, did you mean to connect me, directly or indirectly, with what was known as the Ku- Klux Klan?
22036Might I not be robbed?
22036Mr. Ashmore inquired:"Are you not in favor of abolishing slavery in the District of Columbia?"
22036Mr. Bayard inquired:"Does not the law provide that the customs duties shall be paid in coin or in notes of the United States?
22036Mr. Blaine was asked:"Do you think Mr. Sherman could be elected?"
22036Mr. Buckner inquired:"For this$ 50,000,000 additional I suppose you rely, to some extent, on the coinage of silver?"
22036Mr. Ewing inquired:"Where do you expect to get the additional fifty millions of gold by January 1, 1879?"
22036Mr. Hamilton, of Maryland, inquired:"I would ask the Senator if there is authority to reissue that fractional currency?"
22036Mr. Jefferson, in his message of 1806, says:"To what object shall the surplus be appropriated?
22036Mr. Schurz asked:"Will the Senator permit me to ask him a question in reference to this section?
22036Must it surrender its property, its flag, its nationality?
22036Must this government submit to insult and indignity?
22036My first inquiry to one of the denizens was"Where is your wood and your lake which gave a name to your town?"
22036On one occasion when safely seated he grimly said to them,"Who will carry me when you die?"
22036One day, as my party and I were about to enter a car, some one said:"Is not that John Sherman?"
22036Ought this promise be performed?
22036Shall silver coin be exchanged for United States notes as well as for fractional currency?
22036Shall the mouth of the Mississippi be separated from its sources?
22036Shall we introduce these words when a majority of the states are free, and when the progress of civilization has arrayed the world against slavery?
22036Shall we suppress the impost, and thus give that advantage to foreign over domestic manufacturers?"
22036Should not the benefit of this circulation inure to the people, rather than to corporations, either state or national?
22036Should the great majority yield to a meagre minority, especially under threats of disunion?
22036Such a reception as this, I think, would bring every boy from every farm in the State of Ohio, and what would become of New York then?
22036That question is,''Ought the resumption act of 1875 be repealed?''
22036The Indians, however, had possession, and how was their title to be disposed of?
22036The gentleman from Ohio propounds the question more directly whether I am willing to withdraw the resolution for the purpose which I avow?
22036The only question is, where is the boundary between rights reserved and those given up?
22036The question is not, shall we coerce a state?
22036The question then naturally occurs, why grant them?
22036The young soldier squared himself and with some insolence said:"Do you think I do n''t know how to boil beans?"
22036Then, after calling attention to the war record of the Democratic party, the speaker said:''Who is the enemy of the country?''
22036There was great wealth in the country but how could it be promptly utilized?
22036This naturally led to the inquiry,"What will you do about it?"
22036To all this they answered:"Did you not vote for the bill on its passage?"
22036To the State of Mississippi?
22036To whom?
22036Wade, much excited, asked me, pointing to the soldier:"Who is that?"
22036Was it not then possible to preserve to the government the exclusive right to issue paper money, and yet not injuriously affect the local banks?
22036We are a migratory race, and why should we not be?
22036Well, how can I?
22036Well, why do n''t General Ewing come down and say''I was mistaken?''
22036What a strange tale does not the history of the United States for the past twelve months unfold?
22036What a striking moral does it not point?
22036What are the issues of such banks but bills of credit issued by the state?
22036What can the Republicans do half as bad as Pierce and Buchanan have done?
22036What can they do?
22036What charge is made against me?
22036What did he do with that surplus revenue?
22036What do we mean by this phrase?
22036What expedient so easy if we would make money cheap and abundant?
22036What is he?
22036What is the matter?
22036What is the object of accumulating these vast balances in the treasury?
22036What is there about silver bullion that distinguishes it from any other product of industry that the government needs?
22036What is there in the office that prevents his full and free and complete performance of all the duties imposed upon him as Governor of Ohio?
22036What must be its extent and duration?
22036What of that?
22036What power has he?
22036What should take the place of gold and silver for currency?
22036What was I to do during the two spare years?
22036What was done by the administration of James Buchanan to meet these acts of war?
22036What was the effect of this important act of Congress?
22036What was the result?
22036What will satisfy South Carolina and Florida and Mississippi and Alabama?
22036What would be their miserable fate if now surrendered to the custody of the rebels of the south?
22036What, then, will be the fate of hundreds of politicians in the southern states who have stirred their people up to the present intense excitement?
22036When have results more wonderful been accomplished in eight months?
22036When it came by the telegraph,"Scott 159, Fillmore 112, Webster 21,"he repeated it in his deep tones and said:"How will this read in history?"
22036Where does he find the power to prescribe the terms of the note, to make it transferable, receivable for public dues?
22036Where does the history of nations present an example of greater physical weakness followed so soon by greater physical strength?
22036Where is the spirit of our fathers that urged them to battle and to victory?
22036Who can estimate the untold hoards of silver that will come into the treasury if this policy is adopted?
22036Who has brought anything from that record against me that is worthy of answer?
22036Who of the north can say, that in like conditions, he would not have been a rebel?
22036Who shall possess the territories?
22036Who shall possess this magnificent capital, with all its evidences of progress and civilization?
22036Who would risk such a question to the changing votes of Congress?"
22036Why attempt it, unless to invite new contests, to again arouse sectional animosities?
22036Why ca n''t friends be sent or come here?
22036Why decide upon them?
22036Why discriminate against these notes in the sale of bonds?
22036Why do n''t you compromise?
22036Why does not the Senator dispute some fact stated in that speech?
22036Why may not the United States tax income from each alike?
22036Why not let the Republican administration be inaugurated in peace and quiet?
22036Why not try the experiment?
22036Why not, by terminating their territorial condition, determine this controversy?
22036Why not?
22036Why ought not anyone who issued a promise to pay on demand be made to pay it when demanded, or pay interest thereafter?
22036Why pay three and sixty- five hundredths per cent., when it is easier to print three?
22036Why should all other business be suspended, and saloons only be open?
22036Why should it not have been done?
22036Why should not a man be nominated by the Republicans for a third term as Governor of Ohio?
22036Why should not the United States give its obligation bearing interest just as any individual would have to do?
22036Why should you not do that?
22036Why should you not have an Ohio society as well as a New England society, or any other kind of society?
22036Why, then, present these issues?
22036Why?
22036Why?
22036Will monsieur allow me to be a substitute?"
22036Will you read and send them at once?
22036Will you remonetize silver and place it back where it was before it was excluded from the mints of the United States and Europe?"
22036Will you, by your demand of universal suffrage, destroy the power of the Union party to protect them in their dearly purchased liberty?
22036Will you, then, destroy all confidence?
22036but shall we not defend the property of the United States against all enemies, at home and abroad, here or wherever the flag of our country floats?
22036cause gold to be exported and silver to become the sole standard of value?
22036of greenbacks are retired will they be destroyed and never used again?"
21408''And go in my shirt- sleeves?'' 21408 ''And you will not pay me now?''
21408''For mercy''s sake, what?'' 21408 ''Sir,''said I,''I am ashamed to accept anything for so trifling a service; but I owe this man here,--how much is it now?''
21408''So, he is going too?'' 21408 ''Why have you not called to see me?''
21408''Will you pay me?'' 21408 ''_ Eh bien?_''says the driver, interrogatively, as I went out to him.
21408''_ Pensez- vous qu''il est allà © à   Londres?_''I hurriedly inquired. 21408 ''_ Que veut Monsieur?_''says the driver, looking over at me with his red face, and waiting for my orders.
21408Adaly, my child, what can I do for you?
21408An author may wince under criticism,say the writers of the Saturday Review;"but is the master to leave off flogging because the pupil roars?"
21408And am I to be their slave?
21408And nobody knows this but you? 21408 And what said Adèle?"
21408But do n''t you think,said Pheasant,"that a certain fixed dress, marking the unworldly character of a religious order, is desirable?
21408But how is it you are here so soon?
21408But stay,said Mrs. Gaunt;"for us to play the woman so, and delude a saint for his mere bodily weal, will it not be a sin, and a sacrilege to boot?"
21408But what are these principles? 21408 But what did I behold?
21408But what did he say to you that time?
21408But who rules France?
21408But, father,says Phil, puzzled by the old gentleman''s manner,"what does this mean?"
21408Can it be? 21408 Can there be some horrible mistake in all this?"
21408Do n''t you know that turn- out?
21408Do you really, truly mean it?
21408Do you recall the first name?
21408Frank, did you say?
21408He said, sir,''What does he send me this damned stuff for?'' 21408 How should I know?"
21408How was that?
21408I have found her true name too, at last,--Julie Chalet,--is it not so? 21408 Is the old godmother, of whom you used to speak, still alive?
21408It''s very queer, is n''t it?
21408Madam occupied the back seat-- the seat of honor in a coach-- with whom, do you suppose? 21408 New Papa,"said she, approaching him with a gravity that matched his own,"is this some new delusion?
21408O, is that all?
21408Philip,said the Squire, with a seriousness that seemed almost comical by its excess,"would you really marry Adèle?"
21408Tell me, New Papa,--tell me honestly,--is it not true that I can call no one mother,--that I never could?
21408Then why keep it under cover? 21408 Then you do not believe in influencing this subject of dress by religious persons''adopting any particular laws of costume?"
21408We know it''s silly, but we all bow down before it; we are afraid of our lives before it; and who makes all this and sets it going? 21408 Well, but my dear, consider,"said Griffith;"who ever heard of comparing a living man to St. Paul, for preaching?
21408Well, did you ever see such a tyranny as this of fashion?
21408Well, if ye must,said Betty;"but when will ye come again?"
21408Well, why not bid them serve the dinner?
21408What do you mean, father?
21408What is the matter?
21408What''s the trouble, Philip?
21408What, are you going to strip the house, my woman?
21408What, dine alone o''Sunday? 21408 What, with the sun hot upon''em?"
21408Where had he gone? 21408 Who decides what the fashions shall be there?"
21408Who is Madam Waldoborough? 21408 Who is Madam Waldoborough?"
21408Why does n''t he sup with us, and be sociable, as Father Francis used? 21408 Why not, dearest, just for once?"
21408Why, what''s wrong with him now?
21408You have been to the Gobelins? 21408 You know whose''t is?"
21408_ Truly_, Rose?
21408''WHO IS THE MAID?
21408''Who is the maid my spirit seeks, Through cold reproof and slander''s blight?
21408***** Meditations about the main gas- pipe of a great city,--if the supply were to be stopped, what would happen?
21408--how can I ever hope to raise that sum in Paris?''
21408An outpouring of ridicule, of severity, such as the same book received from so many quarters?
21408And Madam said,''Shall I order the driver to be paid?
21408And all about what?
21408And is there any reason, indeed, in our houses being no better appointed than the English houses of thirty years ago?
21408And now what would be the consequences of the yielding of Congress in this struggle?
21408And says I,''If I was to be always fasting, like as you be, d''ye think I should have the heart to work from morn till night?''
21408And we went somewhere together,--where did we go?--or was it some other gentleman?''
21408And what follows?
21408And wherefore discouraged, indeed?
21408And why did n''t I tell him before that I wished to stop there?
21408And why, I added, should I be in haste?
21408And yet has routine altogether ceased?
21408And, O, sir, what are earthly flowers compared with those blossoms of the soul you have shed so liberally over us?
21408And, finally, is the President to be supported because he is the champion of conciliation and peace?
21408Another important question is, What is the ability of the negro to bear these burdens?
21408Are not the"loyal men"in for their term of office simply, and the State in permanently?
21408Are there many to whom the following lines will not be better than new?
21408Are we never to obtain even this, until the golden doors of the Millennium swing open?
21408Are we so sure of this?
21408Besides, would it not be safer, wiser, to modify ideas by experience, to look abroad for patterns, to seek for an equilibrium, a_ juste milieu_?
21408But by which route would he be like to go?
21408But how to get out of it?
21408But how?
21408But in France the question created by past convulsions, and left unsolved by recent experiments, was this: What_ is_ the basis of power?
21408But is it not plain that Congress, if it admits Senators and Representatives, admits the States from which they come?
21408But is this indeed the explanation?
21408But it was too real, and I said,"Can it be that I am asleep?"
21408But should he rudely break the spell in the presence of the enchanter?
21408But the kindly aunt had not forborne( how could she?)
21408But the two o''clock in the morning,--how should I manage that?
21408But then the question comes up, Was he in reality familiar with the works?
21408But was she, papa, so utterly unworthy?
21408But what is,--and who is?"
21408But what say you to Phil''s marriage now?
21408But why so many words, Kate?
21408But, dear me, what am I thinking of?
21408Can a fraction of the State be in, and another fraction out, by the terms of the United States Constitution?
21408Can there be any safety for the minority, when the majority, which numbers fifteen to one, has such a sense of injustice rankling in its breast?
21408Could he reach it before the train started?
21408Could it be that I was thus suddenly"developed as a medium,"and that the spirit of some departed friend wished to communicate with me?
21408Could it of could it not be done?
21408Could they show a nobler record if subjected to equally close scrutiny?
21408Did ever I ask you to go to church with me?
21408Did he know where the stations were?
21408Did he not die long ago?"
21408Did this Batrachian really possess a rational soul, with sentiments of piety and justice, or only a wonderfully constructive faculty of imitation?
21408Did you ever see flounces?
21408Do you not remember that saying of Engel, that when men dream of asking whether they are awake, they always dream that they answer yes?
21408Does it look as tempting as it did?"
21408For since there is neither place nor provision for her in the world, why indeed should she have come?
21408Great men and women live in glass houses, and what passer- by can resist the temptation to throw stones?
21408Had I visited the Gobelins?
21408Had he deserted"art,"and fallen back upon the crudities misnamed"nature"?
21408Had he merely taken to"dashing off"his thoughts, after the general manner of newspaper writers?
21408Had these negroes of Morant Bay any special causes of exasperation?
21408Has he the genius and the will to solve the problem before him, to reconcile liberty with authority?
21408Has he written me?"
21408Has not prejudice invented most exquisite tortures for reformers of all ages?
21408Has the world no richer gift in store for him?
21408Has_ she_ Love''s roses on her cheeks?
21408Hast thou ne''er heard that they who once become Faithful to death are masters over death?
21408Have things come to a crisis, eh?"
21408Have we been fighting in order to compel the South to resume its reluctant_ rôle_ of governing us?
21408Have we to do with an article of faith, some divine dogma not to be touched without sacrilege?
21408How could she do otherwise?
21408How is it that our own language offers no such example?
21408How is it with the cloud that lay upon you?
21408How long stir the echoes it wakened of old, While its strings were unbroken, untarnished its gold?
21408How long will this harp which you once loved to hear Cheat your lips of a smile or your eyes of a tear?
21408How many different scenes it sheds light on?
21408I ask, therefore, of what liberty we are disputing?
21408I do n''t believe we look any better now, when we are dressed, than we did then,--so what''s the use?"
21408I had regretted that her footman did not accompany us; but what need was there of a footman as long as she had me?
21408I presume you do n''t know anybody else who is afflicted with that complaint?
21408I suggested that King Francis should be left in the coach; upon which Mrs. Waldoborough asked, reproachfully,''Could I be so cruel?''
21408I wonder with what feeling you will read it; will it be with a wakened fondness?
21408If I were in your study, my dear Johns, you might ask me who those women were?
21408In speaking to me of Wordsworth, he said:''Well, sir, did you ever see a horse, sir?''
21408In this age of the world, O what could you do, or where could you go, e''en on a thousand pounds a year, poor Robin Ruff?
21408In what manner did this cruel wretch treat his enthusiastic admirer and humble follower, Toussaint l''Ouverture?
21408In what obscure society have you buried yourself?
21408Is he the enlightened leader whom a nation may and confidently follow?
21408Is it generous, or even just, in scoffers who are safely hidden behind bricks and mortar, to take advantage of the glass?
21408Is it not the charm of life that nothing is final,--not even death itself?
21408Is it not then with reason that M. Sainte- Beuve has been styled"the prince of contemporaneous criticism"?
21408Is it to throw it away in scorn?
21408Is it true?
21408Is not South Carolina in the Union?
21408Is not this attempt to graft the foibles of an older and more corrupt civilization upon our institutions, a disgrace to republicanism?
21408Is prejudice, that monster with a thousand forms which has the quality of never recognizing its own visage, as far removed as we flatter ourselves?
21408Is progress, true progress, as entirely the order of the day as it is believed to be?
21408Is she not an estray upon the world?
21408Is the President to be supported because he aims to represent the whole people?
21408Is the President to be supported because he is determined the defeated South shall not be oppressed?
21408Is the President to be supported because he is magnanimous and merciful?
21408Is the President to be supported because he represents the principle of"no taxation without representation"?
21408Is the President to be supported because he sustains State Rights against Centralization?
21408Is there any light?
21408Is_ hers_ an eye of this world''s light?
21408It all comes, therefore, to this single inquiry: Is the present ruler of France a great man, a hero?
21408Know?
21408Landor, how_ can_ you talk to that fool, Prince Napoleon?''
21408Like all the rest, he has been charmed with the liveliness and grace of Adèle; over and over he has said to his boy,"How fares it, Phil?
21408Marriage to whom?"
21408May not the outbreak teach the danger of not allowing the negro to vote?
21408Me?
21408Might not one also beguile a third day at Niagara by reflections on the Croton Aqueduct?
21408Must one wear such a fright of a bonnet?"
21408Never was there such a Babel of musical tones as that which assailed my ears while these six learned--(what shall I call them?
21408Not that I would willingly have wronged the coachman; but since there was no hope of doing him justice, why not do the best thing for myself?
21408Now, was n''t I right?"
21408One asks, At what expense of life to the victors was all this slaughter accomplished?
21408One would like to be grand and heroic, if one could; but if not, why try at all?
21408Or is it that their Transatlantic compeers float away and dissolve by their own feebleness before they reach our shores?
21408Perhaps it sounds a little egotistic to say"my grocer,"& c., but is not this the way that heads of families talk, and am I not head and family too?
21408Shall he oppose or condemn it because of this contrariety?
21408Shall she not-- as well first as last-- wander forth, homeless as she is, into the night?
21408Shall we then pronounce him a very chameleon in politics and in art?
21408She gave but one glance at it, and screamed out:"There, did n''t I tell you?
21408She had in her arms-- what do you suppose?
21408Should he be any less so?
21408Since all of life may be rounded into rhythm, shall we not even consult the harmonies in a grocer or an upholsterer?
21408So far we are all agreed, are we not?"
21408Soon shutting it, he turned to me, saying:''Is not what I have been reading exceedingly good?''
21408The Paris milliners, the Empress, or who?"
21408The shopkeeper directed my attention to him, saying:''Do you know who that is, sir?''
21408The wind lies there, eh?
21408Then appeared-- who do you suppose?
21408Then on him gravely looked the Syrian With grand, calm mien, as almost pitying, And said:"O father, can this be thy_ faith_?
21408Then she said, rather timidly,"Could you make his eggs into omelets?
21408Then the bride said,''You know my cousin Herbert, I believe?''
21408Thereupon Lamb burst out laughing, and exclaimed:''Did one ever know so conceited a man as Mr. Landor?
21408Upon being asked if he thought dogs would be admitted into heaven, Landor answered:"And, pray, why not?
21408WERE THEY CRICKETS?
21408Was all this delusive?
21408Was it enchanting now?
21408Was it not time for him to go?
21408Was not that friendly?
21408Was not the poor lady she had so religiously mourned over her mother?
21408Was there ever acted on the stage of history such a travesty of constitutional government?
21408What do you say to that?''
21408What if they were to join their fortunes and come back some day to dazzle these quiet townsfolk with the splendor of their life?
21408What is that exorbitant price?
21408What is the result?
21408What moral could be drawn from this?
21408What shall I do?"
21408What tongue talks of battle?
21408What was he to undertake?
21408What would be its effect?
21408What?
21408What_ coupà ©_?
21408What_ do_ girls generally talk about, when a knot of them get together?
21408When is love of dress excessive and wrong?
21408When she moved away at last, as if for a leave- taking, silent and humiliated, the old man said to her,"My child, are you not still my Adaly?
21408When, when will you come to break them, and set me free?"
21408Where are you, my love?''
21408Where do they all go to?
21408Where do you live?
21408Where is the coming man who shall communicate this art of clubbing, which has not yet even been admitted into the feminine dialect?
21408Where next?
21408While the steam power is there for heating purposes, why not use some of it to propel the passengers up and down that wilderness of rosy boudoirs?
21408Who makes the fashions?"
21408Who would believe it, to look at him?
21408Why does she find herself watching their looks so curiously?
21408Why should she be, indeed?
21408Will it not divert him from the trail where he wanders blindly?
21408Will it not touch the heart of Reuben?
21408Will there be a place under the eaves?
21408With the Spider?
21408Would I not be almost tempted to thank him with-- myself?
21408Would you belie a good man for that?
21408You called one morning, did n''t you?
21408You have been to one or two of my receptions, have n''t you?''
21408You scarce think of God on week- days; and, indeed, never mention his name, except in the way of swearing; and on Sunday you go to church-- for what?
21408You shall go with me( will you not?)
21408You think I tumbled down the Waldoborough stairs?
21408_ Cocher, vous emporterez ce monsieur chez lui, comprennez?_''"''_ Bien, Madame!_''says the_ cocher_.
21408_ Is_ it necessary to go without hoops, and look like a dipped candle, in order to be unworldly?
21408_ Quand aurai- je le tems, Mademoiselle?_''"''I sink zis af''noon is more time zan you have anozer day, Madame,''says the Spider.
21408and how was I ever to pay it?
21408and if I were to ask you, would you go?"
21408and what about her carriage?"
21408can it be?"
21408cocher!_''I cried out, despairingly,''_ attendez!_''"''_ Qu''est- il?_''says the_ cocher_, stopping promptly.
21408did you ever hear anything like that?"
21408did you ever witness expansion?
21408have your eyes ever beheld the-- so to speak-- new- risen sun trailing clouds of glory over the threshold of the dawn?
21408or will you retain the_ coupà ©_?
21408perhaps somewhere a bit of a conservatory and a fountain,--did not Mrs. Stowe tell us of these too?
21408poor man,"said she,"and is it so?
21408said the old man with a great tremor in his voice,"what does this mean?"
21408says the boy,''do you suppose my father would lie just for one pigeon?''
21408shall I starve my soul, by hurrying away from the oracles of God to a sirloin?
21408shall it exhibit a discretion and a shamefacedness for which no one, the author least of all, would care?"
21408should he disturb the veneration that encircled his decline?
21408the pinch lies there, eh?"
21408what to do?"
21408what will become of the grand philosophy of Epictetus?
21408where?"
21408will it be with loathing?
21408would not the end be anarchy?
18721A scoundrel, if God ever made one--"Because he looks at me?
18721All right-- kill Slavery and then what? 18721 Am I so ignorant?"
18721And he called on Jeff Davis last night?
18721And it makes no difference?
18721And these, Miss Jennie-- they''re the finest of the lot?
18721And those giants?
18721And try to help me?
18721And what of it, if he threw it away by appointing a fool second in Command?
18721And what say you, Holt?
18721And who''s the young knight by his side with the dear little mustache to which he seems so attached?
18721And why, pray?
18721And you can not forgive?
18721And you did n''t tell me?
18721And you do n''t like that sort of penance?
18721And you expect to go back to Connecticut after making that statement?
18721And you know that the State of South Carolina has dismantled Fort Moultrie?
18721And you recommend?
18721And your Senators who took a solemn oath in entering this Chamber to support the Constitution will leave their seats in violation of that oath?
18721Are all of the girls of the South like you, Miss Jennie?
18721Are n''t they? 18721 Are n''t you sorry for these poor fellows?"
18721Are we more or less than men? 18721 Are you?"
18721Are you?
18721Bitter?
18721But I knew you would come--"You''ll not send me away again?
18721But I think you might help me a little--"If it''s within my power--"You remember Miss Barton?
18721But if he wins-- who will dare to criticise the wisdom of his policy fifty years from to- day? 18721 But one and she has just arrived with the Presidential party-- Miss Jennie Barton--""The Senator''s daughter?"
18721But suppose it should turn out that he had to whip five or six or a dozen?
18721But you do n''t know what I''ve got for you--"What?
18721Ca n''t I do something for you?
18721Ca n''t you say your prayers together to- night?
18721Can you direct me to General Beauregard''s headquarters?
18721Captain Welford evidently thinks so--"And you?
18721Captain Welford,she laughed,"has just accused you of hobnobbing with the enemy on the streets-- what explanation can you offer?"
18721Clairvoyance perhaps--"You believe in such things?
18721Did n''t you save any of your own things?
18721Did you know they were going to do that, sir?
18721Did you see him kiss me, Polly?
18721Do n''t ask me idiotic questions,she answered sternly;"what are you driving at?"
18721Do n''t you believe I would?
18721Do n''t you like me a little?
18721Do n''t you see the chain hanging from her waist?
18721Do n''t you think these fellows could do it?
18721Does it matter now? 18721 Does look like business, does n''t it?"
18721Engaged on important business for the Government--"What Government?
18721Enough to take me west of the Mississippi--"You are well mounted?
18721Even so, how can he do the astounding thing he proposes to carry out to- day? 18721 Even so, is n''t it better to first settle their claims and avoid war?"
18721For heaven''s sake, Jennie,the boy cried at last,"who is that villain in the Diplomatic gallery?"
18721For_ my_ country-- yes--He paused a moment and went on carelessly:"Your older brother, the Judge, will fight for the Union?"
18721Hardly--"Ye want me ter tell ye?
18721Has General Miles given that order?
18721Have n''t I?
18721Have you ever been conscious of being watched? 18721 He has searched your room and found your cipher code--""And you have saved my life?"
18721He is for the Union then?
18721He, too, will enter the army?
18721Honest now, Jennie-- you do n''t care for any other fellow?
18721How can I ever hold my head up again under censure from you-- one of my oldest and best friends?
18721How can the man who made that speech in Boston do this mad deed to- day?
18721How can you ask such a question?
18721How curious--"An illusion?
18721How dare you insult the man I love in my presence, Dick Welford?
18721How do you know?
18721How far?
18721How''ll they beat us when we git ready ter make the fight?
18721How?
18721I am going to surrender you to the authorities--"And you have just been sobbing in my arms-- the man you have sworn to love forever?
18721I am ordered back to the entrenchments--"You think it wise to walk back into the trap we''ve just escaped from?
18721I ask the big divine thing of you, Dick?
18721I bet ye could never guess how I knowed it-- could ye?
18721I ca n''t do it, sir--"Will you lend me your engine?
18721I ca n''t join, Father Wilson?
18721I consider this better ground--"You have left no rear guard to contest McClellan''s crossing?
18721I did n''t know just what they were going to do--"You knew they were up to something?
18721I did, did n''t I? 18721 I have--""Why?"
18721I just ran into Socola talking to this woman--"Is that all?
18721I know one that did n''t anyhow--"Who?
18721I know that Socola is here--"And if he is?
18721I love you--"And that is not enough?
18721I sent for you the night young Dahlgren''s body was stolen--"Really?
18721I should n''t care to meet them in a row--"You know what General Taylor said of them in the Mexican War?
18721I was in a gambling establishment--"Whose?
18721I wonder why that soldier took his hat off?
18721I''ll arrest him--"On what charge?
18721I''ll give him up on one condition--"What?
18721I''ll wait a day and try again--"You knew of Captain Welford''s death, I suppose?
18721I''m afraid I was a little rude the other day?
18721I''m just going home with you, ai n''t I?
18721I''m not so loyal after all-- am I?
18721I''m sorry, Dick dear, I did n''t think you loved me in that way--"What did you think I was hanging round you so much for?
18721I''m sure of it--"But you did n''t see her drop it?
18721If I tell you that much, you''ll let me off?
18721If we could only get them across the Mississippi,Davis cried,"where beef and supplies of all kind are abundant-- but what can we do for them here?"
18721If you care to put it so-- I mean, is their loyalty to the Confederacy a mania?
18721In case Johnston abandons Richmond,the President slowly began,"where in your opinion, General Lee, is the next best line of defense?"
18721In the far South and the West?
18721In this freezing cold?
18721Indeed?
18721Indeed?
18721Is Mr. Davis well mounted?
18721Is it necessary?
18721Is mine a mania?
18721Is n''t he a beauty? 18721 Is there anything else you can think of, Uncle Bob?"
18721Is this not President Davis?
18721It shall be forever?
18721It will take a brave man to do that, wo n''t it?
18721Jennie,he began seriously,"you are sure that you love the South?"
18721Johnnie Worsham''s--"What were you doing there? 18721 Just the lower floor?"
18721Let''s stop on this hill and watch the sunset, Miss Sarah?
18721Lord, I wish I were going with you--"I wish so, too--"Honest, Jennie?
18721M- m- eaning of w- what?
18721May I ask why you chose to give up the defenses of such a river without a blow?
18721May I write to you occasionally, Miss Jennie?
18721Miss Barton, may I ask a little favor of you?
18721Must I, to- night?
18721Need I explain?
18721Neither life nor death, nor height nor depth can separate us?
18721No?
18721Not the least-- little-- tiny-- bit?
18721Of course I am-- don''t you think I know what those shoulder straps mean?
18721Of course, I can pick cotton if I want to--"But ye raly do n''t wanter?
18721Of course, I know that-- but I can keep on trying, ca n''t I?
18721Of course, not--"You liked that Socola, did n''t you?
18721Perfectly--"You have absolutely consecrated your life, and every talent, to your country?
18721Perhaps I should say a divine passion-- are all your Southern women thus inspired?
18721Perhaps your State Department may find me useful?
18721Please, Dick-- don''t--"Yes,he insisted,"I want to talk about it and you must hear me-- won''t you?"
18721Please-- not that now--"Why-- not now?
18721Recognized me?
18721Richmond is to be surrendered without a battle?
18721Say, men, do ye want to die?
18721Say-- now-- ain''t yo''name Jeff''son Davis?
18721Senator Davis-- you do n''t know him?
18721Signor Socola, I believe?
18721So help you God?
18721So you have returned a fiercer rebel than ever, Miss Jennie?
18721Something you''ve always wanted to have for your own--"A pony?
18721Tell me frankly and honestly the whole story of your life--"You believe me an impostor?
18721Tell me,Dr. Craven said kindly,"what I can do to add to your comfort?"
18721Tell me,she cried;"you studied the sciences at West Point, what does it mean?"
18721That cloud of dust coming toward the station?
18721That the woman I love can deliver me to death--"You doubt it?
18721That''s why he kissed me when I left?
18721The aristocrats do n''t think so--"What t''ell they got agin him? 18721 The same old thing, Benjamin-- only a little more virulent this time-- what of it?"
18721Then you do n''t_ mind_ if I win?
18721There are complications which may increase our dangers or suddenly lift them--"Complications-- what do you mean?
18721There''s no other fellow?
18721They can force you to sleep in his room,pleaded the ringleader,"but, by Gimminy, that do n''t make you a monk, does it?"
18721They''re for revenge--"Revenge?
18721They''ve loosed two big rafters and have them ready to use as battering rams--"You''re sure of this?
18721War has been declared? 18721 We will reach Montgomery in time for the meeting of the Convention of Seceding States?"
18721We wo n''t even get our noses in the door--"You do n''t think these old Senators get up at daylight, do you?
18721We''ll be friends anyhow, Jennie?
18721Well, I''ve been speculating about you--"Indeed?
18721Well, it''s good- by to the old Union-- how many Senators are going to- day?
18721Well, sir?
18721Were n''t you afraid of Anderson''s cannon, uncle?
18721What are you crying about?
18721What can I do, gentlemen-- what can I do? 18721 What can I do?"
18721What chance has a Yankee got against such men?
18721What could separate us, my lover? 18721 What do you mean?"
18721What do you mean?
18721What do you think of them?
18721What do you want me to do?
18721What else?
18721What is it, Dick?
18721What is it, James?
18721What is it? 18721 What is it?"
18721What is it?
18721What is it?
18721What on earth?
18721What''ell, Bill, is that thing?
18721What''s that dark spot in the valley?
18721What''s the matter with her, Big Brother?
18721What''s the matter with you to- day, Dick Welford?
18721What''s the matter? 18721 What''s the matter?"
18721What''s the use?
18721What''s this, my little comrade?
18721What?
18721When did they begin firin''?
18721Where are you going?
18721Where are you going?
18721Where are you going?
18721Where?
18721Who are the leaders of these mobs who seek thus to overthrow the Constitution? 18721 Who ever heard of a race of shopkeepers turning into soldiers?"
18721Who is it?
18721Who told you? 18721 Whose camp is that?"
18721Why did he stay so long?
18721Why did n''t I love you?
18721Why did n''t you attack me on Friday?
18721Why did you squeeze me so hard?
18721Why do you look at me so?
18721Why not?
18721Why, I never thought to hurt you, Colonel--"No? 18721 Why, Miss Jennie Barton?"
18721Why, that''s the-- the-- w- w- wagoners-- they''re trying to save the pieces I reckon--"The army has been pushed back?
18721Why?
18721Why?
18721Why?
18721Will you give me this paper?
18721Will you join me?
18721Will you tell me, General,Mrs. Davis asked,"where my husband is imprisoned and what his treatment is to be?"
18721Will you?
18721With the certainty of an uprising of your slaves at home?
18721Wo n''t little mother be surprised and glad?
18721Would the United States Army stand by the old flag?
18721Would what, Dick?
18721Would you like to go through the camps and see our men?
18721Would you, James?
18721Yep-- a shell toppled me over but I was on my feet in a minute laughing-- and I''ll bet you could n''t guess what about?
18721Yes, sir--"How?
18721Yes, why not?
18721Yes, you do-- aren''t you his servant?
18721Yes-- Jennie--"Do you know what you are doing?
18721Yes-- why?
18721Yes-- wouldn''t you?
18721Yes--"You know positively that he was the Secretary of the Sardinian Minister?
18721Yes?
18721Yes?
18721Yo''name, sah? 18721 You are a Southerner?"
18721You are a smoker?
18721You are chill, dearest?
18721You are happy, dearest?
18721You are ready, Miss Jennie?
18721You are serious to- day, Miss Jennie?
18721You are sure that deep down in your heart there''s not another motive?
18721You are wounded?
18721You believe that is a medical necessity?
18721You ca n''t be jealous?
18721You ca n''t convince me?
18721You can deliver me to execution?
18721You can postpone the execution of your order until I see him?
18721You certainly plugged him-- what did you think of the speeches?
18721You do n''t believe this?
18721You do n''t believe what I tell you?
18721You do n''t like me, Father?
18721You do n''t mind my looking about the house?
18721You do n''t say?
18721You do n''t think, doctor--he paused, afraid to say the thing--"you do n''t think my young mistis gwine ter die?"
18721You doubt it?
18721You gave her my message?
18721You have an older brother in New Orleans, I believe?
18721You have fully counted the cost, my son?
18721You have given up all hope of adjustment and reunion with the North?
18721You have money, Reagan?
18721You have moved your army into the suburbs of Richmond, General Johnston?
18721You have promulgated this order to the army?
18721You here?
18721You know any girls in Richmond?
18721You know that she is a traitor to her own people?
18721You like him?
18721You like it very much?
18721You mean insulting to their fathers?
18721You prefer to surrender?
18721You realize that you_ are_ the incarnate Cause of the South for me?
18721You really want to know,he began slowly,"why speaking tires me now?"
18721You think that I''ll submit to my fate without a fight?
18721You told me--"When?
18721You will be very bitter towards him if war should come?
18721You''d go to the front, of course?
18721You''ll excuse me now if I hurry on?
18721You''ll explain the drama to me to- day when the curtain rises?
18721You''ll try to trust me?
18721You''re not going out?
18721You''re wounded, sir?
18721You''ve done a noble and beautiful thing in the gift of your life to our Chief for these two miserable years--"They''ve been miserable to you?
18721You''ve heard of her?
18721Your family are all with you, Senator?
18721Your people must see, Senator, that secession will imperil the existence of their three thousand millions of dollars invested in slaves?
18721Your three younger brothers will fight for the South, of course, Miss Jennie?
18721Yulee and Mallory from Florida, Clay and Fitzpatrick from Alabama and Senator Davis--"All in a day?
18721_ Searching_ the house?
18721A woman inquired of Frederick, who was on his way to his room:"Where''s Jeff?"
18721After all, what does it matter what men think of me now?
18721Ai n''t he the biggest man in this country to- day?
18721And among his visitors the Blackest Republican of them all--""Old Abe run over from Illinois to say good- by?"
18721And how should this be named among the high crimes of George III which caused the Colonies to sever their connection with the Mother country?
18721And what_ did_ you think?"
18721And why did n''t they have a great organ?
18721Are we devoid of the sensibilities, the sentiments, the passions, the reason, and the instincts of mankind?
18721At last, he found his tongue:"Does Pa know I''m goin''?"
18721Besides it''s so much easier--""Indeed?"
18721Buckner quietly asked:"Am I to consider the command turned over to me?"
18721But by Gimminy I got the old rascal this time, did n''t I?"
18721Cadet Davis saw it first and calmly turned to his tormentor:"The fire- ball has ignited, sir,--what shall I do?"
18721Can we love our enemies and bless them that curse and revile us?
18721Dick''s crazy jealousy''s at the bottom of it all--"Why had Socola buried himself in the Department of State so completely since the scene with Dick?
18721Do n''t you hear the boys shouting?
18721Do n''t you see this is your country?
18721Do you know the history of the mind of man?
18721Have we no pride, no honor, no sense of shame, no reverence for our ancestors, no care for posterity, no love for home, or family or friends?
18721He bent his piercing eyes on his future son- in- law:"Lieutenant Davis?"
18721He came within half an hour, a wistful smile lighting his face as he extended his hand:"I am forgiven for having been born abroad?"
18721He could be arrested, but it''s not wise under the circumstances--""You will not arrest Senator Davis?"
18721He lifted his dimmed eyes to hers:"Will you write to my wife for me, Miss?"
18721He merely asked politely:"And the party of Senator Davis will start?"
18721He rose and stood smiling into her flushed face as she gasped:"A wonderful speech-- wasn''t it?"
18721He seized the Boy''s arms:"Do n''t you see, Boy, do n''t you?"
18721He smiled through his black beard into her sweet young face:"No''m, I reckon not--""Ca n''t I wash your face?"
18721He turned to Jennie with a winning appeal in his modulated voice:"Will you do me a very great favor, Miss Barton?"
18721He turned to the officer at the door:"Bring in four of your strongest men-- unarmed-- you understand?"
18721He wondered if he were not in reality playing a desperate waiting game, ready at the moment of the crisis to throw his information to either side?
18721He wondered what his mother would say to that?
18721He wondered what was going on in that home?
18721He''s bound to land somewhere high in the councils of the coming Confederacy--""There''ll be one?"
18721He''s handsome, is n''t he?"
18721Her grandmother sprang to her feet and asked in subdued tones:"What is it, child?"
18721His name is Holt--""The Judge Advocate General?"
18721How can the first step be taken?"
18721How could she be happy amid a scene of such desolation and suffering?
18721How?
18721I confess myself a rebel body and soul--_Confess_?
18721I find myself repeating the old question, what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and forfeit his life?
18721I have a rival--""A rival?"
18721I have searched his rooms--""Searched his_ rooms_?"
18721I love its beautiful mountains and plains-- its rivers and shining seas-- Oh, my love, ca n''t you see this divine vision of the future?
18721I meant to surrender utterly and trust you--""I did n''t get your message--""I know that you didn''t-- where were you?"
18721I saw General Johnston and his staff enter that house and establish his headquarters there--""Here in the suburbs of Richmond?"
18721I suppose you''re asking-- or think you''re asking-- for my daughter''s hand in marriage?"
18721I think a stand of 75,000 will be sufficient for all contingencies?"
18721I''d hate that--""And you like our ways better?"
18721I''ll live to a ripe old age--"She looked up into his face with a tender smile:"You think so?"
18721I''m going to offer him his life on one condition--""And that is?"
18721I''m going to resign my commission with the Sardinian Ministry and enter the service of the South--""You mean it?"
18721I''m surprised and puzzled--""Surprised and puzzled at what?"
18721I-- I love you-- Jennie-- don''t you love me-- just-- a-- little bit?"
18721I-- failed to catch it?"
18721If we lose, who will give us credit for our high ideals of Civil Law in times of war?
18721In heaven''s high name what could they be doing?
18721Is it forbidden in Richmond?"
18721Is there anything I can do to show how much I appreciate it?"
18721Jennie called to one she knew:"Where''s your mother, child?"
18721Jennie lifted her eyes to his:"What''s your name, my sweetheart?"
18721Jennie startled him from a reverie:"You like him?"
18721Kill Slavery and what will you do with its corpse?
18721Miles hastened to say:"''Davis''is in good health--""I can see him at once?"
18721Miss Jennie, will you meet him?"
18721My tenure of this office will be but a few weeks longer-- but you are my personal representative, you understand?"
18721Of having an eye fixed on you every moment, scrutinizing your smallest act, the change of the muscles of your face or the pose of your body?
18721Or was he a Secret Service man on her trail?
18721Save my life and his--""You could n''t live if he should die, Jennie?"
18721She''s scared-- Ah, that dress, that dress-- isn''t it a dream?
18721Should she commence to drop them one by one?
18721Should she take the chance?
18721Socola bent toward his trembling companion and whispered:"Who is she?"
18721Socola stooped and picked up something from the pavement--""Something she dropped?"
18721Socola whispered to Jennie:"Where have I witnessed this scene before?"
18721The Boy cleared his throat with a deep manly note and spoke in studied careless tones:"Seen any stray horses around here, ma''am?"
18721The Captain spoke in sharp nervous tones:"Well?"
18721The Lieutenant shot a swift glance at their leader and saluted him with friendly uplifted hand:"Can you tell us the way to the Fort, Chief?"
18721The President confronted the trembling conductor:"Will you move your train?"
18721The President turned in quiet dignity to Beauregard:"And what do you say, General Beauregard?"
18721The President turned to the white- haired Secretary of the Navy:"And you, General Toucey?"
18721The President, sitting his horse with erect tense figure, dashed up the hill to General Johnston:"How goes the battle, General?"
18721The South will go and build a government of her own-- as we built this one--""And fight twenty- three million people of the North?"
18721The brother smiled again:"Well, what do you think of that?"
18721The little head wagged doubtfully:"Honest, now, Father?"
18721The man who does that-- well, I''ve a pistol ready!--""What are you saying, dear?"
18721The old man smiled pleasantly:"And why do you wish this, my son?"
18721The slaves have risen?"
18721The tuning finished, she turned to her brother and asked with a smile:"And what shall I sing, Sir Richard?"
18721The water is bad--""And you have come to the very gates of the city?"
18721There must be a readjustment--""Between the North and South?"
18721They seek and mourn so long--""Really?"
18721To the shivering servant who stood in the hall the leader called:"Where are the damned secesh women?
18721Toombs hesitated a moment, and then asked suddenly:"Has President Davis money?"
18721Was n''t a man a double fool who had brains and refused to use them?
18721Was this man Kilpatrick''s scout?
18721We never fight--""The President of the Confederacy is a very fortunate leader, Miss Jennie--""Why?"
18721Welford?"
18721What could it mean?
18721What could wooden ships do with such forts and guns?
18721What do you know of the treasures buried in those big volumes?
18721What does he know about work?"
18721What have you heard?
18721What if she were dead and he could never see her again?
18721What shall we do?"
18721What was the use?
18721What would she do if the truth were revealed?
18721What''s the matter?"
18721When all the others had been greeted, he turned to his mother:"Where''s Pa?"
18721When he spoke it was only a commonplace he managed to blurt out:"So you''re really going to- morrow?"
18721When they get the signal from the outside they''ll batter down the walls and rush through--""Batter down the walls?"
18721Where had he heard the peal of that organ and seen the flash of those gorgeous lights?
18721Where had he heard those bells?
18721Where is the Southern man who would wish that monument less by one Northern name that constitutes the mass?
18721Where were you at twelve o''clock night before last?"
18721Who are these hypocrites who claim the championship of freedom and the moral leadership of the world?
18721Who said so?"
18721Who shall deliver us from the body of this death?
18721Why did n''t they proclaim a truce to bury the dead and save the wounded?
18721Why did n''t they rescue those men?
18721Why had he asked the one question that opened the wound in her heart?
18721Why had he not seen this before?
18721Why not cut loose from your escort?
18721Why on earth could n''t he throw off the fool idea that he was going to lose her?
18721Why one year?
18721Why set up a Constitution at all to- day?"
18721Why set up a Constitution until you have won by the sword the power to maintain it?"
18721Why should he risk the happiness of the woman he loved and his own happiness for life by remaining another day?
18721Why should such a man deliberately come into this chamber to- day before this assembled crowd and commit hari- kari?"
18721Why should they swell the ranks of great armies to augment the power of military lords?
18721Why the devil had n''t he done so before anyhow?
18721Why tie these millstones around your neck?
18721Will the safety of your army allow more time?
18721Will you do it?"
18721With the friendliest smile the Lieutenant extended his hand:"Before we begin our chat, let''s shake hands?"
18721With the last breath I breathe your name shall be on my lips--""You may speak your last word soon--""What do you mean?"
18721Wo n''t you be mine?"
18721You can vouch for his loyalty?"
18721You did n''t ask to sleep in his old room, did you?"
18721You know now that I love you, do n''t you?"
18721You leave to- morrow?"
18721You met him in Washington, of course?"
18721You understand my position?"
18721You understand the terms of your parole that you are to take no deadly weapons into the prison?"
18721You want to go to a real school, do n''t you?"
18721You would n''t have gotten into that devilment if they had n''t persuaded you-- now would you?"
18721You''ll forgive me?"
18721You''ll go with me-- won''t you?"
18721You''ll join our party, of course?"
18721Young Laserre crawled carefully to the edge of the rock, peered over and called through the darkness:"Are you dead, Jeff?"
18721Your Southern Senators are really going to surrender their power here without a struggle?"
18721_ Will_ you stand by us?"
34677But our frontiers, it seems, are to be defended; and by whom? 34677 Can it be that these brave men are about to become the tarnishers of their own reputation, the destroyers of a name which does them so much honor?
34677What, then, is to be done? 34677 According to Eaton''s report of the speech, Jackson said to his officers:What is the present situation of our camp?
34677And wherein does the''sound policy''of the measures that have been recommended consist?
34677Are they founded on any false assurances of mine, or upon any deception that has been practised toward them?
34677Bill Weatherford, have we got you at last?''"
34677But how shall a war so long forborne, and so loudly called for by retributive justice, be waged?
34677But in what language, when you arrive, will you address your families and friends?
34677But what was Jackson to do?
34677But why should you despond?
34677Can any course be more plain?
34677Can that be any good reason why I should do an unauthorized act?
34677Did he wait for orders to do what every man of sense knew, what every patriot felt to be right?
34677Do you wait for special instructions from the Secretary of War, which it is impossible for you to receive in time for the danger that threatens?
34677Has one year''s service been performed?
34677Have I really any power to discharge men whose term of service has not expired?
34677Have they performed the service required of them by that act, and which they then solemnly undertook to perform?
34677Have they then been discharged?
34677How did the venerable Shelby act under similar circumstances, or rather under circumstances by no means so critical?
34677How then can it be required of me to do so?
34677Is a certificate, designed solely for their benefit, to become the rallying word for mutiny?
34677Is it a good reason why I should violate the order of my superior officer and evince a willingness to defeat the purposes of my government?
34677Is it by empty mandates that we can hope to conquer our enemies and save our defenceless frontiers from butchery and devastation?
34677Of what avail is it to give an order if it be never executed and may be disobeyed with impunity?
34677Retrograde under such circumstances?
34677Shall I be told that, as they will go, it may as well be peaceably permitted?
34677Shall it be said that we are so lost to humanity as to leave them in this condition?
34677Shall we imitate the example of our enemies in the disorder of their movements and the savageness of their dispositions?
34677Then the question arose, How long have these men engaged to serve?
34677What Indian ever withstood its charge?
34677What army of any nation ever withstood it long?
34677What is really our present situation?
34677Where are they now?
34677Where was General Cocke with the troops from East Tennessee all this time?
34677Will it do to defeat his plans and jeopardize the safety of the Georgia army?
34677or in what way are they''likely to promote the public good''?
35558But could they consistently participate in an election ordered by, and under the control of, the Territorial government?
35558But what now was the status of Missouri?
35558Could Congress effect indirectly what it could not do directly?
35558Could that agent refuse to receive the instructions of one of his principals?
35558If so, must the general Government suppress it?
35558If you make it enter into a new and additional compact is it any longer the same Union?...
35558Is it not far more probable that he thought the quiet of the country would be confirmed and forever established by their general acceptance?
35558Or was it simply a principle of Congressional policy?
35558The gist of the reasoning was, however, contained in a few sentences which ran as follows:"What, then, is the professed result?
35558Was it a body of insurrectionists?
35558Was it a principle of the Constitution, and therefore supreme over all Congressional policies in the case?
35558Was it rebellion, or was it constitutional and legal opposition?
35558What is a_ State_ in the sense of the Constitution?
35558What is this Union?
35558What was, or what could have been, Mr. Douglas''purpose?
35558What, then, was the other?
35558[ Sidenote: Was negro slavery an error and an evil from the first?]
35558{ 189} What now were the planters to do?
34600But this ca n''t be your usual fare?
34600Did our men stand fire?
34600Do you think,asked the prime minister,"the people of America would submit to pay the stamp duty if it was changed?"
34600Do you want to fight now in the rain and at night?
34600How shall I know him?
34600May we not begin?
34600What do you think of the doings of that diabolical dog?
34600What is the meaning of all this, sir?
34600What is to be done now?
34600What''s the matter?
34600What''s your name?
34600Which side?
34600Who knows,shouted one in the audience,"how tea will mix with salt water?"
34600--"What''s the mat- ter?"
34600Are you worth more?
34600As they drew near Trenton, Washington, who rode in front, asked a man chopping wood by the roadside:--"Which way is the Hessian picket?"
34600At the rough log tavern:"What do you charge for dinner here?"
34600At the wayside store:"What''s the price of these boots?"
34600Can the danger be averted?
34600Can this self- trained lawyer from the Western prairies bear all this sudden and tremendous burden, and bear it with courage, credit, and success?
34600Could anything be done to check the Albemarle?
34600Could he himself do anything to save to his country this immense and valuable region?--one man, in midwinter, and across a continent?
34600How could Washington do all this and keep Clinton in the dark?
34600How did our ships stand the contest?
34600How shall he realize his visions?
34600How was it possible for the Union vessels to force their way up the river in the face of these obstructions?
34600In many a country, people were asking,"Is there no easier way to get to India?"
34600Rousing himself he asked,"Who run?"
34600Shall I hoist it?"
34600Should Perry surrender?
34600The American flag is obscured with smoke, so that Captain Pearson, not seeing it, shouts,"Are you ready to surrender?"
34600The Patriots forced to retreat from Lack of Ammunition.=--Their powder all gone, what could the patriots do but retreat?
34600The Sturdy Pioneers of the North rise in Defense of their Homes.=--Meanwhile, what were the stout- hearted pioneers of the north doing?
34600The War of 1812 begun.=--Why did we endure these insults from England so long?
34600The alarming question was, Where will they strike?
34600The idea was sneered at, and people asked,"Of what use is it?"
34600The problem haunted him--"Must I go?"
34600To which the genial philosopher replied,"What is the use of a child?
34600What could he do?
34600What is to be done?
34600What should the colonies do to protect themselves?
34600What was the matter?
34600What''s yours?"
34600When he came to himself, his first question was,"Have I saved the Minnesota?"
34600Where could there be any hope?
34600Who shall be chosen Commander- in- Chief of our armies?
34600Who shall be singled out for this most difficult task?
34600Who will believe in him?
34600Whom can we trust now?"
34600Why was this continent not named for Columbus?
34600Why?
34600alive, my dear general?"
34600said the general;"have your fathers been teaching you rebellion, and sent you to show it here?"
34600what became of him?
29517And did n''t I just say as much?
29517And did n''t that American, Pettitt, play here?
29517And see there where those branches touch the water,she soon continued;"might not that have been the very place where poor Ophelia lost her life?
29517And then,broke in Betty, her face literally radiant,"do n''t you know how Little John finally robbed them?
29517Are n''t the trains funny, John?
29517Are n''t we glad we came, and are n''t Mrs. Pitt and Barbara and Philip good to us?
29517Are you sorry you proposed coming here?
29517Are your vans any bigger?
29517But did n''t they have any services at all in St. Paul''s Cathedral?
29517But how----?
29517But, Mother, is that really the same bench, and did Anne truly live here?
29517Can we have some?
29517Did Shakespeare fall over that stile when he was trying to climb it with the deer, and did they catch him then?
29517Did n''t Dr. Johnson live near here, too, Mother?
29517Did n''t I? 29517 Did n''t she die propped up on the floor in all her State robes?"
29517Did n''t you say that this was where King Alfred had them write the''Anglo- Saxon Chronicle''?
29517Did that stool belong to anybody?
29517Do n''t these trains seem different from ours, Betty?
29517Do you children remember those quaint little verses about Bow Bells?
29517Do you see that the walls are entirely of cedar wood from floor to ceiling? 29517 Do you suppose that jewels were sewn into the dress where those round holes are?"
29517Do you think you will like London?
29517Does n''t that describe it exactly?
29517Have Kew Gardens any story or history to them, or are they just famous because of their flowers?
29517Have n''t we time to walk in the gardens a little longer?
29517Have you ever seen Faneuil Hall Market in Boston?
29517He did pay him back after all, did n''t he? 29517 He lived here, did he?
29517Here we are, Mother; did they come?
29517Honor bright, do n''t you have many fires over here?
29517How do they ever find names enough to go around?
29517How in the world could they see to cook in such a dark place?
29517Is Dorothy at home?
29517Is n''t the''Tumble- down Stile''near here, Mother?
29517Is n''t there a proverb,''A loyal heart may be landed at Traitor''s Gate''?
29517Is n''t there any of it remaining?
29517Is n''t there any upstairs?
29517It could n''t be, could it? 29517 It is n''t any wonder that she looked like that, is it?
29517It was here in Nottingham that Will Stutely had his narrow escape, was n''t it?
29517It''s like Leicester''s Hospital at Warwick, only this is really more quaint, is n''t it? 29517 Let''s see,--that would be twenty- five dollars, would n''t it?
29517Oh, do you see that little river flowing through the meadows?
29517Oh, is that the John Gilpin in Cowper''s poem?
29517Oh, what''s this place?
29517Shall I point out the different flowers?
29517The fellow who burnt the cakes?
29517The name is curious, is n''t it?
29517This one here pictures the Seven Ages of Man, which Shakespeare describes in''As You Like It,''Do you see? 29517 Was it because so many monks went up there?"
29517Was there a real palace in the Tower?
29517Well, what do you think of it all, John?
29517Well, what do you think of that?
29517What did they do to those three Normans?
29517What for? 29517 What in the world does she mean?"
29517What in the world''s that?
29517What is that iron bar for?
29517What others?
29517What should you like to see first, Betty?
29517What sticks? 29517 What was it?"
29517What was that you said?
29517What went on here?
29517What''s that, Mother? 29517 What''s the use?
29517Where are we going now?
29517Where can one see such a scene?
29517Where do you mean to go, Philip?
29517Where was King Alfred buried, Mother?
29517Who was it that the guide told us was imprisoned near the Round Tower, and who fell in love with a lady whom he saw walking in the gardens? 29517 Whose keys?"
29517Why do they always stand there?
29517Why, do n''t you believe it, John?
29517Why, we ca n''t all get in there, can we?
29517Why, what can it be?
29517Why, what do you mean?
29517Why, what in the world''s the matter?
29517Will they put King Edward here, too, when he dies?
29517Will you please tell us what that was? 29517 Winchester has a cathedral, has n''t it?"
29517Would n''t you just know to look at her that she had been in the family all her life?
29517Would you rather be a Horse Guard, or a bus- driver, John?
29517Yes,said Mrs. Pitt, understanding at once;"do n''t you remember that in Scott''s''Ivanhoe''?
29517''There is a willow grows aslant a brook, That shows his hoar leaves in the glassy stream;''Is n''t that a perfect description of this very spot?
29517--_Page 184._]"Do you see that high mound?"
2951712"DO YOU REMEMBER THOSE QUAINT LITTLE VERSES ABOUT''BOW BELLS''?"
29517140"DID ANNE TRULY LIVE HERE?"
2951720"THERE''S THE ABBEY RIGHT AHEAD OF US"26"WHAT''S THE USE OF HAVING SO MANY DOORS?"
2951784"YOU REMEMBER, DON''T YOU, HAVING THE GUIDE POINT OUT LONDON BRIDGE?"
2951788 THE MOSS- GROWN SAXON PORCH 96 JOHN MILTON LIVED THERE AFTER HE FLED FROM LONDON 106"OH, HERE''S THE OLD CORONATION CHAIR, ISN''T IT?"
29517Am I right?
29517And where did he ride to?"
29517Anne Hathaway''s cottage is even more picturesque than its neighbors, or does this only seem so because of the associations which it has for all?
29517Are n''t they attractive?"
29517Are n''t they interesting?
29517Are you getting plenty of history, Betty, my dear?"
29517Ca n''t we?"
29517Ca n''t you fix her?
29517Ca n''t you imagine the two sitting over at that table, with Boswell not far away, patiently listening, quill in hand?
29517Come, shall we go in?"
29517Did I tell you that Guy and his faithful wife were buried together in the cave?"
29517Did they make it that way on purpose, do you think?"
29517Did you look in some of the tiny windows as we passed through?
29517Did you see the busts of Wellington and Marlborough in one of the other rooms, Philip?
29517Do all the boats have names like that?
29517Do n''t you agree that this square has had about as varied a history as is very well possible?"
29517Do n''t you all approve that plan?"
29517Do n''t you ever have bigger fires?"
29517Do n''t you know the story which is told in the''Spectator Papers,''about the boy who accidentally tore a hole in this curtain?
29517Do n''t you remember that one brother was very tall and thin, and the other very short and stout?
29517Do n''t you remember, John?
29517Do n''t you think we can go on with our trip here after Switzerland?"
29517Do you know the story?
29517Do you know this?
29517Do you notice all the streets leading out from this great square?
29517Do you notice the fine carving, and the pictures,--some of Van Dyck''s best works?
29517Do you notice?
29517Do you remember him?
29517Do you remember, Betty?
29517Do you see them, John?"
29517Do you see?
29517Do you suppose he guessed that you''d lost yours?"
29517Do you, Barbara?
29517Each time this conversation follows:--"Who goes there?"
29517Have you never read it, John?
29517Have you noticed those little oriel windows of the gatehouse?
29517Have you the guidebook, Philip?
29517He must have fine stories to tell, does n''t he, Philip?
29517How carefully and how often do you suppose she swept?
29517How did you like the State Apartments?
29517How many have ever read Dickens''s''Tale of Two Cities''?
29517How would you like that?"
29517How would you like that?"
29517I always wish that we could see the King or Queen''s private rooms, do n''t you?
29517I never ran faster in my life, did you, Philip?
29517I should probably go up and say''How do you do?''"
29517In spite of this, she insisted that she was quite happy, for she had her"good feather bed,"--and what more could she need?
29517Is n''t the effect rich, and does n''t it smell good?
29517Is that the tale?"
29517Is that the trouble, Jo?
29517Is this where we take the tram, Mrs. Pitt?
29517It was the wedding night of Dorothy''s sister, was n''t it?
29517It''s a quaint place, is n''t it?
29517It''s curious to think of, is n''t it?"
29517Just for one little hour we are going to know that Anne did live here,--that Will said''Will you?''
29517May we go up, please?"
29517Now, how do you like that story?"
29517Oh, do you suppose it is the same place?"
29517Oh, here''s the old Coronation Chair, is n''t it?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517Pitt?"
29517That''s an odd expression, is n''t it?
29517There they halted and imagined him standing beside his booth, and calling out:"Now who''ll buy?
29517They called it the Waterloo Room, did n''t they?
29517They do n''t know just where he went, do they, Mother?"
29517They do n''t make much fuss about it, do they?"
29517Was n''t she a singer?
29517Was n''t that absurd?
29517Was n''t there one more, Barbara?
29517What are you thinking, Mrs. Pitt?
29517What do you all say?"
29517What does it mean?"
29517What for?"
29517What of the sight- seers whose automobiles go tearing along, uttering weird and frightful sounds?
29517What would ye have of me?''
29517What''s wrong?"
29517What''s your favorite part of the castle, Barbara?"
29517Where will you go, Betty?"
29517Who was she?
29517Why did they call it the White Tower?
29517Why, what is it, Barbara?"
29517Why, what''s the matter, John?"
29517With all his money, could n''t he even have a horse?"
29517Would you like to hear?
29517Yes, what''s that you have found, Barbara?"
29517Yes?
29517You certainly like that in him, John?"
29517You remember, do n''t you, having the guide point out London Bridge to you, from the top of St. Paul''s, day before yesterday?
29517[ Illustration:"DO YOU REMEMBER THOSE QUAINT LITTLE VERSES ABOUT BOW BELLS?"
29517[ Illustration:"OH, HERE''S THE OLD CORONATION CHAIR, ISN''T IT?"
29517[ Illustration:"OH, WHAT''S THIS PLACE?
29517[ Illustration:"WHAT''S THE USE OF HAVING SO MANY DOORS?"
29517[ Illustration:"YOU REMEMBER, DON''T YOU, HAVING THE GUIDE POINT OUT LONDON BRIDGE?"
29517who''ll buy?
32122''Why do n''t they convince the people that they are in earnest?'' 32122 And how''s how?"
32122But these children, madam-- you surely are not a widow?
32122By whose order has this been done?
32122Dare they do it?
32122Have you been successful?
32122How can you?
32122How did I start?
32122How do you carry yourself?
32122How do you do?
32122How do you fare?
32122How do you have yourself?
32122How do you live on?
32122How do you perspire?
32122How do you stand?
32122How goes it with you?
32122How is your stomach? 32122 How many words do you write a minute?"
32122Is that you, commandant?
32122Madam,he said in his most ingratiating way,"may I kiss these beautiful children?"
32122What about that''ere salary of two thousand pounds?
32122What are you going to do with the fifteen hundred too much?
32122What of Adams?
32122What of Sherman?
32122What''s the news?
32122When it''s touch and go for life?
32122Who is speaking?
32122Why did I elect to do Lincoln, then?
32122Why, what have you been doing with this mind lately? 32122 Will they do it?"
32122Words a minute?
32122Yes; what do you want?
32122You?
32122ARE WE WORSHIPERS OF THE BIG DICTIONARY?
32122And what causes the difference?
32122And what have we to oppose to them?
32122And what is a billion of billions?
32122And why not?
32122And yet we are asked,"Is the stage worth while?"
32122Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation?
32122Are men less chivalrous to- day than they were two hundred years ago?
32122Are they all yours, marm?"
32122Brother-- Is this_ truth_?
32122But how dare he hope that the most bigoted old hidalgo in all Spain would ever give his daughter to the son of a Parisian grocer?
32122But what could he be doing at this hour in an apartment which had not been opened for a long time past?
32122But when shall we be stronger?
32122But you want to know how I came to go into this line of work at the very beginning, do n''t you?
32122By what?
32122Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it?
32122DID YOU EVER TRY TO COUNT A BILLION?
32122Describing the difficulty of teaching children our present spelling, he says: How heavy is the burden, as a matter of sober fact?
32122Did he doubt for one moment his ability as an actor?
32122Do you realize that your individual possession in art is as broad as art itself?
32122Do you wish to leave your bones here?"
32122FISHIN''?
32122Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
32122Have we anything new to offer upon the subject?
32122Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love?
32122Have you eaten your rice?"
32122He then remarked,"You get enough clothes to wear, do n''t you?"
32122Henry Miller led the list of players, which was facetiously headed"Who''s In It?"
32122How have you fed it?
32122How long wilt thou leave thy father on his knees?
32122How much must we deduct for the reasonable requirements of the case?
32122I ask, gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
32122I never ask,"Where did they git it?"
32122If Light can thus deceive, wherefore not Life?
32122In this durable record, if anything short of indisputable and undistilled truth be seen there, we all feel, How shall our achievements profit us?
32122Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
32122Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
32122Is the body so much the more important of the two?
32122Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty?
32122Madame, is this a son of mine?"
32122Myself?
32122OTHER WAYS OF SAYING"HOWDY DO?"
32122Recent Abolishment of Tribal Rule in Indian Territory Will Have Powerful Effect for Good or Ill. Are we all to be Indians?
32122Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
32122Shall we go, too, and give their bones to the wolves?
32122Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication?
32122Shall we try argument?
32122The proprietor replied:"You get enough to eat, do n''t you?"
32122The same jocose spirit prompted the further elucidations of the details in the evening''s entertainment on the house bill in this wise: WHERE IS IT?
32122WHAT HAS BECOME OF OLD- TIME GENTLEMEN?
32122WHAT TIME IS IT?
32122WHEN IS IT?
32122Was he willing to die then, to be shot by his old guard?
32122We have now to ask: How much of this time is wasted?
32122What is a billion, or, rather, what conception can we form of such a quantity?
32122What is it that the gentlemen wish?
32122What kind?"
32122What right hast thou to think of thine own life and its suffering?
32122What terms shall we find, which have not been already exhausted?
32122What would they have?
32122Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With freedom''s soil beneath our feet And freedom''s banner streaming o''er us?
32122Which of us does as much for his mind?
32122Who can doubt that Napoleon had selected Julius CÃ ¦ sar?
32122Who knows to what peril your majesty may be exposing yourself?"
32122Whose broad stripes and bright stars, through the_ clouds of the fight_,[1] O''er the ramparts we watched, were so gallantly streaming?
32122Whose heart hath ne''er within him burn''d As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand?
32122Why do we then shun death with anxious strife?
32122Why stand we here idle?
32122Will it be the next week, or the next year?
32122Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
35575A castle?
35575Who can you be?
35575''How is that, Bob?
35575At last I got out the question:--''Will you take the long path with me?''
35575Boston asks"How much do you know?"
35575But who can hope for more than that, or hoping, can reasonably expect to find the wish realized?
35575But who shall describe the terrible sinking of the heart-- the worse than sickness-- when hope is thus suddenly crushed and turned to certain despair?
35575Compliments were passed by the latter, who saluted his friend with--"Well, old boy, where have you been all summer?
35575Corn thus becomes incarnate, for what is a hog but fifteen or twenty bushels of corn on four legs?"
35575Early next morning he laid the matter before the assembled chiefs at the Council House, who asked him whether he could recognize any whom he saw?
35575How did she compare with Newark in the year of grace 1880?
35575I reflected: what was Newark like in those far- away days, two hundred years ago?
35575If there are any known remedial agents which can possibly be an improvement on pure air and sunshine, will you tell us what they are, Dr. Dio Lewis?
35575New York,"How much are you worth?"
35575Shall we never know more of them than Runic stones and mysterious mounds can unfold?
35575Taking its past as a criterion, who shall dare to predict the future of Chicago?
35575They are quick to take ideas concerning their labor; why not in other things?
35575What a noble mission, to thus lead these children of silence from the prison darkness of ignorance into the beautiful light of knowledge?
35575What she will have become when her tri- centennial comes around, who shall dare to predict?
35575What were such disadvantages, however, compared to the satisfaction of standing by their party and ignoring the New Haven vote?
35575What would that court have done with the spiritual manifestations rife in these parts to- day?
35575Where are there such fat oxen, such sleek, self- satisfied cows, with such capacity for rich milk?
35575Where are these peoples now, and where their unrevealed histories?
35575Where, then, would have been the mighty commerce of the West, but for the timely invention of the steam engine, and its application to water craft?
35575but in Philadelphia the question is,"Who was your grandfather?"
30549All straight goods, eh, John?
30549And how do you find them?
30549And how many people might there be in the two together?
30549And the colonel?
30549But,objects the English wildfowl shooter,"suppose the birds are not get- at- able in any other way?"
30549Can any of you mensaid the newcomer"take a boat out for me to San Francisco?"
30549Can you identify yourself, sir?
30549How''do, John?
30549I can let you travel cheaper than he can, ca n''t I, Bill?
30549Insular?
30549Is he the man as built the bridge?
30549What can you do?
30549What do we need of a lawyer?
30549What have you got to complain of? 30549 What is the American Utopia, how much Will is there shaping to attain it?"
30549What is your trade?
30549Why? 30549 You can read that, eh?"
30549''"[ 89:1] Has Mr. Wells ever gone about England asking Englishmen the same question:"What are you going to make of your future?"
30549***** And the conclusion?
30549***** But would it be bad politics?
30549***** Does any one doubt it?
30549***** What has been the course of events in England in the same period?
30549And by what so tutored and guided that it reaches only for what is good?
30549And if he so erred, how shall all the lesser teachers from whom England gets its knowledge of America keep straight?
30549And if it is in truth in their power to do this thing, how can either conceivably convince itself that it is not its duty?
30549And is it not sufficient for her pride that she, one people, should win-- if it be only-- half of all the world''s honours?
30549And what is the result?
30549And what would be the effect on the British race?
30549And when all this has happened, will England''s position be shaken?
30549And when they have crossed, what then?
30549And when those who would be their coadjutors are willing and waiting and beckoning them on, have they any right to hold back?
30549Are they approximately the qualities most likely to equip a man to play the noblest part in the life of modern America?
30549Are you an American?
30549Are you an Englishman?
30549Baldwin?)
30549Burke( was it not?)
30549But because Nice and Naples are entitled to give themselves airs, under what patent do Chicago and Pittsburgh claim the same right?
30549But it is not many years since an eminently distinguished authority on iron and steel( was he not President of the Iron and Steel Association?
30549But whence derived?
30549But why should Englishmen know anything of the United States?
30549But why should I not mention their names?
30549By what power or instinct do they do it?
30549Can it ever, in the long run, be bad politics to champion any cause which is great and good?
30549Do you want it?"
30549Does America suppose that she also did not learn her lesson?
30549Does a brother not love his sister because he says rude things about her little failings?
30549For the rest, what is there in the country which the living American has not made himself, or which his fathers did not make?
30549How is it possible that the American should think of England as the Englishman thinks of the United States?
30549How is it tempered that she remains all pure womanly at the last?
30549How many New Yorkers have helped to organise a new mining town?"
30549How much less"at a loss"does he anticipate that he would find them?
30549How should they have been otherwise when separated from that world by three thousand miles of ocean?
30549How then, in 1895, could they have had any fear of the United States?
30549However strong Southern_ sentiment_ may still be, what is there of the Southern_ spirit_ even in Richmond or in Louisville?
30549I am well aware that many American readers will say:"What is the man talking of?
30549If Americans were given the option to- day to take more Philippines, would they take them?
30549In Africa?
30549In America?
30549In Asia?
30549In Australia?
30549Is it ambition?
30549Is it anything other than moral cowardice if they do?
30549Is it not reasonable to suppose that he will be no less earnest in the study of Botticelli?
30549Is it ten per cent.--or five per cent.--or two per cent.?
30549Is it to be wondered at that he thinks of Englishmen otherwise than as Englishmen think of him?
30549Is the American people as well educated or as well informed or as well cultivated as the English?
30549It goes farther back than the"Who ever reads an American book?"
30549Just go ahead will you and see to it?"
30549Mary, who painted that picture over there-- the big tree and the blue sky?"
30549Moreover, have not many visitors, though finding much to criticise, complimented them always on their rapidity of thought and action?
30549Mr. Wells, by his own account, went about the country confronting all comers with the questions,"What are you going to make of your future?"
30549Nonsense?
30549Or will the same tendencies persist, so that the currents will cross and again diverge, occupying inverse positions?
30549S----y B----l. And when the Englishman thinks of the possibility of war with the United States, with whom is it that he pictures himself as fighting?
30549The American thinks in round numbers:"What will the whole thing come to?"
30549The two currents, once divergent, now so closely confluent, will meet; but will they continue to flow on in one stream?
30549The words"Can we hold him?"
30549Was he not an Honourable and the son of a Baron and the"real thing"in every way?
30549Was she referring to the fact that we were on a special train composed of private cars, or what?
30549What are the party leaders to do in such a case?
30549What did she mean?
30549What have you got to do?"
30549What then can there be in the fighting strength of the United States, for all the figures that she has to show, to breed in him a suggestion of fear?
30549What would be the result if suddenly the limits of the British Isles were to be miraculously expanded?
30549When, moreover, the cheaper magazines became a possibility, how came it that such publications as_ McClure''s_ and_ The Cosmopolitan_ arose?
30549Where is it that spheres of influence are not delimited?
30549Which is ridiculous, is it not, English reader?
30549Why can not the educated American keep his speech silver and gold for educated ears?
30549Why not then go out and enjoy ourselves?
30549Will America ever oust Great Britain from the position which she holds as the Mother of Sports and the athletic centre of the world?
30549Will not Americans understand with what utter reluctance she has been compelled again and again to take more?
30549Will, who is the portrait of your grandfather by-- the one over there in his robes?"
30549With whom?
30549Would she not be bluntly refused to- day?
30549Would the United States accept the plea?
30549[ 169:1] Are they really the qualities most desirable even in an Englishman to- day?
30549or( what is infinitely worse)"Can he hold us?"
30549said the manufacturer,"but you say that''s what they want out there?
32119''An actress? 32119 Ai n''t you gettin''wake, father darlin''?"
32119And the priest?
32119And what about Bach?
32119But you have a gold ring on your finger; why did you not sell it?
32119Cassandra, my sweet Cassandra,said Zeuxis,"why that tear, that sigh?"
32119Did you ever get into Brown''s confidence?
32119Do n''t you ever expect to get married?
32119Do you want to queer the show when so much depends on it?
32119Have you felt slippers, sir?
32119How did I make my start?
32119How far is it to the Owl Creek Bridge?
32119How much do you expect to clear to the acre?
32119I bequeath unto my son, Peter-- and never was there a better son, or a decenter boy!--have you that down? 32119 I fear indeed I''m pegging out; But then what boots it, love?
32119In a few hours came this laconic dispatch:Do you need any more dynamite?"
32119Is he composing nowadays?
32119Is there no force on this side the creek?
32119Must I first bear the taunts of that boy, and then, in the face of thousands, have him challenge me to a trial? 32119 Not beside the corpse?"
32119Sure ye would n''t be mean enough to go against yer father''s dying words?
32119Well, well,said he,"explain to me and I''ve no more to say; Can you go anywhere to- morrow and come back to- day?
32119Well,answered Mr. Sirius Barker, irritably,"why do n''t some of them try it?"
32119What can I do for you?
32119What was costly?
32119Where was I, Billy Scanlan?
32119Why did you not buy it?
32119Why?
32119Would you see your Cassandra happy?
32119You would n''t be mean enough to betray me?
32119= The Treacle Bible=( 1568)--From its rendering of Jeremiah viii:22:"Is there no treacle[ instead of balm] in Gilead?"
32119A COLLEGE CAREER-- IS IT WORTH WHILE?
32119ARE WE SURFEITED WITH WIT AND HUMOR?
32119And why?
32119And, discussing the struggle for success, what is success?
32119Are the neighbors listening?
32119Are we sated?
32119Are ye listening?
32119At last my father unbolted the door, and I heard him say,"Oh, Mr. Peter, what''s the matter?
32119Blodgett-- You see that homely woman hanging to that strap?
32119But how, I should like to know, are people to insure who make ducks and drakes of their five pounds?
32119But what do you care for that?
32119But who is to afford pickles when folk are always lending five pounds?
32119But why thy hope?
32119Could I take one step without crushing them?
32119Could Petroleum V. Nasby get a hearing to- day?
32119Do you hear that shutter, how it''s banging to and fro?
32119Do you hear the mice running about the room?
32119Ever see John Ward as short- stop?
32119Everybody says I do n''t dress as becomes your wife-- and I do n''t; but what''s that to you, Mr. Caudle?
32119For the Ahkoond I mourn; Who would n''t?
32119Foster-- How do you know she is homely?
32119Gods, has it come to this?"
32119Have we had too much humor?
32119However, what''s your family to you, so you can play the liberal creature with five pounds?
32119I shall never close my eyes all night; but what''s that to you, so people can call you liberal, Mr. Caudle?
32119I wonder where little Cherub is?
32119IS THE RICH YOUNG MAN HANDICAPPED?
32119Is Billy Scanlan listening?"
32119Is it down, Billy Scanlan?
32119Is it money?
32119Is it not about time to show that even a democracy can learn something?
32119Is it not just?"
32119Is the ould man worse?"
32119Is this because the emotional strain is so much greater in the case of a clergyman?
32119Is wealth a hindrance to a young man starting out in life?
32119Mr. Goodwin,"she cried,"is the moon up to- night?"
32119My Lords: What have I to say why sentence of death should not be pronounced on me, according to law?
32119Now if from here to Morrow is a fourteen- hour jump, Can you go to- day to Morrow and come back to- day, you chump?"
32119Now, when she grows up, who''ll have her?
32119Or the Danbury News Man, or"Peck''s Bad Boy"?
32119Said I,"I guess you know it all, but kindly let me say, How can I go to Morrow if I leave the town to- day?"
32119Said I,"I want to go to Morrow; can I go to- day And get to Morrow by to- night, if there is no delay?"
32119Said I,"My boy, it seems to me you''re talking through your hat, Is there a town named Morrow on your line?
32119See those slender pennants waving?
32119So shalt thou rest; and what if thou withdraw In silence from the living, and no friend Take note of thy departure?
32119The Judge--"Why did you steal the loaf?"
32119The great philosopher seldom marries-- for is not the experience of Socrates a warning?
32119Thinkest thou yet of the worthless Parrhasius-- even now, upon the eve of thy nuptials with the noble Thearchus?"
32119Turning from the recluse to the men of the world, where can we find a more distinguished bachelor than Voltaire?
32119Two strikes?
32119Want you Postage Stamps from Africa, America, Asia, Oceania?
32119Was n''t it a corkin''game?
32119What is wealth-- what nobility and the applause of the people, if the affections of the heart have no participation therein?
32119What, what, what, What''s the news from Swat?
32119What?
32119When did it happen?"
32119Who is the poorest man in the world?
32119Would not a Burdette writing for the more exacting twentieth- century perception find his occupation gone?
32119Wouldst thou see thy father rivaled, and the voice of Athens-- of the world-- loud in praises of another?"
32119You know him, then?"
32119_ Bible_--"What is man that Thou art mindful of him?
32119_ Set a trap for''em?_ But how are people to afford the cheese, when every day they lose five pounds?
32119_ Set a trap for''em?_ But how are people to afford the cheese, when every day they lose five pounds?
35360*** Is it logical to say that the intelligence of spirits is immortal, and yet that it had a beginning?
35360A secular writer presents the same incident as follows:"''What is truth?''
35360And so it may be if one could be transported to Mars; while there is much that we do not know about Mars-- has it an atmosphere and oceans?
35360And what of the much- vaunted justice of God in that punishment?
35360And what will be after today?
35360And what will follow the present period of 1,000,000 years?
35360First of all, a word of definition: This term"prophet"--what do you make of it?
35360God''s creative acts culminating thus, the next pertinent questions are: Then what of the decreed purpose of God to punish moral Evil?
35360Has it great continents and mountain ranges?
35360Have ye obtained a Bible, save it were by the Jews?
35360Have you ever thought what a dreadful world this would be without this duality-- the opposite existences here contended for?
35360How much of it?
35360How much, 92,000,000 miles?
35360I wonder if I may venture here to draw in outline the suggestion of that system?
35360If so, what is the status of its civilization?
35360Instructed by the Prophet Joseph Smith, he sang in his hymn on Truth, the following: Then say, what is Truth?
35360Is it inhabited?
35360It is correct enough, but how did it get into your heads?
35360Of man, then, thus understood, our Prophet taught:"The soul-- the mind of man-- the immortal spirit-- where did it come from?
35360Reading that passage a few days ago, I asked the question: Is this rather remarkable semi- prediction of Quincy''s in the way of fulfillment?
35360Take a century, or, better yet, a millennium, a period of 1,000 years-- why not take 1,000,000 years as a period with which to measure duration?
35360This"space"--what is meant by it?
35360WHAT IS A PROPHET?
35360WHAT IS A PROPHET?
35360What does it mean to say that the Constitution of the United States is an inspired instrument?
35360What is between us and the sun?
35360What is on the other side of the sun in a direct line from us?
35360What is the meaning of this?
35360What preceded our present period of 1,000,000 years?
35360What was before today?
35360Wherein lies the just responsibility of man if he was so created as to love Evil and to follow it?"
35360Which, in the last analysis of things, in spite of all special pleadings to the contrary, leaves responsibility for moral Evil with God?
35360Who told you so?
35360Who told you that man did not exist in like manner, upon the same principles?
32123''Can you sing?'' 32123 ''Well, what is it?''
32123''Well,''he said, when I appeared,''what do you want?'' 32123 ''What can you sing, my little man?''
32123''What shall I do, Ed?'' 32123 ''Where is he?''
32123''Why, my boy,''he said, after one look at me,''what is the matter?'' 32123 All there?"
32123And how do you feel, general,he finally asked, with just a touch of sarcasm,"after you''ve professionally killed a man?"
32123And t''other one?
32123Been prospecting, eh? 32123 But how to get a chance?
32123Can they do the work?
32123Do you always have your place decorated like this?
32123Do you know,he remarked,"that I have seen Americans eating with their knives and spilling their soup on the table- cloth?"
32123Have you got a bit of supper in the house?
32123He your brother? 32123 How did you break it?"
32123How long out?
32123Hungry?
32123I say, pard,said Goskin,"do n''t you want a little rest?"
32123In a tempest?
32123Must feel pretty dry?
32123Prisoner, what have you to say?
32123Sir,said a little blustering man to a religious opponent--"I say, sir, do you know to what sect I belong?"
32123Then what do you think I did? 32123 Well,"asked the magistrate,"what have you brought the soldier here for?"
32123What difference does it make?
32123What is that?
32123Where''s the player?
32123A decision must be made-- but how?
32123Along of a dwarf?
32123An offset to such evil influences?
32123And as to respectability-- if threepence ai n''t respectable, what is?
32123And then came the question,"Who is General Scott?"
32123And why do we have a mayor who''s no good and who thinks more of a penny piece than of the lives of all of us?
32123As Mr. Lawson, in a naphtha launch, passed the rowboat containing the girl, she called out:"Hullo, Tom, how''s copper?"
32123As it was, he looked at me, and then asked:"''Are you a Spaniard?''
32123Avails it whether bare or shod These feet the paths of duty trod?
32123Boisberthelot said to La Vieuville:"Do you believe in God, chevalier?"
32123But I say, what if he did n''t treat her very well?
32123But as to Chrysanthus, what if he was n''t a total abstainer?
32123But here the pitcher whirled again-- was that a rifle shot?
32123But it is the unexpected that happens, as, for example, who would have dared foretell five years ago the convocation of the Russian Duma?
32123But some inquiries were making about that house, and would he object to say why he left it?
32123But what could these rags avail?
32123Can sordid covetousness long be charged against a people whose youth increasingly seek entrance into"the poorest- paid profession"?
32123Can you get him before morning?
32123Certainly not so small as he was made out to be, but where''s your dwarf as is?
32123Chops, are you sure as you are in a state of mind and body to sit upon the organ?"
32123Chops, to hintimate that the''ole of the expenses of that move will be borne by yourself?"
32123Chops?
32123Chops?"
32123Disraeli?"
32123Do you know, I think that I could make a living doing errands between New York and Boston for people?"
32123Do you see anything that needs to be done?"
32123Gillette,''I said very soberly,''do n''t you think I am getting too little money?''
32123He said: Was Robert E. Lee and were these dead comrades of ours traitors?
32123How combat an inclined plane which has blind caprices?
32123How did I get the job?
32123How did you get out, sir?"
32123How do I love thee?
32123How does that strike you?''
32123How foresee its comings and goings, its returns, its stops, its shocks?
32123How stop the course of something which must be avoided?
32123How to assail this fury of complication?
32123How to avoid its crush?
32123How to end this?
32123How to fetter this monstrous mechanism for wrecking a ship?
32123How well off do you suppose he is?
32123How will you pass through them?
32123How''s brass?"
32123I felt that I went pale, and though not naturally a bold speaker, I could n''t hardly say,"Where''s Normandy?"
32123I says to the young man,"what''s up?"
32123In what way can one attack it?
32123Is Sparta dead?
32123Is it possible to doubt what sort of a Legislature will be chosen?
32123Is the old Grecian spirit frozen in your veins, that you do crouch and cower like a belabored hound beneath his master''s lash?
32123Is there a remedy for this?
32123Might it be compatible with Mr. Magsman''s inclination and convenience to enter, as a favor, into a few particulars?
32123Might it not breed that overweening pride of power which goes before destruction?
32123Not at all; why should he?
32123Or with the envied rubies shine?
32123Out in the mountains-- caught in the storm?
32123Say, did these fingers delve the mine?
32123She has money to burn now, but a little while ago what do you suppose she was?
32123Taking his son one side, he said to him:"Peter, are you or are you not going to marry Lydia Gorham?"
32123Tell a scientific genealogist that your grandfather, a Welsh cobbler, arrived in the steerage in 1860, and what do you get?
32123The gentleman was at last annoyed at her importunity, and said:"Why do you wish my eyesight to be preserved?
32123The proud mother, to please her guest, asked the child,"Who is General Lee?"
32123There was nothing agin Toby Magsman, he believed?
32123Was this greatness not too great?
32123We''re in society together, and what would society say?"
32123What Shall the Man of Scientific Mind Say in the Presence of Apparently Supernatural Phenomena?
32123What could we do better here to- night than to repeat that phrase?
32123What do you say to that?"
32123What has he to complain of?
32123What is the explanation?
32123What is to be done?
32123What shall I do?"
32123What shall I do?''
32123What should I tell him?
32123Which of the two candidates is likely to be preferred by a workman who hears his children cry for bread?
32123Will you go with me?"
32123hear ye yon lion roaring in his den?
37160( 1470?
371607- 9?)
37160GABRIELI, GIOVANNI( 1557- 1612?
37160GALE, THOMAS(? 1636- 1702), English classical scholar and antiquarian, was born at Scruton, Yorkshire.
37160What was to be thought, he said, of a spiritual guide, who either could not or would not show the wanderer his way?
32120''Say,''said he,''who is that little man who keeps sayingshucks?"''
32120''Who?'' 32120 Any more orders?"
32120Anything else?
32120Are you never oppressed by a fear that the ship will run into an iceberg and sink?
32120Bring it out?
32120Ca n''t you think of something pleasanter? 32120 Can I do anything for you?"
32120Could the writer express his contrition without making some such confession?
32120Do you think those men would use such oaths if there was danger of their meeting death?
32120Five along--where could I count five along the room, in any part of it?
32120Full length?
32120Have n''t you done yet?
32120Have you got that other letter?
32120How are you? 32120 How did he communicate the interesting fact of the theft to you?"
32120How did you manage to acquire such an amount of knowledge?
32120It is a telegram from Joplin, Missouri, and it reads:''In what one of your books can we find the definition of a gentleman?'' 32120 Suppose I should not be the greenest fool that ever stood in shoes?
32120What did he do? 32120 What do you fellows do when you sit around the store like this?"
32120What for?
32120What was that suspected clerk''s name?
32120What will you take for your fish?
32120Where was the father? 32120 Will you give Mr. Davager his price for it?"
32120You will take the gun to- day, General?
32120You''ve got your fortune now,said one of his friends;"why do n''t you stop working?"
32120''Do you mean the fellow over there?
32120And what do you suppose he sent himself out in?
32120Are the fortunes of to- day too vast?
32120Asked by the reporter:"Did the Czar impress you as a man of great strength of character?"
32120But did it benefit Rome?
32120But how has this superiority been achieved?
32120But what shall we say of a law under which, in a certain colony, the mere possession of dice or playing- cards was punishable by a fine?
32120But, still, how am I ever to find out that you received it?
32120Can any swindling bank show as much?
32120Can the memorandum be connected with that?
32120Can you imagine anything nobler?"
32120DOES COEDUCATION FEMINIZE COLLEGE?
32120Did the language of his fevered mind flash back upon him as he saw the shore lights on Caprera?
32120Do you happen to know whether the letter we are now speaking of contained anything like an avowal or confession of the forgery?"
32120Does he give?
32120Does that make you any more valuable to the world?"
32120Does the getting of great wealth by individuals necessarily involve injustice to others?
32120Does the rich man not give?
32120Filkins-- Why not?
32120Forney-- What was it?
32120Frank?"
32120Frank?"
32120He finally whispered to one of my members:''Does your minister always preach as long as that at a funeral?''
32120He had a signature to write; and, by the most natural mistake in the world, he wrote another gentleman''s name instead of his own-- eh?"
32120He said,"All right?"
32120How are you getting on with my portrait?
32120How did you first come to have any knowledge of it?"
32120How did you in reality rest during last night?"
32120How did you rest last night?"
32120How many persons have stopped to inquire as to its meaning?
32120In a business way, what did he do?"
32120In short, my dear sir, suppose you were born yesterday, and suppose I was n''t?"
32120In the distribution of the corn during the famine, did Joseph act rightly?
32120Is it Yes, Mr. Frank, or No?"
32120No tradesman irritates by asking,"Is there any other article you wish to- day, sir?"
32120Now, dear President, will you please forgive me, and I promise you I will never do it again?
32120Now, suppose I have got a magistrate''s warrant to apprehend you in my pocket?
32120Observe the expression, will you?
32120Off, I suppose?"
32120People complained, as people will; but what else was an honest chandler to do?
32120Query-- something about himself?
32120Should he have given away the corn instead of selling it?
32120So far as the texture of the wood- pulp paper is concerned, it might be used to print on again, but how are you going to remove the ink?
32120Steward-- Anything I can bring you, sir?
32120Suppose I have a constable to execute it in the next room?
32120Suppose I should have given a certain envelope to a certain friend of mine in a certain place in this town?
32120Suppose I should not carry the letter about me?
32120Suppose he should give them what they earn, instead of taking it himself?
32120Suppose, as a suspicious stranger, you ca n''t get bail in this town?
32120The first day out: Steward-- Did you ring, sir?
32120The fringes that hung from the cornice of the bed?
32120The furniture?
32120The measurement of something he carries about with him?
32120Turning suddenly, he asked:"Which one of you is the oldest?"
32120Van Dyke-- The ocean waved back.--_Truth._***** Uneasy Passenger( on an ocean steamship)--Doesn''t the vessel tip frightfully?
32120Was there anything in the room that would count up to 5 one way and 4 another, seeing that nothing would measure up to it?
32120Was there anything in the room which-- either in inches, feet, or yards-- answered to"5 along"and"4 across"?
32120What but thy grace can foil the Tempter''s power?
32120What can you possibly want with them, when you promised to stay with me quietly for at least a week?"
32120What do I know of that is important to him besides?
32120What do you say to my plan?
32120What do you say to the proposition to make the iron itself a mere by- product to something even more valuable?
32120What do you think of Smith?
32120What do"5 along"and"4 across"mean, then?
32120What was the matter with Joseph?
32120When?"
32120Where is death''s sting?
32120Who but God, my Heavenly Father, has made me do this?
32120Who is it makes a little slate And nominates the candidate-- But lets the people pay the freight?
32120Who is it, after all the noise Against the methods he employs Is meekly followed by the boys?
32120Who is it, when the people rise And make the welkin ring with cries For freedom, sits with upturned eyes?
32120Who like thyself my guide and stay can be?
32120You want to know her name, do n''t you?
32120happily smiled his wife;"But did you notice, sweet, How everybody rubbered''round When we came down the street?"
32120or the measurement of something in his room?
32120where, grave, thy victory?
35470How long, O Lord, holy and true, dost thou not judge and avenge our blood, on them that dwell on the earth?
35470_ Are they not all ministering spirits, sent forth to minister for them who shall be heirs of salvation?_Heb.
35470Am I dead?
35470But how can he believe in a being of whom he has no correct idea?
35470Could a universal or catholic power at once destroy the Saints, and perpetuate them?
35470Could the same power, at the same time, be the conservator and promulgator of a system of universal salvation, and of universal deception?
35470Have love''s emotions kindl''d in your breast, And hope enraptur''d seiz''d the promis''d rest?
35470How shall joy be appreciated without sorrow?
35470How shall the sweet be known without the bitter?
35470Is a compass of use when its needle has lost its magnetic attraction?
35470Is a sun dial of use in a dark and cloudy day; or, a watch without a mainspring?
35470Is fire of use when it loses its heat?
35470Is water of use when it no longer seeks its level, or quenches thirst?
35470Or wait ye still the resurrection day, That higher promise of Millennial sway?
35470Or, how shall life be valued, or its eternal duration appreciated without a contact with its mortal antagonist-- death?
35470Or, of what possible use is it if it does exist?
35470Say, have you learn''d the name, and tun''d the lyre, And hymn''d the praise of him-- the great Messiah?
35470Suppose he attains to this, what then?
35470When Saints and angels come to earth again, And in the Mesh with King Messiah reign?
35470When wilt thou cease to be a child in knowledge?
35470Where and when should we look for the"grain of mustard seed,"the germ, the nucleus of such organization?
35470Where are the institutions which would protect, encourage, and honour the patriarch Jacob, with his four wives and their children?
35470Where is the"_ Christian nation_"that does not prohibit the law of God, as given to Abraham and the ancients in relation to marriage?
35470Where is the"_ Christian nation_"that punishes the crime of adultery and fornication with death, or other heavy penalties?
35470Who can trace Earth with its treasures, Heaven with its spheres, Time''s revolutions, eternity''s years?
35470Who then can define the precise point, in the scale of elementary existence, which divides between the physical and spiritual kingdoms?
35470Why not be noble and boundless in charity, like the God whom he calls his father?
35470Will the great, the infinite principle within him be satisfied?
35470_ A Dream!_ What have not dreams accomplished?
35470two men stood by them in white raiment, and said--"_ Ye men of Galilee why stand ye gazing up into heaven?
36375Can Lake St. Croix, at Stillwater, be connected with Lake Superior by canal and slackwater navigation? 36375 For,"said the speaker,"if we should sell our land where would our children play?"
36375Shall we stand idly by whilst our neighboring states are moving to secure cheaper communications with the seaboard states? 36375 Who has been here this morning?"
36375Why,said he,"should we turn these teachers away before they have done us any harm?"
36375Another rose to confess, but was cut short by her husband, who said:"Who knows how many times he has stolen?
36375Had it all been an illusion?
36375Has he not the best title in the world?
36375Have we a constitution?
36375If so, which one?
36375If we had no legal existence, by what authority could Mr. Sibley represent us?
36375If we had, what was the necessity for a new organization?
36375Was it for the benefit of two humble, footsore pedestrians that all this uproar was produced?
36375What could it be?
36375What did it matter?
36375Who can tell what a day or another fifty years may bring forth?
36375Who is there to dispute it?
36375Why could not the excluded territory continue under the old_ regime_, or inherit, so to speak, the old government machinery?
36375Why should we send you away?
36581''Is there any officer in that boat to receive a surrender of prisoners of war?''
36581Admiral Farragut signaled, and asked,"What''s the trouble?"
36581As Dewey and the captain were about to get into their boat, Captain Smith said:"Are you sure she will burn, Dewey?"
36581As the horseman drew rein, Oliver looked up into his face and said,"Man, you will not ride over me, will you?"
36581Captain Pearson of the_ Serapis_ hailed, saying:"What ship is that?"
36581Captain Pearson repeated:"What ship is that?
36581Captain Pearson saw this, and hailed, saying,"Has your ship struck?"
36581Do n''t you know that this is mutiny?"
36581How could a stop be made to this fearful work of the_ Merrimac_?
36581In the pantry washing dishes?
36581Now and then one of the men would say,''Had n''t we better drop off now, sir?''
36581Shall I hoist it?"
36581What should be done?
36581What would the Revolution have been without its Paul Jones; or the War of 1812, without its Perry?
36581When the big ship is hurling shot and shell in time of battle, where is William?
36581Who makes the lieutenant''s bed and buys his food?
36581Who was this George Dewey who won that famous victory in the Bay of Manila?
36197But how should they know what had become of Him if they were sleeping?
36197But why did the Pope, in correcting the Julian calendar in 1582, not correct the whole error of thirteen days?
36197How is this, says one?
36197In answer to the question,"Why two dominical letters for leap- year?"
36197Julius Cæsar was assassinated 44 years before Christ, what was the corresponding year of the Julian period?
36197May not Septuagesima Sunday be so called because there are just seventy days in the Paschal Season?
36197On what day of the month and on what day of the week will the four hundredth anniversary fall in 1892?
36197On what day of the week did January commence in 450?
36197On what day of the week did January commence in the year 1250?
36197On what day of the week did Lee surrender to Grant, which occurred on April 9th, 1865?
36197On what day of the week did it occur?
36197On what day of the week did it occur?
36197On what day of the week did it occur?
36197On what day of the week did the 15th of the same month fall in 1582?
36197On what day of the week did the year 4 commence?
36197On what day of the week did the years 1, 2 and 3, of the era commence?
36197On what day of the week will the 4th of March fall in 1989?
36197Thus, the Council of Nice was convened in the year 5038 of the Julian period, what was the year of our era?
36197What was the year before Christ?
36197What year of the Julian period corresponds with the present year, 1892?
36197Why did he leave the three days uncorrected?
36197_ State Superintendent D. J. Waller, in the School Journal._ Who brought about the change in the date?
35399''Any carpenters?'' 35399 ''Any printers?''
35399''Have you any shoemakers?'' 35399 ''Have you any tailors?''
35399But do not the Negroes have access to the gospel through the stated ministry of the whites? 35399 ''What work have you in hand?'' 35399 Are a people pushed to such moral extremities, the ones whose level- headed, unbiased statements of fact concerning the Negro can be relied upon? 35399 Can the nation expect of them the poise and patience necessary for the settling of a great social problem? 35399 Could he be deprived of his property simply because his slaves were baptized afterward into a Christian church? 35399 Do not these figures speak for themselves? 35399 Do they really know the Negro? 35399 Does crime grow less as education increases among the colored people? 35399 Has it made his religion less emotional and more practical? 35399 Has there been a single southern campaign in the last twenty years in which the Negro has not figured as the prime issue? 35399 Have not laziness and listlessness always been the followers of slavery? 35399 Have the southern representatives in Congress any settled convictions or policy save hatred of black men, and can they discuss any other matter? 35399 How is the caste system of the South influencing the Negro laborer? 35399 How often have they raised a finger to assume spiritual or religious guardianship over those victims of their past system of economic and social life? 35399 If these ten millions are ignorant by whose past law and mandate and present practice is this true? 35399 Is it, as a rule, the ignorant or the educated who commit crime? 35399 Is the Negro out of politics in the South? 35399 Is the race problem solved? 35399 NOTE 6 Has not the time come for characterizing war plainly and ceasing to envelope it in a haze of sentimental lies? 35399 Now what lessons for the work that is before us can you and I learn from what I have attempted to say? 35399 Now, what is the economic or material result in one county where the Negro has been given a reasonable chance to make progress? 35399 Suppose to- day Negroes do steal; who was it that for centuries made stealing a virtue by stealing their labor? 35399 The query is therefore: If immigration turns toward the South as it undoubtedly will in time, what will become of the Negro? 35399 To these questions I received 136 replies as follows: Has education improved the morals of the black race? 35399 We may now inquire whether they enjoy the privileges of the gospel in their own houses, and on our plantations? 35399 What happened? 35399 What has been the result? 35399 What is it that makes a successful laboring force? 35399 What now has been the reaction of this group on the environment thrown around it since slavery days? 35399 What now should be the policy? 35399 What was the result? 35399 Why can you not worship in the same way?
35399Why do n''t you be orderly, quiet, and systematic in your worship?
35399Why?
35399because they want Negro crime?
37535Are the remains,asked Mr. Tazewell,"of the husband to be removed from the side of the wife?
37535Have we done right? 37535 May we not rely upon your best exertion to aid us in the work in which we are engaged?
37535Among the people of the Great West, can any man, in ancient or modern times, fail to pronounce Washington peerless?''
37535Second, Shall Congress assume the entire responsibility, and to that end repeal the charter of the Society?
37535The Washington Monument; Shall It Be Built?
37535Third, Shall Congress aid the Society by an appropriation, leaving it to continue its efforts to raise funds for the completion of the Monument?
37535Where in the world can be found such a public spirit?
37535who would not call him a hero?
35861Is there,says Mr. Adams,"a constitution upon record more complicated with balances than ours?
35861; represent whom?
35861And if the one rule or the other is to be applied to them, to how many, and to which of their chief subordinates, is it to be extended?
35861Are the Secretaries political or non- political officers?
35861But, after election, what then?
35861Could the Constitution have meant that South Carolina might be taxed to maintain the manufactures of New England?
35861Does administration blunder and run itself into all sorts of straits?
35861Has the President any very great authority in matters of vital policy?
35861How is it to make any difference who is chosen President?
35861How is it, however, in the practical conduct of the federal government?
35861How is the schoolmaster, the nation, to know which boy needs the whipping?
35861If there was to be a break, would it not be there, where was the severest wear and tear?
35861Is Congress rated for corrupt or imperfect or foolish legislation?
35861The question is not, What will Parliament do?
35861There are ways and ways of obeying; and if Congress be not pleased, why need they care?
35861There is always a centre of power: where in this system is that centre?
35861What are those conditions?
35861What is the proper disposition of any bill which thus seems to lie within two distinct committee jurisdictions?
35861What man, what group of men, can speak for the Republican party or for the Democratic party?
35861What that is picturesque, or what that is vital in the esteem of the partisan, is there in these wordy contests about contemplated legislation?
35861Why unearth the carcass if you can not remove it?
35861but, What will Mr. Gladstone do?
35861in whose hands is self- sufficient authority lodged, and through what agencies does that authority speak and act?
37656Would we take two thousand miles of Canada in the same way? 37656 And why not? 37656 Has she a_ right_ to take offense? 37656 Why not march up to''fifty- four forty''as courageously as we march upon the Rio Grande? 37656 Why not treat Great Britain and Mexico alike? 37656 and must not the other, the sad and real sequel, speedily follow? 37498 About an hour later Mrs. Craig, looking back, saw only two children and cried out,Where is the baby?"
37498All alone with her children and servants in the Western wilds, is it any marvel that Lucy Jefferson Lewis should sigh for the happy home of her youth?
37498But who was this primitive race?
37498Ca n''t you let me into the penitentiary and tell Buck Parker whar he can find me when he comes?"
37498Could n''t he have escaped?"
37498He d you saw anything of Buck Parker?"
37498Liles?"
37498Sheriff Parker asked,"How long will it take ye, Jay- bird?"
37498Utterly astounded, Governor Clark asked,"Who is Buck Parker?"
37498What can I do for you?"
37498What do you suppose the sheriff replied?
37498What should be done?
37498When told it was just as"Jay- bird"had said, the governor, in amazement, asked,"Is the man crazy?
37498Whence did they come and what did they accomplish?
37498You go that way; but let me take my gun and walk through the mountains to Frankfort, wo n''t ye?
2654How did the boat strike when she went in? 2654 Shall our rivers and harbors be improved?"
2654What about the tariff?
2654Again, is not Nebraska, while a Territory, a part of us?
2654Amend it for what?
2654And how much do you suppose was really expended for improvements during that four years?
2654And if so, where shall we set it down, and be free from the difficulty?
2654And if this fight should begin, is it likely to take a very peaceful, Union- saving turn?
2654And if we surrender the control of it, do we not surrender the right of self- government?
2654And is there any doubt that we must all lay aside our prejudices and march, shoulder to shoulder, in the great army of Freedom?
2654And now why will you ask us to deny the humanity of the slave, and estimate him as only the equal of the hog?
2654And what of sacrifice would they make?
2654And what shall we have in lieu of it?
2654And, really, what is the result of all this?
2654Are not the tendencies plain?
2654Are not these newspapers a fair index of the proportion of the votes?
2654Are we in a healthful political state?
2654Are you agreed?
2654Are you possessing houses and lands, and oxen and asses, and men- servants and maid- servants, and begetting sons and daughters?
2654Aye, how do you know he is?
2654But can he remember no other military coat- tail under which a certain other party have been sheltering for near a quarter of a century?
2654But can these men''s testimony be compared with the nice, exact, thorough experiments of our witnesses?
2654But had it any reference to the carrying of slavery into new countries?
2654But how are they in the number of their white people?
2654But how far beyond?
2654But how if she votes herself a slave State unfairly, that is, by the very means for which you say you would hang men?
2654But if at these elections their several constituencies shall clearly express their will against Nebraska, will these senators disregard their will?
2654But if it is a moral and political wrong, as all Christendom considers it to be, how can he answer to God for this attempt to spread and fortify it?
2654But if the negro is a man, is it not to that extent a total destruction of self- government to say that he too shall not govern himself?
2654But if you would like to defeat Buchanan and his gang, allow me a word with you: Does any one pretend that Fillmore can carry the vote of this State?
2654But is there any doubt as to what he will do on the prominent questions if elected?
2654But is this any more true in Congress than in a State Legislature?
2654But restore the compromise, and what then?
2654But what are they to do?
2654But where have I assailed them?
2654But who resists it?
2654By the way, Mr. Speaker, did you know I am a military hero?
2654By the way, how do"events"of the same sort come on in your family?
2654Can I send any more?
2654Can I send speeches that nobody has made?
2654Can any man doubt that, even in spite of the people''s will, slavery will triumph through violence, unless that will be made manifest and enforced?
2654Can any one doubt as to the reason of it?
2654Can not something be done even in Illinois?
2654Can they tell us General Cass''s opinion on this question?
2654Can we afford to sin any more deeply against human liberty?
2654Can we as Christian men, and strong and free ourselves, wield the sledge or hold the iron which is to manacle anew an already oppressed race?
2654Can we not come together for the future?
2654Can you believe that these floats go across the currents?
2654Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work?
2654Clay and Webster were dead before this question arose; by what authority shall our Senator say they would espouse his side of it if alive?
2654Could it be that the western district of Virginia furnished more business for a judge than the whole State of Illinois?
2654Could there be a more apt invention to bring about collision and violence on the slavery question than this Nebraska project is?
2654Did business men commonly go into an expenditure of money which could be of no account to them?
2654Did men act without motive?
2654Did they, then-- could they- establish a principle contrary to their own intention?
2654Did you ever, my friends, seriously reflect upon the speed with which we are tending downwards?
2654Do not the signs of the times point plainly the way in which we are going?
2654Do not they know where the shoe pinches?
2654Do we not own the country?
2654Do you find it in our platform, our speeches, our conventions, or anywhere?
2654Do you know who that was?
2654Do you really believe that such is our aim?
2654Do you say that such restriction of slavery would be unconstitutional, and that some of the States would not submit to its enforcement?
2654Does some one persuade you that Mr. Fillmore can carry Illinois?
2654Does the President, for this reason, propose to abolish the Presidency?
2654Each party within having numerous and determined backers without, is it not probable that the contest will come to blows and bloodshed?
2654Fellow- countrymen, Americans, South as well as North, shall we make no effort to arrest this?
2654Fifty?
2654First, then: If that country was in need of a territorial organization, could it not have had it as well without as with a repeal?
2654Five?
2654For instance, do you suppose that I should ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men?
2654For what is it that their lifelong enemy shall now make profit by assuming to defend them against me, their lifelong friend?
2654For what, then, would he have the Constitution amended?
2654Free them all, and keep them among us as underlings?
2654Free them, and make them politically and socially our equals?
2654Had the Vermont election given them any light?
2654Has he no acquaintance with the ample military coat tail of General Jackson?
2654Has not Mexico always claimed the contrary?
2654Have the enemy called in any foreign help?
2654Have you heard us assert that as our aim?
2654How are we to effect this?
2654How came my 47 to yield to Trumbull''s 5?
2654How can any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor of degrading classes of white people?
2654How comes this vast amount of property to be running about without owners?
2654How could I be?
2654How do boats find currents that floats can not discover?
2654How great a majority, do you think, would have been given had Kansas also been secured for slavery?
2654How is this?
2654How make a road, a canal, or clear a greatly obstructed river?
2654How then are we to make anything out of these lands with this encumbrance on them?
2654How was it that the Afton with all her power flanked over from the channel to the short pier without moving one foot ahead?
2654How would you like that?
2654How, then, can we make much out of this part of the territory?
2654I go against the repeal of the Missouri Compromise; did they ever go for it?
2654I repeat, therefore, the question: Is it not plain in what direction we are tending?
2654If I be right in this, how could we make any entirely new improvement by means of tonnage duties?
2654If by any means we omit to do this, what follows?
2654If not, who are the disunionists-- you or we?
2654If so, where is the propriety of having a Congress?
2654If that ordinance did not keep it out of Illinois, what was it that made the difference between Illinois and Missouri?
2654If the fruit of electing Mr. Clay would have been to prevent the extension of slavery, could the act of electing have been evil?
2654If there be doubt as to which of our divisions will get our candidate, is there no doubt as to which of your candidates will get your party?
2654If they had no connection, why are they always spoken of in connection?
2654If they intended to extend it in the event of acquiring additional territory, why did they not say so?
2654If this had been said among Marion''s men, Southerners though they were, what would have become of the man who said it?
2654If to- day he should choose to say he thinks it necessary to invade Canada to prevent the British from invading us, how could you stop him?
2654If you ca n''t now live with the land, how will you then live without it?
2654If you did not feel that it was wrong, why did you join in providing that men should be hung for it?
2654If, by any or all these matters, the repeal of the Missouri Compromise was commanded, why was not the command sooner obeyed?
2654In substance, it is this: The people say to General Taylor,"If you are elected, shall we have a national bank?"
2654In what?
2654Is it all union and harmony in your ranks?
2654Is it because there is a difference in size?
2654Is it not just to yourself that you should, in a few public speeches, state your reasons, and thus justify yourself?
2654Is it possible you do n''t understand that yet?
2654Is it quite certain that this betters their condition?
2654Is it quite safe to disregard it-- to despise it?
2654Is it to be decided by a vote of the people or a vote of the Legislature, or, indeed, by a vote of any sort?
2654Is it to be decided by the first dozen settlers who arrive there, or is it to await the arrival of a hundred?
2654Is not a certain Martin Van Buren an old horse which your own party have turned out to root?
2654Is the defence to blame for that?
2654Is the land richer?
2654Is there any difficulty in understanding this?
2654Is there any mistaking it?
2654Is there anything in the peculiar nature of the country?
2654Is there no danger to liberty itself in discarding the earliest practice and first precept of our ancient faith?
2654Is there-- can there be-- any doubt about this thing?
2654Is this the sacred right of self- government we hear vaunted so much?
2654It is being executed in the precise way which was intended from the first, else why does no Nebraska man express astonishment or condemnation?
2654It is excellent so far as it goes; but does it go far enough?
2654Like the great Juggernaut-- I think that is the name-- the great idol, it crushes everything that comes in its way, and makes a[?]
2654Mr. Clay was the leading spirit in making the Missouri Compromise; is it very credible that if now alive he would take the lead in the breaking of it?
2654Must she still be admitted, or the Union dissolved?
2654My friend from Indiana( C. B. Smith) has aptly asked,"Are you willing to trust the people?"
2654Now can there be any difficulty in understanding this?
2654Now, when the restriction is removed, what is to prevent it from going still farther?
2654Now, why is this?
2654One hundred?
2654One year after the adoption of the first State constitution, the whole number of them was-- what do you think?
2654Our country is prosperous and powerful; but could it have been quite all it has been, and is, and is to be, without Henry Clay?
2654Pray, will or may not the Know- Nothings, if they should get in power, add the word"Protestant,"making it read"all Protestant white men...?"
2654RESOLUTIONS OF SYMPATHY WITH THE CAUSE OF HUNGARIAN FREEDOM, SEPTEMBER[ 1??
2654RESOLUTIONS OF SYMPATHY WITH THE CAUSE OF HUNGARIAN FREEDOM, SEPTEMBER[ 1??
2654Shall we remove it for this reason?
2654She had a large delegation on that floor; but was she now in favor of granting lands to the new States, as she used to be?
2654Should we not stand by our neighbors who seek to better their conditions in Kansas and Nebraska?
2654So far all is easy; but how shall we determine which are the most important?
2654Some such we certainly have; have you none, gentlemen Democrats?
2654Ten?
2654The next thing I will try to prove is that the plaintiff''s(?)
2654Then I ask, is the precept"Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them"obsolete?
2654Then is not this test reliable?
2654Then, on the passage of the bill, the question came upon them, Shall we vote for preamble and bill together, or against both together?
2654They went for the Compromise of 1850; did I ever go against them?
2654They were greatly devoted to the Union; to the small measure of my ability was I ever less so?
2654This general proposition is doubtless correct; but did it apply?
2654This is but the opinion of a man; but who was that man?
2654To make sure of our object, shall we locate it nowhere, and have Congress hereafter to hold its sessions, as the loafer lodged,"in spots about"?
2654Two hundred millions?
2654Was it not her own fault that she entered wrong, so far wrong that she never got right?
2654Well, what are they?
2654What are the facts upon which this bold assertion is based?
2654What can you do in Missouri better than here?
2654What day does Butler appoint?
2654What for?
2654What good would it do?
2654What is reasonable skill and care?
2654What is that something?
2654What is the amount of the angle?
2654What is then left of us?
2654What mood were the steamboat men in when this bridge was burned?
2654What motive would tempt any set of men to go into an extensive survey of a railroad which they did not intend to make?
2654What name can I, in common decency, give to this wicked transaction?
2654What next?
2654What of that?
2654What then?
2654What use for the General Government, when there is nothing left for it to govern?
2654What would they who thus reproach us have done?
2654When the paper was brought to my house, my wife said to me,"Now are you going to take another worthless little paper?"
2654Which is preferable?
2654Who can compass it?
2654Who has, in spite of the decision, declared Dred Scott free, and resisted the authority of his master over him?
2654Who is responsible for this?
2654Who shall improve on what they did?
2654Who will inform the negro that he is free?
2654Who will take him before court to test the question of his freedom?
2654Why ask us to do for nothing what two hundred millions of dollars could not induce you to do?
2654Why ask us to do what you will not do yourselves?
2654Why did he not tell us how much was granted?
2654Why did you do this?
2654Why does everybody call them a compromise?
2654Why has he constantly called them a series of measures?
2654Why has he so spoken of them a thousand times?
2654Why in the accompanying report was such a repeal characterized as a departure from the course pursued in 1850 and its continued omission recommended?
2654Why no necessity then for repeal?
2654Why not apply it, then, upon this question?
2654Why was California kept out of the Union six or seven months, if it was not because of its connection with the other measures?
2654Why was it omitted in the original bill of 1854?
2654Why was the repeal omitted in the Nebraska Bill of 1853?
2654Why, as to improvements, magnify the evil, and stoutly refuse to see any good in them?
2654Will anybody there, any more than here, do your work for you?
2654Will not a small body and a large one float the same way under the same influence?
2654Will not the first drop of blood so shed be the real knell of the Union?
2654Will some one please tell me where is the positive law that establishes slavery in Kansas?
2654Will the disposition of the people prevent it?
2654Will they allow me, as an old Whig, to tell them, good- humoredly, that I think this is very silly?
2654Will they neither obey nor make room for those who will?
2654Will you please tell me by what right slavery exists in Texas to- day?
2654Will you?
2654Would not that have been better evidence?
2654Would that make the navigation better or worse?
2654Would you have gone out of the House-- skulked the vote?
2654Would you have voted what you felt and knew to be a lie?
2654Would you venture to so consider them had they been committed by any nation on earth against the humblest of our people?
2654and is he not rooting a little to your discomfort about now?
2654no bickerings?
2654no divisions?
2654of no application?
2654of no force?
2654or how remove the encumbrance?
2654thou awe- inspiring prince That keepst the world in fear, Why dost thou tear more blest ones hence, And leave him lingering here?
35932All men are bound to obey the laws, of which the Constitution is the supreme; but must they obey them as they are, or as they understand them?
35932Are those who are elected by the people bound to execute it according to the intention of its framers and the understanding of those who ratified it?
35932But_ cui bono_ the vast and expensive apparatus now appertaining to the States?"
35932By what considerations are they to be controlled?
35932Had the State courts degenerated?
35932Has the applicant a right to the commission he demanded?
35932How are they to act in the decision of these questions?
35932If he has a right and that right has been violated, do the laws of his country afford him a remedy?
35932If they do afford him a remedy, is it a mandamus from this court?
35932Is it in that sense sacredly obligatory upon all who are subject to its authority?
35932Nam quis nescit primam esse historiæ legem ne quid falsi dicere audeat?
35932Ne qua simultatis?
35932Ne qua suspicio gratiæ sit in scribendo?
35932Now where was his warrant for these scandalous denunciations?
35932On what grounds?
35932Under such circumstances, I ask, what are they to do?
35932Was Hamilton advised of the application to Jefferson, and was it made with his approbation?
35932Was it the intention of the framers of the Constitution that it should be clothed with other powers, and if so, what are they?
35932Was not this giving up the merits of the question, for can there be a good government without a good executive?
35932What are the true principles that should be applied to the construction of the Constitution?
35932What can I do better than withdraw from the scene?
35932What was the nature and what the extent of Washington''s design in this application?
35932What were they, if not of the character I have suggested?
35932Whence this change?
35932deinde, ne quid veri non audeat?
35932to which I have referred?
37737(?)
37737(?)
37737But how would the Gold Democrats be treated in the Convention; and what action would they take when it declared for silver?
37737Shall there be Slave States other than Louisiana west of the Mississippi River?
37737The Douglas Bill demanded political action in the North, but how was a new party to be formed?
37737What would transpire at the Conventions of the great parties?
37737Who would carry the banner of the Democratic Party under the new issue?
37737Who would lead it, and what would be the success of the new movement?
32943And what was the story about the Porpoise and the Land- sage?
32943Are the letters printed in the book in this form?
32943But is n''t it good to know land things?
32943But what has that got to do with it?
32943But what''s to become of me?
32943Could n''t abide what?
32943Do n''t they?
32943Do n''t you see?
32943Do poets use rhyming dictionaries?
32943Eh?
32943Fourteen pair o''feet?
32943Hear them? 32943 How did you think of asking a mosquito to be like a lamb?"
32943How do you feel?
32943I hain''t found ye?
32943I say, Cap''n Phil,began Jalap Coombs, with chattering teeth,"is it your orders or desire that your men should freeze to death?"
32943I wonder why it is that most little boys do n''t want to go to bed when the time comes?
32943I''d like to be at home in bed-- What language do you speak?
32943In what city( 40) was the first republican government in America established?
32943Indeed it is; but do you notice how he has changed?
32943Is it any worse than this?
32943Is n''t it good to have old Jalap with us once more?
32943It does n''t seem right, does it?
32943Kin ye fit me out with a new pair of feet?
32943Look here,said Phil, referring to the mate''s last surprising statement,"was n''t your friend Mr. Robinson in the habit of drawing the long bow?"
32943No like um Tananah?
32943Nothing wrong?
32943Of course not,said Phil,"for they have n''t got Serge Belcofsky along, so how could their comfort equal ours?"
32943Oh, come, now, are n''t you going to tell us?
32943Rhyming dictionary?
32943Say, what''s de matter wid me helpin''you, lady?
32943Say,exclaimed Danny, in amazement,"de yer mean dat Barstow lives where we''s just come from?"
32943Secrets? 32943 Sure, Miss Barstow,"answered the maid,"but how do you know?"
32943Then why does Friday come each week? 32943 What did you say in your note?"
32943What do you wish?
32943What does your daddy do for a living?
32943What of it? 32943 What''s the matter?
32943What''s the matter?
32943What''s yours?
32943Where do you come from?
32943Where is the place?
32943Who are you?
32943Who( 39) made the first use of steam- power in printing?
32943Why do you wear a chin? 32943 Why have you hair upon your head?
32943Why not? 32943 Why not?"
32943Why should you come to me? 32943 Will you never, never tell?"
32943Would n''t I be drowned?
32943You do n''t mean to say you have police out here on the ocean?
32943You think me so?
32943( 31)"Tell me where I can find the Key of Russia?"
32943( 44)"What do you want?"
32943( 45)"Well, what is it, anyhow?"
32943A jolly old chap, who resembled the King( 34) noted for his penmanship, walking up slowly, shouted:"What insects( 35) does everybody sleep on?"
32943An arrogant fellow who imagined the princess was his, said,"Tell me, if you can, to whom did the flying tapestry belong?"
32943And why are cannon- crackers red?
32943And why do little boys, When with their daily tasks they''re through, Make such a dreadful noise?
32943And why do maids drink tea?
32943And why do men wear cuffs?
32943And why do n''t hens, like lambs, have chops?
32943And why do n''t roosters set?"
32943And why is cream in puffs?
32943And why is water wet?
32943And you will have your poems printed and send them, wo n''t you, dear child?"
32943And, tell me, what are you going to send to the fair?"
32943Are n''t you going to read some more?"
32943As a result of this, and when it was finished, Kurilla left his own side of the fire, and, approaching Phil, said,"You go Forty Mile?"
32943As he was struggling, Miss Barstow ran to him and asked,"Is this the man you told me of-- your uncle?"
32943But do you mean to say, Millicent, that you have really sent anything to the magazines?"
32943But have n''t you got anything on hand that you do n''t want, in the way of fancy- work, that you might send?"
32943But how do ye propose to sarcumvent the villyans what run off with my dogs?"
32943But why give the paper another name?
32943Can little frail white creatures like thee feel?
32943Come, shall I have the princess?"
32943Did n''t you ever hear the story of the Porpoise and the Land- sage?"
32943Did you ever have any idea of it?"
32943Did you really do it all yourself?
32943Did your father say they went about in schools?"
32943Do n''t you, Joan?"
32943Do you know I actually write poetry?
32943Do you not prefer your soap as you prefer your butter, of good natural color?
32943Dost thou really truly mind?
32943Ever see a porpoise?"
32943HARPER''S ROUND TABLE?
32943Have you your very own Bible, and do you keep it in your room, and just where you can easily put your hand upon it?
32943I suppose you both know that a sonnet must be just fourteen lines?"
32943Jack- amend- all( 36) then said,"Who was the first Lady Magistrate?"
32943Oh tell me why all kittens mew?
32943SIR KNIGHT ALFRED C. BAKER asks"If he can become a member of the Camera Club, and what are the duties of a member?"
32943See?"
32943Shall I read them myself, or will you read them to me?"
32943The merriest time?
32943They are in this book, are n''t they?
32943They have gone around the great arctic bend of the Yukon, have n''t they?
32943Were you anxious?"
32943What are thy thoughts, and what emotions thine?
32943What are you doing?
32943What did he ever tell you about them?"
32943What do you suppose he thinks it is?"
32943What do you think of the poem, Peggy?"
32943What games in the past season have not been marred by accidents and collisions in that event?
32943What in the world is it?
32943What is a land- sage?"
32943What is it, Milly?"
32943What is to be on the 30th of April?"
32943What would you think of me as your guardian?"
32943What''s up?"
32943Where are you from, and what''s your name?
32943Who wants her old worsted slippers?
32943Why ca n''t you swim on mountain- tops?
32943Wo n''t you tell me?"
32943Would n''t you know that being invited to eat with that man you''d get your dinner all right?"
32943he exclaimed,"what do you two say to going back, making a camp near that village, and having some sort of a Christmas after all?
32943repeated Jalap Coombs, reflectively,"and slow shoes on every pair?
23780A-- what?
23780About-- the singing- school?
23780Ah, you know that much?
23780Am I really?
23780And how do you suppose Santa Claus keeps so clean?
23780And if_ I_ was sick?
23780And what are you going to do, Pussy?
23780And what else?
23780And who is going to be our President?
23780And you have no relatives, that is, no one to look after you a bit?
23780Are n''t you glad Mr. Harper''s our mayor?
23780Are there any boys about?
23780Are you hungry, dear? 23780 Are you out taking a walk?"
23780Are you quite sure?
23780Are you sure they did n''t have on overcoats?
23780As glad as Stephen?
23780Aunt Mary,inquired the little girl,"is the chicken feed mixed?"
23780Both of us?
23780Boys, ca n''t you help a fellow?
23780Burn it out?
23780But do they dance?
23780But how could you play on it?
23780But how_ do_ you get ready?
23780But what would be the use of fractions if the world came to an end?
23780But when Walter the Testy came-- he was really here?
23780But why did n''t you bring Dolly and stay to dinner? 23780 But you did n''t want England to win, did you?"
23780But you like New York, do n''t you? 23780 But_ is_ there any use of studying or anything?"
23780But_ you_ could n''t turn round and be a Democrat, could you?
23780Ca n''t I ever grow big?
23780Ca n''t you keep it,''Milyer?
23780Can I take her?
23780Can I? 23780 Charles, could n''t you have asked me about the singing- school?"
23780Could I kiss it just once?
23780Could n''t he doctor us at all?
23780Could n''t you coax?
23780Did everybody vote for him? 23780 Did n''t they get awful black and sooty?"
23780Did they call you''country''?
23780Did they treat you very badly when you were a prisoner?
23780Did you know Hannah More wrote a novel?
23780Did you tell her my name?
23780Do n''t you remember, he used to give us a pair now and then?
23780Do n''t you think I might have a party some time, and Ben and all of us?
23780Do n''t you think I_ will_ grow some, Joe?
23780Do n''t you want to put something in the box?
23780Do n''t you want to take a walk down the street with me?
23780Do you live all alone here?
23780Do you mean you were alive then-- a little girl in the Revolutionary War?
23780Do you own a farm, too?
23780Do you really think they''d like to have me?
23780Do you think I could get up, Peggy?
23780Do you want to go in and hear her?
23780Do you, really?
23780Do you_ reely_ like it, Hanny?
23780Do?
23780Eh-- what?
23780Going to send him to college?
23780Goodness sakes, is it you, ringin''as if the world would n''t stand another minnit? 23780 Hanny, will you mind?"
23780Hanny,he began,"do you know you are going to be my little sister?
23780Has he any fancy for a profession? 23780 Have you had the doctor?"
23780Have you hurt yourself?
23780How did he come by so many names?
23780How did you come by such an idea?
23780How do you keep so clean?
23780How is your son to- day?
23780How much are sixty guilders?
23780I wish I had seen that old man at the Bowling Green----"Do they make bowls there?
23780I''m sure I do n''t want the world to come to an end, but----"Do your people believe this?
23780If he''d been a poor shoat he would n''t have hung around here very long, would he, Katschina? 23780 If she was n''t a good scholar already-- and what more_ do_ you expect her to learn?"
23780If she_ did_--what will you do?
23780If we were all in another country, the beautiful heaven, and you were here all alone, would you not like to come to us? 23780 Is he your school- teacher?"
23780Is it Hanny?
23780Is it alive?
23780Is it anything--what should she say?--wrong or bad seemed too forcible--"queer to be old- fashioned?"
23780Is n''t she beautiful?
23780Is that little fairy your sister?
23780Just_ when_ is it coming to an end? 23780 Margaret, what must I do to serve Him?"
23780Margaret,she said,"was it dreadful for Miss Lois to die?"
23780Mother, ca n''t we have supper quite soon, or ca n''t I? 23780 Mother, why do n''t you call me just Charles, as my father does?"
23780Mother,said the little girl after much consideration,"if any of us get sick will we have to pay Joe like a truly doctor?"
23780My little girl,said a tall gentleman who had watched Hanny''s ineffectual efforts to make herself taller,"will you let me hold you up?
23780Now, what is the trouble?
23780Oh, Hanny dear, what is the matter?
23780Oh, Joe, do you really?
23780Oh, Peggy, am I very, very queer?
23780Oh, ai n''t you just crazy to go to New York to live?
23780Oh, do you see how late it is? 23780 Oh, do you suppose she will meet the king''s son?"
23780Oh, father-- who asked? 23780 Oh, what is it?"
23780Oh, when will he be big enough to hold?
23780Oh,_ were_ you troubled?
23780Say, Ben,and his brother gave him a dig in the ribs with his elbow;"say, Ben, do n''t you want to go back to New York with mother?
23780School- teacher? 23780 Shall we buy this little girl?"
23780Sissy, would n''t your mother mend your coat? 23780 The Reign of Terror?
23780To New York?
23780To the Museum?
23780Was it really so, Margaret?
23780Was it true that Steve had been buying some land way out of town? 23780 Was that what you told them?"
23780Well, Peggy,he said, Friday evening of the first week,"how does school go?
23780Well-- I''d take my little girl and mother and Margaret----"And what would you do?
23780Well-- don''t you know you said you wished it was Anna?
23780Well-- why not?
23780What did they fight about, grandmother?
23780What did you have for dinner?
23780What do you want him for?
23780What does your father call you?
23780What have you been doing all this time?
23780What is all this row about?
23780What is it, dear?
23780What was he going to do-- enter college?
23780What''s going to happen?
23780What, all of us?
23780Where is Joe? 23780 Where''s the hundred dollars?"
23780Where, then, did you get the idea?
23780Where_ have_ you stayed so long?
23780Who do you have to kiss?
23780Why could n''t_ you_ ask me?
23780Why did n''t the Whitneys feel worried? 23780 Why not?"
23780Why not?
23780Why, is n''t your own sidewalk good enough?
23780Wo n''t you try? 23780 Would n''t you like to have your hair cut, Charles?"
23780Would we move everything?
23780Would you like to go down and call on Jim''s girl?
23780You are sorry we have been beaten?
23780You do n''t care to go?
23780You do n''t go to school, do you?
23780You do n''t mean to say that child can knit lace? 23780 You through?"
23780Ai n''t you, darling?"
23780And Josie wanted to know if Hanny could n''t come and see them, and if they could n''t have their dishes out and have tea all by themselves?
23780And are you going to have Margaret, too?"
23780And ca n''t I hang up my stocking?"
23780And did her little girl go to school anywhere?
23780And do n''t you''spose he''d found something about it?"
23780And do you know his chum, Phil Hoffman?
23780And everybody-- only-- Margaret, were the people at the church dreadfully disappointed?
23780And it was a nice week at school after the boys got done asking him"Who his Barber was?"
23780And oh, what was this?
23780And she suddenly said:"Father, what was the Reign of Terror?"
23780And the stores are so-- so--"she tried to think of the longest word she knew--"so magnificent?
23780And then came the war----""That grandmother knows about?
23780And this, I suppose, is your little sister?
23780And was grandmother really alive?"
23780And when he was so good and splendid, why did n''t they put him in?"
23780And where are you living?"
23780And where was their Bowery?"
23780And where would she go to school?
23780And will you all come to see me to- morrow?
23780And you''ll try to make things smooth with mother if she feels a little put out at first?
23780And-- let me see-- you did live at Yonkers?
23780But what would they have said to the Columbian nights and electric lights?
23780But where_ is_ mother?"
23780Ca n''t you be brave enough to take the pleasures that come to you without darkening them by a continual sense of the misfortune?"
23780Ca n''t you turn in and stop a while with us?"
23780Can the new President put him out?"
23780Charles sung like an angel, did n''t he, Margaret?
23780Could he bring them over?
23780Could she sit in his lap just the same and twist his whiskers about her fingers and comb his hair and read out of her story- books to him?
23780Did Martha scold you?"
23780Did he know about the war?
23780Did he mean to build there?"
23780Did n''t he want to see them?
23780Did people really have on their ascension robes?
23780Did she know?
23780Did the new people drive the Dutch away?"
23780Did you have two organs of thought?
23780Do girls-- big girls-- and women vote?"
23780Do n''t you suppose they nod to each other when the folks are asleep?
23780Do we not find some of the most beautiful stories in the Bible itself?"
23780Do you go to school?"
23780Do you know that I have been seriously considering a visit to you?
23780Do you suppose he got awfully frightened?"
23780Do you suppose the children had to learn every language?"
23780Do you think Uncle Faid is coming back?"
23780Does n''t it seem just as if God had sent him at the right time, when we were all growing big?"
23780Had Charles done something that had escaped her all- sided vision and was his father going to take him to task?
23780Had Charles put them up to this?
23780Hanny wondered if she would be stout and have full red cheeks and look like Retty?
23780Hanny, are you hungry?
23780Hoffman?"
23780How could she get acquainted with them?
23780How could she get courage to tell him?
23780How do you like Annie?"
23780How had she come to love Dr. Hoffman?
23780I promised to call him Charles, but I think Robert''s prettier, do n''t you?
23780I suppose she is n''t much used to children, being the youngest?"
23780If Dele could be trusted, why not he?
23780If Mr. Theodore was there-- and he never seemed to mind the little girls playing about-- he would say,"Children, what are you doing to that cat?"
23780In the summer when the charcoal man went by they would sing out:"John Robert Charles, what did you have for breakfast?"
23780Is it a town?"
23780Is it possible Mr. Stephen Underhill is your brother?"
23780Is it really so?
23780Is n''t it a Christmas worth having?"
23780Is n''t it a charming day?"
23780Is she real strong?
23780Is this the little girl of whom I have heard so much?
23780Is this your little sister?
23780It sounds quite grand, does n''t it?
23780Miss Underhill?"
23780Mrs. Jasper said hesitatingly:"Would it be wise, doctor?
23780Mrs. Underhill was quite troubled at times when friends said:"Is n''t Hanny very small of her age?
23780Oh, Hanneran, was n''t you awful''fear''d to speak a piece before all the folks at school?"
23780Oh, do n''t you want a ride?
23780Oh, do you s''pose John Robert Charles''mother would let him come?
23780Oh, do you think Jim would come?"
23780Oh, do you want to go to the Museum?"
23780Oh, mother, do let us go?
23780Oh, what is it?"
23780Oh, where could she be?
23780Oh, wo n''t you please let her?
23780Or was there a conspiracy?
23780Say, Ben, you_ would_ like to go, would n''t you?"
23780Seen any girls you like?"
23780Some of them actually took pride in being as nice as possible and obeying the first time they were spoken to, without even asking"Why?"
23780Still, the worst scare was over, and if one mistake could be made, why not another?
23780The boys said,"Sissy, why do n''t your mother put your hair up in curl papers?"
23780The place was comfortable and near their father''s business, so why should they?
23780Then he said:"All the chickens right?"
23780Then she said gravely:"Margaret, are all those old Dutch people dead that were in the history?
23780There are a good many queernesses, are n''t there?"
23780There, could you have it planned out any nicer, Daisy?
23780They''re so hard, and what is the use if we''re not going to live longer than next week?"
23780To his wife Mr. Reed said:"Why do you go off if you do n''t want to?"
23780WHEN CHRISTMAS BELLS WERE RINGING A LITTLE GIRL IN OLD NEW YORK CHAPTER I THE LITTLE GIRL"How would you like to go to New York to live, little girl?"
23780Was n''t he lovely?
23780Was she glad to have them all growing up?
23780Was that the part of you always thinking?
23780Was there any child quite like the little girl?
23780Well, is he Beekman Dutch or Underhill English?"
23780Were not her children dearer to her than any spot of ground?
23780Were there any little girls around to play with?
23780Were they so sure all the signs were fulfilled?
23780What are you going to do with that cream?"
23780What could she have been thinking of to do such a thing?
23780What did make him so laughing and mysterious?
23780What does the President do?"
23780What was death?
23780What was it?
23780What was lacking?
23780What_ would_ Hester say?
23780When Lily entered, she inquired if that little thing was the Underhill girl?
23780When she paused he said,"What else?"
23780When will the cavalcade start?
23780Where did you pick up that?"
23780Where will he live, anyway?"
23780Where would she have found time for such things?
23780Which would Hanny rather do?
23780Why do n''t some of you smart men who have plenty of time to sit round, invent a machine to cook and sew and sweep the house?"
23780Why do n''t you find some boys to go with?
23780Will they play with dolls?"
23780Will you kiss me good- by, dear?
23780Wo n''t you give me a word of welcome?"
23780Would Margaret and Dr. Hoffman have a house like this some time?
23780Would he be back before the end came, and take them all in his strong arms?
23780Would it hurt them to be killed?
23780Would n''t you like to shake hands?
23780Would you like a bit of cold chicken?
23780Would_ I_ look queer?"
23780You do n''t suppose I''m a goose in pin- feathers, do you?
23780You''d rather be in New York, would n''t you, Hanny?
23780_ Could_ anything elude her sharp eyes?
23780_ do_ you believe it?
23780cried Hanny,"where''s mother?
23780she asked in surprise?
23780she cried softly, wonderingly,"do you want to go to New York?"
23780she cried,"ca n''t Hanny go to the Museum this afternoon?
23780she cried,"may I get out and pick some?"
23780with a great exultation in her sweet child''s voice--"the world did n''t come to an end, did it?
2141''Get anything out of that?'' 2141 ''How am I supposed to push along your scramble for prominence?''
2141Ai n''t it a corkin''situation? 2141 Ai n''t progress ever appealed to none of yez?
2141All in?
2141And in the name of the seven sacred saddle- blankets of Sagittarius, where did the stage and literature get the stunt?
2141And say-- did you ever hear a man complain of hippopotamuses? 2141 Any joolry displaced?
2141Any silver missing?
2141Are all these men druggists?
2141Are you afraid you''ll get a free ride?
2141Are you afraid, Eddie?
2141Are you coming along to the house?
2141Are you dressed warm enough, Daise?
2141Are you sure you know me?
2141Are you willing to return to your old home if you are assured of a welcome and restoration to favor?
2141Before we go out,she whispered in his ear--"before anything happens, tell me again, Eddie, do you l-- do you really like me?"
2141Can this be Longhorn Merritt?
2141Cherry loves me? 2141 Did I hear ye open the book?"
2141Did you ever hear that story about the man from the West?
2141Did you see it, Billy?
2141Did you see it?
2141Did you?
2141Do I look bughouse?
2141Do n''t I tell you it''s too late? 2141 Do n''t you like this_ filet mignon_?"
2141Do n''t you remember me, Helen-- the one who has always loved you best? 2141 Do they want me back?"
2141Do you hear our lad readin''to me?
2141Do you know how much money it would take to pay back the losses of consumers during that corner in flour?
2141Do you know the''Falling Waters''?
2141Does mother want to see me?
2141Eddie, do you really like me?
2141For an excipient in manipulating a pill mass which do you prefer-- the magnesia carbonate or the pulverised glycerrhiza radix?
2141For love of me?
2141Gawd knows I love him; but if he has done this deed--you sabe, do n''t you?
2141Got any dough with you, Annie?
2141Had any drinks?
2141Have I no right to come in?
2141Have I no right to stay in it? 2141 Have I?
2141Have another beer?
2141Have you been taking him to the Zoo? 2141 Have you heard any talk of a hippopotamus?"
2141Have you read the last story I sent you--''The Alarum of the Soul''?
2141How could I tell?
2141How could you do that?
2141How did you happen to see me?
2141How do I know?
2141How do you do?
2141How goes the writing?
2141How many this week, Miss Mary?
2141How much capital have you got, Billy?
2141How much did he pay you for it?
2141How was the range when you left the Gila?
2141How''d you like to play a game or two of seven- up? 2141 How''s that?"
2141How? 2141 How?"
2141I think so, Mr. Hildebrant-- the one that lives the longest-- Is that right?
2141I was doing the Monte Cristo act as adapted by Pompton, N. J., was n''t I?
2141If I could prove to you that I am right?
2141Is it evening yet?
2141Is n''t it in the still, quiet places that things do happen? 2141 Is that Jimmy Dunn?"
2141Is that a new one? 2141 Is that so, sport?"
2141Is that you, Annie?
2141Is there a conundrum without an answer in the next number? 2141 Is there a crush already in the waiting rooms of the old doctor that does skin grafting?"
2141Is you from the South, suh? 2141 Ladies?"
2141Longy,he said, in a melancholy voice that disturbed traffic,"what have they been doing to you?
2141Loves me?
2141Man,said Sam Griggs severely, puckering his old, smooth, lined face,"are you a chess automaton or a human pincushion?
2141May I ask what your name is?
2141Me? 2141 Me?"
2141Mr. Pinkhammer,he said, giving the bulk of his attention to his forefinger,"may I request you to step aside with me for a little conversation?
2141Now, what is this foolishness he talks of hippopotamuses?
2141On the dead level?
2141One for the lady?
2141Ought n''t I to?
2141Pardon me,said Mr. Kelley, to the General,"but you got balled up in the shuffle, did n''t you?
2141Paresis or superannuated?
2141Say, Mike,said James Turner,"what''s your line, anyway-- shoe laces?
2141Say, Sport, do you know where you are at? 2141 Say, Tim,"he said to the waiter,"why do they have Easter?"
2141Say,said the girl, blazing upon him with low- voiced indignation,"what do you think I am?
2141Say,''Bo,said Black Riley to him,"where did you cop out dat doll?"
2141She has n''t much money to speak of, has she?
2141Should I stay in? 2141 Smoke, Shack?"
2141Spanish or Dago?
2141Tell me,asked Dawe, with truculent anxiety,"what especial faults in''The Alarum of the Soul''caused you to throw it down?"
2141That''s the way I want it; because--"Because what?
2141The riddle? 2141 Then the charge is fifty cents, I suppose?"
2141They have been pounding your stocks to- day on the Street, Pierpont?
2141This doll?
2141Thursday?
2141Vell,said Hildebrant, shaking all over with the vile conceit of the joke- maker,"haf you guessed him?
2141Vell,said Hildebrant,"haf you guessed him?
2141W''at''s he come makin''a noise like a penny arcade for amongst gen''lemen that comes in the square to set and think?
2141Waiter, bring an absinthe frappé and-- what''s yours, Greenbrier?
2141Want to be in at the death, do you?
2141We''ll drink our beer before we go, ha?
2141Well, how is that for a bum guess? 2141 Well, you''ve been speaking it, ai n''t you?"
2141What I wanted?
2141What are they?
2141What are youse doin''in here?
2141What did you wish to see me about?
2141What do you mean?
2141What house is this?
2141What is it to you?
2141What is it, Doctor Volney? 2141 What t''ell you doin''?"
2141What the deuce are you doing in New York? 2141 What the deuce,"said he, wonderingly,"is old Bell doing here?
2141What to me is war and politics? 2141 What was in the bundle that they left?"
2141What would I think?
2141What would you think,I said, a little anxiously,"if I were to tell you that my name is Edward Pinkhammer, from Cornopolis, Kansas?"
2141What young man?
2141What''s doing at church?
2141What''s his line?
2141What''s that? 2141 What''s the diagnosis of your case, Freddy?"
2141What''s the matter with her?
2141What''s the old lady want this cherry- buster to do?
2141What''s the professor''s line?
2141What''s the use to try?
2141What''s wrong? 2141 What?
2141What?
2141When are you coming to see me-- where I live?
2141Who do you think you are talking to? 2141 Who pays the rent and buys the food that is eaten in this house?"
2141Who pays the rent and buys the food that is eaten in this house?
2141Who?
2141Why are you going in there?
2141Why did you do it?
2141Why fetch and carry,said Black Riley,"when some one will do it for ye?
2141Why should I not be going out?
2141Why, Corrigan,he asked,"is Easter?
2141Why, Shack, is this you?
2141Why, what do you think? 2141 Will that be you, lad?"
2141Will you undertake the treatment of my case, Doctor Volney?
2141Wo n''t that be enough? 2141 Wot''ll you take for it, den?"
2141Would it be too late,I asked, somewhat timorously,"to offer you congratulations?"
2141Would you like me to-- Eddie?
2141You do n''t think I''d fall to that, do you? 2141 You have n''t dined, then?"
2141You see that bundle of printed stuff in the corner, Billy? 2141 You''re quite a big lawyer out West-- Denver, is n''t it, or Los Angeles?
2141You''ve been looking for me,said Thomas,"and do n''t know my name?
2141Young man,said old Jacob, severely,"how about that parlor maid you were engaged to?"
2141''A sidewalk merchant?''
2141''Contrast?''
2141''Vat kind of a hen lays der longest?''"
2141''Vat kind of a hen lays der longest?''"
2141''What do you call this-- letter to a Hardware Merchant from His Nephew on Learning that His Aunt Has Nettlerash?
2141''What kind of a hen lays the longest?
2141( And then to his friend)''Say, Tommy, does a thirty- two bullet make a big hole?
2141--wouldn''t that put pink icing and a little red sugar bird on your bridal cake?
2141A poor coal- digger( ever hear of a rich one?)
2141A young man who can not riddles antworten, he is not so good by business for ein family to provide-- is not that-- hein?''
2141Ai n''t Rooney''s all right?
2141Ai n''t it all right in here?
2141Ai n''t it hell, now, Shack-- ain''t it?
2141Ai n''t it like a Dutchman to risk a man''s happiness on a fool proposition like that?
2141Ai n''t it lovely?
2141Ai n''t that reason enough?"
2141Ai n''t you got any other recommendations?"
2141Ai n''t you just put in an invoice of a pint of peanuts or another apple?
2141Although you married him, Helen--""_ Who Are You?_"cried the woman, with wide- open eyes, snatching her hand away.
2141Am I as good as a horse?
2141Am I nothing in this house?"
2141And for what?"
2141And have you seen Sara Bernhardt in''Andrew Mack''yet?"
2141And if dere''s any picnics or red balloons to be dealt out here, Mike''s money pays for''em-- see?
2141And say-- we''ve got vinegar pretty well in hand, have n''t we?''
2141And then he gave a short roar at the top of his voice, and said:"Was it the hippopotamus you wanted to be read to about then?"
2141And then he said:"Helen, do you not remember me?
2141And then what?"
2141And what am I doin''here with him?
2141And what had Fuzzy to do with any of it?
2141Any of the old ladies''sunshades disappeared?
2141Are they wearing those things on Broadway now?"
2141Are you coming to church with me?"
2141Are you some wiser now, uncle, or do you want to scrap wit''Mike O''Grady for de Santa Claus belt in dis district?"
2141As the doctor was moving off I heard Uncle Cæsar''s voice inside:"Did he get bofe of dem two dollars from you, Mis''Zalea?"
2141Bellchambers?
2141Bessie led away by a strange man?
2141But do n''t you think it about time, now, for you to introduce yourself?"
2141But how did you get wise, doc?
2141But if he has or he ai n''t, what does he want to go''round butting into other folks''s business for?
2141But no more Rooney''s at one o''clock-- see?"
2141But what''s the use of talking about it?
2141But when did these stunts happen?"
2141But will they have me again?
2141But, the bone?
2141Can you forgive the past and remember the love that has lasted for twenty years?
2141Can you, will you, forgive me?"
2141Could it be possible?"
2141Could you get me a drink from the sideboard, Tommy?
2141Cut that out, please-- who do you think I am?
2141Did the gentlemen wish to speak with one of the brothers?
2141Did you ever do that and listen to the words of grief and despair as they flowed spontaneously from her lips?"
2141Did you ever know a man to give a woman a dollar without any consideration?
2141Do n''t you think I was right?"
2141Do n''t you think you might before long?"
2141Do you catch the idea?"
2141Do you know the family of Van Smuythes living in Washington Square North?"
2141Do you see those hills over there?"
2141Do you suppose I''d lie to you?
2141For you were there, and you wrote a note to Fannie on the hotel paper, and mailed it, just to show her that-- you did not?
2141Forster?"
2141Get the point?
2141Get them statistics?"
2141Had you forgotten about it?"
2141Hardly had time to yawn, did you?
2141Has he been found?
2141Have they got them yet?"
2141Have ye hippopotamuses in the lease?
2141Have you heard this fellow Crusoe sing?
2141He called a waiter and said:"Is Mr. Gilmore still behind the desk?
2141Hello, what''s this?
2141Hey-- what?"
2141Hey-- what?"
2141His mind?
2141Horse with the heaves?
2141How did you manage to get past my office- boy and invade my sanctum?
2141How do you know this ai n''t the man I want?
2141How have you been so blind?"
2141How is that?"
2141How long do you expect to hold an audience in a court- room with that kind of stuff?
2141How many square pounds of baled hay do you think a jackass could eat if he stopped brayin''long enough to keep still a minute and five eighths?"
2141How much do you get a week for the stunt you do now?"
2141How much would it be worth to you?''
2141Huh?--why, Macy''s-- don''t it fit nice?
2141I know it comes the first time you''re full after the moon rises on the seventeenth of March-- but why?
2141I might have concealed the name; but why always hold back your mystery till the end?
2141I seen you on Sixth Avenue Tuesday afternoon, Mr. De Forest-- swell?--oh, my!--who is she?
2141I slide a little lower on the leather- cornered seat and, well, order another Würzburger and wish that Longstreet had-- but what''s the use?
2141I''ve give the missionary societies$ 2,000,000, but what did I get out of it?
2141If it was the_ d t''s_, why am I so sore?"
2141Is Mrs. B. along or is this a little business run alone, eh?"
2141Is aphasia curable?
2141Is it a proper and religious ceremony, or does the Governor appoint it out of politics?"
2141Is she nothing to you?
2141Is that too much powder?
2141Is there any life so devoid of impossibilities as life in this city?
2141Is there any way it can be done, old Ways and Means?"
2141Is this ten thousand dollars money, or do I have to save so many coupons to get it?"
2141It was a good story, except--""I can write English, ca n''t I?"
2141It''s kind of hard luck, ai n''t it?
2141Know where a fellow could get action on about$ 9 or$ 10?
2141McCree?"
2141Mike''s got de stomach- ache privilege for every kid in dis neighborhood-- see?
2141Morgan?"
2141Morgan?"
2141Mr. Bassett-- you''re always fooling-- no--?
2141Neither of you never knew One- eyed Peters, did you, while you was around Little Rock?
2141Nerve-- but just here will you oblige by perusing again the quotation with which this story begins?
2141No, then?"
2141Now, could you enjoy having the news read to you from an evening newspaper unless you could see the colors of the headlines?
2141Now, what is there about Rooney''s to inspire all this pother?
2141Now, what''s the prize for the best answer to all this?"
2141Now, what''s the use?
2141Oh, what is it?"
2141Oh, you''ve still got your hammer out for New York, have you?
2141Ought n''t I to know?
2141Say, Cele, what''s the use of waiting now?
2141Say, do I look like I''d climbed down one of them missing fire- escapes at Helicon Hall?
2141Say, who do you think you are talking to?
2141Shall I come to believe in the Chaldean Chiroscope myself?
2141Should he curse this mountain of pernicious humor-- curse him and die?
2141So you know Miss Adair?"
2141Sprinkle a little gasoline on''i m, and drop''i m on the Drive-- well?"
2141That store of mine ai n''t very big, but--""Oh, ai n''t it?"
2141That suit you?"
2141That''s enough to marry on, ai n''t it?
2141That''s rather a new design in waistcoats you have on, is n''t it, Gilliam?
2141The fingers of one hand fumbled with a button on his coat as he blurted between his pale lips:_"Say, Shack, ai n''t that a hell of a note?
2141Then, with quickly returning conviction, he asked blandishingly:"What are you gwine there for, boss?"
2141They stand in the( ranch) library, which is furnished with mounted elk heads( did n''t the Elks have a fish fry in Amagensett once?
2141Those wreaths and festoons of holly with their scarlet berries making the great hall gay-- where had he seen such things before?
2141Und''stand?"
2141Waitin''for me, you say?
2141Walter?"
2141Was it copying ink that you wanted or just writing fluid?"
2141Well, dis is Mike O''Grady''s district you''re buttin''into-- see?
2141Well, now, can you whistle up a fairy that''ll solve this hen query, or not?"
2141Well, when do you want to begin?"
2141What are you doing in here with him?"
2141What are you doing with that girl?"
2141What devil''s city is this?"
2141What did Mr. Morgan say he''d give for it?
2141What did the noisiest project in the world-- I mean the building of the Tower of Babel-- result in finally?
2141What did you call that mess in the crock with the handle, Longy?
2141What have I up?"
2141What have you got against this town, Jack?
2141What kind of a hen lays the longest?
2141What manner of entertainment, adventure, or excitement have you to offer to the stranger within your gates?"
2141What part of the house do you work in?"
2141What saloon does he work in?"
2141What to me should be glory and the shooting of mans?
2141What''s the answer-- two apples or a yard and a half?"
2141What''s the matter with her?"
2141What''s the matter with_ you_?
2141What''s this?
2141What''s vitiating you, anyhow?"
2141What?
2141What?"
2141When a man loses his memory does it return slowly, or suddenly?"
2141When is a hen?"
2141When that part of it was over, Mary said:"And did you find what you wanted while you were abroad?"
2141Where do druggists mostly keep''em?
2141Who earns the money for the rent and the breakfast you''ve just eat, I''d like to know?
2141Who else was there to take it?
2141Who wears the diamonds in this town?
2141Who''s got the money in the world?
2141Why ca n''t they stay at home and forget?"
2141Why ca n''t we get married next week?"
2141Why do we do it?
2141Why should this man, prosperous, happily married, and respected, choose suddenly to abandon everything?
2141Why should we not shake hands-- at least once in fifteen years?"
2141Why was n''t somebody looking after her, I''d like to know?
2141Why, it was this:''What kind of a hen lays the longest?
2141Why?
2141Why?
2141Why?
2141Will you keep company with me, Ruby?"
2141Will you not trust me?"
2141Would an offer of$ 2.25 for it cause you to knock over any fragile articles of your stock in hurrying it off the nail?"
2141Would n''t that knock you off your perch, Shack?
2141Would you be willing at all to entertain the hypothesis that my name is Edward Pinkhammer, and that I never saw you before in my life?"
2141You never was interested in Africa, was you, Miss Cherry?"
2141You old fool nigger, ca n''t you tell people from other people when you see''em?"
2141You see that bottle of blue ink on the table?
2141You see this robe that I wear?"
2141You talk about being cut to a pattern-- well, ai n''t the pattern all right?
2141You und''stand?
2141are we that high up?"
2141asked Thomas, with the freemasonic familiarity of the damned--"Booze?
2141did you ever wonder where they get the other 364?
2141he said with a grin;"but you mean a peroxide Juno, do n''t you?"
2141said Daisy, with a brief flash of spirit,"where do you think I come from-- Brooklyn?
2141said the General, feelingly and finally,"is it that you have never eaten of the corned beef hash that Madame O''Brien she make?"
2141she cried anxiously--"When?--where?
2141she cried, weeping and laughing, and hanging upon his neck,"why did you do it?"
2141that ai n''t the District of Columbia you''re talking about, is it?"
2141what did you do it for, old man?"
35489''Dead, sir?'' 35489 For what, my dear friend?"
35489How is it,she says,"that you look forward only with distaste to the practice of medicine?
35489Is it not finished?
35489Mr. Morse still objected to sending the note, when the fair one, brightening up, asked,''You will, then, send_ me_ on, wo n''t you?'' 35489 What chance have you,"said I,"to follow this man?"
35489What then is the office of vitality? 35489 ''What is the use of a library to a child an hour old?'' 35489 And can your ladyship resolve to spend the rest of your days in grief and sickness? 35489 And why? 35489 At Mill Grove the weeks passed pleasantly,--is not the world always beautiful when we love somebody? 35489 But what is reflection of light?
35489But, according to this view, what is vitality?
35489Calling his son, who was playing in the room, the Dean said,"Frankie, what are these?"
35489Did any of those present remember how Congress allowed him nearly to die of despair and want, only a few years before?
35489Did ever man or woman achieve anything worthy without these dreams?
35489Didst fancy life one summer holiday, With lessons none to learn, and naught but play?
35489For what profession should he study?
35489Has not God waited six thousand years for one to contemplate his works?"
35489Have you reflected seriously before setting aside this profession?
35489He longed to gain access to Dr. Stobæus''s library, but how should it be accomplished?
35489He must be educated, but how?
35489He wrote back to his father:"Oh, is it possible?
35489His host, seeing him standing thoughtfully at the window, said,"Why so sad?"
35489How could he support his family?
35489How could the property be used"for the increase and diffusion of knowledge among men"?
35489I remember his patient look when he said once,''Do n''t you think you could not come in again; I have been interrupted very often?''...
35489I said, hurriedly:''Would ten dollars be of any service?''
35489If to the moon, why not to the planets?
35489If water could be decomposed by it, why not some substances heretofore regarded as simple or elementary bodies?
35489Is it because perfection attained is not best for mortals?
35489Is not this a prospect to keep up the most flagging spirit?
35489On the contrary, why does flame or smoke always mount upward, though no force is used to send them in that direction?
35489Once he said to a German student:"Tell me, candidly, are you rich, and can you afford it?
35489Shall I never see my dear wife again?
35489The home in Germany did not prove a happy one, but how could it without William?
35489The question among naturalists was,"How can plants and animals have become thus changed?"
35489The question then is, what has become of the material which filled the sac of the potato?
35489They were all disciples of Aristotle, and had not Galileo, when a boy among them, dared to oppose the great Grecian?
35489Was ever a man more honored?
35489Were not you and I acquainted for three months before we discovered how completely we were made one for the other?
35489What can I do?
35489What had woke us all up so suddenly?
35489What was to be done?
35489When will the world learn toleration for those whose opinions are different from the popular thought?
35489Why are so many of the best and sweetest things in this world a little too late in their coming?
35489Why does it stop at a certain distance, and then return to you?...
35489Why is this in the order of nature, that there is such a difference in the duration and destruction of her works?
35489Why is this?
35489Will it not be as good as to see his prescription at the apothecary''s?
35489Will it not seem strange when the largest and finest book in papa''s library is one written by his Louis?
35489Would he have become learned or distinguished?
35489Would it pass the Senate?
35489is it possible?
35489well, and what of that?
35489where_ did_ you get that?
35489who can blame him that he hated poverty for his brilliant son?
37812What the devil do you mean, sir,exploded the governor,"by showing yourself here?
37812What''s this? 37812 You come from the South-- from Mexico?"
37812You have stopped firing? 37812 Do n''t you know that I shall call the sentry and have you arrested?
37812Does the State care to accept their services or does it not?"
37812Have not the Indians told us many times that there is no food, no water in that direction, and that, moreover, there is no way to cross the mountains?
37812Then how shall I occupy my corsairs?
37812To begin with, you have seen fit to put a price upon my head?"
37812WHEN WE CAPTURED AN AFRICAN KINGDOM Did you ever, by any chance, leave the Boston State House by the back door?
37812What American ever had a more ambitious dream and was within such measurable distance of realizing it?
37812What shall I do with my fighting men?
37812What the devil does this mean, sir?"
37812What''s this?"
37925But I asked them how near it was to any house?
37925He called on me to know why I had not been at school?
37925He could talk a little broken English, and said to me,"You got any powder?
37925He now discovered who I was, and cried out,"D-- n it, Crockett, is that you?"
37925He was beating on the head of an empty barrel near the road- side, when a traveler, who was passing along, asked him what he was doing that for?
37925He was going westwardly, and very kindly enquired of me where I was travelling?
37925I asked him what he was doing away there in the woods by himself?
37925I asked how all was at home?
37925I rose quicker then, and asked what was the matter?
37925The fight being over, I went on home, and the next morning was started again to school; but do you think I went?
37925To those who recollect Mr. Grattan''s former writings,( and who among novel readers does not?)
37925You got bullet?"
38130''Are you not afraid to walk this road alone on account of Captain Harper and his band?''
38130What became of the Manahoacs?
37686Our political problem now is,''Can we as a nation continue together permanently-- forever-- half slave and half free?'' 37686 Well, Jack,"replied Abe,"if you were a stranger in a strange town, as this man is, and you were called a d----d liar,& c., what would you do?"
37686Well, Jack,said he,"what did you say to the man?"
37686--''Did Lincoln authorize you to sign it?''
37686--''You, then, take the responsibility of your acts; do you?''
37686But how if she votes herself a slave State unfairly, that is, by the very means for which you say you would hang men?
37686Can not something be done even in Illinois?
37686Do I misunderstand them?
37686Do you know who that was?
37686For instance, do you suppose that I should ever have got into notice if I had waited to be hunted up and pushed forward by older men?
37686Free them all, and keep them among us as underlings?
37686Free them and make them politically and socially our equals?
37686He laughed and said,''Ca n''t the party raise no better material than that?''
37686He then asked,"Is the precept''Whatsoever ye would that men should do to you, do ye even so to them''obsolete?
37686How could I be?
37686How could any one who abhors the oppression of negroes be in favor of degrading classes of white people?
37686I said to myself,''What do I mean when I demonstrate more than when I reason or prove?''
37686Is it just to yourself that you should, in a few public speeches, state your reasons, and thus justify yourself?
37686Is it quite certain that this betters their condition?
37686Lincoln?''
37686May she not enter into an alliance with Texas?
37686Must she still be admitted, or the Union dissolved?
37686Says I,''Abe, what are you studying?''
37686Says he,''Smoot, did you vote for me?''
37686What next?
37686What of that?
37686When he came back, I said,''Doctor, what say you now?''
37686Will they allow me, as an old Whig, to tell them, good humoredly, that I think this is very silly?
37686Would you have gone out of the House-- skulked the vote?
37686Would you have voted what you felt and knew to be a lie?
37686of no application?
37686of no force?
38022Juliet, wilt thou have this false pretence, this profligate in broadcloth, this unpaid tailor''s bill, for thy wedded husband?
38022You believe a woman should have all the rights of a man?
38022According to the old but truthful saying, it is impossible for a man to outwit a shrewd woman; and instead of asking, What can a woman do?
38022And what is the result?
38022But where did it come from?
38022Did it come from the sun, the moon, the earth, or from some exploded planet?
38022It does not matter what a man professes to know, but the question is, what does he know, compared with what he might know?
38022Where can it be commenced, except in our common schools?
38022Where, then, is this all- important work to be commenced?
38022Why is this?
38022or was it generated in the atmosphere?
38022we should ask, What is there a woman can not do?
36343But why should we suppose personality to involve limitation?
36343Whither does the soul go?
36343And so rapid and marvelous have been the discoveries that the human mind stands paralyzed with wonder and amazement and asks, What next?
36343Are all Suns and Worlds Inhabited?
36343Are all suns and worlds inhabited?
36343Are these things consistent with a God who cares?
36343Are you endowing them with the intellect of true manhood, or crystallizing into atoms all manner of distorted brains?
36343But as only light came, did the"cause"bring it or did it come with its own velocity?
36343But have we two kinds of energy?
36343But is it right?
36343But where is that wondrous shore, and where will all of the now living inhabitants of earth be a century hence?
36343CHAPTER XVI ARE ALL SUNS AND WORLDS INHABITED?
36343Can any one believe they are kept in their places by a mere balancing force?
36343Can the soul partake of the character of electricity?
36343Did it not reveal forces in nature that would allow men to hear voices at great distances?
36343Does He make men of us with all the trouble and care that comes inside of seventy years, and then throw us away?
36343He says:"What is it that holds together the parts of which this ultimate atom may be imagined to consist?
36343How does it do it?
36343How frail and uncertain is the argument based on such doubtful and assumed facts?
36343I ask why?
36343I said,"Can you do that again?"
36343I was surprised and said,"Have you enough fire in your body to light the gas?"
36343If the Creator of all keeps faith with all other creatures, why not with man?
36343Is it not right, by the eternal law of cause and sequence and unanswerable logic, that life should return to the fountain of life?
36343May not each planet have its own peculiar current, and its own peculiar attracting power, and the sun give each a different electricity?
36343Of what substance are you moulding the grand army of the future race?
36343The question may often arise, Does God perfect humanity and then destroy it?
36343Then, is universal energy and law psychical or physical?
36343There was no flow of lava, but can any one imagine the crater discharging what was said to have issued from it?...
36343They have been the means of determining the answer to the one great question,"What is life?"
36343Vibrations of what?
36343Was the polestar ever obscured by the interposition of a world in formation?
36343Wave motions of what?
36343What cause exceeds the speed of light, which is deemed the swiftest thing in the universe?
36343What constitutes the solidity of this bar of iron?
36343What did the telephone reveal thirty years ago?
36343What is electricity?
36343What is this but pantheism of the rankest old, obsolete, pagan kind?
36343What of the big fish that eat the little ones, or the destruction of life by flood and storm, or human trials, sickness and death?
36343What was it surprised the scientists and came to us with many times the supposed speed of light?
36343Why does the comet, when it approaches just so near to the sun, dart away so quickly?
36343Why should man be an exception?
36343Why?
36343Why?
36343Why?
36343Why?
36343Will man never cease slandering the good Deity, and libeling the beneficent Creator of all good?
36343Will they listen to France''s Macedonian call and the law of love and life written in their womanly natures?
36343Will they receive the gift of eternal life?
36343what qualities are you weaving in your thread of thought?
36343who can know?
37636Can anyone who himself neither intelligently observes, reflects, nor reasons, aid others in so doing?
37636Could we ever forget how he used to read the hymns at evening worship? 37636 Imperious sometimes?
37636Will you reject the invitation and decline the association? 37636 Are you going to speak thus to your best friends, who have done more for you than father and mother? 37636 As terms of study closed, what did this host of girls think of the Head of the Institution? 37636 Cared? 37636 Did he show any disposition to remain satisfied with the standards already erected? 37636 Did this young school teacher overlook the needs of the colored people? 37636 Have we ever found Mr. Cocke in a state of perfect satisfaction with things as they are? 37636 His opportunity was great, and he made the most of it,--and what higher praise can be given to any man?
37636How could it be otherwise?
37636How did the School go on?
37636How should they ever meet the huge obligation?
37636May not this be the providential arena for the realization of my fond dream of mental liberation for the daughters of Virginia and the South?"
37636Moreover, what could such a deal effect in the way of relieving his financial embarrassments?
37636Now what possible promise was there in this arrangement for increasing facilities?
37636One day after service, the girls found in the omnibus a note, inquiring:"Who does that hat belong to?"
37636Shall Hollins keep up the fight?
37636Shall he break all the tender ties that bind him to his Tidewater home?
37636Shall he sunder relations with Richmond College and bring grief to the heart of his devoted friend, Dr. Ryland?
37636Shall he take his young wife and three little children into a rugged land, remote and destitute of the comforts they have known?
37636Such questions voiced the negative, self- regarding view, and he asked himself:"Is not this Southwest a land of great promise and educational need?
37636The accommodations were palpably insufficient, and as there was no possibility of increasing them, what should be done?
37636Under the distressful conditions, is there not something morally grand in this utterance?
37636Was he unnerved or unstrung?
37636Was it due to those unbroken, silent trysts with his Savior in the chapel, in the early morning?"
37636We have seen the source of the Trustees''revenue; how could they pay?
37636What can move us to tears like a strong man''s grief?
37636What could be lovelier than the two letters that follow?
37636What could they do?
37636What has been done during the nineteen years of the Board''s control?
37636What human heart but a school boy''s could resist an appeal like that?
37636What ought they to have done?
37636What ought to be, what may be, the facilities and achievements of this Institution a generation hence?
37636What young Institution ever threaded its way through a wilderness so gloomy or by pits and precipices so dangerous?
37636Where did it come from?
37636Who else could have found the means of building and maintaining that great Institution without aid of church or state or millionaire?
37636Why had not these claims been settled?
37636Will the sun of Austerlitz ever rise on her long and varying battles?
37636With all sincerity, his soul responded to the sentiment of him who asked:"Why should the spirit of mortal be proud?"
37636Would it look strange to see him conducting a Sunday School for the slaves on Sunday afternoons at Big Lick?
37636You may be sure that the boys looked at him curiously, and asked themselves,"Can he do it?"
37922Do you belong to the Vigilants?
37922Well,said I,"you filed on a claim, did n''t you?"
37922Why,he continued,"You know old man Spriggins up there?
37922Going to sell or trade him?
37922Have you taken leave of your senses and gone wild?
37922He stared me straight in the eye and said,"What can I do for you?"
37922How about the killing of the negro in the wagon?
37922How could he forget the tragic death of Mr. Olds?
37922How would it be possible for a writer who had a share in the battle to forget the important part played by Miller Scott?
37922Is there any liklihood of their trying to join those who have left Fort Reno?
37922It was with reluctance that my brave?
37922J.--Can''t he?
37922J.--Have you had any introduction to those young ladies, or what is the matter with you?
37922J.--Jack, do you know that old nester that settled on the flats out on Crooked Creek?
37922J.--Well, Slim, how does it go?
37922J.--What has that to do with you?
37922J.--You do n''t suppose any tenderfoot, nor anybody else wants to be seen riding that old crow- bait around with a young lady?
37922Now the question might be asked, why did not the Indians attack him?
37922The judge of today might be the criminal of tomorrow, and the criminal of today might be tomorrow seated on the judge''s bench administering justice?
37922Their presence was rather disconcerting, to say the least, but what could I do about it?
37922They began to saddle him and one of the boys asked,"Are you going to run old Pinkeye?
37922They each of them kept a close scrutiny on every movement of their distinguished?
37922To be sure that I understood him aright, I asked,''how many?''
37922Well, then, I said, you are not inclined to engage in agriculture, nor to remain in this part of the country, are you?
37922What are you dragging that old skate around for?
37922When he arrived, I asked him in an uncertain tone of voice what he wanted?
37922When he got started the Indians(?)
37922Where do you think those who have left Fort Reno will try to cross the Union Pacific Railroad?
37922Where have you got that old mouse- colored critter, and where do you want the money put up?
37922Why did he not attack them?
37922Why did they not attack him?
37922Why do n''t you shoot him, or do n''t you want to waste a cartridge?
37922You recollect saying what a consarned fool I was about that young lady, and what you thought of the old man?
31339''Question.--How did you sleep before you received those blankets? 31339 Another witness testifies:"''Question.--Were you hungry all the time?
31339From this time forward until the close of the war, in so far as the Western army was concerned, we heard no more of the question,''Will they fight?'' 31339 Have you not mistaken the cause?
31339It is clear that the public good requires slavery to be abolished; but in what manner is it to be done? 31339 March 10th.--The president has the reins now, and Congress will be more obedient; but can they leave the city?
31339Now, why were the colored troops left unsupported? 31339 The blacks had been useful soldiers for the northern army, why should they not be made to fight for their masters?"
31339The soldiers of the Army of the Potomac did this very thing last summer in front of Arlington Heights; are the negroes any better than they? 31339 V. What is the difference, considering the above points between colored troops recruited from the free States and those from the slave States?
31339V.''What is the difference, considering the above points, between colored troops recruited from the free States and those from the slave States?'' 31339 V.''What is the difference, considering the above points, between colored troops recruited from the free States and those from the slave States?''
31339Were the rebels all dead? 31339 You know me now, do n''t you?
31339''Did you see any men shot after the place was taken?
31339''Under which king, Benzonian?''"
31339''What company did you fight with?
31339''What for?''
31339''What have you?''
31339And what shall we say of the halls of learning in which were gathered his eager pupils?
31339And where are our arms?
31339And_ Second_, How can the State be assisted by the general government in effecting the change?
31339Are you sure he was there when this was going on?
31339Are you sure they were wounded men, and not dead, when they were put in there?
31339As they started away the old man turned to me, and with tears in his eyes, said,"Will you take them all?
31339But can this be so?
31339But were not all guilty?
31339But what, my countrymen, withheld the ready arm of vengeance from executing instant justice on the vile assassins?
31339But, Sir, whose fault is this?
31339By whom were they shot?
31339Can an army keep the field, and be active and efficient, on the same fare that kills prisoners of war at a frightful percentage?
31339Can it be hoped that the colored man will be better able to protect himself from the infinite ingenuity of fraud than the white?
31339Captain Romeyn, who witnessed the incident, and who was greatly amused by the fellow''s trepidation, asked him if he was frightened?
31339Col. Streight''s command was so pleased with the gallantry of our men that many of its members on being asked,''What regiment?''
31339Did he try to stop the shooting?
31339Did not American soldiers fight at Bunker Hill with negroes in the ranks, one of whom shot down Major Pitcairn as he mounted the works?
31339Did not American soldiers fight at Fort Griswold with black men?
31339Did not American soldiers fight at Red Bank with a black regiment from your own State, sir?
31339Did the men who were shot after they had surrendered have arms in their hands?
31339Did they bury any alive?
31339Did they kill them before they burned them?
31339Did they not fight with black men in almost every battle- field of the Revolution?
31339Did they say anything while they were shooting?
31339Did you know Forrest?
31339Did you not see symptoms of the same things upon the plantations here upon our arrival, although, under much less favorable circumstances for revolt?
31339Did you notice how they were nailed?
31339Did you see any buildings burned?
31339Did you see any buried alive?
31339Did you see any buried there?
31339Did you see any buried?
31339Did you see any other officers that you knew?
31339Did you see any person shot besides yourself?
31339Did you see any rebel officers about there when this was going on?
31339Did you see any rebel officers about while this shooting was going on?
31339Did you see any shot the next morning?
31339Did you see anybody else shot?
31339Did you see them burn?
31339Did you see them kill any white men?
31339Did you see those on the hill shot by the officers?
31339Do you expect us to give our sanction and our approval to these things?
31339Do you know of their burning any buildings?
31339Do you know they were in there when the house was burned?
31339Do you know they were in there?
31339Do you know whether any of our men were in the buildings when they were burned?
31339Do you say the man was holding the officer''s horse, and when the officer came and took his horse he shot the man down?
31339Does not this state of things arise from the very fact of war itself?
31339Driven away by their master, with threats of violence if they return, and with no decided welcome or reception from us, what is to be their lot?
31339Forrest, turning in his saddle, very coolly replied:''We''ll whip these in our front and then turn around, and wo nt we be in their rear?
31339Had they been massacred?
31339Had they fled from the pitiless storm which our batteries had poured down upon them for so many hours?
31339Have they ever refused to do military duty when called upon?
31339Have you been a slave?
31339He was saluted with,''Well, Johnny, how goes it?''
31339Here I am, an old man; I can not work; my crops are ungathered; my negroes have all enlisted or run away, and what am I to do?"
31339How did they bury them-- white and black together?
31339How did they bury them?
31339How do you know they made their movement while the flag of truce was in?
31339How long have you been in the service?
31339How long since you lived with him?
31339How many did you see in that condition?
31339How many do you suppose you saw shot after they surrendered?
31339How many negroes do you suppose were killed after the surrender?
31339How many times were you shot?
31339How many?
31339I took charge of them, and assuming a stern look and manner, enquired,''Where are you going?''
31339If that be the case, may not some of them be useful in loading, swabbing, and firing the musket?"
31339In view of what they saw, did they still wish we had been there?
31339Is it the arrival of a negro regiment, or is it the arrival of United States troops, carrying by the act of congress freedom to this servile race?
31339Is it to be secured by that wretched resource of a set of profligate politicians, called''reconstruction?''
31339Is there anything unconstitutional in that?
31339It is haughtily asked, Who will stand in the ranks shoulder to shoulder with a negro?
31339It rests with their bones in the charnel house; who shall exhume it?"
31339Of course the Government knew nothing of this.(?)
31339On one occasion an officer was ordered by Gen. Birney to take station at a town(?)
31339P. MILES, RICHMOND, VA."Has the bill for the execution of abolition prisoners, after January next, been passed?
31339The flags are where, do they kiss the morning light, Do they wave in the battle''s gale, are their stars bright, Illumining the path of the brave?
31339The order must be obeyed; it was repeated; away went the Phalanx division, loudly cheering, but to what purpose did they advance?
31339The perplexing question was,''Will they stand their christening under such a hail storm as will come from those bristling Port Hudson heights?''
31339The rebels would reply,''G-- d d-- n you, why did n''t you surrender before?''
31339The secesh would be prying around there, and would come to a nigger and say,''You ai n''t dead are you?''
31339Their history is not written; it lies upon the soil watered with their blood; who shall gather it?
31339This gallant soldier,(?)
31339Those were white men?
31339To what company and regiment do you belong?
31339To what company did you belong?
31339Under what officers did you serve?
31339Upon reflection, can you doubt that the same state of things would have arisen without the presence of a colored regiment?
31339Was the door fastened up?
31339Was the economy of saving six dollars per man worth to the Treasury the ignominy of the repudiation?
31339Was there any one else there who saw that?
31339We have to hold territory in inclement and sickly places; where are the Democrats to do this?
31339Were any of them alive?
31339Were they all captured?
31339Were you a slave or a free man?
31339Were you a slave?
31339Were you a soldier at Fort Pillow?
31339Were you at Fort Pillow at the time of the fight there?
31339Were you in the fight at Fort Pillow?
31339Were you in the fight at Fort Pillow?
31339Were you in the fight at Fort Pillow?
31339Were you not too tender of the lives of those who came to fix a yoke on your necks?
31339What a moment of intense anxiety?
31339What could it mean?
31339What could resist that charge?
31339What did he say?
31339What did it avail to hurl a few thousand troops against those impregnable works?
31339What did you do before you went into the fight?
31339What happened to you afterwards?
31339What officers were they?
31339What shall be done?''
31339What was to be done?
31339What white officers did you know in our army?
31339What, then, had the Phalanx to expect of those to whom they had borne the relation of_ slave_?
31339When did you see that?
31339When was it that you saw them?
31339When were you shot?
31339When were you wounded?
31339Where are you from?
31339Where could experienced officers be found for such an organization?
31339Where did you enlist?
31339Where did you enlist?
31339Where did you live?
31339Where is that faith of the Government now?
31339Where was their leader Sheridan?
31339Where were they?
31339Where were you raised?
31339Where were you raised?
31339Where were you raised?
31339Where?
31339Who could answer?
31339Who endured more cheerfully the hardships of the camp, or faced with greater courage the perils of the fight?
31339Who knows but he was the last soldier who fell belonging to the Army of Northern Virginia?"
31339Who rallied with more alacrity in response to the summons of danger?
31339Who set the house on fire?
31339Who shot you?
31339Who was your master?
31339Why should not the negro contribute whatever is in his power for the cause in which he is as deeply interested as other men?
31339Why were the officers informed by General Dwight that there were clear grounds beyond Sandy Creek?
31339Why were they sent on such hopeless missions?
31339Will you state what happened to you there?
31339Will your honors grant the liberty, and give me the command of the party?
31339With this spirit infused in the confederate army, what else than barbarity could be expected?
31339Would it not be well to take up this suggestion and make it known to the freedmen?
31339Yet, who more than they deserve the thanks of the country, and the gratitude of succeeding generations?
31339You did not see them?
31339You have said the location is unhealthy for the soldier; it is not to the negro; is it not best that these unemployed Africans should do this labor?
31339command niggers?''
31339do you not feel the goads and stings of conscious guilt pierce through your savage bosoms?
31339e._, when enthusiasm and direct personal interest is necessary to attain the end, would whites or blacks answer best?
31339e._, when enthusiasm and direct personal interest is necessary to attain the end, would whites or blacks answer best?''
31339take a fort with a skirmish line?''
31339whoever heard of artillery charging?''
38173Affairs: Fort Smith, Arkansas TROUBLE BREWING AMONG THE CHEROKEES WHAT DOES IT MEAN?
38173After treating with these, I returned by Fort Arbuckle, and before reaching there, met a nephew of Mr. Ross, and a Captain[ Keld?
38173Evan Jones''connected with any Missionary Society and if so, what one?
38173Furthermore, what need was there for Arkansas to interest herself in the Chickasaw forts, since the Texan troops were already in possession?
38173Have you received the money,( some$ 3.000) that I asked should be sent you to pay expenses of the new Indian Councils?
38173If you had written me,_ before_, what you write now, in regard to McKusken[?
38173In answer to a question by Commissioner Sells,"How did you happen to be in this Southern Country?"
38173It was true enough, as Burroughs said, that the Federal troops had abandoned the Indian country; but against whom were the forts to be held?
38173LEEPER[?]
38173Now what is to be concluded?
38173Shall I take care of them on the faith of an appropriation?
38173So much for the contents of the treaties but what about the detailed history of their negotiation?
38173So much then for the location of the really great tribes, but where were the lesser?
38173The President said in my presence,"Now that the Choctaws have a Delegate in Congress, what need of an Agent?"
38173What have the Indians with which to disprove this?
38173Why do you not demand his removal, and name a person for his place?
38173Why should they, if we will not bind ourselves to give them what they hazard in giving us their rights under treaties?
38173You are aware that I can not close my returns without funds for the purpose, when shall I look for them?
35572Shall we permit it? 35572 Who would benefit by cheap municipal gas?"
35572Why should I toy with words when I have this?
35572A redistribution of seats in accordance with population?
35572A statutory minimum wage, as in Victoria, especially for sweated trades?
35572All Parliamentary elections to be held on the same day?
35572An Eight- Hours''Bill, without an option clause, for miners; and, for railway servants, a forty- eight- hours''week?
35572An amendment of the registration laws, with the aim of giving every adult man a vote, and no one more than one vote?
35572An increase of the scale of graduation of the death duties, so as to fall more heavily on large inheritances?
35572And how win the state?
35572Are these conditions necessary concomitants of the modern class- state( Klassenstaat)?
35572As to the second question: How long will the coalition hang together?
35572But are their feet upon the earth?
35572But what laboring man needs gas?
35572But why mark shore- lines?
35572CONCLUSION 250 APPENDIX 273 INDEX 347 SOCIALISM AND DEMOCRACY IN EUROPE CHAPTER I INTRODUCTION-- WHY DOES SOCIALISM EXIST?
35572Compulsory arbitration, as in New Zealand, to prevent strikes and lockouts?
35572Do you wish your County Council to attempt nothing more for London than the old Metropolitan Board of Works?
35572He said:"Now, my lords, what is the character of all this legislation?
35572He wrote as the motto for his most influential book,_ What Is Property?_,"Destruam et aedificabo"( I will destroy and I will build again).
35572How did it come about that society was so organized as to permit this wholesale wrong upon the largest and most defenseless of its classes?
35572How is this great change to come about, and what is to be the exact organization of society under this regime of work and co- operation?
35572How will be accomplished the supreme transformation of the capitalist régime into the collectivist or communist?
35572II And what is the present organization of the Social Democratic Party?
35572In 1840 he brought out his notable work,_ Qu''est- ce que la Propriété?_( What Is Property?
35572In 1840 he brought out his notable work,_ Qu''est- ce que la Propriété?_( What Is Property?
35572Is it a crude theory, an earnest protest, a powerful propaganda?
35572Is it not possible to modify police administration, and the legislative conditions that profane Prussia to- day?
35572Is it not possible, through parliamentary action, to take high tariffs and business speculations from the necks of the workingmen?
35572Is there a rational trend in Socialism?
35572Must there always be industrial war?
35572One hundred years ago it was, What sort of a state shall we have?
35572Or is it a current of human conviction so strong, so deep- flowing that it will be resistless?
35572Or is it only a passing whim of the masses?
35572Private property, the stronghold of the individualist, is then to be abolished and a universal communism established?
35572Second, how long will the Labor Party hold together and prompt the action of the Liberals and Radicals in social legislation?
35572State pensions for the support of the aged or chronically infirm?
35572The Socialists have precipitated a serious problem in this relation of the government employee to the state: Can the state employees form a union?
35572The abolition of all duties on tea, cocoa, coffee, currants, and other dried fruits?
35572The admission of women to seats in the House of Commons and on borough and county councils?
35572The appropriation of the unearned increment by the taxation and rating of ground values?
35572The compulsory provision by every local authority of adequate hospital accommodation for all diseases and accidents?
35572The creation of a complete system of public secondary education genuinely available to the children of the poor?
35572The extension of the Workmen''s Compensation Act to seamen, and to all other classes of wage earners?
35572The fixing of"an eight- hours''day"as the maximum for all public servants; and the abolition, wherever possible, of overtime?
35572The further equalization of the rates in London?
35572The further taxation of unearned incomes by means of a graduated and differentiated income- tax?
35572The grant of the franchise to women on the same terms as to men?
35572The majority of the workingmen are already in the party, where will the increase come from?
35572The nationalization of mining rents and royalties?
35572The payment of all members of Parliament and of Parliamentary election expenses, out of public funds?
35572The prohibition of the industrial or wage- earning employment of children during school terms prior to the age of 14?
35572The provision of meals, out of public funds, for necessitous children in public elementary schools?
35572The question is now being seriously asked: Can there be a social co- operation?
35572The real question at issue was this: Is striking an act of mutiny?
35572The second ballot at Parliamentary and other elections?
35572The training of teachers under public control and free from sectarian influences?
35572Transfer of the railways to the State under the Act of 1844?
35572Triennial Parliaments?
35572WHY DOES SOCIALISM EXIST?
35572What right has a capitalist to charge me eight per cent.?
35572What shall the state do?
35572What, then, becomes of the"surplus value,"the value over and above wages?
35572When has he time to read?
35572Where is this encroachment of the state on private"rights"going to end?
35572Who would intrust the running of a railroad to our Federal or State governments?
35572Why should the Deptford ratepayer have to pay nearly two shillings in the pound more than the inhabitant of St. George''s, Hanover Square?
35572[ 13]_ What Is Property?_ Collected Works, Vol.
35572[ 15]"Do you enjoy freedom from political interference?"
35572[ 19] V Who were these revolutionary labor leaders, this small handful of plotters to whom Briand constantly alluded?
35572[ 39] Two questions naturally arise: First, how far will this movement toward Social Democracy go?
35572[ 4] But who is a Socialist?
35572[ 4] What are the ideals of Socialism?
35572[_ Great commotion and disturbance._] But what would be the meaning of this admission that small concessions can be secured?
35572_ Q._"Are you not a man?"
35572_ Q._"Is this true?"
35572_ Q._"What is the 25th article of the Constitution?"
35572_ Q._"Why?"
35572_ Question._"Who are you?"
35572on the capital value,(_ d_) securing special contributions by way of"betterment"from the owners of property benefited by public improvements?
22928A hard one? 22928 All this sordid consolidation of flesh and blood, this disgusting hallucination of attractiveness?
22928Alone?
22928Am I,she thought, with a sort of comic despair,"doomed by fate, as well as by my own foolishness, to learn a language like the snarling of camels?
22928And after all is it her fault? 22928 And dreams?"
22928And now?
22928And the women?
22928And they were happy ever after?
22928And what''s it all for?
22928And why not, since none can hope to escape his destiny? 22928 And_ Marco Polo_?"
22928Are they at it?
22928Are those right who would say that he has ceased to exist except in memory?
22928Are you religious, Parr?
22928Are your jungles better than this?
22928As late as that?
22928At what? 22928 Behind the formal words?
22928Besides,he concluded,"keeping you here all this while a prisoner----""How can you be so unkind?"
22928But how can I make you understand? 22928 But how could you know that?
22928But where have you been all this time?
22928Do n''t you know that I love you, David?
22928Do n''t you know this will kill him?
22928Do we still go on?
22928Do you care for this idolatry?
22928Do you do this just in order to drive me mad?
22928Do you hear?
22928Do you then wish to risk death just at this time? 22928 Do you think I care for that man?
22928Do you want to die, ma''am?
22928Does that acuteness also come to one in the jungle?
22928Dr. Fallows has really done wonders, has n''t he?
22928For how long?
22928For how long?
22928For what?
22928From that?
22928Has he so much talent?
22928Has he the courage, though? 22928 Have not taken any of this?"
22928Have you forgotten,she breathed,"that a little while ago you, and every one else, would have called this impossible?"
22928Have you telephoned to the Brassfields?
22928He found her again?
22928How can such a matter be important enough to make you risk your life amid deadly fevers and insects, venomous reptiles, wild beasts and wilder men?
22928How did it happen? 22928 How should I know, if you do n''t?"
22928How''s old Marco Polo to- day?
22928I suppose you know what a lot of chatter this nonsense of yours has stirred up? 22928 I suppose you still have the gift?"
22928I''m not even to bring a beautiful lady to talk to you?
22928I, madam?
22928I?
22928Incredible?
22928Is he coming out, then?
22928Is it good?
22928Is it inferiority to be the great artist that you are? 22928 Is she reading my thoughts?"
22928More antipyrene?
22928Mr. Lawrence Teck?
22928No, why should I?
22928Of love?
22928Oh, Hamoud, and dreams?
22928Or is it only that old chap hammering the piano?
22928Really,Fanny Brassfield exclaimed, in her high- pitched, insolent voice,"I must get myself one of these-- what is he again?
22928Shall I call the taxi, sir?
22928Shall I find her?
22928Shall you try to march to- morrow?
22928So it is as magical as ever, a bit of music?
22928So it is this one that she really loves?
22928So it''s that,she vouchsafed, staring at him intently,"which starts men off to the wilds?"
22928So you still believe? 22928 The desert, then?"
22928Then our will is nothing?
22928There is a story, perhaps?
22928They? 22928 What am I good for?
22928What am I to do?
22928What are you reading now?
22928What did you say, Hamoud? 22928 What do I see in you?"
22928What do they say, Hamoud?
22928What friend?
22928What has happened?
22928What have you done to yourself?
22928What is it?
22928What is it?
22928What is it?
22928What is my work worth, if it dooms you to this?
22928What is she, then?
22928What is that fellow''s name?
22928What is that story of yours?
22928What is their word for fate?
22928What shall I do now? 22928 What''s to be the end of this?"
22928What''s to be the end of this?
22928What?
22928Where am I? 22928 Where are you?
22928Where do you come from? 22928 Where is he this time, by the way?"
22928Where is he?
22928Where to?
22928Where''s Lilla?
22928White women, for example, the women of the empire builders? 22928 Who knows?
22928Who?
22928Why are you returning?
22928Why did n''t they print her picture?
22928Why did you go there that afternoon to Brantome''s? 22928 Why do I keep this place up?
22928Why do n''t you eat your dinner?
22928Why is that? 22928 Why not every week?"
22928Why not? 22928 Why not?"
22928Why should one fear even these strange forms of death? 22928 Why, where are you going?"
22928Will you ever return, Bangana?
22928Will you help me to kill it? 22928 Would it, indeed?"
22928Would you like it?
22928You ask me to go into that room, and you might as well say shoot him through the heart?
22928You believe that stuff about women''s inspiration?
22928You dislike him now?
22928You speak English?
22928You''re better, are n''t you? 22928 You?
22928Your voice sounds----"Why not, since I''m suffering a little?
22928A dismal perplexity came to her, a little pang of treason, as she asked him:"How can I hasten that day?"
22928A play of shadows?
22928A thunderstorm was brewing?
22928A tone speech inadequate to describe what I had to describe-- do you know what I''m talking about?"
22928After a long silence, he uttered, so low that she could hardly hear him:"Are there no other places?"
22928After one glance at Lilla:"What''s happened?"
22928Ah, what shall I do with my life?"
22928Ah, yes; but from what cause?
22928Am I some village headman?
22928An unfortunate love affair?"
22928And Lilla, sitting alone in her room, wondered,"Will she meet him out there?
22928And above it a permanence that you call the face of God?
22928And again that voice exulting in the study:"Lilla?
22928And are these things that you celebrate reality?
22928And gazing as if indifferently at a vaseful of roses, she asked, with a feeling of suffocation:"Why did you leave there?"
22928And in one last flash of distracted irony:"If I called God in Arabic?"
22928And presently,"Do you speak Arabic?"
22928And what did he know of her life during all the hours when she was invisible to him?
22928And when the attendant had gone,"Is he, can he be, so stupid?
22928And with a look of tenderness she murmured,"You will show us the way?
22928And with a nervous laugh she said,"If I had been Clara Wieck----""You would have married him just as she did, eh?
22928Are n''t things rather unsettled there?"
22928Are there any mirrors in it?
22928Are they sweet or bitter?
22928Are you deaf?"
22928As much as ever?"
22928At last he asked her:"Do you come here often?"
22928At last, raising his head, the critic murmured:"You think this is going to be easy for me?
22928Because that picture seemed congenial to you in those lonely places you thought that the original must be the same?
22928Brantome exclaimed,"you do n''t know David Verne?"
22928But how was he to escape it?
22928But in her silvery voice there was a cadence of irony, when she demanded:"Whom shall I inspire?
22928But it was in an almost indifferent tone that she inquired:"You are really going back to Africa day after to- morrow?"
22928But normality, too-- what was it?
22928But what did he see now?
22928But what do you expect?
22928But what language?
22928But what was the goal toward which this mass of flesh was striving so frantically?
22928But what was there to do?
22928But why?"
22928By hating her?
22928CHAPTER XLV"And your idea is,"Lawrence inquired calmly,"that he must n''t know at all?"
22928Can their minds soar up like yours?"
22928Can you find me a teacher somewhere?"
22928David carefully pronounced the words:"That was Rysbroek, was n''t it?"
22928David murmured listlessly:"Has the doctor gone?"
22928Did n''t he leave any word?"
22928Did they truly explain the objects from which they issued?
22928Do n''t smile at my intuition----"Later, after seeming to listen intently, Aunt Althea cried:"What are they calling?
22928Do you ever look in them?
22928Do you know still another?"
22928Do you realize that by this time I should probably be already gone, if you had n''t appeared?
22928Do you see in them what''s happening to you?
22928Do you understand me?
22928Does fate finally relent?
22928Does one ever taste those waters?
22928Each finds in the other an overwhelming congeniality?
22928Gaping round him, taking the whole room as witness to this folly, he cried out,"Where to?"
22928Great heavens, what was I thinking of?"
22928Had he not become, in these last days of his, a shattered instrument that she, alone, could make musical again?
22928Hamoud, now gripping his dagger as if he would presently escape this scene by plunging the blade into his breast, uttered:"Dying?"
22928Hamoud- bin- Said, paler than ever, replied in Arabic:"You are sorry for me because I have lost my heshma, my prestige?
22928Have I eaten rabbits?
22928Have I shown you the trophies, Bangana, the hats of steel, the corselets of steel, the guns that one fires by lighting a string?
22928Have they made the other tribes happy in their slavery?
22928Have you any little book that''s gone with you everywhere, that''s shabby from your constant use?
22928Have you forgotten the Dances of the Moon?"
22928Have you seen a sick animal looking at you pleadingly?
22928He added,"I merely mean, is it practicable?"
22928He clutched at the thought,"Yet who knows His designs?"
22928He even said:"Suppose your kindness were the reflection of something still more lovely, which we can not see with these eyes?"
22928He heard a feeble cry:"What has happened?
22928He observed, with a lyrical sadness,"What is life?
22928He persisted:"Eh?
22928He recalled the faith of strong men, which had accomplished prodigies; the confidence of youth----"And when one is old and weak?
22928He seated himself beside Lilla, and, after watching a horse clear a jump, remarked:"Do you know I''m living near you?"
22928He seemed abashed; but he returned:"And are women never tempted to renounce that famous practicality of theirs?"
22928He suggested:"You might perhaps find some engrossing interest?"
22928He understood her, and assented:"Yes, what a victory, eh?
22928His reverie had a flavor of commiseration now, as though he were saying to himself,"Who can catch all the leaves before they fall to the ground?
22928How can he work----""About what?"
22928How can one tell beforehand?
22928How does one get the idea that all this is good- looking?
22928How long do you need to destroy it?"
22928How many times had she not seen him bending thus over David, maybe to smooth his pillow?
22928However, why should you trouble to learn this language of mine?
22928I resent stupidity,"he repeated, giving her a glance of weak alarm, as if wondering,"Are you stupid, too?"
22928If we had some visitors?
22928India?"
22928Is it because he is letting go of you?"
22928Is it the savages who are so sad?
22928Is it then that you see clearly what you''ve let yourself in for-- what that divine impulse of yours has brought you to?"
22928Is it you who have done this?"
22928Is n''t it tiresome?"
22928Is n''t there, for women, besides the joys of personal accomplishment, another satisfaction, which one might call vicarious?"
22928Is that what the Arabs mean when they say that our destinies are written on our foreheads?"
22928Is that what you show me when you raise your eyes blankly from some book, or return from the garden after those lonely walks of yours in the twilight?
22928Is there anything you need here?"
22928Is there nothing else, nothing better?"
22928Late at night, at that hour when bizarre fancies and actions may seem natural, she would ask him:"Do n''t you know that I exist?
22928Lilla surprised herself by saying:"Why do you have that man?"
22928Looking at his child, he was thinking:"By what right have we done this?"
22928Muene- Motapa bitterly asked his captive:"Is there not always rich meat, and beer and brandy in season?
22928Of what nature were those vibrations?
22928Oh, where are you?"
22928Or are those moments that she had with him-- so few, while others are allowed so many!--supposed to be enough happiness for her?"
22928Or is it pity, not only for me, but also for yourself?
22928Or is it that his old Allah has picked me out to tide him along for a while?"
22928Or is it wealth?
22928Or since you had come there why could n''t my conscience die at the moment when you made me live again?
22928Parr, on the Muscat donkey, looking more haggard than ever in the sunshine, demanded:"Is it the white man who is called the Bwana Bangana?"
22928Raising his head, he called out in a voice as strong as the king''s:"Still dreaming, Muene- Motapa?
22928Russian, then?
22928Shall I ask permission to try to do her that favor?"
22928Shall I open your ears with a spear point?"
22928Shall that be?
22928She added, aloud:"In fact, you''ve been such a good teacher that I ought-- well, have n''t I made great progress?"
22928She began to speak, urgently, seductively:"When they come you will wake up and protect me, Hamoud?
22928She heard the hoarse rumble:"What shall I do now?"
22928She hesitated, then asked remorsefully:"Do you hate me, Hamoud?"
22928She knelt down beside him, and asked:"What have I done to deserve this?"
22928She returned:"How can you say such things?
22928She was silent for a time, then murmured:"When this piece is finished, or to- morrow if you like, we might go abroad?
22928Should she reach him too late for that-- find this longing also part of the illusion?
22928So he ground out at her:"Your nature?
22928So it is all a physical phenomenon?"
22928Some Greek island might please you?
22928Some fatal desire for regions where beauty sported more obviously than here the signs of its origins, or death the mask of beauty?
22928Suppose the senses caught only the least of them, or misinterpreted them?
22928Teck?"
22928The leader''s high, tremulous voice was heard again:"Is it a woman of flesh and blood; or is it the Lady of the Moon?"
22928The loneliness round about exerts a tremendous persuasion?"
22928The question was, how long would she be content with this wan sort of love?
22928The word that brought you across the ocean into Mr. Verne''s service, and then back across the ocean into this place?"
22928Then, gazing at the marble warrior that had seized the marble nymph, she said:"I suppose it was you?"
22928Then, seeing nothing except the pen point, she wrote slowly,"What have you done?
22928They had come for tea or for dinner?
22928This text was the answer to his prayer for guidance?
22928This that I see?
22928To whom shall I listen now at night?
22928Toward the end of the meal he vouchsafed:"Have you reported my showing up?"
22928Was everything, even a baggy young teacher of Arabic, foreordained?
22928Was it not she who would virtually be the creative force?
22928We show her to him?"
22928Well, will you think me cruel-- shall I appear to you as the thief of an inestimable treasure-- if I tell you something?
22928Were they more egotistical than compassionate, more defiant than gentle?
22928What am I to do?"
22928What are these white man''s promises?
22928What are your thoughts?"
22928What chair do you like to sit in?
22928What crime have I ever committed?"
22928What did he read in her face?
22928What does all that amount to against those natural qualities, which I can never regain?"
22928What does anything matter except one hour with him?
22928What does the doctor say now?
22928What else do you offer?
22928What has happened?"
22928What has my life been that I should find it precious?
22928What have you done?"
22928What he meant was,"Is it good enough to keep you from regrets?"
22928What is beauty?"
22928What is it now?"
22928What is it?
22928What is that?"
22928What is the matter with you, Bangana?
22928What is your word for resignation, Hamoud?
22928What was it that had driven him into such places, when there had been a great, rich world of safety?
22928What we human fools call beauty?
22928When Hamoud had wheeled him back to the drawing- room, he asked:"Do you mind if I go?
22928When I shall never see you again?"
22928When you saw me there, sitting alone in the shadows, dying with no weight on my conscience, why did n''t you leave me alone?
22928Where is he now?"
22928Where is she?"
22928Where was he?
22928Who am I, a lump of sick flesh in this fever trap, to interfere so strictly with this thing of white flame?"
22928Who can sweep back the waves of the sea?"
22928Who had taught it to them?
22928Who is here?"
22928Who knew what ancient idols, what Himyarite inscriptions, what trinkets of gold, might not be found there?
22928Who knows?
22928Who knows?
22928Who knows?
22928Why do you not marry my little sisters, my brother?
22928Why had there been no female Beethovens, Liszts, or even Chopins?
22928Why listen any more?
22928Why should she feel like this with the goal so near at last, unless from a premonition that all her efforts were useless?
22928Why were they three standing here?
22928Will you get out of the room?"
22928Will you lend a hand by making your beauty hideous, your nature repulsive?
22928With an unaccountable feeling of perfidy she straightened his cravat, while murmuring:"I''ll see you first, of course, dear?"
22928Without moving, Lilla murmured slowly:"Ah, she wants to tell my fortune again, perhaps?"
22928Wo n''t it, David?"
22928Would it surprise you to know that I should like to see all the world as nobly ordered as this landscape?"
22928You could even pray, perhaps?"
22928You''d kill him for me, would n''t you?"
22928You''ll teach me that, wo n''t you?"
22928Zanzibari?"
22928have n''t you seen through him yet?"
22928he asked himself,"and what am I?"
22928what has happened?"
22928why must these things come to me?
37603Any relation of the late Colonel Monroe?
37603Does it hurt you up there?
37603Gentlemen of the jury,said Philipon,"can I help it if His Majesty''s face is like a pear?"
37603Hold up,says Hawaii,"did n''t you say it was wrong to eat man?"
37603How do you mean?
37603I do n''t care what they write about me,said Tweed,"but ca n''t you stop those terrible cartoons?"
37603Is it my fault, gentlemen of the jury, if his Majesty''s face looks like a pear?]
37603Is there any treason in that?
37603May I not hear you say you have had enough?
37603Pray, Mr. Abbé Sièyes, what was the cause of the poor lady''s death? 37603 Sister Press, do you see anything?"
37603Sister Press, do you see anything?
37603To whom do I owe the honor of this intrusion?
37603What does he want to get right in my way for? 37603 What on earth are you doing in there, Willie?"
37603_ Belle dame_,he is saying,"will you accept my escort?"
37603_] In connection with this campaign of 1892, there was no cartoon of more interest than that entitledWhere Am I At?"
37603_][ Illustration:Where am I at?"
37603--where is my friend, John Bull?
37603A bellicose little dwarf, McClellan, is advising the bulldog''s master:"Uncle Abraham, do n''t you think you had better call the old dog off now?
37603Again the Constitution cries:"Sister Press, do you see nothing coming?"
37603By his side is Lincoln, who is inquiring,"Chase, will it stay down?"
37603Can I believe my spectacles?
37603Dare these"Northern Barbarians"thus insult the"magnanimous Mexican Natian"?
37603Did I not command you not to return until you had spread your wing of victory over the whole of Spain?"
37603Dis wot yer call''mancipation?"
37603Do n''t you see the clock is slow?"
37603I say, little Boney, why do n''t you come out?
37603Is that the way you stick to your friends?
37603Massa Lincum, is dis wot yer call Elewating de Nigger?"
37603McClellan, watching from his cab the discomfiture of his foe, calls derisively,"Would n''t you like to swap horses now, Lincoln?"
37603McKINLEY--"I wonder what he holds?"
37603One is calling,"War''s de rest ob dis ole darky?
37603Reproduced in the San Francisco"Wasp,"Jan. 2, 1982._]_ Moonshine_, in a cartoon entitled"Are n''t they Rather Overdoing it?"
37603SAMPSON--"Where is Cervera''s fleet?"
37603THE HISTORY OF THE NINETEENTH CENTURY IN CARICATURE[ Illustration: What it is and What is it?]
37603The Men of To- day 355 LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS Page What It Is and What Is It?
37603The first of these called"Quit- Pro Quo?"
37603The ghost of the Grand Monarque is asking sadly:"Is this the end of''all the glories''?"
37603The unfortunate"Constitution,"feeling that her last minute has come, calls out:"Sister Press, do you see nothing coming?"
37603What was to be done?
37603Why does n''t he let us have some rest?"
37603Wo n''t you walk in and take something?"
37603Yes, d---- you, why do n''t you come out?
37603You are perfectly free to choose?"]
37603[ Illustration: Japan--"Does it hurt up There?"
37603[ Illustration:"Once more, Madame, do you wish divorce, or do you not wish divorce?
37603[ Illustration:"What?
37603_ From the collection of the New York Historical Society._] CHAPTER XIX THE FOUR- YEARS''STRUGGLE[ Illustration:"Why do n''t You take it?"]
37603thunders Napoleon,"what is this I see?
37603where are the French bugaboos?
35366''But how is one to love when one do n''t feel like it, or has attractions in another direction?'' 35366 ''What''n thunder''s up now, Bet-- no, Lizzie, I mean?''
35366''Where, then, was the true locality of the scene that Betsey saw taking place?'' 35366 ''Who knoweth the spirit of a man that it goeth upward, or of a beast that it goeth downward?
35366And so you like the text, do you? 35366 Was Tom Clark mistaken?
35366What of her?
35366Will you do the same?
35366''Colonel Clark, can I do anything for you?''
35366''Did it succeed?''
35366''I will; will_ you_?''
35366''Let''s love each other this time out, will_ you_?''
35366''Not nothing, Lizzie?''
35366''What about, Lizzie?''
35366''Who did that?''
35366''Who is it?''
35366''Who is it?''
35366Am I to blame?
35366Are there any_ Dead_?
35366Are they bad?
35366Can I-- can they, can we, can she-- do anything for you, in this sad hour of your destiny?
35366Captain Clark, do you see yonder battery of the enemy?
35366Curious, is n''t it, how long some gods_ will_ live?
35366Did you ever see a man in tears-- tears tapped from his very soul?
35366Do Souls occupy space?
35366Do n''t you know that he is gazing down into your eyes?
35366Do you hear me, Ministers of State?
35366Do you see the point, the place-- the thing I am aiming at?
35366Do you see the point-- the place where the laugh comes in?
35366Does a Soul feel heat, cold, get wet in a storm?
35366Failure?
35366Friends, I have seen many such-- have you?
35366Had my life, my thinking, and my action on thought been failures?
35366Hereafter?
35366Home, did I say?
35366How can souls be saved without a salary?
35366How prevent it?
35366How?
35366I mean to; wo n''t you?''
35366If I give you command of a regiment whose colonel was killed yesterday, can you take it?''
35366If he could, what of it?
35366Is it just to yourself, your foe, the world, or God?
35366Is n''t it possible to feed him with a little arsenic, or some other sort of poison, and not get caught at it?
35366Is this right?
35366More, did I say?
35366My hearers, can you?
35366Now he is watching you-- don''t his glance trouble you?
35366Said I:''And does this feeling demand a physical atonement?''
35366So soon?
35366These are the Unloved ones; yet ought not to be, for are they not somebody''s sons and daughters?
35366Tom Clark, do n''t you hear?
35366Very cheap, do n''t you think so?
35366Was it Fancy?
35366Was it Fear?...
35366Was it a call to the angels to join in prayer-- midnight prayer, for the sinful souls of men?
35366Was it in a dream?
35366Was it the invisible Hesperina, telegraphing Betsey''s soul across the vast expanse of the Continent of Dream?
35366Was she right?
35366We seldom value either a man or woman, until they are either dead or a long way off, and then--''Who''d a''thought it?''
35366What are the frogs and bloody waves of Egypt, compared to these miracles of the human soul-- these Dream- lives that are not Dreams?
35366What becomes of dead children?--of idiots?--lunatics?--premature births?
35366What d''ye think o''that, my lady?--what d''ye think o''that, my man?
35366What frightful gorgon is that?
35366What is that at the window?
35366What of it-- isn''t Death an eternal sleep?
35366What of it?
35366What work?
35366What''s genius without gold?
35366What''s life without money?
35366What''s talent without brass?
35366What''s the consequence?
35366What''s the consequence?''
35366What''s the loudest call?
35366What''s the result?
35366What''s the use of wishing?
35366What, then, is this?
35366When they laugh at his misery, whose lives he has saved?
35366When was it, where was it, that she had heard that voice and word before?
35366When, how, where had it made so deep an impression on her mind?
35366Whence came the voice?
35366Who can tell?
35366Who shall answer me these questions?
35366Who was it that spoke these melodious words?
35366Who was it-- what was it that spoke?
35366Whom hast thou uplifted, loved, hated?
35366Why did you sacrifice these six hundred thousand men?
35366Why do n''t you bid them rise and be men?
35366Why grudge freemen the pay of other free men; the bounty, the pension, of other heroes of the same rank?
35366Why?
35366Why?
35366Will I?
35366Will it ever be?
35366Will you sanction it longer?
35366You"ca n''t?"
35366_ No black man yet ever sold his country!_ Why do n''t you first remove their disabilities here in the North?
35366_ Two_ dreams?
35366did n''t I tell you not to speak?
35366spending all my time in cultivating thistles-- getting pricked and cursing them-- when roses smell so very well, and are so easily raised?
35366what are tigresses?
35366what is a virago?
35366who knows anything about a judgment?
35366why do n''t they sound its depth, and_ bring it to the surface_?
35366will the Eternal God of Heaven?
35366will your own conscience?
35725( Did you see my last letter in the New York_ Times_ of October 4th, Sunday?)
35725( Why has n''t Jeff sent me the_ Union_ with my letter in?
35725And how are Mat''s girls?
35725Any news from Han?
35725Are the soldiers still on Fort Greene?
35725Cases enough, do I say?
35725Dear brother Jeff, how are you, and how is Matty, and how the dear little girls?
35725Dear mother, have you got over all that distress and sickness in your head?
35725Dear mother, how are you nowadays?
35725Did he write you one about the same time?
35725Did you hear from Mary''s Fanny since?
35725Did you send my last letter to Han?
35725Do you feel quite well again?
35725Do you then think of getting new apartments, after the 1st of May?
35725Does he get any good from that treatment with the baths, etc.?
35725Does it affect your head like it did?
35725Fred McReady is coming home very soon on furlough-- have any of the soldiers called on you?
35725Has Andrew gone?
35725Has she got all over it?
35725Have you heard anything from George or Han?
35725Have you heard anything from Mary or Han lately?
35725Have you heard from sister Han?
35725How are the Browns?
35725How could any one writing in cold blood, to- day, hope to add words of any value to those he wrote then?
35725How does Mat get along, and how little Sis and all?
35725How is California?
35725How is dear sister Mat, and how is Miss Mannahatta, and little Black Head?
35725I got a letter from Mrs. Price this morning-- does Emmy ever come to see you?
35725I had spells of deathly faintness and bad trouble in my head too, and sore throat( quite a little budget, ai n''t they?)
35725I have not heard anything since from George-- have you heard anything further?
35725I said to a lady who was looking with me,"Who can see that man without losing all wish to be sharp upon him personally?"
35725I said,"What is it, my dear?
35725I said,"Why, Oscar, do n''t you think you will get well?"
35725Is Helen home and well?
35725Is Probasco still in the store in N. Y.?
35725Is she as good and interesting as she was six months ago?
35725Is the little baby still hearty?
35725It has been awful hot here now for twenty- one days; ai n''t that a spell of weather?
35725Mat, do you go any to the Opera now?
35725Matty, my dear sister, how are you getting along?
35725Matty, my dear sister, how are you getting along?
35725McReady yet, and do n''t they hear whether the 51st is near Nicholasville, Kentucky, yet?
35725Mother, I believe I told you I had written to Mrs. Price-- do you see Emma?
35725Mother, I have not heard from George since, have you?
35725Mother, I hope you take things easy, do n''t you?
35725Mother, I should like to hear how you are yourself-- has your cold left you, and do you feel better?
35725Mother, I suppose you got my letter written Tuesday last, 29th March, did you not?
35725Mother, did a Mr. Howell call on you?
35725Mother, do any of the soldiers I see here from Brooklyn or New York ever call upon you?
35725Mother, do n''t you miss_ Walt_ loafing around, and carting himself off to New York toward the latter part of every afternoon?
35725Mother, do you ever hear from Mary?
35725Mother, do you get your letters now next morning, as you ought?
35725Mother, do you hear anything from George?
35725Mother, do you recollect what I wrote last summer about throat diseases, when Andrew was first pretty bad?
35725Mother, have you heard any further about Han?
35725Mother, have you heard anything from Han since, or from Mary''s folks?
35725Mother, have you heard anything from Han?
35725Mother, have you heard anything from Han?
35725Mother, have you heard anything whether the 51st went on with Burnside, or did they remain as a reserve in Kentucky?
35725Mother, have you heard anything?
35725Mother, how is Andrew?
35725Mother, how is Eddy getting along?
35725Mother, is George''s trunk home and of no use there?
35725Mother, was it Will Brown sent me those?
35725Mother, you do n''t say in either of them whether George has re- enlisted or not-- or is that not yet decided positively one way or the other?
35725Mother, you have a comfortable time as much as you can, and get a steak occasionally, wo n''t you?
35725O Matty, I have just thought of you-- dear sister, how are you getting along?
35725O mother, who do you think I got a letter from, two or three days ago?
35725So, Mannahatta, you tear Uncle George''s letters, do you?
35725Was my last name signed at the bottom of it?
35725We ask him how the Rebels treated him during those two days and nights within reach of them-- whether they came to him-- whether they abused him?
35725Well, mother, I should like to know all the domestic affairs at home; do n''t you have the usual things eating, etc.?
35725Well, mother, how are you getting along home?--how do you feel in health these days, dear mother?
35725Well, mother, how do things go on with you all?
35725Well, mother, we have commenced on another summer, and what it will bring forth who can tell?
35725What have you heard from Mary and her family, anything?
35725_ Times_ of Sunday, Oct. 4?
35725_ Times_ of last Sunday-- did you see it?
35725and Jess, is he about the same?
35725and how is your wrist and arm, mother?
35725and what is she doing now?
35725did the money come?
35725do you want anything?"
20383''Everything hatched over again, and hatched different,''said the General, who was an admirer of George Eliot;"that''s what they''d like, eh?
20383A thousand, Marcus?
20383About what? 20383 Am I?"
20383An officer in active service? 20383 And did n''t particularly bless me when I wired to you to come here?"
20383And he will be there?
20383And if I could once get her upon ground under the English flag, she would be mine again, and no power could take her from me?
20383And it would n''t matter to you, Daphne, if you did think a man had married you for money?
20383And may I ask what you intend to do here?
20383And that poor child has the management of it all?
20383And the father did n''t care?
20383And there is no other way?
20383And what about the----"The children?
20383And when you get the money what''ll you do with it?
20383And why have you shown it?
20383And why not?
20383And you allow divorce for that?
20383And you do n''t like her?
20383And you have come to suggest something?
20383And you like it?
20383And you suspect that money played a great part in the whole transaction?
20383And you think that''s all right?
20383And you wo n''t give me any idea of the line I am to take with your mother?
20383Any other qualifications? 20383 Are you tired, Daphne?"
20383Ask him?
20383But he did what he could to stop the thing?
20383But you could bear it, if the money counted for something?
20383But, Roger, what can you do? 20383 By which Roger can obtain his divorce from you-- and marry again?
20383Captain Boyson? 20383 Captain Boyson?"
20383Could n''t we talk without bitterness? 20383 Daphne, what_ is_ the matter?
20383Did I?
20383Did she say that?
20383Died-- last night-- Beatty?
20383Do n''t I, dear Lady Barnes-- don''t I know this house?
20383Do n''t you like heat, Uncle Archie? 20383 Do you ever see or hear anything of that woman?
20383Do you know Mrs. and Miss Maddison?
20383Do you mean about pictures?
20383Do you mean that you wish us to be husband and wife again? 20383 Do you really wish me to tell you what I suggest?"
20383Do you suppose I produced_ any_ effect?
20383Do you suppose he knows that you-- are not exactly a pauper?
20383Do you-- or do you not-- mean to propose to Miss Floyd?
20383Does n''t she?
20383Finished?
20383For Roger? 20383 From Lady Warton?
20383Going to learn more lies about us, I suppose, that they may teach them to school- children? 20383 Had Mrs. Verrier any children?"
20383Had n''t it?
20383Had she been staying here before that?
20383Hallo, Daphne!--is that you?
20383Has he been picnicking with the Maddisons?
20383Have I given you reason to suppose that I was going to do so?
20383Have you seen the picture?
20383How did they manage to get into such a subject-- so quickly?
20383How do you do, Boyson? 20383 How do you mean to do it?"
20383How is my wife?
20383How long had you known her?
20383How long were you engaged to her?
20383How long were you engaged to her?
20383I am very sorry if I misunderstood you,he said, a little on his dignity;"but I thought you----""You thought I sympathized with Mrs. Verrier?
20383I do n''t know why you call it absurd?
20383I do n''t suppose he professes to know anything about English pictures, does he?
20383I do n''t wish to seem an intrusive person, my dear Roger, but may I ask how much longer you mean to stay in Washington?
20383I hear the Archdeacon got on her nerves yesterday?
20383I meant--the explanation was hurried--"I thought-- Mrs. Barnes was a South American?
20383I ought to be off at the end of the week; and of course you want to get back to New York? 20383 I suppose she meant to keep her?"
20383I suppose you kissed her?
20383I suppose you know Mrs. Verrier''s story?
20383I thought Miss Floyd expected him to- day?
20383I trust I was not impertinent? 20383 Is Heston getting on?"
20383Is Miss Floyd so tremendously rich?
20383Is Mr. Herbert French at home?
20383Is it really as bad as that? 20383 Is it the country, or the climate, or the people, that wo n''t do?"
20383Is n''t it fine to think of his coming back here to die, so simply, when he''d made a nation?
20383Is that about the truth, Boyson? 20383 Is there any chance of Mrs. Barnes''s marrying again?"
20383Is there any legal way, Boyson, in which I can recover the custody and companionship of my child?
20383Is there any particular point in his joining us?
20383It matters nothing to you? 20383 It was n''t quite nice, was it, outbidding her like that in her own house?"
20383It''s the ceilings, is n''t it?
20383Me?
20383Money? 20383 Mrs. Barnes, may I speak to you a few minutes?"
20383Mrs. Barnes, what do you know of Roger''s present state?
20383No reason for patience? 20383 Not English, you mean?--or American?
20383Of course Mrs. Verrier herself had nothing to do with the talk about divorce?
20383Of course,said Roger hurriedly;"but you would n''t think it a fair and square thing to do?"
20383On the ground of''cruelty,''I understand, and''indignities''?
20383Only moderately?
20383Or rather-- did you murder a life-- that God had given you in trust?
20383Release myself from you?
20383Roger!--to live?
20383She shut herself up here? 20383 Since you became a Catholic?"
20383So that the General''s death was opportune? 20383 Still bothering about those beastly pictures?"
20383That means more, Marcus: how do you imagine that an old woman like me, with only just enough for bread and butter, can waste her money on Sèvres?
20383That means that you did n''t think me good- looking at all, as compared with-- Chloe?
20383That means you think I behaved like a fool, and that my appeal wo n''t move her in the least?
20383There''s no one else in the case?
20383They''re on their honeymoon?
20383Think what?
20383To marry again?
20383To- night?
20383Towards her?
20383Twelve miles, is n''t it? 20383 Us?
20383Was Daphne expecting him?
20383Was n''t it just lovely?
20383Was the particular letter I mentioned one of them?
20383Was there ever such a pair?
20383We can let this house again, ca n''t we, Roger?
20383Well, I''m not likely to forget the Brendon ball, am I?
20383Well, and what do you make of that?
20383Well, is there any crime in that? 20383 Well, now"--he bent forward, with a professional change of tone--"before he arrives, where precisely is this unhappy business?
20383Well, now, when will you all come to Upcott?
20383Well, sir, she''s a dark lady, dressed very smart----"Has she very black eyes?
20383Well, then-- what happened? 20383 Well, we ca n''t argue it-- can we?
20383Well, what came of his action?
20383Well, where is the nephew?
20383Well, why should n''t I go?--why does one do anything? 20383 Well?"
20383What are you doing here?
20383What can that woman have come to say?
20383What can you mean?
20383What did the doctors say to you?
20383What do you mean?
20383What do you mean?
20383What do you want with me?
20383What have I done? 20383 What have they spent?"
20383What is it, mother?
20383What is really the matter? 20383 What is this lady like?"
20383What is your idea?
20383What kind of girl do you suppose she is?
20383What old papers?
20383What right have you to stalk me, as you call it-- to follow me-- to speak to me even? 20383 What sort of ideas?"
20383What were her governesses about?
20383What would you call it--''Mist, Light, and Spring''?
20383What''s the matter with you?
20383What''s the meaning of this, Daphne?
20383What, indeed, can be the matter?
20383What-- the house?
20383When did you see him last?
20383Where are you going, Roger?
20383Where have you been all day?
20383Where have you been?
20383Where is Roger?
20383Which means, I suppose, that your mother gave you some introductions to rich people in New York, and they entertained you?
20383While Roger remains bound? 20383 Who is it?
20383Who is it?
20383Who is she?
20383Who is that?
20383Who on earth----?
20383Who on earth?--at this time of night?
20383Who took you?
20383Who were her witnesses?
20383Who? 20383 Whom did she marry?"
20383Whom did you meet there?
20383Why are we not all Americans?
20383Why should n''t she? 20383 Why should you?
20383Will you write it for me some day-- all you''ve told me?
20383With whom does n''t money count for something? 20383 You are unhappy?
20383You did care about her when you proposed to me?
20383You did kiss her?
20383You do n''t care for the music?
20383You had neuralgia?
20383You imagine that was my doing?
20383You keep up the old habit, like me? 20383 You know this house, then?"
20383You make him work so hard?
20383You mean I should be jealous?
20383You met Boyson at Niagara-- that I knew-- and you are here because of what he said to you?
20383You never heard of Miss Floyd?--of Daphne Floyd? 20383 You saw it all?"
20383You say that?
20383You teach it?
20383You wo n''t want to see him or come across him?
20383You''ll admit it''s an intrusion?
20383You''re not coming?
20383You_ believed_ that I had betrayed you with Chloe Fairmile?
20383Young?
20383_ You?_said French.
20383*****"Well, what the deuce_ do_ I mean to do?"
20383--he hurried to her--"what''s the matter?"
20383..."Can I persuade you to come-- and bring Mrs. Fairmile-- next Tuesday to dinner, to meet Roger Barnes and his wife?
20383A cousin-- a cousin who knew every inch of the house, and seemed to be one of Roger''s closest friends?
20383A teacher?
20383Again I ask you, have you ever let yourself face what it means to a man of thirty to be cut off from lawful marriage and legitimate children?
20383Alfred Boyson?
20383And I suppose you offered us money?
20383And Mrs. Verrier, after observing her for a moment, resumed:"I suppose it was the Bostonians?"
20383And as for Roger, was it her fault that he had made it impossible for her to keep her promise?
20383And he deceived you?
20383And pray, were you listening at the door?"
20383And presently she added,"Do you ever hear anything now-- from England?"
20383And what on earth are all these women here for-- in the middle of the day?
20383And what sort of fellow was the husband?
20383And what, really, had their married life brought her?
20383And why not?
20383And why was she making this journey?
20383And you, I suppose"--the inquiry was somewhat peremptory--"will be going back to New York?"
20383Anguish?
20383Answer to him?
20383Any trouble with them?
20383Are you coming down to dinner?"
20383Are you really willing that Roger should sink into degradation in order that you may punish him for some offence to your pride or your feeling?
20383Are you still discussing them-- as we used to do?"
20383Are you sure you can stand all this damp fog?"
20383As for Roger, who is it says there is a little polygamy in all men?
20383As he had never destroyed the letters, they must exist; but, in the name of mischief, where?
20383Barnes refused to plead?"
20383Barnes?"
20383But Miss Farmer----"Who is Miss Farmer?"
20383But Roger?"
20383But how can it do children any good to live in an unhappy home?"
20383But is it not good for such people to be discontented?
20383But it was so odd that----""That I knew anything about Mrs. Verrier''s affairs?"
20383But meanwhile how was this first stage to end?
20383But perhaps a day or two longer---- So she had a million-- the little sprite?
20383But surely we can, putting all that aside, combine to help Roger?"
20383But surely, at the time of the marriage, something was settled on him?"
20383But the nephew-- the inordinately handsome, and by now much- courted young man-- what was the real truth about him?
20383But the reasons for his suicide were clearly understood by a large public, whose main verdict upon it was the quiet"What else could he do?"
20383But then, why did she ever marry him?
20383But was there no third course?--something which might prove to all the world how full of resource and generosity a woman may be?
20383But you won''t----""You''re-- living with her-- now?"
20383But-- I heard things about you-- that----""You did n''t like?"
20383But----""He has often done it since?"
20383CHAPTER III"Is Miss Floyd at home?"
20383CHAPTER VII"You''re off to the meet?"
20383CHAPTER X"Was there ever anything so poetic, so suggestive?"
20383Could I have seen her last week in New York?"
20383Could it be her mother- in- law?
20383Could you not?
20383Did Mrs. Barnes know many of the American bishops?
20383Did Mrs. Verrier imply that no one who was not a fool could show her grief as Mrs. Washington did?
20383Did he go for a walk?"
20383Did n''t Mrs. French think seven o''clock was late enough for any child not yet four?
20383Did she ever ask for me?
20383Did she, Madeleine Verrier, wish him to succeed?
20383Did you mean to send me to the Colonies-- was that your idea?"
20383Did you say that lady''s name was Floyd?
20383Do you forget that from the day you left him Roger has never touched a farthing of your money?
20383Do you know what has become of her?
20383Do you mean that Beatty has been ill?"
20383Do you remember selling a Louis Seize cabinet to Miss Floyd?"
20383Do you remember the letter in which I told you about that affair of Theresa Weightman?"
20383Do you remember, Penrose, what a magnificent creature he was that year he played for Oxford, and you and I watched his innings from the pavilion?"
20383Don''t--_don''t_ you possess the Vitali Signorelli?"
20383Fairmile?"
20383Fairmile?"
20383Floyd?"
20383Floyd?"
20383For was not Daphne Beatty''s mother?
20383French?
20383French?"
20383German?"
20383Had not Mrs. Barnes herself thrown them perpetually together?
20383Had she learned it abroad?
20383Had she the key?
20383Have I ever looked at anyone but you, old girl, since that day at Mount Vernon?"
20383Have they given you tea?
20383He does n''t wish Mrs. Mountford to see much of her;--though, really, my dear, I do n''t think Mrs. M. is likely to give him trouble-- do you?
20383He had a cousin who had been trained at Leipsic; was n''t teaching it trying sometimes-- when people had no ear?
20383He is coming this afternoon?"
20383He was getting into great difficulties with her, when suddenly Miss Floyd addressed him:"I am sure I saw you in New York, at the opera?"
20383How about the last teeth?
20383How can I reproach him for his behaviour?
20383How could he ever understand the ideals to which she had devoted her powers and her money since the break- up of her married life?
20383How did Mr. Roger know them?"
20383How long are you staying here, Uncle Archie?"
20383How many miles did you say it was?"
20383How to look?
20383How, in the name of justice, was she to blame for Roger''s illness?
20383How?"
20383I forget whether you''ve met the Duchess?"
20383I gather, by the way, that Barnes has got practically all his legal advice from the other side, though the solicitors here have been coöperating?"
20383I have long meant to get at them and burn them, and as you turned me out to- night----""What is that letter in your hand?"
20383I hope I have n''t said anything I ought n''t to have said?"
20383I hope by now you have forwarded_ all_ my introductions?
20383I imagine that by this time Barnes had not much affection left for his wife?"
20383I say, Colonel, do you like''lady helps''?
20383I say, how much more are you going to do to the house?"
20383I say, you seemed to be getting on with that young lady?"
20383I suppose they gave you an account of me?"
20383I suppose you''ve got a carriage?
20383I think that lady might have spared her call-- don''t you?"
20383If Roger''s American wife was by now wildly jealous of his old_ fiancée_, whose fault was it?
20383In any case, how was it her fault?
20383Inwardly she said to herself,"Shall I tell her the Boysons are here?
20383Is it all true?
20383Is n''t it a pity to know too much?"
20383Is there anything that I could do to assist you, or others, to----""To save him?"
20383It made me unhappy----""Did it?"
20383It never occurred to you that it might have been honourable to tell me?"
20383It was from Captain Boyson that I heard----""Oh, Boyson, was that it?
20383It was somewhere, no doubt, among the boxes in the locked room; and who could possibly get hold of it?
20383Just for ten minutes?
20383Just supposing it were true?"
20383Lelius?"
20383Lelius?"
20383Maddison?"
20383May I know what has brought you here?"
20383May I look?"
20383Merely that she might display her eyes, her diamonds, and her gowns?
20383Miss Farmer?
20383Mrs. Barnes''s suit was surely settled long ago?"
20383Mrs. Verrier paused a moment, then said:"Do you suppose he came to America to marry money?"
20383My dear Roger, if I hadn''t-- well, let''s talk plainly!--if I had n''t thrown you over, where would you be now?
20383Neglect any friends of his-- and such jolly friends?
20383No reason for pity?"
20383No, indeed; what does it matter what happens to me?
20383No?
20383Nothing to you that he has lost health, and character, and happiness, his child, his home, everything, owing to your action?"
20383Now then, what shall we do?"
20383Or was it the death of little Beatty, to whom she was much attached?
20383People find out in marriage what they could n''t find out before, and so----""You let them chuck it just when they''re tired of it?"
20383Perhaps you heard something about her?"
20383Poor Roger!--had he been living too well and idling too flagrantly on these American dollars?
20383Shall I tell Mrs. French?
20383Shall we have him in?"
20383She lived in this garret?
20383Should he consult his mother?
20383So these are your new quarters, old fellow?"
20383So you did n''t follow me, Captain Boyson, out of mere regard for my personal safety?"
20383So, stooping over the couch, she said:"Do you know who arrived this evening?
20383Society can do_ nothing_, to help that man either to right himself, or to recover his child?
20383Superstition, in fact?
20383Suppose anyone had passed?
20383Surely nothing more than care and a voyage could set right?"
20383Tell me what you suggest?"
20383That he returned everything to you?"
20383That is really true?"
20383That it was, in fact, a sign of being a fool to regret your husband?
20383That she had been forced to separate Beatty from him?
20383That she might always see the tomb?
20383The scandal, such as it was, was no doubt part of the''cruelty''?"
20383Then there''s the Archdeacon-- why should she fall foul of him?
20383Then, with a sudden veer and a flush:"I say, French, do you know what sort of state the Fairmile marriage is in by now?
20383Was it her money, the sense that she could do as she liked with most people, that made her so domineering and masterful?
20383Was it right to be so very strict with children?--babies under three?
20383Was it serious?
20383Was it simply the approach of mortal illness, the old questioning of"what dreams may come"?
20383Was it the child''s name?
20383Was n''t it ridiculous to expect them not to be naughty or greedy?
20383Was she a native of Washington?
20383Was that indistinct glimmer in the far distance-- that intenser white on white-- the eternal cloud of spray that hangs over the Canadian Fall?
20383We used to think it nothing for a ride, did n''t we?"
20383We were just talking of him, were n''t we?"
20383Well now, look here, what I want to know is, what is the meaning of this absurd journey of yours?"
20383Well, then, what more do you want?
20383Were they no more than physical and transient?
20383What can be the matter?
20383What comparison could there be between her case and Madeleine''s?
20383What did it matter to her or to anyone that Chloe Morant had made a fool of him?
20383What did it matter to us whether they were mopped up by the Indians, or the French, or not?
20383What did she care what the English world thought of her?
20383What did two ladies want with them, in a democratic country?
20383What do you mean?"
20383What do you think she and I have been talking about all this time, Daphne?"
20383What does a man want with such good looks?
20383What does it matter?"
20383What else is one engaged for?"
20383What for?
20383What had changed her?
20383What had happened to her?
20383What had it all come to?
20383What had made her marry him?
20383What had this little Southerner to do among them?
20383What have you been doing to yourself?"
20383What is society but a discipline?
20383What kind of evidence would she want?--what kind of witnesses?
20383What on earth are you doing here?"
20383What on earth took you there?"
20383What on earth was the matter?
20383What right have you to bear more children to a man who is a liar and a shuffler?
20383What was it that she had said to him?
20383What was she going to do?
20383What was she going to do?
20383What was the alternative?
20383What''s that?
20383What, then, must he do?
20383When shall we see some real comity of nations in these matters of international marriage and divorce?
20383Where are you going?"
20383Where was the portrait of Edward, and the full- length of Edward''s father by Sir Francis Grant?
20383Where would he have been without her?
20383Who on earth ever saw such a picture in a dining- room?
20383Who told you?"
20383Who was this woman?
20383Why ca n''t we be happy together?"
20383Why did you shut your door on me?"
20383Why not?
20383Why should n''t Elsie adore her man, if it pleased her?
20383Why should n''t mother have them?
20383Why should n''t you take it?
20383Why should people stay together when they see it''s a mistake?
20383Why should you be?"
20383Why, in the name of goodness, did you accept that tea- fight?"
20383Will you kindly give him my card?
20383Will you move, please?
20383With money?"
20383Would a mere fortune- hunter have done it?
20383Yet who could truthfully charge her with having obtained her divorce in order thereby to claim any fresh licence for herself?
20383You are, I suppose, on your wedding journey?"
20383You here?
20383You know Jews are not in what we call''society''over here?
20383You know, I expect, what a swell he is?
20383You saw that odious paragraph last week?
20383You told Herbert you would pay all expenses?
20383You''re not going to hunt?"
20383_ Why_ had she never been told of this thing?
20383and was he not in truth very fond of her, if only she would let him be?
20383any tea going?"
20383or, as she looked down on Madeleine''s dying face,"Could I even tell Madeleine that?"
20383she said imperiously--"the whole thing?"
20383that''s it, is it?
20383what is the matter?"
20383who do you think has called?
20383who on earth knows we''re here?"
34217Abraham Lincoln( and may we not say the same of James Abram Garfield?)
34217And are you willing to die rather than give up this despatch?
34217Are these boys not in the game?
34217Are you willing to risk your life for the country?
34217But did n''t you say yourself,argued James,"that we did more work than your men?
34217But now, gentlemen of the convention, what do we want? 34217 But what if the other departments should encourage these uprisings?"
34217But why?
34217But, do you think we can get over the road safely?
34217But, how soon will that be, mother?
34217Crete,he said to his wife,"what are they ringing that bell for?"
34217Did you understand it so?
34217Do you mean you have come into the war not expecting to get out of it?
34217He is dead,said each, with tearful eye:"So strong, so true, why must he die?"
34217He never paid any money on that stock, nor received any money from it?
34217He received no dividends?
34217How do we know that you can do the work well?
34217How soon do you want them done?
34217Is it better to march at once, or wait for Cranor and his forces?
34217Is n''t it strange,exclaimed Garfield, to one of his guests,"how a man will revive his early attachment to farm- life?
34217Is there anybody else with you in this matter?
34217So, that, as you understand, Mr. Garfield never parted with any money, nor received any money on that transaction?
34217Those brave words from the strong man bowed, Courageously death meeting, To whom amid the courtly crowd Of great ones sending greeting? 34217 Wall, do n''t yer know him when yer do see him?"
34217Well, James, what are you doing here?
34217What kind of work do you want?
34217What shall we do?
34217What will become of those poor, fatherless children?
34217Who will volunteer to carry the crest of the mountain?
34217Why?
34217Yes,said the President,"there it is, and is n''t it beautiful?"
34217''How many windows in the building?''
34217''What were the colors of different rooms, and the peculiarities of any familiar objects?''
34217***** Mr. Chairman, ought the Republican party to surrender its truncheon of command to the Democracy?
34217***** Now, what does this bill propose?
34217A poet- student at Hiram celebrates the event in the following ode:--"_ Again_ a Mary?
34217A practical Christian, did we say?
34217And who is he for whom all hearts are yearning?
34217And whose the chartered claim to speak The sacred grief where all have part, When sorrow saddens every cheek, And broods in every aching heart?
34217As he passed by he was asked,--"''What of the battle?''
34217At last he said to his mother:"If I should be_ captain_ of a ship some day, you would n''t mind that, would you?"
34217But how was he to procure the education for which he longed?
34217But how was he to procure the means to carry on his studies?
34217But if this were England, what would she have done at the end of the war?
34217But what was it that set it beating in unison with so many millions of others like it with sympathy for the President?
34217By the way, what do you think of the effect of the excitement in reference to Kossuth upon our Nation and popular liberty?
34217Calling Brown, his faithful scout, he said to him,--"What do you say to our going down the river and hurrying up the supplies?
34217Can such a deliberate preparation as this be deemed an act of insanity?
34217Can these truths be realized until each man has a right to be heard on all matters relating to himself?
34217Can this army advance on him at this time, with strong reasonable chances of fighting a great and successful battle?
34217Could this besotted brute be a specimen of the monarchs of the sea?
34217Could we celebrate Yorktown with the same lofty triumph without the memories of Valley Forge and the death of Hale and Warren?
34217Did she afterward repeat the blunder?
34217Did the mantle of this brave Elijah fall upon him, too, I wonder?
34217Did you ever see such an uprising?
34217Do you think an advance of our army at present likely to prevent additional reinforcements being sent against General Grant by the enemy in our front?
34217Do you think an early advance advisable?
34217Do you think an immediate advance of the army advisable?
34217First, what should be done with the national debt, so rapidly maturing?
34217Has the enemy of our front been materially weakened by detachments to Johnston, or elsewhere?
34217Have we done it?
34217Have we given freedom to the black man?
34217Have we grasped a weapon which we have neither the courage nor the wisdom to wield?
34217He broke out one day in the midst of a lesson with''Henry how many posts are there under the building downstairs?''
34217He had now, as he thought, the necessary means to enter college, but which of the many inviting doors should he enter?
34217He said:"You think I do look better, Mollie?"
34217He tapped his cousin Amos on the shoulder, and said,--"Does that lock belong to us?"
34217How could half a million of importunate office- seekers be appeased, when only a hundred thousand offices were in the President''s power to bestow?
34217How far may our Government safely interfere in the Hungarian struggle?
34217How shall we do this great work?
34217If that is so, why should you pay us less?"
34217In the contemplation of this half- century, can we find cause to wish the government had been destroyed?
34217Into what years of Europe, into what cycles of Cathay were ever crowded so much of hope and cheer for humanity as into the tragedy of Elberon?
34217Is it a mere negation?
34217Is it not possible for us now to make a truce with time by anticipating and accepting its inevitable verdict?
34217Is it worth while to join the mad rush for the lottery, or to take the old road to slow success?
34217Is not that country worth dying for whose peasantry are of such a strain?
34217Is not the Constitution worth standing by under whose forms Freedom calls such men to her high places?
34217Is not the Union worth saving which gives all of us the property of countrymen in such a fame?
34217Is that dead or alive?
34217Is there any death here in our camp?
34217Is there any man now who would they had not died, or wishes they had found summer and plenty and ease on the coast of Massachusetts?
34217No angry passion shakes the State Whose weary servant seeks for rest,-- And who could fear that scowling hate Would strike at that unguarded breast?
34217Now, what has been the trouble with us?
34217Now, what would you do?''
34217Or can we now wish it destroyed?
34217Ornithology is a delightful and useful study; but would it be wise for Congress to make an appropriation for the advancement of that science?
34217Shall not the whispers of God be heard by the children of men?
34217Shall sheaves lie there ungathered, And waste upon the plain?
34217Should the civil power be ignored in time of peace, or in sections of the country where martial law had not been proclaimed?
34217Slowly the stories of life are spent, Yet hope still battles with despair,-- Will heaven not yield when knees are bent?
34217Stepping aside to let the drunken man pass him, he was greeted by the gruff question,--"What d''yer want here, yer green land- lubber, yer?"
34217The golden morn is passing: Why sit ye idle, dumb?
34217The voice said''Cry,''and he said''What shall I cry?''
34217Then it was:''How many boot- scrapers are there at the door?''
34217To what conqueror, to what tyrant, to what selfish ambition, to what mere intellectual greatness would it not have refused response?
34217Was every delegate to have his republicanism inquired into before he was allowed to vote?
34217Was that candle of the Lord afterward put out amid the dampening and unfriendly influences of a long political life?
34217Were they to be disfranchised because they thought so?
34217What crown is this, high hung and hard to reach, Whose glory so outshines our laboring speech?
34217What is freedom?
34217What is the threat at which earth holds its breath While one lone man a duel fights with death?
34217What is this deafness that hears?
34217What is this silence, that calls?
34217What ought to be the relation of the National Government to science?
34217What was it?
34217What was the matter?"
34217What, if anything, ought we to do in the way of promoting science?
34217Whence came the immortal truths of the Declaration?
34217Whence comes our symbol?
34217Why not make his summer home just here?
34217Why stand ye idle waiting For reapers more to come?
34217Will you permit me to read aloud?"
34217With him the inquiry was not so much what a man believes, but does he believe it?
34217With this thunderbolt in our hands shall we stagger like idiots under its weight?
34217Would he not come forward and explain himself?
34217shall teach us to receive The mystic meaning of our peace and strife?
34217the bare privilege of not being chained, bought, and sold, branded, and scourged?
34217those little tads?
34217you do n''t expect we want a_ boy_ to teach in our district?"
38007Pray what is this Jupiter? 38007 42?
3800742?, 1600 acres in Westmoreland Co., July 20th, 1662.
38007Are the stars always exercising an influence, or do they exercise it only on certain occasions?
38007But continued the child"suppose he had, what would you have done?"
38007Do you already feel the necessity of counsel?
38007Have you made the acquaintance yet of Dr. and Mrs. Nelson?
38007How can it penetrate the vast extent of space?
38007How can it take place at all?
38007How can that influence differ in its power?
38007How comes it then that Jupiter''s influence acts at the same moment and in the same climate in so different a manner?
38007How do my little children come on?
38007How does Dempster get on securing the hay crop?
38007I have just ordered him to be delivered to Mrs. F. and am about to call, will you accompany me?"
38007If such a man does not deserve to be remembered, we might well ask, who does?
38007If this be true, and who can doubt it?
38007Is there anything else you would like to have done?
38007It was the horse or anything else I might prefer on your estate, was it not?"
38007Let me ask each one of you, when you meet your friend, or when you meet a stranger, in seeking to identify him, what do you look at?
38007Let me ask each one of you, when you meet your friend, or when you meet a stranger, in seeking to identify him; what do you look at?
38007Shall we close this paper here?
38007Shall we shrink from the making of those sacrifices for the salvation of our native land, the loveliest and the choicest of all lands?
38007Shall we, after all that we have seen and heard within nine months past, persist in the slumber and indolence of infatuation?
38007What are we to do?
38007What has become of Cochran''s fine carriage and horses?
38007What then?
38007What was it that first gave to this county of Augusta her high and enviable position amongst the counties of Virginia?
38007What would a cow do without her tail, especially on our fly- pestered prairies, or the Pampas of South America?
38007What would a monkey do without this caudal appendage and its prehensile quality?
38007Why has Mary not written me?
38007Why is this request made after such a short separation?
38007Why so?
36009In this connection did you ever think why it is that the devil is continually seeking the moral overthrow and eternal ruin of the human family? 36009 It is often asked in your intercourse with the world of spirits: What are the employments of spirits?
36009What is the true theory of good and evil? 36009 ''Does the description fit her?'' 36009 ''Indianapolis?'' 36009 ''Is it Jeffersonville?'' 36009 ''New Albany?'' 36009 ''What was the cause of his death?'' 36009 ''Where does your mother live?'' 36009 ''Why, did you know Mary when she was living?'' 36009 Among them these: Do the people on Mars sleep? 36009 An early writer said:''If you can not love him whom you have seen, how can you love them whom you have not seen and be beloved in return?'' 36009 And do morals count for naught in the scale of being? 36009 And now others are earnestly talked of and advocated; and does this not teach you the plain lesson that your system is still imperfect? 36009 And the fathers and mothers who educated us, that directed and comforted us, where are they but just beyond the line of the invisible? 36009 And why? 36009 By whom settled, how and when? 36009 Can he gather and control the winds and the seasons as they come and go with all their powerful influences on the globe? 36009 Can it be rationally maintained that truth and justice require a discrimination to be made adverse to the female? 36009 Do you not know that the ox and the horse, for precisely the same reason, can largely discount you? 36009 Do you not perceive the sublimity of this condition? 36009 Does God do any thing without an allwise and beneficent purpose? 36009 Does it belong to and is it a reflex of your boasted Christian civilization? 36009 Does not this plain statement present a dangerous contingency and indicate a palpable weakness? 36009 Does this terrible history, so replete with evil, offer us evidences of Godlike excellence? 36009 From whence do you get this doctrine? 36009 If not, are these of no moment compared with mere physical brute force? 36009 If redface mighty and paleface weak, how then you like it? 36009 If so, how often and how much? 36009 If so, there must be ample reasons for it, and what are they? 36009 If so, when did this divinely appointed consummation take place? 36009 In what pertains to the finer sensibilities and spiritual pureties is woman inferior? 36009 Is hope gone? 36009 Is it not grand to be able to understand, and even more, to appreciate, this knowledge? 36009 Is it possible for Him to do a silly, foolish thing? 36009 Is it true that no adequate protection can be afforded except by judicial murder? 36009 Is man superior to woman morally? 36009 Is the claim true? 36009 Is there any thing to alarm us in this thought? 36009 Is this true? 36009 It is pertinent to inquire, What are the employments of the people of Mars still embodied? 36009 July 27, 1882:Why seriously discuss questions that are fast fading out of sight?
36009My husband inquired,''Where is the fire at?''
36009Oh, why does man mourn over a law that was ordained for the benefit of all mankind?
36009The Mosaic law demanded an eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth, but is this the doctrine of Jesus, the assumed founder of Christianity?
36009The question necessarily arises, why is this so?
36009The questions were then asked:''Is it Louisville?''
36009They have passed from us, but where are they?
36009Was it made before or after man was made?
36009Was it made for man or man for it?
36009What are the duties of the citizen to the government, or what the government has the right to exact of and from the citizen?
36009What are the duties of the government to the people, or what the people have the right to exact of and from their government?
36009What can finite man do to control the Infinite?
36009What does this mean?''
36009What generation can gather it and hold it in their embrace?
36009What grand purpose, good and wise, can be accomplished by ending the existence of a planet that has as yet scarcely begun to live?
36009What is the argument in its favor?
36009When in the act of taking his departure, he suddenly turned around, and plaintively inquired:''Has Jim got any thing against me?
36009Whence did they come?
36009Where is it situate; who go there and why do they go there, and for what purpose?
36009Whither had it gone?
36009Why can not your statesmen be as patriotic and as true to the public?
36009Why destroy this fair earth, daily and hourly becoming still fairer?
36009Why is it that you require repose in sleep?
36009Why tears fall when he stands where the form of some loved one is laid?
36009Will it be maintained that the Lord would create any thing without a use and wise purpose?
36009Yes, man still asks, with prayerful heart, what are his wants to be in the future?
36009You need not grieve for earthly friendship; those ties have soon to be broken, but have your thoughts on spirit life and friends?
36009_ First._ What is needed to be done?
36009_ Second._ How shall it be done?
36009and if so, pray tell wherein?
36009and whence were their germinating and generating powers obtained?
36009and why does he die?
36009and why was he born?
36009what are they about?
36009what do they do?
33623A poem? 33623 A what ache?"
33623Ah-- just what is this Dreamaline?
33623Ah-- what was that?
33623Alp?
33623And suppose the company failed to dispose of it?
33623And the chamois?
33623And those that you could n''t sell?
33623And was n''t it an animal?
33623And were you sea- sick?
33623And why? 33623 And would you pay the author the twenty- five dollars?"
33623And you confess it, eh?
33623And you think the beggar would read it, do you?
33623And you?
33623And your other book is to be what?
33623And your waffle- deck?
33623And-- er-- you''d have the ladies whose energies are now devoted towards the clothing of the heathen come here and do the cooking?
33623Approve?
33623Are n''t you losing control of your tongue?
33623Are you laboring under the delusion that you have any control over your tongue?
33623B.S.?
33623Balloons for what?
33623Been reading the dictionary again?
33623But do you believe it will develop a mind where there is n''t one?
33623But have n''t we digressed a little? 33623 But suppose you had bad luck and took no tricks?"
33623But upon what would you live yourself?
33623Did they play Alp with you?
33623Did you ever learn to draw parallels when you were in school?
33623Did you?
33623Do n''t you mean that he says he would n''t know what to do if it were not for you?
33623Do you find out these mistakes in your practice before or after the death of the patient?
33623Do you mean to fasten the impertinence on me?
33623Do? 33623 Do?
33623Does he know you?
33623Good, I hope?
33623Have n''t you?
33623How about the poets and the humorists?
33623How about your couple that prefer to sit out the dance on the stairs?
33623How do you score in this game of Alp?
33623How will that solve the problem? 33623 How would you show nerve in writing?"
33623I beg your pardon?
33623I thought you told me you were going off into the country for a rest?
33623If so, why was I not with you?
33623Is it to be Bloomingdale or a private mad- house you are going to?
33623It is n''t a fatal disease, is it?
33623It would be instructive, no doubt,said the Bibliomaniac;"but how would it expand society?
33623Let me see-- that is how many?
33623Let''s give up bickering and turn our attention to-- er-- Social Extension, is it?
33623Mr. Whitechoker is talking through his hat is what you mean to say?
33623Mr. Whitechoker seems to be aware that a pack holds fifty- two cards-- if he, why not I?
33623No?
33623On what?
33623One extra screw, you say, has saved two days?
33623Then why under the canopy do n''t you leave it and go to some other world?
33623Then you believe in travel, do you?
33623Then you want me to go abroad?
33623Then, having attacked this system, what would you have? 33623 Wake me up when he gets to the point, will you, kindly?"
33623We have n''t observed the fact,said Mr. Pedagog;"but what of it?
33623Well, why is this social contraction going on?
33623Welsh- rarebit?
33623What do_ you_ know about cards, John?
33623What on earth is Alp?
33623What would you have such a guild do?
33623What''s the matter with balloons?
33623What''s the matter with champagne for that?
33623What? 33623 What?"
33623Where do you suppose he got the idea?
33623Who on earth would want to borrow a poem, I''d like to know?
33623Who was it said that?
33623Why ca n''t you agree? 33623 Why do you persist in your refusal to allow any one to get a favorable impression concerning you?
33623Why have wet feet at all if electricity is to be so all- powerful?
33623Why not devise an electrical foot- protector and ward off all possibility of damp, cold feet?
33623Why should n''t I know about playing- cards?
33623Why were n''t you firm with them and say you would n''t, and let that end it?
33623Would I?
33623You chose your coin?
33623You have a personal Shakespeare, have you?
33623You look upon your Muse as you would upon your type- writer, eh?
33623You would have a loan department, eh?
33623You_ have_ a father, have n''t you? 33623 Again, for smaller things, like a dance, Why ca n''t the phonograph be made useful at a ball? 33623 And then what happened? 33623 Can not something be done for her? 33623 Do you find that you have succeeded in your self- imposed mission and made the condition of the civilized less unbearable?
33623Do you mean to say that of all that vast audience no one would learn thereby how to behave at a dinner?"
33623Have you been courteous to any one?"
33623How do you know that what you say is true?"
33623How would you show nerve as a beggar?
33623I may be a little discouraged for the time being, but what of that?
33623Idiot, what would you do?
33623Idiot,"said Mr. Pedagog, as the guests gathered about the table,"how goes the noble art of invention with you?
33623Idiot?"
33623Idiot?"
33623If the social mind needs improvement, why not improve it?
33623If you are not conscious of so actual a thing as a sigh, how much the more unconscious must you be of something so subtle as motive?"
33623May I ask, sir, why you attended that lecture if, as you say, your mind is already sufficiently well furnished?"
33623Mr. Whitechoker, will you kindly pass me that steaming ten of diamonds that is wasting its warmth upon the desert air before you?"
33623No money in it?
33623Now why ca n''t the phonograph come to the rescue?
33623Now, why is that irritation there?
33623Pedagog?"
33623Poet,''Things are seldom what they seem''?"
33623Poet?
33623Social expansion is not taken up by society-- who dies, I or society?
33623This from you?"
33623What about?"
33623What are we to do then?
33623What do you take me for-- an insulated sun- beam?
33623What if these lectures do interest those who are comparatively well off?
33623What is the use?
33623What more is needed for a magazine?
33623What right has she to be tired?
33623When I arise in the morning and find a button gone, do I make genial remarks about the joys of life?
33623When a man comes up to a wayfarer, for instance, and says,''Excuse me, sir, but could you spare a nickel to a hungry man?''
33623Whenever any one asks me that foolish question that is asked so often,''What is the good word?''
33623Whitechoker?"
33623Who loses a fine chance, I or the capitalists?
33623Why are its ranks not augmented?
33623Why ca n''t the phonograph voice do_ his_ duty?
33623Why condemn a system because it does not discriminate in the minds selected for improvement?"
33623Why do n''t you invent an easy way to make a fortune?
33623Why does it not grow?
33623Why not say that you''d like to cross the Atlantic on a tight- rope?"
33623With such discouragement at home, what hope have I for better fortune abroad?"
33623Would you have University Extension stop?"
33623Would you have examinations?"
39029)| 26.8| 26.1| 56.7(?)
39029)| 36.9| 21.7| 67.0(?)
39029It is comparatively easy to afford better opportunities to those who are willing to take advantage of them, but how to raise those who are not?
39029the blind(?)
39029| 1.5| 24.3| 28.8| 54.6|| Bremen| 3.8(?
32203''Which way did she go?'' 32203 A watch- meeting?"
32203A wedding fee?
32203Ai n''t this Kentucky? 32203 And Hamilton says:''Where is she?
32203And Judge Grace says to Doctor Brigham,''Where do you reckon that preacher of ours got his notions of what''s right and what''s wrong?'' 32203 And speakin''of names, honey, did I ever tell you how Kittle Creek got its name?
32203And then he turns around to Mother and says he,''Deborah, what do you think about it?'' 32203 And what do you reckon Miss Amaryllis had done?
32203And with that Uncle Billy took a good look at him and says he,''Why, Hamilton, is this you? 32203 Archibald named''em all over to me, and Henrietta says,''Now where do you want to go first, grandma?''
32203But was n''t Miss Dorothy willing to marry the doctor in spite of his poverty?
32203But you''ll tell it on the way back?
32203Child,she said gravely,"do you mean to tell me that you do n''t know what a watch- meetin''is, and you livin''in a Christian country all your life?
32203Did you ever dream, child, of tryin''to go somewhere and your feet feelin''as if they had weights on''em and you could n''t move''em? 32203 Did you ever think, child,"said Aunt Jane, breaking off in her story,"that nearly all the work we''ve got to do keeps us lookin''down?
32203Do they object to strangers coming to see it?
32203Fields as level as a parlor floor and soil like a river- bottom? 32203 Hamilton?"
32203How did Martin Luther happen to be at Goshen?
32203How would you like to live with Henrietta, Aunt Jane?
32203I thought certain Mother had lost her mind, and I went after her and caught her by the arm, and, says I,''Mother, what on earth''s the matter? 32203 Now what was the next thing I went to?
32203Now, how in the world am I goin''to tell you how Miss Amaryllis looked?
32203Now, what was I startin''out to tell you, child, before I got to talkin''about blue blood? 32203 Sam had his purse out and says he,''How much is the glass worth?''
32203Tell me what you meant by saying that being the man he was Dr. Pendleton could n''t marry?
32203Things look sort o''down- hearted and discouraged, do n''t they?
32203Was Sam Amos a drunkard?
32203What are we going to town for?
32203What do you think about it, Aunt Jane?
32203What house is that?
32203What is a watch- meeting?
32203What is the sweetest flower that grows?
32203What was I talkin''about, honey? 32203 Where shall we go first?"
32203Who was Miss Amaryllis?
32203Why should such a pretty little river be called the Barren River?
32203Why, do n''t you ricollect?
32203You ricollect me tellin''you about that picture I saw at Henrietta''s,''The Angelus?'' 32203 You see all these trees, child?"
32203You see that pretty farm yonder?
32203Ah, if the power to put a sorrowful thought into beautiful words brought with it exemption from sorrow, who would not covet the gift?
32203Ai n''t it a pity folks ca n''t grow young instead of growin''old?"
32203Ai n''t that Johnny Amos goin''by on horseback?
32203Ai n''t that enough to satisfy you?''
32203Ai n''t these women got jest as much courage as their grandmothers?''
32203And Abram says,''But, Sam, you swapped that mare to me yesterday,''and Sam says,''Swapped her?
32203And Brother Wilson held up the sock, and says he,''My son, can you tell me how this came to be tied on the clapper of the church bell?''
32203And Brother Wilson says, says he,''Why not?
32203And Hamilton says:''Is she here?
32203And I says,''Doctor, do you ricollect the sermon that strange minister preached about a month ago?''
32203And Miles says,''You hear that?
32203And Milly Amos says,''Why did n''t some o''you men folks look at your watches instead o''lettin''us sit here wastin''all this good time?''
32203And Mother says,''What is it?''
32203And Mother says,''You boys never disobeyed me in your lives, are you goin''to disobey me at this late day?''
32203And Parson Page says:''Do you hear that?
32203And Sam Amos says,''Look a- yonder, will you?''
32203And Sam seemed to know what was in her mind, for he says to her,''Milly, do you believe me or not?''
32203And all at once somethin''said to her,''Suppose it was your boy in this sort o''danger; would n''t you thank any woman that''d go to his help?''
32203And father studied a minute, and then he says,''Do you ricollect the tongues o''fire that descended on the apostles on the day of Pentecost?''
32203And he looks down at Miss Amaryllis and says he,''Is n''t that so?''
32203And he turns around to me and says he,''Have you any idea what Hannah means by saying"An eye for an eye and a tooth for a tooth?"''
32203And old man Middleton says,''Why, daughter, what''s he done amiss?
32203And says he,''Not here?
32203And says he,''There''s one more question I want to ask you: Is there anything you can think of that you''d like to have or like to do?''
32203And says he,''Why, Emmeline, what on earth''s the matter?''
32203And somebody says,''Where''s Martin Luther?''
32203And the old man looked at Joe for a minute, and says he, right slow and earnest,''Well, Joe, why did n''t you die, too?''
32203And the old man says,''Has he struck you or mistreated you in any way?
32203And the old man says,''Well, where''s Annie Laurie and Nelly Gray?''
32203And then he says to Hannah,''Was it that sermon that put it into your head to tear down Miles''s corn shocks?''
32203And then he says,''Well, did n''t you know you''d be found out if you tied your own sock on?''
32203And then he turned around to Miles, and says he,''Miles, do you hear that?
32203And when Italy''s made, for what end is it done If we have not a son?
32203And when she got to the front door again, she stopped and said to me,''Jane, did n''t you hear the foot- steps?''
32203And when they''d got through eatin'', Henry took hold of her hand and says he,''Emmeline, ca n''t you trust me a little bit?''
32203And who but the fool dare say that eternal justice is but a dream?
32203And yet, is not inexorable law, but another name for the eternal justice that measures out to every man his just deserts?
32203And, says he,''Joe, where''s May Queen?''
32203At last,"What became of Hamilton Schuyler?"
32203But as soon as they''d hugged her and kissed her they both said,''Where''s Henry?''
32203But is n''t it sad to see people losing their happiness in this way?"
32203But what I want to know is, am I agoin''to town, or am I comin''back home?''
32203But what o''that?
32203But what was that breath coming across the meadows on the sun- warmed air?
32203But,''says he,''when they get inside of a man, where''s your poetry then?''
32203Ca n''t somethin''be done,''says they,''to stop this wranglin''amongst the churches?''
32203Ca n''t you find some roses?
32203Ca n''t you make allowances for a boy?''
32203Ca n''t you see that?''
32203Ca n''t you wait till to- morrow morning?''
32203Can you tell me which way I''m goin'', and whether it''s mornin''or evenin''?''
32203Did you ever think o''that?
32203Do n''t you know you must n''t say anything but good about the dead, or the livin''either, for that matter?''
32203Do you think you can make a bridegroom out of a skeleton?''
32203Does not the sun rise or set as splendidly over some blue Kentucky hill as over the Jungfrau?
32203Emmeline said Henry''s mother come over and put her arms around her and says she,''Henry Sanford, what prank have you been playin''on your wife?
32203Had I not heard it once before, this homely tale of woman''s work and woman''s weariness, that life repeats with endless variations?
32203Harrison looked at her like he thought she was talkin''out of her head, and says he,''What did you say, Mother?''
32203Has n''t this church got along fifteen years with jest these good pine boards underfoot?''
32203Has she been this way?''
32203Has she gone?
32203Have I got a child with so little sense as to think that that''s any reason for leavin''a man?
32203He said when he stopped, Milly was leanin''forward, her hands together, and hardly enough breath to speak, and she whispered,''Where''s Sam?''
32203Here''s this Shaker bonnet; now what''s the use o''savin''such a thing?
32203How can a man get into his bed and sleep, when his wife and child are lyin''out in the frozen ground?''
32203How did it get here, Mother?''
32203How does it happen you have n''t caught up with her yet?
32203I reckon I''ve told you Sally Ann''s experience, have n''t I?
32203I ricollect when we was talkin''about the cyarpet Silas Petty says:''What''s the use o''havin''that cyarpet?
32203I says to him,''Why, Abram, you would n''t take advantage of a poor drunken man, and a neighbor at that?''
32203I''m nothin''but a poor old woman that''s spent her life raisin''up a family, and what''s a country to me unless I''ve got my sons?''"
32203If you treat her this way now, how''ll it be ten years from now?''
32203Is it that pile of brick and mortar you''re putting up out yonder?''
32203Is the daisy on Mars Hill any fairer than the daisy that opens its petals on any meadow of the New World?
32203Juliet I knew, and Octavia and Iphigenia and Aspasia-- Had Rizpah any kinship to these?
32203Now, why not overlook this little caper of Martin Luther''s and begin the new year in a good humor with everything and everybody?''
32203Pretty soon he got awake and set up and rubbed his eyes, and took notice of the kittle, and says he,"''Have I crossed this creek or not?''
32203Rizpah?
32203Rizpah?
32203Samuel Wilson think that he''s the Pope of Rome?''
32203Says he,''Is there water or milk in your veins?''
32203Says he,''The Bible says we come from the dirt and we''re goin''back to the dirt, so why ca n''t we live in the dirt and say nothin''about it?''
32203Says he,''What is a church, anyway?
32203Says he,''You jest shut your eyes and say the word"Kentucky,"and what''ll you see?
32203She grew strangely silent, and that look on her face-- was it sadness or only joy in retrospect?
32203She''d laugh and say,''Well, what if I am?
32203That''s jest as true as anything in the Bible, and it sounds like it might''a''come out o''the Bible, do n''t it, child?
32203The Lord is my shepherd; what then shall I fear?
32203The pitying world looks on and measures the unwed lovers''loss, but who can measure their gain?
32203The rest of you ai n''t mistreated, are you?''
32203Then they all set down and waited a while, and Brother Wilson says,''Brethren, are you still of the same mind?''
32203Then where is she?''
32203Then why in the world did n''t she tell him so?"
32203To find our treasure of love greater than we had dared to dream-- what rarer joy has earth?
32203Uncle Haley says to her once, says he,''Deborah, ca n''t you think o''your country?
32203WHERE ARE YOU?''"
32203WHERE ARE YOU?''"
32203Was it in Greece or Rome or France or Italy?
32203What danger can frighten me whilst he is near?
32203What did I swap her for?''
32203What for?''
32203What is there in the flight of years to sadden the heart?
32203What''s the use in takin''notice of a boy''s pranks?
32203What''s your name, and who are you, anyway?''
32203Where are you?''
32203Where is she?''
32203Which way did she go?''
32203Whoever heard of a old woman like me makin''a speech?''
32203Why did n''t you tell me?''
32203Why, indeed, should the desire for travel send one across oceans or over continents?
32203With that he opened the paper, and what do you reckon it was, honey?
32203Would n''t this be a sorrowful world, if things was that way?
32203Yes, somewhere I had heard that stately name, but where?
32203You hear that?
32203You know that text that says there''s neither marryin''nor givin''in marriage in heaven, but we''ll all be like the angels?
32203You see that big sugar- maple out yonder by the fence, child?
32203You surely do not mean to deed me a house and land?''
32203You''ve heard o''the battle o''Port Gibson, have n''t you, honey?
32203and,''Why did n''t he come with you?''
32203says he,''and do you think you''d be doin''justice to them to take a step that would cut your salary down?''
32203why did n''t you tell me that?
39403Got any tobacco?
39403Yes, want''t trade?
39403And is he one to whom my friends can have no reasonable objection?"
39403Heading this column that had been moving since midnight was a brigade of Texans and toward these General Lee rode, calling:"What troops are these?"
39403Infuriated, the old Colonel yelled at Jim--"Didn''t I tell you not to bring me any turkey with a shot in it?"
39403Is he a man of character; a man of sense?
39403Is his fortune sufficient to maintain me in the manner I have been accustomed to live?
39403Where before did an exile from his own country ever achieve a friendship circle where the names now scintillate over all the world?
39403Who is this invader?
39403[ Sidenote:_ Beautiful Colonial Belles_] But who were the ladies then?
18984A picture of me? 18984 A tale?
18984About here, Jedge?
18984Ah, hah, an''in the hope that I do I reckon you''ve got a nigger astradle of him stirrin''the spavin outen his j''int, hain''t you?
18984Ah, mammy,said the old man,"you never forgit the Lawd, do you?"
18984Ai n''t as h-- h-- hot as it was when it was h-- h-- h-- hotter, is it?
18984Ai n''t it funny suh, dat I''s yered dat befo''? 18984 Ai n''t true?
18984Air you about through?
18984Air you shore?
18984Already hearn? 18984 Am I to be locked up?"
18984An''ai n''t you got fifty cents you could give me fur all dis inflamation? 18984 An''look yere, Mr. Starbuck, while I''se gone to the pos''office do n''t you reckon you kin think up suthin''fur me ter do?"
18984An''what''s the matter with you, Miz Barker? 18984 And did n''t yo''friends try to kill him?"
18984And have n''t you seen him boil the corn after it was ground into meal?
18984And now what can I do for you-- put another chicken in yo''way?
18984And what do you want with me-- to set down an''help you cry? 18984 And what if I do n''t pay no attention to the gospel?"
18984And you saw the sun rise?
18984Any discussion a goin''on down at town?
18984Any news over yo''way, Laz?
18984Any news over yo''way?
18984Are we going to have rain, Foster?
18984Beggin''yo''pardon, ma''m, for what I''ve said an''what I am about to say, will you let me talk business to you for about a minit?
18984Brash, my dear? 18984 But did n''t you say suthin''about that you might have to kill him?
18984But do n''t we-- don''t your uncle need you?
18984But have n''t the briars torn your flesh?
18984But how could he tell you he loved you if he did n''t?
18984But they will take him to jail, wo n''t they?
18984But w''y doan you go on, man? 18984 But was it true?"
18984But what sort of medicine did they send you after?
18984But you know somethin''about love, do n''t you? 18984 But you never killed anybody, did you-- still being a Starbuck?"
18984But you wo n''t do nuthun''outen the way, will you Jasper?
18984But you wo n''t have no trouble, will you, Jasper?
18984By the way, Judge, have you decided to take up the case of that old man Starbuck to- day? 18984 Could n''t lub you?
18984Cup o''v-- v-- v-- v-- v--"Ca n''t you write it down?
18984Den why do n''t you?
18984Did anybody ever hear the like? 18984 Did anybody knock him down for you?"
18984Did he tell you just now when you must have met him in the road?
18984Did it ever hit you, Margaret, that a woman ought to put herself in a condition to be loved? 18984 Did n''t I tole you you could n''t lub me?"
18984Did n''t expect me at all, did you?
18984Did n''t he say that you made a good deal o''licker when the sun wan''t shinin''? 18984 Did n''t you see me there?
18984Did n''t you? 18984 Did they git him out?"
18984Did yon eat him?
18984Did you ever see Mr. Starbuck make whiskey?
18984Did you ever?
18984Did you forget something, Kintchin?
18984Did you''husband tell you a lie?
18984Do I bother you, Jasper, an''trouble a comin''too? 18984 Do I?
18984Do it sound like I''m a beggin''?
18984Do n''t I? 18984 Do n''t see nuthin''else you want to borry, do you, Laz?"
18984Do n''t want to borry nothin'', do you, Laz?
18984Do n''t you think you mout go off somewhar an''l''arn?
18984Do what, mother?
18984Do you know what that means, Starbuck?
18984Do you know why you are here?
18984Do you like Sam Bracken?
18984Do you mean to say she wo n''t marry me if you tell her to?
18984Do you think her mother will object, sir?
18984Do you think so?
18984Do you think they will send him there? 18984 Do you want him knocked down?"
18984Do you want me to mash your head?
18984Do you want to hear yo''daughter cryin''down thar in the valley?
18984Do you want to see yo''wife with her head bowed down on the table?
18984Doan blebe much in pra''r, does you? 18984 Doan you reccernize me?"
18984Does the Book say anything about shooting craps?
18984Embarrass you? 18984 Folks all as well as usual?"
18984For you?
18984From yo''husband? 18984 Got any corn to feed him on?"
18984Had to break out, did n''t you? 18984 Hah?
18984Have a drink of water, Laz?
18984Have this cheer, Miz Mayfield?
18984Have you ever seen Mr. Starbuck make whisky?
18984Have you got that sorrel yet, Brother Starbuck?
18984Have you hearn anybody hint that you ca n''t talk? 18984 Have you looked at yo''swop to- day?"
18984He insulted you?
18984Helloa, that you, Gabe?
18984How air you gittin''along, Laz?
18984How am I actin''it?
18984How are you going to manage to say it?
18984How big?
18984How could he?
18984How do you know?
18984How what? 18984 Howdy do, ma''m?
18984Huh, give that up, too? 18984 I beg yo''pardon, ma''m, but have n''t you got a picture of yo''se''f you would give me?"
18984I make fun of you, Mr. Reverend? 18984 In earnest?
18984In lub? 18984 Insulted you?
18984Is he game?
18984Is he livin''?
18984Is it too warm in here?
18984Is mammy done ironin''?
18984Is that so? 18984 Is that so?"
18984Is that the law?
18984Is there?
18984Is yo''mother livin''?
18984It did n''t seem to have any influence on the old man, did it?
18984It sounds like things you find in a book, but this is in writin'', is n''t it? 18984 Jasper, do you think he''ll git that app''intment as deputy marshal?"
18984Jasper, what makes you wanter talk thatter way?
18984Jest in time to save his life?
18984Kind old soul, was n''t she?
18984Light of it? 18984 Lived a lie?
18984Lives here, do n''t he?
18984Look here: you know she ca n''t love you, an''do n''t you want her because you think I''ve got a little money? 18984 Lost anythin'', Jim?"
18984Margaret, how did you get away down here?
18984Margaret, is it possible that you''ve been listenin''to two men talkin''business? 18984 May I go with you?"
18984Me? 18984 Miss Lou,"he said, slowly approaching,"what made you run away from me?
18984Mother sent me atter-- atter a c-- c-- c-- cup o''v-- v-- v--"How''s all the folks, Mose?
18984Mr. Reverend, a true woman would take most of the wounds if--"If she were-- loved?
18984Mr. Starbuck, whut you all de time come er talkin''datter way fur? 18984 Mr. Starbuck,"Mrs. Mayfield inquired,"was that you shooting so early this morning?"
18984Mrs. Starbuck,the Judge kindly spoke,"will you please retire until we have concluded this examination?"
18984My father fret anybody?
18984No?
18984Nobody shot or cut?
18984Now Jasper Starbuck, is it possible that you put off that spavined hoss on Brother Fetterson? 18984 Now did he?"
18984Now what do you want to pester a body thatter way for?
18984Now what on the yeth do you want to talk that way fur?
18984Now why do n''t you tell me all about it?
18984Now, Jasper, what on top of yeth has tickled you so? 18984 Now, Jasper,"his wife spoke up,"why do you allus want to talk about fightin'', an''among preachers at that?"
18984Now, Miss Mar''get, whut you all time come er flatter me datter way fur? 18984 Now, Mr. Tom, whut put dat inter yo''head?
18984Oh, I understand him, Mrs. Starbuck,and then of Jasper she inquired:"How far is it to the post office?"
18984Oh, can it be true?
18984Oh, do n''t stop her, please,Mrs. Mayfield replied, and then to Jim she added:"Did you ever have a fawn touch you with its velvety lip?
18984Oh, got you to thinkin'', have I?
18984Oh, how could anybody knock you down?
18984Oh, is that the one they had the talk about consarnin''of the preacher?
18984Oh, may I?
18984Oh, what do I care for yo''nonsense?
18984Oh, you love me? 18984 Oh, you think you kin make me stay at home all day by myse''f, do you?
18984Oh, you want to git back to whar you was tryin''to pick a quarrel with me, do you?
18984Oh, you''ve found out all about him, have you? 18984 Outen the way of what?"
18984Safe ernuff? 18984 Say, is that young feller and that woman here yit?"
18984Shall I mash his head with it, sir?
18984Singular, is n''t it?
18984Starbuck, ai n''t yo''eyes wide enough open to see that I kin ruin you?
18984Starbuck, do you want to be ruined?
18984Starbuck, is that young feller Elliott any kin to Jedge Elliott in Nashville?
18984Talkin''ter me, suh?
18984Talkin''to one now, ai n''t I?
18984Talkin''to you now, ai n''t I?
18984That so? 18984 That so?
18984That so?
18984The bay with white fetlocks?
18984The girl goin''to the theatre? 18984 The pickels, and the chickens?
18984Then why did n''t you answer me?
18984Then why did you tell me you did n''t fetch it? 18984 Then you are in earnest?"
18984Then you have been married several times, have you, Kintchin?
18984Through to where-- to where?
18984Tuck him away for what?
18984Wall, but thar ai n''t no objection to that, is there?
18984Wall, how did it happen, any way?
18984Wall, would you mind goin''over it an''fixin''it up for me?
18984Want to know whar we was when he broke in?
18984Was anybody ever polite to you?
18984Was it Peters you saw goin''into the yard?
18984Was it because you did n''t want to know?
18984Well, how did you happen to fetch it back so soon?
18984Well, what do you want me to do? 18984 Well, what is it?"
18984Well, where air you goin''?
18984Well, where you came from how long does it take anybody to-- to fall-- in love?
18984Well?
18984Wha''fo''?
18984Whar do we sleep to- night, with some of the neighbors?
18984Whar''s S-- S-- S-- S-- Star--"Talkin''ter me?
18984Whar''s that luther string?
18984What Andy?
18984What ailed him?
18984What air you loaded with?
18984What are we all a comin''to?
18984What became of her?
18984What did they do with him?
18984What did they do?
18984What did they take you there for?
18984What did yo''mother send you after, Mose?
18984What did you say, ma''m?
18984What diffunce do that make?
18984What does it mean?
18984What have they got thar, a mortgage?
18984What have you been doin''?
18984What is this line?
18984What luther string?
18984What sort of a mare?
18984What sort of a newspaper did you fetch, Gabe?
18984What sorter one?
18984What was that yell?
18984What!--as if he belonged to you? 18984 What''s that?"
18984What''s the matter here?
18984What''s the matter with her?
18984What''s troublin''you, Margaret?
18984What''s your name?
18984What, Margaret, ai n''t news when a man shoots fo''an''stobs three? 18984 What, all soldiers?
18984What, on an accusation?
18984What, that old dominecker?
18984What, you do n''t mean it?
18984What, you do n''t tell me so?
18984When did all this occur?
18984When we''ve got such guns?
18984When you git right down to it, Lije, ai n''t that the reason-- money?
18984When you go into the court- room, do you think you can understand the nature of an oath?
18984Where is the Jedge?
18984Who talked about it?
18984Who, Jim? 18984 Who, Lije?
18984Who, Tildy? 18984 Who, me?"
18984Who, me?
18984Who, the sheep? 18984 Whut come of it?"
18984Whut de matter wid you, man? 18984 Whut, dis one right yere?
18984Whut, er man bodder er lady dat he lubs?
18984Why ai n''t you folks been over?
18984Why did they come here? 18984 Why do n''t you say I could n''t fret anybody,"Tom broke in, and looking sweetly at him she innocently inquired,"Could you?"
18984Why do n''t you send for a physician?
18984Why do you want to quit? 18984 Why it is n''t loaded, is it?"
18984Why wo n''t you be more considerate? 18984 Why, Jasper Starbuck,"Margaret spoke up,"ai n''t you ashamed of yo''se''f to talk about the Lord thatter way?"
18984Why, Lou,Margaret spoke up,"is that the way to talk?"
18984Why, could n''t they ketch''em?
18984Why, did n''t you just tell me that mammy left you twenty dollars?
18984Why, have things come to such a pass as this? 18984 Why, how did she treat you?"
18984Why, leave that coffee out?
18984Why, that''s what they call blackmail, ai n''t it?
18984Why, what''s the matter with Patterson?
18984Why, where air you goin''?
18984Why, you are n''t going, are you?
18984Why, you do n''t say so?
18984Why-- why do n''t you like to hear me talk?
18984Will you please keep quiet? 18984 Wo n''t you come too?"
18984Wo n''t you light an''look at yo''saddle?
18984Wo n''t you sit down, mammy? 18984 Would n''t let it bother you when you been a stuffin''yo''se''f with a lie?
18984Would you live a lie, like the man that married your aunt? 18984 Yas, suh, an''ai n''t all dat sense wuth er quarter?"
18984Yes, but what about it?
18984Yes, you may, but--"But what?
18984Yo''brother Bill a gittin''better?
18984Yo''mother still a eatin''of spoon vidults, Laz?
18984You ai n''t very good at shoutin'', air you?
18984You do n''t borrow, do you?
18984You do n''t see nuthin''red on my hands, do you? 18984 You do n''t?
18984You mean Barker, Sister?
18984You mean that journeyman hatter that you''ve talked about so much? 18984 You mean the jail?"
18984You were very fond of her, were n''t you?
18984You wo n''t love me any the less because I could n''t hide that I loved you, will you?
18984You wolf, would you shoot a brave old man? 18984 Your faith is simple and beautiful now, Jim, but may there not come a time when it will begin to inquire-- when perhaps I might fret you?
18984''Bout ready to give her another trial, Mose?"
18984Ah, do n''t I ricolleck once when we went to a political speakin''?
18984Ai n''t a cryin'', air you''ma''m?"
18984Ai n''t a runnin''away from yo''old man, air you?"
18984Ai n''t dar nuthin''in dis life ter talk erbout''cept politics?
18984Ai n''t habin''spells, is you?"
18984Ai n''t it wuth er quarter ter be skeered like I is?
18984Ai n''t lost a cow, have you?
18984Ai n''t you been er savin''yo''money all deze years, an''ef er man kain''t lub er lady dat''s been er savin''her money, who kin he lub?"
18984Ai n''t you got no respect at all for the gospel?"
18984Air you goin''to let me ride?"
18984Air you so blind that you ca n''t see that?
18984Am I a makin''it too long?"
18984Am I right, Jim?"
18984An''I says''salt or sugar, I''m here, an''what air you goin''to do about it?''
18984An''come round talkin''''bout peculiar folks, too?
18984An''ef he do, thar''s-- whut did I tell you?"
18984An''my daddy clim''up on the fence an''says,''Whut''s the matter now?''
18984An''p-- p-- p-- pound cake?"
18984An''what did they try to do with me?
18984An''whut you gwine gimme caze I skeered?
18984An''you ai n''t disapp''inted at yo''nephew''s choice?"
18984And I''ll sw''ar, ai n''t this little Jimmie Starbuck?"
18984And ai n''t this Jasper Starbuck''s daughter?
18984And besides, when I speak of him, how do you know that I tell the truth?"
18984And did you ever have a fight, being a Starbuck?"
18984And how are the people over in your highland district?"
18984And how old air you to- day, mammy?"
18984And looking down she replied:"You told me not to ask and I have n''t?"
18984And what were the antecedents of this crankish old woman?
18984And what were your thoughts, Miss Lou?"
18984And whut''s that nigger always hangin''round fur when I want to talk to you?"
18984Anybody dead over yo''way, Miz Barker-- I mean anybody that ought to be?"
18984Anythin''goin''on round here?"
18984As he entered the room he looked about and seeing no one else, spoke to Kintchin:"Whar''s Jasper Starbuck?"
18984As he was cutting the string from the other shoe his wife, peeping round at him, inquired:"Whut you do that fur?"
18984At the word liquor Jasper''s jaw dropped with a"hah?"
18984Blake?"
18984But Mr. Reverend, do n''t you think it is awfully wrong to fight?"
18984But come, shall we not go into the house?"
18984But do you know whether or not he has got a app''intment from off yander at Nashville?
18984But do you think if I was to read books I could be smart?"
18984But has he told you?"
18984But if Jim wants to marry her, why do n''t he say so?
18984But suppose he do git the app''intment-- won''t it mean trouble?"
18984But what am I talking about?
18984But what are you trying to get at?"
18984But whut''s de use in stoppin''dar?
18984But why do we turn up here?"
18984But why do you ask?"
18984But you spoke a resurrecting word and--""But would my dreaming again and again that I had heard you call me Jim-- would that kill it again?
18984But you want to borry a hoss for a week or two?
18984Ca n''t you fix it at the stable?"
18984Ca n''t you help me?"
18984Ca n''t you see nothin''at all?
18984Come along thar one time when the white suckers war a runnin''an''I had a pair of grab hooks, an''--""Well, what about Baker''s ford?"
18984Could n''t make it five months, could you, Jim?"
18984Dar wuz my fust wife an''my fust step- wife, an''--""Your first step- wife?"
18984Did n''t he love you?"
18984Did n''t he?"
18984Did n''t you go to the barbecue over at the cross- roads last year?"
18984Did n''t you see me out there in the rain yesterday?"
18984Did n''t you?"
18984Did the folks tell you that I was over here earlier in the day?"
18984Did you ever have a feller catch a spear out of the sun with a lookin''glass and shoot it through yo''eyes?
18984Did you ever hear him say anythin''about Jeff Waters?
18984Did you ever know a woman to look fur a cause an''not find one?
18984Did you ever notice that when a man begins to talk about a woman, makes no diffunce who, his wife puts it up that he''s a talkin''about her?
18984Did you hear?"
18984Did you?"
18984Did you?"
18984Do n''t I give you plenty to do?"
18984Do n''t you know it is true?"
18984Do n''t you know it say,''Thou sha n''t kill?''
18984Do n''t you ricolleck?"
18984Do n''t you think you mout keep him a leetle longer?"
18984Do n''t you want a few lessons?
18984Do n''t you?"
18984Do n''t you?"
18984Do the folks know anything about it yet?"
18984Do you hear me over thar?"
18984Do you hear me?
18984Do you know a good brother named Adsit, big double log house on the left bank of the creek?"
18984Do you know what that means-- if I git it?"
18984Do you know what that means?"
18984Do you know why I let that scoundrel Peters insult me?"
18984Do you mean that it did n''t happen?"
18984Do you see whut I am a drivin''at?"
18984Do you think you kin fix it so they kin have it over with my case as soon as possible?"
18984Do you want someone appointed?"
18984Do you want to look a lie at me?"
18984Do you-- do you?"
18984Do you?"
18984Doan you know dat de Lawd frown on slander?
18984Doan you know you got er soul ter save?
18984Does you hyarken ter me?"
18984Ever see the sun rise?"
18984Feller over near Smithfield had a sheep once that--""Did n''t he say he was a goin''to be app''inted deputy marshal?"
18984Findin''new picturs on the moon, Jim?
18984Funny how sich er''po''tent p''int will come ter er man w''en he neber did think o''it befo'', ai n''t it?"
18984Go on an''it will be all right an''--""You''ll come too, wo n''t you?"
18984Got a good artickle of pie thar in the kitchin?"
18984Got the same names here that you had down whar you come from?"
18984Great goodness alive, is it all to his credit that he is a jedge''s son?
18984Hah, ai n''t that it?"
18984Hah?
18984Have I said you wan''t good?"
18984Have I, Jim?"
18984Have you fixed everythin''at the mill?"
18984Have you got any postal- kyard or tillygram to that effeck?
18984Have you got any right young pigs?
18984Have you had any news from over my way?"
18984Have you seed Lije Peters sense he was here the other day?"
18984He looked at Jasper, expecting something, and it came:"Was that the time they found the ham under yo''bed?"
18984He spoke to Mose:"How far do you live from Mr. Starbuck''s place?"
18984He--""And is he a liar, too?"
18984Helloa, who''s this a comin''?"
18984Here, you,"he added, speaking to Mose,"what is your name?"
18984How air you an''Lou a gittin''along?"
18984How air you goin''to understand a critter that do n''t understand herse''f?
18984How did I know you did n''t love him?
18984How''s all with you?"
18984Huh?"
18984I ai n''t a prisoner-- don''t you see I ai n''t got no hand- cuffs on?
18984I am so anxious, an''''specially at this time when--""When what?"
18984I seed a old feller a runnin''once, an''I says--""But here,"Jasper broke in,"ai n''t she old enough to know better''n to run fitten to kill herse''f?"
18984I seed him put it under one-- seed him jest as cl''ar as I see you, an''I would have bet him five dollars, but--""But what?"
18984I wanted to tell you--"She sprang to her feet and with snapping eyes exclaimed:"What do you want to tell me?
18984I was po''an''I did n''t have no home an''I was almost starvin''an''he married me, an''--you do love me, do n''t you, Jasper?"
18984In lub wid who?"
18984Is Starbuck at home?
18984Is he expectin''some help?"
18984Is it because I told you of the spirits?
18984Is it yours?"
18984Is n''t it nice to be as brave as you are?"
18984Is that it?"
18984It''s a fact, but I said to myself,''Old fellow, what''s the matter with your knees?''
18984Jasper and his wife exchanged glances, and the old man said:"Husband dead, ma''m?"
18984Jasper studied for a few moments and then inquired:"Wan''t hung, was he?"
18984Jasper, do n''t you see how much Lou is a thinkin''of him?
18984Laws a massy, do n''t I ricolleck it?"
18984Laz, kin you think of any other little thing that''s happened to fret yo''neighborhood?"
18984Like Steve Smith?"
18984Look yere, Mr. Starbuck, ai n''t you got some work fur me ter do while I''s er eatin''?"
18984Look, here, do n''t you know the right to ruin you has come down to me from my folks, like er old spinnin''wheel?
18984Lookin''fur suthin''?"
18984Lou looked at Peters and said:"Then why do n''t you go?"
18984Lou, air you g-- g-- g-- goin''to church Sunday?"
18984Lou, have n''t you spoke to the folks?"
18984Lou, why do n''t you pass the butter to Mr. Elliott; and the bread?
18984Ma''m, I--""Are you calling me ma''m, again?"
18984Ma''m,"he added, looking at Margaret without turning his head,"I reckon you hearn about old Aunt Sis Garrett?"
18984Many professions resultant from the revivals last fall, Brother Jim Starbuck?"
18984Margaret, do n''t you see whut a fix I''m in?
18984Margaret, will you please go in thar?"
18984Mayfield?
18984Miz Mayfield, did you ever see sich carryin''s- on?"
18984Mr. Starbuck, why did n''t you tell me?"
18984Mrs. Mayfield had turned to listen, and Jasper inquired of her:"Will that do, ma''m?"
18984Mrs. Mayfield looked away, and the girl stricken with remorse, hastened to her and said:"There, I have been too brash, have n''t I?
18984Never plowed a day in your life, did you?"
18984Never wuz kicked by er steer, wuz you?"
18984Now that do sound like music, do n''t it?
18984Now what prompted you to do that?"
18984Now, Jasper, whut air you a settin''up here fur, a shakin''like a lump o''calf- foot jelly?
18984Oh, did you see that bird almost light on me?"
18984Or should I call it thermometer?"
18984Peters stood for a moment, looking at her and then inquired:"Did yo''father tell you suthin''I said to him?"
18984Peters?"
18984Puffeckly nat''ral to grunt under sich circumstances, ai n''t it?"
18984Reverend?"
18984Reverend?"
18984Reverend?"
18984Ricolleck the hoss the preacher swopped to Dave Somers?"
18984Say, Jasper, they calls the sakermint the blood o''the lamb, do n''t they?
18984Say,"he added, as he put the jug in its accustomed place,"have you hearn the new preacher over at Ebenezer?"
18984See, through de winder?"
18984Shall we go down there?"
18984She flouted at him and said to Tom:"Goin''to git married?"
18984She halted, looked at him and said,"Well?"
18984She resumed her work, and after a time left off to inquire:"May I ask you somethin''?"
18984So you like it, ma''m?"
18984Stand like that young feller Elliott and read stuff writ in short lines?"
18984Starbuck''s voice was never softer than when he said:"Wo n''t you sit down, Lije?"
18984Suddenly she looked up and then came the question:"And did they put yo''husband in jail?"
18984Swoppin''any hosses lately, Brother Fetterson?"
18984Taking up the jug and the cup Starbuck, approaching his visitor, inquired:"Have a sneeze, Laz?"
18984That whar they uster burn witches?"
18984That woman and young chap here yet?"
18984The affairs of the human fam''ly ai n''t nonsense, is they?
18984The boys looked with big eyes an''the old man clim''up on the fence and shouted,''whut''s the matter here?''
18984The fact is-- what shall I call you?"
18984The old man was silent for a few moments and then he asked:"Do he have the app''intment of the deputy marshals?"
18984The old negro halted to wipe his brow and Jim whispered to Jasper:"Is that learning or ignorance inspired?
18984The wagon stopped and Jasper shouted:"Whut''s the matter here?"
18984Then she added, speaking to Peters,"Is there anythin''else you wanted?"
18984Then why did n''t you kill him?"
18984Tom asked, and he answered:"Who, me?
18984Was he very mean to you, ma''am?"
18984Was n''t she mean?
18984We clim''up on the fence, jest like my granddaddy an''my daddy had done, an''I cried out,''Whut''s the trouble now?''
18984Well, do you want to buy anythin''?"
18984Went along by the sto''one day an''he war a settin''on a box with this here gourd riddle, an--""Well, but what about him?"
18984Whar is it?"
18984What about him?"
18984What about him?"
18984What air they goin''to do about it?"
18984What are they doin''?"
18984What are you trying to do?
18984What did I know how to do when I got back to work?
18984What did you bring that gear in here for?
18984What do he want allus to be a steppin''round her skirts like a frost- bit chicken?"
18984What do you mean by a tale?
18984What do you mean by that?"
18984What do you think of all this, Jasper?"
18984What do you think of them folks in thar, Jim?"
18984What do you want to torment a body fur?
18984What had my grandaddy an''my daddy done?
18984What is your name?"
18984What makes you allus want to fetch in the good Book?
18984What makes you talk about yourself that way?
18984What makes you wanter talk that way for?
18984What object would we have in changing them?"
18984What sort of a chicken?"
18984What was it?"
18984What''s that feller doin''over thar with that crowd about him?"
18984What''s that?
18984What''s the matter with yo''coat- tail?"
18984What, Margaret, ai n''t a cryin''?"
18984When Mose was gone Peters inquired of Kintchin:"Whar''s Starbuck?"
18984Where do you live?"
18984Where does he live?"
18984Where is the scoundrel?"
18984Where you frum?"
18984Whew, what you got sich a hot fire in here for?"
18984Which one o''the gospels air you preachin'', Luke or John?
18984Who preaches to- day, Margaret?"
18984Whut I tell you?"
18984Why do you act this way?
18984Why do you ask?"
18984Why, do n''t a woman know that everybody is a watchin''of a preacher?
18984Will that do?"
18984Will you let me ride?"
18984Wo n''t that be romantic?
18984Would n''t let it bother you when a man gains yo''confidence an''then deceives you?"
18984Would n''t you, Jim?"
18984Would you?"
18984You ai n''t got no cullud ladies ober at yo''house now, is you?"
18984You ai n''t jealous o''that weak little woman, air you?"
18984You might make a man foolish, but you--""Oh, how could I make anybody foolish?"
18984You understand?"
18984You''se Mr. Starbuck, ai n''t you?"
18984Young feller,"he asked of Tom,"did you like yo''ride?"
18984do n''t I git nothin''back-- no change?''
34704But Betty, tell me what is all this gorse for? 34704 Didst thou ever see men of better equipment than these of red and blue?"
34704Dost thou desire to see her?
34704Good? 34704 Has the sexton shook his spade at you?"
34704Is it a fiddle you call that stringed wooden spoon in your hand?
34704Is it not to keep them off? 34704 Like to see them, is it?
34704What delusion art thou under?
34704What kind of equipment is that?
34704''Ah, Cadwaladr,''said she,''have I at last found you?''
34704''And how do you do the day, Catti Shon?''
34704''And what''s that?''
34704''And where is the difference,''asked he, triumphantly,''between knocking the stool against him, and knocking him against the stool?''
34704''But some persons may desire to know why these fairies have appeared in Wales more than in some other countries?
34704''Can there be anything more miraculous than the existence of man and the world?
34704''Can you spell it for me?
34704''Crwys?''
34704''Do n''t you hear the harp,''was the reply,''in the public- house yonder?
34704''Do you know Thomas Mathews, sir?''
34704''For,''said the prosecuting attorney indignantly,''if a man sha n''t drink a blue of beer with a neighbour or so, to what wo n''t it come?''
34704''If the gate of a field were open, would you go through it, or over the stile?''
34704''In your own house?
34704''Is that all?''
34704''Morgan Lewis,''said Harry,''why dost thou walk this earth?''
34704''No,''said the boy,''and if I did, have I not here in my wallet the remains of my dinner that I had before I fell asleep?''
34704''Oh, Jenny, what was that?''
34704''Sion Glanrhyd?
34704''Thou fool,''quoth the spirit,''how canst thou stick what thou canst not see with thine eyes?''
34704''Well,''said her master,''did not I tell thee not to go?''
34704''Were there many fairies about at that time?''
34704''What ails the man?''
34704''What do I want here?''
34704''What do you want?''
34704''What dog is this?
34704''What is the supernatural?''
34704''What seekest thou, thou foul thing?''
34704''What''s that long thing you''re carrying?''
34704''Where are the horses?
34704''Where have you been since?''
34704''Where in the world have you been all this time?''
34704''Which do you prefer, ale or buttermilk?''
34704''Who are you, poor man?''
34704''Why, what ails your leg?''
34704''[ 189]''Whence came the_ red_ dragon of Cadwaladr?''
34704( Ah, sheep- stealer, art thou a guardian of the fair one?
34704( Here''s the twca-- where''s the sheath?)
34704( How d''ye do?
34704( O God, what shall I do?)
34704( my dear Rees, how are you?)
34704Ai dyna y rheswm cloi y drysau, Rhag dwyn y wreigan liw dydd goleu?
34704And do n''t you feel hungry too?''
34704And in that light appeared a band of angels, like children, very beautiful in bright clothing, singing in Welsh these words: Pa hyd?
34704At Rolldritch( Rhwyldrech?)
34704Cadogan,''said she, with ungrammatical curiosity,''what does you here this time o''night?''
34704Hast thou anything to say to me?''
34704He awaked his wife, and rising on his elbow said to the invisible spirit,''In the name of God what seekest thou in my house?
34704He drew near, but keeping beyond the reach of the chain, and questioned the spirit:''Why troublest thou those that pass by?''
34704He said,"How did you see me?"
34704His right hand was then taken, and he was asked a lot of absurd questions, such as''Which do you like best, the mistress or the maid?''
34704How is this?
34704How long will ye persecute the godly Christians?
34704How long?
34704How long?
34704How long?
34704I then asked her, Am I free now?
34704I tried hard to convince myself that this was the case; but why had the reaper resheathed his murderous- looking sickle and fled?
34704Is it credible that between this account and the following yawns the gulf of seven hundred years?
34704No one heard the reply, except the dame, who presently said:''Where is it?''
34704Now, since you are so old, let me ask you-- do you remember anything about Sion y Crydd o Glanrhyd?
34704On Easter Wednesday the spirit departed, saying,''Dos yn iach, Job,''( fare thee well, Job,) and Job asked the spirit,''Where goest thou?''
34704Pa hyd yr erlidiwch y Cristnogion duwiol?
34704Pa hyd?
34704Pa hyd?
34704People heard her in the night saying to the ghost,''What dost thou want?''
34704Pray, who was your father?''
34704Quoth Tudur,"Then where is your harp?
34704She turned and woke her eldest boy, and said to him,''Do n''t you see old John Richards?''
34704She went close and said,"Betty, where are you?"
34704Should he turn back?
34704Should we find, in tracing these notions back to their source, that they are connected with Arthur''s sword Excalibur?
34704The Irish cry,''Why did ye die?''
34704The boy asked''Where?''
34704The first man he met was the conjuror Charles Hugh, who said,''Did I not tell you you had better stay with me?''
34704The lass ran to the house in great fright, and asked her mistress,''Why have you sent master out into the garden to me?''
34704The word coblyn has the double meaning of knocker or thumper and sprite or fiend; and may it not be the original of goblin?
34704Then the devil asked,''Shall I have a whiff out of it?''
34704Unthinkingly she said,"How are you master?
34704Was there ever such a man, do you know?''
34704What could have become of him?
34704When he reached Rhyd- y- Fen, a ford so called from this legend, they met a neighbour, who exclaimed,''Holo, Dewi, are you leaving us for good?''
34704Where could he have come from?
34704Where was he?
34704Whereupon he exclaimed,''A meal for ten, dear mother, in one egg- shell?''
34704Who are you that dare to insult me in my own house?''
34704Who before this was ever so reduced in circumstances as to serve up a sparrow for the day''s food of fifteen men?"
34704Who do you think was in the ships?
34704Who do you think was in the ships?
34704Why do n''t you come in when you''ve got as far as the door?''
34704Why is the leek worn?
34704Why should I grieve?''
34704Why should I rejoice?''
34704With great difficulty he gasped forth,''In the name of God what is here?
34704[ 190]''Why was the Welsh dragon in the fables of Merddin, Nennius, and Geoffrey, described as_ red_, while the Saxon dragon was_ white_?''
34704[_ Strikes him._] Will you be so good, scald knave, as eat it?
34704_ Miranda._ What is''t?
34704a spirit?
34704anything more literally supernatural than the origin of things?''
34704are you cold, that you are so closed up?"
34704cried he,''what''s become of the horses?''
34704cried his wife in alarm,''what is this?''
34704had I been dreaming?
34704how are the children?"
34704is that all you want?
34704man, what, in Heaven''s name, makes you so lively?''
34704roared Gwynne,''thou able to look at him, and not I?''
34704said Morgan,''is that the case?
34704sneered Gwynne;''canst thou show him to me?''
34704was it an apparition-- a spectre, which had been riding by my side for the last ten minutes?
34704was it but a creature of my imagination?
34704what ails you all?''
34704what''s this?''
34704what''s your name?''
34704where are the horses?''
34704where are you go- ing?
34704where are you go- ing?
34704would you have hur hang hur own countryman?''
3912734:"Quis doctior eisdem temporibus illis, aut cujus eloquentia litteris instructior fuisse traditur quam Pisistrati?
39127And what exactly does it say?
39127But if we reject it, have we any better reason for believing the parallel assertion in the Platonic_ Hipparchus_?
39127But the question is-- From what time are we to suppose that the preservation of long poems was generally secured by the existence of written copies?
39127How has this come about?
39127If it was found necessary to transpose the Aeolic Homer, why did the Aeolic lyric verse escape?
39127If these passages do not belong to the period of the wrath of Achilles, how are we to account for his conspicuous absence?
39127In the museums of Dresden and Cassel landscapes with sportsmen are catalogued under the name of Gabriel de Heusch(?
39127Murry( or Allof), king of Sudenne[1]( Surrey and Sussex?)
39127Now, what is the value of that testimony?
39127The boat drifts to Westernesse[2]( Cornwall?
39127What then was the original language of Homer?
39127Where and when was it spoken?
39127_ iör_, Gothic_ aihos_,_ aihous_(?
18817Ah was huntin''--"What for?
18817An''wheah is yo''all goin'', Mistuh Val?
18817And I''d like to know what you''ve been doing all morning--"Would you really?
18817And Mr. Ralestone, how is he?
18817And he wants his share of the estate?
18817And how do you know that that remark was intended as a compliment?
18817And just what are you doing?
18817And just what do you know about the Long Hall?
18817And just what is a Sergnoret piece?
18817And just what is going on here?
18817And just what is it?
18817And just who is he?
18817And may I ask who you are and what you are doing here? 18817 And shall we?"
18817And the question before the house is, I presume, who''s going to wash them?
18817And then?
18817And what did you think of him?
18817And what is there for him to do? 18817 And what might your name be?"
18817And what''s your choice, m''lady?
18817And who is the violet? 18817 And why the merriment?"
18817And why the sudden dip into ancient history?
18817And you think that some mention of such an event might be found in the papers of the family concerned?
18817Another fuse gone? 18817 Are n''t they beauties?"
18817Are n''t you going to stay to lunch?
18817Are you an artist, too?
18817Are you doing story illustrations?
18817Are you hurt, Ricky?
18817Are you sure that you have the right place? 18817 Are you sure you packed it this morning?"
18817Are you sure?
18817Awfully casual about it, is n''t he?
18817Because of the secret you know?
18817But did n''t anyone ever mention to you that gentlemen wipe their feet before entering strange houses?
18817But did n''t he ever try to get in touch with the Ralestones?
18817But he brought home a fortune, too, did n''t he, Rupert?
18817But how did you manage to arrive so opportunely?
18817But how-- why--"Yeah,the rival had collected a measure of his scattered wits,"whatta yuh mean, wise guy?"
18817But suppose you tell me to what we owe the honor of this visit?
18817But what about the costume?
18817But what are you really after? 18817 But what for?"
18817But what has Jeems been up to?
18817But where did you find this''proof''?
18817But which of the twin brothers was the elder? 18817 But who would want to come in here?
18817But why did n''t Gatty give it to Miles when he came?
18817But, Val-- Val, what if-- if--"If we are n''t found?
18817By the way, do you realize that you have ruined your face for my uses?
18817By the way, where is Jeems?
18817By the way,Val asked as they went up toward the house,"did you see that boy in the canoe going downstream as you crossed?
18817Ca n''t we go slower?
18817Ca n''t we-- can''t I lift some of the stuff off?
18817Ca n''t yo''git me outa heah?
18817Ca n''t you do better than that?
18817Can you get that book here this afternoon?
18817Can you make it to the house?
18817Can you take me there?
18817Could that possibly mean a diary?
18817Did Ricky go riding?
18817Did n''t you guess when you heard the story of the missing Ralestone? 18817 Did she take the boat?"
18817Did you ever think that he might be shy, too?
18817Dirty fighters?
18817Do ghosts have union rules? 18817 Do n''t tell me,"Val begged, aroused by this news,"that we are actually able to afford some new clothes again?"
18817Do n''t you remember, Val,she turned to him,"what Rupert said about the Luck last night-- that the names of the heirs were engraved upon its blade?
18817Do n''t you swampers ever get the news?
18817Do n''t you think it needs it?
18817Do you have any really good pictures?
18817Do you know what this is?
18817Do you know where Jeems lives?
18817Do you mean that some descendant of Roderick has appeared to put in a claim?
18817Do you remember, Val?
18817Do you still have the flash? 18817 Do you suppose it will ever be possible to get these clean again?"
18817Do you suppose that that part''s true? 18817 Do you think we''re going to like this?"
18817Does it matter? 18817 Does n''t this red and green plaid seem a bit-- well, bright?"
18817Doing what?
18817Due to you?
18817Even to the victoria and the coach- hound?
18817Fen says that these animal drawings of yours show promise and he wants to know whether you ever thought of trying something along his line?
18817Five? 18817 For me?"
18817For what?
18817Gon na wait here all day?
18817Goodness, what have I strayed into?
18817Have you ever heard of a''sour puss?
18817Have you ever heard that old saying that''possession is nine points of the law''? 18817 Have you no reverence?"
18817He was one of Lafitte''s men, was n''t he?
18817Hear that?
18817How about you, Val, beginning to feel hungry?
18817How are we going to get him to the boat?
18817How did you know what I was thinking about?
18817How do you feel now?
18817How does it feel to own such magnificence, Rupert?
18817How long does it take Rupert to ask a single simple question?
18817How long have you been doing this sort of thing?
18817How much do you want for this information?
18817How''re we gon na do it without bustin''the wall down?
18817How''s Ah a- goin''to git mah ironin''done when dere ai n''t no heat fo''de iron? 18817 How''s Jeems?"
18817How''s the carriage house?
18817How,Val grinned at his brother,"did Richard explain the little matter of the ghost which is supposed to walk at night?"
18817How--? 18817 Huh?
18817I do pick the wrong times to display my sense of humor, do n''t I? 18817 I have n''t touched-- Val, do-- do you feel worse?"
18817I suppose there are electric lights?
18817I suppose you want some supper?
18817I trust we possess a good cook- book?
18817I wonder how much it''s worth?
18817I wonder if I did? 18817 If there is-- well--""Yes?"
18817If you do n''t wish to see my brother, just why did you come?
18817In spite of the enemy? 18817 In your second childhood?"
18817Is Jeems his first or last name?
18817Is dey up at de big house now?
18817Is he the ghost?
18817Is it?
18817Is that for_ Drums of Doom_?
18817Is there anything I can do?
18817It was then that-- that--"I was smashed up? 18817 Jeems?
18817Jeems?
18817Just the same, what if there were something wrong? 18817 Leg hurt, Val?"
18817Like it? 18817 Lissen, Boss, it''s a secret, ai n''t it?
18817Listen, Ricky, how can we fight when we have nothing solid to fight with? 18817 Lose what?"
18817May I pay Jeems a visit?
18817May I?
18817May-- may we see some of them-- the pictures, I mean?
18817Mine? 18817 Mistuh Val, wheah''s Miss''Chanda?
18817Mistuh Val,Lucy''s penetrating voice made him start guiltily,"is yo''or is yo''not comin''to brekfas''?"
18817More business? 18817 Mr. Ralestone, what is the matter?"
18817My dear, are you describing Clark Gable or someone you met in our garden this morning?
18817Nice day, is n''t it?
18817No? 18817 No?
18817No? 18817 No?"
18817Nobility?
18817Not after I''ve come all the way from New York to see you?
18817Nothing?
18817Now just what do you mean by that?
18817Now what?
18817Now,Val said plaintively,"will somebody please tell me just what this is all about?
18817Oh, see here now, was n''t I the one who got you this commission? 18817 Oh, so it''s you, kid?"
18817Oh, yo''know Miss Charity?
18817Oh,Ricky smiled sweetly,"did we really disturb you?"
18817Or am I thinking of the Whiting who talked to the Snail?
18817Our branch of the family?
18817Part of Rupert''s deep, dark secret?
18817Preparing for a little murder or two?
18817Regular Charlie Chan, are n''t you?
18817Ricky?
18817Rod,Val called down to where their cousin was busied over the stretching of the new badminton net,"did you hear that?
18817Rupert,Charity glanced at him,"are you going to see Creighton?"
18817Rupert,Ricky turned and asked impulsively,"do you really believe in the Luck?"
18817Rupert? 18817 Sam, have you seen Miss''Chanda?"
18817So this is the guy who''s trying to do me out of my rights?
18817So you are still determined on treasure hunting, are you? 18817 So you consider that the ducks are the note you wish to emphasize?"
18817So, wise guy, what now? 18817 So,"she was staring into the fire,"that''s the way of it?"
18817So? 18817 Sure it is n''t yours, Val?"
18817Swell place, ai n''t it?
18817That was where the Luck--"How hold ye Lorne?
18817The boy got through, did n''t he?
18817The oak leaf is dust,murmured Ricky,"the sea wave is gone, the broadsword is rust, how now hold ye Lorne?"
18817The one that you broke hitting the stone with when you aimed at your ball yesterday?
18817Then this is n''t your place?
18817Then we are right?
18817Then what more is there to worry about? 18817 Then you do n''t like it here?"
18817Then you_ were_ my faceless ghost?
18817They are rather gaudy, are n''t they?
18817They were with you, were n''t they?
18817This the place, Red?
18817This-- this is rather a darkish place, is n''t it?
18817Tired, old man?
18817To provide a free banquet for mosquitoes? 18817 Val"--he could hear her move uneasily--"remember that old saying:''Pieces of eight-- Ralestones''fate?"
18817Val, do you-- do you think he is badly hurt?
18817Val, had n''t you better go back to bed?
18817Val, he is n''t coming, too, is he?
18817Val, what are you doing out of bed?
18817Val, what sort of a mess have you and Jeems jumped into?
18817Val, will-- will it be fun?
18817Val,Ricky''s throaty whisper reached him,"ca n''t you guess what this is?
18817Val,Ricky''s voice quavered,"did-- did they keep people here?"
18817Val--"Yes?
18817Val?
18817Visitors? 18817 Was Audubon ever here?"
18817Was he badly hurt?
18817We are n''t Chinese, Arabs, or Malays, but we are kind of nice to know, are n''t we, Val? 18817 We never relinquished the title, did we?
18817We sit down and think of one thing we''re really good at doing and then-- Val, what is that?
18817Well, Val,he asked, a frown creasing his forehead,"what is it?"
18817Well, why do n''t you open it?
18817Well, you''ve explained your interest in the place,Val assented,"but what about the rival?
18817Well,he hesitated,"where shall we begin?"
18817Well? 18817 Well?"
18817What about Jeems?
18817What about the cabin?
18817What about the car?
18817What about the third?
18817What about this boy?
18817What am I supposed to do?
18817What are you doing here?
18817What are you going to do with that wall- paper, Rupert?
18817What d''ya mean?
18817What d''yuh mean-- cousin?
18817What d''yuh think it is? 18817 What day is this?"
18817What did you expect,Val asked her,"a skeleton?
18817What do Ah want wi''treasure? 18817 What do yo''mean by that?"
18817What do you call that?
18817What do you know?
18817What do you mean?
18817What do you mean?
18817What do you mean?
18817What do you think of our family retainer?
18817What do you want?
18817What do you want?
18817What does he think?
18817What does this guy Jeems go to the house for?
18817What does?
18817What for?
18817What is the flaw in the masterpiece?
18817What is the trick of getting into that house?
18817What is this?
18817What kind?
18817What shall we do now? 18817 What was he like anyway?"
18817What were we carrying?
18817What woman could resist this?
18817What''re you gon na do now, Boss?
18817What''s all dis Ah heah''bout some mans sayin''he am de Ralestone?
18817What''s food for, if not to feed your friends? 18817 What''s the matter?
18817What''s the story about?
18817What''s this one?
18817What''s this?
18817What''s this?
18817What,her voice was a thin thread of sound,"was that?"
18817What? 18817 What?"
18817What?
18817What?
18817What?
18817What?
18817What_ did_ you want here?
18817Whatcha gon na do with the joint, Brick?
18817Whatta yo''doin''heah?
18817Whatta yo''wanna know?
18817Wheah''s youah hoss?
18817When?
18817Where are your manners?
18817Where did she go?
18817Where''s Lovey?
18817Where''s Rupert-- and Sam?
18817Where''s Sam?
18817Where''s that high and mighty brother of yours?
18817Where''s that map of the city? 18817 Where?"
18817Where?
18817Where?
18817Which scenes--Ricky''s eyes shone in the firelight--"are those Dr. Richardson believes real?"
18817Who are you?
18817Who is he?
18817Who knows? 18817 Who would n''t?"
18817Who''s he?
18817Who''s that?
18817Why be so dramatic about it, old man? 18817 Why did n''t I spread the glad tidings that I was turning out the great American novel?"
18817Why did n''t Val tell me you had come?
18817Why did n''t they get paid in real money?
18817Why did we come?
18817Why do n''t you all go?
18817Why do n''t you ask him that?
18817Why do n''t you say what you were going to? 18817 Why do n''t you then?"
18817Why does n''t she start in on Rupert? 18817 Why not try pressing those?"
18817Why not?
18817Why should we, when you know more about this place than we do?
18817Why this sudden interest in mathematics?
18817Why, that''s where dear Great- great- uncle Rick''s ghost is supposed to walk, is n''t it?
18817Why, where did you meet Cinders?
18817Why? 18817 Why?"
18817Why?
18817Why?
18817Why?
18817Will you favor us with your company?
18817Will you stay right here?
18817Will your conscience let you come over for coffee with us then? 18817 Wonder where all the water is coming from?"
18817Wonder why he hurried off that way?
18817Yeah? 18817 Yeah?
18817Yes, is n''t it? 18817 Yes?
18817Yes? 18817 Yes?
18817Yes?
18817Yes?
18817Yes?
18817Yo''ai n''t foolin'', are yo'', Mistuh Creighton?
18817Yo''all is Mistuh Ralestone, suh?
18817Yo''all wants to git to de back do'', Mistuh Ralestone, suh? 18817 Yo''did?"
18817Yo''goin''ridin''in them funny pants?
18817Yo''ll tell him?
18817Yo''one of the folks up at the big house?
18817You again, huh?
18817You are a descendant of Roderick Ralestone?
18817You do have a nice little habit of speaking your mind, do n''t you? 18817 You do n''t expect me to disagree with that, do you?"
18817You mean the handkerchief we found in the hall? 18817 You mean the piles holding up your cabin platform?"
18817You probably know the story of our Luck?
18817You work for a living, do n''t you?
18817You''d know this Boss and Red again, would n''t you?
18817You-- are-- all-- right?
18817--still sleeping?"
18817A little riding, a great amount of casual reading and-- what else?
18817After all, when did a pirate ever show a saving disposition?
18817Ah got ta git the chest--""The one in the cabin?"
18817Ai n''t yuh been doin''our thinkin''for us all along?
18817An how do yuh know that, wise guy?"
18817An''does Miss''Chanda wan''dem in her room or does she not?"
18817An''lissen here, you swamp bum, you keep outta my way-- see?
18817An''yo''bettah be a- gittin''offen this heah land of mine afo''--""Before what, swamper?"
18817And I''ll--""Am I interrupting?"
18817And did you see those dreadful vultures on that dead tree?
18817And has Sam been to see you?"
18817And how do you like Louisiana, Miss Ralestone?"
18817And it''s locked, see?
18817And just which one of you has been selected to do the appraising?"
18817And look here, if you are going to unpack these, why not move them down to the end of the hall and turn them out on a sheet?"
18817And may I mention again how much we have appreciated your thoughtfulness?"
18817And now that Rod has finished setting out the lawn sports, what is there left to do?
18817And what are you doing now?"
18817And what could he do?
18817And what does that make you?"
18817And what if you do get in?
18817And what neighbor would come calling by water on such a night?
18817And what_ are_ you looking for?
18817And where did that boat come from?"
18817Any scruples about the rest of this stuff?"
18817Are you hurt?
18817Are you hurt?"
18817Are you planning to live here?"
18817Are you sure you''ve looked through all the family papers?
18817Are you through?"
18817As for talking about it-- well, how much has Val ever said about these?"
18817As she sank forward in a deep and graceful curtsy she added,"Ca n''t you see that Rupert has brought home his Marchioness?"
18817Both were young, both had bad tempers, and each saw his side as the right of the matter--""Regular Ralestones, were n''t they?"
18817Bum- lookin''joint, ai n''t it?
18817But Rupert will fix him-- won''t you?"
18817But could even Ricky be such a fool?
18817But how do yuh know that this guy has the stuff?"
18817But how--?"
18817But how?
18817But it was all in fun, see?
18817But that is n''t the point-- just_ what_ are you doing?"
18817But this visit seems to suggest something--""That he has the wind up?"
18817But what is in it?
18817But what were you after here, Jeems?
18817But where are you, Val?
18817But where''s the carriage house?"
18817But who today knew that story except themselves, Charity, LeFleur, and some of the negroes?
18817But why are you out here?
18817But why does he look so-- so sort of starved?"
18817But why should it come from there?"
18817But why--?
18817But why?"
18817But would he?
18817By the way, did Sam mend that croquet mallet, the one with the loose head?"
18817By the way, where''s Charity?"
18817CHAPTER VI SATAN GOES A- HUNTING AND FINDS WORK FOR IDLE HANDS"Val, did that cat go upstairs?"
18817Ca n''t it be mine?"
18817Ca n''t you come to me?"
18817Ca n''t you make her shut up?"
18817Ca n''t you remember the wording of the old charter?
18817Ca n''t you see?
18817Can I slip it under your head?"
18817Can you see him, Val?"
18817Could Jeems interpret that hint?
18817Could it be because he understood her to mean that he knew more of Pirate''s Haven than they did?
18817Could last night''s adventure have had anything to do with that threat?
18817Could the Luck have been made from two other swords found in an old tomb?"
18817Did a big, black, formless something reach out from under the bed and clutch at you?"
18817Did he have that much?
18817Did he really want to?
18817Did n''t you tell us once of the Lady Iseult, who killed herself when they would not release her from her vows to the Luck?
18817Did n''t you want us to live there?"
18817Did you think that out all by yourself?"
18817Do you have to do that?"
18817Do you know how long Charity and your brother are going to be gone?"
18817Do you people know that it is almost ten?"
18817Do you suppose that I might use your terrace for a background and have that big chair, the one with the high back?"
18817Do you suppose we could go swimming in the bayou?"
18817Do you think that I''d let you go into the swamp?
18817Do you want me to get him for you, Charity?"
18817Does Val have to come and hold you down?"
18817Does n''t he look wonderful?"
18817Does yo''wan''Miss''Chanda to think yo''is a know- nothin''outa de swamp?"
18817Doors swing two ways, do n''t they?
18817Go home?"
18817Good grief, girl,"he exploded,"have n''t you any better sense than to come into the swamp this way?"
18817Goodness, wo n''t this rain ever stop?"
18817Had the dark and their trouble made her light- headed?
18817Had the swamper by any foul chance come to suspect Val''s little plan?
18817Has Rupert been fed or is he thinking of going on a diet?"
18817Has there been an accident?"
18817Have n''t you finished breakfast yet?
18817He could relax--"Now,"his brother turned upon Val,"just what did-- What''s the matter with you?"
18817Hear that, Val?"
18817Here, boy, what''s your name?"
18817Hitler?
18817How about you, Rod?"
18817How do you get the thing undone?"
18817How many Ralestones died violently?
18817How much is there, anyway?"
18817How much sugar should we have, Rupert?
18817How soon do we get there?
18817I do n''t suppose you could use another assistant?
18817I hardly think that you should look as if you had just stepped out of the tailor''s--""I''ve done all that?"
18817I wonder how he knew my name?"
18817I wonder if our absent host possesses a larder?"
18817I''se come fust so''s Ah kin see wat Mistuh Ralestone done wan''done wi dem rivah fiel''s--""Where is Rupert?"
18817If Ricky had not come into the garden to hunt him?
18817If Ricky had not dropped the money, then what had caused the clink?
18817In the meantime--""Yes?"
18817Is he always so silent?"
18817Is it fast against the wall?"
18817It''s somewhere in the Hall, and the secret--""See here,"Val interrupted her,"what were you about to tell me when Rupert came in?"
18817Just where is it?"
18817LeFleur is doing all he can, we have explored every possibility here--""Val, do n''t you_ want_ to stay here?"
18817Look there, under that carved leaf-- isn''t that a date?"
18817Looks pretty, does n''t it?"
18817Marvelous types, where did you get them?"
18817May I introduce Mr. Ralestone, who firmly believes that he is the Ralestone of Pirate''s Haven?
18817May I keep it?"
18817Now just what, considered Val, was the slim young clerk from Mr. LeFleur''s office telling that red- faced man in the too- snug suit?
18817Now may I suggest that we find some slumber rooms slightly more modern?
18817Now, as I am a busy man and this is the middle of the morning, I shall have to say good- bye--""So that''s the way you''re going to take it?"
18817Oil- wells bubbling,"Val continued from the point where the lawyer had interrupted him,"Rupert turning out to be the missing author--""What was that?"
18817Or was he going to remain the very human person who had spent eight hours of every day at his brother''s beck and call for the past few weeks?
18817PRINTED IN THE UNITED STATES OF AMERICA TO D. B. N._ In return for many miles of proof so diligently read_[ Illustration:_"How hold ye Lorne?"
18817Paid that voodoo queen-- what was her name?
18817Perhaps I am a violet-- no?"
18817Promise?"
18817RUPERT BRINGS HOME HIS MARCHIONESS ILLUSTRATIONS"How hold ye Lorne?"
18817Ralestone?"
18817Ralestone?"
18817Remember that miniature of her that we saw in New York, the one in the museum?
18817Rick and Miles, the first Rupert and Richard and--""That spitfire, the Lady Richanda?"
18817Rupert,"she raised her voice as their elder brother opened the door by the driver''s seat,"shall we all go and be pirates?
18817See any more bogies last night, Val?
18817Seven or eight, was n''t it?"
18817Shall I, next time?"
18817So what do we do now?"
18817So yuh''ve decided to be tough, eh?"
18817Some face come off along with the paint?"
18817Supper ready?"
18817The storm last night wrecked the door of the carriage house--""Zat so?"
18817They sent her off to Great- aunt Rogers because Uncle Fleming, who took me, did n''t care for a girl--""And Rupert?"
18817Val, do you suppose they could hear me if I pounded on the wall at this side?"
18817Val, do you think that Lucy is going to be like this all the time-- order us about, I mean?"
18817Val, is it so very bad?"
18817Val, what are we going to do?"
18817Val, where are you?
18817W''at time does yo''all wan''breakfas''in de mornin''?''
18817Was dis boy big like yo''all, wi''black hair an''a thin face?"
18817Was he going to retire behind his wall of reserve from which their venture underground had routed him?
18817Was it the Civil War treasure?"
18817Was the South"getting"him as the tropics are supposed to"get"the Northerners?
18817We were gon na move right in and take over the joint, were we?
18817We''ll take turns cooking--""Who''s elected to do the poisoning first?"
18817Well, Charity, shall we stay-- in town I mean?"
18817Well, do n''t you want to see the inside as well as the out?"
18817What are these men doing here?"
18817What are we going to do today?"
18817What are we supposed to be lookin''for?"
18817What are you doing here?"
18817What became of the son?"
18817What could he say now?
18817What did you and your swamp friend do-- run into a mowing machine?"
18817What do you know about that big plantation up river, the one called''Pirate''s Haven''?"
18817What do you think, Rupert?"
18817What do you think?"
18817What had their rival said before he left?
18817What has he done?"
18817What if the fellow took it into his head to walk around?
18817What if you were offered everything you ever wished for, all tied up in pink ribbons and laid on your door- step?
18817What is your price?
18817What profit would I find in a cabin like this?
18817What was it you wanted her for?"
18817What was left?
18817What would have happened if he had?
18817What would your reaction be?"
18817What''s the matter?
18817What''s the matter?"
18817What''s the matter?"
18817What''s this on the lid?"
18817What-- what if his injuries were worse than he had thought?
18817Whatta we gon na do now, huh?
18817Whatya tryin''to do-- break somebody''s neck?"
18817When Ricky had hinted that he knew more of the swamp than the Ralestones did, why had he been so quick to resent that remark?
18817When is this binge of yours?"
18817Where are you?"
18817Where are you?"
18817Where have you been, anyway?"
18817Where is the car?
18817Where''s Rupert?"
18817Where''s the key?"
18817Where''s your proper pride?
18817Where?"
18817Which way now?"
18817Which would win to them first, the rescuers or the second slide?
18817Who is Jeems, really?"
18817Who is he?"
18817Who''s been playing games?"
18817Who''s for bed?"
18817Who?"
18817Why did he appear?"
18817Why do n''t yo''all go visit wi''Miss Charity?"
18817Why do n''t you fight back always when I get mean, Val?"
18817Why has n''t he written to Lever?"
18817Will Jeems take me to pick the lilies too?"
18817Will you join us?"
18817With Rupert writing books, and a lot of oil or something in the swamp, why, what have we got to worry about?
18817Wonder what happened to him afterwards?"
18817Would Jeems surrender as easily as that?
18817Would the efforts of their rescuers bring on another slide?
18817Would the first Roderick--""The Roderick who brought home the Luck?"
18817Would you mind if I showed them to a friend of mine who might be interested?"
18817Yes him does, does n''t him?"
18817Yes, I''m right; see this cross under the leaves?"
18817Yes, not exactly a rest cure for any of us, was it?
18817Yo''all comin''now?"
18817You are returning to Pirate''s Haven now?"
18817You do n''t really care whether we lose Pirate''s Haven or not, do you?"
18817You have safely recovered from that most unfortunate accident, Mr. Ralestone?
18817You know, of course, of the missing Ralestone-- Roderick?"
18817You know, the ones he was so particular about all the way down here?"
18817You the guy who thinks he owns this?"
18817Your charming self?"
18817Yuh''re gon na tell the Boss what he wants to know an''yuh''re gon na spill it quick, see?
18817_ The oak leaf is dust, The sea wave is gone, The broadsword is rust, How now hold ye Lorne?_ By our Luck, thus hold we Lorne!
39927I asked him,says Harding,"if he never got lost in his long wanderings after game?
38309How can that be,someone asked"when Kid and his men just left Anton Chico a few days ago?"
38309Well, Jim,was the first words that broke the death- like silence within,"you are worth several dead men yet, ai n''t you?"
38309What are you fellows trying to do?
38309Who in the dickens is Humphry?
38309You did n''t think I would be brute enough to shoot you in_ such_ a cowardly manner, did you, Jim?
38309''Can we come out and warm if we behave ourselves?''
38309''Oh, you go to h-- l, wo n''t you?
38309( Who''s there?
38309About dark I strolled up to a second- hand book store and asked how much a bible, nearly new, would bring?
38309At one time he asked in a jovial way:''Garrett, have you got a fire out there?''
38309But then what could I do?
38309But, thinks I, what can an uneducated cow puncher do now- a- days to make such a vast sum?
38309Can it be possible that she do n''t think enough of me to answer my letter?
38309Dawdy yelled over asking if they could spare some chuck?
38309Did you ask kind reader, if those were all his own cattle that he butchered?
38309He then asked me if I could think of anything else that I had forgotten to charge the"company"with?
38309He then continued; although I winked at him several times to keep still,"So you fellows succeeded in capturing Billy the Kid, did you?"
38309I headed straight for the Alverado House and who do you suppose was standing in the door when I rode up?
38309I then described one to him and asked how much he would take to- boot if the pony proved to be as I represented?
38309Johnson gave a savage glance at me as much as to say: d----m you, you have been trying to work us, have you?
38309Mr. Collier wanted to know if some of my relations was n''t dead?
38309Now the question arose in my mind,"how are you going to kill your buffalo?"
38309On my arrival there Mr. Grimes asked me how much wood I had?
38309Quien es?
38309She then became frantic and wanted to know why in the world I did n''t go to Humphry''s and get them?
38309She then opened the blinds and asked me in broken English, what I was trying to do?
38309She was cleaning roasting- ears for dinner when I asked her how she would like to jump into double harness and trot through life with me?
38309Sister began crying and wondered why the Lord let us suffer so?
38309The first man I met, I inquired of him, if he knew where Mr. Nicholas White lived?
38309The first thing she asked after kissing me, was, where I got my new suit?
38309The first thing she said was:"Hello, what''s the matter with your face?"
38309The gentleman looked at me and asked:"Are you from Colorado City?"
38309The old lady then broke out in one of her jovial fits and said:"You ketch on?
38309The question then came up, what paper shall it be?
38309They came over to me, and one of them, the oldest, who was on crutches, having only one leg, asked how much I would take for my"shooter?"
38309This of course went against the grain with"Jim,"but then what else could he do now, being at their mercy?
38309Three days after, while out hunting work, I stopped an old man and asked him if he knew where I could find a job?
38309Was ever a prayer so quickly heard?
38309Who in the h-- l is in here?"
38309Who''s there?)
38309and another one remarked,"He is a stiff cuss-- aint he?"
37878And how did the Lady receive these valuable and useful things? 37878 How could I ever judge Margaret fairly,"he exclaims,"after such a crushing discovery of her superiority?"
37878How is medical science to be advanced? 37878 Shall we try,"he says,"the medicines advertised with the certificates of justices of the peace, of clergymen, or even members of Congress?
37878What business have young scribblers to send me their verses and ask my opinion of the stuff?
37878What is the honest truth,he says at another time,"about the medical art?
37878What will it be like? 37878 A feast it was that none might scorn to share; Cambridge and Concord demigods were there-- And who were they? 37878 Ah, pensive scholar, what is fame? 37878 Am I your creditor? 37878 And how could money be spent more economically than to promote the further enlightenment of the medical profession? 37878 And the pale sweetSchoolmistress"in her modest mourning dress?
37878And where the leaves, the flowers, the fruits, Without your watering at the roots To fill each branching vein?
37878And where will you find a more pathetic picture than that of the old musician in_ The Silent Melody_?
37878And who are more likely to have their wants supplied?
37878But is there nothing that may well employ Life''s winter months-- no sunny hour of joy?
37878Could it be the roar of the thousand wheels and the ten thousand footsteps jarring and trampling along the stones of the neighboring city?
37878Do you know whom we send you, Hidalgos of Spain?
37878Do you know your old friends when you see them again?
37878How can I tell you, O my loving friends, What light, what warmth, your joyous welcome lends To life''s late hour?
37878How can one dare to sit down inactive with such examples before him?
37878How could Doctor Holmes on this great occasion pass it by?
37878How could he have treated the offence and the offender with a more fitting combination of wit and scorn?
37878How did he do this?
37878I always feel that people must be saying,''Are you not rash at eighty years of age to write for young people who think a man old at forty?''"
37878I naturally said,''What do you mean?
37878I suppose all of you have had the pocket- book fever when you were little?
37878Is this the mighty ocean?--is this all?
37878King''s Chapel?"
37878Men and devils both contrive Traps for catching girls alive; Eve was duped, and Helen kissed, How, O how can you resist?
37878Shall I bless you, Dorothy, or forgive, For the tender whisper that bade me live?
37878That is a most remarkable trio, is n''t it?
37878The toast to"The Bar"-- Why might that not be the skull Of a lawyer?
37878Though many a cloud your struggling morn obscures, What sunset brings a brighter sky than yours?
37878What better legacy can we leave our children, and our children''s children, than an illumined medical faculty?"
37878What do I mean?
37878What does he leave when life is well- nigh spent To lap its evening in a calm content?
37878What is it to him that you can localize and name by some uncouth term, the disease which you could not prevent and which you can not cure?
37878What keeps the doctor''s trade alive?
37878When your kind summons reached my calm retreat, Who are the friends, I questioned, I shall meet?
37878Where be his quidet''s now?
37878Where did you ever see it before?''
37878Where in the whole range of the English language, or indeed, of any language, will you find such an overflow of spontaneous wit and humor?
37878Where is the patriarch you are kindly greeting?
37878Who''s goin''to run,''n''wher''''s''t goin''to be?''
37878Why should I enumerate them?
37878Without any prefatory remarks, he then read the following poem: Have I deserved your kindness?
37878we remember that angels have wings-- What story is this of the day of his birth?
39634Why so?
39634Could the apostle articulate his thought, for what titles Jerusalem could have conferred would he exchange the"forty stripes save one?"
39634Dishonor?
39634It is needless to say, that, while such a man always has enemies,( as what man of ability and energetic character has not?)
39634Looking back over these fifty years, can we compute the worth of such a life?"
39634The principal, after a casual examination, said:"Well, you do n''t know much, do you?"
39634Was it to enter and change the character of the Universalist movement?
30611''Anything with Smith in James Street?'' 30611 ''Betty, what_ are_ you thinking about?
30611''Do anything with Thomson in King Street?'' 30611 ''Pies, Betty?
30611A very good cellar,said the guest;"but do you not pay rather an extravagant price for it?"
30611An''who rides in the loft up atop?
30611An''yon''s the wagons whar ye''ll set?
30611And agreeable?
30611And how shall we go down the Creek?
30611And how soon do you cut off for oil?
30611And what might such a thing as that cost noo?
30611And why in the world did n''t you tell her?
30611And with whom? 30611 Are you sure it is true?
30611Be? 30611 Business pretty brisk?"
30611But do you think the same remarks apply to the case of the greatly increased amount of clothing that is now manufactured by the sewing- machines?
30611But does n''t that show an interest in you?
30611But how is it with the women with families, the widows?
30611But now?
30611But when they become skilled,I again asked,"you do not pay them as high wages as you pay the men, though they do as much and as well?"
30611But when you began this business, did you expect to sell so many?
30611But,I again inquired,"will this extraordinary demand for the products of the sewing- machine continue?
30611But,I suggested,"if they perform as much work as men could, why do you pay them so much less?"
30611Ca n''t you make room for this lady? 30611 Did he send you?"
30611Did n''t I tell ye?
30611Did n''t mamma like bad uns, Esther?
30611Do anything with Jones on the Parade?
30611Do the girls receive as much wages as the men?
30611Do you give them up? 30611 Do you support your wife and children as well as yourself?"
30611Do you think it''s true, Samuel?
30611Farming? 30611 Got all your winter''s stock o''wood in yit?"
30611Had we better?
30611Have they no more wants than young girls? 30611 Have you never been married?"
30611Hopedale? 30611 How far is it from Schaeffer''s to Tarr Farm?
30611How far_ down_[ up] have you been?
30611I d''n know,says Reuben,"She says she likes good boys; do n''t you like bad uns, Esther?"
30611I suppose, Miss,he resumed, as if unwilling to leave anything unexplained,"you use friction- matches at home?
30611Indeed? 30611 Is your wife dead?"
30611It''s hard travelling down Oil Creek, then?
30611Mossa, you mean dat? 30611 No, no; we''re all right now, do n''t you see?
30611Not happy?
30611Nothing of the kind,said the stranger;"and if you are a gentleman, what business have you here?"
30611Oh, Chris, why do you discourage me?
30611Pray, Cooper,inquired the former at last, tapping the barrel superciliously with his cane,"are you able to make this thing oil- tight?"
30611So your master sells you your time?
30611Squire,he would say, addressing a neighbor on the Common,"what do you s''pose I paid for that brindle ye''rlin''o''mine?
30611The parson? 30611 They would?
30611WHERE?
30611Was you ever troubled by their leaking, when you rolled them through the mud from the well to the Creek?
30611Whaling?
30611What are you thinkin''of, Tourtelot?
30611What in nater was ye sich a cussed fool as ter git stuck fer?
30611What is it? 30611 What is it?"
30611What is it?
30611What now, Esther? 30611 What rank in the peerage do these gold- laced garments and big buttons betoken?"
30611What sort of boat?
30611What''s the use of your guessin''?
30611Where did he say?
30611Where? 30611 Which of them?"
30611Who was it they called''bald- head,''Reuben? 30611 Whose nigger are you?"
30611Why ought I?
30611Why, my son?
30611Why? 30611 Will you believe_ this_?
30611Would you think she did n''t love him? 30611 Wull ye get out?"
30611You do n''t use the fire test in this building, I presume, do you?
30611You wo n''t think hard o''me, Mr. Johns, for droppin''a word about this matter?
30611''She was such a lovely woman,''she says; and the poor, dear little boy,--won''t you let him come and pass a day or two with us?
30611''Spect there''s a many won''erful sights''twixt here an''Eri'', ben''t there?"
3061154?''
306119?
30611A little Southerner( as often since a large one) turned on me fiercely and said,--"Would you marry a nigger?"
30611And is this all the respect you show me on my wedding- day?"
30611And we ought n''t to think so much of living to be happy; we ought to think more of doing right, doing our duty, do n''t you think so?"
30611And what if we bandage a nobler inner faculty, and wrap_ love_ in grave- clothes?
30611And why?"
30611Another dealer, suspecting something, went to him and said,"What do you say flour''s worth to- day?"
30611Are they not fed?
30611Are they not warm?
30611Are you going to let me and the children be killed, John?"
30611Are you there?"
30611Arriving in sight of the railway, this_ puer ingenuus_, pointing to the track, inquired,--"An''be thot what the keers rides on?"
30611At night, Esther, who has a chamber near him, creeps in to say good- night to the lad, and asks,--"Do you like her, Ruby, boy?
30611Bright eyes that followed fading ship and crew, Melting in tender rain?
30611But I suppose this must be what people call political economy, and how should I be expected to know anything of that?
30611But do n''t you think that a godly woman for helpmeet would make the work more effectooal?
30611But do you know, Miss, that our sex feel the most profound contempt for a woman who is so weak as to make such an exhibition of folly?
30611But how did they get acquainted?
30611But how is it now?
30611But they offer to work for these wages, and why should we give them more than they ask?"
30611But who''s to serve tea, I want to know?
30611But, Parson, do n''t you think he must feel a kind o''hankerin''arter somebody to be motherly to him?
30611Could a man feed those rollers more efficiently than a girl?
30611Did n''t I love to see''em growin'', Three likely lads ez wal could be, Handsome an''brave an''not tu knowin''?
30611Did n''t the driver see where they were going?
30611Did niver ye mind the windys uv this house?"
30611Did you ever, in a raw, chilly day, just before a snow- storm, sit at work in a room that was judiciously warmed by an exact thermometer?
30611Do n''t you know she''s very good to you, and takes excellent care of you, and hears you say your catechism every Saturday?
30611Do not working- women live on the little they get only because they are compelled to?"
30611Do you like your Aunt Eliza?"
30611Do you remember the process of getting warm in a bed of most faultless material, with linen sheets and pillow- cases, slippery and cold as ice?
30611Do you think I do n''t know what a man is, Tourtelot?
30611Does this sound harshly, my brethren?
30611Elisha or Elijah?"
30611Following that man?
30611For the best, is n''t it, Parson?"
30611Had they been lecturing her into these conjugal proprieties?
30611Has Reuben caught a fall?"
30611Have they run away?
30611Hovels?
30611How do you get light in this room?"
30611How far is it?"
30611How fur be you going?"
30611Huts?
30611I said,"Ah?"
30611I suppose fuel is very cheap through all this country, is n''t it?"
30611I''ll find something''ll amuse him; hey, Ruby?"
30611If he were caught and whipped to death, of what benefit could he be to his wife and child?
30611If he_ doos_ mean to, he''s sly about it; do n''t you think so, Huldy?"
30611If pound- cake could be had at the price of corn- bread, does it not strike you that the community would consume little else?
30611Is dey a- comin''to take pity on us, Mossa, an''take dis people out of hell?
30611Is it not so, and have not careful people ceased to exist?"
30611Is n''t he a sturdy, stirring lad, Ma''am?"
30611Is not this true of all unreasoning love and self- devotion?
30611Is the parson goin''to marry, or is n''t he?
30611Is the reader sure of his ribs and waistcoat- buttons?
30611Is the road pretty good?"
30611It is your_ kismet_; it is Fate; and what am I, to resist Destiny?
30611It sallies, it returns, but here is the fruition; for is not the seal- flesh dinner there, nicely and neatly bestowed on the floor?
30611Jenny rose in wrath, and cried out to the surpliced official of the Lord,--"Thou foul thief, wilt thou say mass at my lug?"
30611Johns?"
30611Just as I rose to go, he said to me,--"Mossa, could you hab de great kin''ness to come out to de quarters to see Peter?"
30611Long ago when you cried in the nest, The last of the sickly brood, Scarcely a pin- feather warming your breast, Who was it brought you food?
30611Now what is flattery?
30611Now,"said he, with a smile,"do n''t you think you use up six pins you formerly used only one?
30611O sailors, did sweet eyes look after you, The day you sailed away from sunny Spain?
30611Of what benefit is a mine of love burning where it warms nobody, does nothing but blister the soul within with its imprisoned heat?
30611Oh,_ is_ der any Lord?"
30611Oh,_ is_ dey,_ is_ dey, Mossa?"
30611One of them was heard to mutter, indignantly,--"Why de Cunnel order_ Cease firing_, when de Secesh blazin''away at de rate ob ten dollar a day?"
30611Pray, where were you reared, that you are capable of so discourteous a supposition?
30611Reader, do you ever say,"Whew- w- w"?
30611Reuben only rebelled, with the mischief of a boy:--"What for do you call papa Doctor?
30611Shall we be tortured with the knowledge that some poor babe we looked upon only for an hour is wearing out ages of suffering?
30611She was a great favorite at the factory, and why should not the factory be as great a favorite with her?
30611Sir, I ask you, will you believe_ this_?
30611The clerk, however, took him his salary as usual, and on entering his room said,"Have you heard the news?
30611The tears came into her eyes; but her mother looked up, in her cool, business- like way, and said, in her dry voice,--"''Jane, what''s the matter?''
30611Then yon''s for the fowks, I reckon?"
30611There never, never was such a home!--everybody there did just what they wanted to, did n''t they, Chris?--and we love each other, do n''t we?"
30611Think you could foot it that fur?"
30611To him who, deadly hurt, agen Flashed on afore the charge''s thunder, Tippin''with fire the bolt of men Thet rived the Rebel line asunder?
30611To the right of the large, neat, comfortable mission- house is a wretched, squalid spatter and hotch- potch of-- what in the world to call them?
30611To_ me_, Mossa?
30611Well now how d''y''allow to git there?"
30611What has happened?"
30611What is the best route, then?"
30611What is the use of people''s loving each other in this horridly cold, stingy, silent way?
30611What room shall there be for other affections, what room for other memories, than those of''the Lamb that was slain''?
30611What was to be done next?
30611What wonder that religion took a harsh aspect?
30611What would one have more?
30611What, indeed, can be said in the face of affliction, where the manner of the sufferer seems to say,"God has done it, and God does all things well"?
30611What_ can_ they want with pies at 54?
30611When do you propose going?"
30611When the collar was attached to the shirt, it served for a much longer time; what but cheapness and convenience can tempt to such wastefulness now?
30611Where d''y''b''long?"
30611Where the Devil''s that?"
30611Where''s Peace?
30611Who brought the news?"
30611Who is it?''
30611Who said,"Cherries, grow ripe and big, Black and ripe for this bird of mine"?
30611Who said,"Music, come fill his throat, Or ever the May be fled"?
30611Who shall dare to say that they can be?
30611Who was it loved the wee sweet note And the bosom''s sea- shell red?
30611Who''s to mind Reuben in meetin''?
30611Who''s to prevent him a- breakin''all the hymn- books that belong to the parish?
30611Why do n''t ye tak''yer coorse?"
30611Why not stay North and buy them?
30611Why, Miss, do you know that your sex are carrying about them some thousands of tons of brass and steel in the shape of these skirts?
30611Why, ha''n''t I held''em on my knee?
30611Will he become post- Adamite, a man to whom ideas are realities?
30611Will he come with me, Esther?"
30611Will he outgrow himself?
30611You remind me of our poor little duck: do n''t you remember him?"
30611You robin up in the cherry- tree, Singing your soul away, Great is the grief befallen me, And how can you be so gay?
30611_ You_ may grow saintly by self- sacrifice; but do your husband and children grow saintly by accepting it without return?
30611_ is_ dat true, dat dem dere Abolitionists is a- comin''down here to save us,--to redeem us, Mossa?
30611he replied,"No, Sir; pray are you?"
30611how came they ever to be married?
30611how can I tell you?"
30611or would they turn out more work in a week, if attended by a man than by a girl?"
30611or"How does the Squire mean to vote?"
30611said the monk,"so you have been a liar, too, have you?"
30611says the dame;"what about the parson?"
30611she repeated, with frantic impetuosity,"Is it my husband or my son?
30611she said, with a half- frightened look,--"what makes you say so?
30611what does it all mean?"
30611what is this now?
30611what''s an apple or two?"
30611what_ has_ happened?
30611when, where, and how?"
30611which of them?"
30611why?
30611why?"
38892Why ask me to come and see this? 38892 ''Does a farmer plough the sea?'' 38892 ''Does he eat the ground?'' 38892 ''Does the ground plough the farmer?'' 38892 ''What does a farmer do?'' 38892 ''What does he plough?'' 38892 ''Who ploughs the ground?'' 38892 ),( 1468-? 38892 ),( 1469- 1529? 38892 ),( 1470-? 38892 --Is the rainbow very hot on the roof of that house?"
38892--"The dog talks, does he not?"
388922- 17 stand on the tables of stone?
38892Among other works of importance he wrote_ Wo lag das Paradies?_( 1881), and_ Babel und Bibel_( 1902, 1903, Eng.
38892And can we regard the prohibition of polytheism and the prohibition of idolatry as one commandment?
38892Can we take the preface as a separate"word"?
38892DAY, JOHN( 1574- 1640?
38892For a spoken word to be"natural"in this sense it must be onomatopoetic, and what infinitesimal percentage of English words are such?
38892GIOVANNI DELLA ROBBIA( 1460- 1529?)
38892He had already during his father''s lifetime distinguished himself by defeating Alexander of Epirus at Derdia and so saving Macedonia( about 260?).
38892How were the ten words disposed on the two tables?
38892In 1608 Day published two comedies,_ Law Trickes, or Who Would have Thought it?_ and_ Humour out of Breath_.
38892Is it not I the Lord?"
38892It remains to ask, What is the history and significance of the deluge- myth?
38892Shamash, who can cross it?''
38892The name[ Greek: Ioulô](?
38892This suggests that Noah(?)
38892We were often asked by our deaf playmates in our childhood such questions( in signs) as"What does the cat say?"
38892What are we to say of Africa, where only 100 pupils are being taught; of South America, with its paltry 200, and Australia''s 300?
38892_ Education.__ History._[2]--"Who hath made man''s mouth?
38892or who maketh a man dumb, or deaf, or seeing, or blind?
38892the sun- god) has crossed the sea; besides(?)
38892|+------+-------+------------+-------------+------------+||||| Girolamo Luca Paolo Giovanni Marco( 1488- 1566),( 1475- 1550?
39114Are you twenty- one years old?
39114Do you live in this city?
39114(_ Another_ horse?
39114A quaint title, dear reader, is it not?
39114At last one day in an agony of despair I exclaimed,"Where, O where can humbugged humanity find a decent place to feed?"
39114Damphool says my concluding quotation is not strictly correct, but what does he know about it?
39114Do you have good liquor up there?
39114Do you wish to make the acquaintance of Doesticks?
39114How''s your wife?
39114Inspector asks--"Are you a voter?"
39114Inspector hurried to the rescue, and put the test question:"Do you vote for Hoggs?"
39114Is he a malicious, unscrupulous conspirator?
39114Now, if Croton water interferes with my susceptible system in this unaccountable manner, what shall I drink?
39114There, is n''t that_ some_?
39114What are you about?
39114What can I have done to provoke his ire?
39114What is your comparative situation?
39114What kind of a fellow is Burnham?
39114What right has Mayor Wood to come in and upset ancient customs with his new- fangled notions?
39114What would be the effect of brandy and water without any water, and a little lemon?
39114Will somebody answer Bull Dogge?
39114and the ferocious reptiles of fabulous size shrink into a couple of exaggerated angleworms?
39114and what if the two ladies before mentioned are resplendent in sky- blue dresses and yellow turbans?
39114you imagined it a fish pole?
38636Does he?
38636Mabel, what do you mean? 38636 Mabel,"he said to her,"did you pick my flowers?"
38636Papa, what did grandma send me?
38636Papa,said Mabel,"did you see a monkey in town?"
38636Where is Little Joe?
38636A little door is hid in the boughs, A face is hiding within; When birds are silent and oxen drowse, Why should a maiden spin?
38636After all, what did it matter that Little Joe was dead?
38636And how long, he asks, would the country support a policy of blood and iron?
38636And what would England do if, taking advantage of these revolts, a great European power should declare war against her?
38636But there is only a little carbonate of lime in oats, and from whence could this 409 grains of the rocky material have been derived?
38636But what could the fleet do against an enemy invading India by land?
38636Did you pick my flowers?
38636Did you pick my flowers?"
38636How are they to secure a reduction?
38636I''m so tired- like, an''my heart''s so empty for the child; an''you''ll say''God''s will be done,''wo n''t ye, achora?
38636If, after reading one of her poems carefully, we sometimes have to ask"What does she mean by that?"
38636Jim, Jim, do n''t you know your own Winnie?"
38636Might this be, asks Father Cahier, a way of expressing the fact that the saint had banished Arianism from amongst his people?
38636Now, where does the hen procure this substance with which to form the shell?
38636Of what use was it against the Boers or against Cetywayo?
38636Of what use would it be against even a very inferior fleet that used torpedos as the Russians did on the Danube?
38636P. 242,"Asinara(?)"
38636Protus, exiled at first to the island of Asinara(?)
38636SAINT MELLON( Mélon,_ Mellonus_,_ Mallonus_,_ Mello_,_ Melanius_?)
38636Shall it no more be spoken on Eire''s fertile plain?
38636Shall not her sons aspire no more to rend the iron chain, And light the fires of freedom that smouldered in its train?
38636Sure, how can I bear at all, at all, to listen to ye sobbin''like that?"
38636Then why are you so sad?
38636There in my hand it lay: Who could say How from the depths of the ocean calm It rose, and slid itself into my palm?
38636Was there ever a sweeter or gentler rebuke?
38636Was this story the legend or the consequence of an invocation of Saint Pirmin against unwholesome drinks?
38636What metre is it?
38636What would England do if upon two or three of these territories revolts should come simultaneously?
38636What would she have done in 1857 if Russia had been in a position to give assistance to Nana Saïb?
38636Where can England get that army?
38636Who can tell the number that have been rescued from a life of crime through his ministrations?
38636Why are you so sad?
38636Why did you die?
38636Will it be a triumph?
38636Would even the Whigs go through with it for two sessions?
38636You did n''t give him anything did you?"
38636Your troubles are all over, you''re at rest with God on high; But we''re slaves and we''re orphans, Owen!--why did you die?"
38636why did you die?
38636why did you leave us, Owen?
38636why did you leave us, Owen?
39617Do you put tricks upon''s with savages and men of Inde?
39617May I ask,says Col- o- gog( J. H. Stoddart),"in the word_ lie_, what vowel do you use, sir,_ i_ or_ y_?"
39617What hempen homespuns have we swaggering here?
39617Have we a Sheridan among us?
39617Have we no follies here to be redressed?
39617Later the King cries:"Sergeant- at- arms, say, what alarms the crowd; Loud noise annoys us; why is it allowed?"
39617No crimes confessed?
39617No vices gibbeted?
39617The celebrated''Is it the King?''
39617Thus speaks_ one_ critic-- hear_ another''s_ creed:_ Fashion!_ What''s here?
39617What right have I, whose temperament and mode of thinking are dissimilar to yours, to denounce your exposition of such a puzzle as Hamlet?
39617When the historians disagree in this confusing way, who can possibly decide?
39617from a_ woman''s_ pen?
39617or is he still twenty years away?
31130Alone?
31130Are n''t you bad hurt, Lewis?
31130Are you not sleepy, brother?
31130Bad hurt?
31130Ca n''t you get him?
31130Can we get to Annawan by night?
31130Can you keep going?
31130Captain Boone, he tell you to come steal our hosses?
31130Cómo''stà ¡( How are you)? 31130 D''ye hear, Jack?
31130Did she get there?
31130Did you make it, Sam?
31130Do you know Captain Stuart?
31130Do you know my name, sir? 31130 Do you want to rest the horses, lieutenant?"
31130Eh, Bat?
31130Have the men had their coffee?
31130Hoss tief, hey? 31130 How do?
31130How far now, Cap?
31130How far''ve we come, you think?
31130How far, you think?
31130How many are there with him?
31130How many miles is it to the spot where you left him?
31130How many out there, Andy?
31130How many soldiers are there in Kentucky?
31130How many, Cap?
31130How many?
31130How?
31130Hurt much?
31130Hurt you much, Hallowell?
31130Hurt, Hallowell?
31130Hurt, Logan?
31130Indians, are n''t they?
31130Jenny Stupe( or did he really say:Jenny, stoop!"?
31130Old woman, hand me my razor, will you?
31130Out with you? 31130 Really got him, have you?
31130See? 31130 Shall I pull it out?"
31130Shall we leave''em and ferry ourselves over on the raft?
31130Sure?
31130To- night, huh?
31130Vat kind a disease iss der matter mit de hosses, hey?
31130Want to?
31130What company have you come from last?
31130What do you want?
31130What have you for supper?
31130What in thunder are those vagabonds down yonder fooling about?
31130What is it, Hallowell, old fellow?
31130What is your mind, in the matter?
31130What is your name?
31130What makes you shrug your shoulders so, captain?
31130What news now?
31130What news?
31130What next?
31130What they doing now, Cap?
31130What they doing now, Cap?
31130What they doing?
31130What they up to, next, I wonder?
31130What will they do with me there?
31130What''ll we do, then?
31130What''s that?
31130What''s the best thing to do, then?
31130What''s the matter, Cap?
31130What''s wrong?
31130What''s your fee, Doc?
31130What? 31130 Where from?"
31130Where now?
31130Where were you going when I seized you?
31130Where''s Rebecca? 31130 Whereabouts?"
31130Who are you? 31130 Who are you?"
31130Who says I lie?
31130Who will go with me to rescue Burr Harrison?
31130Who will go with me to rescue Burr Harrison?
31130Who''s loaded?
31130Why did you risk your one shot?
31130Why did you shoot your brother?
31130Why so? 31130 Will you have cow beef or horse beef?"
31130Will you let Captain Logan go alone?
31130You are n''t? 31130 You make good cabin?
31130You see that little knoll yonder?
31130A fight?
31130A race it was to be, with his scalp the prize?
31130A trick?
31130After a time the lieutenant changed his tune, to remark:"What''s the matter with the buffalo?
31130Again reprieved?
31130And how many men are there in Fort McIntosh?"
31130And still--"What ails the rascals?"
31130And what then?
31130Are you men, to let a comrade be butchered?"
31130Big rascal, hey?
31130Boone?
31130But could he make it, when all the surrounding country was being watched by the Shawnee scouts?
31130But how could they help him?
31130But the next morning, where were the Shawnees?
31130But what to do?
31130But what was that?
31130But when they four had reached a view- point, and had their glasses out, the lieutenant calmly asked:"What did you see, Frank?"
31130But why did n''t you go with ma?"
31130But why?
31130Ca n''t you tell buff''ler from reds?
31130Could the Indians hold off and see the water enter the fort-- see their prey enter, unharmed?
31130Could the blamed thing possibly stand fire?
31130Did I marry a coward?"
31130Did he do it?
31130Did he not mingle with them, and eat as they ate, and sleep as they slept, and appear perfectly satisfied?
31130Did n''t we come it over''em proper?"
31130Did the fellow intend to talk all night?
31130Did you see how little Jack uses his left hand?"
31130Do you take me for a child?
31130Evidently his ambush was a success, so far, else why had these women come into his very arms, for water?
31130Had Captain Boggs really been captured?
31130Had he come so far, merely to be taken at last?
31130Had she been hit?
31130Had the Indians given up?
31130Had the enemy gone in earnest-- or might it be a feint, an ambush?
31130Had their cannon come?
31130Had they been saved?
31130Had they seen?
31130Have I spoken well?"
31130He had faint memory of two companions-- knew their names, or thought that he did; but where were they?
31130He was safe-- but was he?
31130He will be, by mornin''; but what difference to him whether he''s layin''atop the ground or under the ground?
31130Hey?
31130Hey?
31130Hey?"
31130How about water?
31130How are my wife and children?"
31130How could it know?
31130How do?"
31130How had they come, and from where?
31130How many lurked in the thicket?
31130How many might be spared from the feeble garrison?
31130How were his family?
31130How you like tief?
31130How''d you get away?
31130How''ll we get over?
31130How- do, brudder?"
31130If I had thought such a thing that he says, would I have been foolish enough to say it to him?
31130If I surrender, you treat me well?
31130Know how?"
31130Listen?
31130Miamis?"
31130Must he die at the stake?
31130N- no?
31130No hurt?"
31130Now what to do?
31130Now, what is the American force in Kentucky?
31130One rascal white man, hey?"
31130Or a trap?
31130Or did n''t they care?
31130Pretty soon--"How far now, Cap?"
31130Say, you are n''t going to leave me?"
31130See that Shawnee scalp?
31130See that fellow glidin''like a snake?
31130See the brush shake?
31130Shall we make a running fight, Chapman?"
31130She appealed to her husband:"Are you a coward, too?
31130Should he be killed?
31130Steal Injun''s hoss, hey?
31130Surrender to you, you yaller varmints?"
31130The Sioux were out of sight; there were no sounds of pursuit; was it possible that they had been let off?
31130The cannon?
31130The only point to be discussed was, how should he die?
31130Then why did n''t they hasten on, if they were in a hurry to join Crazy Horse and Sitting Bull, and share in the plunder to be gained from the fights?
31130Then why should I have told my thoughts to him, as he says?
31130They entered Mexico; all were liable to arrest, but who cared?
31130They had avoided two outposts; were there others, still?
31130They had gone; or had n''t they?
31130They knew it well; had they not worked hard here, when bound for the Columbia in the summer of 1805?
31130Troops were coming?
31130Was he down?
31130Was he fatally hurt?
31130Was he going to escape?
31130Was he going to talk again-- and daylight so near?
31130Was he searching?
31130Was he to be eaten alive, like a deer?
31130Was it to be another day of stress?
31130Was n''t that reasonable?
31130Was she down?
31130Were they actually saved?
31130Whar be ye?"
31130Whar''s the rascals that stole all my plunder?"
31130What could they few do?
31130What did it have around it?
31130What did they fear?
31130What do you think?"
31130What had happened?
31130What is it?"
31130What kind of a man is he-- how did he look?"
31130What next?
31130What of the cowardly Tutelu?
31130What was that?
31130What was that?
31130What was the matter?
31130What, indeed?
31130What, then?
31130What?
31130What?
31130What?
31130When?"
31130Where from?"
31130Where live, fat boy?"
31130Where live?"
31130Where was Kit Carson?
31130Where were the reinforcements?
31130Whether they had been seen, who might tell?
31130White boys?
31130Who are they?
31130Who do you aim to be?"
31130Who goes there?"
31130Who might say?
31130Who might tell?
31130Who more willing to act the spy than the happy- go- lucky young giant, fair- haired Simon Kenton alias Butler?
31130Who now wanted him to live?
31130Who''ll go and fetch it on the run?"
31130Who''ll go with me?"
31130Who''ll slip away and break for Lexington?"
31130Who''ll take the back trail?
31130Who''s afraid of the old men?
31130Why had he not been killed before?
31130Why send us out?
31130Why?"
31130Women?
31130Would he make it?
31130Would the Madison save him?
31130Would the store hold out?
31130Would they make it?
31130Would they never quit?
31130Would you cheat us out of him, when the people ahead are expecting great pleasure?"
31130You''d send the women out, to those tomahawks?"
31130You?
31130he said,"Which are you most afraid of: me, or those Indians?"
2805A wound, I suppose?
2805Am I badly hurt, Dan?
2805Am I to go with you, sah?
2805Am dey all gone, sah?
2805And I s''pose the moon will show de way at night, massa?
2805And how came you to enter the army, Tony?
2805And how shall I know your ship?
2805And is he much hurt, sir?
2805And now you are going to be with us for three months, Vincent?
2805And now, doctor, what am I in debt to you? 2805 And when are you thinking of getting married, Vincent?"
2805And who do you suppose all those men are?
2805And who is this officer, Lucy?
2805And wo n''t you let me pay for the man''s passage, captain? 2805 And you want to get out of the way without questions being asked, I understand?"
2805Any news?
2805Anyting de matter, sah?
2805Are they all like this?
2805Are we allowed to bring a servant with us?
2805Are you awake, Marse Wingfield?
2805Are you the same officer, sir, who escaped from Elmira?
2805Are you thinking of going out to the Orangery again soon, mother?
2805Are you using that sailing- boat of yours at present, Harry? 2805 But I thought you had made up your mind that you would rather stop at home, Vincent?"
2805But has Petersburg fallen?
2805But how do they live, Dan?
2805But how ever did you both get through the lines? 2805 But how we find de York River, massa?
2805But supposing they wo n''t work at all, even for wages, Vincent?
2805But where are the others?
2805But why should he? 2805 By the way, do you know where his clothes were sent to?"
2805Ca n''t you do something for me, Sam Smith? 2805 Ca n''t you see he is breathing, and did you not hear him groan when I examined his side?
2805Can I see Dinah, sah?
2805Can you spare me two hours now?
2805Cucumbers to- day, sah? 2805 Did either of you girls put it away, or where can it have been stowed?"
2805Did you tell him that, now?
2805Dinah,Vincent said,"has your boy gone to bed?"
2805Do n''t you know me, aunts?
2805Do n''t you know nobody is allowed to pass through the lines?
2805Do n''t you see we are dying of curiosity?
2805Do you know what train he went by?
2805Do you remember, about a month ago, a man named Pearson being here?
2805Do you see that little black thing two miles ahead of us? 2805 Do you suppose we are going to give in to five men?
2805Do you suppose, sir,Mrs. Wingfield asked angrily,"that I am the sort of person to give shelter to runaway slaves?"
2805Do you think that boy is as foolish as he seems?
2805Do you want a meal? 2805 Doctor,"she said,"I want you to come out to see some one who is very ill.""What is the matter with him?
2805Got a neighbor''s patch handy, eh?
2805Greenbacks, I suppose?
2805Hab you brought de stuff?
2805Hallo, you sir, what the deuce are you doing here?
2805Have I been asleep long?
2805Have you any idea where he went when he left here?
2805Have you any news for us?
2805Have you fixed upon any plan?
2805Have you got him?
2805How am dat, how am dat?
2805How are you getting on, lads? 2805 How are you, Tony?"
2805How did Jonas take his dismissal, mother?
2805How did you miss the straight road?
2805How do you think you would be able to find your way a dark night like this? 2805 How far are we from the mouth of the York River?"
2805How far is it to Porter''s?
2805How have you got on?
2805How long dis go on, you tink, sah?
2805How long will it be, doctor, do you think?
2805How shall we find our way back, Massa Vincent?
2805How you get dem?
2805I am ready to aid you in any way I can,the sheriff said when he concluded;"but the question is, where has the fellow got to?
2805I suppose that''s what you carried the clothes in?
2805I wonder what those two fellows are talking about?
2805Is he dead, sah?
2805Is it Tony, sah; for de Lord''s sake, is it Tony?
2805Is it about a lady?
2805Is she older than you, Vincent?
2805Is that so?
2805Is that so?
2805Is that you, Longmore? 2805 Is the general in?"
2805Is there anything else you will want? 2805 It does n''t make much difference what a man is in a surgeon''s eyes, Dan; the question is how badly he is hurt, and what can be done for him?
2805Mother,he said,"can you put me up for a couple of days?
2805Mr. Renfrew,he said,"I want some money; can you lend it me?"
2805Not much to look at, are they? 2805 Now which way, Vincent?
2805Now, Dan, what is the next move?
2805Now, Miss Kingston, which do you think is our best course? 2805 Now, Vincent, what offer do you make for the letter?
2805Now, gentlemen,the auctioneer said,"surely you are not going to let this desirable piece of property go for seven fifty?
2805Now, then, what do you want?
2805Oh, that''s it, is it?
2805Plantation liquor?
2805Sergeant Newson, am you dere?
2805Shall I go, sah?
2805Shall we make some broth for him?
2805Shall we take de horses, sah?
2805To wait for what?
2805Union or not Union, I mean to talk it, and I want to know who is going to prevent me?
2805Want to get through the lines, eh?
2805Was Lee''s force all engaged yesterday?
2805Was he always alone, or did he have many people here to see him?
2805Was he, sir? 2805 We want to know whether she has seen her husband since the day of his flight from the plantation?"
2805Well, Dan, have you obtained any news?
2805Well, Dan, what''s your news?
2805Well, what is it, sergeant?
2805Well, what is the piece of news?
2805What am I to do, Chloe?
2805What am you going to do, Miss Lucy?
2805What are they going to do that for?
2805What are you doing here?
2805What are you laughing at?
2805What are you spying about here?
2805What do you say, Chloe?
2805What do you want for them, boy?
2805What for?
2805What had we better do, Vincent?
2805What has happened, nurse?
2805What have you been doing to that fellow Andrew Jackson?
2805What is it, Chloe?
2805What is it, Dan?
2805What is it, stranger?
2805What is the thing? 2805 What is your name, sir, and who are you?"
2805What is your news, Dan?
2805What name?
2805What o''clock is it, mother?
2805What on earth do you want money for? 2805 What on earth do you want to buy a slave for?
2805What ought we to ask for these?
2805What plantation liquor like?
2805What sort of thing?
2805What will you do?
2805What''s it like?
2805What''s the matter, Dan? 2805 What, have n''t you got one now?"
2805When did he come to you?
2805When do you leave for the front, Captain Wingfield?
2805When we going on, sah?
2805Where are the girls, mother?
2805Where are you going to, and where have you come from?
2805Where do you come from, lad?
2805Where have we get to now, sah?
2805Where is he now?
2805Where is it, mother?
2805Who are you, sir?
2805Who is it?
2805Why did n''t he come on board before I started?
2805Why did you not bring him in?
2805Why did you not cross by the bridge?
2805Why did you not tell me that you wanted the money instead of going to Mr. Renfrew? 2805 Why should you not stay here till then, Mr. Wingfield?
2805Why you not leave dem black clothes behind, sah? 2805 Why, Vincent, where on earth have you been all this time?"
2805Will any one else make an offer?
2805Will you take him?
2805Will you take your letter again?
2805You are a Confederate?
2805You are not going away again to- night, Vincent, surely?
2805You are unwounded, sir?
2805You belong to the cavalry?
2805You ca n''t find out wher his luggage was checked for?
2805You did n''t s''pose I was coming along shouting and whistling, Sergeant Newson? 2805 You do n''t know where he went to from here, I suppose?"
2805You do n''t know whether he has any friends anywhere in the Confederacy to whom he would be likely to go?
2805You do n''t think my patient would ill- treat his slaves?
2805You do not think there is any probability of the ultimate success of our cause?
2805You have got promoted?
2805You have got your six- shooters with you, I suppose, because you are as likely as not to have to use them?
2805You have no idea, I suppose, Dan, as to which way he is likely to go?
2805You know what the consequence would be if you were caught?
2805You mean he is a negro?
2805You remember taking some tings to station for a tall man wid gray goatee, Pomp?
2805Am I not wounded?"
2805And it was you who beat that man and threw his revolver out of the window?
2805And now what can I do for you, sir?
2805And what should he say now when the negro wrote to claim her?
2805And you, Lucy, do you think you could care for me?"
2805Are you going to get rid of it at Camden to- morrow?"
2805Are you one of them?"
2805At last Vincent, who had been half an hour without speaking, said:"Are you sorry our journey is just over, Lucy?"
2805Been fighting-- eh?
2805Besides, what can I do in a town?
2805But how in the world did you two manage to travel alone all that distance and get through the Federal lines?"
2805But is not your brother here?
2805But, in the first place, which line do you mean to take?"
2805Ca n''t you manage to bring me a little here?"
2805Can you let me have the money?
2805Did I not hear a few months since that you bought Wildfire?
2805Did any one ever see such a bare place?"
2805Did you ever tell the people you lodged with anything about the disguise?"
2805Do n''t you think so, Ada?"
2805Do you know the plantation of Mr. Furniss, on the Pamunkeyunky, near Coal harbor?"
2805Do you know what has become of him since he left you?"
2805Do you mean to keep it here or move it higher up the river, where it would be more handy for you, perhaps?"
2805Do you not know that I love you?"
2805Do you want to buy any?
2805Does n''t ye want any fowl?"
2805Ef dose slave- hunters ca n''t find people in de swamps what chance you tink dose soldiers have?
2805Furniss said in surprise;"what treachery has he been guilty of?
2805Has no one got a full canteen?"
2805Has your servant got any warm water?"
2805Have we your permission to see this woman and to question her?"
2805Have you a rifle, Captain Wingfield?"
2805Have you got proof of what you say?"
2805Have you heard of any more of my old chums being killed since I was taken prisoner at Antietam?"
2805Have you seen him?"
2805How about the others?"
2805How am de prisoner?"
2805How are all the old house hands, and how is Dinah?
2805How are they getting on?
2805How did you manage it?"
2805How does it feel now?"
2805How far have you brought this despatch, sir?"
2805How far is it away?"
2805How far is it from the next bridge on the south, and are there any Federal troops there?"
2805How is the battle going on?
2805How long ago did this happen?"
2805How much do you want?"
2805How was that?"
2805However, as to the boat, can you give me instructions where to find it, and is it light enough for two men to carry?"
2805I suppose it''s in the water?"
2805I suppose she could get another?"
2805I suppose they will sell the baby too?"
2805I suppose you did not keep it many days?"
2805I suppose, doctor, I can be moved at once?"
2805If I do not come back to- night, can you find any one you can trust to take this piece of paper round to Richmond?
2805In that case how would he manage to approach him, and what means would he use to direct the attention of the sentries in another direction?
2805Is anything the matter?"
2805Is there anything I can do?"
2805Me say to him,''Can you read?''
2805Mrs. Wingfield exclaimed, starting up,"what has happened to you?
2805My dear child, where have you sprung from?"
2805Now is there anything I can do?
2805Now, Maria, who has got boats that have n''t been taken?"
2805Now, gentlemen, what shall we say for this desirable lot?"
2805Now, is there anything as I can do to help you?"
2805Now, mister, may I ask where you have come from and where you are going to?"
2805Now, sir, what do you think of the look- out?"
2805Now, what are your ideas as to the roads?"
2805Now, where are the clothes?"
2805Or is it him or her?"
2805Pretty well I hope?"
2805Shall we Chloe?"
2805She has told you, I hope, that she has been good enough to promise to be my wife some day?"
2805So you fought under Jackson and Stuart, did you?
2805So you managed to cheat the Yankees altogether?"
2805The captain appeared at the side and shouted to the boat now but fifty yards away:"What do you want there?"
2805The first question is-- where are we to get a boat?
2805The question is, What is to become of you?
2805The question is-- how are we to get across?"
2805Upon what day do you sail?"
2805Vincent paid him the amount, saying carelessly,"I think I have plenty of time to catch the train for the east?"
2805Vincent''s question,"Dinah, where are you?"
2805Well, do you feel ready for your breakfast?"
2805Well, have you done now?"
2805Well, what success have you had?"
2805What are you dressed up like that for?
2805What are you going to do with him if you get him free?
2805What are you looking at?"
2805What be they a- doing?
2805What can I do for you?"
2805What can I gib you?"
2805What day do you say they got here?"
2805What dey say to you?
2805What do you say?
2805What does he say, ma''am?
2805What good take dem wid you?"
2805What hab you to do wid one side or do oder?"
2805What has happened?"
2805What have you got left, Dan?"
2805What have you got to say to the charge?"
2805What is this?"
2805What made you take those two darkies along with you?
2805What money have you left?"
2805What on earth can have influenced you to act in such a mad- brained way?"
2805What on earth have you done that for?"
2805What shall you do now?"
2805What sort of lines are they?
2805What sort of man is Johnston?
2805What was de man like?"
2805What was de name of dat man, sah, you was speaking of?"
2805What would you have done, Vincent?"
2805What you want ob dem?
2805What''s the matter between you?"
2805When did you arrive from the front?"
2805When will you start?"
2805Where does your mother live, boy?"
2805Where have you sprung from, and when did you arrive?"
2805Where you come from?"
2805Whereber you get dat spirit?"
2805Which do you advise?"
2805Who is she, and what is she like?"
2805Who would you like to take?
2805Wildfire was not hurt, I hope?"
2805Will de compass tell you dat?"
2805Will you be good enough to tell me on what day he left?"
2805Will you come and breakfast with me at half- past eight?
2805Will you give me an order for my horse and myself to be taken?"
2805Will you kindly tell me what is de address writ on dis paper?"
2805Wingfield?"
2805You are not a pair of runaway lovers, are you?"
2805You are not hurt, massa?"
2805You are sure you have got everything of value, Miss Kingston?"
2805You do n''t know anything about the name of the place?"
2805You know the place pretty well, do n''t you, Tony?"
2805You like to see him, sah?"
2805You see it yourself, do n''t you, mother?"
2805You will not leave before that, will you?"
2805You will send a line to the old people, major, wo n''t you, and say I died doing my duty?
2805and if you want it, why do n''t you ask your mother for it?
2805and they are after you?"
2805and what is it you want me for?"
2805are we for duty, captain?"
2805did you discover at last that he was a scamp?"
2805the woman exclaimed;"what do you want to do that for?"
40558May I carry it away?
40558Glover[?]
39068Did he preach-- did he pray? 39068 Why?"
39068''To whom?''
39068Are there such sights yet?
39068But how was he to do this?
39068Can no generous giver be found who will contribute the money necessary to bring the east window from London?...
39068Do you believe you could bear that patiently?
39068Does Isaac take learning freely?
39068Has he become fond of school?"
39068He called his place"Sherwood Forest,"with grim humor; for was he not an outlaw, in the opinion of the Whigs, just as really as was Robin Hood?
39068How does she improve in her writing and reading?
39068Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
39068It is an easy thing to correct this fault, and unless you do so, how can you be fit for law business?"
39068Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view-- And what could you, what should you, what would you do?
39068Shall it appeal in vain?"
39068Soon after I went in Mrs. V. says,''Well, Mr. Johns, what say you to a ride below with me, and bringing Miss Nancy up?''
39068The future President asked himself,"What is the best thing for dinner?"
39068The outspoken preacher replied, so that every one could hear:"What is that if General Jackson has come in?
39068Then came the question,"Where do you live?"
39068Then came the strange marriage scene:"Can this be Martha Hilton?
39068What is it that gentlemen wish?
39068What was the explanation of the father''s changed attitude to his son that led him to make his bequest in such unpleasant terms?
39068What would they have?
39068What, no?
39068Who could withstand such a lover?
39068Why do you go looking so?
39068Why in such rash attempts engage As they can ne''er perform?"
39068Why stand here idle?
39068Will you have the goodness to send me some seed, both of the water and musk melons?"
39068Would it be in the paper which his father had in his hand as he seated himself before the fire?
39068afraid of what?
39068of death?
39068she asked;"because I am afraid?
39568Ought religion to be supported by law?
39568To what,asked Jay,"did this solemn, emphatic, unqualified asservation refer?
39568What grievances are the slaves, under the encouragement of the society, to petition Congress to redress? 39568 What slaves are intended by the resolution?
39568Who are the_ coloured friends_ alluded to?
39568Would a division of the Union be politic?
39568Would it be politic to encourage manufactures in the United States?
39568And are the Southern slaves, sir, accustomed to receive periodicals by mail?
39568And can we believe that if abolitionists would not then refrain from voting for the party, they will now consent to vote against it?
39568And in what way was our most execrable attempt made?
39568Are they unworthy of Christians and of republicans?
39568But how are they to be converted?
39568By secret agents, traversing the slave country in disguise, stealing by night into the hut of the slave, and reading to him our inflammatory appeals?
39568Did he mean to deceive his own party?
39568Did he then know that there was a foot of territory in the United States over which it was morally and physically impossible to extend slavery?
39568Is it to be redeemed by sending among them secret or avowed agents?
39568Is it true conservatism to obliterate in the masses the sense of justice, the feelings of humanity, the distinction between right and wrong?"
39568Some of the subjects discussed were:"Ought infidels to be excluded from office?"
39568The experiment failed, but by whose fault?
39568Was he promising in these impressive terms to oppose what he was conscious would never be attempted?
39568Was he then acquainted with the law of physical geography which would render the Proviso''a re- enactment of the will of God?''
39568Will you enable me to insure the convention of that consent?
39568Would any one believe that I am a master of slaves of my own purchase?
39720And why not?
39720And why should they be exasperated at all?
39720And, if deportation should prove impossible, what system could be devised whereby the two races could dwell together peacefully?
39720As we are more than forty- six years distant from our own Civil War, is it not incumbent on Northerners to endeavor to see the Southern side?
39720Every township will want its home regiment; every plantation its garrison; and what will be left for its field army?"
39720Free them and make them politically and socially our equals?"
39720How about compensation to owners?
39720It ran:"Do you belong to the rebel band Fighting for your home?"
39720The question was, would this radical idea ultimately dominate the Republican party?
39720The questions for Southern emancipationists were: How could the slaves be freed, and in what time?
39720What next?
39720Where could the freed slaves be sent, and how?
39720Why should Southerners be"fearful"when they were intercepting all the dangerous circulars, etc., they could find?
39720Why should the Southerners of that day go_ wild_ over conduct for which the professor of this era has no word of condemnation?
39720Why should they announce a theory of the Constitution that was so full of dangerous possibilities?
2507A star? 2507 And are n''t they a change to the ditches And tunnels of Poverty Flat?"
2507And how do I like my position?
2507And is n''t it nice to have riches, And diamonds and silks, and all that?
2507And now, in my higher ambition, With whom do I waltz, flirt, or talk?
2507And what do I think of New York?
2507Are we men?
2507But what if you make a mistake?
2507But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom? 2507 But whence,"I cried,"this masquerade?
2507But you''re tried and condemned, And skelping''s your doom,And he paused and he hemmed-- But why this resume?
2507For instance, take some simple word,sez he,"like''separate:''Now who can spell it?"
2507HOW ARE YOU, SANITARY?
2507Have I ever a message to send?
2507How fares my boy,--my soldier boy, Of the old Ninth Army Corps? 2507 How fell he?
2507Is she dead?
2507Let me of my heart take counsel: War is not of life the sum; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the autumn days shall come?
2507Lives she yet?
2507Lives she yet?
2507Lost a day?
2507My name? 2507 No sight?
2507Oh, you ask what that''s for? 2507 SEVENTY- NINE"( MR. INTERVIEWER INTERVIEWED) Know me next time when you see me, wo n''t you, old smarty?
2507Shall we stand here as idle, and let Asia pour Her barbaric hordes on this civilized shore? 2507 THE BABES IN THE WOODS"( BIG PINE FLAT, 1871)"Something characteristic,"eh?
2507The FIRST of June? 2507 The Union,"--that was well enough way up to''66; But this"Re- Union,"maybe now it''s mixed with politics?
2507Then you told her your love?
2507What happens when signals are wrong or switches misplaced?
2507What if,''mid the cannons''thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb?
2507What, sit by the side of a woman as fair as the sun in the sky, And look somewhere else lest the dazzle flash back from your own to her eye? 2507 Who were they?"
2507Why are my eyelids so open and wild?
2507Why, indeed?
2507Why, oh, why?
2507Yes; if not rude, When did you make east longitude?
2507''Twould serve me right if I prattled thus wildly To-- say a sheriff?
2507A race that is not to the swift, a prize that no merits enforce, But is won by some faineant youth, who shall simply walk over the course?
2507A something trembled o''er the well, Bright, spherical-- a tear?
2507AFTER THE ACCIDENT( MOUTH OF THE SHAFT) What I want is my husband, sir,-- And if you''re a man, sir, You''ll give me an answer,-- Where is my Joe?
2507AVITOR( AN AERIAL RETROSPECT) What was it filled my youthful dreams, In place of Greek or Latin themes, Or beauty''s wild, bewildering beams?
2507Ah, is it?
2507Ai n''t I a bad lot, sonny?
2507Ai n''t I funny?
2507Ai n''t she a lamb?
2507All his fond foolish trophies pinned yonder-- a bow from HER hair, A few billets- doux, invitations, and-- what''s this?
2507Am I not right?
2507And Billy?
2507And Echo sez"Where?"
2507And I asks,"Is this Nation a White Man''s, and is generally things on the square?"
2507And I gave her four apples that evening, and took her to ride on my sled, And--"What am I telling you this for?"
2507And I said,"What is written, sweet sister, At the opposite end of the room?"
2507And I''d know why papa shut the door with a slam, And said something funny that sounded like"jam,"And then"Edith-- where are you?"
2507And as dumb we lay, till, through Smoke and flame and bitter cry, Hailed the"Serapis:""Have you Struck your colors?"
2507And is that why?
2507And likewise what''s gone of the Established Church?
2507And must thou, foundling, still forego Thy heritage and high ambition, To lie full lowly and full low, Adjusted to thy new condition?
2507And the question goes round How the thing kem to pass?
2507And then where''ll you be?
2507And week from next is Conference.... You said the twelfth of May?
2507And what did Jones, Lycurgus B., With his known idiosyncrasy?
2507And what do I call you?
2507And what if I try your ideal With something, if not quite so fair, at least more en regle and real?
2507And why?
2507And you have sailed the Spanish Main, And knew my Jacob?...
2507And you want to know my name?
2507And you''ll say that she was a Maltese, and-- what''s that you asked?
2507And"Wot''s this yer yarn of the Major and you?"
2507And-- That''s a peart hoss Thet you''ve got,--ain''t it now?
2507Any complaints to make?
2507Are there no laws,-- Laws to protect such as we?
2507Are they misplaced Clasping or shielding some delicate waist?
2507Are things what they seem?
2507Are things what they seem?
2507Are we left in the lurch?
2507Are you listening?
2507As a child- like diversion?
2507BOBBY Do you know why Aunt Jane is always snarling At you and me because we tells a lie, And she do n''t slap that man that called her darling?
2507BOBBY Do you know why Nurse says it is n''t manners For you and me to ask folks twice for pie, And no one hits that man with two bananas?
2507BOBBY Do you know why they''ve put us in that back room, Up in the attic, close against the sky, And made believe our nursery''s a cloak- room?
2507BOBBY She hurt it-- and that''s why; He made it well, the very way that Mamma Does do to I. JOHNNY I feel so sleepy.... Was that Papa kissed us?
2507Busted hisself in White Pine, and blew out his brains down in''Frisco?
2507But Melican man He washee him pan On BOTTOM side hillee And catchee-- how can?"
2507But WHY?
2507But instead, Who is this leaning forward with glorified head And hands stretched to save?
2507But when he came, with smile and bow, Maud only blushed, and stammered,"Ha- ow?"
2507But, however, I read it-- or how could I quote?
2507Ca n''t a man drop''s glass in yer shop But you must r''ar?
2507Can this be she of haughty mien, The goddess of the sword and shield?
2507Cost?
2507Could it be, Bobby, something that I dropped?
2507Couldst thou not in grace Have borne with us still longer, and so spare The scorn we see in that proud, placid face?
2507Dead?
2507Did I say before That the Fray was a stranger?
2507Did he preach-- did he pray?
2507Did you know Briggs of Tuolumne?
2507Do I wonder and doubt?
2507Do the souls of the dying ever yearn To some favored spot for the dust''s return, For the homely peace of the family urn?
2507Do they ever say that to such people as you?
2507Do you know what that date means?
2507Do you know why?
2507Do you know why?
2507Do you know why?
2507Do you think that he meant that she kissed him?
2507Dost thou answer to my kiss?
2507Dost thou still wonder, and ask why these arms Fill thy soft bosom with tender alarms, Swaying so wickedly?
2507Eh!--are you mad?
2507Eh, little rogue?
2507Eh, what?
2507Eh, you knew HER?
2507Eh?
2507Eh?
2507Eh?
2507FURTHER LANGUAGE FROM TRUTHFUL JAMES( NYE''S FORD, STANISLAUS, 1870) Do I sleep?
2507Fifteen year?
2507For why?
2507For you see the dern cuss had struck--"Water?"
2507Had I fired the magazine?
2507Had angels kind Touched with compassion some weak woman''s breast?
2507Had she found the Anian passage famed, By lying Maldonado claimed, And sailed through the sixty- fifth degree Direct to the North Atlantic Sea?
2507Hain''t got no tongue, hey, hev ye?
2507Has the White Man no country?
2507Hast lost thy ready skill of tongue and pen?
2507Have you Ever seen this Australian Emeu?
2507He called me"daughter,"as he raised his jeweled hand to bless; And then, in thrilling undertones, he asked,"Would I confess?"
2507He came down to the Ford On the very same day Of that lottery drawed By those sharps at the Bay; And he says to me,"Truthful, how goes it?"
2507He still comes to confession-- You''d"like to catch him"?
2507He was that scarred trunk, and she the vine that sweetly Clothed him with life again, and lifted-- SECOND TOURIST Yes; but pray How know you this?
2507He''s gone, and for what?
2507Hot work; eh, Colonel, was n''t it?
2507How dared you get rich-- you great stupid!-- Like papa, and some men that I know, Instead of just trusting to Cupid And to me for your money?
2507How dared you-- how COULD you?
2507How did I get in here?
2507How did she get there?
2507How do you think the man was dressed?
2507How old you think, Senor?
2507How passed the night through thy long waking?"
2507How''s Thompson?
2507I have seen danger?
2507IN THE MISSION GARDEN( 1865) FATHER FELIPE I speak not the English well, but Pachita, She speak for me; is it not so, my Pancha?
2507IN THE TUNNEL Did n''t know Flynn,-- Flynn of Virginia,-- Long as he''s been''yar?
2507If this be the grace He showeth thee Who art His servant, what may we, Strange to His ways and His commands, Seek at His unforgiving hands?"
2507In this brand- new hotel, called"The Lily"( I wonder who gave it that name?)
2507Is it Nye that I doubt?
2507Is our civilization a failure?
2507Is our civilization a failure?
2507Is there naught in the halo of youth but the glow of a passionate race--''Midst the cheers and applause of a crowd-- to the goal of a beautiful face?
2507JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG"HOW ARE YOU, SANITARY?"
2507JOHNNY Do you know why that man that''s got a cropped head Rubbed it just now as if he felt a fly?
2507Jim cursed As the fireman, there in the cab with him, Kinder stared in the face of Jim, And says,"What now?"
2507Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view-- And what could you, what should you, what would YOU do?
2507Kick her?
2507Know the old ford on the Fork, that nearly got Flanigan''s leaders?
2507Know you not what fate awaits you, Or to whom the future mates you?
2507LUKE( IN THE COLORADO PARK, 1873) Wot''s that you''re readin''?--a novel?
2507Little Red Riding- Hood, when in the street, Why do I press your small hand when we meet?
2507Look at it; do n''t it look pooty?
2507Look''ee here, stranger, Whar HEV you been?
2507Lost is that camp and wasted all its fire; And he who wrought that spell?
2507MISS BLANCHE SAYS And you are the poet, and so you want Something-- what is it?--a theme, a fancy?
2507MISS EDITH MAKES ANOTHER FRIEND Oh, you''re the girl lives on the corner?
2507MORAL You see the point?
2507Mary Ellen?
2507Money?
2507Must thou go When the day And the light Need thee so,-- Needeth all, Heedeth all, That is best?
2507NATIONAL JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg?--No?
2507Never in jail before, was you, old blatherskite, say?
2507No, Senor?
2507No?
2507No?
2507No?
2507No?
2507No?
2507No?--just caballero?
2507Not hidden in the drifted snows, But under ink- drops idly spattered, And leaves ephemeral as those That on thy woodland tomb were scattered?
2507Nothing more, did I say?
2507Nothing of that kind, eh?
2507Nothing of that sort, eh?
2507Of course the young lady had beaux by the score, All that she wanted,--what girl could ask more?
2507Oh, why did papa strike pay gravel In drifting on Poverty Flat?
2507Or an innocent"Jack pot"that-- opened-- was to us ez the jaws of the tomb?
2507Or had she found the"River of Kings,"Of which De Fonte told such strange things, In sixteen forty?
2507Or is the Caucasian played out?
2507Or is the Caucasian played out?
2507Or is visions about?
2507Or is visions about?
2507Or shall I go bid him believe in all womankind''s charm, and forget In the light ringing laugh of the world the rattlesnake''s gay castanet?
2507Or shall you walk in the garden with Pancha?
2507P''r''aps Some on you chaps Might know Jim Wild?
2507PENELOPE( SIMPSON''S BAR, 1858) So you''ve kem''yer agen, And one answer wo n''t do?
2507PHILOSOPHER Is this true?
2507PHILOSOPHER Rosa?
2507POET What?
2507POET Who?
2507POET YOU?
2507Quien sabe?
2507Rapid to stay?
2507Really now Did I ever leap like this springald, with Love''s chaplet green on my brow?
2507Rum?
2507See that big man who looked up and bowed?
2507Seest thou these hatchments?
2507Shall I speak of my first love-- Augusta-- my Lalage?
2507Shall I tear out a leaf from my heart, from that book that forever is shut On the past?
2507Shall I tell him first love is a fraud, a weakling that''s strangled in birth, Recalled with perfunctory tears, but lost in unsanctified mirth?
2507Shall I?
2507Shall a youth of noble race In affairs of love give place To a Cooke?"
2507So she asked to know"whar I was hid?"
2507So you thought of the rusty old cabin, The pines, and the valley below, And heard the North Fork of the Yuba As you stood on the banks of the Po?
2507Some figure for to- night''s charade, A Watteau shepherdess or maid?"
2507Speakin''o''gals, d''ye mind that house ez you rise the hill, A mile and a half from White''s, and jist above Mattingly''s mill?
2507Stay one moment: you''ve heard Of Caldwell, the parson, who once preached the word Down at Springfield?
2507Still silent, Stranger?
2507Stop, yes; do you see that chap,-- Him standin''over there, a- hidin''his eyes in his cap?
2507THE GODDESS CONTRIBUTED TO THE FAIR FOR THE LADIES''PATRIOTIC FUND OF THE PACIFIC"Who comes?"
2507Tears upon that painted cheek?
2507Thar is n''t her match in the county; Is thar, old gal,--Chiquita, my darling, my beauty?
2507Thar''s your way, To the left of yon tree; But-- a-- look h''yur, say?
2507That little cuss?
2507That when waltzing she drooped on his breast, and the veins of her eyelids grew dim,''Twas oxygen''s absence she felt, but never the presence of him?
2507That''s its name; And I reckon that you Are a stranger?
2507The Station- Master?
2507The delicate odor of mignonette, The ghost of a dead- and- gone bouquet, Is all that tells of her story; yet Could she think of a sweeter way?
2507The girl interests you?
2507The same?
2507The sentry''s warning cry Rings sharply on the evening air: Who comes?
2507The younger looked up with a smile:"I sat by her side half an hour-- what else was I doing the while?
2507Then I looked up at Nye, And he gazed upon me; And he rose with a sigh, And said,"Can this be?
2507Then a man of affairs?
2507Then said Nye to me,"Injins is pizen: But what is his number, eh, James?"
2507Then why waste your labors, brave hearts and strong men, In tracking a trail to the Copperhead''s den?
2507Thou who now and then Touched the too credulous ear with pathos, canst not speak?
2507To yield our tribute, stamped with Caesar''s face, To Caesar, stricken in the market- place?
2507Twenty years was its age, did you say?
2507Twenty years?
2507Twenty?
2507WHAT THE WOLF REALLY SAID TO LITTLE RED RIDING- HOOD Wondering maiden, so puzzled and fair, Why dost thou murmur and ponder and stare?
2507Was I such an ass?
2507Was ever morn so filled with all things new?
2507Was he blind?
2507Was it a trick?
2507Was it euchre or draw Cut us off in our bloom?
2507Was it faro, whose law Is uncertain ez doom?
2507Was it guile, or a dream?
2507Was it really Augusta?
2507Was it the trick of a sense o''erwrought With outward watching and inward fret?
2507Was the victory lost or won?
2507Well what''ud you give to know?
2507Well, here''s to us: Eh?
2507Well, thar-- Good- by-- No more, sir-- I-- Eh?
2507Well, this yer Jim,-- Did you know him?
2507Well?
2507What had they come to see?
2507What if I told you my own romance?
2507What if conquest, subjugation, Even greater ills become?"
2507What made him sigh, and look up to the sky?
2507What made me launch from attic tall A kitten and a parasol, And watch their bitter, frightful fall?
2507What makes you star'', You over thar?
2507What matters?
2507What might be her cost?
2507What nerves its hands to strike a deadlier blow And hurl its legions on the rebel foe?
2507What of the lady?
2507What recked we then what beasts or men around might lurk or creep?
2507What stories?
2507What strange spell Kept her two hundred years so well, Free from decay and mortal taint?
2507What things?
2507What was their greeting, the groom and bride, They whom that steel and the years divide?
2507What would you?
2507What youthful dreams of high renown Bade me inflate the parson''s gown, That went not up, nor yet came down?
2507What''s that you say?
2507What''s that?
2507What''s that?--a message?
2507What''s the thing to do?
2507What''s this?
2507What''s your name?
2507What''s your view?
2507What, no?
2507What, no?
2507When he talks of her cheek''s loveliness, Shall I say''twas the air of the room, and was due to carbonic excess?
2507Where shall we find thy like?
2507Where was the galleon all this while?
2507Where, oh, where, shall he begin Who would paint thee, Harlequin?
2507Who cares?
2507Who else should know?
2507Who shall say?
2507Whom do you shoot?
2507Whose eye was this beneath that beetling frown?
2507Why are they all Looking and coming this way?
2507Why come we here-- last of a scattered fold-- To pour new metal in the broken mould?
2507Why do n''t you go?
2507Why do n''t you say suthin, blast you?
2507Why do they call?
2507Why doth that lovely lady stare?
2507Why, I thought you might be diverted Hearing how Jones of Red Rock Range Drawed his"hint to the unconverted,"And saying,"Whar will you have it?"
2507Why, dern it!--sho!-- No?
2507Why, when you timidly offered your cheek, Why did I sigh, and why did n''t I speak?
2507Why?
2507Will nobody answer the bell?
2507Will you hear?
2507Will you not enter?
2507With his face to the foe, Upholding the flag he bore?
2507With my luck, Where''s the chance of being stuck?
2507With scenes so adverse, what mysterious bond Links our fair fortunes to the shores beyond?
2507Wo n''t you come up to tea?
2507Wot''s that you got?--tobacco?
2507Would ye b''lieve it?
2507Would you-- if your lips was n''t sore?
2507Wrecked on some lonely coral isle, Burnt by the roving sea- marauders, Or sailing north under secret orders?
2507YOU do?
2507Ye noticed Polly,--the baby?
2507Yet here should stand the blasted pine that marked our farther range; And here-- what''s this?
2507You did n''t meet Euchre- deck Billy Anywhere on your road to Cairo?
2507You do not use Snuff?
2507You do?
2507You know it?
2507You know that he''s got the consumption?
2507You like the wine?
2507You mean Something milder?
2507You see that pear- tree?
2507You smile, O poet, and what do you?
2507You think it ai n''t true about Ilsey?
2507You wants to know the rest, my dears?
2507You were speaking of his daughter?
2507You wo n''t turn your face this way?
2507You would crush THEM as well as the robbers,-- Root them out, scatter them?
2507You would try to ARREST him?
2507You''d fill my Jack''s place?
2507You''re no believer?
2507You, with a warrant?
2507and it''s"Belle, is it true?"
2507and the other ones?--Eh?
2507and-- What did you say?-- Oh, the nevey?
2507are they not?
2507do I dream?
2507do they, eh?
2507eh?
2507hath the sea Yielded its dead to humble me?
2507he tells it to every stranger: Folks about yer say the old man''s my father; What''s your opinion?
2507how we shall dine?
2507if I try, you will sit here beside me, And shall not laugh, eh?
2507it''s true We buried him at Gettysburg: I mind the spot; do you?
2507let me see; it''s a year now,''most, That I met Jim, East, and says,"How''s your ghost?"
2507no offense, son,-- You are a soldier?
2507no sound?"
2507really?
2507says Joe Johnson,"and list to this jaw, Without process of warrant or color of law?
2507shall I shock his conceit?
2507to Miss Ilsey?
2507what is the row about?
2507what is this Lieth there so cold?
2507what shapes and laughing graces Slipped from its point, when his full heart went out In smiles and courtly phrases?
2507where''s Sal?
2507who are YOU, anyhow, goin''round in that sneakin''way?
2507will he be there?
2507you not understand?
2507you saw her?
18840A British general, you say?
18840A fine woman, is she?
18840Ah, Evaleen, did you enjoy your ramble?
18840Am I lost in the woods?
18840Am I the tree or the undercurrent?
18840Amen, Solly; how''s the Halcyon Itinerary?
18840And could you leave your earthly paradise?
18840And what will you be, mamma?
18840And you accepted the challenge?
18840And you think she likes Arlington?
18840Are her thoughts like yours?
18840Are you ready to start, my lad?
18840Are you sick, Lucrèce? 18840 Are you sure they are engaged?"
18840Are you sure? 18840 Are you tired of me already,"she playfully chided,"and curious to make a new friend?
18840Are you well rested? 18840 Arlington?
18840At Gallipolis? 18840 At a moment''s warning?"
18840Bought? 18840 Bringing the palm?"
18840Brother?
18840Buy?
18840By what authority do you detain me, a private citizen, attending peaceably to my own affairs, on a public thoroughfare?
18840Byle? 18840 Can we depend on David Clarke''s co- operation?"
18840Can you justify your deceptions, practised on me, or make amends for the injury done the Blennerhassetts?
18840Can you procure for me the family boat which my husband provided for us at Marietta?
18840Cap''n, you ric''lect Colonel Plug, that carried on at Hurricane Island and the mouth of Cash, after Wilson was nabbed? 18840 Captain Danvers your brother?"
18840Could I make verse, I would sing of October in the Ohio Valley, or of Indian Summer, which comes in November, do n''t it?
18840Could you imagine that a son of my father, Major Arlington, would hold the principles of Adams and Jay?
18840Cur? 18840 Danvers?
18840Daughter? 18840 Dear madam, will you console Theodosia with one of your brave, loving, womanly letters?
18840Did I not say the gods are propitious?
18840Did he betray Burr, or did he only find him out? 18840 Did n''t I see him first, Eva?"
18840Did you answer my-- my question?
18840Did you name your daughter, may I ask, Colonel Burr, anticipating extraordinary rank for her? 18840 Did you receive mine, in which I explained the mistakes of Byle?"
18840Do I speak poetically? 18840 Do many boats go to New Orleans?"
18840Do n''t you Pittsburgers drink a las''snort before goin''to bed? 18840 Do n''t you know Arlington, Squire Hale?
18840Do you believe this?
18840Do you hear the water swash against the logs along the shore?
18840Do you know anything of the far West?
18840Do you know what that is?
18840Do you mean Colonel Burr?
18840Do you mean that low island?
18840Do you mean to cast reflections on my character, sir?
18840Do you mean to insult me, sir? 18840 Do you purpose returning South to remain?"
18840Do you recollect passing Bacchus Island?
18840Do you say this in earnest or only to please me?
18840Do you see that red head on the top of that tree t''other side of the house?
18840Do you suppose I am afraid of his big names,''General''and''Governor''? 18840 Do you think so?"
18840Do you want it back after all these years?
18840Does Colonel Burr know there are several millions of dollars in the Bank of New Orleans?
18840Does he preach?
18840Does he think I am committed to him, body and soul? 18840 Does he write to her?"
18840Does the mild- eyed thing recollect me?
18840Does the red stuff boil? 18840 Dominick, do you want to go away, away to Mexico, and become rich and great?"
18840Dominick, hey? 18840 Exceedingly fine women, are they not?"
18840Fair fight or rough and tumble?
18840French? 18840 French?
18840General Wilkinson told you so? 18840 Hadley, you?"
18840Has anything gone wrong?
18840Have I the honor of addressing Colonel Burr?
18840Have you been in the business before this?
18840Have you seen our gaunt Hercules? 18840 Have you told me all?"
18840He has grown a big boy, have you not, Gamp? 18840 He is pleasant enough, but too bold, too audacious, is n''t he?"
18840Here is just where you stood when we met for the first time, love; do you remember? 18840 How are_ you_?"
18840How can I decide? 18840 How d''ye do?
18840How d''ye do? 18840 How did you come by that?
18840How do you feel this morning, Jetty?
18840How many times over has Abe sold you since you ran away from the island?
18840How many wives, widows, spinsters and school- girls did you lead up and down?
18840How soon do you want to start?
18840How, what? 18840 How?
18840Husband, what ails you?
18840I feel that I am rash to talk so positively, but how can there be a difference of opinion on a subject like this? 18840 I know,"said the stranger, smiling, as he turned to ask young Brackenridge,"Is the judge at home?"
18840I looked like a river pirate, did I? 18840 I''m a dog, eh?
18840I''m a sort of self- made doctor, Mr.---- wo n''t you please write your name out just as you spell it yourself, and let me have it? 18840 If it''s good enough for the son of the Duke of Orleans, it''s good enough for me or you, eh?
18840If the inquiry is not impertinent, sir, have you organized a joint stock company? 18840 In regard to Spain?"
18840Invasion? 18840 Is Miss Hale one of those foolish virgins?"
18840Is it possible?
18840Is it the intention to seize upon the deposits of private individuals?
18840Is it your belief that, if war were declared, there would be difficulty in raising volunteers in Virginia?
18840Is n''t it wonderful? 18840 Is that enough for you?"
18840Is there any boat that I can borrow here, or buy? 18840 Is this young woman a sorceress?
18840Is this yourn?
18840It blows a body, do n''t it?
18840It''s a prodigious long name, ai n''t it? 18840 Likes him, does she?"
18840Look out, you will soil your shoes; shall I remove the mud?
18840Margaret, ought I leave them and you unprotected?
18840May I come in, mamma? 18840 My dear girl, will you give no credit to human saviors?
18840Neighbors,said he, listening to the receding hoof- beats of the horses,"did you notice that man''s face and his feet?
18840New Orleans would be your capital city, at first, would it not?--and our home would be there and not in Mexico?
18840New York City? 18840 Not I. I suppose you do?"
18840Not even that?
18840Oh, Warren, is it really you? 18840 Oh, the island over yonder is a damned sight more dangerous, ai n''t it, Abe?"
18840One apiece for us, eh, Mex?
18840Peggin''away, all hands, eh? 18840 Perhaps you prefer the violin or the flute?"
18840Père,asked the girl anxiously, in a gentle voice, so clear that every word she spoke reached the ear of Burr,"may you go with them?"
18840Reckon it were a case of one askeert and an''t''other da''sn''t, eh, Hen?
18840Scipio,''ave you''oed the corn?
18840Shall I holler to them?
18840Shall we go back to our boat? 18840 Smith?
18840So these is your offspring, as the preacher says, are they, Chester? 18840 Son of Colonel Presley Neville?"
18840Speaking of Washington County, General Morgan,--are the people of your neighborhood prosperous and contented?
18840Story? 18840 Surely?
18840That seems impossible-- shoe- and- stocking trees, did you say?
18840That was a mysterious affair-- the disappearance of the schooner-- what was the vessel''s name, Danvers?
18840That''s claiming a good deal, is n''t it?
18840The Rose of Sharon?
18840The Sacred Scripture? 18840 The soldiers, will they perhaps overtake us?"
18840Then why do you confine your liberty? 18840 Then you are not one of us?
18840Then you desire war?
18840This Captain Danvers--?
18840This hankercher?
18840Tom, eh? 18840 We do n''t ever think of dying, do we, Dicky?"
18840Well, governor, what if I am drunk? 18840 Well, what is your verdict?"
18840What are you spilling, there? 18840 What became of the handsome young Arlington?"
18840What charm?
18840What do you know of them, colonel, further than we learned in Pittsburg?
18840What do you see away down the river?
18840What do you think of that as an estimate of human nature?
18840What do you think of_ her_?
18840What do you want with rifles? 18840 What does this mean?
18840What is the best?
18840What is the condition of the new college at the county seat? 18840 What is the third?"
18840What makes you think so, Peter?
18840What might your name be, now, bub? 18840 What of woman''s education?
18840What rigmarole is this? 18840 What sandbar?
18840What shall I do with them? 18840 What shall we do?
18840What was the use of lying?
18840What will be the course of action?
18840What would you do with them?
18840What you jabbering about now? 18840 What''s a sleeping sawyer?"
18840What''s that?
18840What, Colonel Burr, are you still up?
18840When did he tell you?
18840When?
18840Where can I find this Captain Pierce?
18840Where did you leave the boys?
18840Where is Sott? 18840 Where''s your revelations?"
18840Where?
18840Which way is the Highcockolorum?
18840White antelope?
18840Who are these? 18840 Who is this person?"
18840Who wants John Wood?
18840Who''s that?
18840Why did n''t you name him after me? 18840 Why did you direct our captain to pass this way, if it is a dangerous place?"
18840Why did you mark that passage?
18840Why not? 18840 Why not?
18840Why should I disbelieve? 18840 Why there?"
18840Will Colonel Burr be there?
18840Will you both agree to a compromise and accept some half- romantic, half- pious verses which I composed and set to music? 18840 Will you stop the boat, sir?
18840Wo n''t he come to the fort after luncheon?
18840Wonder how things are growing in the front yard? 18840 Would I be in favor of it?
18840Would you be in favor of that?
18840Yes, do n''t you like him?
18840Yes, sure as coffin- nails; why? 18840 You are confident that the prospect of increasing your capital is good?"
18840You call it Jefferson College; it was named for Washington_ and_ Jefferson, was it not? 18840 You came from Marietta; were you agreeably entertained there?"
18840You did not know? 18840 You did not quite forget the lonely island and its solitary family?"
18840You did? 18840 You do not believe such absurdities, do you Palafox?"
18840You know him then?
18840You know the contents of the enclosure?
18840You know what you called me up at Gallipolis?
18840You shot him? 18840 You think him handsome?
18840You told this Mr. Arlington that my daughter was engaged to marry Captain Danvers?
18840You will not, then, permit me to right myself by the code of honor?
18840You window woman?
18840You wo n''t be rash enough to kill an old army officer, will you?
18840You wo n''t buy, then?
18840You would n''t guess there might be a fortune in these, would you, Blackey?
18840You''ll be back and bunk here, or will you sleep on one of the boats?
18840You_ charmed_ him to sleep?
18840You_ love_ him? 18840 Your new Western college, eh?
18840_ Was_ she drowned?
18840''Bout thirty to a boat?"
18840''Oh, Aaron Burr, what have you done?
18840''Richard,''you say?
18840A captain?
18840A felon who would murder Alexander Hamilton-- what crime would n''t he commit?
18840A screw loose somewhere, eh?"
18840A wooden island?"
18840Addressing the innkeeper, he asked:"Can you inform us whether Judge Brackenridge is in town?"
18840Again the mistress made a vain appeal:"Do American soldiers abuse women?"
18840Am I correctly informed?
18840Am I not right?"
18840Are no inhabitants in this wilderness?"
18840Are not you, Colonel Burr?"
18840Are they in print?"
18840Are they militiamen?
18840Are you a Knight of the Plow?"
18840Are you akin to that Turlipe?"
18840Are you an unconditional Jeffersonian?"
18840Are you going home, Mr. Hale?
18840Arlington, escorting the Lady of the Violets, asked her, in an undertone,"Did you get my last letter from Virginia?"
18840Arlington?
18840Arlington?"
18840Arlington?"
18840As for my bereavement-- my heart history-- why speak of that?"
18840Besides, might he not chance to learn the true condition of affairs regarding Evaleen Hale and the objectionable captain?
18840Burr resumed conversation abruptly:"Arlington, you are not a Federalist?"
18840But how would Madam Blennerhassett judge him?
18840But say to me, my daughter''s dear friend, am I myself Eloy Deville?
18840By crackey, you''ve come out in full blossom, have n''t you, like a red- bud bush?
18840By whose permission are you here?
18840Ca n''t you be persuaded to give up your rash design?
18840Ca n''t you learn that a vessel wo n''t navigate while she''s tied to a tree and stuck fast in the mud?"
18840Can it be you?"
18840Colonel Hugh Phelps, of Parkurgberg, how are you?
18840Colonel, were you ever picked up by puttin''out your paw to the wrong man?
18840Could he be suffering remorse?
18840Could n''t you waive ifs and buts long enough to try the Weehauken experiment and then investigate my pedigree?
18840Danvers?"
18840Did Richard leave you as big a pile of money as folks say?
18840Did anybody ever tell you of the Missouri salt mountain?
18840Did he come home?
18840Did he own it?"
18840Did he--?"
18840Did his memory fly back to the far off, sad days when, a lonesome orphan boy, in a Puritan school, he penned sympathetic letters to his sister?
18840Did n''t I warn you never again to come to me unless sent for?
18840Did not the forty men who settled Marietta bring rifles and ammunition?"
18840Did you ever read Plutarch''s Lives?
18840Did you ever see Alexander Hamilton?"
18840Did you hear such a report?
18840Did you take note of his metaphors?
18840Did you, Mex?
18840Did you, Sott?
18840Do I intrude?"
18840Do I intrude?"
18840Do n''t they make them animals cut dirt?
18840Do n''t we, cap?
18840Do n''t you guess I''ve any feelin'', you onery idiot?
18840Do n''t you know me?
18840Do n''t you know what the Ordinance of''87 says?
18840Do n''t you see I''m busy?"
18840Do n''t you see I''m drowned?"
18840Do n''t you think we are too much be- Jeffersoned?"
18840Do you belong here, Africanus?"
18840Do you care?
18840Do you charge him with disloyalty?
18840Do you expect to have to fight?"
18840Do you fancy he loves you?"
18840Do you know any French girl in Gallipolis?"
18840Do you know his name?"
18840Do you know-- do you know of a family by the name of Hale?"
18840Do you like this black gown better than the blue brocaded one I wore that evening at Princeton?"
18840Do you not know that orders have been issued for the civil authorities to interfere with your plans?"
18840Do you play the violoncello?"
18840Do you recollect, Theodosia, the remark of the Mayor of New York, when he invited you to go on board a war vessel?
18840Do you say it is to meet a brother that you wish to go to Cincinnati?"
18840Do you see that couple walking this way from Campus Martius?
18840Do you think Byle is a plumb fool?
18840Do you think it safe to trifle with me?
18840Do you think they''ll ever drum up five hundred lunatics for such an expedition?"
18840Do you think we are coming on a sleeping sawyer now?"
18840Do you understand me?"
18840Do you worship his successor?
18840Do you write verse, sir?"
18840Do_ you_ know the Spring Beauty?"
18840Does he take it for granted that I am a tool and a fool?
18840Does it not insure to us all the right of habeas corpus?"
18840Does not the vision resemble some Mohammedan Isle of the Blest-- one of the happy seats reserved for blameless souls such as yours and mine?
18840Eh?
18840Eh?
18840Faithful to what?"
18840Fifteen?
18840Folks ought n''t to be too familiar with strangers, ought they?
18840For was not this daring leader wise and powerful and popular?
18840George Hale?"
18840Gosh, baby, you want to grab uncle''s nose, do you?
18840Had he not been Vice President and had he not come within one vote of being President of the United States?
18840Had n''t we better go-- you and I-- to Hinson''s, and learn who these parties are and what they want?
18840Had you in mind Theodosius the First, called the Great, or the second and more famous emperor of the name?
18840Has she bewitched you?"
18840Has the fellow gone mad?"
18840Have I not keep my word?
18840Have you a picture of her?"
18840Have you completed your plans?"
18840Have you entertained the possibility of defection?"
18840Have you got rid of him for good?"
18840Have you seen enough of Palmyra?
18840Have you, Warren, formed the acquaintance of--?"
18840He took Peter''s arm, and with a backward jerk of the head declared interrogatively:"The Mogul is sort of queer, is n''t he?
18840Hello, Cuffey, what do_ you_ want?"
18840Her sudden pallor and dilated eye were observed by Arlington, who asked in a tone of gentle solicitude:"What is it?"
18840Here are the palaces, but where are the citizens?
18840Home from Virginia, Evaleen, to old Marietta, on a visit to the folks?
18840How are my boys, Dominick and-- what''s the younger one''s name?--Yes, Harman, how are they?
18840How are you?"
18840How can it be otherwise?
18840How could I know?
18840How did you get by the guard to- night?"
18840How do you all do?"
18840How far is it?"
18840How goes it?"
18840How long do you calculate to stay, Burlingham?"
18840How many wives do you s''pose I''ve got?
18840How much did he give for you?
18840How much is the doctor wuth?
18840How much is the whole caboodle going to cost you?"
18840How you getting along?"
18840How''s all your kith an''kin?
18840How''s he?
18840I am charmed with him, are not you?"
18840I hope you are not past that?"
18840I presume you wish to learn the conditions of our agreement with volunteers?"
18840I s''pose you reco''nize me, do n''t you?
18840I see two chaps on the upper deck; who are they?
18840I want to tell you, Chester, here is just the spot where I stood when I fit for her--""Fought for my wife?"
18840I wonder what detains Harman?
18840I would like Mr. Daviess to tell us what the Constitution means?
18840I''m consarned sorry for the family over on the island; ai n''t you, neighbor?
18840I''m sorry for you, but-- hold up, what did I tell you?
18840If you are a gentleman--""If?
18840If you, or your younger brother-- I believe you have a brother besides the general?"
18840In case hostilities should be precipitated by the Spaniards--""What in that case?"
18840Is Miss Evaleen in town now?
18840Is Tom Jefferson going to make war on Spain?
18840Is he not due here?"
18840Is he-- a reliable officer?"
18840Is it a family of emigrants?
18840Is it possible that you are satisfied with your present limited sphere?"
18840Is it possible you have forgotten the world since abandoning public affairs?"
18840Is it possible?
18840Is it the singing breeze or the rippling water that causes you to put your principles in language so poetical?"
18840Is n''t he an odd Grecian?
18840Is n''t that so?
18840Is not conversion necessary?"
18840Is she French?"
18840Is she French?"
18840Is she as well as usual?"
18840Is that correct military language, Phelps?
18840Is there not one man here who will defend me?"
18840John, take charge of the cordelle; can you row, doctor?
18840Let''s see; where was I?
18840Look on this place I put my finger"--he tapped the paper angrily--"you see ze Premiereville-- ze Premiereville?
18840Lucrèce caught a quick breath and asked eagerly:"Troops from St. Louis, think you?"
18840May it be convenient should one passenger more be accommodated in your polite boat?
18840May you not be in error?
18840Me kill dandy?"
18840Meanwhile, what had Aaron Burr found to interest him so long in the_ sanctum sanctorum_ of the lord of the island?
18840My daughter?
18840Near the court- house he met a gentleman, whom he accosted, taking him cordially by the hand and inquiring,"Is n''t this Squire George Hale?"
18840No attention being paid to the question, the nonchalant intruder went on:"What plunder are you loaded with?
18840No resk this time, Arlington,_ is_ there?
18840Now can_ you_ tell me, as man to man, why the deuce that hunk of beef is put to soak in that puddle, up at the head of the island?"
18840Now, had n''t you better buy the whole damned correspondence?"
18840Now, how many men will them fifteen boats accommodate, when they''re done?
18840Or maybe you carry passengers?
18840Or might he not reasonably hope to be returned to Congress from one of the new States?
18840Or to secure from the President an appointment as Minister to a foreign court, perhaps that of St. James?
18840Or was he merely making a tour of observation for commercial reasons?
18840Or was recollection busy with the scenes of the Revolutionary War, in which he served his country nobly and won proud laurels?
18840Or who can be sure that the craftiness of the guest was greater than the cunning of the host?
18840P. B. Arlington would sound sort of uppercrusty, eh?
18840Pardon, I do n''t mean that I do n''t like_ you_, of course--""Like-- don''t you love me?
18840Pausing, he asked sarcastically:"Are those your sentiments?
18840Pensacola?"
18840Perhaps you are the Vice- President''s brother, or are you his man- servant?"
18840Recollect what I told you that night?
18840Salt or whiskey, or pork or butter, I reckon?
18840Say, cap, is your new man onto the pass words and signs?"
18840Say, you raw recruit, where''s your pal?
18840Scrutinizing Scipio''s features as he might inspect a wonder in a museum, Byle interrogated him:"Potterin''about for greens, I reckon?
18840Shall I read it aloud?"
18840Shall I send one of my servants to conduct you to the wharf?"
18840Shall he span the Ohio with a bridge, and dig a canal around the falls?
18840Shall our Lexington be suffered to become a hot- bed of sedition?
18840Shall we go to the boat?"
18840Shall you be able to adjust the matter amicably or will the dispute result in war?"
18840Sheldrake, did you ever hear anybody call me a liar?
18840Should it differ from man''s?"
18840So cap''s a colonel?
18840Speaking of bitters and how to cure trouble in this vale of tears, as the saying is, I reckon you have heard of a man by the name of Jonathan Edwards?
18840Spoken words are but breath, and who can report all that passed between the tempter and the tempted?
18840Tell me, now that you are rested and refreshed after your long journey, by what route did you come?"
18840The Mississippi Valley is spacious and fertile, Louisiana is a wide domain, but why limit the scope of enterprise to these?
18840The blue violet, I believe, signifies modesty, does it not?"
18840The citizen has an inalienable right to defend his home and family, and we did, did n''t we, Harman?"
18840The question is, are you a man or a dastard?"
18840The young lady is right when she calls me and you gents, eh, cap?"
18840Then Madam Blennerhassett, speaking aside to Miss Hale, asked:"How long does the captain intend to remain with you in Marietta?
18840They shook their heads, when, glancing up at Scipio, the questioner repeated,"Do you know?"
18840This dispute in regard to the boundary line between Louisiana and Mexico threatens war, does it not?"
18840To Arlington Burr remarked as they passed by the waxen show:"The artist makes me a beauty, do n''t he?
18840Tom, wo n''t you oblige us?"
18840Turning over the leaves of his memorandum book, he asked,"Do you know Mr. Vigo, at Fort Vincent, a Spaniard?"
18840Upon reaching the place where the boats were moored to the bushy shore of the bayou, Turlipe called:"Hello, are you there?"
18840Want to see inside the''stablishment?
18840Was he flying from persecution?
18840Was n''t he court- martialed last spring, after holding the command of the Northern army less than a year?
18840Was one of''em your daughter, grand- daddy?"
18840Well, ca n''t you see the pint?
18840Were the seven cities of Cibola clustered in one golden capital?
18840Whar''s Daniel?
18840What are the conditions?"
18840What are your pursuits?
18840What brings you to this wandering wood like a lost Una?"
18840What cared those intoxicated revellers for a scolding tongue?
18840What could be the noted politician''s object in coming to the West?
18840What could the judge do but discharge the jury?
18840What could your father do?
18840What did Jackson say?
18840What direction shall we take?"
18840What do we care for the prattling of this Graham?
18840What do you say to taking a tour to Blennerhassett''s with me in my piroque?
18840What do you say your name is?"
18840What do you think, Colonel Burr, of the temporizing policy of the administration in regard to Spain?"
18840What do you want, Palafox?"
18840What do you want?"
18840What else?"
18840What facts?
18840What for?"
18840What had Burr been doing in the three- quarters of a year which had elapsed since he bade good- bye to the Blennerhassetts in October?
18840What have you here in your basket-- botanical specimens?"
18840What information did you gather in the progress of your trip, concerning our preparations?"
18840What is the matter?"
18840What is to hold us together?
18840What is your business here, my good man?"
18840What is your opinion of the Alien and Sedition laws?
18840What is your opinion of this one?
18840What is your own feeling on that phase of the subject, may I ask, colonel?"
18840What may not be achieved by genius and courage?
18840What might be his evil design?
18840What might your name be, captain?"
18840What next?"
18840What object had these unknown watermen in conveying their unwilling passengers away from communication with Captain Winslow and Doctor Deville?
18840What shall we do?
18840What spur more sharp than a beautiful woman''s appeal to a proud man''s vanity?
18840What story?"
18840What strange bird is that coming down the river road?
18840What the Holy Moses did you shoot my thumb for?
18840What was the action of Judge Hary Innes?
18840What we care now for ze boat- wreckair, ze bad robbair?
18840What were his meditations?
18840What will become of your rights and mine?
18840What will you drink?
18840What''s the fraction now?
18840What''s the last word from Captain Danvers?
18840What''s the latest news from Washington?
18840What''s''is name?"
18840When did you strike Marietta?"
18840When is that knot to be tied, anyhow?
18840Where do you hail from, Arlington?"
18840Where is he?"
18840Where is the Holy Bible?
18840Where is your commanding officer?
18840Where''s the feller you said wanted to join us?
18840Which channel?"
18840Which is the best road from here to Carson''s Ferry?"
18840Which side are you on?"
18840Which way are you bound?
18840Which way do you hail from now?
18840Who could induce Aaron Burr to come to Ohio?"
18840Who is Arlington?"
18840Who is your travelling companion?
18840Who knows what may come to pass?"
18840Who the devil are you?"
18840Whom do I defraud?
18840Whose boat is this, anyhow, and where bound?"
18840Why am I here?
18840Why are you here?"
18840Why did he keep her constantly in sight?
18840Why did n''t they fight?
18840Why do n''t Congress declare war?"
18840Why do n''t the Government declare war, and conquer Mexico?"
18840Why do you ask?
18840Why play a secondary part?
18840Why was that man furtively following her down the river?
18840Why were you not here twelve hours ago?"
18840Will I go with you, friends and fellow- citizens?
18840Will no one take our part?
18840Will they arrest you?
18840Will you have it in quarters or eighths?"
18840Will you hear it?"
18840Will you meet me with pistol or with sword?"
18840Wonder why that dool''tween Jo and Harry never come off?"
18840Would he find success by settling in some rising city of the West, and resuming the practice of law?
18840Would n''t you like an applejack or a stiff metheglin to make you sleep sound?
18840Would n''t"General"Burr come and see?
18840Would not the conquest of Mexico be easy?
18840Would you like to see''em?
18840Would you like, colonel, to look into the library for a moment?"
18840Yer man''s run away, how will I do for a substitute?"
18840You back again?"
18840You bring documents for me?"
18840You do n''t see anything disgraceful in that, do you?"
18840You grieve to see me a widow?
18840You have heard rumors of war on the Sabine?"
18840You heard that speech, Jim, did n''t you?"
18840You know its products and topography?"
18840You mean Elder Smith?"
18840You recollect, do n''t you?
18840You sot on the summit?
18840You will not deny me this pleasure?"
18840You''re a readin''man-- haven''t you come across what the press wrote about that scorpion in your bozom?
18840You''ve rid in a steamboat, I dare say, going to see your pa, in Orleens?
18840You-- you aren''t--?"
18840Your looks denote that you affiliate with-- shall I say, the common people, the humbler class?
18840Ze Captain Danvers, is he a lunatic?"
18840_ Mon soldat-- mon capitaine_, you love heem-- he love you-- how shall we not hate us?"
18840_ Voila!_ have we not brush away ze mosquito?
18840a filthy cur?"
18840a mountain of real salt one hundred and eighty miles long, and forty- five broad, white as snow, and glittering in the sun?
18840and how is it flattery to charge a man with insincerity?"
18840and your name is--?"
18840echoed Burr, blowing a ring of smoke from his lips,"what do_ you_ think, yourself?"
18840ever hear any one say Burke Pierce was a liar or a foot- licker?"
18840him the hero of Quebec, of Long Island, and of Monmouth?
18840him the very sword hand of Washington?"
18840see, is there not somebody who could come to our aid?"
18840the day I first seed you and Hoopsnake on the roof of his flatboat?
39965Where?
39965--But what''s that?
39965But to hit fatally?
39965But what if the latter were not dead?
39965But what mattered it when we were at concert- pitch, and bears for the tune?
39965Did any one ever see a horse- wrangler who was not looking for missing stock?
39965Goats, did I say?
39965Has he taken the alarm and gone back?
39965How every noise-- the crackling of a twig-- startled you?
39965Ought I to have bellowed at him, and at least have got him on his legs?
39965The Blackfeet ask,"What one of all the animals is most sacred?"
39965The question was, had winter come in the park above, for which we were heading?
39965What are we going to do with them?
39965What has become of him?
39965What has become of him?
39965With what superstitious dread you looked cautiously around, expecting a hobgoblin at any moment to rise out of the ground?
18127Am I big enough now?
18127How are you?
18127How''s that?
18127What cheer, friend? 18127 ''Well, Friend Charles,''said Penn,''suppose a canoe full of Indians should cross the sea and should discover England, would that make it theirs? 18127 ''Why, is not the whole of America mine?'' 18127 83. Who owned the greater part of America? 18127 After General Jackson had beaten the Indians, where did they go? 18127 After a time what general got the command of all the armies of the North? 18127 After he returned from the Black Hawk War, what did Lincoln do? 18127 Are you alone? 18127 Are you sure? 18127 At the beginning of 1733 how many English colonies were there in America? 18127 Before Whitney invented his cotton- gin how much cotton did we send abroad? 18127 Can any one in the class repeat what was on the banner? 18127 Did Clark take the fort? 18127 Did Franklin think that anything more would be discovered about electricity? 18127 Did Sir Walter''s attempt to settle Virginia do any good? 18127 Did he ever land on any part of what is now the United States? 18127 Did he ever stand in the presence of any kings? 18127 Did the Indians trouble the Quakers? 18127 Did they ever elect him to the state legislature again? 18127 Did they have guns? 18127 Did they have horses and wagons? 18127 Did they have iron hatchets and knives? 18127 Did we buy it? 18127 Did we own New Orleans or Louisiana when Whitney invented his cotton- gin? 18127 Do you swear to it? 18127 Do you think he was mistaken about that? 18127 For what profession was Jefferson educated? 18127 From what place in England, and in what ship, did the Pilgrims sail? 18127 Had Columbus ever seen it? 18127 He did not care for a gold mine-- why should he? 18127 He said, Why not try lightning or electricity? 18127 He would laugh, and tell them that his father used to repeat to him this saying of Solomon''s:_ Seest thou a man diligent in his business?
18127How can you make a small wire telegraph?
18127How did Captain Smith get corn?
18127How did Clark save the lives of some of the men?
18127How did Columbus get help at last?
18127How did Columbus think he could reach Asia and the Indies?
18127How did Franklin look to Miss Read?
18127How did Washington take Boston?
18127How did he get help about his telegraph?
18127How did he help his father?
18127How did he live?
18127How did he make his nails?
18127How did he pay his debt?
18127How did he save money to buy books?
18127How did many of the people of Massachusetts feel about Mr. Williams?
18127How did most of the people at the North feel about it?
18127How did most of the people at the South feel about slavery?
18127How did most of the people of the slave states feel when Lincoln became President?
18127How did the Indians feel about the west?
18127How did the New World come to be called America?
18127How did the North and the South feel about President Lincoln?
18127How did they feel?
18127How did they fight?
18127How far did the United States then extend towards the west?
18127How far off was Fort Vincennes?
18127How far up the Hudson did it go?
18127How large was Louisiana then?
18127How long ago did the Revolution end?
18127How long did General Harrison live after he became President?
18127How long did he stay abroad?
18127How long did the war last?
18127How long had the war lasted?
18127How long is it since Columbus discovered America?
18127How many counties and towns in the United States are now called by his name?
18127How many miles of telegraph are there now in the United States?
18127How many people went to California?
18127How many pounds of cotton would his cotton- gin clean in a day?
18127How many states did we have then?
18127How many such additions have we made in all?
18127How much could one negro clean?
18127How much did we pay?
18127How much do we send from New Orleans now?
18127How much land did we get?
18127How much of the world was then known?
18127How was Fort Vincennes taken?
18127How was the Declaration sent to all parts of the country?
18127How was the news carried to Philadelphia?
18127How were Catholics then treated in England?
18127How were the Quakers then treated in England?
18127In 1819?
18127In 1846?
18127In 1848?
18127In 1867?
18127Is anything left for us to do?
18127Is there a telegraph line under the sea?
18127Of what was Maryland the home?
18127Presently the chief gave him a push and said, Do move further on, wo n''t you?
18127Roger Williams at Seekonk;[6]"What cheer, friend?"
18127Tell what you can about Franklin''s landing in Philadelphia?
18127Tell why so many people in the South wished to leave the Union?
18127The message on the strip of paper above is the question,_ How is trade?_] 228.
18127Then what happened?
18127Then where did they send him?
18127They looked at each other, and asked,"What does it mean?"
18127To what did the people of Illinois elect Lincoln?
18127To what office was Houston elected?
18127To what part of the country did it spread?
18127To what state did his father move?
18127To whom did King Charles the Second owe a large sum of money?
18127To whom did New Orleans and Louisiana then belong?
18127Was he going any higher?
18127Was the captain pleased with the discovery?
18127What American plants did the emigrants send him?
18127What about Captain Smith''s trial?
18127What about De Soto?
18127What about Fort Necessity?
18127What about Georgia powder in the Revolution?
18127What about Governor Berkeley and Mr. Bacon?
18127What about Indian Rock?
18127What about Jackson and Weathersford?
18127What about Lafayette?
18127What about Massasoit?
18127What about Paul Revere?
18127What about Squanto?
18127What about emigrants?
18127What about him when he was nineteen?
18127What about his books and maps?
18127What about his old age?
18127What about his sea- fight?
18127What about people going west?
18127What about railroads?
18127What about raising silk?
18127What about the German emigrants and Ebenezer?
18127What about the Revolution?
18127What about the battle of Long Island?
18127What about the battle with the Mexicans?
18127What about the discovery of land?
18127What about the first Thanksgiving?
18127What about the gold- diggers?
18127What about the last voyages of Columbus?
18127What about the picture of the king?
18127What about the raft?
18127What about tobacco?
18127What can you tell about Captain John Smith before he went to Virginia?
18127What city did Penn begin to build here?
18127What city did the British take?
18127What could the French say?
18127What could the North and the South do?
18127What could the giant do?
18127What did Abraham Lincoln and John Hanks do?
18127What did Abraham Lincoln hire out to do in New Salem?
18127What did Andrew do?
18127What did Andrew use to do at the blacksmith shop?
18127What did Boone do when he became old?
18127What did Cabot do when he went on shore?
18127What did Captain Parker of Lexington say to his men?
18127What did Captain Smith want to do?
18127What did Clark and his men start to do?
18127What did Clark get for us?
18127What did Clark say to the people in the fort?
18127What did Clark undertake to do?
18127What did Columbus name the island?
18127What did Congress do on July 4th, 1776?
18127What did Congress do?
18127What did Cornwallis do?
18127What did Cornwallis do?
18127What did Eli make in that workshop?
18127What did Eli make next?
18127What did Eli''s fiddle seem to say?
18127What did Franklin do after he returned to Philadelphia?
18127What did Fulton say?
18127What did General Harrison do in Canada?
18127What did General Rufus Putnam do for Washington?
18127What did George''s mother say?
18127What did Governor John Winthrop do?
18127What did Jefferson say?
18127What did Jefferson write?
18127What did Kentucky get for him?
18127What did King George the Third determine to do?
18127What did Lord Baltimore''s son do?
18127What did Massasoit and Governor Carver do?
18127What did Massasoit do for Mr. Williams?
18127What did Menendez do in Florida?
18127What did Mr. Livingston say about Louisiana?
18127What did Mr. Whitney build at Whitneyville?
18127What did Mr. Whitney say?
18127What did Mr. Williams do at Seekonk?
18127What did Mr. Williams do?
18127What did Mrs. Greene say to the planters?
18127What did Mrs. Jackson do?
18127What did Myles Standish do there?
18127What did Penn and the Indians do?
18127What did Penn do in 1682?
18127What did Penn want the land here for?
18127What did Pocahontas do?
18127What did Ponce De Leon do?
18127What did President Lincoln do for the slaves?
18127What did Professor Morse make?
18127What did Robert do for his mother?
18127What did Samuel Morse say to himself?
18127What did Sevier become?
18127What did Sir Walter then do?
18127What did Tarleton say?
18127What did Tecumseh determine to do?
18127What did Tecumseh do when he got back?
18127What did Texas become?
18127What did Thomas Lincoln''s new wife say about"Abe"?
18127What did Washington and Jefferson do?
18127What did Washington do for Robertson?
18127What did Washington do?
18127What did Washington say about the settlers?
18127What did bands of armed men use to do in the country where Andrew lived?
18127What did he and Robertson do?
18127What did he ask Congress to do?
18127What did he begin to build at Coloma?
18127What did he buy there?
18127What did he call it?
18127What did he call the river he discovered?
18127What did he cut on a beech tree?
18127What did he do for Philadelphia?
18127What did he do in 1792?
18127What did he do in 1839?
18127What did he do in Lisbon?
18127What did he do then?
18127What did he do there?
18127What did he do when he was fourteen?
18127What did he do with it in France?
18127What did he do with those plants?
18127What did he do?
18127What did he do?
18127What did he do?
18127What did he do?
18127What did he find on it?
18127What did he find?
18127What did he first carry round the globe?
18127What did he hire Washington to do?
18127What did he invent?
18127What did he learn at school?
18127What did he make for her?
18127What did he make the settlers do?
18127What did he make there?
18127What did he make while his father was away?
18127What did he say about her?
18127What did he say after he became a man?
18127What did he say he would do about Texas?
18127What did he say to himself?
18127What did he say?
18127What did he think would happen?
18127What did he try to do in Portugal?
18127What did he try to do?
18127What did he try to find?
18127What did he use to write on?
18127What did he want to find?
18127What did he wish to do for the poor debtors?
18127What did he write in one of his writing- books?
18127What did his father say?
18127What did many Englishmen refuse to do?
18127What did most of the people at the North think about this?
18127What did most of the people in England think about this?
18127What did people think of him after he began to practise law?
18127What did she do for Walter Raleigh?
18127What did some men in Congress say?
18127What did some of the greatest men in England say?
18127What did some of them try to do?
18127What did such people think we were like?
18127What did the Americans get possession of by this victory?
18127What did the Americans say to that?
18127What did the British do the next year?
18127What did the British have in the west?
18127What did the Cabots carry back to England?
18127What did the Dutch do?
18127What did the Dutch hire him to do?
18127What did the English general do about the great elm in the Revolution?
18127What did the English people offer him?
18127What did the Indians agree to do?
18127What did the Indians call him?
18127What did the Indians call it?
18127What did the Indians say about the"Prophet"after the battle?
18127What did the Pilgrims build to protect them from the Indians?
18127What did the Pilgrims do on the Cape?
18127What did the South do at last?
18127What did the chief men of Boston do?
18127What did the colonies now do?
18127What did the cotton- planters say?
18127What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned?
18127What did the governor of Virginia do when Washington returned?
18127What did the governor order him to do?
18127What did the king name the country?
18127What did the king name the country?
18127What did the king of England give Lord Baltimore in America?
18127What did the king of France do?
18127What did the king promise Lord Baltimore?
18127What did the king say?
18127What did the king then try to do?
18127What did the king want the Americans to do?
18127What did the people now begin to call themselves?
18127What did the people of New England do in the Revolution?
18127What did the people of his state like to call him?
18127What did the people of the west say?
18127What did the people who held slaves at the South want to do?
18127What did the planters say about cotton?
18127What did the settlers name their town?
18127What did the success of the North do?
18127What did the war of the Revolution do?
18127What did these people do?
18127What did they build there on Manhattan Island?
18127What did they call the English troops?
18127What did they call the place?
18127What did they do at Cape Cod Harbor?
18127What did they name the country?
18127What did they nickname him in the printing- office?
18127What did they want to do?
18127What did we add in 1845?
18127What did we buy in 1853?
18127What did we fight about?
18127What did we get at the end of the war?
18127What did we get by that war?
18127What did we say?
18127What did"Abe"do?
18127What does Philadelphia mean?
18127What does it show us?
18127What does the name mean?
18127What does the unfinished pyramid stand for?
18127What else did Myles Standish do besides fight?
18127What else did he publish?
18127What else did we get?
18127What experiments did Franklin make?
18127What friend did Boone have in North Carolina?
18127What friend did Daniel Boone have in Virginia?
18127What good did the battle of Tippecanoe do?
18127What good work did the people of Georgia do?
18127What had Philadelphia grown to be by 1733?
18127What had the North and the South come to be like?
18127What happened after Captain Gray returned to Boston?
18127What happened after that?
18127What happened after that?
18127What happened after that?
18127What happened at Chicago?
18127What happened at Hadley?
18127What happened at Lexington and at Concord?
18127What happened at Princeton?
18127What happened at Saratoga?
18127What happened at the end of the Revolutionary War?
18127What happened at the south?
18127What happened during the winter?
18127What happened in 1812?
18127What happened in 1846?
18127What happened in Boston?
18127What happened in May, 1848?
18127What happened in New York?
18127What happened in the course of eighty years?
18127What happened in the spring of 1861?
18127What happened next?
18127What happened on the Alamance River?
18127What happened on the first part of the voyage?
18127What happened on the way down the Ohio River?
18127What happened then?
18127What happened to Captain Hudson the next year?
18127What happened to Captain Smith when he went in search of the Pacific?
18127What happened to Captain Sutter?
18127What happened to Jamestown?
18127What happened to King Philip himself?
18127What happened to him on his way to Virginia?
18127What happened to him when he went back to Boston on a visit?
18127What happened to him?
18127What happened to one of them?
18127What happened to the Virginia settlement?
18127What happened to the settlers?
18127What happened when he died?
18127What happened when he got there?
18127What has been found there?
18127What has made such a wonderful change?
18127What has"Brother Jonathan"done?
18127What help did the people of Boston get?
18127What if he will not listen to us?
18127What in 1867?
18127What in England?
18127What is a telegraph?
18127What is said about Abraham Lincoln and his party?
18127What is said about Balboa?
18127What is said about Benedict Arnold?
18127What is said about Canonchet?
18127What is said about Canonicus and Governor Bradford?
18127What is said about Captain Smith''s cold- water cure?
18127What is said about Fort Alamo?
18127What is said about General Greene?
18127What is said about General Wayne?
18127What is said about Marshall?
18127What is said about Monticello?
18127What is said about Walter Raleigh?
18127What is said about Weymouth?
18127What is said about a magic fountain?
18127What is said about her afterward?
18127What is said about him and the Indians?
18127What is said about it?
18127What is said about negro slaves at the time of the Revolution?
18127What is said about one of the great seals of the United States?
18127What is said about our war with Mexico?
18127What is said about railroads?
18127What is said about signs of land?
18127What is said about slavery?
18127What is said about that river?
18127What is said about the Friends or Quakers?
18127What is said about the Indian guide?
18127What is said about the Indians?
18127What is said about the Indians?
18127What is said about the Indians?
18127What is said about the Indians?
18127What is said about the North and the South in the war?
18127What is said about the North and the South since the war?
18127What is said about the West?
18127What is said about the boy''s mother?
18127What is said about the celebration of that discovery?
18127What is said about the church in Jamestown?
18127What is said about the end of the war?
18127What is said about the landing of the settlers in Virginia?
18127What is said about the price of cotton cloth?
18127What is said about the second voyage of the Cabots?
18127What is said about the settlement of Savannah?
18127What is said about the telephone?
18127What is said about the war?
18127What is said about the"Praying Indians"?
18127What is said of Abraham Lincoln at seventeen?
18127What is said of General Houston in the great war between the North and the South?
18127What is said of General Oglethorpe in old age?
18127What is said of General Washington after the war?
18127What is said of George the Third?
18127What is said of Jack Armstrong?
18127What is said of King Philip''s wife and son?
18127What is said of Lafayette?
18127What is said of Lord Fairfax?
18127What is said of Lord Fairfax?
18127What is said of Ohio at that time?
18127What is said of Providence?
18127What is said of Queen Mary of France?
18127What is said of Samoset?
18127What is said of St. Augustine?
18127What is said of Washington at the age of twenty- one?
18127What is said of his death and burial?
18127What is said of his death?
18127What is said of his funeral?
18127What is said of his return to Bristol?
18127What is said of negro slaves?
18127What is said of other islands?
18127What is said of steamboats at the west?
18127What is said of the Indians in Kentucky?
18127What is said of the Revolution?
18127What is said of the Texas flag?
18127What is said of the city of Baltimore?
18127What is said of the country west of the Mississippi?
18127What is said of the fort at Boonesboro''?
18127What is said of the grave at Louisville, Kentucky?
18127What is said of the growth of Philadelphia?
18127What is said of the last days of Sir Walter Raleigh?
18127What is said of the men whose lives we have read in this book?
18127What is said of the return of Columbus to Spain?
18127What is said of the"Sons of Liberty"?
18127What is said of"Captain George"?
18127What is the river he discovered called now?
18127What kind of a bargain did he make for a new pair of trousers?
18127What kind of boats did they have?
18127What kind of houses did they live in?
18127What lady did he become acquainted with?
18127What land did they first see in America?
18127What land did they see?
18127What land did we buy in 1803?
18127What land did we buy in 1853?
18127What lands did they come to?
18127What made them both certain that the dust was gold?
18127What must be done to raw cotton before it can be made into cloth?
18127What name did Queen Elizabeth give to the country?
18127What name did a boy cut on a door?
18127What name did they give it?
18127What news did Miss Annie Ellsworth bring him?
18127What other great man died on the same day?
18127What saying of Solomon''s did Franklin''s father use to repeat to him?
18127What sayings did he print in his almanac?
18127What state grew out of the Watauga settlement?
18127What the next November?
18127What three things did he do for Virginia?
18127What title did a college in Scotland now give him?
18127What two states were made out of the Oregon Country?
18127What two things did Franklin do in the Revolution?
18127What two things did he find out by means of this kite?
18127What war then broke out?
18127What was David Crockett''s motto?
18127What was Jefferson chosen to be?
18127What was Lord Baltimore to pay for Maryland?
18127What was done at New York?
18127What was done then?
18127What was done there in the Revolution?
18127What was done to Boston?
18127What was done with three of Philip''s men?
18127What was he called?
18127What was he talking about on his voyage back to America?
18127What was the country on the Miami River called?
18127What was the first message sent by telegraph in 1844?
18127What was the saddest thing which happened at the close of the war?
18127What were the four steps in Andrew Jackson''s life?
18127What were we like?
18127What words did Jefferson have cut on his gravestone at Monticello?
18127What would Hudson say if he could see New York City now?
18127What would a traveller going west then find?
18127When Mr. Whitney came back he asked his housekeeper,"What has Eli been doing?"
18127When and where did the emigrants land?
18127When and where was Columbus born?
18127When and where was George Washington born?
18127When did Jefferson die?
18127When did he sail?
18127When did we buy Florida?
18127When he left college where did he go?
18127When they met a farmer, they would stop him and ask,''Which side are you for?''
18127When was Abraham Lincoln born?
18127When was Texas added to the United States?
18127Where and how did the war begin?
18127Where did Cornwallis shut himself up with his army?
18127Where did Franklin find work?
18127Where did Fulton make and try his first steamboat?
18127Where did General Putnam go in 1788?
18127Where did Houston go after he became governor of Tennessee?
18127Where did Houston go next?
18127Where did Robertson and others go?
18127Where did Washington go?
18127Where did Washington take command of the army?
18127Where did he first go in Spain?
18127Where did he go after he gave up making nails?
18127Where did he go after that?
18127Where did he go when he became a man?
18127Where did he go?
18127Where did he go?
18127Where did he go?
18127Where did he go?
18127Where did he live?
18127Where did he live?
18127Where did he then go?
18127Where did the British go?
18127Where did the_ Mayflower_ stop?
18127Where did they land on December 21st, 1620?
18127Where did they settle?
18127Where is Fulton buried?
18127Where is he buried?
18127Where is he buried?
18127Where is his monument?
18127Where is his monument?
18127Where is one foot?
18127Where is the other?
18127Where was Colonel Washington living?
18127Where was Washington''s army?
18127Where was a great battle fought with the Indians in 1811?
18127Where was he born?
18127Where was the first blood shed?
18127Where were the last battles fought?
18127Where were three of those forts?
18127Who became the chief defender of the South?
18127Who bought them for us?
18127Who built the throne for King Cotton?
18127Who commanded the British soldiers in Boston?
18127Who did Mr. Williams think first owned the land in America?
18127Who did a great deal for Philadelphia?
18127Who did this work?
18127Who fired the first gun in the war?
18127Who fought the greatest battle of the War of 1812?
18127Who gained the victory?
18127Who helped emigration to the west?
18127Who hired the Indians to fight?
18127Who sailed with him?
18127Who seized New Netherland?
18127Who stopped them?
18127Who was Captain Sutter?
18127Who was General Oglethorpe?
18127Who was Henry Hudson?
18127Who was John Cabot?
18127Who was Lord Baltimore, and what did he try to do in Newfoundland?
18127Who was Myles Standish?
18127Who was Roger Williams?
18127Who was Thomas Jefferson?
18127Who was Wamsutta?
18127Who was William Henry Harrison?
18127Who was its great military leader?
18127Who was the tall man in Congress from Illinois?
18127Who was"King Philip"?
18127Why did Captain Smith go back to England?
18127Why did Franklin go to London?
18127Why did Hudson turn back?
18127Why did Lincoln get the name of"Honest Abe"?
18127Why did he go to Spain?
18127Why did he hate the white men?
18127Why did he name the settlement Providence?
18127Why did he run away?
18127Why did he want to go there?
18127Why did some Englishmen in Holland call themselves Pilgrims?
18127Why did some of the people of Virginia trouble them?
18127Why did they give him that name?
18127Why did they like to be there?
18127Why did they now wish to go to America?
18127Why did we fight the British?
18127Why had they left England?
18127Why is Virginia sometimes called the"Mother of Presidents"?
18127Why not?
18127Why was he made a general?
18127Why was the new settlement called Georgia?
18127Why?
18127Would you give up the country to them?''
18127[ 4] and so have n''t I the right to it?''
18127[ Can any one in the class tell how many we have now?]
18127replied the king;''did n''t my people discover it?
18127what cheer?"
38073Has not every restitution of the ancient Saxon laws had happy effects? 38073 [ 274] Was this a veiled threat?
38073About seven o''clock of the evening of that day he awoke and, seeing me staying at his bedside, exclaimed,"Ah, Doctor, are you still there?"
38073Are we not the better for what we have hitherto abolished of the feudal system?
38073Are we then to see again Athenian and Lacedemonian confederacies?
38073B. Colvin, he took up again the same question:"In what circumstances is it permitted for the man in charge to assume authority beyond the law?"
38073But what compensation?
38073But why not quote also from another traveler, John Mellish, who spoke of the impetus given to manufactures and home industries?
38073CHAPTER II JACOBIN OR AMERICAN?
38073Can any condition of society be more desirable than this?
38073Could these undesirables be pushed into the Spanish sphere of influence?
38073Does it mean that Jefferson should be accused of plagiarism?
38073Finally in answer to Fortescue Aland''s question why the Common law of England should not now be a part of the Common law of England?
38073Has it not been the practice of all other nations to hold their lands as their personal estate in absolute dominion?
38073He concurred in it from the first dawn of the question, What was the political relation between us and England?
38073He then asked,"Is it the Fourth?"
38073Her good faith?
38073If therefore, on leaving our harbors we are certain to lose them, is it not better, as to vessels, cargoes and seamen, to keep them at home?
38073In God''s name, from whence have they derived this power?
38073Is he capable?
38073Is he faithful to the Constitution?
38073Is it from any principle in our new constitution expressed or implied?
38073Is not it''s history well known, and the purposes for which it was introduced, to wit, the establishment of a military system of defense?
38073Is this a democratic view in the modern sense of the word?
38073May not our government be more homogeneous, more peaceable, more durable?
38073Or can it hesitate to believe with us, that nothing but our own exertions may defeat the ministerial sentence of death or abject submission?
38073Or is this the tocsin of merely a servile war?
38073Suppose 20 millions of republican Americans[ were] thrown all of a sudden into France, what would be the condition of that kingdom?
38073That of a horse jockey?
38073That they are not to be violated but with his wrath?...
38073The acquiescence of Bonaparte to the annexation of the Floridas?
38073The death of George III?
38073The next question was to determine where does the power rest to declare a law unconstitutional?
38073The"law of nature"--what was meant by the word?
38073To wage another Peloponesian war to settle the ascendency between them?
38073Was Jefferson irritated and despondent at the ingratitude of his fellow citizens who had not rejected at once the charges made by Nicholas?
38073Was he not rather a victim of overwork and overexertion?
38073Was he so alarmed by the health of his wife that he did not feel that he could leave her even for a few days?
38073Was it fair to ask Belinda to wait so long for him?
38073Was it not afterwards made an engine of immense oppression?...
38073Was it the Epicurean maxim of Horace,--"enjoy to- day and put as little trust as possible in the morrow?"
38073Was the young republic of the United States to follow in their steps and accept such a humiliating compromise?
38073Well, which of these kinds of reputation would I prefer?
38073Were the United States going to be dragged into the European convulsions and would they have to side openly with their former ally?
38073What was to be done in that case?
38073What will be the conclusion?
38073Which would be your second choice?
38073Why did he send to Martha moralizing and edifying letters when he was traveling in Southern France and Italy?
38073[ 114] This is indeed a charming letter; but why did he not write more often in this vein?
38073a fox hunter?
38073an orator?
38073or the finest advocate of my country''s rights?
40769; and Lake Michaelson( 12,700 ft.?)
40769As a sarcastic protest against cock- fighting in England, he declared that he had witnessed in Sligo(?)
41041How can it be that"two- fifths of the trade and travel of the road were diverted at Brownsville?"
41041Is there any young fellow of the present time who aspires to take the place of a stoker?
41041What of the future?
41041Where are you, O rattling''Quicksilver,''O swift''Defiance?''
41041Where are you, charioteers?
38478The question now to be solved was,''Should I make the northern or the southern portion of the province the scenes of further exploration?'' 38478 ( seeáppa) who is he? 38478 A smooth tree you may climb, however tall it is; but how can you pass over the sea, glassy as it looks? 38478 Also whether the bark of a very young tree, e. g. four years old, contain thus early the active principle, genuine? 38478 And when thou dost traverse the spirit land, And its dwellers shall ask thee,What meaneth this?"
38478Are the nights and forenoons, as in Java, usually clear until noon?
38478But what have been the results directly springing from these high- handed acts, these political_ faits accomplis_?
38478But what interest have these things for you?
38478Can specimens of the soil be procured?
38478Canst thou still the surf that breaks on the Shoal of Rongo- mai- ta- kupe?
38478Does it affect rich black mould, in moist forcing soils, or rather dry, stony, barren soils?
38478Does it grow on steep acclivities, or does it seem to prefer gentle slopes or level ground?
38478Does it grow solitary, or is it found in groups or clusters, and are its special peculiarities in this respect observable in every forest?
38478Does it rain for months at a time, and for how many, and during what months?
38478For how many and during what months does it rain, and during what period of the day are the showers heaviest?
38478He inquired of the physician in attendance how long they were likely to live?
38478He issues from the press, presented to him at Vienna, stirring publications, comparing the Maories to Pharaoh(?)
38478How did its members respond to the efforts made to provide them with every possible appliance that munificence could supply?"
38478How many days of rain are there in the rainy season of that particular region of the tropical zone?
38478Is it known whether observations have ever been made by the Spanish Creoles as to the amount and duration of the rain- fall?
38478Is it the unlimited use of spirits, or is it not rather the ignorance begotten of fanaticism run mad, which disloyally put weapons into your hands?
38478On what soil does it grow most abundantly and luxuriantly?
38478Or does it not rain at all, in which case is its place supplied by regular afternoon storms?
38478Say what has filled the graves of Mahaéna with human bones?
38478Sin proteccion, pues, y sin estimulo, ni oficial, ni social, ¿ qué se podrá esperar de las letras Peruanas?"
38478Such was the reasoning once avowed by a murderess of her child:--"Why should my child live?
38478That thou mayst have a comely aspect, That when thou art bidden to a feast, They may not ask,"Whence cometh this_ red- lipped_ woman?"
38478That when thou dost enter the circle of dancers, They may not ask,"Whence cometh this woman with the ugly lips?"
38478That, when thou crossest the threshold of a strange house, They may not say,"Whence cometh this ugly woman?"
38478The grasp of a chief''s red hand can not be loosened, but the grasp of a slave, what strength has it?
38478To the question,"_ Eaha tera fenúa?_"( What is the name of this island?)
38478To the question,"_ Eaha tera fenúa?_"( What is the name of this island?)
38478What are the general meteorological conditions, and what is the annual amount of rain- fall?
38478What are the highest and lowest limits of the_ Cinchona Calisaya_, or at all events, what is the altitude of the region in which it most abounds?
38478What can I say more?
38478What description of bark is the most prized, that from the young and slender, or that from the larger and older trees?
38478What is independence or even affluence to the exile, if he has no one to care for, or think of, but himself?
38478What is the description of the rock formation, trachytic, granitic, or gneiss, or are slate or sandstone the characteristic formations?
38478What is the unvarying warmth of the soil, as observed at a depth of 5 feet below the surface?
38478What objection could the Committee possibly have to a man whose name they had never heard before that moment?
38478Where now?
38478Where, O physicians, was the power of your remedies?
38478erythroderma_ of Weddell, as would appear from an article by Howard in"the Pharmaceutical Journal for October, 1856?"
38478which| itch|-- what?
38478who''s there?
38478| akéea?
38478| go- leejáa?
38478| idiatoom?
38478| itch- kowa?
38478| sapaée?
38478| ta?
38478| tchée?
38478| togata mett?
38478| táa- ban- pyn?
38478| áya?
38478|-- what does that cost?
38478|-- who are you?
38478|-- who?
38478|--| sáya- táy?
38478|--| sáya?
38478|--| tchick- ahn?
32105''Are you ready?'' 32105 ''Pardon me once more, my dear young friend,''he said,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?''
32105''Pardon me, gentlemen,''he again said, addressing himself to me in a louder tone,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?'' 32105 ''Pardon me, sare,''remarked the old gentleman at our table, addressing himself to me,''ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?''
32105''Sare, what you mean? 32105 ''Sare?
32105''Taint likely the road agents has stopped her, is it?
32105Ai n''t yer tired, Benner?
32105And Lizzi was well then?
32105And concerns me?
32105And my Gertrude,asked Mr. Plowden, anxiously,"how was she enjoying herself?"
32105And poor father,Lizzi continued,"away out in the cabin alone, his wife dead and his daughter disgraced-- how will I tell him that mother is dead?"
32105And pray why do you take me for a Democrat?
32105And what about my affair?
32105And what became of little Anna?
32105And what if he should,retorted Miss Fithian;"who would believe the word of a bigamist?"
32105And you''ll keep my secret, boys? 32105 Are we going to bed?"
32105Are you Mrs. Robert Plowden?
32105Are you awake, boy?
32105Are you sure she died?
32105Are your eyes open in heaven, mother? 32105 But how are you and Hunch goin''to keep up with the big McAnays?
32105But what will my wife say-- she who never suspected that I had a wife before her, much less a child?
32105But, Marthy, how''s it to be managed?
32105By the proper authorities?
32105Ca n''t you help me, Lizzi?
32105Ca- ant yer see I lo- ve you better nor Dick and all the rest o''the fellers put together?
32105Can you prove it?
32105Did I hurt your feelin''s when I asked ef you had noos from home? 32105 Did Mrs.''Oney stay?"
32105Did they call him Gill here?
32105Do n''t you see, Lizzi? 32105 Do you know, Jim, that Squire Parsons is going to be hard to beat?"
32105Do you mean that my husband is a bigamist?
32105Do you, dear? 32105 Five years?
32105Has he been here long?
32105Have any of our guests disappointed us?
32105Have any of you decided upon a course of action?
32105Have you any money?
32105Have you that letter?
32105He did n''t? 32105 He is n''t wuss, is he?"
32105His mother- in- law? 32105 How can you help find him?"
32105How do you know that she is dead?
32105How long ago was that?
32105How should I know?
32105How?
32105How?
32105I say, Joe, what ails you?
32105I say, Parkenson, wot''s''appened to''er?
32105I think so, too,Gill remarked, and then asked, as if the idea had just struck him:"Why not be married by the Squire?"
32105I''m not much of a story- teller, boys,said Dan;"can anybody suggest a subject?"
32105Is he employed here?
32105Is it anything serious?
32105Is there any person here present who knows any good reason why these two parties shall not be united in marriage? 32105 Jist find it out?"
32105John, did you know it?
32105John, would you marry me and give up the money-- marry me before people and send your mother word?
32105Keep a secret? 32105 Kind of small potatoes beside of Levi''s pile,"Cassi replied;"but if Levi will write us an order, we''ll sign it, hey, Matthi?"
32105Lizzi, what has happened to my fiddle?
32105Lizzi,said Gill,"will you be my wife?"
32105Nor mine either, I suppose you think?
32105Parson,Hunch said, meeting the reverend gentleman at the church door,"what der yer think crazy Bill Kellar''s got inter his head now?"
32105Pray why did you take me for a minister?
32105Robbed me?
32105Say, Benner, what''d yer call me a liar fer?
32105Say, Benner, when did you leave the Sisters?
32105Say, Bill,inquired the dwarf,"what''er yellin''at, the sky?"
32105She talks mighty pretty, do n''t she, Hunch?
32105Squire, can you keep a secret?
32105Surely yer would n''t go back East to set the folks there to makin''fun of us, would yer, arter what they said agin our comin''so far away?
32105That''s strange, is n''t it?
32105That''s why you left Three- Sisters and joined the circus?
32105The father of the wife he had here?
32105The girl?
32105Then who wrote this?
32105Then why do n''t yer take a holt and do somethin''for Joe?
32105Think so?
32105Up? 32105 Well, ef Joe''s a woman, who is she, anyhow?"
32105Well, yer would n''t think I''d objec'', would yer?
32105Well?
32105What am I for if you ca n''t tell me your troubles?
32105What are you doing?
32105What did he want to do that for?
32105What did you tell your mother?
32105What do you all think?
32105What do you say to a quiet game of''draw''?
32105What does it all mean?
32105What fer?
32105What if it had been some other man going through the grove?
32105What then_ shall_ we do to preserve our dignity and get them back?
32105What''ll it be?
32105What''s the matter?
32105What''s this?
32105What, Lizzi, not scared by the dark?
32105Where are you all going?
32105Where is he?
32105Where yer from?
32105Where''s the woman who brought that card, Sam?
32105Who are you?
32105Who cares if you do?
32105Who is it? 32105 Who is she?"
32105Who is that youth?
32105Who spoke of East or West or any other p''ints of the cumpis, I should like to know?
32105Who told yer''bout thet?
32105Why are you running so?
32105Why are_ you_''ere, mother?
32105Why did yer want ter burn the books?
32105Why did you not tell her the truth before marriage?
32105Why do n''t yer set a trap fer it?
32105Why do n''t_ you_ make a clean breast of it at once? 32105 Why have you got such a long face, John?
32105Will the doctor never come?
32105Will you baptize my boy?
32105Wot''s up? 32105 Would n''t you do it for Dick?"
32105Would you like me to wear that dress?
32105Yes?
32105Yes?
32105You have n''t got a mother, have you?
32105You''re a doctor, ai n''t yer?
32105''A slight misunderstanding,''eh?
32105''What can we do?''
32105''ow could you?
32105After the dancers were seated when this quadrille was finished, Bill took Hunch aside and asked:"Hunch, are you afraid of the devil?"
32105Ai n''t you glad to see me?"
32105Although so long settled in Virginia, you are an Englishman?"
32105An insult?''
32105And what the words my weary brain Discovers in your vague refrain?
32105And yet, where are we?
32105And, Hunch Blair, how dare you?"
32105At last Blind Benner said:"Hunch, do yer mind the time Lizzi told me what she looked like?"
32105Because I loved you?
32105But are we going to stay here all Christmas, while they are having a good time by themselves?"
32105But did n''t you hear anything of Gill?"
32105But how came you to know all this?"
32105But what is my position?
32105But who comes now?
32105Could it be after all that she was dishonest?
32105Could it be that her mother had read her aright?
32105Could it be that she had cruelly encouraged his faith in her, knowing the certainty of his discovery of the truth at last?
32105Could you take me in?"
32105Darting into the dining- room, she surprised Sam( was the artful Sam surprised?)
32105Did any one of my readers ever read that neither the eagle nor the lion would eat anything they had not themselves slain?
32105Did not William say he left me forever?"
32105Did you observe how sweetly she bore the horrible revelation?
32105Did you think I could n''t guess who left the cake there yesterday?"
32105Do yer mind thet, Benner-- hot and scorchin'', not soft an''warm?
32105Do you know what I thought?
32105Does sorrow never lead to peace?
32105E. S._ THE BELLS OF CHRISTMAS._ O bells that madly toll to- night, What is the meaning of your note?
32105F. H._, 641 DOCTOR MERIVALE: A Story,_ Charles P. Shermon_, 811 DOES THE HIGH TARIFF AFFECT OUR EDUCATIONAL SYSTEM?
32105For the pudding?
32105Guess it was all a lie, eh?"
32105Had you, ducky?"
32105Has he a wife?"
32105Have you made it all right with her?"
32105He dodged, and said:"Ca n''t yer keep quiet?
32105Here he caught Levi''s arm and asked in a whisper:"Did yer hear anything of him?"
32105How can I ever repay you, Mr. Plowden, for your noble frankness?"
32105How did I know?
32105How then is it possible that a yearly excess of £ 70,000,000 could be paid in specie?
32105However, he made an effort to prepare Bill for disappointment by asking:"Would n''t cotton in yer ears do as well as the hair in the box?"
32105Hunch shouted familiarly:"Say, Bill, do n''t yer know yer old frien''s?"
32105I ai n''t easy skeered, yer know, an''I set up ter git a better look, an''what do you think it wuz?
32105I am dying even while I speak; but I shall die perfectly happy if you will tell me whether_ zat was your breakfast or your dinnaire_?''"
32105I married you because-- what do you suppose, now?
32105If Mr. Plowden left a legitimate wife in England, then what is my position?
32105Into Nowhere?
32105Is disappointment or delight The burden of each brazen throat?
32105Is it surprising that after these manifold exertions his exhausted nature demands repose?
32105Is n''t it just a little extraordinary to invite strangers?"
32105Is there anything on earth that I can do for you or yours?
32105Mrs. Rutherford sprang to her feet, instantly armed_ cap- à- pie_ with her never- failing jealousy:"What do you mean?"
32105My dear sare, ess zis your breakfast or your dinnaire?''
32105No gentleman?
32105Now, do you see?"
32105Oh, how shall I ever forgive myself for wronging my own dear, innocent, faithful, self- sacrificing love by my cruel suspicions and hateful jealousy?"
32105On his way home Bill muttered:"What infernal business had Old Nick at Lizzi''s party?"
32105Pallid and quivering with wrath, she muttered half audibly:"So I''m''a mischief- making old cat,''am I?
32105Perhaps not; but how much has this wonderful system done to arrest those evils?
32105Plowden?"
32105Rutherford?"
32105She had a letter of introduction from Lydia Wildfen; and what do you think her business was?"
32105She looked like a drooping lily, did n''t she, Wildfen?"
32105So he opened a volume of legal forms and asked the question,"Are both parties of contracting age?"
32105So you see, Plowden, that if you_ can_ stave off my wife''s suspicions until after Christmas, I will--""What?"
32105So, you will keep my secret, my dear madam, will you not?"
32105The silence was soon broken, however, by Wildfen saying to his wife:"A pretty row you''ve made all around, have n''t you?"
32105Then the dreadful question presents itself, how is it to be cooked?
32105Well, lads,"he continued, as he filled his pipe,"you want to know how I got the name of''Dead- Shot Dan''?"
32105Well?"
32105What am I?"
32105What are you fighting about?"
32105What can I say to your wife?"
32105What do they mean?''
32105What have I done that you must select me for your soloist on the violin?"
32105When I give you the nod, just take your cornet, sneak up on the roof and blow a hole through him, will you?"
32105Where are you going with that basket of food?"
32105Who is it?"
32105Who''s that?"
32105Why can not our gifted authors, such as Miss Mathews, for example, turn to these and give us a fiction worthy the name?
32105Why do you ask me all these questions?"
32105Why do you follow me?"
32105Why is n''t it legal?"
32105Wo n''t Lizzi be glad ter know it was Blind Benner what found him?"
32105Would a country be richer for such a state of things?
32105You are a surgeon; can you do anything for him?''
32105and I''m''deaf as a post and an adder,''am I?
32105bad noos from the States?"
32105do I?
32105do yer take me fer a woman?"
32105groaned Plowden,"could there have been any mistake about her death?"
32105how could you, and in your mother''s name, too?"
32105is he too a villain?"
32105she demanded,"what does this mean?"
32105what is that?"
32105what''s the matter?"
32105when will those discords cease?
35742But when?
35742Dead, sir?
35742If the Governor refuses to give the pass, shall the revenue officer be allowed to seize the tea and land it to- morrow morning?
35742Is it not finished?
35742What makes thee think so, Isaac?
35742What picture do you get in that paragraph?
35742Where is Cervera going?
35742Why dost thou remove thy hat, friend Charles?
35742Will he try to break the blockade which an American fleet under Admiral Sampson is keeping up on the northern coast of Cuba? 35742 Would$ 10 be of any service?"
35742About his ability as a speech- maker?
35742Are you constantly trying to form mental pictures as you read?
35742Are you forming the habit of looking up on your map all the places mentioned in the text?
35742But when shall we be stronger?
35742But while, in deep suspense, the meeting waited and deliberated, John Rowe said,"Who knows how tea will mingle with salt water?"
35742Can you form a mental picture of Patrick Henry as he made his great speech in St. John''s Church?
35742Can you form a mental picture of their first dwellings?
35742Do you not think it would be profitable for you to memorize this speech?
35742For how could they escape?
35742Had he and his men endured such peril and hardship to perish unknown in the sea?
35742Have you definite pictures of the personal appearance of these men?
35742How could he send Ezekiel, too?
35742How did Greene look?
35742How did Jefferson look when he was in college?
35742How did William Pitt feel about American taxation?
35742How did Wolfe look, and what were his most striking personal traits?
35742How did he dress?
35742How did he make many Puritan enemies?
35742How did he show his interest in the people?
35742How did his colony suffer?
35742How did his slaves regard him?
35742How did it result?
35742How did the people of Providence feel about religious freedom?
35742How do you explain the success in life of this poor boy?
35742How many are already in the forts lying between Lake Erie and the Ohio River?"
35742How was he treated by the French people and their King?
35742How was the idea of the telegraph suggested to Morse?
35742In Pocahontas?
35742In what way did the King try to entrap the Americans?
35742In what way was he defeated?
35742In what ways did he give evidence of his stubbornness?
35742Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
35742Its most striking result?
35742On a certain occasion, Morse said to one of them, who owed him a quarter''s tuition:"Well, Strothers, my boy, how are we off for money?"
35742Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
35742Should the people of Virginia tamely submit to it and say nothing?
35742Should they urge Parliament to repeal it?
35742Tell about Washington''s troubles and his retreat across New Jersey?
35742The special question of inquiry was this:"Does the length of wire make any difference in the velocity of the electric current passing through it?"
35742Washington eagerly asked,"Did the Americans stand the fire of the regular troops?"
35742What and where was The Hermitage?
35742What can be the plans of the French?
35742What can you say of his record in the Mexican War?
35742What can you tell about Grant''s personality?
35742What caused the war with Spain?
35742What caused this war?
35742What did Champlain accomplish?
35742What did De Soto accomplish?
35742What did Franklin have to do with the following: the Stamp Act; the Declaration of Independence; securing aid from France?
35742What did Jackson do for the Union?
35742What did Lieutenant Hobson and his men do?
35742What did Raleigh try to do?
35742What did he succeed in doing?
35742What did his mother mean when she said to him,"George, be King"?
35742What do the following dates mean: 1492, 1541, 1607, 1629, 1676, 1682?
35742What do the following dates signify: 1492, 1607, 1620, 1775- 1783, 1861- 1865, 1898?
35742What do you admire in Bacon?
35742What do you admire in Boone''s character?
35742What do you admire in Jefferson''s character?
35742What do you admire in La Salle''s character?
35742What do you admire in Penn''s character?
35742What do you admire in Roger Williams?
35742What do you admire in Smith?
35742What do you admire in his character?
35742What do you admire in his character?
35742What do you admire in his character?
35742What do you admire in his character?
35742What do you admire in the character of Abraham Lincoln?
35742What do you admire in the character of Admiral Dewey?
35742What do you admire in the character of Miles Standish, and what did he do for the Pilgrims at Plymouth?
35742What do you admire in the character of Robert Fulton?
35742What do you think of General Braddock?
35742What do you think of Powhatan?
35742What great discovery did he make at this time?
35742What great thing did he do?
35742What honors were showered upon him?
35742What important thing was done by Sir Thomas Dale?
35742What is a hero?
35742What is it that gentlemen wish?
35742What is meant by his"republican simplicity"?
35742What is there in Webster''s character that you admire?
35742What picture have you of Webster''s personal appearance?
35742What serious accident happened to his boat?
35742What shall we do?"
35742What should be done about the Stamp Act?
35742What simple ways of living did Franklin adopt when he was trying hard to pay his debts?
35742What sort of a man was he in his home life?
35742What traits in Grant''s character do you admire?
35742What was Boone''s great work?
35742What was Columbus trying to do?
35742What was Daniel Webster''s idea of the Union?
35742What was Washington''s favorite motto?
35742What was his personal appearance when he went to Williamsburg to attend the session of the House of Burgesses?
35742What was the Stamp Act and what was its purpose?
35742What was the condition of his army when he took command of it in the South?
35742What was the condition of this army?
35742What was the great work of Samuel Adams?
35742What was the new problem?
35742What was the purpose of this journey?
35742What was the"race for life"?
35742What was their three- fold purpose?
35742What was this?
35742What were Gage''s secret plans, and how did Paul Revere and his band of patriots try to thwart them?
35742What were King George''s new taxes?
35742What were La Salle''s twofold plans?
35742What were Marion''s methods of annoying the British?
35742What were his most prominent traits of character?
35742What were his reading habits?
35742What were his trials and difficulties at Quebec?
35742What were his working habits?
35742What were its most striking results?
35742What were the British plans for 1777, and in what way did General Howe blunder in carrying out his part?
35742What were the Navigation Laws, and how did they affect the planters?
35742What were the leading causes of the Revolution?
35742What would they have?
35742What, in the American sailors in the war with Spain?
35742When and why did Jefferson purchase Louisiana?
35742When did the Quakers settle Pennsylvania?
35742When did this battle take place?
35742When was Jamestown settled?
35742When?
35742When?
35742When?
35742Which point of view was correct?
35742Whom do you most admire of all the heroes you have read about in this book?
35742Why did Commodore Dewey go with his fleet to the Philippines?
35742Why did Raleigh when a boy hate Spain?
35742Why did he wish to settle Pennsylvania?
35742Why did the British wish to get control of the South?
35742Why did the Iroquois become bitter enemies of the French and warm friends of the Dutch?
35742Why did the colonists object to it?
35742Why stand we here idle?
35742Why was Penn thrown into prison?
35742Why was the capture of Quebec by the English so important?
35742Why were all the taxes repealed except the one on tea?
35742Why?
35742Will he try to intercept and destroy the battle- ship Oregon?
35742Will it be the next week, or the next year?
35742Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
35742Would the world never know of their great achievement?
35742[ 12] Or, will he bring havoc and destruction upon us by sailing straight for some great Atlantic seaport?"
35742he asked,"Who runs?"
35742or should they cry out against it in open defiance?
4098By whose order is this?
4098Did I tell you that''Jim Nooks,''Mrs. Waite''s cat, was dead?
4098What appointment?
4098What efforts have been made to open up other roads for provisioning the army?
4098Where am I to find the new commander who is to possess that greater ability which you believe to be required?
4098Why did n''t you cut off his head?
4098-- Captain Grant in a Hard Fight Meanwhile, what had become of Grant?
4098How could he get well?
4098Might it not be possible to keep him busily occupied in front, while a force stole behind his right wing and caught it between two fires?
4098Should it be necessary to abandon our position to prevent being surrounded, what will you do?
4098The question is, is it right to surrender this army?
4098Was he engaged in a flanking movement such as had crumpled them to pieces at Chancellorsville?
4098Was he trying to lure them out of their position and catch them in some giant ambuscade?
4098Was it possible that Lee had retreated?
4098What was the explanation of this ominous silence?
4098one of them protested,"What will history say of the surrender of the army in the field?"
37702''Then you do not give me your word?'' 37702 **"Whence is any right derived, but that which power confers, for persecution?
37702Are we to humble ourselves before Judge Paine?
37702Dare you put up a petition to Heaven for such a power, without fearing to be struck from the earth by its justice? 37702 Did thee never hear him call on Christ?"
37702Do Christians not see that their own religion is founded on a human sacrifice? 37702 How happened it that he did not discover America; or is it only with kingdoms that his sooty highness has any interest?"
37702Is not the Bible warfare the same kind of warfare as the Indians themselves carry on?
37702Many thousands of human beings will be sacrificed in the ensuing contest, and for what? 37702 Shall the clay say to the potter, why hast thou formed me thus?"
37702Supposing their aim to be the re- establishment of the Bourbons, the difficulty which will present itself, will be, to know who will be their Allies? 37702 The frost returns?
37702What is Dayton gone to New Orleans for? 37702 What is Fulton about?
37702What,he afterward said--"what were the tribute of my glass of wine in that torrent of brandy?"
37702Why has the Revolution of France been stained with crimes, while the Revolution of the United States of America was not? 37702 ''Aye,''he replied,''and who would have thought that we should meet in Paris?'' 37702 12) Minister Fauchet''s report of a conversation with Secretary Randolph in which he( Randolph) said:What would you have us do?
37702And what could be done by the Americans in Paris, whom Paine alone had befriended?
37702And what does my reader suppose is the alternative claimed by the prelate''s foaming mouth?
37702And who do you think the man was who offered me his services?
37702But how was the death of Jesus Christ to affect or alter the case?
37702But if Paine was so fit for such a Convention, why should they behead him?
37702But suddenly another question was sprung upon the Convention: Shall the execution be immediate, or shall there be delay?
37702But what was this atheism?
37702But why should men who then opposed him suddenly revive the claims of humanity when the penalty happened to fall upon a King?
37702But why was not Paine executed?
37702Can there be a portrait lost under some other name?
37702Canst thou find out the Almighty to perfection?"
37702Did God thirst for blood?
37702Do you think to convert Mr. Eaton to your religion by embittering his existence?
37702Do you think to please the God you worship by this exhibition of your zeal?
37702Do you want to renew in Louisiana the horrors of Domingo?"
37702Erskine found gallant defenders in the House, among them Fox, who demanded of Pitt:"Can you not prosecute Paine without an army?"
37702Have those who emigrated to America improved, or those whom they left behind degenerated?...
37702He used to say, that he thought nothing more impertinent, than to say to any body:"What do you think of that?"
37702How far is it from thence to Rotherham?
37702If Paine was spared, what heretic need tremble?
37702If a God he could not die, and as a man he could not redeem: how then is this redemption proved to be fact?
37702If by any means I can obtain your release on my own security, will you promise me to return within twenty days?''
37702If she could not do the one, how is she to perform the other?
37702If so, would it not have been better to have crucified Adam upon the forbidden tree, and made a new man?"
37702In fine, will any of these Powers consent to furnish forces which could be directed against herself?
37702In receiving salutations he bowed very gracefully, and, if from an acquaintance, he did not begin with"how d''ye do?"
37702In what"Israel"is greater faith found?
37702Is he taming a whale to draw his submarine boat?
37702Is he there as an Agent for the British as Blount was said to be?"
37702Is this then a satisfactory answer to the objection?
37702Is this what I ought to have expected from America after the part I had acted towards her?
37702Or, will it redound to her honor or to your''s that I tell the story?
37702Paine copied for him his creed from the"Age of Reason,"and asked,"My good friend, do you call believing in God infidelity?"
37702Paine, hearing some one speak, opens his eyes, and said:"''T is you Doctor: what news?"
37702President.--Did you give a copy of the note to Brissot?
37702President.--Did you send it to him as it is printed?
37702Reign of Terror?
37702She was shown into his bed- chamber; and Paine, raising himself on his elbow, and turning towards the woman, said:"What do you want with me?"
37702Should not slaves revolt?
37702So far are these historical facts-- Maybe sometime hence I may collect dates and periods to them-- But why should they be disputed?
37702The excesses in France are great; but who are the authors of them?
37702The following are some of its trenchant paragraphs:"Is it a fact that Jesus Christ died for the sins of the world, and how is it proved?
37702Then set the ribs at proper distance, and after dinner I and Jackaway[?]
37702They made a strong point of the sentence found, and added:"Why Thomas Payne more than another?
37702This being the case how is the War to close?
37702To whom is our agent to be accredited?
37702Was it his money sent over or the taxes of French labor?
37702Was the penalty good enough for the people, but not for a King?
37702What are you about?
37702What has become of the original of this second picture by the elder Jarvis?
37702What is Barlow about?
37702What is Bonneville about?
37702What is Mr. Adams''authority for this?
37702What then has caused the difference?
37702What would a diary of interviews with Paine, written by his friend Kitty Few, be now worth?
37702When the Apostles went abroad to convert the nations, were they enjoined to stab and poison all who disbelieved the divinity of Christ''s mission?...
37702Where is the evidence that the person called Jesus Christ is the begotten Son of God?
37702Where is the vision that has led this wayworn pilgrim?
37702Where the star he has followed so long, to find it hovering over the new birth of humanity?
37702Who remembers that the younger Pitt was brought to an early grave by the bottle?
37702Why may Paine''s imperilled comrades not come forth again?
37702Why not send it( if you send it anywhere) to the deputy Paine here?''
37702Why should the victim spare the altar on which he is sacrificed, and justice also?
37702Why then is it to be supposed they have changed with respect to man?"
37702Why, then, do you ask it of man against man?
37702Will Spain, or any other maritime Power, allow France and her Marine to ally themselves to England?
37702[ But how can it be determined how much in Jeremiah is the"word of God,"and how much uttered for the casual advantage of himself or his king?]
37702[ Paine had asked, why might not writers mistaken in the natural genealogy of Christ be mistaken also in his celestial genealogy?
37702[ Paine''s question here had been:"What certainty then can there be in the Bible for anything"?
37702[ What but human reason, in the absence of papal authority, is to draw the line between the historical and religious elements in the Bible?]
37702but, with a"what news?"
37702has not the world adopted as true a- many affairs without date and of less moment than this, and even pay what is called a holy regard to them?
37702he exclaimed,''do you call this a Republic?
37702is of consequence involved and interested in the affair The question then is-- What is the best step to be taken?
37702who helped to rescue them from the oppressor''s yoke, or our arm and armies?
36745A which?
36745After all,he says,"what would there be in such a system more mysterious than in the processes of the mind reader?
36745Ai n''t you been with him all the time?
36745Ai n''t you glad to see me?
36745An''where did you come from, an''where are you goin''?
36745And how are the Asiatic animals caught?
36745Boss, is dat sho nuff coffee?
36745Boss, kin I have dem what''s on de groun''?
36745But, father, how could I go and leave you here all by yourself?
36745But, father, what can you do? 36745 D''ye see that line there?"
36745Dat ar mark? 36745 De ginnywine ole- time coffee?"
36745Did anybody tell you he was here?
36745Do n''t you know you are liable to get killed any minute? 36745 Do you begin to see my idea?"
36745Do you mean Lieutenant Clopton, father?
36745Green, so green, is the cedar tree, And green is the moss that''s under; Can you hear the things that he says to me? 36745 How can you talk so?"
36745How?
36745Is this what you call war?
36745Jest makin''a speech, eh? 36745 Marse Dave Henry, whar de namer goodness you been?
36745Miss what?
36745Perhaps you have seen him yourself since the war began?
36745Sez one ould man,''Will yez give me a chew?'' 36745 What are you wanderin''''round here in the woods for?"
36745What did he say?
36745What does the fellow mean?
36745What have you there?
36745What is it, sor?
36745What is it?
36745What is your fighting force?
36745What was he talkin''about?
36745What''s funny?
36745What''s that for?
36745What''s the countersign, Johnny?
36745What''s your name?
36745Who axed you to come trespassin''on my land?
36745Who else but you?
36745Who was he talking to, Jule?
36745Who was he talking to, Jule?
36745Who? 36745 Why do n''t you make her come?"
36745Why do n''t you nail him?
36745Why, what is the matter, father?
36745You saw the hankcher jump, did n''t you?
36745You see that big poplar over yonder? 36745 A later friend of his declared that, when he asked,What has become of that enormous dish of meat?"
36745A minute later he said:"You will come, then?
36745Ai n''t you makin''your way to the Yankee army?"
36745And did n''t the immortal Ralph Keeler appear upon the scene during the summer of''71 or''72?
36745At first she thought that she would get away and go to him, and beg him not to give her up-- what does a child know of pride all at once?
36745But when this was ready the problem was, what to do with the earlier organ?
36745Could you not make a work in two volumes, and get Mark Twain to sell it by subscription?
36745DEAR SIR: Would not those"undated anecdotes"come in well to illustrate and brighten your summing- up chapter?
36745De boxes, dey er dar at de camp, an''here me, but wharbouts is Marse Dave Henry?
36745Did n''t I hear you talkin''to somebody?"
36745Did you hear that shootin''?
36745Did you see him when he went back?"
36745Do you know,"he continued,"that there are five varieties of royal tigers?
36745Do you like them?
36745Do you reckon I was born to set down here an''put up wi''that kind of business?"
36745Do you reckon I''m a- goin''to be a- refugeein''an''a- skee- daddlin''across the country like a skeer''d rabbit at my time of life?
36745Do you reckon I''m a- gwine to be drove off''n the place where I was born, an''where your granpappy was born, an''where your mother lies buried?
36745Do you remember the glorious talks we had together while the hours of the night slipped away unnoticed?
36745Father Pierre seemed quite a favorite with the children, for is it not he, as little Griselle said, who brings letters from brother Charles?
36745Hagenbeck?"
36745Hagenbeck?"
36745Hain''t I got one son on one side an''another son on t''other side?
36745Have you gone an''lost what little bit of common sense you was born with?
36745How can I read books and sit quietly here while the soldiers are preparing to fight?
36745How can you help yourself?
36745I have changed, have I not?"
36745If these two forces are identical in one respect, why may they not be so in all respects?
36745If they want to collogue an''palaver, why do n''t they go som''ers else?"
36745In such circumstances who would venture to draw the horoscope of the Europe of to- morrow?
36745In the distance could be heard the shouting of the Union soldiers and the band with its"Yankee Doodle, howd''y- do?"
36745Indeed, is it not possible that the deaf mute might actually hear spoken words?
36745Is not a volume of five hundred pages too small?
36745Is there any one who could describe for you some of the noted scenes in which your uncle figured, but which you did not witness yourself?
36745It was"Yankee Doodle, howdy do?"
36745Me?"
36745Mr. Hagenbeck, noting the direction of my gaze, said:"I suppose you know who that is?"
36745None er you all ai n''t seed nothin''er Marse----""Who do you belong to?"
36745None er you- all ai n''t seed nothin''----""What are you doin''here?"
36745None er you- all ai n''t seed''i m, is you?"
36745Now, how did he git him?
36745Of course, I know that, being what you were, you could not have helped writing that book, but what was the immediate cause of your writing it?
36745Ought it not to be two volumes at five dollars?
36745Standing in front of a great glass cage full of snakes, I said to Mr. Hagenbeck:"Now, how do you manage to get hold of these reptiles?
36745Suddenly Clopton turned to Captain Fambrough:"I want to ask you how many troops have you got over there-- fighting men?"
36745Suppose there should be a battle?"
36745The first questions to be asked of a man are: Where, and of whom, was he born?
36745Then blanching the countess added,"You think, sir, do you not, that he is in ignorance of what has happened?
36745Was he joking?
36745What Love and Terror and Night called forth the Music?
36745What ancient chisel first sculptured the rounded columns of the limbs?
36745What could have possessed them to stay here?
36745What dead hands built the cupola of the brain, and from what older ruins were the scattered pieces of its mosaic- work brought?
36745What did she care about the Catechism, or the_ curé_, or an unblessed marriage, if Armand blessed her?
36745What do I want with your tea and coffee?"
36745What forgotten looms wove its tapestries and draperies?
36745What if it were the same as any other kind of magnetism?
36745What is it on your side, Yank?"
36745What ocean- beds and forest glades worked up the colors?
36745What winds and weathers wrought the strength into its buttresses?
36745When has human history ever afforded such a spectacle?
36745Who can not read faces?
36745Who fixed the windows in its upper walls?
36745Who knows?
36745Who the nation are you hollerin''at?"
36745Why do n''t he nail me?
36745Would not that be terrible?
36745Would ye mind comin''along, sor, for to kape me from swindlin''the Johnny out of all his belongin''s?"
36745You do not think that he has any suspicion?
36745You know what happened yesterday, do n''t you?
36745You saw that elegant lookin''chap that came out to take my place, did n''t you?
36745_ Boyesen._ After returning to this country, did not you settle down in New York?
36745_ Boyesen._ But his love story?
36745_ Boyesen._ Did Lowell share that opinion?
36745_ Boyesen._ Do not you regard that Venetian experience as a very valuable one?
36745_ Boyesen._ Do you call that the Latin character?
36745_ Boyesen._ Do you remember you once said to me that he was a most inveterate praiser?
36745_ Boyesen._ From Columbus you went as consul to Venice, did not you?
36745_ Boyesen._ How do you mean that you ought not to like it?
36745_ Boyesen._ How old were you when you left Jefferson, and went to Columbus?
36745_ Boyesen._ I need scarcely ask you if your association with Lowell was agreeable?
36745_ Boyesen._ Then he took snuff, and had a supernumerary calico handkerchief?
36745_ Boyesen._ Then there was a good deal of literary atmosphere about your childhood?
36745_ Boyesen._ Was not it at Cambridge that Björnstjerne Björnson visited you?
36745_ Boyesen._ What do you attribute that to?
36745_ Boyesen._ What was the condition of society in Columbus during those days?
36745_ Boyesen._ What year did you leave"The Nation"and assume the editorship of"The Atlantic"?
36745_ Boyesen._ You must have acquired Italian in a very short time?
36745_ Boyesen._ Your father, I should judge, then, was not a strict disciplinarian?
36745exclaimed Kilpatrick, pettishly;"you reckon I do n''t know your old man?
36745exclaimed O''Halloran,"do n''t I know that same?
36745what is the matter with everything?"
36720''But why?'' 36720 ''Not invited?
36720''The harem? 36720 And the rest of you gentlemen sided with the North?"
36720Are you a man responsible for his words?
36720Are you ready to apologize to me?
36720But really, how many?
36720But what can one do in such a case?
36720But what sense is there in men dressing in that way? 36720 But why do you ask?"
36720Comfortable?
36720Do they?
36720Do you mean that-- seriously?
36720How many Society friends have you, Miss Browneyes?
36720I hear, Mr. Miller,I said,"that you are my compatriot-- that you are a Hoosier by birth, as I am-- is it true?"
36720If I want to go to Indianapolis, what road do I take?
36720If I want to go to Madison?
36720Is it signed?
36720Is n''t it?
36720It''s stuff and nonsense,I interposed,"but what yarns did they tell?"
36720Lies? 36720 No, did I?
36720On terms?
36720Quite a new attitude of mind to you, is n''t it, Doctor? 36720 Say,"he broke out, interrupting some formal question of mine,"Say, do you know anything in fact?
36720Still again what harm would have been done if he had succeeded in selling the article? 36720 Suppose your book were published, how many of your Society friends could you confidently reckon upon as probable purchasers?
36720The American publishers of your father''s poem,he said,"have paid him all they could afford to pay in the present state of the law, I believe?"
36720Then what were you doing there?
36720To what book do you refer?
36720Well, what do you think? 36720 What about their literary quality?"
36720What am I to do with that?
36720What battery is that over there?
36720What did you say to him by way of reply?
36720What do you think of servants?
36720What is its theme? 36720 What is the Federal work that lies in front of it?"
36720What was it?
36720What was your special objection to me?
36720What? 36720 Whence comes the color of the rose or the violet or the dandelion?
36720Whence comes the inspiration?
36720Why not submit the question to Mr. Bryant himself?
36720Why, Mr. Briggs,I protested,"it was only a paragraph----""What of that?"
36720Why, sir, do you presume to tell me what is and what is n''t in an article that I''ve read for myself? 36720 Why, what do you call these chairs if they are not comfortable?
36720Would you mind reciting to me so much of it as you''ve written? 36720 Yes,"I answered in astonishment,"but how do you happen to know anything about it?"
36720Yes-- but what is it? 36720 You are thinking of''Elsie Venner''?"
36720You think human liberty is involved?
36720You''ve found it so since, have n''t you?
36720''With a pit- cher of but- termilk un- der her arm''--don''t it sing?
36720Almost forgetting to say"good- morning,"he eagerly asked:"Are you sure of your facts in that Amour story-- can they be proved?"
36720And how much of it have you written?"
36720And now that I have read the reminiscences in print, why am I unable to recall the fact that I wrote them?
36720Are we helplessly provincial or hopelessly snobbish?
36720Are we, after all, provincial?
36720Are you a rainbow chaser?"
36720Are you entirely certain that the manuscript was mine?"
36720Are you going to write on this affair in the Senate, or shall I take it up?"
36720As the evening of the dinner day approached, I asked my host:''When shall we dress for the dinner?''
36720As they turned their backs on the humorist and moved away, the Bishop asked:"What did you say the name of that mountebank is?"
36720At last the man asked in despair:"Well now, stranger, suppose I wanted to go to Hell?"
36720At that point he grasped my hand warmly and said:"Tell me, how is Joe?
36720Booth?"
36720Bryant?"
36720But as a people, have we outgrown our provincialism?
36720But could he learn it within six months?
36720But did you ever hear an English_ grande dame_ crush the life out of a sweet and innocent young girl by calling her''that young person''?
36720But is it gain?
36720But is the world richer or poorer for the change?
36720But what should it be about?
36720By the way, did you ever hear that I once committed arson?"
36720Do n''t you see how it sort o''sings?
36720Do you know Arithmetic an''Algebra an''Geometry and can you really teach me?
36720Do you know that is the worst tomfoolery this idiotic world ever gave birth to?
36720Harper?"
36720Have we achieved our intellectual independence?
36720Have we learned to value our own judgments, our own thinking, our own convictions independently of English approval or disapproval?
36720Have we not yet achieved our intellectual and social independence?
36720He was a genuine poet-- as who can doubt who has read him?
36720His creative ability failing him, what can he do but use his critical ability in its stead?
36720How are you?
36720How long would a bookkeeper in a bank hold his place after making a similar blunder?
36720How was that?"
36720I observed the stress he laid upon the word''you''and asked:''Is n''t it time for you, also?''
36720I think Mr. Eggleston and Mr. McCabe were in active service on the Southern side during the war?"
36720If Fitz Lee had been educated at Yale or Harvard, what place would he have occupied in the world?
36720In its first month?
36720In reply he said:"Lent him money?
36720Is n''t that about the way the mysticists make up their''facts''for the misleading of half- baked brains?"
36720Louis?"
36720Of that book?
36720Or is it that our English literary visitors make more skilful use of the press agent''s peculiar gifts?
36720Or is it, perhaps, that we are more generous and hospitable than the English?
36720Presently he asked:"Did n''t you command a mortar fort at Petersburg?"
36720Quoth Charles:''Old Hetman, wherefore so, Since thou hast learned the art so well?''"
36720Still cool, self- possessed, and sarcastic, Tilton asked:"Do I correctly understand you to mean, Dr. Fulton, that you shrink from sensationalism?"
36720Suddenly he interrupted in his impetuous way, asking:"Are you the man I took on my crupper that day down there by Dranesville?"
36720That''s tautological, of course, for prejudice is always ill- informed, is n''t it?
36720Then a moment later he asked:"Did you ever read one of them?"
36720Then adopting something of his own manner I asked:"What is it you want me to do, Charley?
36720Was that a bit of theatrical"business"?
36720What chance has an American novel, published at a dollar or more, in competition with English fiction even of an inferior sort published at ten cents?
36720What could I do?
36720What is more reasonable, then, than that he should select marketable things that other people have written and sell them?
36720What should be its plot and who its personages?
36720What''s in a Name?
36720What''s the use of drudging when a fellow has got it in him to write poetry like that?
36720What''s your guess?"
36720When I scourged myself for neglecting the task, why did n''t my memory remind me that I had actually discharged the duty?
36720Where should its scene be laid?
36720Why bother, then, to make a journey for the settlement of a matter of business which could wait as well as not for next court day to come round?
36720Why should anybody who invites us both to dinner, expect that we shall wear the same sort of clothes?
36720Why should n''t we have a"Watch Night"after our own fashion?
36720Why, otherwise, were the German speaking people of Pennsylvania and the mountain regions south universally known as"Pennsylvania Dutch?"
36720Why, what can you mean?''
36720Will you come?"
36720Would even Mr. Howells be made to feel that he was appreciated there as much as many far inferior English writers have been in New York?
36720Would he have become a Virginian lawyer and perhaps a judge?
36720Would n''t I, for a consideration, secure the acceptance of her novel by some reputable house?
36720XVIII[ Sidenote: What''s in a Name?]
36720You remember Thackeray''s Roundabout paper with that headline?
36720You were a Federal officer, were you not?"
36720[ Sidenote: A Challenge to the Ghosts]"Did he have the same experience the rest had had?"
36720or are you just pretending, like the rest?"
36720or what else?
40863( dispersed?)
4086316, 1857-Dec. 21,''57 James W. Denver 1"( 23") Dec. 21, 1857-May 12,''58 Hugh S. Walsh 4(5?)
408631780?
40863How is it possible for the individual thinking subject to connect together the parts of his experience in the mode we call cognition?
40863Might not mathematics be a purely imaginary science?
40863No glimmering of the further question, Whence come these notions and with what right do we apply them in cognition?
40863Now, from another side, the supreme difficulty was presented-- how could such notions have application to any objects whatsoever?
40863Of these_ na_ negatives the verb, as in_ chuh_, he is;_ chuna_, he is not;_ a_ asks a question, as in_ chwa_, is he?
40863Or, it may be further asked, how is the individual really connected with the system of things apparently disclosed to him in conscious experience?
40863So soon, however, as the critical question was put, On what rests the reference of representations in us to the object or thing?
40863The subjoined genealogical tree will place Kaffir relations in a clearer light:-- Zuide( 1500?
40863What is the nature of the distinction between knowledge gained by analysis of notions and knowledge of matters of fact?
40863Where, then, are we to look for this realm of free self- consciousness?
40863Who?
40863Xosa( 1530?).
40863_ ti_ adds emphasis, as in_ chuti_, he is indeed; and_ tya_ asks a question with emphasis, as in_ chutya_, is he indeed?
40863in other words, How do we come to have knowledge of objects at all?
40863or, did he make for him?
40863what is the nature of the relation between himself as one part of the system, and the system as a whole?
40863what is the precise significance of the existence which he ascribes both to himself and to the objects of experience?
41055I have told you of earthly things and you believe not; how shall ye believe if I tell you of heavenly things?
41055( c) That the exile lasted seventy years(?
410551 even record an invasion of Philistines and Arabians(?
4105514, 16( the numbers are not inclusive), and reckons three deportations in the 7th(?
4105564"Filigree ornament( ear- ring?)
410558?
41055Again, without justice mere earthly rule is impossible; how then is injustice conceivable in Him who rules over all?
41055From Chiusi(?)."
41055His most famous romance is The_ Famous Historie of the Seaven Champions of Christendom_( 1596?).
41055In answer to this demand the Divine voice answers Job out of the tempest:"Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge?"
41055In his 30th year( 15th year of the emperor Tiberius,?
41055JOHNSON, RICHARD( 1573- 1659?
41055Sanballat of Horon, Tobiah the Ammonite, and Gashmu the Arabian(?
41055what can human weakness, however innocent, do against infinite might and subtlety?
31125Christ''s message,''Peace on earth, good will to men''--what has it done and what does it mean after nineteen centuries?
31125Could n''t the employers of the bricklayers have bribed the editors?
31125Did they ridicule and denounce the bricklayers?
31125Do you know the world is a blank to me?
31125Do you pray?
31125Does Wifehood Preclude Citizenship?
31125How many less children have you now than ten years ago?
31125In love?
31125Like the Howard Mission?
31125Now ca n''t you come to our Kansas City Inter- State Convention? 31125 Redeem it from what?"
31125The Evolution of the Home;"The Family and the State;"Shall We Co- operate?
31125Then you do n''t find life tiresome?
31125What could have made the difference? 31125 What did they say about you?"
31125What do I think of marriage? 31125 What do you think the new woman will be?"
31125What is most needed to ensure the future greatness of the empire?
31125What is your favorite hymn or ballad?
31125What thanks did you receive for the stand you made?
31125What then do you think made this difference?
31125What would you call woman''s best attribute?
31125What''s your favorite motto, or have you one?
31125Why has it been so understood? 31125 Why, Miss Anthony, do you mean that you would actually turn the home of this old family into an orphan asylum?"
31125Would it not be a practical work, then, to make it possible for every mother to support her own children? 31125 You saw the Queen, I suppose?"
31125A.?"
31125Again one inquired,"Did you not grow discouraged in those olden times?"
31125All we ever have asked is simply,"Do you believe in perfect equality for women?"
31125And is not this the precise condition of what men call the"better half"of the human family?
31125And later:"Do any of my wails reach you?
31125And then a few days later:"Have I killed you outright?
31125And what was his offense?
31125And who can give the reason why the sister''s opinion should be ignored and the brother''s honored?...
31125Anna?
31125Are you going to leave your mothers, wives and sisters in that category?
31125At the close of Mrs. Hooker''s verses entitled"Should Auld Acquaintance be Forgot?"
31125Bless the Republicans for slapping us in the face, and blast the Populists for giving us a helping hand?
31125But how could they without finding themselves, as a result, penniless and homeless?
31125But should the Republicans refuse to insert the plank on June 6 and the Populists put a good solid one in their platform on June 12, what then?
31125But suppose there were plenty of money, and there could be a most thorough fall campaign, what then?
31125But who should do it?
31125But, you say, why do you not go to your several States to secure this right?
31125Can it be that she is gone in the very prime of her womanhood?
31125Can we get 5,000 or 10,000 to send on their postals?
31125Can we summon the women from the vasty deeps-- or distances?
31125Could any pen give an adequate idea of the amount of work accomplished by that tireless brain and those never- resting hands?
31125Did the law of supply and demand regulate work and wages in the olden days of slavery?
31125Did we banish Mrs. Rose?
31125Do n''t you see that for Anthony to head the fray, preside and be general master of ceremonies, would reduce it to a mere mutual admiration affair?
31125Do the petitions still come in?
31125Do you mean so satisfy me that I would work, and recommend all women to work, for the success of the Third party ticket?
31125Do you mean to repeat the experiment of 1867?
31125Do you see that they are all Mrs. John and Mrs. George and Mrs. William this and that?
31125Do you suppose all the women in the State would shout for the Republicans and against the Populists?
31125Does any lawyer doubt my statement of the legal status of married women?
31125Dying?
31125Finally a gentleman asked,"Do n''t you want those children taken out?"
31125For instance, a man charged some twenty francs for a shell comb, then came down to seven, six, five, and finally asked,"What will you give?"
31125For what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
31125For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
31125Had we the right to vote, do you suppose we should have to plead in vain before the two parties to place women in nomination for the school board?
31125Have I told you that I have a new dark garnet velvet?
31125Have you ever spoken in Albany before the legislature?
31125Have you ever spoken in Washington before Congress?
31125Have you formed any resolutions for the coming year, and what has been the fate of former New Year''s resolutions?"
31125How are we going to reach the other five- sixths of the men who never come to women''s meetings?
31125How can the State deny or abridge the right of the citizen, if the citizen does not possess it?
31125How could_ four_ million negroes be made voters if two million out of the four were women?
31125How does the plan strike you?
31125How is that by the side of our old farm harvest of 1,000 trees?
31125How long do you think our streets would be infested with men walking up and down seeking whom they might devour, and with women doing the same?
31125How many lectures delivered?
31125How many people would you think you had addressed in your lifetime?"
31125How many thousands of appeals and documents have you had printed and how many have you sent out?
31125I almost would be willing to postpone the enfranchisement of women to see Cuba free....""Do you believe in immortality?"
31125I ask you, therefore, for the sake of your own question, do you think it wise to pick my apples now?
31125If her presence is comforting, why do n''t you ask her to stay with you till the wee one arrives?
31125If men possessing the power of the ballot are driven to desperate means to gain their ends, what shall be done by disfranchised women?
31125If no one writes up his own times, where are the materials for the history of the future?"
31125If such civil government as we have was made by God, what reason is there to expect any improvement in the future?
31125If they could, do you for a moment believe they would take the subordinate places and the inferior pay?
31125If this is true of a naturalized woman, is it not equally true of one who is native born?
31125In an interview in the Rochester Democrat and Chronicle she is thus reported:"Did you have anything to do with the new Bible, Miss Anthony?"
31125In the oft- repeated experiments of class and caste, who can number the nations that have risen but to fall?
31125Is a woman both great and good?
31125Is a woman great?
31125Is anything further needed to prove woman''s condition of servitude sufficient to entitle her to the guarantees of the Fifteenth Amendment?
31125Is it not a little remarkable that no matter who the class may be that it is proposed to enfranchise, the objections are always the same?
31125Is n''t it discouraging?
31125Is n''t such a position humiliating enough to be called"servitude?"
31125Is n''t that fair?
31125Is not that slavery under a new form?
31125Is not that your intention?
31125Is not the only amendment needed to Article 1, Section 3, to strike out the exceptions which follow"respective numbers?"
31125Is the right to vote one of the privileges or immunities of citizens?
31125Is there an example in all history of either man or woman who devoted half a century of the hardest, most persistent labor for one reform?
31125Is there any hope?"
31125Letter after letter came asking,''Is there no way by which we can get Miss Anthony?''"
31125Many said, as they grasped her hand:"You''re going to be a Populist now, ai n''t you?"
31125Now what have we?
31125Now, since this is the"long session,"will you not take hold of this work, and with the same earnestness that you do other questions?
31125Now, will you not set about in good earnest to secure the enfranchisement of woman?
31125October 2.--Reached St. Louis at 8 A. M. As I was looking for my trunk I heard some one cry out,"Is that you, Susan?"
31125On what principle, then, do you deny her representation?
31125On whose shoulders will fall the mantle of Wendell Phillips?
31125Or do you mean the least that I think it should say for its own sake?
31125Our audiences have been five- sixths women, and the one man out of the six, who was he?
31125Please ma''am, why did I know nothing of your reception till it was all over?
31125She answered him politely but at length he asked:"If the negroes do n''t like it in the South, why do n''t they leave and go North?"
31125She laughed as she took off her glasses, leaned back in her chair and asked,"Where shall I begin?"
31125Should we not wonder, rather, that so many escape the sad fate?
31125Stanton?''
31125The man good- naturedly replied,"Where will you have it sent?"
31125The only question left to be settled now is: Are women persons?
31125The people tried to hush him, but soon he broke out again with,"We''ve had''nuf of England; ca n''t you tell''s somethin''''bout our grand republic?"
31125The tree- trunks were not larger than my arm and I exclaimed,"How many peaches can you get off these little trees?"
31125The women who have come into the work in late years continually ask,"How have you borne it so long?"
31125The''Woman''s Bible''a hindrance to organization?
31125This being the case, why did Mr. Goodelle not favor its being submitted to the voters of the State in order that they might decide?
31125Time?
31125To this Miss Anthony replied: What is the full significance of"would satisfy you?"
31125Under this in her scrap- book Miss Anthony wrote,"Does n''t this cap the climax?"
31125Was it because the honorable gentlemen had no respect for those women or their demand?
31125Were you ever in love?"
31125What can I say to the women who have the franchise?
31125What could she write?
31125What does the good Book say?
31125What is a slave?
31125What is servitude?
31125What is woman''s ideal existence and what woman has most nearly attained it?
31125What is''gospel suffrage?''
31125What of it?
31125What privilege or immunity has California or Oregon the right to deny them, save that of the ballot?
31125What then could the women infer but that such action meant political help in carrying this amendment?
31125What was the result of all this expenditure of time, labor and money?
31125What will be its next message to us?"
31125What wonder men despise us as a shallow lot of simpletons, if we are deceived by so thin a pretense as this?
31125What would my mother have said?
31125What would our friends have had us do?
31125When will the children of men ever listen to such a matchless voice?
31125When you propose legislation so fatal to the best interests of woman and the nation, shall we be silent until after the deed is done?
31125Where else could they go to get that balance?
31125Where would you ever expect to find a majority more ready to grant to women equal rights than among those old Free State men?
31125White labor and the freed black men had their champions, but where are ours?"
31125Who are the men that come to our women''s meetings?
31125Who came this day?
31125Who can tell now whether these commentaries may not prove a great help to woman''s emancipation from old superstitions which have barred its way?
31125Who is to draw the line?
31125Who will send the next$ 100?
31125Why can not we keep with us the brave and beautiful souls; why can not the weak and wicked go?
31125Why do not the Republicans push this question?
31125Why is it that you never set yourself about some practical work?"
31125Why not describe its initiative steps?
31125Why was their prayer unheeded?
31125Why were they treated with ridicule and contempt?
31125Why, or why not?"
31125Why?
31125Will it now attempt to sneak out of the responsibility and go back on its past record?
31125Will you come?
31125Will you please tell me what is your highest ideal of the woman of the future?"
31125Will you, as my friend and Mrs. Eddy''s, ever feel free to suggest and advise me as to a wise use thereof?
31125Would n''t that tell the story of the interest in this question?
31125Would she accept a"reception"from the Scribblers''Club of Buffalo?
31125Would she please reply to the following questions, from various newspapers:"Have not women as many rights now as men have?
31125Would she send a package of documents to the girls of Vassar College, who were going to debate woman suffrage?
31125You remember the petition of 18,000 of the best women of Chicago, a year ago, asking the common council not to repeal the Sunday Liquor Law?
31125[ 109] One number of the program is,''What is woman''s part in this larger synthesis,''or''What can woman do for liberal religion?''
31125[ 131] Neither was there any limit to the newspaper requests for opinions, such as,"Do you favor the use of birds for personal adornment?
31125after all these years has it come to this?
31125for the New York World;"If you had$ 1,000,000 what would you do with it?"
31125for the Y. M. C. A. paper of Chicago;"What Should the President''s Message Say?"
31125how can we reform the world æsthetically?"
31125how soon must that be?
31125party but has laid no straw in way of negro, 315; tribute by Mrs. Livermore, at New York Press Club speaks on"Why do n''t women propose?"
31125to mother, love of family,"shall we meet the dead?"
41472; W. Ridgeway,_ Who were the Romans?_( followed by the abstract of a paper by the present writer) in_ The Proceedings of the British Academy_, vol.
41472But experts proverbially differ: what was to be done when they disagreed?
41472Can he be thought sane who offers the light of lamps and candles to the Author and Giver of all light?"
41472If candles are lit before their tombs, are these the ensigns of idolatry?
41472When they said,''Is it small?''
3568717. Who managed the receipts and expenditures, and were they honestly managed? 35687 And here comes in the question, What is a life in accordance with Christ''s commandments?
35687And the_ breeches_ sometimes, I suppose?
35687But these functions of reason, do they carry within themselves the pledge of their own continued health and harmonious action? 35687 Can we make any approximation to axiomatical truth for ourselves?
35687Do you hold to marriage?
35687Have you any schools?
35687How about women?
35687Is there some secret leaven in this conjugal mixture, which declares all other union to be out of the possible affinities? 35687 It is often asked, What are the peculiarities, and what the advantages of the Hopedale Community?
35687Now what do we gather from this? 35687 Schools?
35687Then you go back to nearly the first principles of government, and acknowledge the necessity of some controlling power other than individual will?
35687_ What are its Advantages?_1.
35687''***"There may be some persons at a distance, who will ask, To what degree has this Community gone into operation?
35687''If you love not man, whom you have seen, how can you love God whom you have not seen?''
35687''It was taken for a debt,''said he,''and what else was I to do to get rid of it?''
35687(?)
35687(?)
35687***"There_ are_ men and women, who have dared to say to one another, Why not have our daily life organized on Christ''s own idea?
35687***** Shall we then turn back in despair, and give it up that Association on the large scale is impossible?
35687After supper I was standing near some men in the sitting- room, when one said to another,''How high is your God?''
35687After this luminous introduction, Mr. Dana, the editor of the_ Sun_, followed with the article ensuing:"WILL IT SUCCEED?
35687Again:''If ye love not one another, how can ye be my disciples?''
35687Am I to be astonished by hearing sensible men declare, because mankind have been the victims of false relations, that these things are impracticable?
35687And all for the benefit of whom?
35687And are we all at once to abandon, to deny, to destroy this supposed stronghold of virtue?
35687Any kind of government?
35687Any particular trades?
35687Are men forever to be such consummate fools as to neglect even the colossal profits of Association?
35687Are you a man?
35687As these two principles are thus expanding side by side, the question arises, Which on the whole is prevailing and destined to prevail?
35687At what season did they go to examine the country?
35687But about the committee which you say consisted of an artist, mechanic and a doctor; what report did they make concerning the land?
35687But might it not be enforced that the two family ideas really neutralize each other?
35687But must not, therefore, individual( or dual) union cease?
35687But the question returns after all, Which is primary and which is secondary?
35687But with this theory how shall we account for the failure of Brook Farm and Hopedale?
35687Can any example of success be found where this second condition is not present?
35687Can it be, we ask ourselves, that Owen had such conflicts with whiskey- tippling, but never a fight with the love- mania?
35687Can persons take their earnings away with them when they leave?
35687Could not such a sum be raised?
35687Did the associates agree or disagree, and in what?
35687Did they obtain aid from without?
35687Do I censure their want of foresight?
35687Do I regret this trial?
35687Do you assist runaway slaves?
35687Do you call dis Community?
35687Do you express opinions and principles as a body?
35687Do you know any persons in your neighborhood who will for one year, three years, five years, contribute for this end?
35687Do you object to religionists?
35687Does it contain within itself the elements of success?
35687Does the majority govern the minority?
35687For before the judgment- seat of his sayings, how do our governments, our trades, our etiquettes, even our benevolent institutions and churches look?
35687For instance, I require such information as the following questions would call forth, viz:"1. Who originated it, or how was it originated?
35687Had you any capitalists among you?
35687Have the Brocton people enough of it to carry them safely through?
35687Have you any delegated power?
35687Have you any form of society or test for admission of members?
35687He very rapidly asked me the object of my book: what good would it do?
35687Here is a specimen of our dialogue:"Do you make laws?
35687His own opinion of the cause of the catastrophe, he gives in the following words:"What were the causes of these failures?
35687How could it be otherwise?
35687How does it appear that he"combined the enunciation of general principles of social organization with actual experiments?"
35687How long did they keep together?
35687How was the land obtained?
35687How were members admitted?
35687How, then, can it be hoped that there is universal affection sufficient to unite many such families in one body for the common good?
35687I hope we do not disturb you?
35687If God be for us, of which we have sufficient evidence, who can prevail against us?
35687If successful, what were the causes of success?
35687In our societies, with their constantly recurring revulsions and ruin, would they not be wise in so doing?"
35687In the name of history we ask, Why has not George William Curtis himself made the permanent record?
35687Is dis common property?
35687Is it founded upon notions that promise any considerable advance upon the present form of society?
35687Is it not quite certain that the human heart can not be set in two places?
35687Is it questioned whether the family arrangement of mankind is to be preserved?
35687Is this mixture of male and female so very potent, as to hinder universal or even general union?
35687Is this the right way?
35687Must you be Grahamites?
35687Now how is this to be done?
35687Of course it was necessary, before they could be admitted, to decide the question,''Can they be useful to the Association?''
35687Or is their religion of too transcendental a character to form a sure and tenacious cement for their social structure?
35687Or will a combination of both keep its place in the world hereafter, as it has done hitherto?
35687Pray, sir, how and where did the Sylvania Association originate?
35687Religion is their first principle; what is their second?
35687Shall we clear the generals, and leave the poor soldiers to be called volunteer fools, without the comfort even of being in good company?
35687The question for the future is, Will the Revivalists go forward into Socialism; or will the Socialists go forward into Revivalism?
35687The reader will perhaps expect us to say something from our stand- point, in answer to Mr. Dana''s question,"Will it succeed?"
35687Their education, natural intelligence and morality?
35687They were never asked when applying for membership,''Do you believe so and so?''
35687Was all the property put into common stock?
35687Was it free or mortgaged?
35687Was there a written or printed constitution or laws?
35687Were pledges, fines, oaths, or any coercive means used?
35687Were the new circumstances of the associates superior or inferior to the circumstances they enjoyed previous to their associating?
35687What are the terms of admission?
35687What have you to say of them?
35687What if Napoleon had written out a programme for the battle of Austerlitz, and then left one of his aids- de- camp to superintend the actual fighting?
35687What is there in all this that entitles St. Simon to a place among the theoretico- practicals?
35687What kind of a theory of chemistry can a man write without a laboratory?
35687What more could be asked from nature?
35687What particular person or persons took the lead?
35687What religious belief, and if any, how preached and practised?
35687What then has been Fourier''s function?
35687What then shall we say of the rank- and- file that formed themselves into Phalanxes and marched into the wilderness to the music of Fourierism?
35687What was the difficulty?
35687What was the number of persons in the Association?
35687What were its means in land and money?
35687What were its principles and objects?
35687What were their trades, occupations and amount of skill?
35687What were they, and who got them when the society left?
35687What will the next ten years bring forth?"
35687When and where did the Association commence its experiment?
35687When and why did they break up?
35687When he had concluded I asked if those who wished to join the society were expected to acknowledge a belief in all the articles of their faith?
35687Where shall we end?
35687Where was the mistake?
35687Who after this can be so cold as not to bid them good speed?
35687Who ever had such motive for action?
35687Who owned it?
35687Who so niggardly as to withhold from them their mite?
35687Who so ungenerous as to speak to their disparagement?
35687Why did they fail?
35687Why has not George Ripley taken the story out of the mouths of the sneerers?
35687Why not begin to move the mountain of custom and convention?
35687Will you not aid?
35687Would Mr. Brisbane repeat such a farce?"
35687_ C._--But you encouraged capitalists to join your society?
35687_ C._--Does this not result from ignorance of the principles, or a want of faith in them?
35687_ C._--How long did the Association remain on the place?
35687_ C._--How much stock did the members take?
35687_ C._--Was his theory the society''s practice?
35687_ C._--What improvements were upon it, and what were the conditions of sale?
35687_ C._--What were the qualifications of the men who were appointed to select the location?
35687_ C._--When did the members proceed to the domain, and how did they progress there?
35687_ E.H.H._--How did your company succeed in their new movement?
35687_ E.H.H._--Would it not have been better if your company of thirty had been patient, and gone on quietly till the others were converted to your views?
35687_ Requiescat in pace!_ Where is the Phoenix Association that is to arise from its ashes?
35687and if so which will be primary and which secondary, and how will they be harmonized?
35687and that means, which is primary in the order of truth, and which is secondary?
35687if so can you send me a copy?
35687in Owenism or Fourierism?
35687that man can not worship at two altars?
35687was there any standard by which to judge them, or any property qualification necessary?
35687what was it for?
37203''A man-- John G.''Mr. W. asked,''How was it given to you?''
37203''Can you say what rank?'' 37203 ''Is it not whisky or rum?''
37203''Is it not wine?'' 37203 ''Very fat,''she answered;''but has the gentleman a cork leg?''
37203''Were you a soldier?'' 37203 ( 2) What town have we thought of?
37203( 3) What town have we thought of? 37203 ( 4) What town have we thought of?
37203( 5) Is it hurt--? 37203 And you do not see any bridge?"
37203But how does wife''s brain know certain secrets?
37203By whom?
37203Can you foresee the future?
37203Can you name his illness?
37203Can you remember the_ time_ of the incident?
37203DEAR ARTHUR,--Has anything happened to you? 37203 Do you know Ansel Bourne?"
37203Does no one tell wife what to write? 37203 Does time run backward here?
37203Had Gen. Richardson, before he left home, promised or said anything to Mrs. R. as to sending his ring to her in case he should be wounded?
37203Have you arrived?
37203How is your head?
37203I replied,''Yes; is he thin or fat?'' 37203 Is it the will of a living person or of an immaterial spirit?
37203Mr. W.''We do n''t know J. G. Have you anything to do with us?'' 37203 Mrs. R. asked,''Are you a man or a woman?''
37203Now, how did I come to have my looms and driving- gear arranged in this particular way? 37203 Now, what do you think of such a vision as that?
37203Of what does he write?
37203Old Governor Stuyvesant?
37203Seventeenth of what?
37203To whom is it directed?
37203What day of the month is it?
37203What do you think of it?
37203What does he say caused his illness?
37203What have you in your hand?
37203What is he doing now?
37203What is it that you hear?
37203What is the matter, Marie?
37203What is your own name?
37203What sort of sewing is it?
37203What was it that happened,asked Prof. Janet,"when Léontine was so frightened?"
37203Where am I?
37203Where is Norristown?
37203Where is he stopping?
37203Who are you that writes?
37203Who is dead? 37203 Whose spirit?"
37203Why the mischief have you been so late?
37203''Is that all?''
37203''Well,''I said;''how much do you want for that piece of property you wish to sell?''
37203''What do you mean by that?''
37203''What does it cost you to live?''
37203( Signed) J. G.''"We did not fully understand this drawing; and Mr. W. asked,''Will J. G. try again?''
372031 came for her favorite concerto; was n''t it splendid that she could hear it?"
37203Accordingly he had to leave at once-- but before starting he said,"Where are you at this moment?"
37203Again it was asked,"Is it the operator''s brain, or an immaterial spirit that moves Planchette?
37203As Frank and the native were cross- cutting a tree, the native stopped suddenly and said,''What are you come for?''
37203Bernheim?"
37203But whence came the vision, and why to- day?
37203Can these statements be received as true and reliable?
37203Do n''t you see?
37203Do you see the picture?"
37203Does he remember who were present and what was going on?
37203Fairly studied, then, what does Planchette really do?
37203Frank replied,''What do you mean?''
37203Frank said,''Where is he?''
37203Has Hypnotism any actual standing either in science or common sense?
37203Having been received, how can they be explained?
37203How about the old pear tree?"
37203How much money do you owe?''
37203How stupid''the other one''looked while I took her apron off?
37203I had screamed and struggled, crying out,''Is he really dead?''
37203I said:"Yes; but how did you know she was here?"
37203If so, who?"
37203Is it one of my patients?"
37203Is there any possible truth in it?
37203Mr. W. asked,''What does the drawing represent?''
37203On my replying in the affirmative he said,''Can you mesmerize any one at a distance?''
37203On seeing Z. a few days afterwards I inquired,''Did anything happen at your rooms on Saturday night?''
37203Salt was first so tasted by the operator, whereupon the subject, C., instantly and loudly cried out:"What''s that salt stuff?"
37203The following experiments were also made among many others, Miss Maud Creery being the percipient:--"( 1) What town have we thought of?
37203There is inquiry concerning Telepathy or Thought- Transference-- is it a fact or is it a delusion?
37203Thinking some one might be behind the screen I said,''Who''s there?''
37203Truly what is this tenant, what are its powers, and why is it here at all?
37203We first heard a faint cry of''Mother''; we all looked up and said to one another,''Did you hear that?
37203Were you angry?
37203What are these facts which have come to the notice of students of psychology?
37203What do you want?''
37203What is her name?"
37203What is the condition of the patient while under the influence of this induced sleep?
37203What is the nature and what the method of this peculiar vision which has been named clairvoyance?
37203What next?
37203What next?
37203What of Clairvoyance, Planchette, Trance and Trance utterances, Crystal- Gazing and Apparitions?
37203What on earth has been the matter?"
37203What part did you think of first?
37203What part did you think of first?
37203What was the character of the apparitions or appearances which were presented; were they, properly speaking, dreams?
37203Where am I?"
37203Which of us is right?
37203Who is it there talking to me like that?"
37203Why did you leave so suddenly?
37203Why did you tell her that her apron was falling off?
37203Why do you look so frightened?''
37203Why should two of those present have seen his apparition, and two others have failed to see it?
37203With evident surprise he said:"What do you mean?"
37203You looked distressed, and in answer to my greeting and inquiry,''What''s the matter?''
37203said the doctor;"from what are you suffering?"
37203wo n''t you sit down?''
37203you said:''Are you taking your dinner?
37203|"Yellow... is it a||| feather?...
41349Did you subdue the stranger?
41349Why sound this call?
413493 S. of R. 68 W. 6th P.M."?
41349And is not this lingering fragrance the smell of the lotos- flower?
41349Do you suppose that I can raise as many as that?"
37834And would you like, then, always to live retired at home?
37834And would you never care to make acquaintances, then-- to make and receive calls?
37834Are you not afraid?
37834Can you not tell me?
37834Do n''t all grown- up people do wonderful things?
37834Do you not see that these are no questions for you? 37834 Do you think we can do that?"
37834For such a thing as this?
37834Have you chosen the part of men or of traitors?
37834Have you made your decision, gentlemen?
37834Is she? 37834 Madam,"said he,"can you tell me where the scene of this picture is laid?
37834Miss Kershaw, would you mind just kissing me_ once_?
37834Of course,said Harry,"do n''t angels know When God has told them which way to go?
37834Our fathers, where are they?
37834Thankful Blossom?
37834Then?
37834Was it not the poor and sick that He visited, mamma, chiefly?
37834Well, dear?
37834Well, what is it now?
37834What greater cause could there be? 37834 Why child, what ails you?"
37834Why is it not better to keep out of it entirely?
37834Will you keep the door open so I can hear voices?
37834You mean going anywhere out of your own family?
37834''Men, can you bear it?''
37834A passing stranger, has He skill To charm the multitude at will?
37834And Death-- Who stays to think of him, till age Comes stealing on with sure and silent tread?
37834At last he called out:"Well, what have I caught?"
37834Baedeker says-- ELDERLY TOURIST(_ eagerly_)--Is it really so, guide?
37834Behind the mask-- who knows the care That grim and silent rests, And all the burdens each may bear Within the secret breast?
37834Behind the mask-- who knows the strain That each life may endure, And all its grief and countless pain That wealth can never cure?
37834Behind the mask-- who knows the tears That from the heart arise, And in the weary flight of years How many pass with sighs?
37834Behold the change?
37834But again, who would n''t like it If they every night could hear,"Yes she did it, Katy did it", Sounding for them loud and clear?
37834But can a virtuous man hesitate in his choice?"
37834But how can I especially serve you?"
37834But where is the suggestion of those garments all tattered and torn?
37834Can it be wondered at that, like St. Peter''s at Rome, it had an atmosphere of its own, and defied the outer changes of the temperature?
37834Can we mothers have a better teacher or a wiser example than this little bird, whose lessons in motherhood have come to her direct from her Creator?
37834Can you fancy the scene?
37834Can you keep still if I go up the road and watch for''em?
37834Did dear old England give thee birth?
37834Did ever anything stir the pulse Like a glimmering moonlight skate?
37834Did n''t do what?
37834Did n''t set her stitches nicely?
37834Did not the mysterious author resemble Veronica?
37834Did they not belong together?
37834Do n''t they sing in the sky, where we ca n''t see And listen up there to Harry and me?
37834Do you think it is_ my duty_ to go into company?
37834Do you think, guide, I would have time to go back and get my wife?
37834Does n''t Katy wish she had?
37834GUIDE-- You enjoy ze ferocity?
37834Has God led us so far to desert us now?
37834How old is the cathedral, guide?
37834How under the sun can they ketch him?
37834If robes and sacques the damsels wore, And sweeping skirts in days of yore?
37834In 1885, she published a very clever booklet entitled Who Was Old Mother Hubbard?
37834Is not her trial sore enough now without overloading it with an imaginary trial?
37834Katy didn''t-- lazy Katy, Did n''t do her lessons well?
37834Leave me, for such a thing as this?"
37834Little brook, where wild flowers drink, Rushing past me, swift and clear-- Thoughtful stand I on the brink--"Where''s thy home?
37834Look, do n''t you see?
37834Most prominent among the volumes are"The Lady or The Tiger?
37834Now which way?
37834Now who gave that weeping mother permission to use that word"if"?
37834Of what Nellie found by her Christmas tree?
37834Or merry France, the land of mirth?
37834Shall I tell you a story of Christmas time?
37834The name of the little woman figured on no heroic roll, but was she the less a heroine?
37834Then I looked up at Nye, And he gazed upon me; And he rose with a sigh, And said,"Can this be?
37834Then she inquired simply:"But what if we should live, after all?"
37834Thus, in the poem alluded to, could the thoughts contained in it, have been expressed as beautifully and tenderly in the mother tongue?
37834To this they all agreed, and another kindly asked:"Ca n''t we do something to help her to know people?"
37834Voices in accents hushed reply"Jesus of Nazareth passeth by?"
37834We quote from WHAT DOES THE CAUSE OF HUMAN FREEDOM OWE TO THE HUGUENOT?
37834What do you mean by''going into company?''
37834What is"tone"?
37834What mean these cannon standing here, These staring, muzzled dogs of war?
37834What means this eager, anxious throng, Pressing our busy streets along, These wondrous gatherings day by day, What means this strange commotion, pray?
37834What sort of"tone"do they give?
37834When nearly here, after traveling long in the forest, he inquired of his guides:"Where is Rockciticus?"
37834Whence com''st thou here?"
37834Where_ is_''there''?"
37834Who can tell?
37834Who is this Jesus?
37834Who shall say how far this fragile woman aided to stay the wave of desolation which was spreading over the land?
37834Who, indeed, can compute or measure the power of the press at the present day?
37834Whom do you mean by the"best people"?
37834Why is it then that men become drunkards?
37834Why should He The city move so mightily?
37834Will He, who led our fathers across the stormy winter sea, forsake their children who have put their trust in Him?
37834With you and papa and Nelly and our pet Lucy, and the boys coming home Sundays, what could one wish for more?
37834You do n''t want to deceive the man, do you?"
39012''Is your father here?'' 39012 ''So you have come up to take Henry home with you, have you?''
39012And why?
39012But do you think it fair to repeat such stories about a man, and condemn one whom you do not dare to face?
39012But when?
39012Daniel, Daniel,said he, at last, with a searching look,"do n''t you mean to take that office?"
39012Did it ever flash?
39012Do you understand me?
39012Have I ever flashed, except upon the compensation bill?
39012How dare you,said Jackson,"ride up to my tent, after having murdered the women and children at Fort Mims?"
39012My friend,said Clay,"have you a good rifle?"
39012Well, Yank, when are you coming into town?
39012Well, will you throw me away?
39012What did you do with the rifle when it flashed?--throw it away?
39012What is now their pride?
39012What is to be done?
39012What used to be the pride of the Americans?
39012Why,thought he,"can I not write something for the new sheet?"
39012Will you, then, go to his house to- morrow, and be introduced to him, if I promise to meet you there?
39012''So,''said he,''your farming is over, is it?''"
39012Am I not right, then, in calling this bill the best on which Congress ever acted?
39012Are they not strewn over a thousand battle- fields?
39012As he walked up to the Capitol to make his last great speech upon the measure, he said to a friend accompanying him,"Will you lend me your arm?
39012But how could a boy win his way without money?
39012But what are all these evils when compared with the fate of which the Port Bill may be only a threat?
39012Could he not go to school again?
39012Could you get his endorsement?"
39012Did the martyrs fail when with their precious blood they sowed the seed of the Church?...
39012He is coming back again in the fall, I hope?''
39012He simply remarked,''Do you really think he can teach next winter?''
39012His first efforts in finding an office in which to study were unsuccessful, for who cares about a young stranger in a great city?
39012How can you sleep on your pillow?
39012How could he, I thought, with so large a family, and in such narrow circumstances, think of incurring so great an expense for me?
39012How does that strike you?''
39012I can only account for it on the ground of long continued familiarity and friendship.... Has she not betrayed and slain men enough?
39012Is not this Moloch already gorged with the bloody feast?
39012Jurisprudence has many arrows in her quiver, but where is one to compare with that which is now spent in the earth?"
39012Once, at a dinner party of gentlemen, he was asked by one present,"What is the most important thought that ever occupied your mind?"
39012Perhaps the busy public life was over-- who could tell?
39012The best they can do is to leave things to their ministers; and what are their ministers but a committee badly chosen?"
39012The influence of such a lovable and strong nature over an ambitious youth, who can estimate?
39012There was reputation to be made, and perhaps a fortune, but where and how?
39012They must be educated; but how?
39012Under temptations and difficulties, I would ask myself, what would Dr. Small, Mr. Wythe, Peyton Randolph do in this situation?
39012Was Franklin discouraged?
39012Was it a failure now?
39012What course in it will insure me their approbation?
39012What is that point of stable equilibrium?
39012What nation, what individual was ever taught in the schools of ignominious submission these patriotic lessons of freedom and independence?...
39012What should the mother do with her helpless flock?
39012What would the condition of any of us be if we had not the hope of immortality?...
39012When an officer, the son of one of Jackson''s best friends, said to him,"May I go to town to- day?"
39012When will mankind be convinced of this, and agree to settle their differences by arbitration?
39012Who can picture that meeting?
39012Who should be the commander of this growing army?
39012Who supposed then that he would some day be President of the Commonwealth of Pennsylvania?
39012Who would have thought then that one of these saplings would grow into a mighty tree, admired by all the world?
39012Would he separate from the Whigs?
39012Would you break up the only support of an aged man and seven children?"
39012Years afterward, an old gentleman who knew Jefferson, when asked,"What was his power in the court- room?"
39012You will lose your place; or, supposing you to retain it, what are you but a clerk for life?
39012if God''s good will were so; For what is in this world but grief and woe?"
39012the reply was,"Of course, Captain Livingston, you_ may_ go; but_ ought_ you to go?"
35619What kin you- uns view on the mounting?
35619''''Crost the line in the old North State?''
35619''Ai n''t you- uns''most tired out, Euraliny?''
35619''Air it the Good Book?''
35619''Air old Mis''Cayce''s gyarden- truck suff''rin''fur rain?''
35619''Air the orchard mine, or the raiders''?
35619''Air you- uns thinkin ez I''ll''low ez I would hev married a man four months ago ez never axed me ter marry, nohow?''
35619''An''I wo n''t be''lected, hey?''
35619''An''did you- uns swear sech?''
35619''An''what sets Pa''son Kelsey agin me?''
35619''An''why air it me more''n enny other man at the Settle_mint_?''
35619''An''why me, more''n the t''others?''
35619''An''ye sit thar ez peaceful ez skim- milk, an''''low ez ye hev let my two hundred dollars slip away?''
35619''Be them men a- wraistlin''?''
35619''Be you- uns a- goin''ter hold fo''th,''demanded the old woman,''or Brother Jake Tobin?''
35619''Be you- uns satisfied?''
35619''Brother Reuben Bates, will ye lead us in prayer?''
35619''But who wants ter go ter heftin''rocks?''
35619''Ca n''t ye''light an''sot a while''an talk, Rick?''
35619''D''rindy,''he said suddenly,''ye set a heap o''store on Rick Tyler?''
35619''D''ye reckon that he wanted ter go ter jail in Shaftesville?''
35619''D- d- did what?''
35619''Damn ye, what is it?''
35619''Did he hurt yer feelin''s?''
35619''Did they git enny shower up in the mounting, Amos?''
35619''Did they live in thar lifetime up hyar in the Big Smoky, or in the valley kentry?''
35619''Did ye ketch him?''
35619''Enny news''round the mill, Amos?''
35619''Grind some fur we- uns ter- morrer?''
35619''He hain''t been so delivered over by the Lord ez ter kem agin, arter informin''the raiders, inter the Big Smoky?''
35619''He hain''t nosed you- uns out yit, hev he, Rick?''
35619''Hev they tuk him ter jail-- the pa''son-- Pa''son Kelsey?''
35619''Hev ye jes''fund that out?''
35619''Hev you- uns hearn the news?''
35619''How air the moral vineyard a- thrivin''?''
35619''How''d Rick Tyler say he got away from the sher''ff, ennyhow?''
35619''How''d ye git away, Rick?''
35619''How''s granny?''
35619''I hedn''t let on a word, he d I, D''rindy?''
35619''I s''pose ez you- uns hev hearn the news?''
35619''I s''pose not, bein''ez ye never drinks nuthin''but buttermilk, do ye?''
35619''In the name o''Gawd, D''rindy, what air you- uns a- wantin''me ter do?''
35619''In the name o''reason,''exclaimed the young fellow petulantly,''why ca n''t he pray somewhar else?
35619''Is it a weddin'', D''rindy?''
35619''Jacob,''she softly drawled,''whyn''t ye go ter bed?''
35619''Kin ye read yer book, pa''son, an''ride yer beastis all ter wunst?''
35619''Lord A''mighty, air the corn mine, or no?''
35619''Lord, pa''son, how''d you- uns know that?''
35619''One sher''ff''s same ter you- uns ez another, ai n''t he, Rick?''
35619''See old Groundhog?''
35619''Take the gaynder down?''
35619''Talkin''''bout Rick Tyler, did you- uns go sarchin''that night-- the dep''ty''s party-- ter the still they say old man Cayce runs?''
35619''The boys air convicted, then?
35619''The dogs?''
35619''This hyar''Cajah Green, ye know, ez air a- runnin''fur sher''ff-- air-- air he Republikin or Dimmycrat?''
35619''W- w- w- whyn''t ye lie low, Rick?''
35619''W- w- what would I be a- doin''of, Amos Jeemes, whilst ye war a- flingin''m- me over the b- b- bluff?''
35619''Waal, then, how''d the sher''ff take him ter jail?''
35619''Waal, then,''said Amos, crestfallen,''who done it?''
35619''War he gone ter the still?''
35619''War he tuk?''
35619''Wh- wh- at d''ye mean?''
35619''Wh- wh- whar be you- uns a- goin''?''
35619''Whar be D''rindy?''
35619''Whar did ye see him?''
35619''Whar''s he now?''
35619''Whar?''
35619''Whar?''
35619''What ailed D''rindy ter say that word?''
35619''What ails ye ter hustle''long so, D''rindy?''
35619''What ails ye, ter git tuk so suddint in yer temper, Amos?''
35619''What air ye a- aimin''ter do with it?
35619''What be you- uns a- goin''ter do?''
35619''What d''ye bring the savage beastis home fur, Hiram, out''n the woods whar they b''long?''
35619''What d''ye want with him?''
35619''What did I tell you- uns?
35619''What did ye ever do ter the Cayces,''Cajah, or what did Bluff Peake ever do fur''em?''
35619''What did ye git?''
35619''What do I want with him?
35619''What fur?''
35619''What fur?''
35619''What promise?''
35619''What war I a- tellin''you- uns?
35619''What war I a- tellin''you- uns?
35619''What war the word ez ye war a- layin''off to say ter me, gran''dad?''
35619''What war ye a- doin''of with yer rifle?''
35619''What work be you- uns a- doin''of?''
35619''What''s goin''on''round the mounting?''
35619''Which way did he go?''
35619''Who be ye a- goin''ter cut?''
35619''Who does this?''
35619''Who said ye warn''t goin''ter be''lected?''
35619''Who''s that?''
35619''Who?''
35619''Why air Mirandy Jane called ter l''arn how ter cook vittles?''
35619''Why did he''low ez that warn''t comin''ter pass?''
35619''Whyn''t he git bail?''
35619''Whyn''t pa''son gin the bail, then?''
35619''Whyn''t ye tell me that man warn''t thar?''
35619''Whyn''t you- uns git him ter bed?''
35619''Whyn''t you- uns go on his bond?''
35619''Will ye come?''
35619''Wo n''t the Court let the pa''son go free now, sence they know ye done no crime?''
35619''Would ye be afeared, D''rindy, ter marry a man ez would hev ter keep his life, and yourn, mebbe, with this pistol?
35619''Would ye be afeared?''
35619''Ye ai n''t goin''ter be''lected, air ye,''Cajah Green?''
35619''Ye ai n''t kem up the Big Smoky a- huntin''fur Rick Tyler?''
35619''Ye hain''t seen nor hearn of him, I s''pose, hev ye?''
35619''Ye war a- prayin''fur''em on the bald?''
35619''Ye wo n''t gin the reason?''
35619Air that a true word?''
35619Air''Cajah Green a- goin''ter be''lected?''
35619Airish out o''doors, ai n''t it?
35619An''ye fund it out?''
35619And although the parson preached no more, who shall say his sermons were ended?
35619And what was that sound on the air?
35619And where did he say he went with the apples?
35619Ca n''t ye set an''drink yer liquor sociable,''thout clinchin''that- a- way?
35619Could he look at them and doubt that one day he should see God?
35619Had he not confessed himself an evil- doer, forsaken of God and bereft of grace?
35619He was on his knees: was he praying?
35619How kem you- uns ter git the nightmare''bout''n the raiders?
35619I s''pose ye hain''t seen him hyar- abouts?''
35619In the plenitude of their ignorant faith, were they listening for the invoked voice of God?
35619Law, Rick, ef the murderer would say the word ter set ye free, ca n''t ye do ez much fur the pa''son, ez hev seen so much trouble a''ready?''
35619Mirandy Jane''s mythical raider, and mam''s dream, and D''rindy''s folly-- were these to baffle that stout- hearted old soldier?
35619She stopped him with some difficulty, and then,''Convicted of sin?''
35619Should she speak the thought nearest to her heart?
35619Should she suggest a rescue?
35619Should she urge them to go?
35619Since there was nothing to gain, why humble himself in vain?
35619Ter kill sech chillen ez happen ter make game o''ye?
35619That quick glance was incongruous with his dullard aspect; it held a spark of fire, inspiration, frenzy-- who can say?
35619Then, with a moral hardihood that matched his physical prowess, he asked,''An''what ef I be?''
35619Then,''What ails ye, Rick?
35619Then:''Hain''t you- uns hearn how the Cayces turned out agin ye at the''lection?
35619This anxious, browbeaten, humiliated creature-- was this Micajah Green?
35619Those fine immaterial issues of faith and unfaith-- where were they?
35619Waal, now, who made that law?
35619Was it the rising of the wind?
35619Was this lukewarm inattention the guerdon of the sacrifice of the cross?
35619Were not the words of his prophecy still on the air?
35619Were these the sincerities of faith?
35619Whar did ye go, ennyhow, when ye war on the mounting?''
35619What ails the gal?''
35619What did Pete do ter ye, Amos?''
35619What did the doctor say ye gin her?
35619What sort o''weather is this?''
35619When war she buried?--las''week or year afore las''?
35619Where had he been?
35619Which fork o''the road is it ye take fur the still-- I furgit-- the lef''or the right?''
35619Which way did he go?''
35619Who air under conviction hyar?''
35619Who had heard of them, and when did they come, and where did they go?
35619Who is the happy man, D''rindy?''
35619Who sold Rick Tyler that powder, Mister Hoodendin?''
35619Why ai n''t I goin''ter be''lected?''
35619Why did he deny?
35619Why should he linger, and wring his heart, and garner bitterness to feed upon in his lonely days?
35619Whyn''t ye speak the truth ter her, pa''son?
35619Would ye be afeared?''
35619Would ye-- would ye hev married me then?''
35619Ye would n''t let him do that ef ye could holp it, would ye, Rick?''
35619he asked familiarly,''and D''rindy?''
35619he would say; or,''Do n''t ye feel wore in yer backbone, hevin''ter wait so long?''
35619or,''Hedn''t ye better lay down on the blanket in the waggin an''rest yer bones, bein''ez we- uns started''fore daybreak?''
35619said the sheriff, smiling fixedly,''or had ye ruther be fetched?''
41742Was it then for heads of arrows, Arrow- heads of chalcedony, Arrow- heads of flint and jasper, That my Hiawatha halted In the land of the Dacotahs? 41742 Who shall say what thoughts and visions Fill the fiery brains of young men?
41742He heard them patiently and answered,"What would the nation think of its President stealing into the Capital like a thief in the night?"
41742Who shall say what dreams of beauty Filled the heart of Hiawatha?
41902LA CUEVA, JUAN DE( 1550?-1609?
41902LA HOZ Y MOTA, JUAN CLAUDIO DE( 1630?-1710?
41902LAEVIUS(?
41902Pour faire un nombre de quarante Ne falloit il pas un zéro?"
41902The saprophyte_ Diplophrys(?)
42173Did Livy use Polybius at all, and, if so, to what extent?
42173LITHGOW, WILLIAM( 1582-?
42173Out of what materials, then, did he put together his account of the earlier history?
42173was a player and that his name was Thomas, neither of which is supported by the text( see C. M. Ingleby,_ Was Thomas Lodge an Actor?_ 1868).
41156Who then is this,they whispered with awe,"that even the wind and the sea obey Him?"
41156626- 586 B.C.?
41156Again,"Can history produce an instance of rebellion so honorably conducted?...
41156And what is the result of his expedition?
41156But what is this new name which is placed side by side with the Divine Name--"in God the Father and the Lord Jesus Christ"?
41156Do Japanese understand Persians or even Indians better than English or French?
41156God forbid that we should ever be twenty years without such a rebellion.... What signify a few lives lost in a century or two?
41156How can a man like Jeremiah have advocated any such panacea?
41156How did the Lord Jesus speak and act?
41156In Jeremiah, as in Isaiah, we must constantly ask to what age do the phraseology, the ideas and the implied circumstances most naturally point?
41156In fulfilment of this promise, who is it that has come?
41156JEROME, ST( HIERONYMUS, in full EUSEBIUS SOPHRONIUS HIERONYMUS)( c. 340- 420), was born at Strido( modern Strigau?
41156Pilate''s question,"Art Thou the King of the Jews?"
41156To what lengths would this liberty go?
41156Up to this point what have we seen?
41156Was Korea within safe range of such enterprises?
41156What is to be done?
41156Which may these be?
41156Who, then, he might well ask is this Jesus Christ who is lifted to this unexampled height?
41156[ 27]_ Wo lag das Paradies?_( 1881), pp.
41156_ A Patriot?_--Was Jeremiah really a patriot?
41156and why did He arouse such malignant enmity amongst His own people?
14355Ah, Madam, and was so mean a key as this to open that world for you? 14355 Ah, is that it?
14355Ah, sir, will you not, too, leave the room, and let me tell on this story to myself, to my own soul? 14355 Ah, then you also forbid our banns?"
14355Ah, what matter?
14355Ah, you were kinder to him than to me?
14355Ah,said he briefly,"then my message found you?"
14355All of Oregon?
14355All, Madam? 14355 All?
14355All?
14355Am I not a woman? 14355 And about Texas?"
14355And about the other lady?
14355And afterwards?
14355And me, Madam? 14355 And might I not wear it for an hour?"
14355And of what, Madam?
14355And so, then you came to Washington? 14355 And suppose I shall not do this that you ask, Señor?"
14355And that one?
14355And that other shoe, which_ I_ got that night?
14355And what did it say? 14355 And what is that, Señor?"
14355And where is home?
14355And which wins, my friend?
14355And who are_ you_?
14355And_ myself_?
14355Are you his friend, Madam?
14355Are you keeping faith with Doctor Ward?
14355Are you mad? 14355 Are you not afraid of_ me?_"I asked.
14355Are you not sorry?
14355Are you then an enemy of my country?
14355As enemies or friends?
14355At least, these British officers would see a part of this country, do you not comprehend? 14355 At my hotel?
14355At what hotel do you stop?
14355Aunt Betty,said I, as I took her hand;"Aunt Betty, have we told you, Elisabeth and I?"
14355Because I live alone, because quiet rumor wags a tongue, you will judge me by your own creed and not by mine?
14355Better that than part of the world to one-- or two? 14355 But as to myself, Madam?
14355But come, what''s the matter, then? 14355 But could you yourself get through?"
14355But did I not hear him say there was a key--_his_ key-- to- night?
14355But do n''t you see, there has been a mistake, a horrible mistake?
14355But have you earned it? 14355 But he told you somewhat of this country?"
14355But how would it sound to the tune of cannon fire? 14355 But lost-- where?"
14355But she has gone,said I,"who knows where?
14355But tell me, where did you get that leetle thing?
14355But tell me,I interrupted,"where is the mistress of this house, the Baroness von Ritz?"
14355But unless what?
14355But what did Mr. Calhoun say to this marriage?
14355But what did you determine?
14355But what else?
14355But why is it that we always have some unpleasant argument? 14355 But why?
14355But why?
14355But would Mr. Pakenham listen to your report, after all?
14355But you can not guess that_ I_ might ask one? 14355 But you promised to tell Mr. Calhoun more at a later time?"
14355But you saw Elisabeth?
14355But you were not there-- you did not see me? 14355 But you were there?
14355But you will remain for my protection? 14355 But your father resented this?"
14355But, surely, this is not all news to you?
14355But_ why_ then? 14355 Can we not persuade you to abandon this foolish plan of your going east?"
14355Changes of maps, my friend? 14355 Clean?
14355Come now, is he gone? 14355 Did I not call at your request upon a gentleman in a red nightcap at two in the morning?
14355Did I so seem?
14355Did I? 14355 Did I?"
14355Did he ask you what you knew of Mexico and England?
14355Did he perhaps ask how you were induced to come at so impossible a time? 14355 Did not Saul fall upon his own sword?"
14355Did she speak of that?
14355Did they know you were present?
14355Did you credit the attaché of Mexico with being nothing more than a drunken rowdy, to follow me across town with a little shoe in his carriage?
14355Did you not always credit me with being the good friend of Mr. Pakenham years ago-- did not all the city? 14355 Did you see her father-- any of her family?"
14355Did you see her?
14355Did you see that young lady?
14355Did you see the baroness?
14355Do you know why I am to go on this heathen errand?
14355Do you not believe in charms and in luck, in evil and good fortune, Madam?
14355Do you not see that I must reclothe myself before I could go with you-- that is to say, if I choose to go with you? 14355 Do you recognize it, Madam Baroness?"
14355Do you see that writin''on my wagon top?
14355Do you?
14355Does Doctor McLaughlin know of your plans?
14355Eh, what?
14355Elisabeth,I said to her,"are you not ashamed?"
14355End it? 14355 For what, Madam?"
14355For what? 14355 Has she fortune?"
14355Has she given you any answer?
14355Has this been presented to Mr. Buchanan, our secretary of state?
14355Have I been fair with you thus far?
14355Have staff and scrip been your portion so long that you are wholly wedded to them? 14355 Have we not been fair with you, Baroness?
14355Have you fortune?
14355Have you not seen the Baroness von Ritz? 14355 Have you then no question?"
14355Have you_ no_ curiosity?
14355How can I tell? 14355 How can a mere woman know?"
14355How could she have believed?
14355How could she?
14355How did he receive you, Madam?
14355How did you know?
14355How do you do?
14355How do you do?
14355How do you mean, Madam?
14355How do you mean? 14355 How do you mean?"
14355How do you mean?
14355How do you mean?
14355How do you mean?
14355How do you stand in case war should be declared against Mexico?
14355How indeed, Señor?
14355How long have you been in Washington?
14355How now, Nick, my son?
14355How now? 14355 How now?
14355How so, Madam?
14355How so?
14355How then? 14355 How, then, could I believe"--she laid a hand upon her bosom--"how, then, could I believe that principle was more than life?
14355I beg pardon, I am sure, your Excellency?
14355I do not know that I may ask those?
14355I shall give you a dozen better some time,said I;"but to- night--""And my slipper?
14355I should guess then perhaps you went to Paris?
14355I told you not to go back to your hotel, did I not?
14355I would have the right to guess you were hit pretty hard?
14355If results came as you liked, what difference would the motives make?
14355If you know who I am, who are_ you_, and why do you talk in this absurd way with me, a stranger?
14355If you will pardon me?
14355In Heaven''s name, how many of these homes have you, then? 14355 In regard to what?"
14355In what part?
14355Indeed? 14355 Indeed?"
14355Is it here?
14355Is it this door on M Street, as you go beyond this other street?
14355Is not that true?
14355Is she beautiful to you?
14355Is she not?
14355Is that answer worth more than Van Zandt?
14355Is that for me?
14355Is that my only reward?
14355Is this all that your art can do in jewelry? 14355 It iss of value, perhaps?"
14355It must be done; but how? 14355 It takes no part in our records?"
14355Look, is not that she?
14355Madam,I exclaimed,"why beat about the bush?
14355Madam,I remarked to my companion,"in what manner can I be of service to you this evening?"
14355Madam,I said to her once more,"who are you and what are you?"
14355Madam,said I to her, at last,"did you indeed think me so cheap as that?
14355May I, then?
14355May not we two ask that other miracle of yourself?
14355Meaning--?
14355Might not in great stress that thief upon the cross have been a woman? 14355 Mr. Dandridge,"said I to him,"you know the Baroness von Ritz?"
14355No longer?
14355No; and why not? 14355 No; how could that be?"
14355No? 14355 Not so bad for a black midnight, eh?"
14355Not sure of what, Madam? 14355 Now, is it wise to make a definite answer in that matter yet?
14355Of course, this conversation is entirely irregular-- I mean to say, wholly unofficial, your Excellency?
14355Of what?
14355Pardon me?
14355Perhaps I make mistake to come by the St. Lawrence? 14355 President Tyler has offered you Mr. Upshur''s portfolio as secretary of state?"
14355Send_ me!_"Would you go?
14355Señora, have you ever seen this slipper?
14355Shall we not take it across direct to Mr. Blair for publication in his_ Globe_?
14355She looked at you, yess?
14355Sir Richard, did you ever love a woman?
14355So much? 14355 So your chief, as you call him, asks me to come to him, at midnight, with you, a stranger?"
14355So, then, it is a great country?
14355So, then, we had here the stage setting,said he;"the pistols, the cause for pistols, sometimes, eh?"
14355So, then, you do not say? 14355 So?"
14355Sometimes you need to be?
14355State secrets, eh?
14355Tell me, Sir Richard, has not that miracle been done?
14355Tell me, do you know what you have said?
14355Tell me, my friend, suppose you had come hither and knocked at my door?
14355Tell me,she said gently,"what security do_ I_ have?
14355That means also Oregon?
14355That, my dear lady,_ I do not suppose!_"You threaten, Señor Secretary?
14355The baroness?
14355Then I am again your prisoner?
14355Then I may start soon for Oregon?
14355Then do you accept? 14355 Then it belongs to another woman?"
14355Then the names-- or at least one?
14355Then this is to be the last time we meet?
14355Then you did have a message? 14355 Then you do not know the lady?"
14355Then you got on well?
14355Then you offer me no hope, Doctor?
14355Then you think there is a chance of trouble between our country and England, out there?
14355Then you will play it fair with us? 14355 Then, as to that breakfast_ à la fourchette_ with Madam; if I remain, will you agree to tell me what is your business here?"
14355Then, does that not end it?
14355There is danger--"For me?
14355They have adjourned at the House, then?
14355This journey to- night,I began;"can I not be excused from making that?
14355Those? 14355 To Montreal?
14355Trouble of any kind?
14355Under duress?
14355Under penalty?
14355Unless what, John? 14355 War, sir,_ war_?"
14355We have good news of some kind this morning, sir?
14355Well, then, Madam, why all this hoighty- toighty? 14355 Well, why should you ask me to help you, then?
14355Well,said the other,"have you not said there is a God of Battles?"
14355Were you, then, married?
14355What are_ my_ stakes? 14355 What can it be?"
14355What could this country give more than Mexico or England?
14355What do you mean about home? 14355 What do you mean?
14355What do you mean?
14355What do you mean?
14355What do you think of my little place?
14355What do you_ mean?_She repeated it again, as though half in horror.
14355What does Monsieur suggest?
14355What does this mean, that I see here? 14355 What fat, my son?"
14355What guessing game do you propose, Madam?
14355What has my chief said to cause you to fail poor Mr. Pakenham as you did? 14355 What have I done?"
14355What have you done? 14355 What have you done?"
14355What is it to the tree which consumes another tree-- the flower which devours its neighbor? 14355 What is the distance, do you think?"
14355What is the matter? 14355 What iss it?"
14355What time can England make with her brigades, west- bound, my friend?
14355What were_ you?_ Mistress of the prince of France! 14355 What will it do?"
14355What would you do if I refused to go with you?
14355What would you have given to have been there yourself?
14355What''s wrong, Nicholas?
14355What, then, is the answer of John Calhoun to this latest call of his country?
14355What? 14355 When will you be back?"
14355Where are you going?
14355Where do you propose going, then, my friend?
14355Where else?
14355Where?
14355Who is here, then? 14355 Who is it?
14355Why be churlish with me?
14355Why do you not ask me outright_ why_ I am here?
14355Why should I not be?
14355Why should I?
14355Why should a man ever do anything_ in_definite, Jim Polk?
14355Why should you? 14355 Why so soon?"
14355Why, how do you mean?
14355Why, what do you mean?
14355Why?
14355Will Monsieur carve?
14355Will it please you to go in your own carriage, or shall I return with one for you?
14355Will you accept?
14355With England? 14355 Would you like Oregon?"
14355Would you plunge this country into war? 14355 Would you retire now, Madam?"
14355Yes?
14355Yet you can not guess how to persuade me?
14355You also are acquainted with these?
14355You are American?
14355You are armed?
14355You ask me what I should do?
14355You condemn me?
14355You did marry him?
14355You did not live at your own home with your father?
14355You did not see that note?
14355You do not tell me_ you_ would do that?
14355You forget someting?
14355You have been at Fort Vancouver?
14355You have but love- and this country?
14355You have crossed the Rockies? 14355 You have heard how?
14355You have heard of me, you knew of me?
14355You have personal interest in this?
14355You know Miss Elisabeth Churchill?
14355You know what it iss, eh?
14355You mean Señor Yturrio?
14355You mean my daughter Helena?
14355You must, at a guess, have come up by way of the lakes, and by batteau from La Prairie?
14355You put his message in your slipper?
14355You told him somewhat of yourself?
14355You will follow as close on their heels as you can?
14355You will give my government that information?
14355You will not even ask me why I am here?
14355You would be surprised if I told you the truth? 14355 You would not call Mr. Polk important?"
14355Your cage, Madam?
14355Your own country was Austria?
14355Your wedding?
14355_ Eh bien!_ madam, why do you bar me out?
14355_ Eh bien?_I answered.
14355_ Eh bien_, Madam?
14355_ Et moi?_"And you?
14355_ Et moi?_"And you?
14355_ How may I serve the Baroness?_said I.
14355_ Married?_ Zounds! 14355 _ One_ slipper?
14355_ Van Zandt!_ Madam, are you indeed in the camp of_ all_ these different interests? 14355 _ Were you married_--that other night?"
14355_Whose friend am I?"
14355''Twas all no more than half a jest""How could you do it?"
14355''What do they_ think_?''
14355A deep fire burned in her eyes, that was true; but on her face was-- what?
14355A friend-- what is that?
14355Ah, am I not?"
14355Ah, but do I not know?
14355Ah, did I not?
14355All I could do was to guess and to point to the inscription on the white top of the foremost wagon:"_ Fifty- four Forty or Fight!_""Is Polk elected?"
14355Am I not an apt student?
14355And did I not tell you you would one day, one way, find your reward?"
14355And did not I, repenting, marry you to her-- did not I, on my knees, marry you to her that night?
14355And does that not mean that you are also at war with England?
14355And for your sake-- and the sake of sport-- did I not almost promise him many things?
14355And in any case, if trouble can be deferred until to- morrow, why concern oneself over it?
14355And so you got into your own carriage-- alone-- after a while?
14355And so, when you were there you put on the shoe which was left?
14355And when we shall be worth that price, what numerals shall mark our territorial lines?
14355And would you use women in our diplomacy?"
14355And your husband died?"
14355And"How do you do?"
14355Are they all alike?"
14355Are we worth the price paid for the country that we gained?
14355Are you going to Elmhurst as you look now?"
14355Are you my friend, or are we to be enemies to- night?"
14355Are you not adventurer enough to forget that other woman for one night?"
14355Are you so ignorant-- and you a physician, who know them both?
14355Are you the friend of America, or are you a spy upon America?
14355Are you then with England and Sir Richard Pakenham?
14355Are you too high- priced to have for a friend-- for a friend to our Union-- a friend of the principle of democracy?
14355As he was servant of a purpose, of an ideal of triumphant democracy, why should not I also serve in a cause so splendid?
14355As to the use of women-- tell me,_ why not women?_ Why anything_ else_ but women?
14355As to the use of women-- tell me,_ why not women?_ Why anything_ else_ but women?
14355At least, why should I not also enjoy intrigue with yonder government of Mexico at the same time?
14355Betray you, Monsieur?
14355But come now, was I not bound in some sort of honor to my great and good friend, Sir Richard?
14355But come, do I have my little slipper?"
14355But did I discard you for that?
14355But how might that be done?
14355But now, as I walk, before my eyes on the street, I see what?
14355But now, you have seen Elisabeth?"
14355But suppose it_ could_ be averted?
14355But tell me, where did you find these pieces of raw gold?"
14355But tell me,_ were you not then married?_""No, I am alone, Madam.
14355But what of that?
14355But whence came that spirit of revolution in Europe?
14355But whose ship was she?
14355But why go East, instead of West?
14355But why?
14355But will you not also tell me what is the news from Château Ramezay?
14355But would that be a reason?
14355But you did not find my message?"
14355But_ why_?
14355But_ why_?"
14355By what miracle did you come through?
14355Calhoun?"
14355Can I not-- may I not be mistaken?"
14355Can they get across next fall, think you?"
14355Can we transport our army there in time?
14355Come now, am I not to see you and explain all that; and hear you explain all this?"
14355Come, can you betray a people of whom you can say so much?"
14355Come, do you not know some of those things?"
14355Come, has not fate been kind to us again?"
14355Come, now, Madam, is it to be war?"
14355Come, now, why do you delay?"
14355Come, what security shall_ I_ have?"
14355Come, will you not give it to me?"
14355Could I not make merchandise of my sorrow?
14355Could a man really get a mile square of good farm land without trouble?
14355Could he come to your apartments in broad daylight and that fact not be known?
14355Could she humor a peevish friend so much as that?
14355Could this indeed be her residence?
14355Could you go to the office of a United States senator and possible cabinet minister in broad daylight and that fact not be known?
14355Dare you not come into ours?
14355Dear lady, may we not conspire together-- for the ultimate good of three republics, making of them two noble ones, later to dwell in amity?
14355Did I know any of them?
14355Did I not see?
14355Did n''t you make a show of me before that ass, Tyler, when I was at the very point of my greatest coup?
14355Did she despise me as a faint- heart?
14355Did she indeed sail with the British ships from Montreal?
14355Did that hurt our chances with France?
14355Did you never hear the other gossip?
14355Did_ you_ ever hear of''America Vespucci''?"
14355Do I make myself quite clear?"
14355Do I not know?"
14355Do n''t you remember that?
14355Do they not elect us to subserve those interests?"
14355Do you begin to understand?"
14355Do you come to- night-- this afternoon?"
14355Do you happen to know where he is now?"
14355Do you mean to break your word-- your promise?"
14355Do you not approve?"
14355Do you not remember our bargain?
14355Do you not suppose I have something to do besides feeding a canary?
14355Do you not think so?"
14355Do you perchance know the watchword which is now on the popular tongue west of the Alleghanies?
14355Do you perhaps wish to hunt mushrooms in the Georgetown woods when morning comes?
14355Do you think I would risk more than I have risked?
14355Do you think so?"
14355Do you wish a third war?
14355Does Monsieur think that I, too, was in wine?"
14355Does he want Texas for England, or the Baroness von Ritz_ for himself?_"Ward still sat and looked at him.
14355Does it follow that at the ball at the White House he could have removed that shoe?
14355Does that not mean you are again at war with Mexico?
14355England or the United States-- monarchy or republic-- aristocracy or humanity''?
14355Erskine, of England, when times were strained in 1808, and later-- and our friend for the most part-- was not he also husband of an American?
14355Father, is it not so?"
14355Fight_ us_?"
14355First, of course, for what reason do you carry the secrets of my government into the stronghold of another government?
14355For instance, how could she know if her husband should perchance leave the legation to which he was attached and pay a visit to another nation?"
14355Go with you to Washington?
14355Had they seen a small party east- bound?
14355Had you no friends among us?
14355Haf I not seen them?
14355Has my chief not proved himself fair with you?"
14355Has she not made her report?"
14355Has she not made known her presence here?
14355Have I punished you for_ that?_ No, I have only shown you the more regard."
14355Have n''t I stood flouts and indignities enough from you?
14355Have you lied to me?
14355He was tall and young and handsome and rich, do you see?
14355How can I be held to blame for the act of a drunken friend?
14355How can I help you?
14355How could I?"
14355How could you?
14355How did she seem to part with you?"
14355How may I pay?"
14355How much are we prepared?
14355How shall I tell of those stirring times in such way that readers who live in later and different days may catch in full their flavor?
14355How was the land?
14355How was the weather?
14355How would it look written in the smoke of musketry?"
14355How, then, might I gain yet closer touch?
14355How, then, shall I gain your friendship for my country?
14355How_ did_ you do it?"
14355I am doubted?
14355I ask you how you got access to that meeting to- night-- for I doubt not you were there?"
14355I can not offer gems, as does Señor Yturrio-- but, would this be of service-- until to- morrow?
14355I have found you since then playing with Mexico, Texas, United States all at once?
14355I have not had time-- I have had no leave from you to come to see you-- to ask you-- to explain--""Explain?"
14355I have proposed half a dozen times more to Miss Elisabeth, have I not?"
14355I have seen about me here these savages-- savages who have walked thousands of miles in a pilgrimage-- for what?"
14355I have still the right to ask you why you did not take them?
14355I heard him grumble, at length;"how can one tell what a woman''ll do?
14355I never saw you in my life until this very moment-- how, then, do you know me?
14355I presume of course you know whom I mean?"
14355I presume that the minister of the gospel is already here?"
14355I say, was that the way to treat me, coming as I did?"
14355I think you understand me, perhaps, Señora Yturrio?"
14355I trust you did not find our little repast to- night unpleasing?
14355I was following them?
14355I wish that I might love her now, do you know?
14355I would like to take your arms in my hands and crush them, until--""Until what?"
14355I-- could I have a glass of wine?"
14355If England provides us so beautiful a picture, why could she not afford a frame more suitable?
14355If I do that, Elisabeth, you will marry me then?"
14355If you entered my abode once,"she said,"why not again?
14355If you train with him, why come to our camp for help?"
14355If, then, you are not for England, in God''s name,_ whose friend are you?
14355Impossible?
14355Is Madam''s wardrobe with her?
14355Is it not so?"
14355Is it not so?"
14355Is not that the truth, my father?"
14355Is not the net full enough?"
14355Is not the youth of all these things still your own?"
14355Is that all?"
14355Is the place safe at last?"
14355It came to you there, at that time?"
14355It is not Mr. Calhoun; it is not I. Mr. Calhoun only puts before you the summons of--""Of what?"
14355It is old, old, is it not?
14355It iss sometings of honor, iss it not?"
14355It would be shorter to go by New York?
14355Jack, will you do two things for me?"
14355Lady, this time?"
14355Madam, can not you use your wits in a cause so worthy as mine?"
14355Meantime, you have not reported?"
14355Must I do some of these things-- force you into obedience-- carry you away in a sack?
14355My Lord Oswald, of Great Britain, who negotiated our treaty of peace in 1782--was not his worldly fortune made by virtue of his American wife?
14355My friend, can it-- can it in part justify me-- now?
14355Now, he comes...""But, Madam-- ah, how could you so disappoint my belief in you?"
14355Now, is this any comfort to you?"
14355Now, suppose I had a message-- where do you think I could hide it; granted, of course, the conditions obtaining at a ball in the White House?"
14355Now, what shall we do?"
14355Of course you do not know anything of this?"
14355Of course, my dear Madam, we talk riddles in your presence?"
14355Of course, you do not mean what you have said about being married in such haste?"
14355Of what use could I be to you?"
14355On the other hand, what of interest could America offer?"
14355On the streets?"
14355One apiece, eh?"
14355Only now--""Only what, then?"
14355Pakenham?"
14355Pakenham?"
14355Pakenham?"
14355Perhaps, after all, we all had been misinformed regarding her?
14355Polk?"
14355Secretary?"
14355Secretary?_"he exclaimed, turning to Calhoun.
14355Shall I decline to go?
14355Shall I go to her, shall I tell her?"
14355Shall I show you my bugs of Oregon?
14355Shall I take it?
14355Shall not that for which she stood help us hold it?
14355Shall we call it the Calhoun Doctrine?"
14355Shall we not hope to see all this continent swept free of monarchy, held_ free_, for the peoples of the world?"
14355She was free to mock me, why?
14355Sir, tell me, what have_ principles_ to do with_ elections_?"
14355So now, we three-- no, four-- at last understand one another, do we not?
14355So the wind is there, eh?
14355So you hastily departed-- to your wedding?"
14355So, now, what I got, eh?
14355So, then, one answer for another, we might do-- what you Americans call some business-- eh?
14355Some attaché of the British Embassy at Washington?
14355Some minister from England itself, sent here direct?"
14355Some such souls are born, do you not think?"
14355Still I would not accept my dismissal, but went on stubbornly:"But may I not see your father and have my chance again?
14355Suppose I do not like this other woman?"
14355Suppose I might listen to such suits-- might there not be some life for me-- some life with events?
14355Suppose Van Zandt proves traitorous to us?"
14355Suppose the Señora Yturrio herself_ could_ avert it?
14355Suppose the Señora could remain here still, in this city which she so much admires?
14355Suppose you invade Texas, as the threat is, with troops of the United States, before Texas is a member of the Union?
14355Tell me where you get it?"
14355Tell me, Sir Richard, am I not clean?"
14355Tell me, are you a spy of that man Pakenham?"
14355Tell me, do you see me now?
14355Tell me, now,"she concluded,"what became of the other shell from this clasp?"
14355Tell me, what argument did you use with her last night?"
14355Tell me, what does this council mean regarding Oregon?
14355Tell me, what have you learned?"
14355Tell me, when will it arrive on the Columbia?"
14355Tell me, who was the wise man who described all this to you?"
14355Tell me, you go soon to Oregon?"
14355Tell me,_ were_ you married?"
14355That iss much?
14355The alternative?
14355The bargain?"
14355The people may get out of hand_ before the convention!_""Why should they not?
14355The representatives of Mexico?
14355The women?
14355Then why should her heart beat one stroke the faster now?
14355They leave their own homes and make new governments, yess?
14355This has not been made public?"
14355Treason?
14355Trist?"
14355Tyler?"
14355Was it not life?"
14355Was it not treachery enough to rebuke him for his attentions to the Doña Lucrezia?"
14355Was it then for the sake of ease, for the sake of selfishness?
14355Was it then true that faith and loyalty could purchase alike faithlessness and-- failure?
14355Was it then true that faith could purchase faith-- and win not failure, but success?
14355Was not life, indeed, for her to remain a perpetual tragedy?
14355Was not your mother clean in her heart?
14355Was she incognita here?
14355Was there any likelihood of trouble with the Indians or with the Britishers?
14355Was there much game?
14355Was there the slightest mocking sneer in her words?
14355Was this indeed the covert embassy of England?
14355Wass I not also young once?
14355We must have--""Free?"
14355Well, then, for myself?
14355Well, what more?
14355Well-- Miss Elisabeth, may I be the first to congratulate?"
14355Were there not other swords upon which they might have fallen-- those of their enemies?"
14355What are you?"
14355What can he wish?"
14355What chance would we have with so powerful a nation as that?"
14355What could comfort her?
14355What could he now mean?
14355What could the girl do or say?
14355What do you mean-- still hearing the rustle of skirts?"
14355What do you mean?
14355What do you mean?"
14355What do you say to this?
14355What does it augur, Madam?"
14355What does it mean, Monsieur?
14355What had I done-- what had I been-- what could I ever be?
14355What had happened there for me?
14355What had the world ever given me?
14355What have you done?"
14355What is the inference?
14355What is wrong?"
14355What made her go?
14355What might you have been?_''"So now,"she concluded,"you asked me, asked me what I was, and I have told you.
14355What of my own heart?
14355What others?
14355What rare and splendid wedlock brings forth_ that_ manner of offspring?"
14355What then?"
14355What will you give me, then, to tell you what I know?"
14355What woman of the court of Austria or France comes out with_ morals?_ We used you here because you had none.
14355What would Monsieur do if Monsieur were in my place-- and if I were in Monsieur''s place?
14355What would you say to a stiff demand there, with a strong show of military force behind it?"
14355What would you say, for instance, regarding its safety for a lady traveling across-- a small party, you know, of her own?
14355What would''that man Pakenham''suspect in either case?
14355What''s the news?"
14355What, now, is your wish?"
14355Where did_ you_ get it, then?"
14355Where is all that to come from?
14355Where is that other key?
14355Where is your political party, John?
14355Which of us knew all the motives that had lain behind its setting?
14355Who are they?
14355Who can teach yon love of woman as can I?
14355Who did that?
14355Who is it at the door?"
14355Who makes and unmakes cities and empires and republics to- day?
14355Whose agent was she now?
14355Why did you not go to him?"
14355Why does your taste run to such quarters as these?
14355Why is England so secret with us?"
14355Why not myself?
14355Why should I be faithful to England?
14355Why should I, my dear girl?"
14355Why should I?
14355Why should not I?"
14355Why should we be?"
14355Why should we not be friends in every way, and fair ones?"
14355Why should we not please ourselves?"
14355Why should you?
14355Why so anxious, my son?"
14355Why was she going east instead of west, away from Oregon instead of to Oregon?
14355Why, then, should I love him as I did?
14355Why?
14355Why?
14355Why_ then_?
14355Will you answer_ my_ question?"
14355Will you do that now?"
14355Will you give my family a chance for revenge on these accursed heathen-- these Americans?
14355Will you have a Dream with me?
14355Will you have_ that_, my lord?
14355Will you not shield me once again?"
14355Will you not take them now?"
14355Will you serve again, John?"
14355Will you tell me in turn of yourself?"
14355Without her, you heathen people would not present a solid front, would you?"
14355Would it not be better to defer action until later-- until after, I may say--""Until after you know what your own chances will be, Jim?"
14355Would it raise wheat and corn and hogs?
14355Would it take much labor to clear a farm?
14355Would there be also an expedition by sea?
14355Would you not like to travel with me in America so far as that?"
14355Would you pit two peoples, like cocks on a floor?
14355Would-- would she let me-- if she knew?"
14355You are married?"
14355You can not?
14355You do not think me a fool for telling you what I have?"
14355You do not?
14355You have him in the net also?
14355You have perhaps seen the Oregon country?
14355You know that I am back in the Senate once more?"
14355You know what went forward?"
14355You say that you and she talked of_ principles?_""Yes, we went so far into abstractions."
14355You shall see them, yess?
14355You told Mr. Calhoun what he desired to know?"
14355You understand him?"
14355You want more?
14355You will not betray me?
14355You will ride home with us after a time, I am sure?"
14355You would like to see them bruised by the hard going in some heathen country?
14355You-- you, what have you not done for us?
14355_ Did_ you find her there-- in Oregon?"
14355_ Granted_ he was in wine,_ granted_ he followed me,_ granted_ he had my shoe in his possession-- what then?
14355_ N''est- ce pas vrai, mon drôle?_"she asked, turning to put her arm on her father''s shoulder as he dropped weakly on the couch beside her.
14355_ Stella Terræ_ I name it-- my Star of the Earth, that which I crave but do not always haf, eh?
14355_ Vice versa_, I suppose?"
14355_ What_ is it?
14355_ What_ value, Madam?"
14355_ Where_ originated that germ of liberty which did its work so well?
14355_ Why_ does it live, grow, increase, even now?
14355_ Why_ does it sound now, close to the oldest thrones?
14355_ Why_?"
14355` What do the people say?''
14355asked Calhoun serenely;"and what fire?"
14355boy, what do you mean?
14355exclaimed Polk;"eh?"
14355is there no little pity in your heart for me, after all?--who succeeded only to fail so miserably?"
14355it may be?
14355my friend, who is to give those to others who follow us?
14355said he at last, softly; but Calhoun went on:"Why, who has made the maps of the world, and who has written pages in its history?
14355said he,"you jealous beggar, could you not leave me to be happy for one minute?
14355she went on,"--in a strange town-- and on a strange errand?
14355were it not, after all, enough, this, if one be loved?''
14355what do we not see?
14355woman, what are you asking_ now?_ Do you want me to let you have this paper anyhow, to show old John Calhoun?
14355woman, what are you asking_ now?_ Do you want me to let you have this paper anyhow, to show old John Calhoun?
14355would it not be enough?"
14355you do n''t call it out of the way for me to seek the nomination?
39079''Going out, ladies?'' 39079 ''Return as what, madam?--prisoners or subjects?''
39079''Well,''said the man,''do you wish to hear from them, or send any thing by way of refreshment to them? 39079 ''Will you?''
39079And hast thou forgotten, Friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? 39079 And why,"asked he,"is it called the rebel flower?"
39079Does it enable you to sleep?
39079When we got to the front door, we asked,''Who are you?'' 39079 Where do you live?"
39079Who has dared to do this atrocious act? 39079 Why have you come so far away from your homes?"
39079Why were you singing?
39079Would you?
39079''Have you any?
39079''Is she killed?
39079--''O, Lord North''s and Lord George Germaine''s, beyond all question; and where is the third head?''
39079----When meet now Such pairs, in love and honor joined?
39079And who would risk life in attempting it?
39079And who, with her disposition and spirit, could not do something to aid the cause of God?
39079As she recovered from a spasm, I said to her,"do you not often desire to depart, and be with the Saviour you love so fervently?"
39079As the stranger drew near the table and saw the scantiness of the fare, he asked,"And is this all your store?
39079Augustine?"
39079Brewton?"
39079But pray,''said he,''how came you here?''
39079But then the thought occurred to me, What can_ you_ do, a poor widow, with four small children to support, and your house rent to pay?
39079But we are not so sure we have to die; do n''t you hear the crack of Melbury''s rifle?
39079But when winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then?
39079But, madam, do you not wrong your children by giving a part of your morsel to a stranger?"
39079Can you comfort me?
39079Dear President, will it be possible for you to do any thing?
39079Dear father of the land of my birth, can you do any thing?
39079Did the mother indulge the grief of her spirit, and sit down in despair?
39079Do you not know what the---- rebels have been doing?"
39079Do you offer a share to one you do not know?
39079For who is able to judge this thy so great a people?''
39079Have chivalry''s bold days A deed of wilder bravery In all their stirring lays?
39079He sees that there is much dross to refine away, and why should I wish against his will?"
39079Hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?''
39079I cried,"do you never rest?"
39079If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness, and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings?
39079If, therefore, the proposed change should profit neither man, woman, nor the rising race, how can it benefit the world at large?
39079Inquiries were made as to who had been killed, and one running up, cried,''Where is the woman that gave us the powder?
39079Is it not the province of true wisdom to select such measures as promote the greatest good of the greatest number?
39079It may be asked, What was the result?
39079MATERNAL HEROISM Is there a man, into the lion''s den Who dares intrude to snatch his young away?
39079Mr. Van Alstine, starting up in surprise, asked impatiently,''What the devilish Indian wanted?''
39079One day the physician of the hospital, inquiring--"How is Robert?"
39079Rocks have been shaken from their solid base; But what shall move a dauntless soul?
39079She scornfully replied:"And if I could act so dastardly a part, think you that General Washington has but one Captain Randolph in his army?"
39079The only question which concerns me, is, are my motives pure and holy?
39079Think''st thou there dwells no courage but in breasts That set their mail against the ringing spears, When helmets are struck down?
39079To whom else could I look for comfort?
39079Walking to the spot where she stood near the gate, he said fiercely:"Did I not order you, madam, to keep out of my presence?"
39079Were these somewhat indefinite claims conceded, would the change promote her welfare?
39079What bosom beats not in its country''s cause?
39079What rhetoric didst thou use To gain this mighty boon?
39079What then should she do?
39079When they had gone, the good mother quietly said,''Elizabeth, why didst thou invite strangers, instead of thy schoolmates?''
39079Who can tell how much this republic is indebted to the prudence, integrity, courage and patriotism of Cornelia Beekman?
39079Who shall find a valiant woman?
39079Why do n''t you put powder in your guns?"
39079Why need she be again tempted by pride, or curiosity, or glozing words, to forfeit her own Eden?
39079Why should''st thou faint?
39079Wilkinson?''
39079Will you ask for their release?
39079Will you feel offended with me for appealing to you for comfort?
39079With such a mother to counsel him, one is led to ask, how could John Quincy Adams_ help_ becoming a noble- minded and great man?
39079Would she be a gainer by any added power or sounding title, which should require the sacrifice of that delicacy which is the life- blood of her sex?
39079cruel fate, why have I lived to see this?
39079do n''t you call that rebellion against their king, madam?"
39079he exclaimed,''What are you doing there?
39079not in rebellion against their king?
39079replied he, with great surprise,"pray what can be your meaning in that?"
39079what madness fires her?
39079where is your master?"
41485And what did the madame do?
41485When the shore is won at last, Who will think of the billows past?
41485AFTER THE BATTLE, WHAT?
41485After all, would it be wise or not, to seek again the fleet in Tampa Bay?
41485But what had become of D''Artaguette and his three hundred?
41485But where was Weatherford?
41485How else could all this be explained, save by the story which she related?
41485If so, what is the character of the book?
41485Meanwhile, where were the courageous Choctaws who were so eager for the fray and who were the chief cause of bringing on the fight?
41485When General Johnston was wounded at Seven Pines, and General Lee took command, one of the first inquiries of General Lee was:"Where is Dr. Guild?
41485Who knows of his clearness of demonstration in presenting the most tangled and abstruse of problems?
41485Who now reads a book?
41485Would you seek his monument?
38819But,interjected one of the listeners,"does President Harding understand that?"
38819Kow Loon, where is the place anyway?
38819Your President,he said,"is a charming man, but why does he put such funny things in his speeches?"
38819After he has blustered through some utterance, he will buttonhole you and ask,"Did I make a damn fool of myself?
38819All this sounds as if I were getting far from my happy ending, and you begin to see me asking the old question,"Is democracy a failure?"
38819And not only are we divided as to the limits of government, but where shall Mr. Harding look for authority to guide him with respect to clocks?
38819And what virtue is there in the theory that the Executive alone represents the national point of view, that he alone speaks"for the country?"
38819And who would be worse scandalized than the ancient committee chairman, some with one foot in the grave?
38819Besides, we have had infinite space, in our minds; but have we ever had democracy there?
38819But does Progress always respond instantly to our needs with new methods and devices, like a nurse responding to a hungry child?
38819But granting that the real Mr. Mellon is shown in the enormous fortune and not in the timid asking of a subordinate,"Did I make a good impression?"
38819But how many of us really believe that in the unqualified way we once did?
38819But in peace shall he go on thus boldly?
38819But on what do the octogenarian feet of Mr. Lodge and Mr. Cummins, and Mr. Colt and Mr. Nelson, and the others, rest except upon party authority?
38819But when will progress vouchsafe it?
38819But why should Mr. Harding understand or represent the national point of view?
38819Can anyone tell whether Mr. Justice Taft is coming or going, as this Fourth of July speaker asked?
38819Did I get it clear?
38819Does he represent Capital?
38819Does he represent the farmers?
38819Existence had been unclouded until this last cloud came; why was it to end suddenly and without reason?
38819For the limited tasks of self- government, why should special talents be required?
38819Forces?
38819Had not Mr. Carnegie confessed the weakness in his soul''s fortress by writing a book?
38819Had not Mr. Morgan by buying art suggested the one aim of pioneering on a grand scale might not be life''s sole end?
38819Have we a government by parties there?
38819How could the dull sideshow in Washington compete with the big spectacle in New York?
38819How doubt in the face of all this evidence?
38819How much wisdom has emerged from the biweekly meetings?
38819If the two existing parties can not be positive and constructive,"Why not scrap them both?"
38819Just a journalist?
38819Minority opinion is definite, but is it safe?
38819Mr. Hearst''s newspapers?
38819Or did I seem like a damn fool?"
38819Or shall he revert to the good old days, the days of McKinley, when the clock was sacred?
38819Or something that Mr. Harding may create himself if he will?
38819Or the manufacturer or railroad builder who put the town on the map, giving employment to labor or an outlet for its products?
38819Or the product of the propaganda conducted from Washington?
38819Or the rest of the press?
38819Principles?
38819Public opinion, what is it?
38819Remember the sneers in our cocksure press of those days at the"culture"of Boston?
38819Shall Wilson"get away with it,"with his League of Nations and his sublimated world set free from all the baser passions of the past?
38819Shall official Washington turn to public opinion as its guide?
38819The connection between President Harding and the Ku Klux Klan?
38819To business?
38819To go back to the small town again, who was it increased the opportunities of the storekeeper, the neighboring farmer, or real estate holder?
38819To his party?
38819To public opinion then?
38819Useful; but why should the whole nation worry about who advises with the President over the inveterate bad habits of the people as letter writers?
38819Was his reputation solidly based or was it newspaper made?
38819Was it the mayor and the common council by passing ordinances about street signs and sidewalk encumbrances?
38819Was n''t America being produced in accordance with economic law and was n''t America one of the marvels of the earth?
38819Were ever great abilities so tongue- tied as this?
38819Were they not instruments rather than mere men, instruments of the greater purpose of which America was the perfect work?
38819What could Alexander Hamilton do as the head of Mr. Harding''s Cabinet?
38819What could Alexander Hamilton do?
38819What could a subordinate reply except,"Yes, Mr. Mellon, you did very well."?
38819What difference does it make which is in power?"
38819What do these adverse circumstances mean regarding Mr. Vanderlip''s fitness to be, let us say, Secretary of the Treasury?
38819What else?
38819What is a good Secretary of the Treasury?
38819What is he going to do in office with those who"stood close"to him as he"stood close"to President Taft?
38819What is it that makes a leader and followers unless it is a common purpose?
38819What more threatening spectacle for second childhood is there than first childhood?
38819What would the loss of the senatorship mean to such a man?
38819When he was retiring, it is said, a reporter asked,"What can be done with the Senate?"
38819When we ceased to be a nation of farmers did we abandon the basis of our government in divine right?
38819Where did Mr. Harding''s plan of settling international affairs by conferences originate?
38819Where is authority?
38819Who else?
38819Who knows that there wo n''t be another"and Frelinghuysen"ticket, this time a successful one?
38819Why not, indeed?
38819Why should Mr. Harding have a vast understanding of national problems and a clear sense of the country''s will?
38819Why should President Harding declaim against them so persistently?
38819Why should minorities be regarded with such aversion?
38819Why should we let this new political organism keep us awake nights?
38819Would you make the nation happy and rich, give the soldiers a five- billion- dollar bonus and start them buying?
38819Yet Mr. Harding''s administration has been in office more than a year, and how many important policies has it adopted?
38819You and I know those Allied war debts are worthless, but how can we make the people realize that they are worthless?"
38819You have trouble laughing?
38819does such shrinking, such ill adaptation, on the stage of public life make a contribution to the unending drama of self- government?
41266Damn you, why do n''t you disperse?
41266I have half of Old England set against me already, and do you think I will have all New England likewise?
41266Well,said Stark,"would you have us turn out now, while it is pitch dark and raining buckets?"
41266What do you suppose my fate would be,Arnold is said to have inquired,"if my misguided countrymen were to take me prisoner?"
41266What do you think of the damnable doings of that diabolical dog?
41266Who knows,said John Rowe,"how tea will mingle with salt water?"
41266Why,therefore,"all this haste?
41266But were it ever so easy, does any friend to his country really wish to see America thus humbled?
41266But why, we may ask, did the intriguer come back?
41266Colonel Reed replied,"You are aware, sir, of the rank of General Washington in our army?"
41266Could it have been with the intention of playing into the hands of the enemy?
41266For a moment all firing ceased on both ships, and Captain Pearson called out,"Have you struck your colours?"
41266General Lee, what are you about?"
41266Is this the palace that papa was to have when he came to America?"
41266No one spoke for a few moments, until General Stevens exclaimed,"Well, gentlemen, is it not too late_ now_ to do anything but fight?"
41266Then why not be magnanimous in the hour of triumph?
41266To whom but Chatham should appeal be made to repair the drooping fortunes of the empire?
41266Was it to join such a league as this that she had cast off allegiance to Great Britain?
41266What must the traitor''s feelings have been when he read the affectionate letters which Schuyler wrote him at this very time?
41266What would Washington, what would Congress have thought, had the truth in its blackness been so much as dreamed of?
41266What would the keeper of his majesty''s lions do?
41266When Cornwallis, on the 7th of April, arrived at Wilmington, what was he to do next?
41266Where is the brigadier who will go?"
41266Whom can we trust now?"
41266Why did he think it worth his while to pose once more in the attitude of an American?
41266Why not make a hill?
41266Why this driving?"
41266Why this urging?
41266Would he not fling open the dens of the wild beasts, and then address them thus?
41266[ 35] To a gentleman, like Clinton, such a proposal was a gross insult, to which the only fitting answer would have been,"What do you take me for?"
41266and could Sir Henry Clinton have been aware of this purpose?
15534And do n''t we want to see her arrive? 15534 And my father''s grave?"
15534But what has that to do with this? 15534 Can every one set himself up as a judge of the laws and disobey them if he chooses?
15534Can we see the farm?
15534Did n''t Mr. Brooks tell you?
15534Did you know,he said,"that the early Puritans in New England were the progenitors of one third of the whole population of the United States by 1834?
15534Do n''t you see how clearly Douglas''compact mind stands out against all this folly?
15534Do you know what happened right here in New York?
15534Do you love me?
15534Do you really love me?
15534He loves you?
15534He wants to marry you?
15534How about Seward being too radical?
15534How about the War of 1812, and the Hartford convention?
15534How can I send you money?
15534How can I tell you how to be my friend? 15534 How can that be in your country?"
15534How could that be?
15534How did they get there?
15534How is this?
15534If all men are created free and equal how about the negro?
15534If you do n''t nominate Seward, where will you get your money?
15534Is your life not a waste?
15534Perhaps he was my father... did you know my father?
15534So they are debating, are they?
15534That was three, was n''t it?
15534That, you mean?
15534There was a will then?
15534Was he kind to you?
15534Well, now do n''t you see,I asked,"that Douglas is against all these people and that he has all these influences to fight?
15534What do you think about gold being discovered in California? 15534 What do you think now?"
15534What do you think of Barnum?
15534What do you wish me to do?
15534What if the Southern States secede?
15534What new arguments could you advance?
15534What sort of country is this?
15534What?
15534Where am I?
15534Where do you get all these things?
15534Where do you work?
15534Where is Fortescue?
15534Where is Zoe?
15534Where?
15534Who is Abraham Lincoln?
15534Who is it?
15534Who lives there now?
15534Who painted it?
15534Who was Douglas?
15534Who was Pinturicchio?
15534Why ca n''t these agitators leave the states as they were made by the fathers, slave and free?
15534Why make the two inconsistent?
15534Why pursue Douglas with arguments like these?
15534Why who can depend on him? 15534 Why, is n''t there something to tell?"
15534Why,she asked,"does every one say here''how''s your health''instead of''good morning''as they say in England?
15534Why?
15534Wo n''t that ensure his reelection?
15534Yes, but do we not need the harbors?
15534Yes,said Yarnell,"but how is Douglas going to stand out against it?
15534You do not like Douglas, do you, Reverdy?
15534You have been reading and thinking, have n''t you, Reverdy?
15534You remember him?
15534A heckler asked him:"Are not the provisions of the Constitution respecting the return of a fugitive slave a violation of the law of God?"
15534A slumbering nature?
15534A voice:"How about Kansas and Nebraska?"
15534After a few minutes of silence I asked her about my father: what were his spirits; his way of life; where did he live; did she live with him?
15534After all had not Douglas been starved in the finer part of his genius by the life to which he was wedded?
15534After all, what of the law?
15534After all, what was humanly possible?
15534After that what, anyway?
15534All the while, where did God come in?
15534Also, how and when was I to get to Jacksonville?
15534Am I to be President?
15534And I was thinking, what better way to forget Isabel?
15534And if I had, could I win her back?
15534And if an advertisement should be published in the local newspaper where would it reach?
15534And if it had come to that, what could I do with Zoe, if I found her?
15534And if territory is property, who owns the property?
15534And if you could have been a friend of Pinturicchio in the noblest sense, why not of me?
15534And now, what was Zoe?
15534And that lets in all the kings of Europe, and where''s your Monroe Doctrine?
15534And the first asked:"Was n''t your name on the draft?"
15534And was not Jefferson prophetic when he wrote that the extension of this divisional line in 1820 alarmed him like a fire bell at midnight?
15534And what I say is: where did he get his eddication?
15534And what can I say to you now?
15534And what do you think of Douglas now?
15534And what does England want them for?
15534And what does young Douglas do?
15534And what happens?
15534And what would this growing hostility lead to?
15534And when could they be freed and cleaned of it?
15534And who can tell what will come of that?
15534And who was Douglas in spirit?
15534And why is n''t that best?
15534And why not now?
15534And why not speak my heart?
15534And why?
15534And will South Carolina secede from the Union on account of the unjust and lawless tariff?
15534Anything of Douglas''?
15534Are not men free?
15534Are we like two people who are kept from each other by circumstances that they do not control, like friends whom a war separates?
15534Are you willing to violate the Constitution for the negro?
15534As Zoe''s brother, or as her unnatural lover?
15534As for human love, what was it but the feeling evoked by consideration?
15534At least what, but a sentimental reason, could I set up against the enforced servitude of Zoe?
15534Back of me was nearly a quarter of a century in America and before me what?
15534Besides was I ever much of an adventurer after all?
15534Besides, what''s to hinder new work being found for the slaves?
15534But I was his friend, and why not?
15534But after all, what was to be done?
15534But after the liquor was in Kansas or the slave in Nebraska could they flourish?
15534But as Zoe was my sister why should she not have some of the land that my father left?
15534But did I really care for Abigail?
15534But even if Dorothy only knew that Zoe was my sister, what would she think of me?
15534But finally as they paid for their dinner, lighted cigars, and became less energetic of mood, one asked the other:"Have you ever heard from the girl?"
15534But for the rest, what did it all come to?
15534But how about America, if the colored people were given freedom, not of the franchise merely, but in civil rights of property and free activity?
15534But how about slavery?
15534But how could this man win against an old soldier?
15534But how had I come to this household?
15534But how was he to escape a derivative gain?
15534But if Dorothy had heard of it would she continue to receive me?
15534But if Zoe had been remembered in the will what was the danger now?
15534But if Zoe should run away what would become of her?
15534But if she had met foul play how could that be discovered?
15534But if she had not found these circumstances a reason for turning from me could she tolerate the rest of my difficulties?
15534But now how to find Dorothy again?
15534But then what should the explanation be?
15534But was he happy?
15534But was life nothing but money making?
15534But was not Lincoln so too?
15534But was that home to be?
15534But was there enough moral depth to him?
15534But what good was the land?
15534But what had I to say?
15534But what has he to carry against them that will be a loss to the world, if he fails?"
15534But what is strength?
15534But what need?
15534But what of England?
15534But what of the field hands, the heavier workers?
15534But what one of them would give back Texas, New Mexico, California, to Mexico?
15534But what one of them would not have done the same thing if he could?
15534But what right have I to talk?
15534But what will the future be?
15534But what?
15534But where do you see outdoor sports?
15534But where now was Dorothy''s body?
15534But where was Douglas?
15534But who should be the candidate?
15534But why also desist?
15534But why change the subject?
15534But why had Reverdy not warned me against taking Zoe to live with me?
15534But why not a chimney of stone?
15534But why not a formal marriage?
15534But why"poor fellow"?
15534But why, after all?
15534But why?
15534But why?
15534But why?
15534But, after all, was not Webster cribbed by his New England environment?
15534By not admitting any more slave states?
15534By what authority was his right challenged to come to this state to make his home; and to this town to follow the profession of the law?
15534CHAPTER LX Who should call upon me the next morning after my arrival in Chicago but Yarnell?
15534CHAPTER VIII What were my thoughts after all?
15534CHAPTER XLI What was the result?
15534CHAPTER XXXVI But what of Douglas?
15534Ca n''t we use our will and our thought to assist climate and soil, about anything?
15534Can I help that?
15534Can he throw it to any one?
15534Could Dorothy, bred in Tennessee, look with favor upon my attentions?
15534Could I enforce the will after all?
15534Could I rely upon the hope of her staying away, and that she would not figure in my life in the future except as to the land, the money?
15534Could I take care of myself entirely?
15534Could anything lift him out of his complication to honor and freedom?
15534Could it be possible that this Captain Brown should have his Pinturicchio?
15534Could it be true?
15534Could n''t I say that Congress could prohibit slavery in the territories under the power it has to regulate commerce between them?
15534Could not a liquor dealer from Chicago take his stock to Kansas?
15534Could she have an interest in a man with a family relationship of this sort?
15534Could she sense that my heart was beating, but with terror?
15534Could such a theme be dramatized now?
15534Could we wait until the house was rented, or at least placed with an agent, the furnishings stored if necessary?
15534Did Congress have to pass favorable legislation?
15534Did I begrudge her the interest which she had, of right, with me in our father''s estate?
15534Did I know that Miss Martineau had stopped in Chicago and had described Chicago as it was then?
15534Did I know the Ridgeway family there, of which Edward Ridgeway, the founder, had been prominent in the affairs of Illinois, now dead some five years?
15534Did I know what I was getting into?
15534Did I not see it with English eyes used to tranquillity and order?
15534Did I really know myself?
15534Did I want a wife who had such definite opinions about masculine questions such as these?
15534Did I wish to?
15534Did Mrs. Brown do it?
15534Did Zoe meet that fate, and not violence?
15534Did a territorial legislature have power to pass favorable legislation?
15534Did any one of them dream of a sectional party as long as the North was the weaker section and the South the stronger?
15534Did he get my letter, or was he consoling himself in convivial ways?
15534Did he keep her in his heart?
15534Did he reckon enough with the forces which made for culture, enlightenment?
15534Did he smile, approve?
15534Did it not prove Lamborn''s interest in Zoe?
15534Did loneliness ever come over him?
15534Did moral ideas have strength, or did war?
15534Did my father suffer for this marriage?
15534Did one have her and one lose her?
15534Did she know that Zoe and I had the same father?
15534Did she love me?
15534Did she receive my attentions on account of the relations between him and me?
15534Did the North have strength, or the South?
15534Did these words have any definite meaning to Webster?
15534Did they disapprove his leaving England?
15534Do I speak fantastically when I ask you to try out a marriage of the mind?
15534Do n''t you need money?
15534Do n''t you see the point?
15534Do you appreciate these figures?
15534Do you know...?"
15534Do you promise me that?"
15534Do you realize who is living in it to- day?
15534Do you think that I am only a shadow or a registering machine, and that Dorothy is not flesh and blood?
15534Do you think, if we once get it that there will be any whining that we should give it up?
15534Does it understand; does it but partly divine these secrets; does it for any of these reasons cease to be sensitive?
15534Does the heart of age become deadened?
15534Douglas took up this challenge by saying:"Yes, but who is to decide what is right and what is wrong; or what is to decide it?
15534Douglas was left to me, but what could he do for me or I for him?
15534Douglas, in bronze, looks over the lake to the east-- to what?
15534Drinking?
15534Even if I did, what was her life to be?
15534Everybody had used it for more than eighty years-- why not this platform?
15534For here was Isabel dissolved in my arms and how could I continue this futile demonstration?
15534For it was beauty of life that Isabel and I shared, and who can not know between whom this secret exists, if he have eyes to see?
15534For should I ever come this way again?
15534For the rest, what did it all come to?
15534For what could be between us?
15534For why would I surrender so much when I did not have to?
15534From what clause flowed the duty and the power?
15534Had Dorothy heard them?
15534Had Douglas gone forth to bring this about in realization of his dream of America''s greatness?
15534Had I awakened all of her nature?
15534Had I been living a neutral life all these years?
15534Had I contracted it from the oysters, or from food on the steamer?
15534Had I gone too far in dividing the estate with Zoe?
15534Had I killed Lamborn for jealousy, or in self- defense?
15534Had I made a god of a poor piece of clay?
15534Had I not seen them together on the lake front in Chicago?
15534Had I wounded her?
15534Had Reverdy and Sarah kept this relationship from Dorothy?
15534Had anything just like this ever occurred in England?
15534Had he been kind to my mother?
15534Had he had a fair chance in such a brief period to do anything?
15534Had he had a hand in this-- the young judge of the Supreme Court?
15534Had he heard of Douglas?
15534Had he not acquired brusqueness, vulgarity since coming west?
15534Had he not been driven from position to position by Douglas in the debates?
15534Had his pride been wounded, his spirits dampened?
15534Had not Douglas stood for this too?
15534Had not Zoe then hidden herself behind a suspicious reticence?
15534Had not the Whigs, marching through these streets of Chicago, captured all the effective thunder of the Democratic party?
15534Had not the young man given away too much?
15534Had not this crowd caught up the Democratic platform which congratulated the republicans of France?
15534Had some one else told her?
15534Had the Declaration of Independence been approved at the polls?
15534Had we accomplished anything?
15534Has he not been a Whig with all the humbuggery of that party, of log cabins and imperial practices?
15534Has it not been for lack of some one better to whom you could give your heart?
15534Have you read Emerson or Lowell yet?
15534He ca n''t go away from the plantation, but why go away?
15534He closed with these memorable words:"Why can we not thus have peace?
15534He had married again, but was he happy?
15534He sees me, but what am I?
15534He was much out of breath and looked definitely ill. How had they found us?
15534He went on:"How do you dare to yell for negro freedom and then deny me the freedom of speech?
15534He''s a country jake, is n''t he?"
15534Hence this long freight train with coal, oil, and iron-- all very well, but where are the free men and the free soil that Reverdy''s son died for?
15534How about the tariff and South Carolina in 1832?
15534How can they play with things in this way?"
15534How could I approach that?
15534How could I comfort her?
15534How could I go into explanations with Dorothy?
15534How could I help but make comparisons between Isabel and Dorothy?
15534How could I return to the house in Chicago?
15534How could I stand the loneliness?
15534How could I?
15534How could a woman, fair and high- bred, become the wife of a sooty creature like Othello?
15534How could constables and sheriffs in the surrounding counties be notified?
15534How could he do it?
15534How could it be?
15534How could posters be sent around, how phrased?
15534How could she establish herself?
15534How could such a locality ever be the seat of a city?
15534How could that be?
15534How could their devotion to a liberty, bring liberty to him?
15534How far up did the city extend?
15534How had I dared to make this proposal to Dorothy?
15534How long is it since these ambitious northern men wished for a sectional organization?
15534How long would it take?
15534How should I find the home that I had left?
15534How should the whole people be at peace?
15534How should this examination be managed?
15534How was Douglas taking it?
15534How well had they known each other?
15534How would Douglas face these great men?
15534How would Douglas react to these world movements?
15534How would I unravel this tangle with him?
15534How would Lincoln abolish slavery?
15534How would he interpret them?
15534How would her fate tangle itself with mine?
15534How would the two pieces be connected?
15534How, for example, can you stop the railroads on Sunday if you let communities, states, control the matter?
15534How?
15534I could get richer, but why get richer?
15534I could not marry Isabel; and what could be?
15534I followed this by asking:"Are you very good friends?"
15534I had never seen anything remotely approximating Lake Erie...."How large is it?"
15534I have developed this power of concentration and self- denial; but would you bring me to live over again what I lived with Uncle Tom?
15534I liked it, but would it take me to Chicago?
15534I shall never forget my feelings, but how shall I describe them?
15534I turned to her and asked:"Would you and Mr. Winchell like to join me?"
15534I was rich to be sure, but what had I done?
15534If Dorothy should be dead, or Mother Clayton, or Mammy or Jenny?
15534If I went to her with the same will that I took up the matter of the farm, could I not win her?
15534If Lamborn wanted Zoe and I had her in my house and kept him from seeing her, was it for a good or a selfish reason?
15534If he should die to- day what would the world lose?
15534If he was right, why condemn him unheard?
15534If he was wrong, what harm to hear him through, the better to see the wrong?
15534If labor conditions presaged slavery for white men were they freed by negro slavery?
15534If not real, what was Shakespeare trying to do?
15534If now he could not win the prize, what would be his future as against the growing power of the Republican party?
15534If one man says it does not mean a negro, why may not another man say it does not mean another man?
15534If she knew about it would not the present association of ideas bring it to mind and bespeak it to me by change of color or expression?
15534If she was dealt with justly as to her property what more could I do?
15534If so, why not recognize the great principles of self- government and state equality as curatives?"
15534If the general government was one of granted powers, where did it get the right to prohibit slavery in the territories?
15534If these things could be done with honor and applause, did Douglas deserve the hostility which was rising up against him?
15534If this Constitution is to be repudiated for the law of God, who is to be the prophet to reveal the will of God and establish a theocracy for us?"
15534If this be true, why must you change toward me?
15534If we did assume such a position it would be a very pertinent inquiry, why do you not adopt this institution?
15534If you can rule the territories arbitrarily as to slavery, why not as to anything else?
15534In a word, was wealth everything?
15534In such case had I married Dorothy?
15534In what soil had Zoe moldered into the earth?
15534Is he not for the tariff and loose construction?
15534Is he scoring?
15534Is it the same way out in Chicago?"
15534Is it wrong?
15534Is n''t slavery traffic?
15534Is slavery the only wrong in the country?
15534Is there a Republican in Galesburg who can travel into Kentucky and carry his principles with him across the Ohio?"
15534Is there a statesman in Europe or one in America with a cleaner record?
15534Is there anything more desperate at times?
15534Is this a campaign of the log cabin, hard cider, and war records?"
15534It has changed its base, but is there more of it?
15534It may not be a pleasing sight to see a slave returned to its master, but what are you going to do with the law?
15534Just be good to me as you have been-- don''t you understand?
15534Might not Dorothy come back to me if she knew that Zoe had wholly vanished from my life?
15534Might she not have been sold for her loveliness to some man desiring a mistress?
15534Now that I was separated from him how should I follow him day by day?
15534Now, let me inquire, where are you to find the slave territory with which to balance these seventeen free territories, or even any one of them?"
15534On the other hand, if you give it breathing space what will become of the country?
15534Or had Douglas''oratory swept them off their feet?
15534Or is it against northern interests?
15534Or was he drowning disappointment, the tragic sense of life''s inadequacy, in abandoned diversions?
15534Otherwise what is the future to be?"
15534Sarah''s mother was my pride and she''s dead a long time too, but I do n''t get over that.... What''s the matter, Jimmy?
15534Shall I ever return?
15534Shall we have a glass of wine together?"
15534She seemed to say:"What difficulty in this boy''s life is he trying to mingle with my daughter''s life?"
15534She wailed incessantly:"What is free territory to me?
15534She was beginning to think of the ordeal herself, of the fate of the child, what it was being born to.... What, indeed?
15534Should I attempt to argue down her misgivings?
15534Should I keep her in my household and let the tongues wag, as they were doing, or clatter if Zoe should have a child?
15534Should I not carry the sword to defend and establish them?
15534Should I not go there for her?
15534Should I not see something of the city?
15534Should I not write to Dorothy and tell her of Zoe''s disappearance?
15534Should I remain silent?
15534Should I send Zoe away?
15534Should I tell her that I would return to Jacksonville and send Zoe away?
15534Should I tell what I knew?
15534Should I urge Dorothy to a marriage with me?
15534Should I write Dorothy that I relinquished any hope of making her my wife?
15534Should I write Dorothy?
15534Should her dark skin deprive her of that?
15534Should slavery, polygamy, rum, be driven from the land?
15534So we sat until I broke the silence by asking:"When was the baby born?"
15534Some one at our side says:"This railsplitter Lincoln, who carries the purse for him?"
15534Still would it be known?
15534Still, if it came to a question of law, what law was to be observed?
15534Still, would I not be kind enough to arrange it?
15534Still, would he like to know that the public have no access to the lake at any place where the tracks lie between the shore and this wall?
15534Suppose this vote grew and an Abolitionist President should ultimately be elected?
15534The laws that were written, the laws relating to the progress of the country, the laws that worked for peace among the American people?
15534The motley elements that Douglas had derided as anti- Masonics, Know- nothings, Abolitionists, Spiritualists, where were they?
15534The progress of the country or the opinions of fanatics?"
15534The question was: Are the Whig policies best for the country?
15534The thought went through my mind, why not take Dorothy and go in order to give her the benefit of this summer climate through the winter?
15534The young woman asks her companion:"Who is that monument to?"
15534The young woman says:"I wonder who that old man is?
15534Then recalling what Isabel had said I asked her:"Where is the face, Isabel, you wished to show me?"
15534Then she said:"Are n''t you best alone?
15534Then should we be free and happy, and just and noble?
15534Then why should England be tolerated in this Western Hemisphere?
15534There were always my growing enterprises-- and yet to what end?
15534These are issues between him and Douglas still; but is this the real issue after all?
15534These questions about Texas and Oregon, about tariffs, about Whigs and Democrats, what are they but the cackle of the moment?
15534This being the case why should I not go to Dorothy and tell her so?
15534This boy is mine, but am I better off than Isabel?
15534To what darker waters has she been towed by some creature of prey?
15534To what depths has Dorothy sunk?
15534To what extent, then, the associate on a basis of equality with Zoe too?
15534To what there?
15534Turning to the octoroon she said:"Will you feed him, Zoe?"
15534Under that roof the most priceless heart I had found in life was beating-- but was it in sleep or in wakefulness?
15534Upon what basis could I seek to regain Zoe, if she did not wish to return?
15534Very well?
15534Virginia had been bought, why did n''t she deliver?
15534Was America in the business of pirating around the shores of Europe to pick up islands, or promontories like Gibraltar?
15534Was America so immaculately free that Douglas''subordination of the negro to the welfare of the republic at large should be so severely dealt with?
15534Was Dorothy happy?
15534Was Douglas a youth?
15534Was Douglas turned against me?
15534Was Douglas unmoral?
15534Was England safe against such innovation?
15534Was I ashamed of my kinship with Zoe?
15534Was I drawn to her?
15534Was I free?
15534Was I happy?
15534Was I in some sort a negligible character, without magnetism, of unfulfilled passion?
15534Was I investing Dorothy with my own thoughts, putting into her mouth the objections that I could make against myself?
15534Was I not resolved to be rich myself?
15534Was Jenny kidnapped?
15534Was Lincoln any more radical than Douglas?
15534Was every one corrupt, people and legislature?
15534Was he greatly interested?
15534Was he not a log roller in the Illinois legislature of 1836?
15534Was he really high- minded?
15534Was he rising to a purer height, had a glory begun to dawn on America?
15534Was he syllogistic, analytic, intellectually hard?
15534Was he to lose them?
15534Was he, too, becoming uncertain of mind?
15534Was it Zoe; Dorothy''s knowledge of Zoe?
15534Was it fair?
15534Was it more than a mile?
15534Was it my mother?
15534Was it not a pure makeshift, an expedient in the breaking up of her life, the first step in an accommodation to Dorothy''s loss?
15534Was it possible that my father''s mind was disturbed?
15534Was it real?
15534Was it so warm?
15534Was it some dream?
15534Was it the life going out of me, or the life clinging to me in spite of the airs of eternity?
15534Was it to prove his lasting triumph, or his undoing?
15534Was not one half of her blood English blood?
15534Was not this America hailing Europe?
15534Was not this marriage as valid as any?
15534Was not this roar outside of the house a part of the tumult in Germany and France?
15534Was nullification right?
15534Was she not closer to me, as temperate genius of the North, than Dorothy, out of the languor and the romanticism of the South?
15534Was she not sublimating the materials of our thwarted relationship?
15534Was she only my friend?
15534Was she perhaps ill?
15534Was the town dividing as to me?
15534Was there a home for me?
15534Was there a trace of Zoe in him?
15534Was there any one present who did not wish him to strive for these achievements for this western country?
15534Was there anything in all of Europe to equal it?
15534Was there reality in Isabel''s words?
15534Was there something lacking of depth, of genuineness, in Dorothy''s nature?
15534Was this new- found acquaintance before me a friend of my father''s?
15534Was this not perfectly unreasonable?
15534Was to- day her day of destiny?
15534Was trade everything?
15534We had the ballot but did we have freedom?
15534Webster and Douglas had lost the nomination, how could a gentleman win the election?
15534Well now, is n''t that better than calling the territories property and subject to the arbitrary rule of Congress as merely inert matter?
15534Well, are climate and soil any more nature than thought?
15534Well, but can this plan of mine be carried out?
15534Well, if he had not had the gifts and the energies to do such things, how could he have served the country and maintained himself?
15534Well, might it not be so since Victor Hugo, living in exile, had also given Brown an apotheosis?
15534Well, was not Douglas a martyr too?
15534Well, were there not then the usual consequences?
15534Well, what of it?
15534Well, why does n''t he go farther and let Congress at one stroke emancipate the slaves?
15534Well, why should he not return to Chicago with me and help with the investigation?
15534Were merchants to be permitted to do what they chose in order that they might create wealth for themselves, or even the nation?
15534Were the merchants the leaders of civilization?
15534Were we not rivals for the same favor?
15534What about this observance of the law, the higher law included?
15534What after all was art to me except a diversion?
15534What are Lincoln and Jeff Davis thinking of?
15534What are their speculations as to whether this ridiculous old document called the Constitution goes into a territory or not?
15534What better field for making money?
15534What can I do for Douglas?
15534What could I say, to what could she listen?
15534What could it mean?
15534What did Douglas know of law?
15534What did I know of Mrs. Stowe?
15534What did he want?
15534What did it matter in point of justice and civilization that the South could not carry on her commercial interests without slavery?
15534What did it mean?
15534What did it mean?
15534What did our kindred blood have to do with the matter of my desire?
15534What did they do?
15534What divided the American imagination?
15534What does he care whether I admire him or not, or whether any one loves him or not?
15534What does one derive from love?
15534What else could I do?
15534What follows from all of this?
15534What fraud could have been wrought upon him?
15534What great fish started at the splash, the white apparition; and then returned to nibble?
15534What had Clay to offer as a counteractant, as an equal inspiration to the pride of this lusty nation?
15534What had Douglas to gain with popular sovereignty?
15534What had I to do with Rome, with art; what with a woman like Isabel?
15534What had all this to do with Dorothy and me?
15534What had become of Fortescue?
15534What had been accomplished?
15534What had been the delay thus far?
15534What had come over Lincoln?
15534What had created nullification?
15534What had happened in my absence?
15534What had he accomplished?
15534What had he done?
15534What had my generosity, foolish and boyish, come to after all?
15534What has Douglas written or said that will live?
15534What has done it?
15534What has he done that will carry an influence to a future day?
15534What have I to gain by favoring them?
15534What have the Whigs to offer?
15534What have you done with prohibition of slavery in the North by Federal law?
15534What heart could withhold itself from Mammy and Jenny?
15534What if I fell ill again and in the middle of the winter, when the ways were snowbound?
15534What in the Constitution forbade slaves from being taken into the territories?
15534What is any earthly thing to him?
15534What is honest about him above other men?
15534What is it like?
15534What is left for Seward, for his supporters?
15534What is my friendship now to him?
15534What is stirring there?
15534What is the danger of a contest, even if Zoe could be brought to make one?
15534What is the end of slavery to me?
15534What is the matter with Seward?
15534What is the matter?
15534What is this matter of freedom after all?
15534What is this sanctimonious talk in prose and verse in England about Texas?
15534What is this talk of Old Abe Lincoln, Old Uncle Abe, Honest Abe Lincoln?
15534What is this vote of Virginia,--fourteen votes out of her twenty- three for Lincoln?
15534What is this?
15534What kind of a soul was he giving it?
15534What light was falling on those soft and tender cheeks in the Vatican?
15534What nominated Lincoln?
15534What of American progress in such a contingency?
15534What of Fortescue?
15534What of Pennsylvania and her tariff?
15534What of a wrecked republic before the greedy eyes of England, the envious hands of kings?
15534What of her property, her interests?
15534What of the Whigs?
15534What of the right of revolution?
15534What of the steam engine, what of machinery, what of unknown developments?
15534What of the unmorality of taking Kansas and Nebraska from the Indians?
15534What one of us saw that we could not make an ocean- bound republic without a supremacy of wealth, even if it was brought about by a plebiscite?
15534What other use have I for money but to give it to this war, or to Douglas?
15534What public man has become so rich?
15534What rights did England have to the Mosquito Coast?
15534What shall we obey at all, and where shall we resist?
15534What should I do?
15534What should I say?
15534What should I say?
15534What soil could be richer than that south of Madison Street?
15534What state had greater natural riches?
15534What then of the law of God?
15534What then?
15534What was American liberty?
15534What was Great Britain doing?
15534What was I now to do?
15534What was I to do?
15534What was I to do?
15534What was a quarter of a dollar more a day to me?
15534What was giving it strength but some form of materialism?
15534What was growing up, and from what source, which should be the master of the destiny of the country?
15534What was he accomplishing for the real greatness of his country by giving it territory and railroads?
15534What was he doing in Congress now?
15534What was he doing?
15534What was he that he could do such a thing with the prospect that he would injure you, his son by another marriage, in so many ways and so deeply?
15534What was he thinking?
15534What was his secret?
15534What was it all about?
15534What was it?
15534What was now stirring in his restless imagination?
15534What was really before the country?
15534What was she after all?
15534What was the attitude of mind in allowing this free association between Isabel and me?
15534What was the difference between this and girding the slave states around with freedom?
15534What was the explanation of Fortescue''s trick?
15534What was the law business in this community, divided, as it was, by eleven lawyers, shared in by visiting lawyers?
15534What was the subject?
15534What was this visit to a sister?
15534What was thought of Washington in America?
15534What was to be done by a man who had the burdens of leadership?
15534What went into the Union?
15534What were politics but the interpretation of business?
15534What were the colored people but the shadows of the white people, following them and imitating them in a childlike, humorous, innocent way?
15534What will my life be?
15534What will they teach in it?
15534What would Douglas do?
15534What would Douglas now do?
15534What would England do?
15534What would England say to this?
15534What would Lincoln do about the fugitive- slave law?
15534What would Lincoln do?
15534What would Serafino think if he could hear this?
15534What would a ride of more than 200 miles on a pony do to me?
15534What would become of her?
15534What would come of arraying section against section?
15534What would future inventions do to exacerbate it?
15534What would it all come to?
15534What would life have been to me if I had met Isabel when I first knew Dorothy?
15534What would the German vote do, the Irish vote, all the foreign vote?
15534What would the Titans-- iron, coal, gold, copper, wheat, corn-- do to the Giant of cotton?
15534What would the Whigs do?
15534What would this hot blood, seeking opportunity and freedom from old world restraints, do for the new country?
15534What would this mature Zoe do to me?
15534What would this strange creature now rising to six feet four inches of awkward angularity say in reply to this wonderful oration?
15534What''s all this talk anyway about Honest Old Abe?
15534What''s the difference?"
15534What?
15534What?
15534When had Douglas had time to master its simplest principles?
15534When should I start west?
15534Where could I begin, what words could I select to express briefly my experiences?
15534Where does sovereignty reside under our system?
15534Where is Hyer the prize fighter?
15534Where the song out of the flesh, but too subtle for the ears of flesh?
15534Where was I stopping?
15534Where was I to stand amid all this confusion and contradiction?
15534Where was Jenny; in whose hands; what fate had she met?
15534Where was he now on that flattened, negligible map called America?
15534Where was it that Dorothy sank?
15534Where was such evidence?
15534Where were Abigail and Aldington, Reverdy, Sarah, this night?
15534Where were the flames that had sung to me ethereally before?
15534Where would Seward''s strength be thrown now that he can not use it for himself?
15534Who concluded a treaty of peace with Great Britain after the Revolution?
15534Who could not see through Douglas''thin scheme to attach his fortunes to the chariot of the great but misguided Jackson?
15534Who could stand against this world- wide avalanche?
15534Who formed themselves into the Confederate States, each retaining its sovereignty?
15534Who had brought into this remote and peaceful town that copy of Garrison''s_ Liberator_?
15534Who had done more for his country?
15534Who in this time was giving America a soul?
15534Who is so bold as to do it?...
15534Who is trying to nullify these inestimable principles and safeguards?
15534Who left that union and formed the present Union?
15534Who said so?
15534Who was Franklin Pierce?
15534Who was this Mr. Buchanan?
15534Who wished to part with Texas, New Mexico, California, or Oregon?
15534Who would be my friends here?
15534Who would dare accuse him of subserviency to Jackson or to any man, for bread or for position?
15534Who would trust his interests to a lawyer so inexperienced?
15534Why a nomination on the strength of a deceiving nickname?
15534Why all these advertisements of quack remedies, why all this calling on God?
15534Why all these sharp- faced, lantern- jawed, lean, sallow, hard- handed people?
15534Why ca n''t they dig coal and gold like peons?
15534Why ca n''t they farm?
15534Why could Douglas not have been nominated?
15534Why could it not be arranged and for Dorothy too?
15534Why could she not see that Douglas had always done his best?
15534Why did I not come over?
15534Why did I not travel in the splendid forties and the leisurely fifties?
15534Why did I not try my hand?
15534Why did n''t Ohio yield?
15534Why did not Seward honor the requisition of the Governor of Virginia for the return of a fugitive slave?
15534Why did not these banners make free men and a free soil?
15534Why does Pennsylvania deliberate, why does she retire so often to consult her wishes?
15534Why does he not settle to the solid study and experiences of the law?
15534Why does n''t the machinery work?
15534Why except negroes?
15534Why had Douglas leaped to the defense of Jackson in this community, like a fice coming to the aid of a mastiff?
15534Why had Polk fulminated first for 54:40 and faded off to the 49th parallel?
15534Why had my grandmother said nothing to me of this?
15534Why had not Dorothy seen in me a practical, courageous heart, who took his fate and made the best of it?
15534Why have n''t you sent for money?"
15534Why leave Mammy and Jenny behind, who had served nearly the whole of their lives in this household?
15534Why not South Carolina, then, if she chooses?
15534Why not a constitutional amendment establishing a state religion?
15534Why not a state religion under the present constitutional clause which makes provision for the general welfare?
15534Why not come here to live?
15534Why not come to Chicago with us, make her home with us?
15534Why not include some other slaveries for condemnation?
15534Why not take her with me?
15534Why not talk to Mrs. Clayton?
15534Why not?
15534Why not?
15534Why separate Dorothy from her?
15534Why should she not come with me?
15534Why should such folly be?
15534Why then could not a planter from Louisiana take his slaves to Nebraska?
15534Why this catching at this and the other opportunity?
15534Why this contempt of his for the idealist, the reformer?
15534Why this depression of spirits?
15534Why this ingratitude?
15534Why try?
15534Why was I here after all?
15534Why would any one murder Zoe?
15534Why would not all statesmen rise with him in the assertion of a title to the whole of North America?
15534Why"poor fellow?"
15534Why, after all, need Zoe have affected her so profoundly?
15534Why, after all?
15534Why, how could anyone say anything about you?
15534Why, if not to get a bone for his own hungry stomach?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Why?
15534Will I come to hear him speak?
15534Will I write it out for him?
15534Will Rhodes pay for his lust?
15534With a rough hand he brushed them away, then asked me:"What do you think?"
15534With this human being who had nursed me so tenderly through my illness?
15534With whom, and where?
15534Would Clay win the Whig nomination?
15534Would Dorothy see me again?
15534Would Hale?
15534Would I be the honored guest of yesterday?
15534Would I be there?
15534Would I like to come to their house?
15534Would Mexico sell them without a fight?
15534Would Webster?
15534Would he ever return?
15534Would it be a patchwork?
15534Would it ever be a whole, well- fitting garment to his great genius?
15534Would it not be best for me to have a woman in the house with Zoe?
15534Would the Abolitionists put up a ticket?
15534Would they have changed at any age to which they might have lived?
15534Would you like something to eat?"
15534Yes, and what Englishman would not resent with tears an insult which he could neither deny nor punish?
15534Yet may not Greeley''s Bates still come in?
15534exclaimed Dorothy,"does it have to be by so many words?
33409And what be those critturs you are picturing, Friend Ralston?
33409Are you glad or sorry over something?
33409Are you sick, girl?
33409Are you sure, Jack, that you explained to her about me? 33409 Bear it?"
33409But how, Jim?
33409But if Laska and Josef come back for me?
33409But you can advertise for him, ca n''t you, Jim?
33409Ca n''t you find Olive, Jim?
33409Ca n''t you see that it is selfish of you to refuse to go with us to try to find out about Olilie? 33409 Can I do anything for you, ma''am?"
33409Can you bear it, girl?
33409Can you tell me where to find the home of Laska?
33409Did any of you feel a bit of a shock, say like an earthquake, a few minutes back? 33409 Did anybody ever see such riding before?"
33409Did you think we no find you? 33409 Did you think we were giving a party?"
33409Do let''s wait a little while longer?
33409Do n''t you think I might tell you my name at least?
33409Do n''t you think maybe it would?
33409Do n''t you think you could come home to the ranch with us, until you feel better and can tell us what troubles you? 33409 Do n''t you wish we could spend this whole day out of doors, Jean?"
33409Do you suppose Jim could meet Cousin Ruth without me?
33409Do you think I have got time to waste while you talk to Jack Ralston all day? 33409 Do you think it would be wrong if we should go for a little run across the prairies?
33409Do you think she is going to find us so very dreadful?
33409Do you think she will laugh at us, Jack?
33409Do you think that you are the only member of Rainbow Ranch who has any business head? 33409 Do you want to leave a message for one of the girls or to speak to Aunt Ellen or Zack?"
33409Does n''t any one know how to set a pony''s leg?
33409Found what?
33409Frieda, what''s the matter? 33409 Has anything happened, Jack?"
33409Has n''t she spoken yet?
33409Has n''t the ride been just too beautiful?
33409Has the Indian woman been here to inquire for her daughter? 33409 Have n''t you made enough trouble for yourself and other people already to- day, Jack?"
33409Have you gotten your lessons, Frieda?
33409Home? 33409 How dare you thrust your way in here?
33409How did you come here?
33409How did you know, Aunt Sallie? 33409 How is our dear lady cousin going to get over to the ranch?"
33409How is the wounded member?
33409I do n''t know, Jean Bruce, what is it now?
33409I shall be horribly stupid and nervous, Mr. Colter,Ruth protested,"but if you are sure you wo n''t mind the trouble?"
33409I wonder what brings him up to the ranch house to- night? 33409 I wonder where on earth I am?
33409If Mr. Norton brings suit and makes us leave our ranch in January, what can we do? 33409 If a body meet a body, Comin''through the rye; If a body kiss a body, Need a body cry?
33409If three fifths of a number is fifteen, what is the number?
33409Is n''t it great to be at home, children?
33409Is something wrong ahead on the track?
33409Is the carriage waiting for us in the town?
33409It is n''t true though, Jim, is it?
33409It looks rather like we might have a rainbow after the summer shower: do n''t you think so, Olive?
33409JACK, do n''t you think we are going too near the corrals?
33409JACK, how are we ever going to quit using slang?
33409Jack,she asked more sympathetically,"is Cousin Ruth horribly old?"
33409Jacqueline Ralston,she inquired coolly,"has it ever occurred to you, that you are a very hard- headed and selfish person?"
33409Jean, Harry, would n''t it be a glorious night for a ride?
33409Jean, you are lazy; why did n''t you mend it yourself?
33409Jim, what''s up? 33409 Just keep this for me, will you, Miss Ralston?"
33409Known what?
33409Look here, Jack,he said,"was n''t it you who asked your cousin to come out here to live with you, so as to have some one to tell you what was right?
33409Look here, Miss Bruce, I know I am a tenderfoot, but do you think we ought to go into these woods at night? 33409 May I come in, Miss Ralston?"
33409May I get off at the station myself, please?
33409May I look at it, dear?
33409May I stay with you until your escort joins you, Miss Ralston?
33409May we interrupt the school a minute, please?
33409Miss Drew,he whispered,"will you be good enough not to let Olive go away from the ranch alone?
33409Miss Ralston, is it?
33409Oh, Cousin Ruth, wo n''t Olive come back ever? 33409 Oh, what is it?"
33409Olilie is not Laska''s child, is she? 33409 Olive,"she asked gently,"do you think you could be happy if you came to live with us at the ranch?
33409Only if anything should develop, you will be sure to tell me about it, wo n''t you?
33409Please tell me, are you Rosalind in the forest of Arden? 33409 Pretty good day''s work for us, boss?"
33409Shall I go to Laramie to- morrow and order out a chaperon, Miss Ralston?
33409Shall I tell the whole truth and nothing but the truth, Aunt Sallie?
33409Sure you know how to get to your friends from here?
33409Teach Laura to ride?
33409The number is fifteen, is n''t it Olive? 33409 Their ranch, did you say?
33409Then there was an Indian girl all the time?
33409Then you do n''t think I am an Indian girl?
33409This girl has been brought up among white people, has n''t she, Frieda?
33409Was it an earthquake, Jim?
33409Was the figure on horseback a girl?
33409We do n''t have to tell Jean and Frieda yet, do we, Jim?
33409We have made up our minds to it, have n''t we? 33409 Well, Jim, do n''t you think it would be a good scheme for us to look up this court record?"
33409Well, go on, tell us how your miracle happened?
33409Well, have you found a friend to help me?
33409What are you doing, Jack, want me to help you?
33409What are you doing? 33409 What are you so mysterious about?"
33409What can we do?
33409What did you hear next?
33409What do you mean?
33409What has happened, imp?
33409What has happened? 33409 What has kept you so long?"
33409What in the world are you girls doing here?
33409What in the world are you up to, Jacqueline Ralston?
33409What in the world has happened to you, child? 33409 What is it you would do?"
33409What is it, dear? 33409 What is it?"
33409What is the matter with you, Jacqueline Ralston?
33409What on earth are those creatures?
33409What on earth is all this pow- wow about?
33409What on earth is the matter with you, Frank, Mr. Kent, I mean?
33409What was it you had to show me?
33409What was that?
33409What''s the matter, Jack?
33409What''s the matter, baby?
33409What''s the trouble, Olive?
33409What''s the use of telling you all this? 33409 When will Jack and Jim come back?"
33409Where did you ever find these old things and what do we want with them anyhow?
33409Where in the world have you been? 33409 Where is Olive?"
33409Who are you trying to get rid of, at present?
33409Who goes there?
33409Who would have thought of meeting a girl in these woods? 33409 Who would have thought we could have had such luck?
33409Why should I spy on you?
33409Why should we go to the village, Jean?
33409Will you be good enough to tell me how I can get over to the Rainbow Ranch? 33409 Will you please go away?"
33409Wo n''t you come in and fix it for me, please? 33409 Wo n''t you come in here?"
33409Wo n''t you kiss me, Jean?
33409Wo n''t you let me come in, Jack?
33409Wo n''t you let me thank you for keeping me here and let me tell you why I ran away?
33409Wo n''t you please slow down a little? 33409 Wo n''t you tell me something more about your home in England?
33409Wo n''t you tell me?
33409Wo n''t you? 33409 Wonder what old Jim and Jack are up to?"
33409Would n''t it be too funny if old Jim should fall in love with Cousin Ruth?
33409You are hurt, are n''t you, Miss Ralston?
33409You are not angry at the scolding I gave you last night, are you? 33409 You are well now, are n''t you?"
33409You have a piece of news for me, have n''t you, Jack?
33409You have brought me to the railroad track, but where is the station? 33409 You mean an engine and a railroad track, do n''t you, Little Brother?"
33409You mean you must shoot him, do n''t you, Harry?
33409You mean, Jim, that you think we had better go on and have a chaperon, just as we planned, as though there was no danger of our losing the ranch?
33409You want me to live with you like one of you?
33409You will let me show you the right trail, wo n''t you?
33409You wo n''t be cross about something if I tell you, will you?
33409You wo n''t mind if I am away from the ranch all day to- day, Cousin Ruth?
33409Ai n''t things often revealed unto babes that are hid from the rest of us?"
33409Already had Laska come to take her home?
33409And what will Cousin Ruth say about Jim''s grammar?
33409And what would Laura and Mrs. Post think of them?
33409Are n''t you Frank Kent, the English fellow who is the guest of the Nortons?
33409Be they mules or buffaloes?"
33409But I wonder who she is?
33409But can you show me the trail to the Rainbow Ranch?
33409But did n''t you and Jean have something on your minds that you meant to ask me about?
33409But may I be of any service to you?"
33409But the question with me is, how am I ever going to live until then?"
33409But wo n''t Jean and Frieda be frightened?
33409Ca n''t you get hold of that?"
33409Ca n''t you?"
33409Colter?"
33409Could it have fallen an inch in such a little while?
33409Did n''t we hear you call?"
33409Do n''t you think you could return; or is there anything we could do for you?"
33409Do n''t you think you might tell me a thing or two about it?
33409Do you hear me, or is it that you have changed your mind like all women and do not now wish to go?"
33409Do you think Aunt Ellen could mend this for me before we go?"
33409Do you think we will be able to endure it?"
33409For goodness sake, wo n''t you teach Cousin Ruth to ride?
33409Frieda wanted to help, but what could she do?
33409Funny, is n''t it?"
33409Gee, they are stunning- looking fellows, are n''t they?
33409Had she traveled across the continent to a wild Western town to find no one to meet her?
33409Have you any idea who is responsible for the trouble?"
33409He is somewhere around, wo n''t you find him?"
33409How could she have turned her back on dear New England villages, with their sleepy, green and white homesteads and trim gardens, for this vast desert?
33409How could you have come to congratulate us at just the right moment?"
33409How dared he speak in that calm and self- assured fashion of some day taking possession of their own beloved Rainbow Ranch?
33409How far is it to the ranch?"
33409How in the world would he be able to connect with her?
33409I am their cousin--""Not Ruth?"
33409I do n''t know anything about your quarrel and if we were properly introduced, do n''t you think we could be friends?
33409I know I did very wrong and I''m sorry; wo n''t you please let me explain better in the morning?"
33409I thought I heard you talking to Dan, when I rode up to you, but that wo n''t matter about me, will it?
33409I wonder if he ever had a tragic love affair?"
33409I wonder if we are too much like boys?"
33409Is n''t it splendid that old Laska and Josef have left us in peace?
33409Is one of you hurt?
33409Is that the horse you mean me to use now, Jim?"
33409It was n''t true, was it?
33409Jean went over and pulling Frieda''s hair said:"Since when, Frieda Ralston, have you developed into a student?
33409Oh, Frieda darling, has n''t Aunt Ellen saved me anything to eat?
33409Poaching?
33409Remember the game we used to play with a bit of paper, when you were a little girl, Jack,''Fly away Peter, Come back Paul''?
33409Ruth opened her eyes; what had made her traveling companions''faces brighten with interest?
33409She did feel it would be too hateful of her to laugh out loud, yet how could she help it?
33409She is coming back home with us, is n''t she?"
33409She knew that Jim was troubled about something; had the ranch girls any right to offer a home to any one when their own future was so uncertain?
33409She remembered this other face faintly, but where and when had she seen it?
33409Some day we will bring suit and just take possession of their place; wo n''t it be corking?
33409Tell us why you ran away?
33409Unless they left the cañon pretty soon, Jack knew they would never get home in time; yet what could they do with Frieda''s Indian girl?
33409Was it Jean or Jack?
33409Was it because they had no mother that neither of them had thought?
33409Was she actually arriving in the neighborhood of Rainbow Ranch?
33409We never say die, do we, Jim?
33409Were there people in the world idiotic enough to think there was beauty in the western prairies?
33409What Indian chief has ever obeyed a woman?
33409What did it matter if she had not caught Olilie?
33409What did the old woman mean?"
33409What difference can it make to us, whether this Frank Kent is a lord or a prizefighter?
33409What do you mean by trespassing on my land?"
33409What girl ever has understood anything about engineering?
33409What has happened?"
33409What have I been doing these last few days but looking up that very record of the sale of Rainbow Ranch to John Ralston, Esq.?
33409What in the world had he said?
33409What is it you have to tell me?
33409What must she say?
33409What need was there of locking people either out or in, in this great open western land?
33409What on the face of the green earth were they to do?
33409What use was money to her in this wild land?
33409What was his name?"
33409What was to become of Frieda, Jean and Jack, in case they were forced to give up their home at the beginning of the New Year?
33409What would Aunt Sallie and Mr. Simpson say?
33409Whatever are you doing here?
33409When did you begin to worry about clothes?
33409Where are the other girls?"
33409Where are you going?"
33409Where was you expecting to spend to- day?"
33409Where will we go?
33409Who knows what may happen in two months?"
33409Why should I?"
33409Will you come along?"
33409Will you please show me the trail?"
33409Will you please show me the way to the Rainbow Ranch?"
33409Wo n''t you come over to Mrs. Simpson with me?
33409Would you care to come with us?"
33409Would you mind telling me where this train is going?"
33409You can kind of see that old man Norton has got us in a tight place, ca n''t you, Jack?"
33409You did n''t think to look among father''s books for a stray paper, did you, Jean?"
33409You understand, do n''t you?"
33409You wo n''t mind, will you, if I go away for a while?
33409[ Illustration:"CAN I DO ANYTHING FOR YOU, MA''AM?"]
40458And the Governor said, Why, what evil hath He done? 40458 Hath not the Scripture said that Christ cometh of the seed of David, and out of the town of Bethlehem, where David was?"
40458How often would I have gathered thy children together even as a hen gathereth her chickens under her wings, and ye would not?
40458Is not this Jesus, the son of Joseph, whose father and mother we know?
40458Is not this the carpenter''s son? 40458 Will the Lord be pleased with thousands of rams, or with ten thousands of rivers of oil?
40458Ye serpents, ye generation of vipers, how can ye escape the damnation of hell?
40458A little later it is said:"And none of the disciples durst ask Him, Who art Thou?
40458And His brethren James and Joseph and Simon and Judas?"
40458And yet should not the ideal of the heavenly Father be higher than that of the earthly father?
40458And yet, why is it sung, except on that supposition?
40458But Jesus said unto him, Judas, betrayest thou the_ Son of Man_ with a kiss?"
40458But if He had appeared in His natural form, how could any of the apostles have doubted as to whether the apparition was He or some other person?
40458But if the good are to be confined to the weapon of moral suasion, how long will it be until the powers of evil are in full control?
40458But some said, Shall Christ come out of Galilee?
40458Can it be supposed that the fulsome adulation with which it is filled can be pleasing to the God of the universe?
40458Hath not the Scripture said that Christ cometh of the seed of David, and out of the town of Bethlehem, where David was?
40458How far has modern Christianity kept undefiled the pure religion of the Great Nazarene?
40458How many of our wars would have lacked advocates, if they had been obliged to plead their cause under the principles of the Sermon on the Mount?
40458If the"universal tradition of the church"is not to be believed on this point, of what value is it on any other?
40458If this be true, should we not look for the beam in our own eye, before we criticize Germany for starting the Great War?
40458In putting to Jesus the question:"Is it lawful to give tribute unto Cæsar or not?"
40458Is not His mother called Mary?
40458Jesus then"went forth and said unto them, Whom seek ye?
40458Matthew''s narrative covers seventeen verses, and John recognizes Jesus, for he says,"I have need to be baptized of Thee, and comest Thou to me?"
40458Nathaniel''s reply is:"Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth?"
40458On the approach of the band, Jesus comes forth and says,"Whom seek ye?
40458Or was he a religious zealot, trying to force Jesus''hand?
40458Or, What shall we drink?
40458Or, Wherewithal shall we be clothed?
40458Peter and John ask Him,"Who is it?"
40458Pilate asks Him,"Art Thou the King of the Jews?
40458Shall I give my first- born for my transgression,_ the fruit of my body for the sin of my soul_?
40458The chief priests tell him,"What is that to us?
40458The only charge here is,"Art Thou the Christ?"
40458They all ask,"Master, is it I?"
40458They ask her,"Why weepest thou?"
40458To the question,"Art Thou the Christ, the Son of the Blessed?"
40458Was he simply a traitor, seeking to sell his Lord and Master for a price?
40458What motives can be substituted for those that will have the same compelling, driving force?
40458What promise has the future to prevent the recurrence of such evils?
40458Why did the mighty forces of Christianity fail to work with any practical effect at this, their supreme test-- the prevention of war?
40458Would it not be well for them to consider the beam in their own eye?
40458XI:2; Mark VI:17), he sent some of his disciples to inquire of Jesus,"Art Thou He that should come or do we look for another?"
40458[ 7] Apparently Mary, while"espoused"to Joseph, was not yet his"wife", since she asks the angel how she shall conceive,"seeing that I know not a man?"
42473Do you wish to destroy my influence?
42473The question at once suggests itself, Is this kind of mass ponderable?
42473What load is required at the point y to maintain the configuration shown, both loads being supposed to act vertically?
42473Where should he land?
42473and, if so, is the proportion between mass and weight the same as for ordinary bodies?
42473does it add to the weight of the body?
3653''Tain''t so bad down here on a spring night, is it, Harry?
3653A long time?
3653Ai n''t it time to offer him some dry clothes, Uncle Sam?
3653All right, Harry?
3653An''is your son thar goin''right into the middle of it?
3653And what are you going to Washington for?
3653And what then?
3653And you wish, then, to serve at the front?
3653And you, Arthur?
3653Are you hurt, Tom?
3653Breckinridge?
3653But would n''t it be better for them to make the first hostile movement, Happy?
3653Can we come in?
3653Can you tell me where I am likely to find Senator Yancey?
3653Colonel,said Jarvis, at about the tenth corn cake,"be you fellers down here a- goin''to fight?"
3653Did n''t I tell you everything would come as we wished it?
3653Did n''t I tell you it was fine?
3653Did you ever hear her tell of Henry Ware''s great friend, Paul Cotter?
3653Did you pick up that, too, from a wandering fiddler?
3653Do n''t you know me, Mr. Gardner? 3653 Do n''t you know what day this is?"
3653Do n''t you think that South Carolina has enough orators now? 3653 Do n''t you think we''d better creep back?"
3653Do you think so?
3653Do you think the attack is really coming this time?
3653Do you want to sell him now?
3653Even if what happens should be war?
3653Fall in?
3653Has the luck been against us all along the line?
3653Have you and Fowler come here for that purpose?
3653Have you heard anything of my father? 3653 How about that attack upon your house and you and your friends?
3653How about those troops in the hills?
3653How are their sympathies placed in this great division of our people?
3653How does it go?
3653How far away would you say that light is, Arthur?
3653How goes the cause here, Bertrand?
3653I believe you said you were leaving for Charleston this afternoon?
3653I wonder when the word will come for us to turn these big guns loose?
3653In Heaven''s name, who are you?
3653In thirty- six hours we''ll have a new President, do you appreciate that fact, Harry Kenton?
3653Is it the steamer? 3653 Is n''t it what one would naturally expect?"
3653It''s certain that the President is coming tomorrow, Harry, is n''t it?
3653Look out for what?
3653Now, then, Johnny Reb,he said,"what are you doin''here this time o''night an''in such weather as this, wakin''honest citizens out o''their beds?"
3653Now, what are you doing in Frankfort? 3653 Then tell us, Harry,"said Langdon,"is it a Northern rumble or a Southern rumble that you hear?"
3653These new friends of yours who saved you from the river, are they going to stay long in Frankfort?
3653Tom,he shouted to Langdon,"what was that you said about sleeping in the White House at Washington with your boots on?"
3653Was there much enthusiasm in South Carolina when the state seceded, Raymond?
3653What difference does it make if we should happen to fight them, anyhow? 3653 What do you mean by that, Tom?"
3653What do you think?
3653What do you want, gentlemen?
3653What does that clothing mean, Harry?
3653What has happened to you?
3653What has happened?
3653What is it, Arthur?
3653What is it?
3653What is it?
3653What is it?
3653What is it?
3653What is it?
3653What is it?
3653What is that?
3653What news, then, will you send to Charleston?
3653What under the moon are those?
3653What was it? 3653 What will it mean?"
3653What''s that?
3653What''s the use of working when you do n''t have to, especially in a June as hot as this one is? 3653 What''s the use of worrying?
3653When do you wish me to start?
3653Where are you going?
3653Where did you get that song, Sam?
3653Who are you, and what do you want?
3653Who are you?
3653Who are you?
3653Who is Aunt Suse?
3653Who is he?
3653Who is there? 3653 Why are we retreating?"
3653Why, what''s the matter, Aunt Suse?
3653Will it make you feel better to do so?
3653Will they undertake to force the harbor and reach Sumter?
3653Will you tell her that Kentucky, the state of great names, will stand beside her?
3653Would you take a passenger in the boat? 3653 You are Colonel Kenton''s son?"
3653You are stopping in Nashville?
3653You have the advantage at present, it is true,said Shepard,"but what makes you think I was going to shoot at you or have you seized?"
3653You mean that he''s gone with the North, took one side while you''ve took the other?
3653You think they ought to take Tennessee out right away?
3653All''s square and above board, but why do you bring here that South Carolina Frenchman to meddle in the affairs of the good old state of Kentucky?
3653Am I right?"
3653And has he returned to fight for his great mother, South Carolina?"
3653Are you staying long in Frankfort, Dick?"
3653Are you telling, Mr. Gardner, what the News will have to say about it?"
3653Are you willin''to let him have it, Ike?"
3653Are you willing?"
3653Arthur, how can you be cool enough to bathe your face in that water?"
3653But if the prologue was so hot what''s the play going to be?"
3653But why do you call me Johnny Reb?"
3653Ca n''t we decide it ourselves?
3653Can you leave here in a day or two for Richmond?"
3653Can you tell me whether Missouri will go out?"
3653Could it be possible that he would come again, and in the manner that the old woman had predicted?
3653Could n''t you find somethin''bigger an''a heap more dangerous that would stir you up an''give you action?"
3653Did you ever hear me speak, Harry?"
3653Did you hear anything before you left, of one Raymond Bertrand, a South Carolinian?"
3653Do n''t you hear the hoof- beats, Harry?"
3653Do n''t your mouth water, Harry?"
3653Do n''t''pear as if you was tearin''out a lung or two every time you drawed breath?"
3653Do you know how long he has been here?"
3653Do you know whar you are an''what''s around you, Johnny Reb?"
3653Do you not see how you are threatened?
3653Do you reckon it was true, Harry?
3653Do you reckon that any man that ever lived could talk eight different ways?"
3653Do you reckon that''s the reason why we like him, Ike?"
3653Ef you change your mind on the trip all you''ve got to do is to say so, an''we''ll take you in, ai n''t that so, Ike?"
3653Feelin''better already, boy?
3653Harry, what are our chances?"
3653Hilaire?"
3653His experience told him that it must be made by marching troops, but what troops were they, Northern or Southern?
3653How are they prepared there for defense?"
3653How could I desert them?"
3653How did you get here, Harry?
3653How long will that be?
3653How''d you like to come with me an''take a good job, while them that do n''t know no better go ahead an''do the fightin''?"
3653I hears a splash an''says I to Ike,''What''s that?''
3653I suppose you''ve heard that you rebels are gathering on the other side of Frankfort in Owen County under Humphrey Marshall?"
3653I''ve been fished out of a river, and a fisherman is entitled to the value of his catch, is n''t he?"
3653If they act this way when they''re raw, what''ll they do when they are seasoned?"
3653Ike, are you willin''to take Colonel Kenton''s son back with us?
3653Is he at Pendleton?"
3653Is it any business of his or of the other people down there?
3653Is it the Star of the West?"
3653Is it true?"
3653Is n''t that so?"
3653It''s fine to see it ag''in, ai n''t it, Ike?"
3653Jarvis?"
3653Kenton?"
3653Langdon sprang to his feet in anger and exclaimed:"Hey, you fellow, what do you mean by that?"
3653Listen, what do you think of that, boys?"
3653Louis?"
3653Now you''ll take breakfast with us, wo n''t you, colonel?
3653Now, tell me, what do you want?"
3653Now, what do you want to git your head shot off fur?
3653Or did you fall in the river, bein''awkward?
3653Or was you tryin''to swim the stream, believin''it was fun to do it?
3653Says I to Ike ag''in,''Was it a big fish?''
3653Says I,''Is that a man''s head?''
3653See that clump o''laurel''cross the valley thar, Harry?
3653See that deep pool in the brook, where the big oak throws its shade over the water?
3653Shepard?"
3653Sooicide?
3653Tell us, what is your own opinion?"
3653Then why does not she do the same?"
3653What am I runnin''on this way fur?
3653What are you wastin''your time in little things fur?
3653What business have you got here?"
3653What do you say to that, old Wait- and- See?"
3653What do you say to that?"
3653What do you think of that for a military tune?"
3653What do you think of this?
3653What do you think, General?"
3653What do you think, Ike?"
3653What has become of that brightness and glory?
3653What have you been doing, Harry?"
3653What on earth do all your people find to talk about?"
3653What right had he to judge?
3653What was that?"
3653What were they doing in the far states beyond the Ohio?
3653What would happen?
3653What''s that you''re reading, Arthur?"
3653Why did all this tremendous fire go on so long, and yet not a foe set foot upon the bridge?
3653Why should he not?
3653Why should he, when the Southern cause was moving forward so smoothly?
3653Why, where is Shepard?"
3653Will it, old fellow?"
3653Would n''t it, Ike?"
3653Wuz you expectin'', Johnny Reb, to ride right into the Yankee pickets with that Confedrit uniform on?"
3653You agree to that?"
3653You do n''t think you can run away with a state like this, do you?"
3653You have seen the enemy''s forces?"
38554What constitutes treason? 38554 And for what, mistaken men-- for what do you throw away these inestimable blessings? 38554 And now, sir, I repeat, how is it that a State legislature acquires any right to interfere? 38554 And should we be afraid of offending the enemies of our country? 38554 And what is this principle? 38554 And what was that confederation? 38554 And why is it the cause? 38554 Are there engagements, to the performance of which we are held by every tie respectable among men? 38554 Are we entitled, by nature and compact, to a free participation in the navigation of the Mississippi? 38554 Are we in a condition to resent or to repel the aggression? 38554 Are we not thrown back again precisely upon the old confederation? 38554 Are we prepared to grant the next that may be made at any future time? 38554 Are we to give way to one demand after another until we have transferred all the rights which we now possess to this rule or ruin party? 38554 Are you really ready to incur its guilt? 38554 Are you united at home-- are you free from the apprehension of civil discord, with all its fearful consequences? 38554 But did they propose to destroy this government if Mr. Breckenridge was elected? 38554 But if you were assembled in general Convention, which would you think the safest depository of this discretionary power in the last resort? 38554 But shall we revolt and overthrow the government because our pet scheme is defeated? 38554 But where was the brave Jackson? 38554 But who shall decide this question of interference? 38554 But who was to blame for this spirit of mobocracy? 38554 Can any one pretend that further concession would help the case permanently? 38554 Can impudence go further? 38554 Can it authorize others to do so? 38554 Can it be charged to anything but political prejudices? 38554 Can the States, who magnanimously surrendered their title to the territories of the west, recall the grant? 38554 Can those sacrifices be recalled? 38554 Could Arnold have done more to have accomplished his base and ignoble purpose? 38554 Could Mr. Yancey himself have made out a stronger document? 38554 Did the name of Washington sanction, did the States deliberately ratify such an anomaly in the history of fundamental legislation? 38554 Did they ever think that they too are traitors, and that they are as legally deserving of a halter as the madest secession hotspur of South Carolina? 38554 Did they insult him, or drive him from the country as a felon? 38554 Did we pledge ourselves to the support of an airy nothing-- a bubble that must be blown away by the first breath of disaffection? 38554 Do our neighboring republics, every day suffering some new revolution, or contending with some new insurrection-- do they excite your envy? 38554 Do we owe debts to foreigners, and to our own citizens, contracted in a time of imminent peril, for the preservation of our political existence? 38554 Has she not collected armies to resist the United States? 38554 Has she not even taken the fortifications and arsenals and confiscated the property of the United States? 38554 Has she not obstructed the collection of the revenue of the nation? 38554 He believed the embargo unconstitutional, and so did others; but what then? 38554 How do you propose to defend us? 38554 How has it accomplished this great and essential end? 38554 How, then, they would ask, do you propose to defend us? 38554 I question not their bravery, neither do I doubt their determination, but with the certainty of defeat before them, would they strike the fatal blow? 38554 If John Fries[5] had produced an act of Pennsylvania annulling the law of Congress, would it have helped his case? 38554 If not, then should we allow others to involve us in one common ruin because of their defeat? 38554 If so, tell me, if you please, when and where you will be willing to make a stand for the vindication of our constitutional rights? 38554 If your leaders could succeed in establishing a separation, what would be your situation? 38554 In the strong light of these facts how are we to regard the present attitude of South Carolina? 38554 Is a violent and unnatural decrease in the value of land a symptom of national distress? 38554 Is commerce of importance to national wealth? 38554 Is it not granting all the South have ever asked? 38554 Is it the creature of the State legislatures, or the creature of the people? 38554 Is private credit the friend and patron of industry? 38554 Is public credit an indispensable resource in time of public danger? 38554 Is respectability in the eyes of foreign powers, a safeguard against foreign encroachments? 38554 Is that a reason why the right of free discussion should be blotted out of existence? 38554 Is the government of the State on that account not a popular government? 38554 Is the present Union similar to that? 38554 Is the unconstitutionality of these laws of that description? 38554 Mr. Webster went on to ask from whence this supposed right of the States came? 38554 Now has not South Carolinalevied war?"
38554Now, who will pretend that a Democratic government can be sustained without this principle is both recognized and, if necessary, enforced?
38554Now, why this difference?
38554SHALL THE PEOPLE RULE?
38554Shall there be a free port in one State, and onerous duties in another?
38554Shall this Union he maintained, or shall it be dissolved?
38554Should this not be the case, if they are determined to resist all legal restraint, can there be any advantage in further delaying the use of force?
38554Should we be found unfaithful to the trust imposed on us by our forefathers?
38554That all may be so; but if the tribunals should not happen to be of that opinion, shall we swing for it?
38554That is true; but would the judge admit our plea?
38554The State legislature?
38554Their demands have become more frequent and of a more startling character-- and why is this?
38554Then should we not warn those who are expecting an easy victory, against the awful consequences of a persistence in their destructive policy?
38554This is a very moderate request indeed; but, fellow countrymen,_ are you ready to grant it_?
38554To whom lies the last appeal?
38554WHAT SHOULD THE PEOPLE DO TO AVERT THE THREATENING STORM?
38554Was it Mr. Lincoln or his friends?
38554Was our devotion paid to the wretched, inefficient, clumsy, contrivance which this new doctrine would make it?
38554Were we mistaken, my countrymen, in attaching this importance to the Constitution of our country?
38554What are they?
38554What can we understand by this proposition?
38554What if they are?
38554What is such a state of things but a mere connection during pleasure, or, to use the praseology of the times,_ during feeling_?
38554What is the meaning of the word_ palpable_, in the sense in which it is here used?
38554What more encouragement could those who have been engaged in this treasonable scheme have asked for or desired?
38554What would be the result of giving way to those who are now threatening our peace?
38554When, and wherein, have they asked more?
38554Where did they get the power to interfere with the laws of the Union?
38554Which is the most discreet disposition of the power?
38554Who can determine what might have been the issue of her late convulsions, if the mal- contents had been headed by a CÃ ¦ sar or by a Cromwell?
38554Who did he suppose was to decide that question?
38554Who is to make the scrutiny?
38554Whose agent is it?
38554Would any thing, with such a principle in it, or rather with such a destitution of all principle, be fit to be called a government?
38554Would you add a clause giving it to each of the States, or would you sanction the wise provisions already made by your Constitution?
38554[ 2] Are we even in a condition to remonstrate with dignity?
38554for what would you exchange your share in the advantages and honor of the Union?
36026''What do you call a successful lecture, Greeley?'' 36026 And how long did they keep you?"
36026And what did they do to you?
36026And what did you make out of it?
36026And what has Uncle Sam had to say to all these activities?
36026And you''re from New York, eh?
36026Any danger, Porter?
36026Any more bookings?
36026Anybody round hyah knows what it costs to beat up a niggah in this hyah State?
36026Are n''t there any steel cars on this train?
36026Are you goin''to speak here to- night, Brother?
36026Bridge? 36026 But how,"said I,"did you manage to conceal the stuff?"
36026But is there for the night a resting- place? 36026 But what can I do?"
36026But why does n''t the captain keep his boat closer to civilization?
36026But-- would_ you_ be interested in that?
36026Do they attend the lectures?
36026Do toes and fingers come as high as that?
36026Do you carry any insurance?
36026Excuse me,said I, addressing the barker,"but is there to be a lecture here to- night?"
36026Forty years?
36026Friends?
36026Got any children?
36026Have a good time at Albany?
36026Hit''s ober yander, ai n''t it?
36026How about a little heat here, Son?
36026How are you these days?
36026How is it?
36026How long you been with this hyere road, Sam?
36026How so?
36026I am very glad indeed to see you; but what are you doing here?
36026I do n''t like to complain,said I;"but this pie--""What''s the matter with the pie?"
36026I suppose you know Howells, and Mark Twain, and all that_ bunch_?
36026In he bed?
36026Is n''t there room for him closer to town?
36026Is there more than one Auditorium in town?
36026Lecture?
36026Like to run it yourself?
36026Maine?
36026Matter?
36026Natural gas?
36026Now,said he, running his hand over the back of my head after he had attended to my other needs,"how do you want your hair fixed?"
36026Oh, that''s it, eh?
36026Oh, that''s it, eh?
36026Oh, well, what of that?
36026Only I was talking with a man about you the other day, and from one or two things he said--"What did he say?
36026Pardon my intrusion, madam,I panted,"but can you tell me where I can find Miss So- and- So?"
36026Pretty good stuff, that, eh?
36026Ready to talk turkey, are you?
36026Really?
36026Saved your life?
36026Say,he said, pointing with the scissors point to the portrait of myself,"that guy looks sump''n like you, do n''t he?"
36026See that red- headed chap in the fourth row?
36026Shall I find comfort, travel- sore and weak? 36026 Shall I meet other wayfarers at night?
36026Tell me again-- is it Salubrities or Celebrities?
36026That faker? 36026 That''s it, is it?
36026To lecture?
36026Twenty miles, eh? 36026 Want to buy a ticket for to- night''s lecture, mister?"
36026Well, Mr. Bangs,said the chairman as we walked back to the hotel together after the lecture was over,"what did you think of your audience to- night?
36026Well, if ya ca n''t move it, why in Dothan dontcha kick it out?
36026Well, would you mind telling me where they are?
36026Well, you''ve got it, have n''t you?
36026Well,said the guest the following morning, as he started to leave for the station,"what''s the tax?
36026Well-- tell me-- is there a lecture course of any kind in this town that you know of?
36026Well-- what of him?
36026Wh- whut''s de mattah?
36026Whaddyer suppose she ast me?
36026Whaddyer think of Chicago?
36026What are you doing here?
36026What are you trying to do, discourage me?
36026What do you know about my business?
36026What do you mean by that?
36026What is a good lecture, Major, anyhow?
36026What kind of car do you call this, anyhow? 36026 What on earth is the matter with you?"
36026What the dash is the matter with you?
36026What the deuce am I going to do?
36026What the dickens are you doing?
36026What yo''niggahs want round here dis time o''night?
36026What''s Maine?
36026What''s happened to you?
36026What''s that-- Boggs?
36026What''s that?
36026What''s the name?
36026What''s the trouble-- caught cold?
36026What''s the trouble?
36026What?
36026Where are you going?
36026Where is Captain Maguffy''s house?
36026Who are you?
36026Who is this eighth wonder of the world?
36026Who publishes that book?
36026Who the deuce ever told you that?
36026Will you sell me that vest?
36026Yank though I be, eh?
36026Yes,said I,"I''ve got two sons in Detroit, and--""Dee- troit, eh?"
36026Yo''got enough pillows, Cap''n?
36026You are pretty bald, ai n''t you?
36026You do n''t call that idiot Wilberforce Jenkins a friend of mine, do you? 36026 You mean the pall bearer with the green necktie?"
36026You say he did business with me once?
36026_ Did you get him?_came a deep bass voice out of the night.
36026_ Faker?_retorted the major.
36026_ He''s aboard his boat-- the Samuel J. Taylor._"His boat?
36026_ The Idiot?_This was the title of one of my books.
36026_ What?_he exploded.
36026''What the blank do yo''suppose I caiah fo''the honah?''
36026Ah do n''t know much erbout Yonkers; but Ah guess Yonkers is a nice State too, ai n''t it?"
36026And is there anything pleasant I can say about you in introducing you to your audience?"
36026And what do you suppose he answered, suh?
36026Another in Boston, after shaving me, inquired,"Now how do you want your hair brushed?"
36026Are you a Tennessee man, suh?"
36026B. Pond of the Pond Lyceum Bureau?"
36026Besides I was down in Tucson the other day, and-- you''re going to lecture at Tucson Tuesday night, are n''t you?"
36026Burne- Jones, William Morris, Madox Brown, Holman Hunt, and Rossetti-- I suppose you know your Rossetti like a book?"
36026But the other-- who was the other man?"
36026Did n''t you feel anything?"
36026Did you get my letter?"
36026Do n''t it get on your nerves?"
36026Do n''t you know that this whole dod- gasted train has fallen through the trestle?
36026Do you always try your lecturers on a cat?"
36026Does he call a trip up to Albany and back a tour?
36026Have you ever considered the desirability of using your gifts on the lecture platform?
36026How do you make deliveries?"
36026How do you propose to have the lecture delivered-- by long distance telephone, or parcels post?"
36026How much do I owe you?"
36026How much do you want?"
36026How''s things?"
36026I explained my predicament to him in a few well chosen words, ending up with:"Have n''t you a white vest you can lend me?"
36026I have not space for that illuminating interchange of ideas in all its verbal fullness; but part of it ran in this wise:"Whar yo''come from?"
36026I hope I have n''t made you think life''s nothing but a hat to me?"
36026I love that''Up Hill''thing of hers-- remember it?--"Does the road wind up- hill all the way?
36026Is n''t it a trifle late for your farmers to be in town?"
36026Is n''t there any way out of here?
36026Is n''t this the car Shem, Ham, and Japhet took when they moved back to town from Ararat?"
36026May not the darkness hide it from my face?
36026More than once during our little chat together he would pause and say:"What is the title of your talk again?
36026No lyrics worthy of the name Are sung to- day by living men?
36026Now that I know how, what in Dothan shall I read?
36026Or drops of blood dabbling the guilty feet?
36026Or golden coins squander''d and still to pay?
36026Or such spill''d water as in dreams must cheat The undying throats of Hell, athirst alway?
36026Sellin''brains, eh?"
36026So yo''was born at Yonkers, was yuh?
36026So yo''was born in Dee- troit, was yuh?"
36026Some responsiveness there, all right, eh?"
36026Still there?"
36026The connection made, I inquired:"Is this Major Pond?"
36026The only trouble is that there ai n''t much in the way of good biography written these days-- is there?"
36026Then must I knock, or call when just in sight?
36026Well, sir, do you know what happened then?
36026Well-- what seems to be the matter?"
36026What about him-- he did n''t bother you, I hope?"
36026What do I owe you?"
36026What was his line?"
36026What yo''sellin''?"
36026What''s the use of puttin''in all your time on fiction when there''s so much romance to be found in the real thing?
36026What''s your line?"
36026Who''s this talking?"
36026Will the day''s journey take the whole long day?
36026Will there be beds for me and all who seek?
36026Will you please tell me who you are, and_ what_ you are, and_ why_ you are?
36026Wo n''t you be a Good Samaritan and give me a lift to the station?
36026Wo n''t you tell me your name, that I may add it to the list of my friends?"
36026Would they be ears of wheat Sown once for food but trodden into clay?
36026You say he has invited you here to meet him?"
36026You wrote a book called''Tea and Coffee''once, did n''t cha?"
36026You''ve evidently heard of it before-- but why do n''t you have something of the kind out here?"
36026[ Illustration:"But what was the point of this little joke last night?"]
41597And what has become of the colonels?
41597Do n''t know?
41597Well,continued the Captain,"where are you from?"
41597What about the majors, captains and lieutenants?
41597What does the F stand for?
41597What spot so appropriate for the last resting place of these heroes, as some commanding eminence overlooking the memorable plain of Fredericksburg? 41597 Where were you born?"
41597Where, then, tell me, where in the world have the privates gone?
41597Where,said the soldier,"is old Marse Bob Lee and his army?"
41597Why not stay in the front?
41597But the question is, what is to be done with this immense power?
41597Can any man of ancient or modern times fail to pronounce Washington peerless?''
41597Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
41597Now, can you tell me which one I dropped?"
41597Now, will you please tell me where I was born?"
41597Shall it be used in Fredericksburg or transmitted to neighboring cities to increase their facilities for manufactures?
41597Shall their names pass from the knowledge of the living to be treasured only in the mind of Him''to whom the memory of the just is precious?''
41597The house, an immense pile of English brick,(?)
41597The impatient and anxious traveller cried out"Where is Extra Billy?"
41597The keeper saw he was beaten, and demanded,"What is your age?"
41597The question was what shall be done to place the town in its proper position, and who shall take that action?
41597Was not that a beautiful solution of the vexed problem of Christian union?"
41597What does it stand for?"
41597What is it that gentlemen wish?
41597What would they have?
41597When arrested he was asked in a brusque tone by the officer--"Where are you from?"
41597Why stand we here idle?
41597said the private;"ah, then where are all the generals?"
41634How many bones of Northern men,he asked with majestic pathos,"lie at Yorktown?"
41634Is it not,he finely, though for the occasion sophistically, said,"by popular injustice that greatness is burnished?"
41634Methinks,he said at Dayton,"I hear a soft voice asking, Are you in favor of paper money?
41634When the monarchs of Europe are assembled together, do you think,he asked,"that we are not a subject of their holy consultations?"
41634''Major,''said I,''is there anything non- committal about that?''
41634And can you think it kind or just to harass me under such circumstances with letters which no man of common sensibility can read without pain?...
41634Could the South believe that Harrison would"lay ruthless hands on the institutions among which he was born and educated?"
41634Did he approve a like distribution of the proceeds of the sales of public lands?
41634Did he approve another bank charter, if it should become necessary to preserve the revenue and finances of the nation?
41634Did he approve federal appropriations to improve navigable streams above ports of entry?
41634Did he believe it constitutional to expunge from the records of a house of Congress any of its proceedings?
41634Oh, have you heard the news from Maine, Maine, Maine, All honest and true?
41634Ought not the collection, safe- keeping, transfer, and disbursement of public moneys to be managed by public officers?
41634Ought the moneys taken from the people for public uses longer to be deposited in banks and thence to be loaned for the profit of private persons?
41634The country was merely asked without specifications: Do you on the whole like Jackson''s administration?
41634The inquiries must be: Who can best preserve the unity of the Democratic party?
41634There was for the time in politics but one question, and that was born of the annexation of Texas,--Shall slavery go into free territory?
41634To the tune of the"Little Pig''s Tail"they sang:"What has caused this great commotion, motion, motion, Our country through?
41634Van Buren, knowing of this, wrote to Hamilton, and, after signing his letter, added:"P. S.--Does the old gentleman have prayers in his own house?
41634Were their usurpations not in the name of the people?
41634What politician indeed, dead or living, is to be ranked above him?
41634Where now was his boasted loyalty to the party?
41634Who best understands the principles and motives of our government?
41634Who will carry out the principles of the Jeffersonian era and General Jackson''s administration?
41634Would it not be better to get the streets of Washington clear of office- seekers first in the way I proposed?...
41634against all banks, or by a summons to Doctors''Commons for a divorce of bank and state?
42872What do they hold-- these walls of corn, Whose banners toss in the breeze of morn? 42872 Where do they stand, these walls of corn, Whose banners toss in the breeze of morn?
42872Who would have dared, with brush or pen, As this land is now, to paint it then? 42872 The Gulf easily swallows up all the Mississippi waters in a way that reminds of Rossetti''s dirge:Why does the sea moan evermore?
29878Can you tell me what will be in the platform of the Democratic party in 1916?
29878Do we ask what this has to do with Municipal suffrage?
29878Do you talk of chivalry?
29878How about the women who have lost their husbands?
29878How could you tell a Democratic woman''s vote from a Republican woman''s vote?
29878If women voted,was one of them,"would they not have to sit on juries?"
29878May I present next,said Miss Addams,"Mrs. Ida Husted Harper, of New York?
29878Must I do that?
29878Then why do you say the men did not know what they were about?
29878Where did you get your figures?
29878Who are the evil creatures we are supposed to meet there on election day? 29878 Who will care for the children during the mother''s absence?...
29878Why have there not been more eminent women?
29878Will exclusion from the suffrage educate and improve the illiterate masses more quickly than the use of it?
29878Will women vote intelligently? 29878 Yet, after all,"she said,"are not these clubs doing good work for woman suffrage under another name?
29878You are then opposed to having a State grant suffrage to its own women?
29878), Who Will Defend the Flag?
29878... Is it true?
29878A reed shaken with the wind?''
29878Ai n''t we got de right on our side?
29878Although she gives the same quality and the same amount of work yet she can not command the same wage, and why?
29878And are not women taxed?
29878And what is the result?
29878And what is the result?
29878And who among the workers are the weak?
29878And who are the weak?
29878And who better than she knows what the needs of the workers are in the factories?
29878Another question was:"Have not men a better right to the suffrage because they have to support the family?"
29878Answering the question,"Do we propose a mad revolution?"
29878Are not our mothers quite as capable as our fathers to wage warfare against these, the enemies in our midst?
29878Are not the effects of over- work and long hours in the household as great as are those of the factory or the office?
29878Are the Indians more important than the women of America?
29878Are the Mexican peons more to our Government than are the women of America?
29878Are they less intelligent?
29878Are they less moral, peaceful and law- abiding than men?
29878Are they less public spirited and patriotic than men?
29878Are we alone to refuse to learn the lesson?
29878Are you afraid of intelligence?
29878Are you going to do this because you think they are needed in the electorate and because they will make conditions better?
29878Are you in favor of women voting?
29878Are you not ready now to wipe out that paltry 2,000 majority which five years ago voted to continue this unjust condition?
29878But do we not sit in silence when that flag waves over living conditions which should be an insult to all patriotism?
29878Can they do it?
29878Can we really bring up our sons with a clear sense of the civic responsibility which we ourselves have not?
29878Can women, and do the average, every- day women in their present condition as subjects take a very lively interest in the real welfare of the State?
29878Can you consistently oppose now the things for which you fought so bitterly a short time ago?
29878Can you help me?''
29878Do children suffer because their mothers own property?"
29878Do you not see how, in spite of politicians, the people have been writing direct primary laws?
29878Do you stand in need of the trust of other peoples and of the trust of our own women?
29878Does a desire for an environment of moral and civic purity show neglect of the highest good of the family?
29878Does an intelligent interest in the education of a child render a woman less a mother?
29878Does any one believe that we should have to boil all the water before we dared to drink it?
29878Does it not mean that there is no class so wise, so benevolent that it is fitted to govern any other class?
29878Does the record end here?
29878Dr. Shaw closed her address with a beautiful delineation of Americanism, saying at its close: What is Americanism?
29878Gentlemen, is it not manifestly unfair to demand of women a test which has never been made in the case of men in this or any other country?
29878Go to your States, go anywhere but do not come to us?''
29878Hardly, and are not men and children affected by this indifference?
29878Has not this movement a strong tendency to encourage the exodus from the land of bondage, otherwise known as matrimony and motherhood?
29878Have we forgotten the cry of our forefathers which stirred the blood of every patriotic American, that"taxation without representation is tyranny?"
29878Have we no right to a voice in the disposal of our wealth, the greatest that the world possesses, the priceless wealth of its womanhood?
29878He looked out upon them and do you think he said,"I am convinced that the women of New York do want to vote and I will help them?"
29878How about Idaho?
29878How can a woman live an honorable life on such a sum?
29878How can it be done?
29878How can it plead for justice in the East when it denies this to its own women?
29878How can those who refuse to give women the right to vote reconcile their opinion with the form of government in which they believe?
29878How can we best spread our ideas in other organizations?
29878How did this happen?
29878How have they kept that promise?"
29878How shall we dispose of our headquarters, our workers, our plans?
29878How would men like such reasoning applied to themselves?...
29878I ask you, in the name of common sense, is it safe or wise or sane to entrust to men alone the dealing with this age- long evil?
29878I have said that the passage of this amendment is a vitally necessary war measure and do you need further proof?
29878I saw men jump up on the seats and throw their hats in the air and shout:"What''s the matter with Champ Clark?"
29878If an outlaw is to be arrested are you going to order a woman to get a gun and come with you?
29878If dissolution is determined upon, what disposition shall be made of( a) the files of data;( b) the property;( c) the funds, if any remain?
29878If it is a right, who can question it?
29878If not, when shall the next be called?
29878If the woman teacher''s need of the ballot is a debatable question then another very natural question arises: Do men teachers need the ballot?...
29878If they had been 30,000 women with votes would he have said that?
29878If this is done, to whom shall such a board render its final report and by whom shall it be officially discharged?
29878If this is to be the last convention, shall a Board of Officers be elected at this convention to serve until all tasks are completed?
29878If we can not get that peace out of this war what hope is there that it will ever come to humanity?
29878If you should meet a new idea in the dark, would you shy?
29878In New York in the constitutional convention of 1821 when some members advocated its removal others asked,"Where is the demand?
29878In contrast we may ask what have women done?
29878In such places the question next day is not,''Did the election go Democratic or Republican?''
29878In the event that the association shall be dissolved what agency shall become the auxiliary of the International Woman Suffrage Alliance?
29878Is Limited Suffrage Worth While?
29878Is it any wonder that so many of our little sisters are in the gutter?
29878Is it any wonder that so many women prefer to go into factory life at less pay but where they can have some hours of their own?
29878Is it fair for you_ not_ to tell us why you are opposed to us?
29878Is it fair to say woman shall have no part in the every- day affairs of life when she must bear so much in war?"
29878Is it for the protection of his property that he may have a voice in the governing of his wealth, of his stocks and bonds and merchandise?
29878Is it not because it is a symbol of the hopes and aspirations of the men and women of the whole world?
29878Is it not true that every free- lover, socialist, communist and anarchist the country over is openly in favor of female suffrage?
29878Is it of no concern who compose Congress, who vote for members of Congress and for the President?"
29878Is it true that the United States Constitution too is but a"scrap of paper"to be repudiated at will?
29878Is it true that there is a lower birth- rate among working women than among those of the wealthy class?
29878Is not that a true statement in the most practical form of the problem of the tariff?
29878Is not this a survival of that old vice of womankind, indirection?...
29878Is that a reason for considering that woman suffrage is a mistake?
29878Is that trust an asset or is it not?
29878Is the birth- rate less among women who are engaged in the occupations unknown to women of the past?
29878Is there any justice underlying such a condition?
29878It has been said to me when I have spoken for childhood,''You have no child?''
29878It is at least certain that a great many of these cornerstones of society are tottering, and why?
29878Keep your mothers in a state of invalid remoteness from life and who shall arm the young with intelligent virtue?
29878Led by Mrs. Ella Hawley Crossett, president of the New York association,"Should there be concentration on one bill or work for several"?
29878Logical thinkers the world over have been led in consequence to ask: Are not women equally capable with men of self- government?
29878May I say un- American, if you object to the word"radical"?
29878Miss Miner said in answering the objection to"the immoral vote":"Is the fact that immoral women would have the vote a real objection?
29878Mr. Taggart asked:"Why should the women of Kansas have the vote when it is denied to those of other States who need it as much or more?"
29878Mrs. Catharine Waugh McCulloch presided at the conference on How can we nationalize our request for a 16th Amendment?
29878Mrs. Craigie spoke on Citizenship-- What Is It?
29878Mrs. Dudley represented the women of the South, saying in the course of her address: What has happened to the State''s rights doctrine?
29878Mrs. Harriet Taylor Upton( Ohio); Well then what is the matter?
29878Mrs. Kate S. Hilliard( Utah) answered the question, Will the Ballot Solve the Industrial Problem?
29878Mrs. Kelley asked:"Why not do prenomination work?"
29878Must we crawl on our knees to ask you for that which we feel we have a right to demand?
29878Ninety days?
29878Now if a good woman can develop the best in an individual man, may not all the good women together develop the best in a whole State?
29878Now, why is the Shafroth- Palmer amendment easier to pass Congress than the Bristow- Mondell amendment?
29878One afternoon was devoted to a conference on How Can We Best Utilize the Press?
29878One of the gentlemen has asked:"What is the relation of all this labor talk to the ballot?"
29878Or is the decline alike marked among those who are pursuing the ancient occupations but under different conditions?...
29878Or shall they attempt to determine causes, apply remedies and clear the way for their own enfranchisement?
29878Out of the present, its arrogant militarism, its sordid commercialism and worship of gold, is there anything to give us cheer and hope for tomorrow?
29878President, are you or are you not for this Federal Amendment?''
29878Rabbi Emil G. Hirsch gave an able address under the title"Why Not?"
29878Representative Littlefield of Maine inquired:"What do you say, Governor, about Miss McCracken''s article in the_ Outlook_?"
29878Said he:"Ladies, why do you waste your time year after year in coming before us and asking for this appropriation?
29878Shall it recommend its members to join the League of Women Voters?
29878Shall the National American Woman Suffrage Association dissolve when the last task concerning the extension of suffrage to women is completed?
29878Shall the National American Woman Suffrage Association drop work for State Referenda and concentrate on the Federal Amendment?
29878Shall this be the last suffrage convention held under its auspices?
29878Shall we admit them only to a partnership of suffering and sacrifice and toil and not to a partnership of privilege and right?
29878Shall we be content with four stars or shall we provide the means to get a fifth?"
29878She must take it from one or all of them and will she make herself or the world better by doing so?"
29878Should We Work for Woman Suffrage in War Time?
29878Surely it behooves us to do something at once or what sort of citizens shall we have?
29878That is as far as you want them to go?
29878That was after the election?
29878The Chairman: That supposition applies to Congress also, does it?
29878The Chinese woman-- the woman of the harem-- do they rule it?
29878The Indian woman rocks the cradle; does she rule the world?
29878The crystallized sentiments of an intelligent people?
29878The following conversation then took place:"May I ask you a question?"
29878The natural question, therefore, was, Should the association make plans to dissolve immediately upon ratification or was there reason for continuance?
29878The program was as follows: What is the matter with the United States?
29878The question before the men of the country is, Should the women have the suffrage and if they get it how will they use it?"
29878There certainly can be no disagreement among us as to the latter statement but why is it more applicable to women than to men?
29878There was at first no thought that the people should elect him but do you not see how quickly they assimilated the machinery which was provided?
29878They gave much to us, did we give anything to them?
29878To say that means what?
29878Want it?
29878Was it not something of this love which inspired that immortal Declaration made at the Woman''s Rights Convention on July 19- 20, 1848?
29878Was there ever such a chance offered to the world before?
29878What Can the Enfranchised Women Do to Secure Suffrage for the Women of the Entire Nation?
29878What Good Will Woman Suffrage Do Our Country?
29878What care they now when all the world is with them?
29878What caused the doctors to come together in a Society for Sanitary and Moral Prophylaxis?
29878What could be more appropriate than that such women should do for the coming generation what those of a preceding did for them?
29878What could be more natural than that women having attained their political independence should desire to give service in token of their gratitude?
29878What could be worse than that?''
29878What did I hear?
29878What does that mean?
29878What does the idea of government imply?
29878What is done with them when their bones give out and they can not work any more?
29878What is the Best Thing it Has Done for my State?
29878What is the position of your organization with reference to the question of whether or not women should have the right to vote at all?
29878What is your own mental attitude toward progress?
29878What more could we expect of her son?
29878What mysterious cause delayed them?
29878What necessary qualification fits men for the exercise of this sacred right which is not likewise possessed by women?
29878What of the working girl and her employer?
29878What time will a woman have to prepare herself for these new duties of citizenship?
29878What was the result?
29878What was the result?
29878What was the result?
29878What''s de reason dat we women ca n''t vote, an''ai n''t got no say- so''bout makin''de laws dat bosses us?
29878When I asked him about it he said:''Do you think I would notice a woman''s meeting?''
29878Where is yours?"
29878White of Chicago; Mrs. Upton on What Next?
29878Who are you that hesitate to promote, if you do not actually obstruct this Federal Amendment?
29878Who better than she knows whether or not the cost of living advances more rapidly than the wage does?
29878Who better than the mother who sees her boy and her girl playing in the streets knows the need of playgrounds?
29878Who can think that intellectual divergence, disagreement upon great public questions, would disrupt a family worth holding together?
29878Who is to blame if they do not have the keener sense?
29878Who represents these if not women?...
29878Who says"suffrage is going and not coming"?
29878Who shall say that our triumph is to be long delayed?
29878Who wants to vote that has no land?"
29878Whom did I see at that first suffrage meeting, first in my experience?
29878Why are we afraid?
29878Why debar the better and enfranchise the worse?
29878Why did not such evidence of a demand win the vote?
29878Why did they not come sooner if men were so willing?
29878Why do they neglect the women?
29878Why do we care more about our flag than any other flag?
29878Why do we want the ballot?
29878Why is it tyranny to men but not to women?
29878Why is the ballot given to him while it is denied to us?
29878Why not directly into the governmental ear-- the ballot box?
29878Why not then avail ourselves of this unique, this providential opportunity?
29878Why persist in embarrassing us with this very troublesome question?"
29878Why should they have grown more in the last sixty years than in all the years before?...
29878Why should we breathe them only in the prayer meeting or in the parlors of our friends?
29878Why should woman suffrage not come?
29878Why should you take such an interest in defeating Democratic Congressmen and Senators?
29878Why, when we have been travelling and seeing others, does the sight of the American flag bring tears to our eyes and warmth to our hearts?
29878Will she take it from her home and husband or from her church and children or from her charities and social pleasures?
29878Will the ballot in the hands of women pour oil on the troubled domestic waters?
29878Will women help our courts to better administer justice?
29878Would Congress fail to recognize such voting strength upon any other issue?
29878Would it be unwomanly to ask why there should have been such wide divergence in the Divine Illumination which each Oracle received?
29878You are aware that more Democrats voted for it than men of any other party?
29878You ask by whom?
29878You might say,"Why do you select this Democratic administration for your demand?
29878You tried to defeat him, did you not?
29878You tried to defeat the man in the House who presented this resolution which you are having hearings for, did you not?
29878Your organization spent a lot of time and money trying to defeat men on this committee that you are now before, did it not?
29878[ 117] From the address of President Wilson: And what shall we say of the women?...
29878[ 30] Our vice- president- at- large will speak to you on What Cheer?"
29878[ 37] If this request was so"reasonable"why was the word"sex"included in the first place?
29878and in amazement ask himself,"How does it happen that there have been any?"
29878but''Was it license or no license?''
29878under the title What''s in a Name?
42309How so?
42309In whose name?
42309And what pen shall betray The sweet secrets that hide from men''s vision away In its solitude wild?
42309Can imagination boast Amid its gay creation hues like her''s?
42309Did any of his prophecies ever prove false?
42309Hath not thy tomahawk been often bathed in the red blood of thine enemies?
42309Hath the fleet deer ever escaped thy arrow, or the beaver eluded thy chase?
42309Have the rainbows that followed autumn storms faded upon the mountains and left their mantles there?
42309How could one so weak in frame, and using so little food, stand so many fatigues?
42309Or can it mix them with that matchless skill, And lose them in each other, as appears In every bud that blows?"
42309The maiden responded,"Art thou not thyself a great warrior, O Occuna?
42309Was he not then telling the Great Spirit every wrong they had done?
42309What was it he was in the habit of muttering so long, when counting the beads of that mysterious chain that hung round his neck?
42309Whence comes the name of Quebec?
42309Why, then, shouldst thou fear to go into the presence of the Great Manitou?"
40758And pray, madam, did it cure you?]
40758And pray, madam,he inquired,"what made you go to Bath?"
40758Can not some one whistle it?
40758Difficult, do you call it, sir?
40758How do you manage it?
40758If you were in a strait,asks Thackeray,"would you like such a benefactor?
40758Is that all you have to say in its favor?
40758Very well, father,was the reply;"but where is the shilling to come from?"
40758Well, sir, what did you think of his acting?
40758What in the devil''s name,he writes,"have you to do with either Mr. Disraeli or Mr. Gladstone?
40758Why do you laugh?
40758Why, what''s the matter?
40758Will you do me the honor of accepting a copy of my works?
40758''Why so?''
40758Another peculiarity of Newton was that he fancied himself a poet; but who ever saw a verse of his composition?
40758Being asked,"What is a communist?"
40758Besides, did he not write an original cook- book, which still stands for good authority in the cafés of the boulevards?
40758Bracegirdle''s name had been mentioned; when Lord Halifax said:"You all of you praise the virtue of this lady; why not reward her for not selling it?
40758Canst thou be kind, And from thy darling part?
40758Canst thou range earth, sea, and air, And so meet me everywhere?
40758Could we have a clearer instance of monomania?
40758Did I ever attack your head?"
40758Did not Cervantes"laugh Spain''s chivalry away"?
40758Did not Thoreau also affect humility in his rudely built cabin on the borders of Walden Pond?
40758Does not this truthful sketch from life, of a poor wood- sawyer''s son, read like romance?
40758Garrick?"
40758Hall?"
40758Has Luther been crucified for the world?"
40758Have not these historic characters tested the familiar axiom that calamity is man''s true touchstone?
40758How many of our readers remember the one recorded scene when Queen Elizabeth condescended to coquet with Shakespeare?
40758In a poem called"Clio''s Protest; or, the Picture Varnished,"we find the following really beautiful lines:--"Marked you her cheek of rosy hue?
40758Is it not difficult to recall an instance where a pronounced genius has also enjoyed the quiet beauty of domestic life?
40758Is not this a quiet peep behind the curtain?]
40758Is not"Tristram Shandy"a synonym for its author, Sterne?
40758Is there not a ceaseless interest hanging over the domestic and professional habits of these famous men of the past?
40758Marked you her eye of sparkling blue?
40758Must not earth be rent before her gems are found?"
40758Of how many American books, of a similar character, can this be said?]
40758Thackeray''s tender and beautiful thoughts upon this subject occur to us here:"To be rich, to be famous?
40758They are pretty sure to have some idiosyncrasies more or less peculiar; and who, indeed, has not?
40758Was there ever pleasanter or more genial reading than"Cowper''s Familiar Letters,"full to the brim with sparkling humor?
40758When Coleridge once asked Lamb,"Charles, did you ever hear me preach?"
40758Where was all the monarch''s pride of State, his kingly dignity?
40758Who and what is Luther?
40758Who does not enjoy recalling these silent friends, favorite authors grown dear to us by age and long association?
40758Why am I grown old in seeking so unprofitable a reward as fame?
40758Why does not some popular author give us a book upon this theme, and entitle it"Behind the Prison Bars"?
40758Would it not seem, in the light of these many instances, that practical labor forms the best training even for genius?
40758[ Footnote 147: We find these two verses in Thoreau''s published journal: I. Canst thou love with thy mind, And reason with thy heart?
40758[ Footnote 18: Is it generally known that among the accomplishments of his after years was that of music and an instrumental performer?
40758[ Footnote 8:"What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe,"asks Sir Walter Scott,"save that it runs back to a successful soldier?"]
40758is there no bribing death?"
40210):And now courteous reader, we leave Mr. Paine entirely to thy mercy; what wilt thou say of him?
40210Do we want to contemplate his power? 40210 Is the day dark?
40210Must the merits of Common Sense continue to glide down the stream of time unrewarded by his country? 40210 What has become of the Bible that Paine attacked?
40210--_Ella Wheeler Wilcox._"Who could with almost one stroke of his pen, turn the people in a radically new direction?
40210--_Encyclopedia Britannica._ An Unknown Writer of Charleston, S. C.( Feb. 14, 1776):"Who is the author of''Common Sense''?
40210--_Holland''s Life of Lincoln, p. 236._ Why, it may be asked, was Lincoln''s Infidelity not used against him everywhere in this campaign?
40210And would you strew with flowers and moisten with tears the grave that enfolds the one, and trample with scorn the turf that grows upon the other?
40210Are not three fourths of the world''s inhabitants Infidels?
40210Are there not hundreds of immoral writers even among the living?
40210But does this mean, or would it mean, that Paine had become converted to Christianity?
40210But is it a crime to defend the dead?
40210But what did he do?
40210But what if he had died poor?
40210But what peculiar significance do your informants attach to this fact?
40210But which one does this, the successful or the defeated antagonist?
40210Could they control the rising tide that rolled upon the boundless sea of thought?
40210Did he try to escape?
40210Do all accept it?
40210Do not the greatest scholars of the age go far beyond him in Infidelity?
40210Do the American soldiers despair?
40210Do we want to contemplate his mercy?
40210Do we want to contemplate his munificence?
40210Do we want to contemplate his wisdom?
40210Do you want to renew in Louisiana the horrors of Domingo?"
40210Does not the world teem with immoral literature?
40210Frank S. C. Wicks:"Why this ingratitude?
40210General Charles Lee:"Have you[ Washington] seen the pamphlet''Common Sense''?
40210Has the Bible been given to all the world?
40210Has the battle been bloody?
40210Has the court of Death issued an injunction restraining us from pleading the cause of the departed?
40210His writings certainly have had a powerful effect on the public mind,--ought they not then to meet an adequate return?"
40210How do we account for this?
40210How have you kept even the commandments of your own law?
40210If by any means I can obtain your release on my own security, will you promise me to return in twenty days?''"
40210If so, why has all this wrath been concentrated upon Paine to the almost total exclusion of the rest?
40210In fine, do we want to know what God is?
40210In this perilous position what course would Paine pursue?
40210Infidel to what?
40210Is drunkenness so rare as to secure for its victims an immortal notoriety?
40210Is it honorable?
40210Is it just?"
40210Is it manly?
40210Is poverty a crime?
40210Lord Beaconsfield( to Gladstone):"How does your reform government differ from that of Thomas Paine, except that the sovereign is left in name?"
40210Now does the church treat deathbed penitents in the manner in which Paine has been treated?
40210Now, let me ask the church, what is your record?
40210Now, let me ask these people, do you know why Thomas Paine has been so bitterly assailed?
40210P. Bland, B. D._"Was he filthy?
40210Religious zealots sealed the lips of a philosopher; but could they stop the revolving earth?
40210Was ever nobler thought conceived than this?"
40210Was he little?
40210Was he little?
40210Was he little?
40210What did he do?
40210What has been the effect of coercion?
40210What is it?
40210What is your duty?
40210What was his belief?
40210Where the mitred charity, the practical religion?
40210Which of you, to assist his infant merit, would diminish even the surplus of your debaucheries?
40210Who is responsible for the obloquy that has been cast upon the memory of this noble man?
40210Who must exert an influence that had never, in any crisis of history, been exerted by one man before?
40210Why, then, denounce Paine for having, as they claim, renounced his Infidelity?
40210Why, then, do you ask it of man against man?
40210William Pitt( to Lady Hester Stanhope, who had quoted from the"Rights of Man"):"Paine is quite in the right, but what am I to do?"
40210Wilt thou address him?
40210Would Bishop Watson have crossed swords in theological disputation with a poor, drunken, immoral wretch?
40210Would Dr. Franklin have retained the friendship of a poor, drunken, immoral wretch?
40210Would France''s greatest women, Roland and De Stael, have stooped to pay the tribute of praise to a poor, drunken, immoral wretch?
40210Would Lord Erskine have defended against the government of England, a poor, drunken, immoral wretch?
40210Would Napoleon Bonaparte, when in the zenith of his fame, have invited to his table a poor, drunken, immoral wretch?
40210Would President Jefferson have offered a national ship to bear to his home a poor, drunken, immoral wretch?
40210Would Washington have acknowledged as one of the most potent factors in achieving American Independence, the pen of a poor, drunken, immoral wretch?
40210Would he shrink from danger now?
40210Would he, like others, quietly acquiesce in these unjust proceedings?
40210Would you have the mystery solved?
40210did he secure for himself the profits to which he was justly entitled?
40210ye pretended moralists, so forward now to cast your interested indignation upon the memory of Paine!--where were you in the day of his adversity?
12423A plurality?
12423Against it?
12423And what should be done with the freedmen?
12423Are the states"sovereign states"?
12423Are they still self- evident?
12423At Boston?
12423At the close of January, 1777, what places were held by the British?
12423But the real question was, should slaves who had no vote be counted as a part of the population?
12423But what should be done with California and with New Mexico?
12423But which of them should be President?
12423By Hamilton?
12423By whom?
12423CHAPTER 26 §§ 276, 277.--_a._ What is meant by the Era of Good Feeling?
12423CHAPTER 33 THE COMPROMISE OF 1850[ Sidenote: Should Oregon and Mexican cessions be free soil?]
12423Can the taxing power and the legislative power be separated?
12423Chase?
12423Compromise as to Apportionment.--Should the members of the House of Representatives be distributed among the states according to population?
12423Could it not be set aside on the ground that there was no longer a French monarchy?
12423Could the Southerners have done otherwise than fire on the flag?
12423Could the Spanish war have been avoided?
12423Could these states have been neutral?
12423Could they have been avoided?
12423Did Lee and other officers who resigned necessarily believe in the right of secession?
12423Did Mexico begin the war?
12423Did a white man in the North and in the South have proportionally the same representation in the House?
12423Did the British government act wisely?
12423Did the"spoils system"originate with Jackson?
12423Do the same objections hold against the present Stamp tax?
12423Do the same reasons exist to- day?
12423Do we still keep to the Monroe Doctrine in all respects?
12423Do you consider such a method wise or not?
12423Do you consider such a system better or worse than the Spoils System?
12423Do you think his action justifiable?
12423Do you think that a President should"reign"?
12423Do you think that laws made by a legislature so elected were binding?
12423Do you think that railroads should be carried on by the state or by individuals?
12423Do you think that roads should be built at national expense?
12423Exactly what was the condition as to Cuba?
12423Explain carefully the plan of the campaign to Corinth Why was Corinth important?
12423For what did Garrison contend, and how did he make his views known?
12423For whom would you have voted had you had the right to vote in 1824?
12423From what parts of the country did the volunteers come?
12423Had sea power been in Southern hands, could the Union have been saved?
12423Had slavery disappeared in the North because people thought that it was wrong?
12423Had you lived in 1840, for whom would you have voted?
12423How and why had the center of population changed since 1791?
12423How are Williams''s ideas as to religious freedom regarded now?
12423How are manufactures protected?
12423How could the Articles of Confederation be amended?
12423How did Hamilton set to work to defeat Adams?
12423How did Hobson try to prevent the escape of the Spanish fleet?
12423How did Jackson oppose the South Carolinians?
12423How did Jackson try to ruin the United States Bank?
12423How did Jackson try to stop speculation?
12423How did Jefferson''s inauguration illustrate his political ideas?
12423How did Lee secure the removal of McClellan''s army from the James?
12423How did Lee try to compel the withdrawal of Grant?
12423How did Parliament punish the colonists of Massachusetts and Boston?
12423How did Sherman''s occupation of Raleigh affect Lee?
12423How did South Carolina oppose the Act of 1832?
12423How did Spain get the Floridas?
12423How did Townshend try to raise money?
12423How did Whitney''s cotton gin change these conditions?
12423How did all these affairs affect the relations between the United States and Great Britain?
12423How did he carry it out?
12423How did it fit him for this work?
12423How did its formation make the election of Polk possible?
12423How did some states treat other states?
12423How did the British army get to Yorktown?
12423How did the Carolina proprietors treat their colonists?
12423How did the Compromise postpone the conflict over slavery?
12423How did the Cuban rebellion come to an end?
12423How did the McCormick reaper solve the difficulty in wheat growing?
12423How did the Pequod War affect the colonists on the Connecticut?
12423How did the United States acquire Louisiana?
12423How did the accession of Charles II affect the colonies?
12423How did the battle of Bennington affect the campaign?
12423How did the choice of Washington as first President influence popular feeling toward the new government?
12423How did the favoring the"pet banks"increase speculation?
12423How did the holding these lands benefit the United States?
12423How did the king interfere with these claims?
12423How did the new government encourage manufacturing?
12423How did the new government of England regard Massachusetts?
12423How did the repeal of the Sherman Law affect confidence in the future of business?
12423How did their action influence the election?
12423How did these inventions make large cities possible?
12423How did they show their opposition?
12423How did they treat American ships?
12423How did they treat the Indians?
12423How did they try to injure one another?
12423How did this act of Napoleon''s set the Monroe Doctrine at defiance?
12423How did this expedition affect the later growth of the United States?
12423How did this plan differ from the Stamp tax?
12423How did this turn the scale of war?
12423How do they influence the opinions of the people?
12423How does his speech show the increase of the love of the Union?
12423How far did he succeed?
12423How far has later history proved the truth of his words?
12423How had Grant shown his fitness for high command?
12423How had Sherman''s victories affected the blockade?
12423How had Washington and Adams filled offices?
12423How had it fared with Grant?
12423How had railroads increased, and what improvements had been made?
12423How had the demands of the Southerners concerning slavery increased?
12423How had the population of the states changed since 1790?
12423How had the question of slavery already divided the country?
12423How had the use of steamboats increased?
12423How had the war altered Lincoln''s power as President?
12423How has machinery influenced the history of the United States?
12423How is this right secured to citizens of the United States?
12423How must bribery in political life affect a government?
12423How was Congress able to pass a bill over the President''s veto?
12423How was Jackson fitted to meet difficulties?
12423How was Mason and Dixon''s line famous later?
12423How was it affected by his death?
12423How was it connected with the"spoils system"?
12423How was it finally captured?
12423How was it known that Jefferson''s election was the wish of the voters?
12423How was it proposed to overcome this difficulty?
12423How was it regarded by Englishmen?
12423How was it settled?
12423How was it settled?
12423How was its capture accomplished?
12423How was slavery as an institution abolished throughout the United States?
12423How was the Constitution ratified?
12423How was the Emancipation Proclamation justified?
12423How was the Republican party formed?
12423How was the South dependent upon the North?
12423How was the action of the Republicans regarded by Washington?
12423How was the dispute finally settled?
12423How was the idea of the Association carried out?
12423How was the injury to our shipping during the Civil War connected with Great Britain?
12423How was the institution of slavery abolished?
12423How was the matter finally settled?
12423How was the matter settled?
12423How was the matter settled?
12423How was the news of this affair received in America?
12423How was the rebellion suppressed?
12423How was this ground hallowed?
12423How was this matter settled?
12423How was this proposal regarded by Americans?
12423How were Roman Catholics treated in England?
12423How were the British connected with this Indian trouble?
12423How were the slaves contraband?
12423How were their hopes disappointed?
12423How were these candidates nominated?
12423How would this act affect the growth of the colonies?
12423How would you have acted had you been a United States officer called to carry out the Fugitive Slave Law?
12423How would you have voted on this question?
12423If a bill is vetoed by the President, how can it still be made a law?
12423If such proposals were carried out, what would be the effect on the Union?
12423If you had been a Representative in 1824, for whom would you have voted?
12423In the United States?
12423In what European war were the Swedes and the Dutch engaged?
12423In what other question similar to this had South Carolina led?
12423In what respects was Jackson fitted for President?
12423In what respects was Jackson unlike the early Presidents?
12423In what respects were the colonial governments alike?
12423In what respects were they unlike?
12423In which colony would you have liked to live, and why?
12423In whose hands do appointments to federal offices lie?
12423Is a stamp tax a good kind of tax?
12423Is it better to settle disputes by arbitration or by war?
12423Is it still the basis of government?
12423Is it the same to- day?
12423Is this period more important or less important than the period of war which preceded it?
12423Is this wise?
12423Of Congress?
12423Of Scott''s campaign?
12423Of the Supreme Court?
12423Of what advantage has the telegraph been to the United States?
12423Of what advantage to the South were the negroes?
12423Of what use are newspapers?
12423Of what value was this region to the United States?
12423On America?
12423On France?
12423On the other colonies?
12423On what land did the Swedes settle?
12423On what matters did Roger Williams disagree with the rulers of Massachusetts?
12423Passage of the Ordinance of 1787.--What should be done with the lands which in this way had come into the possession of the people of all the states?
12423Pierce?
12423Precisely what is meant by"reconstruction"?
12423Should a man be given an office simply because he has helped his party?
12423Should city governments be conducted as business enterprises?
12423Should it be free soil or should it be slave soil?
12423Should the United States be a"world power"?
12423Sumner?
12423The Independent Treasury System.--What should be done with the government''s money?
12423The South?
12423The Wilmot Proviso, 1846.--What should be done with Oregon and with the immense territory received from Mexico?
12423The mistakes?
12423The"stay laws"?
12423They were reddish in color and interested Columbus-- for were they not inhabitants of the Far East?
12423To how much honor are the Northmen entitled as the discoverers of America?
12423To what party did Tyler belong?
12423To what was the prosperity of Virginia due?
12423To what was the refusal to receive Pinckney equivalent?
12423To what was this great success due?
12423To whom did Charles give this territory?
12423Under the spoils system what would naturally follow?
12423Under what conditions were the remaining seceded states readmitted?
12423Upon people''s minds?
12423Upon the British?
12423Upon the growth of cities?
12423Upon what would its enforcement depend?
12423Was Bacon a rebel?
12423Was Douglas a patriot?
12423Was Douglas''s declaration in harmony with the decision of the Supreme Court?
12423Was Henry''s criticism true?
12423Was a slave a person or a thing?
12423Was he a traitor?
12423Was his inaugural conciliatory to the South?
12423Was it true or false?
12423Was it wise to have one man in command of all the armies?
12423Was it wise to let the Southerners work out their questions for themselves or not?
12423Was the South justified in thinking that the North would yield?
12423Was the United States Bank like the national banks of the present day?
12423Was the burning of the public buildings justifiable?
12423Was the doctrine of popular sovereignty necessarily favorable to slavery?
12423Was the offer of the British government enough?
12423Was the plan a wise one from the British point of view?
12423Was the reduction of the navy wise?
12423Was the territory Ralegh named Virginia just what is now the state of Virginia?
12423Was their action wise?
12423Was there any reason for the fear on the part of business men?
12423Was there the least injustice in the treatment of Andrà ©?
12423Was this a good way to settle important questions?
12423Was this bank like one of the national banks of to- day?
12423Was this important?
12423Were all the Southern whites slave owners?
12423Were its principles like or unlike those of the Republican party of Jefferson''s time?
12423Were the Massachusetts colonists rebels?
12423Were the New England colonies difficult to govern?
12423Were the Southern states in any particular danger?
12423Were the colonies independent when the Declaration of Independence was adopted?
12423Were the harbors well defended?
12423Were the people of the South generally in favor of secession?
12423Were the years 1857- 61 more or less"critical"than the years 1783- 87?
12423Were there any good points in the slave system?
12423Were these ideas new?
12423What action did Great Britain take?
12423What action did President Taylor take?
12423What action did the American settlers in California take?
12423What action did the British merchants take?
12423What action did the government take?
12423What advantage has Alaska been to the United States?
12423What advantage would the occupation of New York give the British?
12423What advantages did it possess for the Spaniards?
12423What advantages did the founders of Massachusetts have over those of New Plymouth?
12423What advantages had Grant not possessed by McClellan?
12423What aid had Great Britain given to the Confederates?
12423What are customs duties?
12423What are some of the problems now before the American people?
12423What are the advantages and disadvantages of a tariff?
12423What are the important duties of citizens?
12423What are the important points in his Farewell Address?
12423What are the three great compromises of the Constitution?
12423What arrangements were made for the comfort and health of the people?
12423What attitude did California take on the slavery question?
12423What attitude had Mexico taken on slavery?
12423What attracted the Dutch to the region discovered by Hudson?
12423What candidates were named?
12423What caused the trouble with the Indians?
12423What change in the control of the Senate had taken place?
12423What changes did Andros make in New England?
12423What changes did William and Mary make in the colonial governments?
12423What changes would their admission make in Congress?
12423What charges were made against Adams?
12423What classes of people were there in Virginia?
12423What common interest did all the states have?
12423What complaints did the people of Virginia make?
12423What compromise did Buchanan suggest?
12423What conditions make a large navy necessary?
12423What custom was established by these early Presidents?
12423What danger is there in such power?
12423What declaration was made by the Republican party as to slavery?
12423What departments were decided upon?
12423What did France lose?
12423What did Franklin say about the feeling in the colonies?
12423What did Lincoln say about the Union?
12423What did Maryland contend?
12423What did Seward mean by saying that there was a"higher law"than the Constitution?
12423What did Sherman''s army accomplish on its way to the sea?
12423What did Spain gain?
12423What did Squanto do for the Pilgrims?
12423What did he say about slavery?
12423What did he think of the Kansas- Nebraska Act?
12423What did the British government hope to accomplish in the tea business?
12423What did the Stamp Act Congress do?
12423What did the allies propose as to America?
12423What did the election of Grant show?
12423What difference did_ one year_ make in the population of California?
12423What difficulties in the United States showed the necessity of a stronger government?
12423What dispute had long existed with Great Britain?
12423What dispute with Mexico arose?
12423What divisions took place in the Democratic party?
12423What do Perry''s and McDonough''s victories show?
12423What do the existing pueblos teach us about the Indians of Coronado''s time?
12423What do you consider the most decisive battle of the war?
12423What do you think of Lincoln''s action?
12423What do you think of Napoleon''s treatment of the United States?
12423What do you think of Sir Thomas Dale?
12423What do you think of Weyler''s policy?
12423What do you think of the action of the English mill operatives?
12423What do you think of the justice of removing Schuyler?
12423What do you think of the provision as to debts?
12423What do you think of the provision relating to the use of the army?
12423What do you think of the wisdom and justice of such a plan?
12423What do you think of the wisdom of his actions?
12423What do you think of the wisdom of the compromise as to apportionment?
12423What do you think of the wisdom of the plan?
12423What do you think of the wisdom of this policy?
12423What do you think of these suggestions?
12423What doctrine did Douglas apply to Kansas and Nebraska?
12423What does it show as to Thomas''s ability?
12423What does the Senate represent?
12423What does the name show?
12423What does this show about the feeling of both parties toward the government?
12423What effect did it have upon business?
12423What effect did the Kansas- Nebraska Act have on the settlement of Kansas?
12423What effect did the control of the Mississippi have upon the Confederacy?
12423What effect did the_ Monitor- Merrimac_ fight have on McClellan''s campaign?
12423What effect did these laws have on Massachusetts?
12423What events at first seemed to disprove Franklin''s prophecy?
12423What events in any colony have shown that its people desired more liberty?
12423What events showed Greene''s foresight?
12423What extreme parties were there in the North and the South?
12423What fact hindered the growth of cotton on a large scale in colonial times?
12423What government did England have after the execution of Charles I?
12423What government did the colonies really have?
12423What government was formed by them?
12423What great change was made by Congress in the Declaration?
12423What had Blair done for the Union?
12423What had Lincoln said in his inaugural?
12423What had been the feeling of most of the colonists toward England?
12423What had caused the growth of the Northern cities?
12423What had caused the growth of the Northwest?
12423What had the Republican party declared about slavery in the states?
12423What help did the Southerners hope to obtain from Great Britain and France?
12423What important discoveries did Lewis and Clark make?
12423What important matters have been definitely settled during the past one hundred years?
12423What influence did the telegraph have?
12423What influence has the railroad had upon the Union?
12423What is a blockade?
12423What is a blockade?
12423What is a bribe?
12423What is a caucus?
12423What is a compromise?
12423What is a constitution?
12423What is a majority?
12423What is a privateer?
12423What is a rebel?
12423What is a veto?
12423What is a"despotism"?
12423What is a"joint resolution"?
12423What is a"party machine"?
12423What is an"unfriendly act"?
12423What is contraband of war?
12423What is declared to be the basis of government?
12423What is meant by his"kitchen cabinet"?
12423What is meant by saying that Parliament was"the supreme power in the British Empire"?
12423What is meant by the phrase"assumption of the state debts"?
12423What is meant by the phrase"change of base"?
12423What is meant by the phrase"public credit"?
12423What is meant by the phrase"unconditional surrender"?
12423What is meant by the word"demonetization"?
12423What is meant by the"Merit System"?
12423What is meant by the"rising spirit of nationality"?
12423What is meant by toleration?
12423What is meant by"arbitration"?
12423What is meant by"squatter sovereignty"?
12423What is sedition?
12423What is the Civil Service?
12423What is the advantage of such an exhibition?
12423What is the case to- day in your own state?
12423What is the difference between a national and a federal government?
12423What is the difference between a tax laid by a tariff on imported goods and an internal revenue tax?
12423What is the difference between internal revenue taxes and customs duties?
12423What is the force of the writ of_ habeas corpus_?
12423What is the meaning of the phrase"too conspicuous"?
12423What is the meaning of the word"Puritan"( see § 43)?
12423What is the"supreme law of the land"?
12423What is treason?
12423What is"reciprocity"?
12423What is"tariff reform"?
12423What kind of a governor was Stuyvesant?
12423What land did Columbus think that he had reached?
12423What law had been made as to fugitive slaves?
12423What laws were made about the commerce of the colonies?
12423What more should have been promised?
12423What oath did Lincoln take?
12423What oath had the officers of the United States army and navy taken?
12423What of its justice?
12423What other Italians sailed across the Atlantic before 1500?
12423What other colony was united with Connecticut?
12423What other states followed South Carolina?
12423What party came into power in 1841?
12423What places were captured?
12423What policy did Horace Greeley uphold?
12423What policy did each uphold?
12423What position did the Union army keep as regards the Confederates?
12423What position does Washington hold in our history?
12423What power did the Alien Act give the President?
12423What power does the Constitution give Congress over a territory?
12423What power had Congress over the mails?
12423What power has Congress over the Judiciary?
12423What principles did they stand for?
12423What privileges did the patroons have?
12423What privileges were the settlers to have?
12423What promises had the Spaniards made to the Cubans and how had they kept them?
12423What quality in Grant was conspicuous at Shiloh?
12423What question arose concerning the site of the national capital?
12423What reasons did Otis give for his opposition to the writs of assistance?
12423What reasons were given for keeping an army in America?
12423What resulted from this division?
12423What results followed?
12423What right had the King of Great Britain to veto a Virginia law?
12423What rights did the Supreme Court declare a slave could not possess?
12423What scandal arose in connection with the Union Pacific Railway?
12423What slave states were not affected by this proclamation?
12423What statement did Davis make as to Lincoln?
12423What steps had already been taken by Congress toward freeing the slaves?
12423What suggestions were made by some in the North for the ending of slavery?
12423What territory did England gain in 1763?
12423What the House?
12423What third party was formed?
12423What trouble arose with Maryland about the boundary line?
12423What trouble broke out in Cuba?
12423What troubles arose in the South?
12423What truths are declared to be self- evident?
12423What two methods does the Constitution provide for its amendment?
12423What two new states were admitted in 1791- 92?
12423What two parties were fighting in England?
12423What two points were especially emphasized in their constitution?
12423What valuable work was done at Valley Forge?
12423What view did Webster take?
12423What view did she take of slavery?
12423What was Bragg''s object in invading Kentucky?
12423What was Grant''s wish?
12423What was Jefferson''s policy toward expenses?
12423What was Johnson''s attitude toward reconstruction?
12423What was Lee''s object in invading Pennsylvania?
12423What was done with the surplus?
12423What was the Force Act?
12423What was the Liberty party?
12423What was the Massachusetts Circular Letter?
12423What was the Sherman Silver Law?
12423What was the advantage of having Washington act as President of the Convention?
12423What was the cause of Garfield''s murder?
12423What was the cause of King Philip''s War?
12423What was the chief wish of the Spanish explorers?
12423What was the effect of Burgoyne''s surrender on Great Britain?
12423What was the effect of St. Leger''s retreat to Canada?
12423What was the effect of the blockade on the South?
12423What was the effect of this measure?
12423What was the effect on Northern opinion of the attack on Fort Sumter?
12423What was the extent of Oregon in 1845?
12423What was the extent of Oregon in 1847?
12423What was the force of the Emancipation Proclamation?
12423What was the force of the Tenure of Office Act, and why was it passed?
12423What was the great difference mentioned in § 196?
12423What was the great objection to it?
12423What was the great question settled by this war?
12423What was the great task before the people?
12423What was the important work of Madison?
12423What was the new point in Monroe''s message?
12423What was the object of Burgoyne''s campaign?
12423What was the object of the Continental Congress?
12423What was the object of the Dutch West India Company?
12423What was the object of the Mayflower Compact?
12423What was the plan of Taylor''s campaign?
12423What was the real object of Sherman''s march to the sea?
12423What was the real significance of Cleveland''s first election?
12423What was the reason for the American successes?
12423What was the result of Buchanan''s attempt to send supplies to Fort Sumter?
12423What was the result of Gage''s attempt to seize the arms at Concord?
12423What was the result of Hamilton''s intrigues?
12423What was the result of Hood''s attacks?
12423What was the result of each of these battles?
12423What was the result of the battle of the Cowpens?
12423What was the result of the declaration as to slaves?
12423What was the result of the election?
12423What was the result of the election?
12423What was the result of the election?
12423What was the result of the expedition?
12423What was the result of the seizure of the_ Liberty_?
12423What was the result of their actions?
12423What was the result of these economies?
12423What was the result of these wars?
12423What was the result of this battle?
12423What was the result of this expedition?
12423What was the result of this rebellion?
12423What was the work of a Committee of Correspondence?
12423What was the"Whiskey Ring"?
12423What was the"draft,"and why was it necessary?
12423What was their attitude on slavery?
12423What was their hope in threatening secession?
12423What was there peculiar in Lincoln''s election?
12423What were Jefferson''s objections to a third term?
12423What were Lincoln''s leading characteristics?
12423What were Lincoln''s personal views as to slavery?
12423What were its advantages?
12423What were some of the duties of the President?
12423What were the Non- importation agreements?
12423What were the Virginia Resolves of 1769?
12423What were the advantages of Webster''s"Dictionary"?
12423What were the arguments in favor of the extension of slavery?
12423What were the chief difficulties in the way of reconstruction?
12423What were the chief weaknesses of the Confederation?
12423What were the early steamboats like?
12423What were the effects of the battle upon the Americans?
12423What were the effects of the seizure of Ticonderoga on the siege of Boston?
12423What were the effects of this union?
12423What were the four most important things in Jefferson''s administrations?
12423What were the good points in Jackson''s administration?
12423What were the great objections to the New Jersey plan?
12423What were the issues in the campaign of 1868?
12423What were the provisions of the Fifteenth Amendment?
12423What were the results of his treatment of the Indians?
12423What were the results of the French alliance?
12423What were the results of the battle of Guilford?
12423What were the results of the war?
12423What were the results of this action?
12423What were the results of this invention?
12423What were the theories on which the Kentucky and Virginia Resolutions were based?
12423What were the"best roads"in 1800?
12423What were the"border states"?
12423What were the"tender laws"?
12423What work did the Jesuits do for the Indians?
12423What would Jackson probably have done had he been President?
12423What would be the arguments in Congress for and against this"proviso"?
12423What would be the result of a grand march through Georgia to the seacoast, and then northward through the Carolinas to Virginia?
12423When and how had Louisiana changed hands since its settlement?
12423When did it end?
12423When did the Revolution begin?
12423When signed?
12423When was the Declaration adopted?
12423Where did the United States government keep its money?
12423Where have we found Madison prominent before?
12423Where have you already found the ideas expressed in Calhoun''s_ Exposition_?
12423Where is it now?
12423Where is the nation''s money kept to- day?
12423Where was Fort Duquesne?
12423Where was there the greatest density of population?
12423Where were the negotiations for peace carried on?
12423Which country, England, France, or Spain, had the best claim to the Mississippi valley?
12423Which ideas prevail to- day?
12423Which method has always been followed?
12423Which method is followed to- day?
12423Which of these acts was most severe?
12423Which of these favored the North?
12423Which party would you have joined had you lived then?
12423Which side had the greater advantages?
12423Which side really won in the Parson''s Cause?
12423Who had directed the war before?
12423Who should be the Republican standard bearer?
12423Who was Charles Lee?
12423Who was Mrs. Stowe?
12423Who was chosen?
12423Who was elected?
12423Who was finally chosen?
12423Who were nominated?
12423Who were some of the important writers?
12423Who were the Hessians?
12423Who were the candidates for President in 1824?
12423Who were the candidates in 1852?
12423Who were the leading Republican candidates?
12423Who were the leading candidates for the presidency in 1896?
12423Who were the"Mugwumps"?
12423Who won the battle of Bunker Hill?
12423Who would be excluded by the Maryland Toleration Act?
12423Whose business is it to decide on the constitutionality of a law?
12423Why are Lawrence''s words so inspiring?
12423Why are such writs prohibited by the Constitution of the United States?
12423Why are the Hawaiian Islands important to the United States?
12423Why are these steps important?
12423Why could he not carry them out?
12423Why could not Admiral Dewey remain at Hong Kong?
12423Why did Charles and James dislike the growing liberty of the colonies?
12423Why did Chase call this bill"a violation of faith"?
12423Why did Congress determine to attack Canada?
12423Why did Congress give Washington sole direction of the war?
12423Why did Connecticut need a charter when she already had a constitution?
12423Why did Davis advocate war on Northern soil?
12423Why did England wish to conquer New Netherland?
12423Why did General Miles land on the southern coast?
12423Why did Grant impose trust in him?
12423Why did Hamilton want a Bank of the United States?
12423Why did Jackson dislike and distrust the United States Bank?
12423Why did Lincoln inform the governor of South Carolina of his determination to succor Fort Sumter?
12423Why did New Jersey and Delaware oppose the Virginia plan?
12423Why did Texas wish to join the United States?
12423Why did Verrazano explore the northeastern coasts?
12423Why did Washington decline a third term?
12423Why did colonists come to Pennsylvania?
12423Why did he not succeed?
12423Why did money become scarce in the summer of 1893?
12423Why did not Congress have any real power?
12423Why did not the people of New Amsterdam wish to fight the English?
12423Why did people wish to buy Western lands?
12423Why did she not give more assistance?
12423Why did slaveholders feel the need of more slave territory in the Union?
12423Why did so many people live near tide water?
12423Why did the British attack at this point?
12423Why did the British object to the boundary line laid down in the Treaty of 1783?
12423Why did the Connecticut people feel the need of one?
12423Why did the Democrats nominate Greeley?
12423Why did the Dutch East India Company wish a northern route to India?
12423Why did the New Haven settlers found a separate colony?
12423Why did the Pilgrims come to America?
12423Why did the Republicans sympathize with the French Revolution?
12423Why did the Southerners object to the admission of Maine?
12423Why did the capture of the_ Chesapeake_ cause so much delight in England?
12423Why did the colonists refuse to buy the tea?
12423Why did the impeachment fail?
12423Why did the plan fail?
12423Why did the struggle between England and France begin in the Ohio valley?
12423Why did the value of paper money keep changing?
12423Why did"prices go down with a rush"?
12423Why do you select these?
12423Why do you select these?
12423Why do you select these?
12423Why had Washington and Adams paid them?
12423Why had it not been enforced?
12423Why had manufacturing received so little attention before the Revolution?
12423Why had the control of the House passed to the free states?
12423Why had this feeling changed?
12423Why had this led to the separation of the West and the East?
12423Why had this progress been confined mainly to the North?
12423Why is Civil Service Reform so difficult?
12423Why is Sir Edwin Sandys regarded as the founder of free government in the English colonies?
12423Why is he the greatest of all Americans?
12423Why is it called a massacre?
12423Why is it deserved?
12423Why is it memorable?
12423Why is it so important?
12423Why is the Connecticut constitution famous?
12423Why is the education of our people so important?
12423Why is the period covered by this division so important?
12423Why is the right of petition so important?
12423Why is this Ordinance so important?
12423Why is this book so important?
12423Why is this chapter called the"Reign of Andrew Jackson"?
12423Why should disputes as to elections for President go to the House?
12423Why should not steam be used to haul wagons over a railroad?
12423Why should slavery be allowed west of the Mississippi River?
12423Why should the Southerners have felt so strongly about this election?
12423Why should the people have shown loyalty to the states rather than to the United States?
12423Why should the speculator get one dollar for that which had cost him only thirty or forty cents?
12423Why should these petitions be considered as insulting to slaveholders?
12423Why should they not pay a part of the cost of maintaining it?
12423Why these?
12423Why was Blaine so strongly opposed?
12423Why was Cabot''s voyage important?
12423Why was Charleston so difficult to capture?
12423Why was Chattanooga important?
12423Why was France wise to make peace with the United States?
12423Why was Harrison chosen President?
12423Why was Harrison defeated in 1892?
12423Why was Jefferson asked to write the Declaration?
12423Why was Johnson impeached?
12423Why was Lincoln nominated?
12423Why was Lincoln''s death a terrible loss to the South?
12423Why was McClellan placed in command of the Army of the Potomac?
12423Why was Mrs. Hutchinson expelled from Massachusetts?
12423Why was Petersburg important?
12423Why was Washington appointed to chief command?
12423Why was Washington"stiff and aristocratic"?
12423Why was a Navy Department necessary?
12423Why was an attempt for a higher tariff made in 1828?
12423Why was he unpopular?
12423Why was it a failure?
12423Why was it difficult for the government to carry on its business without a bank or a treasury?
12423Why was it fought so bitterly?
12423Why was it important south of this line?
12423Why was it important?
12423Why was it important?
12423Why was it necessary for Lincoln to follow Northern sentiment?
12423Why was it passed?
12423Why was it unsuccessful?
12423Why was its position important?
12423Why was not the North united upon this war?
12423Why was opposition to the nomination of Grant so strong?
12423Why was silver demonetized?
12423Why was slavery no longer of importance north of this line?
12423Why was the Association so important?
12423Why was the Holy Alliance formed?
12423Why was the New World called America and not Columbia?
12423Why was the North growing rich faster than the South?
12423Why was the Shenandoah Valley so important?
12423Why was the appointment of Clay a mistake?
12423Why was the battle so important?
12423Why was the change made in 1850 so important?
12423Why was the colony prosperous?
12423Why was the conquest of Vicksburg so difficult?
12423Why was the destruction of the tea at Boston necessary?
12423Why was the difference so great?
12423Why was the effect of these victories so great?
12423Why was the founding of William and Mary College important?
12423Why was the navy better prepared for war than the army?
12423Why was the question about the territories so important?
12423Why was the scene of action transferred to the South?
12423Why was the slavery contest"irrepressible"?
12423Why was the voyage of the_ Oregon_ important?
12423Why was there a conflict over the clause as to commerce?
12423Why was there a dispute about the election of 1876?
12423Why was there little question whether Oregon would be slave or free?
12423Why was there so much bribery and corruption at this time?
12423Why was there so much confusion in the army?
12423Why was there so much opposition to Grant''s reëlection?
12423Why was there such hesitation in the North?
12423Why was this change so important?
12423Why was this discovery of importance?
12423Why was this doctrine so dangerous?
12423Why were not more soldiers sent to McClellan?
12423Why were the American people on the Atlantic seacoast alarmed?
12423Why were the British attacks directed against these three portions of the country?
12423Why were the Southerners so afraid of any discussion of slavery?
12423Why were the Southerners so alarmed by Nat Turner''s Rebellion?
12423Why were the Spaniards poor neighbors?
12423Why were the Virginians so divided?
12423Why were the elections of 1866 important?
12423Why were the people of South Carolina so opposed to any limitation of slavery?
12423Why were the protective tariffs of no benefit to the Southerners?
12423Why were the seizures of Cairo and Paducah and the battle of Mill Springs important?
12423Why were the soldiers needed after Dewey''s victory?
12423Why were the soldiers stationed at New York?
12423Why were there no executions for treason at the close of the Civil War?
12423Why were there so few large cities in the slave states?
12423Why were there so many loyalists?
12423Why were these views opposed in the North?
12423Why were they passed?
12423Why were they so successful?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423Why?
12423With what result?
12423With what result?
12423Would Washington have accepted the title of king?
12423Would a state be likely to nullify an act of Congress now?
12423Would it not then be fair for the people of the United States as a whole to pay them?
12423Would not this unopposed march show the people of the North, of the South, and of Europe that further resistance was useless?
12423_ b._ What matters occupied the attention of the people?
12423_ b._ What people in the United States would welcome the purchase of Florida?
12423_ b._ What propositions were made by the Hartford Convention?
12423_ b._ What work did the privateers do?
12423_ b._ Why did not this success of the Americans have more effect on the peace negotiations?
12423_ b._ Why is it called the Second War of Independence?
12423_ b._ Why was the news of the treaty so long in reaching Washington?
12423_ c._ What does this section show you as to Jackson''s character?
12423_ c._ What shows the sudden increase in Western migration?
12423_ c._ What was settled by the war?
12423_ c._ Why did Washington issue the Proclamation of Neutrality?
12423_ c._ Why were the free states gaining faster than the slave states?
12423c. What is meant by the statement that"he took possession"of the new land?
12423c. What is sea- power?
12423c. What other band of Spaniards nearly approached Coronado''s men?
12423c. What portions of the world were known to Europeans in 1490?
12423d. What effect did the defeat of Spain have upon_ our_ history?
12423d. What other places were explored by the Spaniards?
12423d. What reason had the Spaniards for attacking the French?
12423voted?
12423voted?
12423§ 106.--What colonies claimed land west of the Alleghany Mountains?
12423§ 273.--_a._ Why was so little advance made at first toward a treaty of peace?
12423§ 274.--_a._ Were the Federalists or the Republicans more truly the national party?
12423§ 280.--_a._ Why was Florida a danger to the United States?
12423§ 333.--How did the Mexicans regard the admission of Texas?
12423§§ 271, 272.--_a._ Why were most of the naval conflicts during the first year of the war?
12423§§ 376, 377.--_a_ Could one state dissolve the Union?
12423§§ 394, 395.--_a_ Why did Lee invade Maryland?
43259A first experiment is everything, who does not wish it success?"
43259Do I, or do I not, owe the Printer?
43259Shall I pay him his small pittance?--Shall he stop his business for want of what I honestly owe him?
43259The consequences of this enterprize who will predict?
38941Ah,said the admiral,"you a Coffin too?"
38941And now?
38941Are they quite full?
38941Are you General Prescott?
38941But, Ben, do you believe in dreams?
38941Certes,thought I,"if it''s none of your business, why do you ask?"
38941Did you ever see Cotton Mather''s''History of New England?'' 38941 Do n''t you see the silvery wave?
38941Do you see yonder cloud that''s almost in shape of a camel?
38941Do you think they will take me in over there?
38941Do you think,he was asked,"that in such a crowd it was the fashion or the desire for instruction which dominated?"
38941Have you,demanded the emperor,"among your officers any one who is acquainted with Ragusa?"
38941How old are you?
38941Is the cool summer injuring your corn?
38941Let him go,growls an old writer;"has not Sir Harry other sons but him?"
38941May I ask your Majesty,said the_ ruse_ old Briton,"if this would be your policy in case the colonies had belonged to you?"
38941Or like a whale?
38941Says Tweed to Till,''What gars ye rin sae still?'' 38941 Shall_ we_ make the signal, sir?"
38941There is, then,I suggested,"something in a name at sea as well as ashore?"
38941Wa''al,said an old fellow, removing a short pipe from between his lips,"you was jest a- cannin''on it up, warn''t ye?"
38941What are we poor fellows going to do when they catch up all the porgees?
38941What constitutes a state? 38941 What do you call him?"
38941What is your authority?
38941What on airth do you want to look at that rock for?
38941Whither bound?
38941Will monseigneur deign to show me his commission?
38941( Do you know, Monsieur de Calonne, that my father is as crazy as ever?)
38941And what has become of the gate- ways of a thousand palaces?
38941And why not?
38941At last West said,''Are you dead, Stuart?''
38941Bright eyes that followed fading ship and crew, Melting in tender rain?"
38941But the fishing, what of that?
38941Do n''t you hear the voice of God?"
38941Does not this sufficiently show that all human power and greatness is in the soul of man?
38941Here, indeed, was the town, but where were the people?
38941History is said to repeat itself, and why may not the whale- fishing?
38941How did Marblehead look in the olden time?
38941How is the historian to follow such a clue?
38941I know''tan''t none o''my business; but what might you be agoin''to Mount Desart arter?"
38941I then asked if those Friends were Jesuits?
38941I then demanded of him and his associates then present if they acknowledged themselves subject to the laws of England?
38941I then said by what law do you put our friends to death?
38941I was not at all surprised when accosted by one who, like me, wandered and wondered, with the question,"Does any body live in Nantucket?"
38941Is it possible, you ask, that such a waste should ever be the cause of heart- burnings, or know the name of bond, mortgage, or warranty?
38941It was after a visit to some such mansion that Daniel Webster asked,"Did those old fellows go to bed in a coach- and- four?"
38941Its roof and tower are of wood, and, being here, what else could it have but a fish for its weather- vane?
38941Met him, did I say?
38941Or have we eaten of the insane root, That takes the reason prisoner?"
38941Or is it, mayhap, a softening of his great, sluggish brain?
38941Peters._"How dare you look into the court to say such a word?"
38941Reader, are you?
38941Shall we be baffled by such a one as this?
38941Supposing this doctrine correct, it becomes an interesting question where the sailors of future navies are to come from?
38941The stranger''s puzzled questioning is often met with,"You know that old house in such a street?"
38941The tradition of the embassy of Alden, and of the incomparably arch rejoinder of Priscilla,"Prythee, John, why do n''t you speak for yourself?"
38941The vaunting, the exasperating mockery of a savage, is in these lines:''Who is there here to fight with the brave Wattawamat?''
38941The word"[ Hudson?]"
38941Turning to the by- standers, he exclaimed:"My maisters whar is your harts?
38941We commiserate the situation of an individual out of business; what shall we, then, say of a town thrown out of employment?
38941What do they say to us?
38941What does he want with it?
38941What if she designed to edify her own family in her own meetings, may none else be present?"
38941What should a sheep see in the ocean?
38941What would now be thought of domiciliary visits like the following?
38941When the captain replied,"I suppose, my lord, Admiral Collingwood will now take upon himself the direction of affairs?"
38941Where is he?"
38941Who cares for them?"
38941Who have passed this way?
38941Why may not the cotton- wood, which propagates itself in the sand on the borders of Western rivers, prove a valuable auxiliary here?
38941Why might they not say to those after- comers,"We are the Jasons; we have won the fleece?"
38941Will it ever come down again?
38941Would not Canonicus have led the white men to the spot, and there recounted the traditions of his people?
38941_ Banquo._"Were such things here as we do speak about?
38941_ Governor._"Who be they?"
38941_ Governor._"Will you, Mr. Coggeshall, say that she did not say so?"
38941he repeated;"why, Joe''s a living man; but where''s his mates?"
38941how dare you go About the town half- dressed and looking so?"
38941if I knew, could I not have all myself?"
38941my fancie, whither wilt thou go?"
32225''Do I understand you, sir? 32225 A share?
32225A sweet Sabbath morning, is it not? 32225 Ah, Brother Levis,"said Rosie coaxingly,"you surely will not be so unkind as to require lessons of us to- morrow?"
32225Ah, Rosie, my bonnie lassie, how can you treat your auld kinsman so ill as to suspect him of murdering the king''s English in that style?
32225Ah, did I do that?
32225Ah, do you really think so, sir?
32225Ah, sir, who is to say he belonged to this part of the world?
32225Ah, what was that, sir?
32225Ah, yes, a rather intimate acquaintance of yours, sir, is he not?
32225Ah?
32225Ai nt I fooled ye nice, now? 32225 And Andrew Jackson was the commanding general?"
32225And I may choose it myself?
32225And begin to feel yourself something of a man, since you are not called Max, but Mr. Raymond at the Academy yonder?
32225And did the Americans chase them that time, sir?
32225And did they do it, sir?
32225And did they go on firing at the fort?
32225And may I too, papa?
32225And oh, papa, may n''t we run about everywhere and look at everything?
32225And our fellows fired back at him, of course?
32225And the more we love him, the more we will try to be like him?
32225And the victory was won then, papa?
32225And this was in the fall of 1814, was it not, captain?
32225And was Gansevoort alone with them, papa?
32225And was that the end of the fight, papa?
32225And were many of them killed, sir?
32225And when then did we get possession of Florida, sir?
32225And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war, and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country should leave us no more? 32225 And where was Butler all this time, sir?"
32225And will you drive over with me, Art?
32225And you are just as willing to let me keep near you, papa?
32225And you have left Max at the Academy again?
32225And you will ask him for both of us, wo n''t you, papa?
32225Are the ladies and girls all gone?
32225Are those lessons ready, daughter?
32225Brother Levis,said Rosie,"you surely are not going to be so unreasonable and tyrannical as to require lessons of us to- day?"
32225But Burgoyne never got there-- to Albany-- until he went as a prisoner; did he, sir?
32225But I suppose there is something to be seen here?
32225But I suppose you will hardly think it necessary to decline the invitation on that account?
32225But did any of our men escape being killed, sir?
32225But sha n''t I drive him out, sir?
32225But then you''ll let him have something to eat, wo n''t you, papa?
32225But to change the subject: when shall we take that delightful trip to New Orleans? 32225 But was n''t there some fighting done there or at Mobile in the Civil War, sir?"
32225But who gained the victory, papa?
32225But, papa, I''ll never be able to learn the lessons before dinner time, and I am hungry now; are you going to make me fast till I recite perfectly?
32225Dartmoor, papa?
32225Did he live to see the end of the war, sir?
32225Did n''t Jackson capture Pensacola at one time during that war with England, Captain?
32225Did n''t you, now?
32225Did the British give it up then, papa?
32225Did the men in the fort give up then, papa?
32225Did they do no fighting at all at the time, sir?
32225Did they let him be mayor again, papa?
32225Did you get leave for him to stay all day, papa?
32225Do I?
32225Do you know her, Art? 32225 Does it?
32225Does my dear eldest daughter deem that a privilege?
32225Especially when enjoyed in such good company, I presume?
32225Firstly, then, are we to have school as usual between this and the time of the wedding?
32225For what?
32225Gracie, my darling, do you not want to go to your bed?
32225Gracie,said Lulu,"how much money have you left?"
32225Had a royal time of it, I suppose?
32225Had he lost many of his men that day, sir?
32225Had not the British made very sure beforehand of being able to take Baltimore, Captain?
32225Has some special good come to you, dear?
32225Have n''t you lessons to say to- day?
32225Here,returned Gracie;"do n''t you see I''ve got her in my arms?
32225Hull, Bainbridge, Porter-- where are they? 32225 I am sure nobody else is,"said Walter;"so please go on, sir, wo n''t you?
32225I have n''t been misbehaving, have I? 32225 I hope he was n''t allowed to do as he pleased about it?"
32225I hope you did n''t stay at home just to hear my lessons, papa?
32225I should think that was a great victory; was it not, Brother Levis?
32225I suppose there was an exchange of prisoners?
32225I, laddie? 32225 In regard to what, daughter?"
32225Including your pupils in the list, I presume, sir?
32225Is anybody else going, papa?
32225Is anything wrong with her?
32225Is it almost as lovely here as at Viamede?
32225Is mamma ready for dinner, Elsie?
32225Is she ill?
32225Is that what is meant in those verses?
32225It happened in the War of 1812, did n''t it?
32225It is, what does the Bible mean by growing in grace?
32225It was attacked by the British, was n''t it, sir?
32225It will be returning good for evil, as the Bible bids us; wo n''t it, papa?
32225Max''s?
32225Maxie dere too, papa?
32225May I not assist you to your room?
32225NOW, papa, if you''re not too tired wo n''t you please tell us about the writing of the''Star- Spangled Banner''?
32225Not a single cent,was the reply in a rather rueful tone;"and I suppose yours is all gone too?"
32225Nothing to be bought for the gentlemen, I suppose?
32225Now, Brother Levis, if you''re not too tired, wo n''t you please go on and tell us all about the taking of New Orleans in the last war?
32225O Virgie, did he die as he had lived?
32225Oh, Mamma Vi, is n''t it just delightful to be at home again?
32225Oh, do you know him, sir?
32225Oh, do you think so?
32225Oh, it is an earthly paradise, is it not, Ned?
32225Oh, may I go and get her some, papa?
32225Oh, papa,exclaimed little Elsie, seated upon her father''s knee,"may n''t I send dem some of my dollies?"
32225Oh, say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming? 32225 Oh, was n''t everybody terribly frightened, papa?"
32225Oh, would papa never give her an opportunity to speak to him?
32225Oh,cried Lu in surprise,"we are at anchor again in the river at Annapolis, are n''t we, papa?"
32225Papa, did you know they could talk?
32225Papa, do you think a dollar will be enough for me to give the Forestis?
32225Papa, is it wrong to wear nice, pretty clothes, and to enjoy having them?
32225Papa, is that the end of your story?
32225Papa, may I?
32225Papa, please may I ask a few questions now, before you leave me?
32225Papa, shall we stop there to- morrow on our way to or from church? 32225 Papa, was n''t he a Christian man?"
32225Papa, what are fascines?
32225Papa,asked Grace at length,"are we to begin lessons to- morrow?"
32225Papa,asked Lulu,"ca n''t we take a little different route going home?"
32225Papa,asked Lulu,"what became of that very star- spangled banner Mr. Key was looking for when he wrote the song?"
32225Papa,said Grace earnestly,"did not God help our cause because we were in the right?"
32225Perhaps some other day, then?
32225Please may n''t I sit on your knee for five or ten minutes?
32225Please, if you have letters to answer, may n''t I write them for you on my typewriter?
32225Possible? 32225 Rather strong, is n''t it?"
32225Regulars, sir?
32225Rosie? 32225 Shall I go too, papa?"
32225So the Americans of course were afraid to reject them?
32225So you want a cracker, do you?
32225Some of the New Orleans people, especially the women, behaved very badly, did they not, captain?
32225Surely it could not be mamma herself?
32225Thank you, papa; you are very kind to say that; but please tell me if you think a dollar will be enough for me?
32225The one great question is,''Do you believe on the Son of God?'' 32225 Then what right had Jackson to suspend it, sir?"
32225Then, as we are all done eating, shall we not go at once, my dear?
32225To help with the shopping? 32225 Waiting for me, love?"
32225Was he an American by birth, Brother Levis?
32225Was n''t it that night it was written?
32225Was n''t it?
32225Was that so, sir?
32225Was the_ Manassas_ one of the eighteen, sir?
32225Was there not a second attack by the British upon Fort Bowyer, Captain?
32225We are in the Gulf now, are n''t we, sir?
32225We are nearing there now, are we not, my dear?
32225We will pass near enough to Forts Gaines and Morgan to get a view of them-- the outside at least-- will we not, Captain?
32225Well, daughter, has the rest of the Sabbath made you ready for work in the school- room again?
32225Well, what shall we do this afternoon?
32225Were any of the British killed, sir?
32225Were both Americans and British playing their national airs while the fight was going on, sir?
32225Were not the British rather more successful in another part of the field, Captain?
32225Were they frightened and bribed into doing what the British wished, sir?
32225Were you indeed, papa? 32225 Wha-- wha-- wha dat raskil done gone?"
32225Whar dat fellah dun gone?
32225What about, papa dear?
32225What is it, daughter?
32225What is it?
32225What is that, Max?
32225What is that, papa?
32225What is the matter?
32225What now, Raymond?
32225What was it you saw yonder in that bush, Bill?
32225What was it, papa? 32225 What was that for, papa?"
32225What will papa do and say to me?
32225What would mamma say if we failed to bring you? 32225 What would you take for him, sir?"
32225When is it to be? 32225 Where was Porter just then, sir?"
32225Who has a better right than her husband to bestow caresses upon a beautiful and attractive woman?
32225Who is to be married, Elsie?
32225Who more likely than Dick Percival?
32225Who told you, Max, that your father had been a good officer?
32225Why, how was that, Bill?
32225Why, what is the matter?
32225Why, where is he? 32225 Why, who on earth can be going to be married?"
32225Will I do, my dear?
32225Will you give us some music, mother?
32225Will you take it to him and ask him to please read it?
32225Would you, indeed, my dear child?
32225Yes, my boy,was the pleasant toned reply;"and are there any places along its coast that you or any of the others would particularly like to see?"
32225Yes, papa,she returned, putting her arms round his neck and her lips to his in an ardent kiss;"and are you and all the rest?"
32225Yes, papa,she said softly,"I will ask God to help me to do so; and you will pray for me too, wo n''t you?"
32225Yes, sir,said Walter;"but will you please tell what became of Hon- Yost?"
32225Yes, sir; and must I say good- night now to you?
32225Yes,he replied with an amused look;"that is number one, and how many are to follow?"
32225Yes,he said; then turning to Grandma Elsie, asked,"Mother, would you like to stop and visit the forts?"
32225Yes; but do n''t you think it would be well to get some assistance from the rest of us in making your choice?
32225You are going with us, mamma?
32225You have not been to tea?
32225You love him, then?
32225You mean that you would simply give a home here to your cousins?
32225''Well, I suppose you want to hear about that New Orleans affair?''
32225Ah, Christine and Alma,"as the two came hurrying out to greet the returned travellers,"I hope you are well?
32225Ah, Ned, is not that our own orange orchard just coming into view?"
32225And how did my little girl sleep?"
32225And so your cousin, Miss Johnson, is going to be married?"
32225And what is it to have faith toward our Lord Jesus Christ?
32225And where''s your kitten?"
32225And you''ll take Gracie too if she wants to go, wo n''t you?"
32225And-- Oh, Grandma Elsie, you and mamma will help me to think what will be best to get for them, wo n''t you?"
32225Are we here by your consent?
32225Are ye no ashamed to so falsely accuse an auld friend who wad never do harm to you or yours?"
32225But I almost always sleep well, and that is something to be thankful for, is n''t it?"
32225But do tell me, will we pass near enough to Mobile to see those forts?"
32225But oh, might it not be something that would be over before the rest of the family should come home from their drive?
32225But we ca n''t love him so dearly without loving one another; can we?"
32225But you are not going to remain on deck till then?"
32225But,"with another sweeping glance from side to side,"we''re certainly anchored; and where?
32225Butler asked,''Why not?''
32225Ca n''t you, papa?"
32225Can you not send a servant here with a plateful of your most toothsome viands?"
32225Could it have passed around the vessel?
32225Do n''t we, girls?"
32225Do n''t you, Eva and Lu?"
32225Do not you?"
32225Do not you?"
32225Do you approve, papa?"
32225Do you, Lu?"
32225Does it mean the dear Lord Jesus, papa?"
32225Evelyn?
32225Gospel means good news, and what could be better news than that?
32225Have you opened your arms and bid us welcome?
32225How did we get here?
32225How much ought I to give, papa?
32225How soon do we leave Annapolis to pursue our homeward way?"
32225I ca n''t mourn his loss; how could I?
32225I suppose the sooner the better, that we may not be too much hurried with the necessary dressmaking?"
32225If not, why are we here?
32225Just get in here with us, you two, will you not?
32225Lilburn?"
32225Lulu adding,"Papa, are you quite, quite sure you can really spare all this without being-- embarrassed?"
32225Lulu, sitting beside her father, asked in a low aside,"Papa, may I buy a handsome present for Cousin Betty?
32225Lulu?
32225May I take my place alongside of you, Miss Leland?
32225Mildred Keith-- Mrs. Dr. Landreth?
32225Morgan is the name?"
32225Now what else?"
32225Now, what is meant by repentance toward God?
32225Perhaps you would prefer to ride your pony?"
32225Please treat us to some of them to- night, and let us have all before we visit their scenes, wo n''t you?"
32225Shall we establish ourselves there?"
32225Shall we take the babies along?"
32225She has fainted, has she not?"
32225Some folks in papa''s place would have made me fast till my lessons were learned; but he''s such a good, kind father; is n''t he?"
32225The bairns Rosie and Walter, too, are not here; what''s become o''them a'', laddie?
32225The friends and relatives will all be here for some time, mother?"
32225The others exchanged glances of astonishment; then Ella asked in low, terrified tones,"O Art, is she-- is she dead?
32225The view here is lovely, is it not, papa?"
32225Then, with an earnest look into the captain''s face, his own flushing hotly,"You, sare, ish de fader off Mees Lu Raymond?"
32225They too were invited, of course?
32225They''re no ill, I hope?"
32225Were there very many of them killed, papa?"
32225What did he order the people, or the soldiers, to do?"
32225What do you say, girls?"
32225What would I ken o''the folk i''this part o''the world?"
32225Who can have told her?
32225Who was he, Brother Levis?"
32225Will you forgive her and love her still?"
32225Would you, or would you not, expel us if you could?
32225You are not displeased with me, are you?"
32225You know me, dear cousin?
32225You remember what happened there at that time?"
32225and what of that, little sister?"
32225and wo n''t you please do so now?"
32225asked Calhoun;"what does she say?"
32225but why did they never do it before?"
32225called Polly from the sitting room,"what you''bout?
32225cried the boy, ready to dance with delight;"but may I go back to my room for a moment first?
32225exclaimed Adelaide and Calhoun in a breath; for both were standing near;"can it be?"
32225exclaimed Lulu, her eyes flashing;"I hope they did n''t escape punishment for such an outrage as that?"
32225exclaimed Lulu,"were they really frightened in the same way?"
32225he called; then catching sight of the note in her hand,"What oo dot?"
32225inquired Mr. Lilburn gravely,"and would you do me the favor to point him out?"
32225meaning all they might want to use?
32225that God offers us salvation of his free, unmerited grace?
32225the''and so forth''I suppose, meaning milk, cream, butter, and eggs?"
32225what''s that?"
43776Chetopa?
43776after 1854; name possibly a personal one?
43884Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
35529Ah, would n''t they?
35529Ah, your honour,she said,"would you not be giving me something for my poor sister here?
35529Ah-- so it is the big stones you would be after?
35529All right,I agreed; and then, as an afterthought,"How much will you charge?"
35529All the year round?
35529Am I trespassing?
35529And does that make me think any the less of you? 35529 And will ye have coffee or tay, miss?"
35529And would you be comin''all this way just to see the big stones?
35529Are n''t there many riots next day?
35529Are there really some?
35529Are you interested in the butter business?
35529Banshees is it? 35529 Black törn?"
35529Built by the government?
35529But does n''t it grow wild?
35529But how can they live on that?
35529But where do you get enough police?
35529But where hast thou left thy followers?
35529But why is it, then, Ulster is so frightened?
35529But why?
35529But you have seen cowboys?
35529But you were born in Ireland?
35529Ca n''t do it?
35529Can we get lunch?
35529Can you spell it?
35529Can you tell me how to get to the cromlechs?
35529Can you tell me, sir, if this is the train to Derry?
35529Did I understand you to say,he asked,"that the elections all over your country are held on the same day?"
35529Did the Saint let him go?
35529Did they come true?
35529Did you see the underground passages?
35529Do n''t know?
35529Do n''t you know where the hotel is?
35529Do n''t you remember the song about Willy Reilly and his dear cruiskeen lawn?
35529Do you ever see any ghosts?
35529Do you see them marks? 35529 Do you suppose I''d go away now, without kissing it?
35529Enough police?
35529From America?
35529Ghosts? 35529 Give for a king?"
35529Give up smoking?
35529Have you been away long?
35529Have you been to the abbey?
35529Have you ever been there?
35529Have you heard Timothy Sullivan''s''Song from the Backwoods''?
35529Have you people hereabouts?
35529How about this army of Ulster the papers are so full of?
35529How can you prove that?
35529How did you happen to stay in Ireland?
35529How did you know?
35529How do I start?
35529How do we get to it?
35529How do you like living in the old castle?
35529How far is it?
35529How far is it?
35529How is all this to be brought about?
35529How much land would it take to give grass to the cow?
35529How much will you charge an hour?
35529How, I''d like to know? 35529 I suppose ale is still to be obtained at the''Three Jolly Pigeons''?"
35529In what way?
35529Indians? 35529 Is it a car your honour would be wantin''?"
35529Is it ready?
35529Is it so? 35529 Is n''t the room all right?"
35529Is that the counsel of you all to me?
35529Is this it?
35529Is yon one your wife?
35529It is a fine day, is n''t it?
35529It''s up this way, is n''t it?
35529Kiss the Blarney stone?
35529Land purchase, is it?
35529Nor hear any banshees?
35529Nothing like it?
35529Of course you know''To the Dead of Ninety- eight''?
35529On the war- path?
35529Or in the condensed milk business??
35529Or in the condensed milk business??
35529Something to his discredit?
35529Sure, there''s nothing I can do, miss,said the jarvey, who had listened sympathetically;"I ca n''t make the car any longer, now can I?
35529Tell me, miss,he said, at last,"is them your own teeth you''ve got?"
35529That''s not far, is it?
35529That_ is_ Sackville Street, is n''t it?
35529The bogs are very wet this year, are they not?
35529The cromlechs? 35529 The stones are near here, are n''t they?"
35529Then it''s less than two miles?
35529There''s no work in winter, so how can one be payin''wages then?
35529They are, sir; and why should one bother washin''them when they get dirty again right away? 35529 They''re brave lads, are n''t they?"
35529Tricker?
35529Unprofitably gay?
35529Was there a man stopped you?
35529Well, what, for instance?
35529Well, why on earth did n''t you say so?
35529Well,he said, as I sat down mopping my face, for I had covered three miles in half an hour,"did you see the fort?"
35529What about?
35529What are you going to do?
35529What are you going to do?
35529What can we have?
35529What do the labourers do then?
35529What do you suppose is the matter?
35529What do you think of that, anyway, sir?
35529What does cruiskeen lawn mean?
35529What happened to the thief?
35529What is a senator?
35529What is it they''re saying?
35529What is it? 35529 What is that you have in your hand, sir?"
35529What is the fare?
35529What is the fare?
35529What name was it you gave this street, sir?
35529What wages does a labourer make?
35529What would you pay, now?
35529What''s the matter?
35529What,I said;"not married?"
35529Where be you going?
35529Where did you pick up all that patter?
35529Where is it you''d be wantin''to go, sir?
35529Where is the bed?
35529Where would they go? 35529 Where would you be from?"
35529Where_ is_ O''Connell Street?
35529Who the devil are you?
35529Why do n''t they go away?
35529Why do n''t you make three wishes yourself?
35529Why do n''t you take a leaf from Lloyd George''s book? 35529 Why do they stay here?"
35529Why not go up with me now?
35529Why should we Catholics interfere wid them?
35529Why, have you seen them?
35529Why?
35529Will you be wantin''a pilot, sir?
35529Would you be telling me,he gasped,"that your millionaires, your men of vast properties, have no more votes than the poor man?"
35529Would you mind doing it again, so that we can see just how it is done?
35529Would your honour be wantin''a car?
35529You are a Nationalist, I suppose?
35529You do n''t foresee a roseate future, then?
35529You would be from America? 35529 You''re not a native of these parts?"
35529A berry or a fruit?"
35529And where is the beauty that once was thine?
35529Are the Rules as to this book observed?
35529Are they all over seventy?
35529Besides, if everybody owned land, where would we be gettin''labour to work it?
35529But how does it come that any one lives in these hills, where life is such a constant and heartrending struggle?
35529But what can the farmers do?
35529By raisin''taxes?
35529Can not the clargy be Irishmen too?"
35529Can you tell me how to get to them?"
35529Did he give you the key?"
35529Do you know his''Ode to Ireland''?"
35529Do you know the poem?
35529Do you know where it is?"
35529Do you mean to say you have never seen the Sheela- na- gig, nor read that line about Wilo Wisp and Jack the Printer?"
35529Do you see that hill yonder?"
35529Drilling and arming?
35529Every evening Betty would have a colloquy with the maid, which ran something like this:"What will ye be wantin''for breakfast, miss?"
35529For how could such beauty be unprofitable?
35529For whom was it built?
35529From what ragged pocket had it fallen, we wondered?
35529Have you a car?"
35529Have you ever heard of"Silken Thomas,"tenth Earl of Kildare?
35529Have you examined the Religious Instruction Certificate Book?
35529Home Rule will make no difference-- how can it?
35529How do you manage it in America?"
35529How great a tragedy would its loss represent?
35529How many of them died, I wondered, and how had she herself managed to survive the awful years which followed?
35529How many of us, I wonder, would be too proud to beg if we could find no work to do, and our backs were bare and our stomachs empty?
35529How much farther is the hotel?"
35529Is n''t it the same in America?"
35529Is the school_ bona fide_ open to pupils of all denominations?
35529It is still so in Ireland, as Lesson Eight will show: Is it a dog?
35529It was Lady Morgan who celebrated Kate''s charms in the ingenuous verses beginning, Oh, did you not hear of Kate Kearney?
35529My principal objection to this is that it is nonsense: how, for example, if the dog was in the box, could it have been also in the mud?
35529Now how old am I?''
35529O, where are the princes and nobles that sate At the feast in thy halls, and drank the red wine?
35529Oh, wo n''t you come up, come all the way up, Come all the way up to Limerick?
35529Once the Bishop looked grave at your jest, Till this remark set him off wid the rest:"Is it lave gaiety All to the laity?
35529Ruins?
35529Seein''they''re no manner of use and cost a lot of money, who else could have built them?"
35529Sure, have n''t I seen them before this treatin''a small fight at the corner as though it was a revolution?
35529The bones do be workin''up to the surface all the time-- and how can that be helped, I should like to know?
35529The cause of this decay?
35529Was he sad or glad Who knew to carve in such a fashion?
35529Was the fox in a box?
35529We get along very well together, and why should n''t we?
35529We will need strong arms at the helm, and what do we care what their religion may be, if only they''re good men and true?
35529Well then, what is it the Ulster men are afraid of?
35529What did Catholic emancipation mean to me and thousands like me?
35529What do you think of that now?"
35529What do you think of that?"
35529What is a man to do against such ignorance as that?
35529What is man?"
35529What might that be?"
35529What''s that?"
35529What, then, are we to believe?
35529When you ask the man at the station,"Is this the train for So- and- so?"
35529Where, O, Kincora?
35529Wherefore sea- severed, long leagues apart?"
35529Who was he?
35529Why is the north energetic and prosperous, while the south is lazy and poverty- stricken?
35529Why should I spoil his dream?
35529Will you not come in and sit a spell?"
35529Would your honour be trying it, now, if I would get my blueing bag?"
35529You are from America, I''m thinking?"
35529You know Glengarriff?
35529You''re a Protestant, I take it, sir?"
35529centre of my longings, Country of my fathers, home of my heart, Overseas you call me,"Why an exile from me?
42398Are there no marks by which you might know her?
42398Are you sure?
42398But what can we do?
42398Did you ever sing to her?
42398How far is it to Dawson?
42398Was there no old hymn that she was fond of?
42398Where are you going?
42398Who are you?
42398Who will go with me?
42398Why do they send wild young men to treat for peace with old powers? 42398 A senator had said of that territory,What is the character of this country?
42398As she turned away, disconsolate, Colonel Boquet said to her,"Ca n''t you find your daughter?"
42398But what then?
42398Do you see that tall ship in the bay flying a blue flag?"
42398He had just reached a point of safety when he heard a man behind him call out,"Good God, captain, what shall I do?"
42398I ask you if you think it just, first to violate our neutrality and then to leave us to be destroyed or pay for your aggressions?"
42398The little boy cried,"Where is our house, mother?"
42398The officer asked,"Are you ready to surrender, and trust to the mercy of the government?"
42398Voices answered,"We want to see Mr. Lovejoy; is he in?"
42398What can we ever hope to do with the western coast, a coast of three thousand miles, rock- bound, cheerless, and uninviting, and not a harbor on it?
42398What use have we for such a country?"
42398Where shall I go?
42842And what do you think the fisherman found? 42842 The listening guests were greatly mystified, None more so than the rector, who replied:''Marry you?
42842Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?
42842''But what of my lady?''
42842Can this be Martha Hilton?
42842His dim vision not discerning it, he shouted,"Where away?
42842Samuel Adams Drake tells of asking the momentous question of a Maine fisherman getting up his sail on the Penobscot:"Whither bound?"
42842The impatient Governor cried:''This is the lady; do you hesitate?
42842Yes, that were a pleasant task, Your Excellency; but to whom?
42220Do n''t you think this failure was due to too much bookkeeping?
42220Do you think it needed a flaming poster effect to secure reading of that column? 42220 Do you want me naked or will you give me time to put on my duds?"
42220How does he act when you do have the meals ready?
42220Need I tell you how bravely and how well the army of the Union settled these questions? 42220 Shall we ask: Did the work prosper?
42220About the third day he came into the office and took Mr. McCabe to the lodge room above and wrote:''What will they do to me if I talk?''
42220Another question may arise"is it practical?"
42220Being assured that he would not be harmed and to the astonishment of the boss he reached out his hand and exclaimed,''How are you, Bob?''
42220Can you not bring forward some man besides Preston?
42220Finally he took from his pocket a slip of dirty paper and wrote on it''do n''t you need some help?''
42220Forests of giant trees have come and gone over them, how many times?
42220Had Shepherd sold this cabin to Hull after having driven Stone across the river?
42220Harlan was asked on his return to the county seat, minus his prisoner,"Why did n''t you take Bill when you had him?"
42220Has it been changed in fourteen hundred or in six thousand years?
42220His enterprises were not always successful ones, whose are?
42220If man once existed here, why may he not have always existed here?
42220Leverich said,"Ai n''t you afraid of me?"
42220The pure water which gushes from a spring on the hillsides, who can trace?
42220Then he asked,"Is Harper here?"
42220There were big posters, beginning with the couplet"O, dinna ye hear the slogan, boys?
42220Thompson looked up and inquired,"Why so, Colonel?"
42220Under these circumstances what policy does it become us to adopt?
42220What great eulogy can we pronounce upon them?
42220What is it these men, about whom we have been writing, have done?
42220What is manufactured in Cedar Rapids?
42220What of their age?
42220What of their history?
42220What of their life?
42220Who knows?
42220Who made the history of Iowa during that great struggle of our nation''s life?
42220Why must I, who have always tried to do my duty, go to hell?''
41799Are you sure of that?
41799Certainly I can,replied Donaldson,"what shall the new name be?"
41799Does the plan which you have mentioned, of breaking up the roads, apply to gravel roads, or only to those roads composed of hard stones? 41799 How does it come,"further queried the Governor,"that all you copperheads are for Bunting?"
41799I am as hard as my name,said Breakiron,"and what is your name?"
41799What do you want?
41799What then is it?
41799When?
41799Why did n''t you tell me that last night?
41799And to the inquiry,''What is the water boiled down for, Uncle Isaac?''
41799And where were they all now?"
41799By his amendment he proposes what?
41799D.) Page 105.--"How deep do you go in lifting the roads?
41799If so, how?
41799May I request such information as is within your reach on this subject?
41799POINTS RAISED BEFORE THE COMMITTING MAGISTRATE: Quere.--Can bail be given on any other species of property than real estate?
41799Pray have you had a severe winter below?
41799Quere.--Are not these persons indemnified?
41799Quere.--The order is that two sureties in$ 25,000 each should be furnished-- will any other members be taken?
41799Suppose the same count had charged the accused with robbing, stealing and taking?
41799The simple question, then, was this: Are roads necessary to carry the mail?
41799Was it not our duty to lend a helping hand to encourage, to cheer, and to sustain them in their noble and patriotic efforts?
41799Was it possible that an American statesman could, at this time of day, urge such an argument?
41799What a change?
41799What power of this government was the sedition law intended to carry into effect?
41799What would the brave freemen of this country say to the men who would deny them roads to travel on, lest the enemy might take them from us in war?
41799Who can question the allegation that it is an immensely important national work?
41799Who, then, can doubt its nationality?
41799Would it be policy to recognize them as witnesses on the part of the United States?
41799_ Who can reconcile it to his conscience and his constituents to permit it to go to destruction?_[ Illustration: ROAD WAGON] CHAPTER XVI.
32103Ah, but having been born your child, how can I help it?
32103Ah, do n''t you wish you had?
32103Ah, is courting me such hard work?
32103Ah? 32103 Ah?
32103And Chester has n''t recovered entirely?
32103And I may guess who that is, may I, dearest?
32103And are you willing now to let me be the captain''s daughter?
32103And do n''t you know that having adopted this as my country, I now consider it as truly my ain banner as it is yours?
32103And is that all the story about him?
32103And it will be a delight to get home once more, wo n''t it?
32103And mine is just the same, is it not, papa?
32103And shall we learn lessons in them in school time, papa?
32103And that being the case you are willing to be one of them, Cousin Annis, are you not?
32103And that is the case with you now, is it?
32103And to- night will be Christmas Eve, wo n''t it, papa?
32103And were both highly elated over the happy augury?
32103And what are your directions to me, Captain Raymond? 32103 And when did we get it, grandma?"
32103And when you have Cousin Bob added to all the rest, how do you suppose you are going to stand it?
32103And where are you going in this_ Dolphin_?
32103And who are you and your girl?
32103And you love Max?
32103And you love mamma, too?
32103And you mean to do it?
32103And you prefer it to Viamede?
32103And you will see to it that he does so, Cousin Arthur?
32103And you would n''t want to be a bag of bones, would you?
32103And your experience on shipboard has accustomed you to late hours, I suppose?
32103And, Grandma Elsie, can not you find some use for the stay- at- homes?
32103Annis,she said, turning to her cousin,"can not you and Cousin Ronald go with us?
32103Are n''t Elsie and I to help read them, papa?
32103Are we going in our yacht, papa?
32103Are we? 32103 Are you expecting to take a trip?"
32103Are you very weary, dearest?
32103As to the wedding- dress question-- suppose we send to New Orleans for samples, let Sidney choose from them and order the quantity she wants?
32103Aunt?
32103Brother Max,he queried,"wo n''t you ever have to obey papa any more?"
32103But Frank can be spared from his, I suppose?
32103But de Lawd''s chillens got to be good, mistiss, ai nt dey?
32103But might not you grow tired-- having so much of it?
32103But since we are neighbors and distant connections, and my brother engaged to Miss Lu, you do not absolutely forbid me your house, captain?
32103But the case is not thought to be hopeless?
32103But what has become of those tramps-- the merry men who were going to claim a share of this feast?
32103But when Ucita heard that Ortiz was gone, what did he do about it?
32103But why is Christ called our passover? 32103 But you do n''t think the dear child cares at all for him?"
32103By the way, did Robert Johnson''s bit of news make my daughter and her lover a trifle jealous that their engagement must be so long a one?
32103Ca n''t we send presents to brother Max, papa?
32103Can I have a moment''s chat with you, captain?
32103Can we go all the way in the_ Dolphin_, papa?
32103Can you repeat it for us?
32103Christians, mamma? 32103 Cousin Ronald and brother Max, ca n''t we have some fun there to- day, as well as at the wedding time?"
32103Cousin Ronald, ca n''t you make some fun for us?
32103Did Mocoso stay long? 32103 Did Narvaez do very bad things to the poor Indians, mamma?"
32103Did he and his men stay there in that beautiful valley, Lu?
32103Did he kill her for it?
32103Did it sound like my voice?
32103Did n''t things go off to suit you to- day?
32103Did you ever hear the story of what Emily Geiger did for the good cause?
32103Did you not hear at the time of the marriage of Dr. Johnson''s sister that a ventriloquist was present and made rare sport for the guests?
32103Do n''t you think it would make a pretty wedding, Cousin Vi?
32103Do they intend to go to housekeeping?
32103Do you think the Lord Jesus takes notice that we love him and want to do as he tells us?
32103Do you?
32103Fun, Neddie? 32103 Grace is not up yet?"
32103Grandma, did n''t he and his soldiers camp in the swamps a good deal of the time?
32103Grandma, will it be disturbing if I talk to you and ask some questions?
32103Had Ucita''s mother done anything to Narvaez to make him treat her so?
32103Had they good houses to live in, grandma?
32103Had we not better retrace our steps to the house now?
32103Have not you some preparations to make also, Elsie?
32103Have you forgotten, or do n''t you know yet, how dearly that same little girl loves to be with you?
32103He deserved it for killing Almagro, did n''t he, grandma?
32103He was sometimes called''The swamp Fox,''was he not, papa?
32103His own?
32103How could I help it?
32103How soon are we going, papa?
32103How soon will the_ Dolphin_ be ready, papa?
32103I do not mean to be either, papa,she returned;"and I may always consult you about it, may I not?"
32103I hope they have not been too exacting in their entreaties for such amusement?
32103I hope you will not object, Lu?
32103I presume you have sent or will promptly send word to Frank that his sister is about to marry?
32103I suppose by this time he knows how to manage a vessel almost as well as you do, papa?
32103I think I must have missed one of your letters, father,said Max;"for surely you did not intend to keep me in ignorance of all this?"
32103In regard to what?
32103Is it not lovely?
32103Is it you talking, Cousin Ronald, or is it brother Max?
32103Is n''t that rather insulting, madam?
32103Is that all, grandma?
32103Is that so, Polly? 32103 Is that so, cousin?"
32103It is on an island, is it not?
32103Lutherans?
32103My dear, does it not make you tremble with apprehension lest those two weddings should take place somewhat sooner than you wish?
32103Neddie, shall I help you? 32103 No matter which, laddie,"said the old gentleman;"and who shall say it has n''t been both of us?"
32103No, dear,was the smiling reply,"but what is it that you wish to hear from me?"
32103No, ma''am; wo n''t you please tell it?
32103Nor did I,said a rough man''s voice,"What are you doing here, you young rascal?
32103Now, Cousin Ronald,he exclaimed, turning to Mr. Lilburn,"do n''t you think it is the very prettiest flag that floats?"
32103Now, Ned, do you call that polite?
32103Of course; who''s afraid?
32103Oh, Cousin Ronald,exclaimed Elsie,"ca n''t you make some fun at the wedding, as you did when Cousin Betty was married?
32103Oh, Dick, dear fellow, are you still unable to move about?
32103Oh, Lu,said Grace as she pulled down her hair before the glass,"have n''t we the best and dearest father in the world?
32103Oh, are you?
32103Oh, by the way, why should n''t we have a triple wedding?
32103Oh, do you, brother Max?
32103Oh, doctah, sah, is you bad hurted?
32103Oh, is he very ill?
32103Oh, what was that?
32103Oh,cried Ned,"wo n''t they catch that fellow who just ran round to the kitchen as I told him to?"
32103Papa, am I so very fat?
32103Papa, ca n''t we keep right on now to Florida?
32103Papa,said Elsie,"it''s a dreadful place, and very, very old, is n''t it?"
32103Saved your life, Lu? 32103 Shall I go and tell Max and Lu that you are ready?"
32103Shall we join the others in the parlor now? 32103 Should n''t you?"
32103So since that she has been a part of our Union like the rest of our States; has n''t she, grandma?
32103That bird you are eating looks good,said the same voice;"could n''t you spare me a leg?"
32103That means the winter time, I suppose?
32103The three of us, Harold? 32103 Then the fighting stopped, I suppose?"
32103Then we wo n''t stop at all of them, I suppose,remarked Ned sagely;"only at the big ones, wo n''t we, papa?"
32103There will still be a vacant seat,said Grandma Elsie,"will you not go with us also, Grace?
32103To stay long?
32103Wait a minute and tell us who you are before you go,called out Eric Leland, and from the tree came the owl''s"Who, who, who?"
32103Was it you did that, brother Max?
32103Was n''t Jacksonville formerly known by another name, captain?
32103We will call at Jacksonville, I suppose, father?
32103Well, and what of that, youngster? 32103 Were you ever there, papa?"
32103What do you say to going North with us, if Captain Raymond should give you and Maud an invitation to take passage in his yacht?
32103What do you say, captain, to taking your family down there for a few weeks?
32103What do you think of Maud''s proposition, Eva?
32103What do you want from Santa Claus, papa?
32103What is it, Harold?
32103What is it, papa?
32103What is it?
32103What is wanted?
32103What''s the matter with you, Frank?
32103Where are Elsie and Ned?
32103Who I am?
32103Who is it, papa?
32103Who, who, who?
32103Why do n''t you look and see?
32103Why not ask Max instead of me?
32103Why, Lu, what could it have been?
32103Why, do n''t you know me?
32103Why, it''s real, is n''t it?
32103Why, son, have I ever done that?
32103Why, where is the bird?
32103Why-- why, Max, what do you mean by calling me that?
32103Will Chester be over here this morning, Lu?
32103Will that be enough, do you think?
32103Will you go in first, father? 32103 Will you take us in the yacht, my dear?"
32103Wo n''t you take me along?
32103Wo n''t you take this other one by her side, my love? 32103 Won''you pray de good Lawd for dis ole darky, mistiss?"
32103Would n''t you be willing to make haste quickly in this instance, dearest?
32103Yes, daughter dear, but do you expect to escape entirely from that last when you marry?
32103Yes, mamma, and you will join us, will you not? 32103 Yes, papa; was n''t it odd that Eva and I happened to catch it together?"
32103Yes,said his father, then asked,"Are you well up in the history of Florida, my son?"
32103Yes; what do you suppose they contain?
32103Yes? 32103 Yet what?"
32103You are satisfied with me, father?
32103You do not think Aunt Silvy really a dying woman, Harold?
32103You have hardly sent out your invitations yet?
32103You remember the anger of the burglar whom you and I testified against some years ago, and his threat to be revenged on me?
32103You think it takes the two of us, do you?
32103You will let us go, papa, wo n''t you?
32103''Are there no other lands to be robbed, no other people to be made miserable?
32103''Surely, general,''he said,''this can not be your ordinary fare?''
32103''Why do you still remain in my country?''
32103About how long ago was that?"
32103Addressing him, Ferguson said,''You are Colonel Horry, I presume, sir?''
32103Am I not that still as truly as I ever was?"
32103And he attacked you?"
32103And he has told you of it?"
32103And shall I call you Max, as of old?"
32103And she wo n''t consent?"
32103And you too, brother Levis?"
32103And you will not even allow her to enter into an engagement?"
32103And, Lu, how soon do you expect to follow suit and give her the right to call you sister?"
32103Are we all angels to- day?"
32103Are you not afraid, Chester,"turning to him,"that one of these days she may prove too independent for you?"
32103As she ceased, Cousin Ronald, who had drawn near, joined in the exercise, repeating the text,"''What shall we say then?
32103At that a loud guffaw right at his ear made the little boy jump with an outcry,"Oh, who was that?"
32103But can you hold that relationship to my father and to me at the same time?"
32103But have they no children?"
32103But how shall we manage it?
32103But that''s martial music, and now,"as another sound met the ear,"do n''t you hear the tramp, tramp?"
32103But what will you and Elsie do while we older people are shopping?"
32103But who or what can have called them out?"
32103But,"she added thoughtfully,"there are several sounds going on at once; could he make them all, do you think?"
32103By the way, your father has a good deal of taste in the line of ladies''dress, has he not?"
32103Ca n''t we help him out?"
32103Can you give me a text that teaches it, Chester?"
32103Did Marion live long after the war was over?"
32103Do n''t you think so, brother Max?"
32103Do n''t you think so?"
32103Do n''t you?"
32103Do you all like the plan?"
32103Do you remember, Elsie, what they called it, and what they did there?"
32103Do you, Elsie and Ned, want to be of the party?"
32103Do you?"
32103Does anybody feel inclined to go there and attend to the matter?"
32103Dr. Percival,"turning in his host''s direction and raising his voice,"can you account for that martial music playing a moment since?"
32103Grandma Elsie paused as if she had finished her narration and Ned exclaimed,"Oh, that is n''t all, grandma, is it?"
32103Has anything happened?
32103Have we not been careful to bring along with us one of the very physicians who have had charge of Chester''s case?"
32103Have you and Grace decided upon any particular articles that you would like to give?"
32103Have you not yet forgiven that act of indiscretion?"
32103I hope that does not mean that these are not happy days?"
32103I think I shall accept his and Vi''s invitation to stay to that meal; as you will, will you not?"
32103I trust Chester is inclined to wait patiently until the right time comes?"
32103I''m falsely accused and who knows but they may shoot me down on sight?"
32103I''se in pow''ful big hurry to git dem dere fore----""Here,"called the voice of Harold from an upper window;"is it I that am wanted?
32103Is any one ill there?"
32103Is n''t it, Lu?"
32103Is that not so, papa?"
32103It is a very modest request,"was the kindly- toned response,"What can I do for you?"
32103It was a pretty one; was n''t it?
32103It''s Grace Raymond you''re after, eh?
32103Jesus said,''Are not two sparrows sold for a farthing?
32103Motte''s?"
32103Oh, Elsie, are n''t you glad?"
32103Oh, how could I ever have borne that?"
32103Oh, papa, may I open it?"
32103Please, sah, where de doctahs?
32103Shall I lift the lid for you?"
32103Shall I never, never escape?"
32103Shall we continue in sin that grace may abound?...
32103Shall we sin because we are not under the law, but under grace?
32103She complained of misery in her head, misery in her back, and being"pow''ful weak,"finishing up with the query,"Is I gwine die dis day, suh?"
32103She rose and went to him, asking in kindly inquiring tone,"What is it, Uncle Joe?"
32103Sisters Lu and Gracie too?"
32103The captain paused in his narrative and Elsie asked,"Then did the Spaniards let the Indians have their own country in peace, papa?"
32103Then Elsie asked:"Are you going too, mamma?
32103Then turning to Lucilla:"You will tell us the story of the Princess Xualla, will you not?"
32103They were silent for a moment, then she asked,"Where are we now, papa?
32103Violet answered,"What is it, mother?"
32103Was it you, Cousin Ronald?
32103Was n''t it at that feast that he instituted what we call the Lord''s Supper?"
32103What Christians?"
32103What could have exceeded the kindness of Cousins Harold and Herbert-- Cousin Arthur Conly, too-- when you were so ill?
32103What do you think of it, my boy?"
32103What would you like it to be?"
32103Will you please tell us why it was kept and why they called it that?"
32103Would there be any objection to having''Old Glory''set waving from the tree tops to- day?"
32103and did they harm him, mamma?"
32103and how did you come in here?"
32103and to what port bound as the first?"
32103and what but his love for you makes him so unwilling to give you up to Chester?
32103and will you let Max tell them of his good fortune?
32103are n''t you glad?"
32103are you willing to eat of a fowl that can scream out so much like a human creature?"
32103but may n''t I ride him about here a while just now, so as to be sure I''ll know how to manage him on the road?"
32103ca n''t Elsie and I go along with the rest of you to New Orleans to- morrow?"
32103came aboard to steal, did you?"
32103do you know what it is?"
32103have you a good joke for us?"
32103is that so, Max?
32103is you uns one ob de doctahs?"
32103must you live on fun all the time?"
32103or am I to be left entirely to my own devices?"
32103or is anything out of the usual course of events likely to happen?"
32103or is it professional jealousy?
32103or was it brother Max?"
32103she cried,"is it for me, papa?"
32103they asked as they drew near,"time to go home?"
32103were they going to burn him to death?"
32103who are you?
43909What are the rules?
43909What are you going to do with us?
43909Come from Pittsburgh, eh?
43909How in Sam Hill did you get into the canal?
43909You know how sometimes you turn and drive away the homeless dog that sheepishly follows you down the street?
43909[ Illustration: Picturesque Water Mill Beside the Potomac] Is n''t it peculiar how the smallest trifles will alter the most elaborate plans?
43909exclaimed the lockmaster,"You- all do n''t intend to spend the night in that boat, do you?"
40914But what opportunity can there be,is the reply,"since private capital is to be abolished?"
40914Do you mean,I said,"that they have not received proper moral instruction?"
40914And the righteousness?
40914Are some of them suppressed by society and forced to seek their satisfaction in roundabout ways?
40914Are specially promising youths to be set apart from early childhood to prepare themselves for these positions of authority?
40914But are there not also peaceable crowds, crowds devoted to religious and moral propaganda, idealist crowds?
40914But how comes it that primitive people fear these spirits, and attribute to them every sort of evil design against the living?
40914Could anything be more absurd?
40914Do all agree to the great slogan of the revolution?
40914Do these instincts and sentiments operate the same under all social conditions?
40914Does anyone doubt that certain members of the Society for the Prevention of Vice, or of the Prohibitionists, would persecute if they had power?
40914Does anyone imagine that this new class of rulers will hesitate to make use of every opportunity to make itself a privileged class?
40914Does the crowd''s thinking commonly show a like tendency to construct an imaginary world of thought- forms and then take refuge in its ideal system?
40914Does the name Darwin mean anything to you?
40914Have not pacifist mass meetings been known to break up in a row?
40914Have you ever heard of William James?
40914He says: How then can Absolutism possibly be a religion?
40914How any agreement?
40914How many are capable of discriminating criticism of works of music, or painting, literature, or philosophy?
40914How many school and college"yells"begin with the formula,"Who are We?"
40914How, then, shall there be any getting together without an outside authority and an absolute standard?
40914I asked again,"Do you really mean to say that you care so much as that for Chinese, not one of whom you have ever seen?"
40914Ibsen makes his Doctor Stockman say: What sort of truths are they that the majority usually supports?
40914If he is not to drink in London lest a Glasgow engineer should get drunk, why should not his eating be alike limited?
40914If not, what happens?
40914If so, how?
40914Is not that plenty of time for all?
40914It is not our purpose to enter upon a discussion of the question, what is the real world?
40914May not a thing be good and true for one and not for another?
40914May there not be a like unconscious psychic determination of much that is called social behavior?
40914Now in what does this entity really consist, this mysterious fetich which revolutionists have revered for more than a century?
40914The question, however, arises, is democracy more conducive to freedom than other forms of political organization?
40914The questions asked were such as follow: What is the difference between the Declaration of Independence and the Constitution of the United States?
40914The unconscious reasoning was something like this:"If those men got out of this thing, why should not we?
40914What is a dicotyledon?
40914What is it all but a slightly exaggerated account of the egoism of all organized crowds?
40914What is the significance of the battle of Tours?
40914What other meaning has the excited cheering?
40914What then is the secret of this impersonal view of the social?
40914What then remains to hold its various elements together in a common cause?
40914What was to be done?
40914What would a democracy be like if based on millions of independent Joneses each of whom decided to vote this or that way as he pleased?
40914When an individual or party is wronged in the United States, to whom can he apply for redress?
40914Who is to govern?
40914Who was Thomas Jefferson?
40914Who, at a ball game or athletic event, has not experienced elation and added self- complacency in seeing the home team win?
40914Why do we think of ourselves socially in the same impersonal or external way that we think of others?
40914Why does it always appear the minute a crowd is sufficiently powerful to dream of world- power?
40914Why not the size and character of his house?
40914Why not the style and cut of his clothes?
40914Yes, but which individual shall we begin with?
40914You might ask, Is this comic opera or is it government?
36055Will the star of empire become stationary at New- York? 36055 Would the Gospel allow us, if it were in our power, to reduce our fellow- citizens of our own color to slavery?
36055$ 2,333,535,520 What is the import of these figures?
36055A system which sanctions the sale of the child by its own father, regardless of the purpose of the buyer?
36055Add up the two columns of figures above, and what is the result?
36055Am I not also the thief?
36055And now let us ask, and we would put the question particularly to Southern merchants, what do we so much need as a great Southern metropolis?
36055And shall I not have to pay the damage for detaining that child in my service as a slave?
36055And why are they so determined?
36055And why must something be done?
36055And why?
36055And, now, pray let us ask, what does this narrative teach?
36055Are both in favor of the North?
36055Are these the chosen architects who are expected to build up"a purely Southern literature?"
36055Are they not destined to occupy an inferior rank among the nations of the earth?
36055Are we a flock without a shepherd?
36055Are we not dependent on New- York, Philadelphia, Boston, and Cincinnati, for nearly every article of merchandise, whether foreign or domestic?
36055But are slavery and war to_ endure_ for ever because we find them in the Bible?
36055But do Southern merchants stay at home?
36055But does it alter the case whether I agree before hand or not, to pay him for the child?
36055But how about Cotton?
36055But how about cotton?
36055But of what avail is all this latent wealth?
36055But were they permitted such an expression?
36055But what are these, that they should seal a minister''s lips-- what more are the wishes of politicians?"
36055But what is kidnapping?
36055But why did she not maintain her supremacy?
36055Can it be possible that the slavocracy will ever have the hardihood to open their mouths again on the subject of terra- culture in the South?
36055Compare the progress of these States, and then say, what is it but Free Labor that has advanced Ohio?
36055Dare they ever think of cotton again?
36055Do the masts of her ships ever cast a shadow on foreign waters?
36055Do they build up Southern commerce?
36055Do we ever think of these countries or States without thinking of their cities also?
36055Do you ask what we have to do with slavery?
36055Do you aspire to become the victims of white non- slaveholding vengeance by day, and of barbarous massacre by the negroes at night?
36055Do you offer us your negroes in part payment?
36055Does slavery exist in any part of civilized Europe?
36055For the last sixty- eight years, slaveholders have been the sole and constant representatives of the South, and what have they accomplished?
36055From whose hands did this man receive fifty thousand dollars-- improperly, if not illegally, taken from the public funds in Washington?
36055Has anybody ever heard of her?
36055Has it been suppressed by the oligarchy?
36055Has not the mechanic, have not the middle classes their rights-- rights incompatible with the existence of slavery?
36055Has she imitated the praiseworthy example of our illustrious ancestors?
36055Has the past, with all its glittering monuments of genius and patriotism, furnished no beacon by which we may direct our footsteps in the future?
36055Has the slave no rights, because he is deprived of his freedom?
36055Hereby we make application for a lease of freedom for ten years; shall we have it?
36055How do you propose to settle?
36055How has it been with the South?
36055How much of_ that_ is to be found in the region of Slavery?
36055If a man is injuring_ us_, do we ever doubt as to the time when_ he_ ought to cease?
36055If it be asked when, I ask again, when shall a man begin to cease doing wrong?
36055If we want to learn the news of the country, do we not go to the city, or to the city papers?
36055In this respect to what is our poverty ascribable?
36055In what degree of latitude-- pray tell us-- in what degree of latitude do the rays of the sun become too calorific for white men?
36055Is either in favor of the South?
36055Is it necessary to adduce other facts in order to prove that the rural wealth of the free States is far greater than that of the slave States?
36055Is it not almost entirely tributary to the commerce of the North?
36055Is it not my act as fully as his?
36055Is it your purpose to make the game perpetual?
36055Is not the answer,_ immediately_?
36055Is the sum of one hundred and sixteen millions of dollars more desirable than the sum of eleven hundred millions of dollars?
36055Is this sufficiently explicit and categorical?
36055Is this to act like wise men?
36055It is just; shall payment be demanded?
36055It remains for us now to enquire, WHAT HAS PRODUCED THIS LITERARY PAUPERISM OF THE SOUTH?
36055MILTON asks:--"Where is the beauty to see, Like the sun- brilliant brow of a nation when free?"
36055MONTESQUIEU asks:--"What civil law can restrain a slave from running away, since he is not a member of society?"
36055Must the country languish, droop, die, that the slaveholder may flourish?
36055Now, if these people were so much in love with the''institution,''why did they not remain where they could enjoy its blessings?
36055Now, when Paul said the law was made for men- stealers, was it not also saying the law was made for slaveholders?
36055Of what avail will it ever be, so long as slavery is permitted to play the dog in the manger?
36055Oh, my country, my country, whither art thou tending?
36055Or, if they were to throw a pound of strychnine into a public spring, would that be none of our business?
36055Or, to come nearer home, what would Maryland be without Baltimore?
36055Shall all interests be subservient to one-- all rights subordinate to those of the slaveholder?
36055Shall ignorance, or prejudice, or obduracy, or willful meanness, triumph over knowledge, and liberality, and guilelessness, and laudable enterprise?
36055Shall we fee the curs of slavery in order to make them rich at our expense?
36055Shall we pat the bloodhounds of slavery for the sake of doing them a favor?
36055Shall we pay the whelps of slavery for the privilege of converting them into decent, honest, upright men?
36055She gave that territory away, and what is the result?
36055Sir, being thus injurious, have we not a right to demand its extermination?
36055Suppose we estimate five hundred acres as the average landed property of each slaveholder; will that be fair?
36055The questions now arise, How can the evil be averted?
36055Then we are an abolitionist?
36055Thomas Marshall, of Fauquier, said, in the Virginia Legislature, in 1832:--"Wherefore, then, object to slavery?
36055To what is this change ascribable?
36055To what, Sir, is all this ascribable?
36055Upon whom will you depend for an equitable and judicious form of constitutional government?
36055What about Southern Commerce?
36055What are the most prudent and practical means that can be devised for the abolition of slavery?
36055What are the opinions, generally, of the non- slaveholding whites?
36055What are you going to do about it?
36055What changes worthy of note have taken place in the physical features of her superficies since"the evening and the morning were the third day?"
36055What is his mere pecuniary claim, compared with the great interests of the common weal?
36055What is our faith?
36055What is the actual condition of Literature at the South?
36055What is the testimony of reliable Southrons themselves?
36055What is to be done?
36055What more can we do?
36055What more can we say?
36055What need is there to present to you the unmitigated wrong of slavery?
36055What next?
36055What potent influence hushed its clarion voice, just as it began to be lifted in behalf of a liberal policy and an enlightened humanity?
36055What says one of Virginia''s own sons?
36055What shall be done with this amount?
36055What wonder is it that there is no native literature in the South?
36055What would England be without London?
36055What would France be without Paris?
36055What would Louisiana be without New Orleans?
36055What would South Carolina be without Charleston?
36055What would Turkey be without Constantinople?
36055When a man has land for sale, does he reject thirty- six dollars per acre and take three?
36055When did he receive it?--and for what purpose?--and who was the arch- demagogue through whose agency the transfer was made?
36055When will Southern authors understand their own interests?
36055Where are our ships, our mariners, our naval architects?
36055Where do we stand?
36055Where is fanaticism now, North or South?
36055Where is that address?
36055Where is the record of that law?
36055Who that watches passing events and indications, is not sensible of the fact that great internal convulsions await the slave States?
36055Who voted_ for_ this resolution?
36055Whom will you designate as models for your future statesmen?
36055Why did not the_ Enquirer_ continue to preach it?
36055Why not decide it at the next general election?
36055Why should I thus be deprived of sleep that the slaveholder may slumber?
36055Why, then, do you still clamor for more?
36055Will any_ respectable_ man enter a protest against it?
36055Will it avail me to say I purchased him and paid my money for him?
36055Will it not be asked, Do you not know that a white person is not merchantable?
36055Will it not be cheerfully indorsed by many of the slaveholders themselves?
36055Will its supremacy be permanent?
36055Will not the non- slaveholders of the North, of the South, of the East, and of the West, heartily, unanimously sanction this proposition?
36055Will you aid us, will you assist us, will you be freemen, or will you be slaves?
36055Will you not abolish it?
36055Will you support by your vote a system that recognizes property of man in man?
36055Would any one believe that I am master of slaves of my own purchase?
36055Would the slaveholders of North Carolina lose anything by the abolition of slavery?
36055Would we not be correct in calling it a total eclipse of the Black Orb?
36055Would you be instrumental in bringing upon yourselves, your wives, and your children, a fate too horrible to contemplate?
36055Yet, Sir, I must ask upon whom is to fall the burden of this defence?
36055a nation without a government?
36055a people without a prophet?
36055and to what, except slavery, can we attribute the non- progression of the Old Dominion?"
36055and who voted_ against_ it?
36055are you ready to settle the account?
36055echo answers, where?
36055or are they to_ cease_ at once and for ever because the Bible inculcates peace and brotherhood?"
36055or will it, like its predecessors, be eclipsed by western rivals?
36055shall society suffer, that the slaveholder may continue to gather his_ crop_ of human flesh?
36055that they are not to be violated but with his wrath?
36055would you understand how abjectly slaveholders themselves are enslaved to the products of Northern industry?
43791= The Science of Concepts.= Here the question immediately arises: how can we secure such perfection?
43791Are we then to deduce that it is superfluous or unfeasible to designate the waves as different?
43791But where is the line of division between one wave and the next?
43791Each time we encounter such problems, we must ask ourselves: what would be the difference empirically if the one or the other view were correct?
43791How far can the form be extended?
43791Now what predictions do those natural laws enable us to make?
43791Now, wherein lies the more significant value of such formulations?
43791_ Carnot_ asked himself the question, Upon what does the action of the steam engine, which had just then come into use, depend?
43254How does he know I have a hump?
43254(?
43254(?)
43254(?)
43254Did Alexander merely receive such honours?
43254Did not Machiavelli leave good habit, as an essential ingredient of character, out of account?
43254Had he this love?
43254How far could it have done so, had the scheme been realized?
43254How far did Alexander intend that in such a fusion Hellenic culture should retain its pre- eminence?
43254How much shall we allow for his position in Renaissance Italy, for the corruption in the midst of which he lived, for his own personal temperament?
43254How shall we estimate the permanent worth of his method, the residuum of value in his maxims?
43254How shall we state his point of departure from the middle ages, his sympathy with prevalent classical enthusiasms, his divination of a new period?
43254Or did he claim them himself?
43254The famous cavalry leader had brought on his mounted men ahead of the infantry and asking,"Where is the king of Sweden?"
43254The question at once arises, is the lymph channel at all times open to receive the materials present in the tissue space?
43254The question then becomes: When does this restoration take place, and what is the intermediate state of the tissue?
43254The_ Seasons_ of Thomson, for instance, a poem of high merit and lasting importance in the history of literature-- where is that to be placed?
43254Was he a man?
43254What is to be said of the_ Essay on Man_?
43254[ Greek: Makkabaios]-?
43254_ My Novel_( 1853) and_ What will he do with it?_ were designed to prolong the same strain.
45177In his gloomy views of the War of 1812 he asks what Virginia can raise, and answers his question thus:"Tobacco?
30203A movement headed by Clarkson and Wilberforce,says Mr. Henson,"could be no other than Christian,"But why?
30203Are there not impressions borne in upon the soul of man as he stands a spectator of the universe which religion alone attempts to formulate? 30203 Ha,"they exclaimed,"what do you Freethinkers say now?"
30203How shall I write,I said,"who am not meet One word of that sweet speaking to repeat?"
30203Is it according to the will of God?
30203Oh yes,says the giddy fly,"it looks so nice, positively inviting?"
30203Well, what do we learn from Scripture?
30203What shall I write?
30203What,asks Professor Stokes,"is man''s condition between death and the resurrection?"
30203Which,he asks,"comes nearest to the truth about love-- poor Lombroso''s talk about pistil and stamen, or one of Shakespeare''s sonnets?"
30203Why,asked a Unitarian of a Positivist,"why is not Christ in your Positivist calendar?"
30203Will you walk into my parlor?
30203_ Is there any thing whereof it may be said, See, this is new? 30203 ''He was mad,''they say; but what drove him mad? 30203 ''Tis a pity truly that the old fiddle should be broken at last; but then for how many years has it not been discoursing most excellent music? 30203 * ARE ATHEISTS CRUEL? 30203 * ARE ATHEISTS WICKED? 30203 * DID BRADLAUGH BACKSLIDE? 30203 A leading London newspaper, the_ Daily Chronicle_, has recently opened it columns to a discussion of the question,Is Christianity Played Out?"
30203ARE ATHEISTS CRUEL?
30203ARE ATHEISTS WICKED?
30203After all, does not this objection come with an ill grace from a Christian Theist?
30203Among the eminent sons of science who is greater than he?
30203And am I not just and reasonable in declining to take the decision out of their hands?
30203And are you quite sure you did not dream the whole business?"
30203And how did Mrs. Besant dispose of these charges?
30203And if not, do you think it kind or just to speak of him in this manner?
30203And if the root is no explanation of the flower, what will happen if you are careless about the root and the soil in which it is planted?
30203And is it conceivable that the soldiers would take money to say they had slept at their posts?
30203And is it not weakest in the first and second childishness of youth and old age?
30203And is_ this_ the supreme virtue of a great poet?
30203And on what ground?
30203And what is dogma?
30203And what is it?
30203And what is the"remark"which Mr. Bradlaugh"uttered"( what etymology!)?
30203And what right, we ask, has a Christian minister to rail at duelling?
30203And what, he asks, does thought depend on?
30203And where is the evidence?
30203And who is responsible for the rest?
30203And why did the abolition movement in England wait until new ideas had leavened the public mind?
30203And why from_ the French_?
30203And why not?
30203And why should not a Christian reverence the greatness of Marlowe?
30203And why was Bruno allowed a week''s grace before his execution, except to give him the opportunity of recanting?
30203And why_ solidarity_?
30203And yet, after all, is there not something indecent in their talking about a"living wage"for the workers?
30203Are Atheists conspicuous in the Divorce Court?
30203Are not such scoundrels a thousand times worse than a passionate boy like George Mason?
30203Are there not diseases of the brain that affect thought in a definite manner?
30203Are they not parasites upon the said workers?
30203Are we to conclude that an Atheist''s talking shows mistrust, and a Christian''s talking shows confidence?
30203Are you not aware that the most risible imp could hardly laugh at_ all_ the contents of the Bible?
30203As James Thomson said,"Do you dread that the Satyr will be preferred to Hyperion, when both stand imaged in clear light before us?"
30203At last he asked a gaoler"What hour is it?"
30203But did the Church think so when it imprisoned Galileo and made him swear that the earth did_ not_ go round the sun?
30203But do they?
30203But does nature act independently of God?
30203But has not Christian Rome witnessed many a viler spectacle?
30203But how am I to put Mr. Williams to the credit of Christianity, and Captain Gurney to the credit of something else?
30203But how does this fit in with the teaching of Christ?
30203But how far is this creditable to Mr. Brooke''s intelligence?
30203But how is it we have not got them already?
30203But how many Christians have been converted to Freethought?
30203But how"coming"?
30203But is it worth playing at all?
30203But is our purpose a sound one?
30203But is this any more than a verbal distinction?
30203But suppose the question had been one of"a living wage"for the sky- pilots; would not a minimum figure have been speedily decided?
30203But what are the facts?
30203But what does Mr. Hughes mean by his"Christ- like purity"?
30203But what has science to do with the origin of matter?
30203But what if it does?
30203But what is it that_ will_ rise from the dead, and get joined with some sort of inconceivable body?
30203But what is the speciality of a literary man on this particular subject?
30203But what was his crime?
30203But where is the signature?
30203But who caused the Terror?
30203But who does_ not_ laugh at cock- and- bull stories like that of Jonah and the whale?
30203But who doubts that, during a thousand years, a humane and even a noble heart often beat under a priest''s cassock?
30203But who ever said it was?
30203But who wrote the text?
30203But why did Jacob weep?
30203But why not?
30203But will it ever have them?
30203But, in that case, what becomes of the"literal"method of reading the"moral precepts"of Christ?
30203But, in that case, why was Bruno burnt alive at the stake?
30203But, on the other hand, who invented and who applied such instruments of cruelty as racks, wheels, and thumbscrews?
30203But_ do_ they?
30203By what superhuman power do they make up the deficiency?
30203Can Dr. Hitchens produce two names among his"converts"of the same weight, or a half, a quarter, or a tithe of it?
30203Can anyone imagine the seven- devilled Mary Magdalene conversing in this way?
30203Can we ever be united on a question of personality?
30203DID BRADLAUGH BACKSLIDE?
30203Did Jesus teach in order that men might become insane?
30203Did he not teach David''s fingers to fight?
30203Did he say so to you, and where and when?
30203Do men sell their honor for what they can never enjoy, and count their lives as a mere trifle in the bargain?
30203Do the clergy think the Lord is growing deaf with old age?
30203Do you really believe that an Atheist has a special proclivity to murder?
30203Do you want to know what this positive suffering is?
30203Does a gardener act in that way?
30203Does he accept the New Testament miracles?
30203Does he embrace the Incarnation and Resurrection?
30203Does he mean to say that the author of the Mosaic Law was not the same God who speaks to us in the New Testament?
30203Does he really imagine that the true character of any body of men and women is likely to be written out by a hostile partisan?
30203Does he think there can be a Christianity_ without_"theology"?
30203During all the centuries from Ignatius to Bossuet, what eminent Christian ever denounced Slavery as wicked?
30203Even if they are right, he falls back upon his old exclamation,"What does it matter?"
30203Exaggeration there must be in passion and imagination; it is the defect of their quality; but what are we without them?
30203For instance, how does he know that the star of the Nativity was"a strange white star"?
30203For their sakes, and not for our own satisfaction, we shall criticise her little volume on_ Death-- and After?_ just issued as No.
30203Genesis is a little confused, indeed; and what scripture is not?
30203George Griffiths committed a murder because he was a Christian?
30203Had it been purely Christian, would it not have triumphed long before?
30203Has Mr. Watkinson never read the answer to these questions?
30203Has Sir G. G. Stokes never read St. Paul?
30203Has he never heard of John Calvin and Martin Luther?
30203Has he never read the Thirty- nine Articles of his own Church?
30203Has it ever occurred to you that if Christ died, he died on a particular day; and that if he rose from the dead, he rose on a particular morning?
30203Has it ever occurred to you to inquire how it is that the Bible is so easy to ridicule?
30203Has it never struck you as strange, also, that the risen Christ never appeared to anyone but his disciples?
30203Has it not seen hundreds of noble men burnt alive in the name of Christ?
30203Has your lordship never heard of a Christian murderer?
30203Have they a secret suspicion that praying for a change of weather is as useful as whistling for the wind?
30203Have they not been in full operation for a lifetime?
30203Have they not, also, had ever so many centuries of dominance?
30203Have we not as much right to our own thoughts as they had to theirs?
30203Have you ever heard of the text,"Physician heal thyself"?
30203Have you ever reflected that what is laughed at is generally ridiculous?
30203How did he discover that the Magi, or priests of the Zoroastrian religion, were really Buddhists and came from India?
30203How is it that Milton beats the Mahatmas?
30203How is it they had to wait for realisation until the advent of an age permeated with the spirit of scepticism and secular humanity?
30203How is it your"Christian conceptions"took such a surprising time to be understood?
30203How is this consistent with his saying,"call no man master"?
30203How much attention, Mr. Blomfield asks, am I to give to this world and how much to another?
30203How then can there be anything supernatural, supersensible, or"spiritual,", in their combination?
30203How, I ask, did those Jewish priests know that Jesus had said"After three days I will rise again"?
30203If I treat the Creation Story and the Deluge as legend and mythology, and smile at the feats of Samson, shall I therefore commit a burglary?
30203If Secular principles tend to make parents hate their own children, why should their evil influence be confined to artisans?
30203If he and his apostles did not believe in the"hereafter,"what_ did_ they believe in?
30203If he be still living, have you taken the trouble to obtain_ his_ version of the matter?
30203If man is purely material, and the law of causation is universal, where, he asks,"is the place for virtue, for praise, for blame?"
30203If they can not, why should we pay them a heavenly water- rate?
30203In the long run, it is knowledge and idea?
30203Is a great name a substitute for argument?
30203Is all this consistent with the doctrine of human equality?
30203Is authority as good as evidence?
30203Is he only responsible for_ some_ of the things that happen?
30203Is it almost said when you have said it?
30203Is it conceivable that the priests were so foolish as the story depicts them?
30203Is it in our principles, in our objects, or in our policy?
30203Is it logical to select all you admire in Christian countries and attribute it to Christianity?
30203Is it not Christian reputations that are smirched in that Inquisition?
30203Is it not a fact that Jesus Christ himself could not select his apostles without including a villain?
30203Is it not a fact that their profession of Christianity is usually in proportion to the depth of their rascality?
30203Is it not a special insult to the multitude of poor, struggling women, whose earnings are taxed to support the classes who lord it over them?
30203Is it not disgraceful that, at this time of day, there should be any need to discuss a"living wage"for the workers in a_ Christian_ civilisation?
30203Is it not enough, and more than enough, to perpetuate a system which is firmly founded, to begin with, on the education of little children?
30203Is it not entirely suspended in healthy sleep?
30203Is it not evident that Religion works, like everything else, upon common materials?
30203Is it not generally found, in the case of great business collapses, that the responsible persons are Christians?
30203Is it not high time for Jesus to run the job himself?
30203Is it not the horticulture of Fleet- street sentimentalists?
30203Is it not true, also, that the greatest swindlers of this age have been extremely pious?
30203Is not one in twelve a large percentage?
30203Is not that a domestic question for the Christians to settle among themselves?
30203Is not the Bible God"the Lord of Hosts"and"a man of war"?
30203Is not the writer too young to have had"much experience"?
30203Is not this lavish generosity to a pair of royal and well- provided lovers an insult to the working people of England?
30203Is not thought excited by stimulants, and deadened or even annihilated by narcotics?
30203Is not thought most vigorous when the brain is mature?
30203Is there a reference here to the twelfth verse of the nineteenth chapter of Matthew?
30203Is there no medium?
30203Is there not"a sort of a smack, a smell to"of them in your godly constitution?
30203It is a"converted infidel"case, in the report of a recent sermon-- the last of a series on"Is Christianity Played Out?"
30203It is dangerous to deny any"great truth,"but how many does evangelicalism possess?
30203It is easy to ask"Is there a future life?"
30203Le Gallienne''s reply to this objection is clear, sufficient, and well expressed:--"But how so?
30203May it not be, therefore, that the difference between Agnosticism and Atheism is one of temperament?
30203May it not have been red, yellow, blue, or green-- especially green?
30203May it not have been, at least with respect to the cerebrum, quite infinitesimal?
30203Might we not even reflect that he was graduating for a strait- waistcoat?
30203Mrs. Bonner adds that her demerits are beside the point, which is,"Did Mr. Bradlaugh weaken in his Atheism?"
30203Must the passions be kings or slaves, in prison or on the throne?
30203No doubt he believes this statement, but is it true?
30203No doubt the seat was rather incommodious, but why should a ghost sit at all?
30203No one equals the Yankee at"tall talk,"and what Yankee equals Talmage in this species of composition?
30203Now what is belief?
30203Now what were the crimes of the three other members, who were completely and absolutely expelled?
30203Now what_ is_ this humanitarian Christianity of Christ?
30203Of what use then was the bribe?
30203Or does he mean that the"sects"comprise all persons who have more theology than himself?
30203Or has the spirit of this sceptical age invaded the clerical ranks so thoroughly as to make them ashamed of their printed doctrines?
30203Or is the stomach of a ghost capable of digesting such victuals?
30203Other writers then joined in the fray, and the result was the famous"Is Christianity Played Out?"
30203Our theory is that the Whitechapel murderer is------"Whom?"
30203Shall I hate my own boy because I disbelieve that Jesus Christ was born without a father?
30203Shall I keep him without food and clothes because I see no proof of a special providence?
30203Should he not rejoice in the next bloody cockpit of featherless bipeds?
30203Should the jury decide according to the eminence of the pleader''s friends, or according to his facts and the force of his reasoning?
30203Should we not look at him with curiosity and amusement?
30203Sir G. G. Stokes begins by promising to confine himself to the question,"What is it that personal identity depends upon and consists in?"
30203So are all principles in intricate cases; why else have Christian divines written so many tons of casuistry?
30203Some of those Inquisition records he translates, apparently fancying he is making a revelation, though?
30203Soon after the_ Daily Chronicle_ correspondence on"Is Christianity Played Out?"
30203Still more ridiculous, if possible, is the Christian cry,"Where are your Freethought hospitals, almshouses, and orphanages?"
30203Still more, why do you congratulate the survivors?
30203Supposing all this to be true, what does it prove?
30203The man, we repeat, was an open, nay a militant Atheist; and again we ask, What do the clergy make of this phenomenon?
30203The only dispute was-- which were the heretics, and who should die?
30203The point was this, Did the writing-- the_ last_ writing-- of Mr. Bradlaugh show the slightest change in his Atheism?
30203The question is, How did he come to let these faculties play upon ghosts and gods?
30203The question is, What is its explanation?
30203The single query"Why should they trouble themselves?"
30203The very publicans demand compensation, and could the sky- pilots do less?
30203The villain of the"Promise of May"is certainly an Agnostic, but are not the villains of many other plays Christians?
30203The whole mystery of life, he says, may be found in a curve: as thus, Why is n''t it straight?
30203Then what becomes of your"purely_ Christian_ conception,"when"infidel France"outshines"Christian England"?
30203Then why do you lament over them?
30203They both speak to me as Christians; is it for me to say that the one is a Christian and the other is not?
30203They solemnly inform us that Esau was a trickster, as though Jacob''s qualities were catching?
30203They_ would_ be free, and who should say them nay?
30203To say as Dr. Schmidt does that"Christian ideas filled the air"is easy enough, but where is the proof?
30203To talk of a risen Christ was to invite the question"Where is he?"
30203Turning to these Councils, then, what do we find?
30203Very likely; but who could lose what he never possessed?
30203Was it because the Northern and Western nations were cowardly and selfish?
30203Was not the strength of Freethinkers, from Jeremy Bentham downwards, given to the abolition movement?
30203We are not aware that men have souls, but if they have, why should any soul be_ lost_?
30203We are not aware that there is a God, but if there is, why should he_ let_ any soul be lost?
30203We may imagine a ghost going through a keyhole, but is it possible to imagine broiled fish and honeycomb going through the same aperture?
30203We should be sorry to charge such a holy body of men with duplicity, but is there not"a sort of a smack, a smell to?"
30203Well, and who made them lords over us?
30203Well, as the old lady said, who would have thought it?
30203Well, if this be the case, what is the use of Mr. Nix?
30203Well, what of that?
30203Were not Joshua and Jehu, the two greatest tigers in history, his chosen generals?
30203Were not the Freethinkers all on one side, while the Christians were divided?
30203Were not the slave- owners also Christians?
30203Were not the"Liberator"victims fleeced and ruined by professed Christians?
30203What Atheist fails to reverence the greatness of Milton?
30203What are all the lying stories about Infidel Death- Beds but conversions of corpses?
30203What are these to the men who built up the glory of ancient Rome?
30203What becomes of it when violation takes the place of seduction, and a woman bears a child to a man she loathes and hates?
30203What becomes of the"sacred mystery of motherhood"when a poor servant girl brings her child into the world unaided, and casts it into the Thames?
30203What connection does he discover between Secularism and selfishness?
30203What did Christ mean by promising that when he came into his kingdom his disciples should sit on twelve thrones judging the twelve tribes of Israel?
30203What did Paul mean by ordering unlimited obedience to"the powers that be"?
30203What did he and Peter mean by telling slaves to obey their owners?
30203What difference is there between this and the passage in Mark?
30203What do the clergy make of this phenomenon?
30203What do you make of Messrs Hobbs and Wright?
30203What do you think of Jabez Balfour?
30203What does all this mean?
30203What does it prove?
30203What does the New Testament say?
30203What does this show?
30203What evidence has the ordinary Christian, and has he ever reflected on his creed for five minutes in the whole course of his life?
30203What has she ever done?
30203What have you to say about Mr. Hastings, Captain Verney, and Mr. De Cobain, who were all convicted of bad crimes and expelled from Parliament?
30203What is it to"almost say"a thing?
30203What is the greatest novel in the English language?
30203What is the reason of this strange inconsistency?
30203What is the use of God''s interference if he does not make people wiser and better?
30203What is the use of Mr. Hughes?
30203What is their city to the magnificent city of old, among whose ruins they walk like pigmies amid the relics of giants?
30203What is there in Atheism to make men hate each other?
30203What on earth, too, does he mean by Bruno''s"great obscurity"when he returned to Italy and fell into the jaws of the Inquisition?
30203What other reason, indeed, could have inspired his selection?
30203What possible effect could that have on the sensible part of the jury?
30203What reader of the Gospes does not remember the exquisite English in which our translators have rendered the lament over Jerusalem?
30203What real weakness is there in the Atheist''s seeking for sympathy and concurrence?
30203What terror had death to Charles Bradlaugh?
30203What terror had death to Mrs. Besant while she was an Atheist?
30203What the clergy said about them was true, or why did n''t they get up and contradict?
30203What then are we to conclude?
30203What wonder, then, that the people fixed their gaze upon it on that ominous fourteenth of July, and attacked it as the very citadel of tyranny?
30203What''s in a name?
30203What, then, is the explanation?
30203What_ is_ the evidence then?
30203What_ is_ the something else?
30203What_ is_ the spirit of Christianity?
30203When they state an opinion in the pompous language of revelation, are they less fallible than the rest of us?
30203Where are the evidences of Atheistic cruelty?
30203Where are the statistics to justify your assertion?
30203Who asserts that Atheists are absolutely free from the passions and frailties of human nature?
30203Who brought forth cries of agony from honest men and women that rang to the tingling stars?
30203Who built dungeons and filled them?
30203Who burnt Bruno?
30203Who burnt heretics?
30203Who can doubt it?
30203Who invented separate tortures for every part of the sensitive frame of man?
30203Who is the Princess May?
30203Who laughs at the horrid massacres of the Old Testament?
30203Who laughs at the saying,"Blessed are the peacemakers"?
30203Who really tries to carry out the Christianity of Christ?
30203Who roasted or drowned millions of"witches"?
30203Who spat filth over the graves of Paine and Voltaire?
30203Why are they so fond of the ladies?
30203Why did God write it so that thousands of gentlemen get a fine living by explaining it-- in all sorts of different ways?
30203Why did he lay down slavery laws without hinting that they were provisional?
30203Why do they choose to speak through a woman like Madame Blavatsky, or a popular lecturess like Mrs. Besant?
30203Why do they neglect our Spencers and Huxleys?
30203Why has it not been used?
30203Why indeed do not the petitioners refute the apostles of the"New Criticism,"instead of appealing to the_ authority_ of Convocation?
30203Why indeed should they?
30203Why not three to- day and seven to- morrow?
30203Why not try to establish a just harmony between them?
30203Why should a man write impurely for writing much?
30203Why should he control the obscure Mr. Reedman?
30203Why should he go all the way to Birmingham instead of doing his first business in London?
30203Why should he turn up at the house of Mr. Gray?
30203Why should it be so hard then for a railway servant, a museum attendant, an art- gallery curator, or a librarian to work on Sunday?
30203Why should it hesitate, then, to tell untruths about_ little_ ones?
30203Why then all this chatter about Christ?
30203Why then did it obtain so long in Christendom?
30203Why then did they not marry?
30203Why then does he talk about them so consumedly?
30203Why then should he be averse to international butchery in Europe?
30203Why then should we talk of"liberal theology"?
30203Why then, in the ease of private correspondence, did he not hint that Slavery was only tolerated for the time and would eventually cease?
30203Why was it not made plainer?
30203Why, then, did God write it so that you could_ easily_ be facetious about it?
30203Why, then, did he not leave it alone?
30203Why, then, do you pretend that George Mason committed a murder because he or his father was an Atheist?
30203Why_ always_ four?
30203Will Count Tolstoi take the final step?
30203Will Shakespeare''s_ Hamlet_ poison my mind because I think it finer than the gospels?
30203Will he tell us if anything could amaze us_ without_ being unparalleled?
30203Will not a man of genius become an imbecile if his brain softens?
30203Will not a philosopher rave like a drunken fishfag if he suffers from brain inflammation?
30203Would bribing the soldiers protect them against Christ?
30203Would he not strike us as a silly fanatic?
30203Would it not be well to give them a trial?
30203Would not a man who violated the most sacred laws of friendship and hospitality be quite capable of telling a lie?
30203Would not this have attracted general attention?
30203Would they not have abandoned their projects against him, and sought his forgiveness?
30203Yea, and echo answers, Why?
30203_ Why_ is this?
30203and where are the traces of the"long and ardent thought"?
30203for who has ever_ seen_ any man read the Bible through?
30203have you not one man''s share of those qualities yourself?
30203is it not?
42680Boom-- will it break soon?
42680Harris,said he,"do you know that once, on that hot day going to Fort Tejón, we were within three hundred feet of a fine, cool spring?"
42680I do n''t change my face for company,he says,"then why my garb-- so long as both are clean?"
42680Then why in the devil,I retorted,"did n''t you take us to it?"
42680Where do you live?
42680An old man, evidently the proprietor, met me and straightway asked,"Are you a Jew?"
42680As to the island lying almost within a stone''s throw of our mainland, ought we not to possess Cuba, too?
42680Is it any wonder, therefore, when such ignorance was universal, that the pest spread alarmingly and that the death- rate was high?
42680One day a Mexican customer came into the store and, looking around, said:"_ ¿ Compra cueros?_"( Do you buy hides?)
42680One day a Mexican customer came into the store and, looking around, said:"_ ¿ Compra cueros?_"( Do you buy hides?)
42680Sam walked in; and having a casual acquaintance with the man, asked him if he would lend him the animal for a while?
42680The world''s greatest book is of course compulsory; but what is the_ interesting_ part of it?
42680Thereupon someone in the room asked:"What_ is_ his business?"
42680When at length my Mexican friend appeared on the scene, I asked him where he kept his hides?
42680When the slovenly Captain bawled out:"Which will you have-- chops or steak?"
42680where are you bound?"
43342But how are you going to obtain it?
43342Dat you little gal? 43342 What are you after?"
43342Where is your Oakland company to hang me?
43342And may we not, even now, after having escaped so many dangers, be reserved for the same or a worse doom?
43342But are we not to be disappointed at last?
43342But what land is that coming suddenly in sight under our lee bow, and nearly in the direction of the ship?
43342Don to see dranfader?
43342How near may we have been to sharing the same fate with them?
43342How old you gal?
43342In their efforts to save themselves, may not some of them have been lashed to this very yard?
43342It is an interesting question, How came the Valley lowered to its present depth?
43342May not this vessel have been lost in one of the storms that nearly drove us ashore upon the coast of Patagonia?
43342Reader, shall I give you a further account of my observations and adventures?
43342This afternoon two vessels are in sight, and our company, for want of other subjects, are busily engaged in discussing the questions,"Who are they?"
43342To his question"why do you not eat some ship- bread?"
43342What you gal name?
43342You gal, he no come to Californy?
43342You no want to see you gal?
43342_ August 27._ Our first inquiry this morning was the same we have often and anxiously made of late,"How does she head?"
43342and"Can we come up with them?"
43342and"How soon?"
43342where''s a handspike?"
36004And,said the governor,"they tell me you are largely responsible for the reduction of the wages?"
36004But how is it when corporations combine? 36004 Have the Pullman people sent any one to see you?"
36004Have you eaten to- day?
36004How many in Pullman,said the governor,"are in the same fix, whom you know of?"
36004Is it any indication of the power of a court,interrupted Judge Wood,"to hold a man convicted on a charge of perjury?"
36004Is not that enough to bring disrespect of the law? 36004 It has been demonstrated that your company had no subject for arbitration, that the request of the employes for arbitration could not be acceded to?"
36004What can be done to dispel the apprehension that now prevails, and restore peace and confidence? 36004 Where are the members of the committee that sent for me?"
36004A fireman was asked by his landlord,"where have you been lately?"
36004Are we freemen?
36004As mayor of the city, do you think the police, or a portion of them, either directly or indirectly, took a part in promoting the strike in any way?"
36004But only a part of these men would be taken back by the companies, and what under the sun did these chiefs intend to do with the others?
36004But what would we know about them?
36004Can not something be done to protect citizens?
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Are the workingmen compelled to obey the orders given by the foremen?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"But suppose honorable means are not effective?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Did the speakers at the meetings advice against violence or did they encourage it?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Did you ever see anyone you knew to be a railroad man engaged in any violence?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Did you see anyone whom you know to be a railroad man engaged in violence or encouraging others who were so engaged?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Did you take any steps to prevent such interference?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Did you think them sincere in this advice or was it simply a cloak?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Do n''t the people of Pullman know that we want to hear from every one that can throw any light on this subject?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Do n''t you think some steps should be taken by labor unions to punish their members who violate the rules in that respect?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Do n''t you think that disputes ought to be settled by some other method than open warfare?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Do you consider burning cars a species of rioting?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Do you know of any organization that disciplines its members for resorting to violence?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Does not history show that on account of jealousies in your own ranks a complete organization of labor can not be effected?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Have any of the old men been taken back?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"How about that''save your money and buy a gun''telegram?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"How about the telegrams sent by you?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"How general was the strike at La Salle?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"How much higher are rents in Pullman than elsewhere?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"How much would you have gotten at the rate of wages in force in March or April?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Is it not true that strikes usually end disastrously to the men?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Is it not true that the roads were united sympathetically?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Is not time enough allowed to finish the work so that such instances would be due to the neglect of the man who took the job?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Is there any appeal from these orders?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Is there any punishment for violation of that rule?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Now tell us about the cause that led to your discharge as you understand it?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Then a resort to violence is rather detrimental to the cause of the strikers?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Then there is no system of obtaining a hearing from the officials concerning any grievance?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Then there is no way of getting the matter to the officials or superintendent?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Then you do not consider the American Railway Union responsible for the rioting that occurred?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Was it so done?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Were not the roads united sympathetically?
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Were you determined not to recognize any union?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Were you obliged to sign any contract relating to your membership in any labor organization?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What do you mean by Pullman work?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What do you think of arbitration as a remedy?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What is your reason?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What other accommodations do you get for the rent you pay, say in the way of paved streets?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What steps if any did you take to prevent violence?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What was your observation as to the sobriety or otherwise of the strikers at the meetings?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What were the conditions of your re- employment with the company?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What work was done in your department?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"What, as a rule has been your experience in strikes where violence was restored to?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"Would it not cause jealousy among other branches of workingmen if such a system should be adopted toward railroad men?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"You do countenance advice to such men not to take the places of strikers?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"You do not assault them?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"You do not say that all grievances are just, do you?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"You regard such a strike as would be possible under the conditions you outline as a desirable thing for organized labor?"
36004Commissioner Kernan:"You wo n''t go so far as to say that no interference of the sort alluded to has ever been engaged in?"
36004Commissioner Kernan;"Was there any object in breaking the older unions so that the American Railway Union might profit thereby?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"By whom were the deputy marshals to be paid or by whom will they be paid?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Did they act in the double capacity as marshals and as railroad employes?
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Did those men serve as employes of the road while acting as marshals?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Did you ever try to use anything but force to settle the difficulty?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Did you have anything done in relation to the appointment of deputy marshals?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"It was then the condition and not the character of the men that signed the document that made you refuse to receive it?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Now was not the letter courteously composed and looking to a settlement of the difficulty?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"The soldiers, marshals, sheriffs and police remained on duty sometime after that-- didn''t they?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Was the communication you referred to presented to the general managers?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Were any other overtures of settlement made to you?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"What would have been out of the way in your talking with Debs and Howard when they asked a conference with you?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"What, in your opinion, would it cost to build houses such as you live in?"
36004Commissioner Worthington:"Will government supervision answer the purpose?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Did not Mr. Pullman offer to let you look over the company''s books to convince you that what he said was true?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Did the cuts in other departments average as much as in yours?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Do labor unions ever blacklist non- union men?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Do you pay rent?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Have you any objection to telling us where you got this?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Have you any other evidence of the existence of a blacklist?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Have you any suggestion of a remedy for labor troubles?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Have you applied to the Pullman company for work since the strike?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"If the government owned the railroads how would you avoid the changes incident to a change in administration?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Was the action of the convention of June 12 a strike?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Was the grievance submitted in writing?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Were there those not getting enough to eat?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"What part did your local union take in the Pullman strike?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"What was the feeling of the employes toward Mr. Pullman previous to the strike?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"What would similar houses rent for elsewhere?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"What would you suggest as the next best thing if government ownership proved impracticable?"
36004Commissioner Wright:"Will you let me see it?"
36004Could cold blooded heartless avarice go further?
36004Could it be charged that they were actuated by selfish motives in the cause in which they had enlisted?
36004Could not arbitration determine the principle involved?"
36004Could you not have carried mails, if you did not insist in hauling Pullmans?
36004Did any one of you ever hear me advocate violence?
36004Did not that strike force the issue?"
36004Did the strikers interfere to prevent carrying of the mails if you left the Pullmans off?
36004Did you consider that there was anything insulting or offensive in the letter?"
36004Did you propose an increase of even 5 per cent in your employes wages because you were making money?
36004Did your company have a contract with the government to carry the mails?
36004Did your contract with the Pullman Company require you to refuse to transport mail if you left the Pullmans off?
36004Has anybody ever heard of soldiers being called out to guard the rights of workingmen?
36004How comes it, I ask myself, that these heroes dead and gone are near me here to- day?
36004How do you think strikes can be avoided?"
36004How far back did that accumulation begin?"
36004How, then, did the strike extend to the railways?
36004If this be true why not allow a board of fair and impartial arbitrators to determine the fact?
36004Is it of record that any officials of any one of them has ever been in prison for violating the law?
36004Is it?"
36004Is that charge true?"
36004Is there a man so utterly lost to the sense of justice, that would conscientiously dispute the manly fairness of this communication?
36004Mr. Kernan:"Are you an officer of the American Railway Union?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Do you call that evidence of a blacklist?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Is it not a fact that such interviews usually result in violence?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"That of officials, superintendents or foremen?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Then this action was simply a plan to guard the public health?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Was any written record kept of that conference of the heads of the labor organizations which was held at the Briggs House?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Was this order extended to roads not using Pullman cars or which were not represented in the General Managers''Association?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Were there any such road?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Were you concerned in any violence during the strike?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"When the general cut in salaries was made, was your salary reduced?"
36004Mr. Kernan:"Why can not the contract between employer and employe provide for all you want the law to cover?"
36004Mr. St. John:"What had the Rock Island to do with the Lake Shore?"
36004Mr. Wickes, interrupting:"Do you come as representatives of the city instructed by the mayor?
36004Mr. Worthingford:"How did you advise all other organizations to go on a sympathetic strike?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Are the Pullman employes required to live in Pullman?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"But do you think the police did their duty?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"But you paid the usual dividend of eight per cent last year?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Did I understand you this morning to charge the General Managers Association with the responsibility of the strike?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Did they have notice through the press?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Did you ever express any unwillingness to arbitrate?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Do you believe that such an organization would be so strong as to compel the adoption of all reasonable demands?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"During or before the strike were there any overtures made in regard to arbitration?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Has the American Railway Union brought in any information of this character?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Has the Pullman Company ever voluntarily raised wages?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"How many were killed in all or who have since died in consequence of injuries received?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Impossible, what is impossible?
36004Mr. Worthington:"In your suggestion of a board of arbitrators there would be but one of them unprejudiced?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Is it justifiable to incommode the public as such strikes do?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Is it on account of the strike that they can not get back?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Now, the company does not make any repairs, does it?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"The rent is deducted monthly, is it not?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Then the disposition of the American Railway Union appears to have been to assist the city?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Was there any violence at La Salle?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"Will arbitration answer?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"You believe in enforcing the law, do you not, and in the proper authorities using sufficient force to do it, do you not?"
36004Mr. Worthington:"You may state whether at any time you advised the American Railway Union or its members to strike?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Did the officers of the American Railway Union advise the men on roads other than those using Pullmans to go on strike?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Did you consider that strong enough for a general strike?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Do you know the date on which the general managers adopted their resolution to resist the strike?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Has that anything to do with the American Railway Union?"
36004Mr. Wright:"If the American Railway Union had had its own way in regard to its policy would a general strike have been postponed?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Tell us if you can what was the average pay of the employes, say in April last?"
36004Mr. Wright:"That was the boycott order, was it?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Was a notice of the action of the convention served on the different companies?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Was notice served on the Illinois Central and Rock Island roads?"
36004Mr. Wright:"Was the general strike precipitated by the Pullman troubles?"
36004Mr. Wright:"What was the number of your membership at that time?"
36004Mr. Wright:"What would have been the action of the convention if there had been no strike at Pullman?
36004Now what had the Lake Shore road to do with the Rock Island road?"
36004O''Brien:"There must be some trouble?"
36004On the other hand did anyone here ever hear me counsel the men to be frank and straight forward, and honest and law- abiding in all they did?"
36004Pullman?"
36004That is, would an engineer, for instance, while wearing a star showing his authority, run an engine for the road?"
36004The question is, can the American workingman be again deluded by these organs of organized capital?
36004Their thoughts took them back to the days of English tyranny, and they ask themselves, must this fight be fought again?
36004They would n''t have been needed after an amicable settlement had been reached, would they?"
36004Was ever court of justice so utterly debauched?
36004Was ever military despotism more thoroughly demonstrated?
36004Was the contract dependent upon your ability to carry Pullmans?
36004Was your contract with the government less binding on you than your contract with the Pullman Company, or was either dependent on the other?"
36004We would like to hear his testimony?"
36004What has become of our boasted liberty?
36004What rent do you pay, and what did you get for it?"
36004Why did you do so?"
36004Why do n''t you go among your employes and see things for yourself?
36004Why not bring these colossal scoundrels to justice too?
36004Why should we wonder that houses of prostitution find no difficulty in procuring inmates?
36004Why was that?"
36004Wickes?"
36004Will you consent to that?"
36004Would it be of no avail in any case?"
40412Can Love be controlled by Advice?
40412Is Life Worth Living?
40412Is n''t God upon the ocean Just the same as on the land?
40412What is to be done?
40412Why thus Longing?
40412Why wait,he said,"why wait for May, When love can warm a winter''s day?"
40412''ABD- URRAHMÁN JAMI, the last of Persia''s classic poets, was born in Jam, Khorasan, in 1414, and died in May(?
40412), 1650(?).
40412), March 15(?
40412), about 1575, and died in London(?
40412), and died in 1597(?).
40412), and died in Spain, 102(?).
40412), and died there in 1123(?).
40412), in 1661( or at Bolam, Durham, 1660), and died in London(?
40412A stranger hither?
40412ALEXANDRE DUMAS, the Elder, an illustrious French dramatist and romancist, was born at Villière Cotterets, Aisne, July 24, 1803(?
40412ALGERNON SIDNEY, a noted English republican patriot, was born at Penshurst, Kent, in 1622(?
40412ANACREON, a famous lyric poet, of Greece, was born at Teos, in Ionia, 562(?)
40412Among his writings are:"Can Abolitionists Vote or Take Office?"
40412And what is joy?
40412And what is sorrow?
40412Are your houses regulated, your children instructed, the afflicted relieved, the poor visited, the work of piety accomplished?
40412Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?
40412Child of mortality, whence comest thou?
40412Cruel is death?
40412DECEMBER DECEMBER What is the greatest bliss That the tongue o''man can name?
40412Do n''t you remember, sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?
40412ETIENNE PIVERT DE SÉNANCOUR, a distinguished French writer, born at Paris, March 4(?
40412Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality?
40412FOOTNOTES:[ 1] Is there no tyrant but the crowned one?
40412FRANÇOIS VILLON, a renowned French poet, was born in 1431, and died 1460(?).
40412GEOFFREY CHAUCER, the father of English poetry, was born in London(?
40412GEORGE COLMAN, THE YOUNGER, a famous English dramatist and humorous poet, was born in London(?
40412GEORGE PEELE, a famous English dramatist, was born in 1553(?
40412HARRIET WATERS PRESTON, a distinguished American scholar, translator, and writer, was born in Danvers, Mass., January 14(?
40412HESIOD, a renowned Greek poet, born at Ascra in Boeotia, and lived in the ninth century(?
40412Have you sent to the apothecary for a sufficient quantity of cream of tartar to make lemonade?
40412He has published:"Robert Browning,""Charles Dickens,""George Bernard Shaw,""What''s Wrong with the World?"
40412He wrote:"Barriers Burned Away,""What Can She Do?"
40412He wrote:"Our Old Church: What Shall We Do With It?"
40412He wrote:"The Hermit of Warkworth,"the song,"O Nanny, Wilt Thou Gang Wi''Me?"
40412He wrote:"The New Magdalen,""No Name,""Antonia,""Basil,""The Dead Secret,""Armadale,""Man and Wife,""Poor Miss Finch,""Miss or Mrs.?"
40412His best known works are:"In the Midst of Life,""Shapes of Clay,"and"Can Such Things Be?"
40412His"Sermons"were edited by Dr. Lyman Abbott in 1868. Who can refute a sneer?
40412How comes it to pass, then, that we appear such cowards in reasoning, and are so afraid to stand the test of ridicule?
40412How shall I charm the interval that lowers Between this time and that sweet time of grace?
40412I loved thee once, I''ll love no more, Thine be the grief as is the blame; Thou art not what thou wast before, What reason I should be the same?
40412I reply,"Liberty for whom to do what?"
40412If on a Spring night, I went by And God were standing there, What is the prayer that I would cry To Him?
40412If you ask me,"Do you favor liberty?"
40412Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
40412Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love?
40412JEAN BAPTISTE POQUELIN( MOLIÈRE), the greatest of French dramatists, was born in Paris, January 15(?
40412JEAN DE LA BRUYÈRE, a famous French moralist and satirist, was born in Paris, August 30(?
40412JOHANN AMOS COMENIUS, an illustrious theologian and educator, was born at Nivnitz(?
40412JOHN BUNYAN, a renowned English author, was born in Elstow, Bedford, November 19(?
40412JOHN DUNLOP, a noted Scottish song- writer, was born March 25(?
40412JOHN FLETCHER, the renowned English dramatist, was born in Rye, Sussex, December 20(?
40412JOHN GOWER, a noted English poet, was born in Kent in 1325(?
40412JOSEPH MAZZINI, a famous Italian patriot, was born at Genoa, June 28(?
40412JULIA PARDOE, a noted English historical and miscellaneous writer, was born at Beverly, Yorkshire, December 11(?
40412LUCY LARCOM, a noted American poet, was born at Beverly, Mass., June 23(?
40412MARGARET JUNKIN PRESTON, a celebrated American author, was born in Philadelphia, Pa., December 19(?
40412MARTIAL, a famous Latin poet, was born at Bilbilis, Spain, A.D. 50(?
40412MARY ELIZABETH MAPES DODGE, a noted American editor, poet and author, was born in New York City, December 20(?
40412N''est- on jamais tyran qu''avec un diadème?
40412NATHANIEL LEE, a celebrated English dramatist, was born in 1653(?
40412NICHOLAS ROWE, a distinguished English dramatist and poet- laureate, was born at Little Barford, Bedfordshire, June 30(?
40412O Mother dear, Jerusalem, When shall I come to Thee?
40412OMAR KHAYYÁM, a celebrated Persian poet, mathematician, and astronomer, was born at Nishapur, in 1050(?
40412Or make pale my cheeks with care,''Cause another''s rosy are?
40412Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught?
40412Quis legem det amantibus?
40412ROBERT BLAIR, a noted Scottish poet, was born at Edinburgh, April 19(?
40412SADI, one of the greatest of Persian poets, was born at Shiraz, in 1184, and died in 1291(?).
40412SIR JOHN DENHAM, a noted English poet, was born in Dublin, 1615, and died in London(?
40412SIR SAMUEL GARTH, a renowned English physician and poet, was born in Yorkshire(?
40412ST. JOHN CHRYSOSTOM, a noted Greek Church father, born in Antioch, Syria, 350(?
40412Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman''s fair?
40412THOMAS CHANDLER HALIBURTON( SAM SLICK), a famous Canadian author, was born at Windsor, Nova Scotia, September 26(?
40412THOMAS HEYWOOD, a famous English dramatic poet, was born in Lincolnshire(?
40412THOMAS WARTON, a distinguished English clergyman, critic, was born at Basingstoke, August 1(?
40412Thy joys when shall I see?
40412WILLIAM PALEY, a noted English divine and philosopher, was born at Peterborough, June 25(?
40412What are they?
40412What is it?
40412What is philosophy?
40412What right have we human beings to happiness?
40412What shall I do with all the days and hours That must be counted ere I see thy face?
40412What shall I render to my God For all his gifts to me?
40412When shall my sorrows have an end?
40412Where are the cities of old time?
40412Where did you come from, baby dear?
40412Who can blame me if I cherish the belief that the world is still young-- that there are great possibilities in store for it?
40412Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercy ever hope to have?
40412Why is thy countenance sad, and why are thine eyes red with weeping?
40412Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
40412You hail from Dreamland, Dragon- fly?
40412You k''n hide de fier, but w''at you gwine do wid de smoke?
40412[ 5] What law can bind lovers?
40412thy everlasting light?
40412why should sorrow O''er that brow a shadow fling?
35793And if I do n''t surrender?
35793Are the dragons particularly bad this year?
35793Are you sure?
35793Charm? 35793 Could I possibly be of any assistance?"
35793Do you know anything of modern English public schools? 35793 Do you know how always to obtain cheerful obedience?"
35793Do you see that farm over there?
35793How can we tell,is the burden of her plaint,"that they will leave her alone?"
35793How''s the house?
35793I ca n''t( neither am I able to think of anything to reply to the question which he counters to my''Were You Ever a Child?'' 35793 Is that all?"
35793It comes from Chile, or Honduras, or some place down that way, does n''t it?
35793Let''s see,mused the dragon,"that does n''t tell us much, does it?
35793No?
35793Reader: Is n''t that very dull?
35793Reader: Whoever heard of such an idea?
35793Smite them hip and thigh,said Dr. Straton and the king looked down at him and asked,"Is the necessity immediate?"
35793Then it does n''t make any difference, does it?
35793Then it was n''t a magic word after all?
35793Then, where is the cake, and the holly wreath, and the toy duck?
35793To suppress the fighting instinct? 35793 Was it a large, rather fat June bug?"
35793What happened?
35793What part of the country are you from?
35793What suggestion?
35793What will you do if I surrender?
35793What''s that?
35793What''s the first letter of the magic word?
35793What''s the matter?
35793Which hand?
35793Who?
35793Why not get some of the bright young men on the magazine to write us some fiction?
35793Why?
35793Would any refund on the tuition fee be necessary in case of an accident to young Coeur- Hardy?
35793Yes,said E----, aggressively,"but how are you going to get them to market?"
35793You know what potatoes were selling for last year?
35793''How do you do it?''
35793(_ Briskly_) Say, now, Mr. Tailor, how would you like to form the Wonder Cloth Limited Company?
35793(_ He moves over close to the second Courtier._) LEADING REPUBLICAN-- Wonderful fabric that we saw just now, was n''t it?
35793(_ He reaches into the bag again._) And what''s this?
35793(_ He steps to the door and calls_) Mrs. Cottontail, will you come here immediately?
35793*** JUNE 5, 1919.--"Izzie gon na teachie itty cutums English or not?"
35793--''Were You Ever a Parent?''
35793:"Who''s the best lefthanded golfer you ever saw?"
35793After a moment or so he produces a miniature from his pocket and remarks:"Pretty, is n''t it?"
35793After all, it was fortunate that the young man did not begin with"Will you have a drink?"
35793Again and again he interrupted the lesson to inquire,"And if I say''Rumplesnitz''the dragon ca n''t possibly hurt me?"
35793Already H. 3rd is constantly inquiring"Good boy, dada?"
35793And what shall it be?
35793And where do we get nitrogen?"
35793And, anyway, why should he want to?
35793Ask some veteran theatergoer"What was Booth like as Hamlet?"
35793But I always say, What difference does it make what they call''em if they can do the work?
35793But has Dr. Straton ever stopped to consider what a dreary and dull life he would lead if there were nothing for him to thunder against?
35793But what harm would that have done?...
35793But what of the punctual, persevering and truthful child brought up under the new method?
35793But why Van Cortlandt?
35793But why is it time?
35793COTTONTAIL(_ horrified_)--You mean it comes from drinking?
35793COTTONTAIL(_ sadly_)--Three holes?
35793COTTONTAIL-- What does that come from?
35793COTTONTAIL-- What shall I do?
35793COTTONTAIL-- What''s the matter with me?
35793COTTONTAIL-- You do n''t think I saw any pink monster come through the ceiling?
35793Carefulness?
35793Correct pronunciation?"
35793DOCTOR-- What was n''t a dream?
35793DR. CONY-- And you will admit that the ceiling''s just the same as it ever was?
35793DR. CONY-- Any shortness of breath or palpitation?
35793DR. CONY-- But you were n''t stabbed in the big toe, now, were you?
35793DR. CONY-- Dreams, eh?
35793DR. CONY-- Have you had your heart examined lately?
35793DR. CONY-- That makes it a little more difficult, does n''t it?
35793Deborah had begun to cry long before Simon finished his story, but when he had done she lifted up her head and said,"How could you do it, Simon?
35793Did n''t you ever notice Woodie always picks up things with his left hand?"
35793Did you ever see it?"
35793Do n''t you see that?
35793Do you feel like growling or biting anybody?
35793Do you happen to remember what sort of a hat?
35793Do you know how much 440 bushels at$ 1.50 are?"
35793Do you mind if I go out to smoke?"
35793Do you think you can learn that?"
35793Do you think you could fix us up for to- morrow night with a couple of good aisle seats for_ Up in Mabel''s Room_?"
35793Do you understand?
35793Do you understand?
35793Do you understand?
35793Does n''t it say that the woman is an aged widow?
35793Does n''t it stand to reason that she must have bought that fast mare some time in her forties, at least?
35793Dooley?"
35793Even carefully rehearsed bits of dialogue such as"Who''s a good boy?"
35793Even if that was an elegant house, you''d want to fix it up some way to suit yourself, would n''t you?
35793Fabre has said some hundreds of thousands of good words about wasps, but even if he had n''t, whence comes the cry of"justice for the wasp"?
35793Father and mother living?
35793Go into any railroad station in town and ask the man at the window for a ticket and he will invariably inquire"Where do you want to go?"
35793H. 3rd-- The Review of a Continuous Performance MARCH 1, 1919.--"Do you know how to keep the child from crying?"
35793Has n''t he got_ Jack the Giant Killer_, and_ Dick Whittington_, and_ Aladdin_ and_ Captain Kidd_?
35793Have you ever been a parent?
35793Have you ever heard of Audle?
35793Have you ever thought of what a good, husky tidal wave would do to''Little Old New York,''as we call her?
35793He should take thought and ask himself repeatedly,"Is this really love?"
35793His test for reviewers consists of three point- blank questions, as follows: One-- Have you ever stood bareheaded in the nave of Amiens?
35793Honesty?
35793How can anybody possibly want to do something eight weeks in advance?
35793How can it be expected that they will?
35793How can we tell?
35793How could I possibly tell whether or not I would cry if the safety pins were in wrong or anything else of that sort was not quite right?
35793How did you do that?
35793How many Americans do?
35793How much could you get?"
35793I brought her up on that go- as- you- please system you have been talking about, and do you know what has become of her?"
35793If the people can see it, hey?
35793If, for instance, a rhinoceros escaped from his cage just what would you do to get him back again?
35793Instead of that somebody said,"How many children have you brought up?"
35793Is it an epithet, do you think?"
35793Is n''t this a little excessive?
35793Is that the joke you promised me?
35793Is there any coming back to see people here?
35793It is easy to ask nonchalantly,"How much income tax did you pay this year?"
35793It is true that I have persevered to gain this high office, and why should I not, seeing that I was cradled in page 136?"
35793It lifted off the ceiling-- MRS. COTTONTAIL-- Peter, ca n''t you even be temperate in your lies?
35793It''s hard to tell shades in this light, is n''t it?
35793Just clean butter plates?
35793LEADING REPUBLICAN-- Moonlight?
35793LEADING REPUBLICAN-- Now, what shade should you say it was?
35793LEADING REPUBLICAN-- Scarlet, eh?
35793MR. COTTONTAIL-- Is that doctor ever coming?
35793MRS. COTTONTAIL(_ looking at him in amazement_)--What do you say?
35793My big toe, I think, but that''s not what worries me-- DR. CONY(_ breaking in_)--Pains worse at night than it does during the daytime, does n''t it?
35793No fixed delusions?
35793Now, what do you think is the best show you ever saw?
35793Of course, we did not expect Miss Weston to enjoy her predicament, but when a man asked her,"Are you going to sing''As Once in May''to- night?"
35793Or, even if they said nothing, but just looked at you accusingly, what would you say to them?"
35793Perseverance?
35793Personally we never see him in a new picture without suddenly being struck with the thought,"How long has this been going on?"
35793Rather, he says:"What is all this to me?"
35793THE FAT MAN(_ almost plaintively_)--Don''t you believe I''m Death?
35793THE FAT MAN(_ horrified and distressed_)--Why should I rattle?
35793THE FAT MAN-- But what makes you so sure I''m not Death?
35793THE GIRL FROM THE KITCHEN-- But what do they want?
35793THE KING-- Well, why did n''t you say so in the first place?
35793THE KING-- You are eloquent, O stranger from a far country, and what do you mean?
35793THE LEADING DEMOCRAT-- It all gets down to this, your majesty: do you trust the people, or do n''t you?
35793THE LEADING DEMOCRAT-- It seems to me that the only question is, Does his majesty trust the people fully and completely?
35793THE LEADING DEMOCRAT-- Then why are you afraid to show yourself before them in this magnificent new robe?
35793THE LEADING DEMOCRAT-- Then why are you afraid?
35793THE SICK MAN(_ eagerly_)--I suppose my temperature''s way up again, hey?
35793THE SICK MAN(_ enormously impressed_)--Do you get shows there before we have them in New York?
35793THE SICK MAN(_ incredulously_)--Almost normal?
35793THE SICK MAN(_ indignantly_)--How can you do that?
35793THE SICK MAN(_ shocked_)--Did she get in?
35793THE SICK MAN(_ suspiciously_)--Did you hole out on every green or just estimate?
35793THE SICK MAN(_ with rising interest_)--Do you mean to say you''ve got funnier shows than"Fair and Warmer"?
35793THE SICK MAN-- And, say, will Delehanty bust that ball?
35793THE SICK MAN-- Any shows?
35793THE SICK MAN-- More than four hundred yards?
35793THE SICK MAN-- There wo n''t be any bodies, then?
35793THE SICK MAN-- Well, how about this"Ah, There, Annie!"?
35793THE SICK MAN-- What Shaw''s that?
35793THE SICK MAN-- What do you make of that?
35793THE SICK MAN-- What''s the joke?
35793THE SICK MAN-- Who are you?
35793THE SICK MAN-- Will Radbourne pitch?
35793THE TAILOR-- And that''s all you do?
35793THE TAILOR-- The sixth?
35793THE TAILOR-- Who are you?
35793THE TAILOR-- You see the cloth?
35793Take that one of Ibsen''s now,"Merry Christmas"-- THE SICK MAN(_ fretfully_)--Ibsen?
35793That ought n''t to make me see things; do you think so?
35793That''s a bit of a risk now, is n''t it?
35793The Leading Republican draws close to the first Courtier._) LEADING REPUBLICAN-- Wonderful fabric that, was it not?
35793The dragon waited for a long time for Gawaine to ask"Why?"
35793The query"What trains have you got?"
35793The question was so intelligent and so well thought out that the lieutenant said to him:''What were you before the war?''
35793Three-- Have you ever walked with whispers into the hushed presence of the Frari Madonna of Bellini?
35793Throbs a bit right now, hey?
35793To teach punctuality?
35793Towns has traced to tobacco actually lies at its door-- even then is the case for the prohibition of smoking persuasive?
35793Truthfulness?
35793Two-- Have you ever climbed to the Acropolis by moonlight?
35793We suggested,"Is n''t it rather stuffy in here?
35793Well, now, Mr. Cottontail, what can I do for you?
35793What can I provide?"
35793What charm?"
35793What color?
35793What do I want with a black overcoat or a skeleton?
35793What happened?
35793What is getting into children these days, anyway?
35793What is it that you carry-- ammunition, clothing, food?''
35793What is it?"
35793What seems to be the trouble?
35793What sort of a word is this?
35793What was the use of keeping me waiting?
35793What would you do with it?
35793What''s meaner than Death?
35793Where do they get it?
35793Where''s your black cloak?
35793Where''s your sickle?
35793Where''s your skeleton?
35793Why do n''t you rattle when you walk?
35793Why has the Lusk committee failed to act in the matter?
35793Why not let the audience have a new Deburau, a young Deburau?
35793Will you surrender?"
35793You do n''t think you''re Napoleon or the White Rabbit or anything like that, do you?
35793You feel any more comfortable?
35793You knew, of course, that he was a heavy drinker?
35793You know that man?
35793You know, they say"Oh, Death, where is thy sting?"
35793or,"How do you get that way?"
40884A Frenchman?
40884A railroad station?
40884Ai n''t we goin''to see the houses of the fashionable people?
40884And you do n''t run many risks?
40884Are they going to rebuild?
40884Are we so bad?
40884Are you going to bring the troupe up in extra cars or in a special train?
40884But why?
40884Do you honestly?
40884Do you notice that house?
40884Do you think that they are four dollars a dozen?
40884Great stuff?
40884Have you tickets for''The Giddiest Girl''?
40884How about Coney island?
40884Is it like this-- every night?
40884It must be fine for the children?
40884So good?
40884So you are from near Syracuse?
40884Suppose that the apartment houses should begin to drift in there-- in any numbers?
40884The St. Cecilia Society?
40884The cult?
40884The ingredients?
40884The manner of the mixing?
40884There is Brooklyn?
40884They were n''t reading fiction?
40884Well, what of it?
40884Western,did we say?
40884What has happened to the poor West Side?
40884What is a typical New Yorker?
40884What is ever going to keep that statue from falling over some day?
40884What is the nature of the typical Rochesterian?
40884What is the price of them?
40884Why tea?
40884Why what?
40884_ Café lait?_says the coffee- man.
40884*****"Now what are the things that have gone to make these things possible?"
40884--How could you do it, Dad?"
408848 WHERE ROMANCE AND COURTESY DO NOT FORGET"You are not going to write your book and leave out Charleston?"
40884A hustler from North or East would put in electric shakers instanter-- a thousand or is it ten thousand revolutions to the minute?
40884Abandoned?
40884Absurd, you say?
40884And who shall say that such dreams are idly dreamed?
40884Are the sane folk right when they say that he does not exist?
40884Beds?
40884Breakfast at the hotel?
40884But what of that speed limit with a good magazine in your hands and a slowly changing vista of open country ever spread before your hungry eyes?
40884But who shall say that she should not be restive about a business that reaches an output in a single twelvemonth of something over 150,000,000 tons?
40884Ca n''t he ever give us the leisure to read them without its costing us the money for our food?''
40884Can he not do better than that?
40884Can one be young and beautiful forever?
40884Can you keep Solomon Strunsky out of the family of typical New Yorkers?
40884Can you think of any worse blow for an average town?
40884Cooks?
40884Did you notice the station at which you entered today?"
40884Do n''t you get the idea now of the bigger and better Pittsburgh?"
40884Do they ever ride?
40884Do you wonder that in the face of such a state of things transit relief comes rather slowly to Pittsburgh?
40884Do you wonder that they really live their lives?
40884Does that sound familiar?
40884Elaborate did we say?
40884Finally--"Do they bury all of them this way?"
40884For what is Prosperity, she may ask you, but a dollar- mark?
40884From the supposedly abandoned sheds and houses, from the_ costumiers_?
40884His house was--""What was that about the Confederates?"
40884Honor among New York business men?
40884How about the bells of St. Philip''s?
40884In all that time did we say?
40884Like the compartments in the night- trains of Europe?
40884Now why has Cleveland taken her new position of sixth among the cities of the land?
40884Odors?
40884Oversight?
40884Stay fixed?
40884The Atlantic seaboard has paid full tribute to the measure of her training-- and why not?
40884There was a curving wall of stone along the quay street and it all seemed quite like the geography pictures of Liverpool, or was it Marseilles?
40884They have a parrot and a sewing- machine and what are the glories of the past to them?
40884They saw plains-- mile after mile of plains-- peopled by what?
40884We have already told of the rapid progress of Toronto, now what of the folk who came to make it?
40884What fun, too, for those old boys?
40884What is the typical New Yorker?
40884What matter the souvenirs now?
40884What price could he give for a love and loyalty of that sort?
40884When they came out and looked for their land what did they see?
40884Would Denver do that?
40884Would not the city of Denver lend its credit to an enterprise so fraught with commercial possibilities for it?
40884You can ask a New Yorker about it half an hour after his trip down town, sardine- fashion, and he will only say:"The subway?
40884You could not imagine such a thing in Boston or Baltimore or Philadelphia, could you?"
40884You think you are going to fairly revel in a wide open town, in the full significance of that phrase, and what do you see?
40884[ Illustration: You still see white steamboats at the New Orleans levee] An ugly old building did we say, with rough glance at its rusty façades?
40884you begin, as if attacking the very substance of our argument of romance,"fighting the battles of the English Queen?"
39245A Court of Inquiry!--proofs, and all riglar-- upon oath?
39245Ai n''t that first- rate?
39245And this Patriotic Copperplate Bank of Quodlibet was not set on foot by Nicodemus Handy and Theodore Fog?
39245And who has a right to object to that?
39245Are you content to see your cherished banks stripped of the confidence of the government?
39245Did n''t I?
39245Do we not know,said he,"that in every community the majority are poor?
39245Do you mean to say that you heard him say so?
39245For,he inquired with great force of argument, adopting the Socratic form,"what is Congress?
39245Have you none of our paper?
39245How larger, sir?
39245I want to know,said Mrs. Ferret,"who''s master of this house-- you or me?
39245Is the thing to be made public? 39245 Jesse,"said I, mildly,"have you any respect for the opinion of our distinguished representative, my former pupil, Middleton Flam?"
39245Never,cried out Flanigan Sucker, who stood in the doorway, just behind Nim Porter--"will we, Nim?"
39245Shall this bank suspend specie payments? 39245 Susan Barndollar, are you in earnest?"
39245The failures of traders and of banks?
39245The., who sot that agoin''?
39245The., you ai n''t afeard, old fellow?
39245There''s_ something_ in this here thing-- else why do n''t the President go smack forward on the letter?
39245Well, I''spose you know?
39245Well, and ef things does take a turn?
39245Well, what''s the fraction,said Neal,"that you''re all a busting out in such a spell of a laugh about?"
39245What does that signify?
39245What does the Globe give out concerning of it?
39245What put into your drunken noddle that we have broke?
39245What''s Tom Benton''s notion?
39245What''s the odds?
39245Who put it into your head to underrate and strangle down Theodore Fog, the oldest friend we have had sence we came to Quodlibet? 39245 Who,"he asked,"was Augustus Postlethwaite Tompkinson?
39245Who?
39245Whoever said Tigertail ought to be turned out?
39245Why, my dear, do n''t you see the good of it?
39245You admit that there is a large amount of paper money afloat?
39245You admit the derangement of values all over the country?
39245You admit, I suppose,said Mr. Grant,"that this Bank of Quodlibet has exploded?"
39245''Where is the man with soul so dead Who never to himself hath said, This is my own, my native land?''
39245A mint julep, Dabbs?
39245Again asked Anthony Hardbottle,"What circulation have you abroad?"
39245And is n''t this the_ last_ thing he could think of?
39245Are you willing, I ask, to see this glorious system prostrated to the earth?"
39245Besides, who would be the most impartial in such a matter, the man legislating for his_ own_ property, or the man legislating for his_ neighbor''s_?
39245But what can be more consistent with the principles and professions of the New- Light creed?
39245But what distress is there?
39245Dabbs, is n''t that metaphysics?
39245Do you assemble in front of this edifice to make the day hideous with howling?
39245Does he tell us to keep the public moneys locked up only for the selfish purposes of the government?
39245Does n''t our member, Middleton Flam, tell you the same thing, and Nicodemus Handy, and Liphlet Fox?
39245Does n''t the schoolmaster tell you to stick to the upper side?
39245Ferret?"
39245Ferret?"
39245Flan, a julep?
39245Flan, do n''t you call that the true theory of the balance of power?
39245For whom can any one man in that body speak?
39245Haint we had turns before?
39245Handy,"that we must all make our fortunes, if the government is only true to its word; and who can doubt it will be true?
39245Has n''t he tried everything else?
39245He was_ for_ a National Bank-- he was_ against_ it: what of that?
39245How else can we be with the majority?
39245I hear his husky, dry, and querulous voice, tisicky and quick, asking, how goes it in Bickerbray?
39245If the project shall be successful----""What project?"
39245Is Democracy like the laws of the Medes and Persians?
39245Is it a post set up in a stream for the liquid element of human policy forever to roll by and leave behind?
39245Is it that, your honor?
39245Is it to be told_ against_ a man, that his neighbors count him to be frugal and thrifty, and that he is considered respectable in the world?
39245Is it to insult Nicodemus Handy, a worthy New Light, or is it to affright the universe by pulling down these walls?
39245Is not Democracy itself the march of intellect?
39245Mr. Flam raised his arm, and spoke in this strain:--"Men of Quodlibet, what madness has seized upon you?
39245Nim, how have you made out in these illustrious''three days?''"
39245Now, what is the President?
39245Of that which the rich hath, does he give to the poor?
39245Quid consilii capiemus?
39245Secondthoughts?"
39245Shall I tell it?
39245Sir, the Secretary is an honor to the Democracy of Quodlibet:--what does he say?
39245Solomon Secondthoughts, ai n''t I right?"
39245Speech by Horace Binney-- eh?
39245Submit?
39245That''s the way they treat a poor man like Joe Plumb, what''s obliged to work for his livin'':--would they''a sarved a Big Bug so?
39245The Secretary, you perceive, has confidence in the''solidity and established character''of our bank-- how can you refuse_ your_ confidence after that?
39245These men, he said called themselves Conservatives:"And what think you, Mr. President,"he asked,"was_ their_ project?
39245To the Wieters belongs the Spiles; if that ai n''t a motter, what''s the use of having it?
39245Well, sirs, he_ did_ change-- what of it?
39245Well, what does these Federals do then?
39245What did you want with me, my love?"
39245What else could it be put for?
39245What from Tumbledown?
39245What is any portico put up for?
39245What is the New- Light Quodlibetarian Democracy, but a strict conformity to the will of the majority?
39245What should we do?
39245What was his calling?
39245What was his paper?
39245What was to be done?
39245Where is the slave that would desert his party?
39245Where''s the distress, then?
39245Who are the rich that they talk about?
39245Who''s he?
39245Who''s he?
39245Who''s here so base would be a turncoat?
39245Why should he be prevented paying seven, eight, or nine, even, if he finds it his interest to give it-- or can not do without it?
39245Why should these representatives of_ the parts_ undertake to dictate to the representative of_ the whole_?
39245Why should we suspend?"
39245Would gentlemen submit to be led by the nose by a thing like that, twenty- four by eighteen?"
39245Yes?
39245and does not marching consist in change of place?
39245asked Goodlack, peevishly,"''cepting Neal Hopper, who picked up such a story out of the nine thousand lies of the Whole Team?"
39245how came you here?
39245or is it the divine rainbow spanning the earth with its arch, and changing with the sun, now in the east, now in the west?
39245replied the wife,"is there anythink new in that, in this Borough?
39245that there are two men without property for every one man with it?
39245when money is worth but five?
39245who cares about it?"
43921''And why not?'' 43921 And what are ye ating, my dear little fox?"
43921And what church is that over yonder, whose spire we see beyond the college?
43921Is it a goose you stole from me?
43921Is it singin''yees want?
43921Phwat''s that?
43921Sure, an''is n''t the English good enough for a beast?
43921What is the drink bill of Ireland?
43921What is the ratio of illiteracy in Ireland?
43921An American tourist said to his driver:"Why do you speak to your horse in English, when you talk Celtic to your friends on the road?"
43921And how does she stand?
43921And what''s the matter with the motto,''No dependence but the cross''?"
43921I met with Napper Tandy and he tuk me by the hand And he said,''How''s poor ould Ireland and how does she stand?
43921Lord Treasurer Burleigh remonstrated, saying:"What?
43921One Sunday morning the good doctor found Harry at breakfast and remarked pleasantly:"''I hope you are going to meeting this morning, Harry?''
43921So much for a rhyme?"
43921Tell us what the pile contains?
43921Under the picture is printed in plain letters the words,"Who fears to speak of''98?"
41474Besides,said many,"why stir up these old matters?
41474Is that you, Peter?
41474La, Marse Phil, whar you gwine?
41474Miss-- hold de wire-- Will you marry me? 41474 Ole Mis''Anne?
41474What did he say, Remus?
41474Why-- yas-- Of course I loves my beau-- Say what''s de reason you wants to know?
41474Yas.--Dis Angeline-- Dis me--"I-- des wanter say-- dat I does-- love you-- Miss Angeline-- does you love me, too--?
41474( Quoted by) HENRY STILES BRADLEY July Nineteenth What was my offense?
41474( What meks you rattle de handle so?)
41474A cricket dirging days that soon must die?
41474And I says to a man settin''next to me, s''I"what sort of fool play''n is that?...
41474And shall not the evening call another star Out of the infinite regions of the night, To mark this day in Heaven?
41474And what is meant by character?
41474Ask the world-- The world has heard his story-- If all its annals can unfold A prouder tale of glory?
41474But were a man never so usurious, would he not lend a winter seed for a summer song?
41474Ca n''t I, Mammy Phyllis?"
41474Courage?
41474DANIEL B. LUCAS(_ The South Shall Claim Her Own Again_) July Fifteenth FACT OR FICTION?
41474Dat you?"
41474Did n''t my rooster always clap his wings and crow whenever he passed our quarters?
41474Do your folks know how to make it pay?
41474During the rest of my visit you call me Marse Charles, you hear?"
41474HENRY KYD DOUGLAS_ Capture of Harper''s Ferry by Jackson, 1862_ September Sixteenth Mr. Lincoln, sir, have you any late news from Mr. Harper''s Ferry?
41474He wields no warlike weapons now, Returns no foeman''s thrust,-- Who but a coward would revile An honest soldier''s dust?
41474Honesty?
41474I say, Main twenty----what''s ailin''you?
41474If ever merely human life Hath taught diviner moral-- If ever round a worthier brow Was twined a purer laurel?
41474Lee?...
41474Lord, to thy will I yield my parting breath, Yet many a dream hath charmed my youthful eye; And must life''s visions all depart?
41474Love of truth?
41474MAJOR CHARLES H. SMITH(_ Bill Arp_)_ Joseph E. Johnston born, 1807_ February Eighth Hath not the morning dawned with added light?
41474One day, on meeting the old colored man, he asked:"Where do you get your wood, Uncle?"
41474Or did the ghost of Summer wander by?
41474Or heart- sick bird that sang of happier hours?
41474Or wilt thou, ere this very day be done, Blaze Saladin still, with unforgiving fire?
41474POE-- How can so strange and fine a genius and so sad a life be expressed and compressed in one line?
41474Pride of race?
41474Take him by the hand and help him up and brush the dirt off his clothes?
41474The school in which the training was given is closed, and who wishes to open it?
41474Thou canst not measure Mistress Nature''s hair, Not one sweet inch: nay, if thy sight is sharp, Wouldst count the strings upon an angel''s harp?
41474True--?"
41474WALTER MALONE October Sixth Who said"false as dreams"?
41474Was it a voice lamenting for the flowers?
41474Well, what did the big feller do?
41474What a nigger gwineter learn outen books?
41474What matter if our feet are torn?
41474What matter if our shoes are worn?
41474Who is you?"
41474Wilt warm the world with peace and love- desire?
41474Would he refuse to invest his stale crumbs in an orchestra of divine instruments and a choir of heavenly voices?
41474_ Stonewall Jackson born, 1824_ January Twenty- Second Wherein, then, lay his strength, and what was the secret of his influence over all this land?
41474is it fancy, That beneath us sighs, As that warm lap receives the largesse of the skies?
41474what were slumber''s drowsy kiss, To golden visions such as this, Through all the wakeful night?
45744Huntington?)
45744Portrait of Sebastian Cabot,( 1477- 1557?)
45744_ Falstaff._--Shall I?
40731''What is that?'' 40731 How do you like hoofing it?"
40731Miss what?
40731Not his is the bone they are fighting for, And why should my dog sail in, With nothing to gain but a certain chance To lose his own precious skin? 40731 Well, uncle, how far is it ten miles down the road from here?"
40731What are you about, Sal?
40731What are you doing?
40731Would you have given me no chance for life,I replied,"in case the battle had gone in your favor?"
40731108 Measuring an Alligator 125 General Custer at the Close of the War-- Aged 25 168"Stand there, cowards, will you, and see an old man robbed?"
40731And what do you think those scamps did?
40731But finding our boy in the wrong, he arraigned him, and began,''Did you strike Jake with malice aforethought?''
40731But lightning"murders sleep"with me, and, consequently, he was awakened by a conjugal joggle, and on asking,"What is it?"
40731But who would have thought that the stream would have risen around the little knoll as it did?
40731Do n''t I know what I''ve been through to gain my victory?
40731Eliza, in her own quaint way, is saying to me now:"Do you mind, Miss Libbie, how me and you got J---- his parole?
40731For where will we get another?"
40731He often said:"Shall we not stop in Detroit a day or two, Libbie, till you get the tired look out of your face?
40731He would say,''What you two conspirin''up now?
40731How could it be otherwise to a boy who, five brief years before, was a beardless youth with no apparent future before him?
40731How long am I to contend with this?''
40731How many apple- dumplin''s and biscuit did they get this time?''
40731I asked what was the matter-- did he have any grudge or hatred for the man?
40731I could not help telling the sergeant this, and he yielded to my entreaties-- for what soldier ever refused our appeals?
40731I exclaimed in horror,"Another man drowned?
40731I often think, Who among our friends pleases us on all occasions?
40731I only remember one,"What does a regiment of cavalry weigh?"
40731I told him Eliza; and he says, looking me all over fust,''Well, Eliza, would you like to cum and live with me?''
40731I would say, when I saw him lookin''at the little path in the weeds,''Well, what is it, Ginnel?''
40731In a pine forest, dark and thick with fallen trees, what good did one tallow dip do in the hasty search we made?
40731Is he not a statesman as well as a soldier?
40731Miss Libbie, you would n''t have me to do it, would you?
40731Oh, Libbie, do you think I lie as flat to the ground as you do?"
40731One of them would speak up the minute they saw me, and say,''Eliza, you hain''t got no hot biscuit, have you?''
40731Out of the dark my husband''s voice came cheerily, as if he were riding in a path of sunshine:"Are you all right?"
40731She asked her usual question,"Did I come way off down in this here no''count country to wash white counterpanes for dogs?"
40731She still persisted, saying,"What if we should reach a fort, and I was obliged to appear in the gown I now wear?"
40731The anxious, unhappy creature beside me said, gently, in the small hours,"Libbie, are you awake?"
40731Then the General tapered off his aggravating threats, and said,"Well, come, come, come, father, why do n''t you eat your dinner?"
40731This news is quite unexpected,"and so on, or"When, may I inquire, did you learn this?"
40731Und dey singed songs dill py and py one of de ladies say:''Ish any podies here ash know de crate pallad of"Hans Breitmann''s Barty?"''
40731Was there room for a thought, save one of devout thankfulness, and such happiness as I find no words to describe?
40731We were both much moved when, after asking us questions, she said to me,"And, Missey, is it really true that I is free?"
40731Well, whom do you think we have found down here, but the old Colonel Groome who distinguished himself that day?
40731What can I say in admiration of the pluck of those Western men?
40731What did earth hold for us greater than what we then had?
40731What had I to ask more?
40731What shall we do?"
40731What trees that grow Give such sweet impunity?"
40731What would your mother Custer think of you now?"
40731When I returned I asked anxiously,"Did any one speak to you, Eliza?"
40731When at last I heard he had been given release and slept the blessed sleep, what word of sorrow could be framed?
40731When we were at home in our own room, if I asked him, blazing anew with wrath at such a stab, how he kept his temper, he replied,"Why notice it?
40731While the weather remained good, this was a very comfortable camp for us-- but when, in Kansas, do the elements continue quiet for twenty- four hours?
40731Who could help being grieved for a man so frank and humble over his failings?
40731Who keeps in front in our country''s progress as does this war hero?
40731With a"do you suppose the mate cares for one darkey more or less?"
40731With complaining tones she said,"Miss Libbie, ai n''t you goin''to do no sewin''for me at all?
40731[ Illustration:"STAND THERE, COWARDS, WILL YOU, AND SEE AN OLD MAN ROBBED?"]
40731and if you had studied up anything that they could do for you?
40731bit you whar?''
40731but the Americans are a brave people,"the poor, frightened woman clung to me and whispered,"Miss Libbie, could n''t we get down anyway?
40731do you hear_ that_, Miss Libbie?
40731how I used to feel when my husband''s morning duties at the office were over, and he walked the floor of our room, saying,"Libbie, what shall I do?"
40731how can you speak so irreverently of death?"
40731joined the doe- boys, eh?"
40731meaning, When shall we find a creek on which to camp?
40731stand there, cowards, will you, and see an old man robbed?''
40731what am dat?"
40731what shall we do?
40731what_ have_ you done with Libbie''s transparent skin?''
40731when I got better, did n''t he go and say I was playin''off on him, just to get a big drink of whiskey?
23215A memory?
23215Ah, and they took him out and whipped him?
23215Ai n''t you goin''to hear him, pap?
23215All right; and how about you, Lige?
23215And besides what would the law do?
23215And do you know the reason?
23215And if there is you would n''t mind writing it up, would you?
23215And is it possible, Mr. McElwin, that you do not see the humor of it?
23215And is that where he walks up and down while he''s thinking?
23215And it is suspected that the visitor had something to do with the subsequent call of the White Caps?
23215And leave me?
23215And now, Sammy, what are you going to do with that feller? 23215 And now,"he added,"have you any idea or any suspicion as to who led this gang?"
23215And what if you come home drunk?
23215And who will tell Zeb Sawyer? 23215 And you did n''t mean that you''d simply look over the fence and then come away?"
23215And you did n''t see her again?
23215And you have remained to tell me this?
23215And your partner, will he be here?
23215Annie, is Eva better?
23215Any news about town?
23215Are you busy?
23215Are you busy?
23215Are you feeding many mules at present?
23215Are you going to have them arrested?
23215Are you going to sign it?
23215Are you hurt?
23215Board with a relative of mine?
23215Bold, did you say? 23215 Brother McElwin?
23215But I am to see you again?
23215But I guess Aunt Tobithy and Miss Annie will go, wo n''t they?
23215But are you willing to shoulder the debt of sixty- five millions of people? 23215 But ca n''t you see how she likes it?"
23215But did n''t I tell you to hold on a moment? 23215 But did n''t they teach you that without a certain moral force there can be no real and lasting achievement?"
23215But do n''t you suppose she''d rather have a partnership than freedom?
23215But do you think the country is as well off now as it was then?
23215But have you been introduced to her?
23215But have you kept your promise to me? 23215 But have you met her?"
23215But what right have you to blame him for that? 23215 But what''s this joke they''ve got on you about bein''married?"
23215But what''s to be the outcome of the affair?
23215But who shall say when a mind is not sound? 23215 But who''s there?"
23215But why should you be surprised? 23215 But you do n''t regret having made the sacrifice to get the education, do you?"
23215But you dreamed of her?
23215But you wo n''t shake hands?
23215Ca n''t shoot a pistol much, can you?
23215Ca n''t you find it? 23215 Cabbages?"
23215Can you call them together for tonight?
23215Conditions? 23215 Did Mr. Menifee have anything of interest to say?"
23215Did he call it an editorial?
23215Did he threaten you?
23215Did n''t I tell you that he tried to beat me out of the money? 23215 Did n''t concern you?
23215Did she ask you to sign the populistic petition?
23215Did she say so?
23215Did she tell you, sir?
23215Did the banker forgive you?
23215Did they hurt you?
23215Did you ever think that when the heart was paid the whole world is out of debt?
23215Did you find out as to how she stands?
23215Did you find out how you stand?
23215Did you see him?
23215Did you speak to me?
23215Did your father come?
23215Did-- did Mrs. Lyman entirely recover before she was taken home?
23215Do I show it?
23215Do I?
23215Do the doctors think that Bob will get well?
23215Do you call it weakening when you grab a woman and kiss her? 23215 Do you think Bob will be back pretty soon?"
23215Do you think so?
23215Do you think you can walk?
23215Do you?
23215Does he do most of his work here?
23215Does he know that he''s a subscriber?
23215Dollars?
23215Feller still there?
23215Fog? 23215 For me to hear him?
23215Hard of you? 23215 Has Mr. Sawyer been to see you?"
23215Has she returned?
23215Has that old fellow got any money?
23215Has the old man offered you money to turn loose?
23215Has who returned?
23215Has your life been really hard?
23215Have n''t got one, have you?
23215Have n''t you got out of bed rather soon?
23215Have you said anything to annoy him?
23215Helloa, Steve, where''s Bob?
23215Horses gone?
23215How are they all, Uncle Buckley?
23215How could I, sir?
23215How did you know? 23215 How many do you print a week?"
23215How much longer is this suppression act to remain in force? 23215 How so?"
23215How''s business with you?
23215How?
23215How?
23215Hunch- back? 23215 I ask, sir, how you could presume to stand up with her?"
23215I do n''t want to be wicked,she said, looking up at him,"but I beg of you not to sign that petition to the Court, until--""Until when?"
23215I do n''t want to draw any comparisons, old fellow, but do you suppose Miss Eva could milk? 23215 If you do n''t insinuate, what then?
23215If you have been afraid that he will accept the offer--"What,he said, closing the umbrella and looking at her,"what do you know about it?"
23215In the house?
23215In the name of the love you bear this man?
23215In the rain?
23215In whose name, then?
23215Is Mr. Lyman here yet?
23215Is he up there now?
23215Is it possible, Mr. Lyman, that you do not see the necessity of it?
23215Is it worth a hundred dollars?
23215Is it? 23215 Is n''t it the memory of a bright face that calls on you?"
23215Is n''t it, Zeb?
23215Is that so? 23215 Is that the way they do?
23215Is the paper which your daughter signed here or at your home?
23215Is there any moral force over there? 23215 Is there anything I can do for you?
23215Is there anything holding you?
23215Is there anything wrong?
23215Is this the pen he writes with?
23215It''s a what?
23215Laughed at you; how could they?
23215Look here, have you gone crazy?
23215Lucy, where are you?
23215Lyman did? 23215 Lyman, would you believe that I weakened?
23215Marry, and get acquainted afterwards, eh? 23215 May I ask why?"
23215Mr. Lyman, we are not friends, but would you ruin me in the estimation of the public?
23215My daughter, ca n''t you understand the strange interest you take in him? 23215 My dear boy,"said he,"do n''t you know it would be very indelicate, not to say vulgar, for us to print a sensational account of that marriage?
23215No? 23215 No?
23215No? 23215 Not even if they should come with pistols?"
23215Not tonight? 23215 Not very hard; were you?"
23215Not weakening, are you?
23215Now, Judge, what airs have I ever put on to cause you to size me up that way? 23215 Now, look here, Judge, am I to accept this as an insinuation?"
23215Now, what do you want to talk that way for? 23215 Oh, I could n''t object, but-- but do n''t you think it might cause remark, after what has happened?"
23215Oh, are you? 23215 Oh, but who will tell Cousin McElwin?"
23215Oh, is he? 23215 Oh, then you have heard of me?
23215Oh, you could n''t get away without mentioning your god- essence, could you? 23215 Old Jack?
23215Once more, are you going to open it?
23215Pardon me,he said to her, paying no attention to Sawyer,"but do you realize the scandalous absurdity of your action at his moment?"
23215Printing the paper in there?
23215Refused?
23215Rob me? 23215 Sawyer?
23215Say,said Bob,"you''lowed your man wa''n''t easy to skeer, and if that''s the case, what''s the use of takin''him a mile or two to the woods?
23215Sent it to me?
23215Shall I keep the columns open?
23215Sincere? 23215 Something important?"
23215Sudden, sir?
23215Suppose we could strike him for a hundred for six months?
23215Tell you? 23215 That may be all true, sir, but how could you presume, even in fun, to stand up with her?
23215The marriage, do n''t you understand? 23215 Then what did you want to tell me?"
23215Then why are you standing there?
23215Then why did n''t you tell me?
23215Then would you mind walking up there with me so that I may sign it?
23215Then you did n''t do anything with his Royal Flush?
23215Then you''d rather go alone, anyway, would n''t you? 23215 Then, why should not all three of us go?"
23215Tired of yourself?
23215To think? 23215 Understand what, Uncle Buckley?"
23215Upon what collateral, sir?
23215Was n''t this meeting an accident?
23215Weakening? 23215 Well, and then what happened?"
23215Well, but how often are you going to print a notice of the firm?
23215Well, do n''t you get mad? 23215 Well, do n''t you think you''d better introduce us?"
23215Well, is that all?
23215Well, now what would be the use of saying so? 23215 Well, then, what more does he want?
23215Well, what is expected of me?
23215Well, what of that? 23215 Well, why do n''t you?
23215Well,said Warren,"have you got another piece of news to suppress?"
23215Were you ever caught by a woman?
23215What about them?
23215What are you going to do, Lyman?
23215What business are you in?
23215What do you blame him for, then?
23215What do you make of it?
23215What do you mean, my dear?
23215What do you mean?
23215What do you think has happened? 23215 What do you think of it?"
23215What do you think of it?
23215What is it, dear?
23215What is it?
23215What noise was that?
23215What time?
23215What would be the use of thinking of it? 23215 What''s he looking so serious about?"
23215What''s the trouble?
23215What, Mab''s running away?
23215What, again?
23215What, is it that late?
23215What, over that dark road? 23215 What, sir, do you mean it?"
23215What, so soon? 23215 What, we ai n''t going in the same door?"
23215What, you do n''t want it?
23215What, you get up a prayer- meeting?
23215What?
23215When am I going to sign it for you?
23215When did you quit each other?
23215Where are you going?
23215Where is Eva?
23215Where is Eva?
23215Where is your mother?
23215Where''s Jim?
23215Where? 23215 Where?"
23215Which way did he go?
23215Who is she?
23215Who suggested that-- that impudence, sir?
23215Who the deuce is he? 23215 Who''s there?"
23215Why did n''t you tell me, so that I might have known what to expect? 23215 Why do n''t you do something?
23215Why do n''t you go, Warren?
23215Why do n''t you light your cigar?
23215Why do n''t you make him give you a big sum?
23215Why do n''t you say that you are thankful to find me a fool?
23215Why have n''t I met such men as you are? 23215 Why not wait for a thunder storm and comfort her between flashes of lightning?"
23215Why should we care what they think?
23215Why so?
23215Why, Mr. Lyman, how can you say that?
23215Why, Mrs. McElwin and her daughter?
23215Why, how do you do?
23215Why, my child, how can you talk so? 23215 Why, my dear old friend, do you suppose I would let you lose it?
23215Why, what can you be thinking about, James?
23215Why, what''s the matter?
23215Why, what''s the matter?
23215Why? 23215 Why?
23215Why?
23215Will you take it?
23215With her?
23215With the lady and the mule?
23215Without signing this petition?
23215Wo n''t you sit down to a sardine?
23215Wo n''t you sit down?
23215Would it be ridiculous to hear that young man preach?
23215Would n''t I? 23215 Would n''t take a mortgage on the library?"
23215Would you mind showing me the room where he does his work? 23215 Yes, I know, but after you have protected her-- what then?"
23215Yes, but are you sure, Sammy, that he ai n''t your partner?
23215You are afraid so?
23215You do n''t? 23215 You fling me''n creek?"
23215You heard him? 23215 You mean is he still in town?
23215You said there was one or two-- the other one? 23215 You thank me?
23215You will go, then?
23215You will sign it, wo n''t you?
23215Zeb,she said,"why do you let this man talk that way?
23215''That ai n''t the question,''I said,''do you care anything for me?
23215After forming so strong an attachment?"
23215Ai n''t you going to send one to Miss Eva?"
23215Am I bold?
23215Am I right?"
23215And I was not an entire stranger when I called at your bank?
23215And ai n''t he the funniest thing?
23215And did n''t your wife take the young woman''s part, declaring that she looked higher, and was n''t she finally compelled to yield?"
23215And do you know why?
23215And how came you to be near him?"
23215And how did you get the name of being desperate?"
23215And if any royalties should come from the sale of my book, what then?
23215And if you did, how could you?
23215And now I hope you wo n''t feel hurt if I ask you something?"
23215And now will you agree to conform to the requirements of that ridiculous legislature, and sign the petition to the court?"
23215And now, Jimmie, after this well merited rebuke, are you ready to listen to what I was going to say?"
23215And then she cried:"Oh, where is Henry Bostic?
23215And this from another one:"''What do you think of young Parson Bostic?''
23215And what does it mean?
23215And why are you so much inclined to take his part?
23215And you do n''t really mean to tell me that you ai n''t, Sammy?"
23215And, by the way, do n''t you think you had better get at it while it''s fresh?"
23215Any sour citizens up your way?"
23215Anything blowing in the wind?"
23215Are all these our books?"
23215Are you as bold with all women as you are with me?"
23215Are you going to church tonight?"
23215Are you going?"
23215Are you hurt, Sawyer?"
23215Are you in a position to do that?"
23215Are you sure that it was a negro singing?"
23215Are you tired?"
23215Because you like to hear it?"
23215Busy tonight?"
23215But about the woman, what became of her?"
23215But before I forget it I should like to ask what this man Sawyer has to do with it?"
23215But did you go to the law and enter a protest against an outrage which you knew he was going to commit?
23215But did you notice that he had law books under his arm?"
23215But do n''t you think we''d better carry the check around town awhile before depositing it?"
23215But have you found out where she stands?
23215But it is a fact that I sat here asleep while a mob was in my house?"
23215But say, you are not going to sign that paper, are you?"
23215But the question is, can I get sixty- five cents out of this firm?"
23215But was n''t there many a sign that said,''get money''?"
23215But what are you going to do with that fellow Sawyer?"
23215But what did I do?
23215But what do you think of the situation now, Lyman; I mean your situation?"
23215But what if it is someone yelling over in town?
23215But where is the constable?
23215But why did he want to speak of it at all?
23215But why do you call me a pestiferous son- in- law?"
23215But why do you say the sweet and torturing and desperate love that must exist?
23215But, pap, where''s Nancy?"
23215But, why did n''t you throw him back into the creek?
23215By the way, Sammy, where is the other man; the great lawyer that was your partner?
23215Can we coin his words and pass them for money?
23215Caruthers?"
23215Come, now, wo n''t you go just to oblige me?
23215Could it be a surprise party at so late an hour?
23215Did he blurt it out before everybody?"
23215Did he say anything about the money I owe him?"
23215Did n''t I tell you?
23215Did n''t you tell her that he was the most promising young man in the neighborhood and that she must marry him?
23215Did you ever notice that when the newspapers begin to discuss a man''s health he dies pretty soon?
23215Did you ever see a man wabbling off after a thrashing that he was hardly able to carry?
23215Did you ever see the inside of her mouth?
23215Did you ever think of that?"
23215Did you notice any saintly precepts on his wall?
23215Did you request this Mr. Lyman to sign the petition?"
23215Did you send me a word of warning or did you quietly wait in the hope that the result might rid you of me?"
23215Did you think I was going to let you go?
23215Did you wish to write something?"
23215Do n''t we read every day of women who kill themselves?"
23215Do n''t you feel like you want to take a gun and shoot him?"
23215Do n''t you know now?
23215Do n''t you know that it does exist?
23215Do n''t you know we passed a good many dangerous places coming?
23215Do n''t you think it must be on account of some sort of work you have done?
23215Do n''t you think so?"
23215Do n''t you think that request would be better?"
23215Do n''t you?"
23215Do you know that?
23215Do you know the reason why I am so strong in the faith now?
23215Do you mean to tell me that I am suspected of complicity in this infamous outrage?"
23215Do you remember those cigars you brought from the moonlight picnic?
23215Do you suppose she could grab a calf and make him feel ashamed of himself?"
23215Do you think he''ll be willing to go away, Bob?"
23215Do you understand that?"
23215Do you want your father scandalized?
23215Do you want''em?"
23215Does n''t it strike you that you are a trifle too brash, as they say around here?
23215Educated man?
23215Eva McElwin, with a pout, turned to some one and said:"What, with that thing?"
23215Eva, do you know what that man tried to do?
23215Ever stay too long, Jim?"
23215Figures were his playthings, and who could say that he was not to become one of the country''s great financiers?
23215Have I ever given any swell dinners?
23215Have I ever shown any tax receipts?
23215Have n''t got an old gun around, have you?"
23215Have n''t you at some time been in a position where everybody could come along and boss you?"
23215Have n''t you worked year after year and now should a just reward come as an astonishment?"
23215Have you asked her to define her position?"
23215Have you found out yet-- in your case?
23215Have you got anything in hand now?"
23215Have you seen the banker lately?"
23215Have you seen-- seen Mr. Lyman since the evening of the picnic?
23215He believes that he is inspired to preach the Word, and who, indeed, shall say that he is not?
23215Hear what I said?
23215Hear what I said?
23215Helloa, what''s up?"
23215How are the boys, the White Caps?"
23215How are you gettin''along, Sammy?"
23215How can a man earn five dollars when a scoundrel pays him one dollar for fifteen dollars''worth of labor?
23215How could I get it cashed without going to his bank?
23215How could you say that?"
23215How did I know but that they had given their consent, and stayed in the other room for sentimental reasons?
23215How did I know it was in fun?
23215How did I know?
23215How did you learn so much about his family affairs?
23215How do you know that it is?
23215How do you know?"
23215How does he dare enforce conditions?
23215How is she?"
23215How long did it take you to write it?"
23215How long, sir?"
23215How the deuce did you know she would be here?
23215How''s that marriage of McElwin''s daughter gettin''along?"
23215I argued with them and swore at them, but they stacked their guns; and then what could I do but surrender?
23215I ask, are you?"
23215I know that there ought to be an end to your forgiveness, but why should you draw the line at me?"
23215I suppose you told him I''d pay it as soon as I could, did n''t you?"
23215Is Mr. Warren out there?
23215Is he gone?"
23215Is he out at present?"
23215Is n''t it enough?"
23215Is n''t that a plan worthy of a county surveyor?"
23215Is that all?"
23215Is that it?"
23215Is that it?"
23215Is there a doctor present?
23215Is there anything else we want?
23215Is what you have told me in reality suspected by the people or did you evolve it out of your own richness of observation?"
23215Is your father well?"
23215Is your mother well?"
23215It was arranged long before you ever saw me, and besides what right have you, a stranger, to interfere in his affairs?"
23215It''s dangerous in town, ai n''t it?"
23215It''s this: Do you need any money?
23215Let me ask another impertinent question: Did n''t you appeal to her to marry him?"
23215Let me ask you an impertinent question: Does she love him?"
23215Let me have a fling now, wo n''t you?
23215Look here, Lige,"he added, clearing his throat with a warning rasp,"are you in such a powerful swivit after you''ve heard what I said?
23215Looking at dad''s temple?
23215Lyman sat looking about with a dozing laugh on his lips:"Are you sure you''ll not need eighty cents every week?"
23215Lyman?"
23215Lyman?"
23215Money gives a man confidence in himself, does n''t it?"
23215More promises?
23215Mother, why have n''t I met such a man among our friends-- why did n''t I see one in my travels?"
23215Now, Caruthers, what the deuce are you laughing at?
23215Now, you wo n''t think hard of me, will you?"
23215Of course there has been a great deal of talk, but have you any idea as to who lead the party?"
23215Oh, did you hear of the White Caps?"
23215Pitt?"
23215Recollect?
23215Sammy, where is that man that was your partner?"
23215Sawyer walked home with her; did that cause remark?"
23215Sawyer?"
23215Sawyer?"
23215See the point?"
23215She looked at him in surprise:"When did you ask me to play, before?"
23215Sit down, wo n''t you?"
23215Tell you that, hah?
23215The town sits gaping for the news, with a bad eye on me; but what can I do with a great corporation arrayed against me?
23215To annoy her?"
23215Two dollars, you say?
23215Two hundred copies?
23215Uncle Buckley, do n''t you want something to drink?"
23215Warren?"
23215Was it a blow aimed at him?
23215Was n''t that a conquest?"
23215Was there not a woman in the past who aroused it within you?"
23215Well, they waited, and what came?
23215What about her?"
23215What are you doing?
23215What are you goin''to do with him?"
23215What are you laughing at me for?
23215What can I do?
23215What did he do?"
23215What did he say?"
23215What did he say?"
23215What do you expect will become of you if you keep on this way?"
23215What do you mean?"
23215What do you want?
23215What for?"
23215What have I done?
23215What is his purpose?"
23215What proof have I?
23215What right had he to join you, and why did you permit it?"
23215What sort of a fellow is Zeb Sawyer?"
23215What were they?"
23215What''s her name?"
23215What''s your name?
23215When are you going to sign that petition for father?"
23215When are you going to vacate the premises?"
23215When did you get home?
23215When?
23215Where are you going?"
23215Where are you going?"
23215Where are you going?"
23215Where are you?"
23215Where do you want to go, Jim?"
23215Where''s pa?"
23215Who am I that he should aspire to me?
23215Who ever knew me to weaken?
23215Who ever knew of so disgraceful and ridiculous a situation?
23215Who is that at the gate?"
23215Who said anything about enemy?
23215Who told you?"
23215Why did n''t you stamp him into the ground?
23215Why did you nurse it so long?"
23215Why do n''t you take up some line of study?"
23215Why do you say''brought up?''
23215Why do you set up a mere opinion against my experience?
23215Why not put it to him right then and there, out in the yard, over a barrel?"
23215Why should the girl have gone away just at that particular time?
23215Why the deuce wo n''t they let us dance?"
23215Why, confound my old hide, do n''t I know exactly what it will do for me; and do you think I''ll deliberately make a brute of myself?
23215Why, if they had taken my advice, do you suppose they would have surrendered without firing a gun?
23215Why,"he added, with a dry laugh,"what is it to go down town at half past nine?"
23215Why?"
23215Will twenty dollars pay the way?"
23215Will you assure her that I''ll come home sober?"
23215Will you pardon me if I mix business with pleasure, and give you the money now?"
23215Will you print the article?"
23215Will you sign it?"
23215Wo n''t you come up and dine with us?"
23215Wo n''t you come up and have a box of sardines?"
23215Wo n''t you go just to oblige me?"
23215Yes, sir, he had law books, and what is the meaning of this extraordinary proceedin''?
23215You ai n''t Jim, are you?
23215You are impudent, Mr.----""Have you forgotten your own name?
23215You are not going out in it, are you?"
23215You ca n''t be interested in him?"
23215You know that''s what I mean, do n''t you, Jimmie?"
23215You know what I said, Zeby?"
23215You would be just as much alone then, would n''t you?"
23215[ Illustration: outside the church]"Do n''t you know that it is not in good form to receive the attentions of an old lover so soon after marriage?"
23215cried Hillit, raising upon his elbows,"did you know old Barney?
23215now do n''t feel hurt; do you need any, and, if you do, wo n''t you let me lend it to you for a year or so without interest?"
23215what do you mean?"
45699''Forty years? 45699 What shall I do with the third regiment, if I make peace?"
45699What shall be done with them?
45699Why do n''t he confine the troops to the great line of travel?
45699Only three hundred miles?''"
45699That''s the sum, what is the quotient?
45699Was the United States, or should it become, a nation competent to undertake the work?
45699_ You_ do?
45978''Is this indeed true, foster- father?''
45978= Winslow.=( Rip.?)
45978Vin.?)
33221A jolly, good- natured man, I should judge?
33221A story?
33221A what?
33221Ah, how do you feel, after your journey?
33221Ah? 33221 An''t it enough for me to know it, without having it flung in my teeth?"
33221And I know where you got it?
33221And can the good Husbandman plant them side by side with the better trees, in his garden?
33221And did you walk home?
33221And do n''t you think you would cry, if you had hurt your foot as he has?
33221And how are you to- day, sister?
33221And work on the farm?
33221And you were mocking him?
33221Any mice, Jim?
33221Anybody to see me?
33221Are you fit to die?
33221Are you getting too proud for that,--with your heiress in view?
33221Are you going to pitch on to the load out of the win''row?
33221Are you sorry?
33221Are you_ seventy- two_?
33221But how did the boys know how to lay the stone so exactly as to accomplish their purpose?
33221But the minister?
33221But what can cure it?
33221But what did they do with Napoleon?
33221But what did you lie about it for?
33221But what do you intend to do, in the mean time?
33221But where is Samuel? 33221 But you will try a cup of coffee?
33221By the way, you have n''t heard of any one''s losing a horse recently, have you?
33221By the way,he added, in an off- hand, careless manner,"I suppose you will put your name on our paper for the new meeting- house?"
33221Ca n''t you mount?
33221Can anything be done for it?
33221Certainly, I do; is n''t the idea rational, Father Brighthopes?
33221Come, Jim,said he,"where are the cards?
33221Come, how did you trade?
33221Did Henry laugh?
33221Did he bring my trunks?
33221Did it put it out?
33221Did she?
33221Did you learn shoe- making before you went soldiering?
33221Did you leave him at the tavern?
33221Did you put away the brown horse for this?
33221Do I not look as old?
33221Do n''t you know better than to show your hand?
33221Do n''t you think I have lasted pretty well?
33221Do n''t you want to ride?
33221Do you hear, Samuel?
33221Do you hear?
33221Do you know what day it is?
33221Do you know,said Father Brighthopes, feelingly,"I have a disposition naturally very much like yours?"
33221Do you mean that?
33221Do you never stop to consider the utter insignificance of all those little trials, compared with the immortal destiny of man?
33221Do you tell me you will?
33221Do you think it is going to rain?
33221Do you want to ride now?
33221Do you, Sis? 33221 Do you?"
33221Fascinating?
33221Father Brighthopes, what shall I say to express my sorrow and shame for what has taken place?
33221Father, why do n''t you stop?
33221Fell down?
33221Folks all well? 33221 Ha, how do you do, Ches?"
33221Hard and gloomy?
33221Has anything unpleasant happened?
33221Has n''t father returned?
33221Have n''t you anything else to do but to watch the old goose?
33221Have you been trading?
33221Have you got rid of Jake?
33221Have you the means to spare for the purpose?
33221Have_ you_ got to using_ perfumes_, Chester?
33221He has been here, has n''t he? 33221 He probably views it in a purely business light, then?"
33221He went to his room,said Sarah;"shall I call him?"
33221Hepsy,spoke up Mrs. Royden,"why do n''t you take your sewing?
33221How about that pillow?
33221How are you to- day, Job?
33221How are you, chuck?
33221How did it happen?
33221How did you do that?
33221How do you do to- day, friend Mark?
33221How does Margaret get along?
33221How does that fit?
33221How does your wife bear up, under all her trials?
33221How long is he going to stay?
33221How old is he?
33221How then?
33221How_ did_ it happen?
33221Hurt his eye? 33221 I do?"
33221I hope you were contented to return to shoe- making?
33221I hope your minister calls occasionally?
33221I must not? 33221 I suppose you will give a dollar and a half a week, in the busy season?"
33221I think,said he,"your tall chestnut- tree is found in forests?"
33221I wonder what Chester invited that disagreeable old bach to stop for?
33221I-- I-- hope-- I hope there is no-- ah-- danger?
33221Indeed, would they flourish in a soil so different from that they loved here too well? 33221 Indeed?
33221Is he lame?
33221Is it possible that you are twenty- eight years older than I?
33221Is n''t Hepsy going to church?
33221Is not such always the case, when you have too much work on hand?
33221Is not the old house a good one?
33221Is that Sam?
33221Is that the trouble?
33221Is the thing decided upon?
33221Is this Job Bowen''s house?
33221Is your father at home?
33221It an''t Sunday after sundown, is it? 33221 It is a comfort to think she is there, is n''t it?"
33221It''s nothing but''_ Who''ll be my judge?'' 33221 It_ an''t_ down,_ is_ it?"
33221Josephine Smith did?
33221May we?
33221Me? 33221 Mother, why do n''t you come?"
33221Mr. Royden,said he, with forced calmness,"are you pretty busy just now?"
33221My coat? 33221 My own ideas simplified and expressed in three words,_ If we can afford to build_; and who will say we can not afford so much?"
33221No; what do you mean?
33221Now, do you think you can take this horse over to the village without getting into some kind of a scrape?
33221Now, supposing you should take a rake, and help the men with those win''rows?
33221Now, what is the matter?
33221O, a letter!--who from?
33221Oh, you will come again next summer, wo n''t you, Father?
33221On the whole,said Mark,"what do you think of him?"
33221On the whole,said the latter,"you made a bad bargain when you traded your hammer and awl for a musket and cartridge- box?"
33221Shall I head her off?
33221Shall we send for a doctor?
33221So, your foot is well enough to chase mice, is it?
33221Some-- some other time?
33221Spoilt, an''t it?
33221Take the rest of this win''row,said Mark;"had n''t we better?
33221Then how does your theory hold?
33221Then you would be pleased if we called you by this name?
33221Then, aside from the wickedness of the thing, is not falsehood unwise? 33221 There!--how does that set?
33221Upon_ me_?
33221Was he stopped?
33221What ails you, child?
33221What are you about there, you rogue?
33221What are you crying for?
33221What are you doing to that cat?
33221What are you doing with that lash?
33221What are you going to do, you foolhardy boy?
33221What cat? 33221 What did the landlord say?"
33221What did you do that for?
33221What did you do to bring such disgrace upon your name?
33221What did you run away from him for?
33221What do you say to coming and helping us, next week?
33221What do you talk such nonsense for?
33221What do you think of bread?
33221What else could have happened, to give us a more delightful surprise?
33221What have you run away from that churn for?
33221What is it, to afford?
33221What is that,--a knave or a king?
33221What is the matter with him?
33221What is the matter with your colt''s eye?
33221What is the matter, my son?
33221What is the matter, then?
33221What is the matter?
33221What is the matter?
33221What is this, my dear? 33221 What made you stay so long, Chester?"
33221What makes you look so white?
33221What makes you so lazy? 33221 What of him?"
33221What of it?
33221What were you doing?
33221What''s a dollar and a quarter a week?
33221What''s the matter?
33221What_ are_ you doing with those nuts?
33221When did you get home?
33221Where are you folks going?
33221Where are your trunks?
33221Where did you get him?
33221Where did you get that plaything?
33221Where is Hepsy?
33221Where is she now?
33221Where is your father?
33221Which of the books do you like best?
33221Who blames the boy?
33221Who do you expect is going to believe them? 33221 Who ever heard of apples for breakfast?"
33221Who is it?
33221Who would have kissed me? 33221 Why ca n''t you tell?
33221Why did n''t you say so last night?
33221Why do n''t you govern him, when you set out to?
33221Why do you tell such a story?
33221Why just and true?
33221Why not? 33221 Why not?"
33221Why not?
33221Why, what has he done now?
33221Will you come?
33221Will you let me take the babe? 33221 Will you ride slow?"
33221Will you turn the grindstone?
33221Will you walk in?
33221Willie, do you hear?
33221Wo n''t you take a hand now, sir?
33221Would you enter the tomb through a boiling gulf of passion?
33221Would you go and leave your father and mother, and Chester and James, and all?
33221Would you like to know?
33221Would you-- ah-- would you like to-- ride-- a little ways-- ah-- after my pony?
33221You can lay your foot on a chair, and----Do you hear?
33221You did n''t get spattered, I hope?
33221You got the worst of it?
33221You have heard the case, Father,he added, turning to the old clergyman:"what is your opinion?"
33221You have met before, I take it?
33221You have n''t had any supper, have you?
33221You have n''t put any bones out, I hope?
33221You see, this butter wo n''t come, and I''ve been churning stiddy on it all day----"What has that to do with the cat?
33221You wo n''t let him lick me for that, will you?
33221You wo n''t let me--_die_--here in the filth-- will you?
33221You-- like-- you like it?
33221You-- you are-- you are not-- partial to riding-- perhaps?
33221_ Ca n''t walk!_--in a mocking tone,--"what is the reason you can not?"
33221''Supposing I had got to be a real, genuine bloody hero?''
33221''What would it all have come to, in the end?''
33221A sprained ankle?"
33221And was Hepsy happy?
33221Are you afraid of your cousin?"
33221Bad work he made with it, did n''t he?"
33221But is the eye going to look very bad?
33221But what have we here?
33221But why is it that the sight of vice does not always strike us with the same disgust or horror as the mere contemplation of it?"
33221Chester could no longer evade the leading question,"Why had he left the academy?"
33221Come, Father Brighthopes, would you like to take a short walk?"
33221Did n''t he, Georgie?"
33221Did n''t you meet him?"
33221Did you obtherve it, Mithter Royden?"
33221Do n''t you always feel better to be frank and honest, let the consequences be what they will?"
33221Do n''t you see?"
33221Do you expect me now to stay at home?"
33221Do you know, you are as much better-- brighter than she is, as light is brighter and better than darkness?
33221Do you not think that an established habit of preserving a serene temper, in the midst of the most trying scenes, would produce blessed results?"
33221Do you think I would?"
33221Hepsy, why do n''t you clean up the floor, without being told?"
33221How so?"
33221How would you like that?"
33221How?"
33221I wonder if he will stop at the tavern?
33221If all our worldly circumstances were pleasant and smooth, who would not be contented with them?
33221If the sun forsake its place in the heavens, and go chasing after the bright tail of some gay comet, what will become of the planets?
33221If, on ordinary occasions, it was difficult for the amateur farmer to express his ideas, what shall we say of him in his present painful situation?
33221Is it possible,"he added, with tears in his eyes,"that I have deserved such a title?
33221Is she getting ready?"
33221Is your daughter Margaret at home now?"
33221Mr. Rensford, I believe?
33221Oh, why was I formed so weak, so infirm a mortal?"
33221Or a cup of tea, at least?"
33221Or, since it is getting late, suppose I lend you a little book in the morning, that relates all about it?"
33221Samuel, do you hear?"
33221Skenitt?"
33221Supposing I had lost an arm,--or my head,--and been obliged to get a new one?"
33221That was the labor of copying the spoiled manuscript?
33221The clergyman patted his shoulder kindly, and said,"Do you not feel it is better as it is?"
33221The old man looks at Chester with a smile which asks,"Is it not so?"
33221This is the return you make me, is it, for fitting you out for school, and working my fingers to the bone to keep you there?
33221Was ever a more cheerful gathering?
33221What are all the trivial accidents of life?
33221What are the petty trials of to- day, compared with_ their_ immortal destiny?"
33221What are you doing?"
33221What are you running off for, Sarah?"
33221What cared the eternal sun?
33221What do you hobble along so, for?"
33221What even is the loss of property?
33221What have you got on those pantaloons for, this busy morning?
33221What is gold good for, unless it has been fused and hammered?
33221What is it?"
33221What is the matter?
33221What is the matter?"
33221What is the matter?"
33221What remembrance do we need of this swamp- lot, when we are once out of its mud and mire?"
33221What was a quarter, a half, or even a dollar a week, to come out of his pocket?
33221What will the girls say?"
33221What''s the matter, Sam?"
33221What_ can_ I do, to quiet it?"
33221When she speaks, her soft eyes----But what is the matter?"
33221Where is the little rascal?"
33221Where''s Lizzie?
33221Whist?"
33221Who_ could_?"
33221Why are Barnes''Notes like the waters of a deep stream?
33221Why ca n''t you?"
33221Why could n''t you walk over from the tavern in the first place, instead of hiring a horse?
33221Why did n''t you tell the truth, the first thing?"
33221Why do n''t you sit down?"
33221Why do you scream out so loud, Lizzie?
33221Why do you want to spoil the little shaver''s ride in that way?"
33221Why is it?
33221Will Hepsy play?"
33221Will he show it much?"
33221Will you be so naughty again?"
33221Will you be tho good,"--Miss Smith somewhat changed her tone,--"will you be tho good as to help me to a glath of water?"
33221Will you go in too, Brother Corlis?"
33221Will you go in, or sit in the wagon?"
33221Will you take mine?"
33221You have no more colts over in the cornfield, to take as good care of my vest, I trust?"
33221You mean to govern me like a boy, on my own ground?"
33221You will let me defend myself, I hope?
33221You''d better try a small piece?"
33221are you here?"
33221but how could cheerfulness be expected of one in her condition?
33221cried James,"have you been trading again?"
33221exclaimed Mr. Royden, impatiently,"what is all this about?
33221exclaimed Mr. Royden;"what did you do that for?"
33221exclaimed the clergyman,"is n''t that as good as whist?"
33221how do you do?"
33221said he, looking into the wood- shed,"what are you about?"
33221said she,"will you mind next time, when I speak?"
33221she exclaimed, in a sharp key, regarding Hepsy with contracted features,"ca n''t you walk across the floor without falling down?
33221spoke up Mrs. Royden,"do n''t you know better than to lean upon your uncle''s shoulder?"
33221the old minister?"
33221what charmer have you there?
33221what do you think of that?"
33221what has happened to my little friend?"
33221who would have thought it could be so late?"
45789''At first salutation when we met, he demanded my business into his country, and how it happened that I dared to enter it without his leave?
45789To what can it be owing that,_ among us_, SO MANY are found deformed, or deprived of one or other of their senses?
45789To what more than the spirit of Quackery[8] which, for many ages past, hath taken possession of us, instead of the simplicity of former times?
45789When he departed for the night, he enquired whether I wanted any thing that his country afforded, and he would send his warrior to fetch it?
45789have we_ Christians_ done, to make them_ better_?
4355''And what is that?'' 4355 ''And who are you?
4355''But what''s the use?'' 4355 ''But what''s to be done, Colonel?''
4355''You are right; but how is this to be done?'' 4355 And how shall I find where you live?"
4355And where,Crockett added,"do your get your spear- heads, your rifles, your blankets, and your knives?"
4355But, Henry Snyder, vat did you do mid der toll?
4355Have I the pleasure of seeing that gentleman before me?
4355My dear fellow,shouted out Crockett,"you do n''t call this electioneering, do you?
4355Says he,''What will you have, sir?'' 4355 Was he not a Tariff man?
4355Well, Henry Snyder, did n''t you never take too much toll?
4355Well, Henry Snyder, has n''t you got a mill?
4355Well, Shake Fulwiler has n''t you never taken too much toll?
4355Well, Shake Fulwiler, has n''t you got a mill?
4355Well, Shorge Fulwiler, did n''t you never take too much toll?
4355Well, Shorge Fulwiler, has n''t you got a mill?
4355What can that all mean?
4355And how should I, having been a hunter all my life?
4355And what do you think?
4355And when he set it down before me, how do you think it was?
4355Butler pleasantly replied,"Ah, Colonel Crockett, is that you?
4355Crockett arose and said:"Mr. Speaker: Do you know what that man''s bill reminds me of?
4355Crockett then inquired of the chief what had guided him and his party to the spot where they had found him?
4355Crockett, addressing the chief, said:"Is your nation at war with the Americans?"
4355Crockett?''
4355Doctor Butler; you do n''t know me do you?
4355He was beating on the head of an empty barrel on the roadside, when a traveller, who was passing along, asked him what he was doing that for?
4355How shall I dispose of them?"
4355Many who have perused this sketch thus far, may inquire, with some surprise,"What is it which has given this man such fame as is even national?
4355One of the witticisms ever prominent on the occasion was,"Where is Black Betty?
4355Poor Kate, who will tell this to thee?
4355Santa Anna seemed much annoyed, and said,"Have I not told you before how to dispose of them?
4355Says I,''What does that mean?''
4355Speaking a little broken English, he inquired,"You got any powder?
4355We see the whole country in commotion: and for what?
4355What has come of all this?
4355What hash you been dain in dis lower world?"
4355What hash you been doin in dis lower world?"
4355What hash you bin dain in die lower world?"
4355When did we first hear of his opposition?
4355Where did you come from?"
4355Why do you bring them to me?"
4355You got any bullets?"
46013And did you observe,he continued, bluntly, with the hope of avenging his wounded self- love,"that he called all Americans vulgarians?"
46013And do you regret,he wrote to Theodosia herself, when she was a little more than sixteen,"you are not also a woman?
46013Did you ever hear, madam,retorted Mrs. Downs,"that I had said anything sweet of you?"
46013For what else, for whom else, do I live?
46013Have you heard of the wonderful new magazine Lady Randolph''s to edit with help from the Queen? 46013 But what would you have been if you had not married the widow Custis?
46013Coquetting for admiration and attracting flattery?
46013His first words were,"And how is the beautiful voice?"
46013That you are not numbered in that galaxy of beauty which adorns an assembly- room?
46013To an admirer, who once exclaimed,"Is there anything in the world you can not do, and do brilliantly?"
46013What have we left?
46013Why should he rejoice?"
46175Did not General Sherman by this order of depopulation needlessly add to the suffering of non- combatants?
46175Has the age of poetry passed?
46175How long will it be before civilization shall cease to be a mere veneer or varnish and become a matter of substance in human affairs?
46175Is it any wonder that when such men composed the opposing armies, the fighting was such as to make men admire and angels weep?
46175It was obvious that he must draw his widely scattered forces together at some point; but where?
46175Or is it merely that our poets have been embarrassed by the very richness of our Confederate war in deeds of derring- do?
46175What if he judges wrongly?
36175Aye,ses he,"what''s up?"
36175But,says he,"what about the finances?"
36175But,ses I,"Kernel, ca n''t they see how the thing has worked in places whar nigger equality has been tried?"
36175But,ses I,"suppose he should bust your bilers, what would Wall street do then?"
36175Done what?
36175Is that all?
36175Majer, what do you want them words for?
36175No,ses Seward,"what is it?"
36175Now, Majer,ses the Kernel,"you do n''t think I want to split the Union, do you?"
36175Now,ses I,"Kernel, can you tell me why this wiskey is like the Constitushin of the United States?"
36175Now,ses I,"Kernel, ef I''ll make you a Constitushinal Tellskope, will you promise me to use it?
36175Now,ses I,"Kernel, that is purty sharp, but do you know why your sickness is like the Union?"
36175Or split the Union?
36175That would be a capital idee, Majer, but how am I to do it?
36175Wal, I''de like to know,ses Linkin,"whether you think Port Royal_ was an excepshin_?"
36175Wal, Majer,ses the Kernel,"how are we to get him away?"
36175Wal, that is a fact,ses Linkin,"I never thought of that; but they will as sure as preachen do jest what the Majer ses; but what kin we do?"
36175Wal, yes, that''s so,ses Linkin,"but do n''t you see, Majer, I''ve got to break off with_ sumbody_?
36175Wal,ses I,"Kernel, are you goin to give Freemount a kommand?"
36175Wal,ses I,"Kernel, can you tell me how you think this war is goin to end?"
36175Wal,ses I,"Kernel, now kin you tell me why that fifty- cent shinplaster is like the war?"
36175Wal,ses I,"Kernel, what do you think of your visit?"
36175Wal,ses I,"Kernel, where do you carry your pocket- book?"
36175Wal,ses I,"Mr. Secketary, do you have a macheen for every Gineral and every army?"
36175Wal,ses I,"then what''s the use of changin?
36175Wal,ses I,"what do you do about the contracters?"
36175Wal,ses I,"what is it?"
36175Wal,ses Linkin, ses he,"Majer, let''s drop the nigger jest now, as I want to ask you whether you think the rebils kin take Washington?"
36175Wal,ses Linkin,"did n''t the Lord cuss the earth for man''s sins?"
36175Wal,ses Linkin,"how would they carry it when marchin?"
36175Wal,ses Linkin,"let it, who cares?
36175Wal,ses Linkin,"we want to know the condishin of your department?"
36175Wal,ses Linkin,"what am I to do?
36175Wal,ses Linkin,"where on arth kin we send''em?"
36175Wal,ses he,"Majer, I want to know whether you mean to apply that story to me?"
36175Wal,ses he,"Majer, ai nt we goin down to the land of the Secesh, and who knows but we may git in an ambushcade?"
36175Wal,ses he,"Majer, what is it?
36175Wal,ses he,"ai n''t I plain enuf this time?"
36175Wal,ses he,"kin you tell me whether the calf_ was a heifer or a steer_?"
36175Wal,ses he,"ther''s Centril Ameriky-- what do you think of that spot?"
36175Wal,ses he,"what is it?"
36175Wal,ses he,"what kind is it?"
36175Wal,ses he,"what on arth is it?"
36175Wal,ses he,"what on earth was it?"
36175Wal,ses he,"what''s posterity ever done for us?"
36175Wal,ses he,"what''s the use of swappin jackets?
36175Wal,ses the Kernel,"Majer, do n''t you think I''ve done well in keepin it together as long as I have?"
36175Wal,ses the Kernel,"what will come of it then, Majer?"
36175What''s that?
36175What''s up, Boss?
36175Why, Majer,ses he-- and he put on one of the queerest smiles I ever see on a man''s face--"don''t you know I have turned Dimmocrat?"
36175Why,ses I,"Kernel, what could you do then?"
36175Why,ses I,"Kernel, what makes you ask that questshin?"
36175Why,ses I,"how is that?"
36175Why,ses Linkin,"ai n''t you never heerd the story of the Giascutis?"
36175''Are you a coon?''
36175''Now, Mr. Jones, tell me whether you struck Dick Robinson?''
36175''Tut, tut, brother,''says the Elder,''how can you do so?
36175''Wal, Mr. Jones, did you hit Jim Wattles?''
36175''Wal, Mr. Jones,''said the Justess,''what do you mean by"sloshin around?"''
36175''Wal, will you warrant him a good dog for foxes?''
36175''Wal,''ses old Sol,''how do you make that out?''
36175After I got thru, ses I,"Kernel, what do you think of my dream?"
36175After he he d gone, ses I,"Kernel, how many times has Seward he d the rebellyun suppressed?"
36175After it was all over with and every thing had been decided on, ses Linkin, ses he,"Majer, do n''t you think that that is a capytal stratygim?"
36175After they had all got thru, Linkin turned to me, an ses he,"Majer, what do you think about this matter?"
36175After they went out Linkin ses to me, ses he,"Majer, what do you think of them fellows?"
36175After they were gone Linkin turned to me and ses he,"Majer, what do you think of that?"
36175Ai n''t we gone by the Shanandore Vally, by Jeemes River, by Manasses, an yet we ca n''t get to Richmond?
36175All the while the noise kept growin louder, an finally ses I,"Who on arth is that makin such a tarnal racket?"
36175And did n''t they do it?
36175Are you Union or Secesh?"
36175At last, ses I,"Kernel, have you tried eny of that old rye lately?"
36175At this Seward brushed up an asked him"what he meant?"
36175But I told you to keep your temper, an not take it as personal, but only as a joak?"
36175But what am I do?
36175But what do you think about our goin up to the army an reviewin the sojers, and seein whether I ai nt jest as popelar as ever I was?"
36175But, Major, how shall we go?"
36175But,"ses I,"Kernel, I''me terribul tired after this trip, an what do you say to havin a little old rye before we go to bed?"
36175But,"ses I,"do n''t you rekollect the story about''applyin the principle?''"
36175Command us to delivur The land from slavery''s chane?
36175Did n''t they say they would n''t fite to coerce the South?
36175Did n''t they say they would only defend the Capital, and would n''t invade Virginia, and did n''t they do it?"
36175Did you ever see a lot of hot swill put in a trough, an every single hog in the pen would go an stick in his snoot an get it burned?
36175Do n''t they do as you desire?"
36175Do n''t you hear de banjo?
36175Do n''t you hear de banjo?
36175Do n''t you hear de banjo?
36175Do n''t you hear de banjo?
36175Do n''t you hear de banjo?
36175Do n''t you see,"ses I,"Kernel, how nice that would work?
36175Do you suppose it would be dangerous for him to live down in Secesh, where they are burning_ cotton_ as fast as they kin?"
36175Do you think your dog is good for foxes?''
36175Do you want to take any more elder- bark tea?"
36175Does not grate Dr. Cheever,( And shall he speke in vain?)
36175Finally he turned to me and ses he,"Majer, ca n''t you help me out of this scrape?"
36175Finally ses he,"Majer, wat are you standin there for?"
36175Finally, Mr. Linkin, ses he,"Majer, wat on erth shall I do?"
36175Finally, he kicked his slipper off, and ses he,"Majer, do you know what good lether is?"
36175Finally, ses he,"Wal, Majer, will we have to give up the Union after all?"
36175Has that feller Stantin been cuttin up eny more of his capers?
36175He asked Linkin what could be done?
36175He caught rite hold of my hand, an ses he,"Majer, how are you?
36175He cum into Linkin''s room, an the Kernel ses,"Have you heerd the news, Boss?"
36175He went up, an ses he,''Who''s there?''
36175How can it be carried out?"
36175How do you feel?"
36175How many soldiers have you had?"
36175I did n''t say it out loud, but I sed, ses I,"Boss, will you let me see whether there ai n''t sumthin rong about that?"
36175I giv the tabel a rap with my hickory, and the Kernel stratened up jest like openin a jack nife, and ses he,"Was I asleep, Majer?"
36175I see the Kernel had on a high- pressure excitement, and ses I,"Hold on a minnit, Kernel, and tell me what on arth''s the matter?"
36175I told him that that was jist what Gineral Jackson always said--"Did he?"
36175I took hold of her, and felt jest like shakin her to pieces, wen I axed her, ses I,"Topsey, why do n''t you be good?"
36175If you will, it will be about as good a guide to you as ef I staid here all summer myself?"
36175Instead of a hotel, they telled us we must cook our own vitals, and what do you think they giv us?
36175Is it good?"
36175Is she hedin up stream or side- ways?
36175Jest a little while after breakfast, who should come in but Seward?
36175Jones, did you strike Tom Smith yesterday?''
36175McClellan bein compelled to retreat from Richmond, they all thought that France and England would interfere, and what was to be done?
36175Now which shall it be?
36175Now, that preserver saved your life, did n''t it?"
36175Now, the rale question is, Why have we failed?
36175Now, what is the cause of the failure?"
36175Now, what on arth am I to do?"
36175Now,"ses I,"ef L- i- n- k- i- n do n''t spell Linkin, what on arth does it spell?"
36175One day I went into the Kernel''s room, an seein he looked kinder blue about the gills, ses I,"Kernel, what''s the matter?"
36175One day the Kernel ses to me, ses he,"Majer, what do you think about McClellan''s new base on the Jeemes River?"
36175Presidint?"
36175Pretty soon a man cum along, an ses he,"Deacon, do n''t you know that the worst showers and hurry- canes we have always cum from the West?
36175Purty soon the Kernel''s eyes began to look wild, and ses he,"Majer, where do we land next?
36175Ses I,"Ai n''t it jist as easy to say that we''re goin on a military tower of obsevashin?"
36175Ses I,"Did he tech this?"
36175Ses I,"Did n''t you ever have a hole in that pocket for a day or two, and had to put your pocket- book in sum other?"
36175Ses I,"Did you kick em down stairs?"
36175Ses I,"Do n''t your Cabbynet agree in your policy?
36175Ses I,"How is that?"
36175Ses I,"Is Burnside whipped agin, or is Stonewall Jackson in our rear?"
36175Ses I,"Is that fair, Kernel, to burden posterity in that fashun?"
36175Ses I,"Is that it, Kernel?"
36175Ses I,"Kernel, ai n''t you gettin the ager?"
36175Ses I,"Kernel, do n''t you know that you said in your inaugerole that you had no rite to interfere with slavery, an that you did n''t intend to?"
36175Ses I,"Kernel, do n''t you know there is one way to get to Richmond that you ai n''t tried yet?"
36175Ses I,"Kernel, do you expect Dimmicrats are goin to support you on freein the niggers?"
36175Ses I,"Kernel, do you want me to help write your messige?"
36175Ses I,"Kernel, is black your favorite color?"
36175Ses I,"Kernel, what on arth do want of revolvers?"
36175Ses I,"Mr. Secketary, who is your engineer?"
36175Ses I,"What did you do with it then?"
36175Ses I,"What do n''t you see?"
36175Ses I,"What is the debt now?"
36175Ses I,"What is the matter, dear Topsey?"
36175Ses I,"What possesses you to act so?"
36175Ses I,"What was it?"
36175Ses I,"What was that?"
36175Ses I,"Who is me?
36175Ses I,"Why do n''t you change''em?"
36175Ses Linkin, ses he,"Majer, are you whistlin to keep your courage up?"
36175Ses Linkin,"What''s the matter, Majer?"
36175Ses he to me, kinder funnin me I thought, ses he,"Majer, will you make a bet with me?"
36175Ses he,"Did I, Majer?
36175Ses he,"Have I got the boot- jack?"
36175Ses he,"Have the rebils took Saint Lewis?"
36175Ses he,"How is that, Major?
36175Ses he,"How was that, Majer?"
36175Ses he,"How was that?"
36175Ses he,"Majer, did you ever hear of the story of a man who caught a panther by the tail?"
36175Ses he,"Majer, do you know why a man''s face is like the eend of an old- fashioned house?"
36175Ses he,"Majer, do you know why you and Seward and Stantin rollin me on the floor were like men spredin hay in a meadow?"
36175Ses he,"Majer, how do you know it was made for white men?"
36175Ses he,"Majer, what do you mean by edicated fools?"
36175Ses he,"Majer, which way does the shootin cum from?"
36175Ses he,"Majer, you''re rite, an what kin I do for you this mornin?"
36175Ses he,"Major, what would we do if Linkin dies, for he''s the only one of us left that the peeple''s got eny faith in at all?"
36175Ses he,"What is it?"
36175Ses he,"What on arth has that to do with the subjeck?"
36175Ses he,"What''s that?"
36175Ses he,"What''s your quandary?"
36175Ses he,"What?"
36175Ses he,"Why not, Majer?"
36175Ses the Deacon, ses he,"How was that, Majer?"
36175Ses the Kernel to me, the other day, ses he,"Majer, what do you think that military strutegy consists in?"
36175Ses the Kernel, ses he,"How much was that?"
36175Shall we whose harts are litened With Rye, and cake and wine, Shall we to Cuff and Dinah Give nought but crust and rine?
36175So he called the feller in putty bad close, who does chores around the White House, and asked him if he''d seen it?
36175So what''s to be done?"
36175Suppose they go thar?"
36175The Kernel looked at it very sharp, an ses he,"Majer, you ai nt going to give me rale fence to drink, are you?
36175The next mornin, when I went in the room where the Kernel was, ses he,"Majer, you look oncommon serious this mornin; what''s the matter?"
36175The question is, what is to be done?"
36175The very next day after the meeting, what do you think happened?
36175There''s Libery, how would that do, Major?"
36175Wat tho''the army hosses Die off for want of food?
36175We must take Richmond, an ai n''t we tried every way but this?
36175Wen I arriv, ses I,"Kernel, what''s the matter?"
36175Wen I handed them to the Kernel, ses he,"Majer, does Chase expect me to survive after studyin out these figgers?"
36175Wen I sed this, the Deacon knocked the ashes out of his pipe, an ses he,"Wal, Majer, wat do you think the war will amount to, enyhow?"
36175Wen I thought he was in purty good humor, ses I,"Kernel, why did you remove McClellin?"
36175Wen I went in, the Kernel had his cote off and his sleeves rolled up, an ses he,"Majer, do you know where I kin get a first- rate axe?"
36175Wen Linkin saw the name on the bottle,"Mr. Cotton, 306 Washington street, N.Y.,"ses he,"Major, do you think this is loyal wiskey?"
36175Wen he did speak, ses he,"Majer, what do these last words''in partickelar''mean?"
36175Wen he sed that I jumped rite up with my hickory, an ses I,"Ai n''t your name Salmon?"
36175Wen they heered that, it did n''t suit em at all, and a good meny yelled out,"Who are you?"
36175What is the cause of it?
36175What is the use of a President when the ballot- box ai nt of half so much account as the cartridge- box?
36175What is the use of a President when there''s a standin army?
36175What is to be done with''em?
36175What on arth can it be?
36175What on arth makes you sleep,"ses I,"rite in the middle of the day?"
36175What on arth will we do?"
36175What was I to do?
36175What was it?"
36175When I sed this, Stantin, who is quick as a flash, jumped up, an ses he,"Majer, do you mean to say that we are devils tryin to catch the South?"
36175When I went in, ses I,"''Kiah, what on airth is the matter?"
36175While it was goin down, you looked kinder anxious at Chase, and ses you,''Chase, think it will stay down?''
36175Wot tho''the Nor''-West breezes Blow sum o''er Georgetown hill, And likewise also freezes The troops at Turner''s Mill?
36175Wot tho''the Yankee nashin Pores out the warlike flud, And sogers of all stashin Are stashined in the mud?
36175Wot tho''the sly contracters Defraud us rite and left, And Uncle Sam''s old stockin''Of all his cash is reft?
36175Wot tho''the taxis plague us, And heeps of corn must spile, Wile poor folks three times over Their coffee- grounds must bile?
36175Would n''t it hev made a sensashin?"
36175_ To the Editers of The Cawcashin_: SURS:--Didn''t I tell you that, as soon as I got here, I would straiten things out?
36175ses he,"jest read that, Majer, and tell me whether you do n''t think that that infernal cuss, Stantin, ought to be kicked out of the Cabinet?"
1908211Is not He who created man able to quicken the dead?
1908212The scoffers say,''Shall we be raised to life, and our forefathers too, after we have become dust and bones?
1908214What does Abraham to those circumcised who have sinned too much?
1908222 Does it not seem perfectly plain that John''s doctrine of the Christ is at bottom identical with Philo''s doctrine of the Logos? 19082 32 And again he writes,"If souls survive, how has ethereal space made room for them all from eternity?
1908234 Was Jesusfrom above,"while wicked men were"from beneath"?
190827 Origen also and who, after the apostles themselves, knew their thoughts and their use of language better than he? 19082 All things remain as they were: where is the promise of his appearing?"
19082But some one will say, How are the dead raised up? 19082 Can you cast a pair for me?"
19082Else why stand we in jeopardy every hour?
19082For what shall it profit a man if he gain the whole world and lose his own soul?
19082Hath the news of the overwhelming day of judgment reached thee? 19082 If souls be substances corporeal, Be they as big just as the body is?
19082In this tabernacle we groan, being burdened,and,"Who shall deliver me from this body of death?"
19082Is the law against the promises of God? 19082 Jesus said not unto him,''He shall not die;''but,''If I will that he tarry till I come, what is that to thee?''"
19082Know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost?
19082O Charidas, what are the things below? 19082 O eternity, what art thou?
19082So, thou hast immortality in mind? 19082 That I can,"says the man:"will you have them large or small?"
19082Thou fool, this night thy soul shall be required of thee: then whose shall be those things thou hast gathered?
19082What aileth them, that they believe not the resurrection? 19082 What and if ye shall see the Son of Man ascend up where he was before?"
19082What if some did not believe? 19082 When bodies are raised, will each soul spontaneously know its own and enter it?
19082Wherefore, if ye be dead with Christ, why are ye subject to worldly ordinances? 19082 Who is a liar but he that denieth that Jesus is the Christ?"
19082Why is God here? 19082 Why,"complainingly sighed the afflicted patriarch,"why died I not at my birth?
19082Will all have one size and one sex?
19082Will all rise of the same age?
19082Will each one''s hairs and nails all be restored to him in the resurrection?
19082Will the deformities and scars of our present bodies be retained in the resurrection?
19082''Then why was this cross put over you?''
1908215. preservation of health because it can not be an everlasting possession?
1908222 The Resurrection of Spring, p. 26. just like them?
1908240 Tanslation by Dr. Stevenson, p. 23. the highest state of being?
190826, 2. circumstances, than it is for him to go to heaven to such an experience as the faithful follower of Christ supposes is there awaiting him?
190827 What debauched unbeliever ever inculcated a viler or a more fatal doctrine?
190828 In seasons of imminent danger as in a shipwreck it was customary for a man to ask his companion, Hast thou been initiated?
19082According to the Zoroastrian modes of thought, what would have been the fate of man had Ahriman not existed or not interfered?
19082Accordingly, the question next arises, What is death when considered in this its true aspect?
19082Admitting the truth of the common doctrine of the atonement, why did Christ die?
19082And Pluto?
19082And am I then revenged To take him in the purging of his soul, When he is fit and season''d for his passage?
19082And can it be that every soul in the universe is better than the Maker and Father of the universe?
19082And how will it be with us then?
19082And is a common man better than Christ?
19082And is it not an incredible blasphemy to deny to the deified Christ a magnanimity equal to that which any good man would exhibit?
19082And is it not equally obvious, that it can lay no sort of claim to logical validity?
19082And is man better than his Maker?
19082And is not this a desertion of the orthodox doctrine of the Church?
19082And is this blood, then, form''d but to be shed?
19082And lives there a man of unperverted soul who would not decidedly prefer to have no God rather than to have such a one?
19082And now, recalling the varied studies we have passed through, and seeking for the conclusion or root of the matter, what shall we say?
19082And we find the author of the Epistle to the Hebrews thus replying to the question, Why did Christ die?
19082And what do history and prophecy show more plainly than the tendency to a convergence of all humanity in every man?
19082And what is that but the very consciousness, or the subject as its own object?
19082And what method is there of crushing or evaporating these out of being?
19082And what period can we imagine to terminate the unimpeded spirit''s abilities to learn, to enjoy, to expand?
19082And what reception do the conclusions of those few meet at the hands of the public?
19082And what the returns to earth?
19082And whither do we go?
19082And why should not the two shades be conceived, if either?
19082And, however that Power be named, is it not God?
19082Are not the poetic process and its sophistry clear?
19082Are there not Those that fall down out of humanity Into the story where the four legg''d dwell?"
19082Are there not souls"To whom dishonor''s shadow is a substance More terrible than death here and hereafter"?
19082Are you a Gentile, an idolatrous member of the uncircumcision, or a scorner of the Levitic and Rabbinical customs?
19082Are you afflicted?
19082Are you blessed?
19082Are you in danger?
19082As long as you live, is it not glory and reward enough to have conquered the beasts at Ephesus?
19082Because in death thou dost not know that thou art, therefore fearest thou that thou shalt be no more?
19082Believing, as he certainly did, in a devil, the author and lord of darkness, falsehood, and death, would he not conceive a kingdom for him?
19082Besides, had there been no sin, could not man have been drowned if he fell into the water without knowing how to swim?
19082Besides, if they slept, how knew they what transpired in the mean time?
19082Besides, there is a parallel fact of deep significance in our unquestionable experience;"For is not our first year forgot?
19082But admitting the clauses apparently descriptive of the nature of this retribution to be metaphorical, yet what shall we think of its duration?
19082But how did the Gentiles enter into belief and participation of the glad tidings?
19082But how does such an antagonism arise?
19082But if an indefinite number of impressions were superimposed on the same paper, could the fumes of mercury restore any one called for at random?
19082But if such a world of fire, crowded with the writhing damned, ever existed at all, could it exist forever?
19082But if the doctrine be true, and he is on probation under it, is it fair that he should be left honestly in ignorance or doubt about it?
19082But if the souls live so long in heaven and hell without their flesh, why need they ever resume it?
19082But some one may say,"If I have fought with beasts at Ephesus, what advantageth it me if the dead rise not?"
19082But that plausibility becomes an extreme probability nay, shall we not say certainty?
19082But what are good and evil?
19082But what else means the minute morbid anatomy of death beds, the prurient curiosity to know how the dying one bore himself in the solemn passage?
19082But what is the prophecy, and how is it to be fulfilled?
19082But what shall solace or end it if they know that hell''s borders are to be enlarged and to rage with avenging misery forever?
19082But what was to become of the righteous and redeemed?
19082But whence did we come?
19082But, waiving that, what would the legitimate correspondence to it be for man?
19082By what proofs is so tremendous a conclusion supported?
19082Callimachus wrote the following couplet as an epitaph on the celebrated misanthrope:"Timon, hat''st thou the world or Hades worse?
19082Can a breath move Mount Kaf?
19082Can a ganglion solve a problem in Euclid or understand the Theodicee of Leibnitz?
19082Can a mathematical number tell the difference between good and evil?
19082Can air feel?
19082Can air, earth, water, fire, live and we dead?
19082Can an action love and hate, choose and resolve, rejoice and grieve, remember, repent, and pray?
19082Can any defective technicality damn such a man?
19082Can blood see?
19082Can earth be jealous of a rival and loyal to a duty?
19082Can egotistic folly any further go?
19082Can every element our elements mar?
19082Can fire think?
19082Can human thought divine the answer?
19082Can it be left there forever?
19082Can it be that the roar of its furnace shall rage on, and the wail of the execrable anguish ascend, eternally?
19082Can the fearful anguish of bereavement be gratuitous?
19082Can water will?
19082Can we imagine that we are the creators of God?
19082Comes not death as a means to bear him thither?
19082Compare the following text:"The baptism of John, whence was it, from Heaven, or of men?"
19082Considering, then, that beatific experience of which heaven consists, under the metaphor of a city, what are its ways of entrance?
19082Could Christ be satisfied?
19082Could God suffer it?
19082Could any conventional arrangement, or accident of locality, save such a man, while his character remained unchanged?
19082Could the angels be contented when they contemplated the far off lurid orb and knew the agonies that fed its conscious conflagration?
19082Could the saved be happy and passive in heaven when the muffled shrieks of their brethren, faint from the distance, fell on their ears?
19082Could they have dreamed it?
19082Cur?
19082Destroy his organization, and what follows?
19082Did Jesus perform miraculous works?
19082Did they except none from the remediless doom of Hades?
19082Do you belong to the chosen family of Abraham, and are you undefiled in relation to all the requirements of our code?
19082Does a surprising piece of good fortune accrue to any one, splendid riches, a commanding position, a peerless friendship?
19082Does it follow that at that time it was a common belief that the trees actually went forth occasionally to choose them a king?
19082Does it not betoken a preserved epitome of the long history of slowly rising existence?
19082Does justice heed the wrath of the offended, or the guilt of the offender?
19082Does not the record plainly show this to an impartial reader?
19082Does not the simple truth of love conquer and trample the world''s aggregated lie?
19082Does not the whole idea appear rather like a rhetorical image than like a sober theological doctrine?
19082Does the butterfly ever come back to put on the exuvia that have perished in the ground?
19082Does the engineer die when the fire goes out and the locomotive stops?
19082Dormant in the body, dead with the body, laid in the tomb?
19082Doth it not seem the impression of a seal Can be no larger than the wax?
19082Eliphaz the Temanite says,"Is not God in the height of heaven?
19082Exhausted with wanderings, sated with experiments, will he not pray for the exempted lot of a contented fruition in repose?
19082For a delegation was once sent to ask Jesus,"Art thou Elias?
19082For example: what direct proof is there that Christ, when he vanished from the disciples, went to the presence of God in heaven, to die no more?
19082For is it not one flexible instant of opportunity, and then an adamantine immortality of doom?
19082For what purpose, then, was it thought that Jesus went to the imprisoned souls of the under world?
19082For what were the most vivid of all the experiences men had among their fellows on earth?
19082Fourthly, after the notion of a great, epochal resurrection, as a reply to the inquiry, What is to become of the soul?
19082God asked Gabriel,"Whence comes that Amen?"
19082Had Jesus an inspiration and a knowledge not vouchsafed to the princes of this world?
19082Had it been all along credited in its literal sense, as a divine revelation, could this be so?
19082Had not Plato that idea?
19082Hast grounds that will not let thee doubt it?
19082Have we not eternity in our thought, infinitude in our view, and God for our guide?
19082He says, while answering the question, How are the dead raised up, and with what body do they come?
19082He took my father grossly full of bread, With all his crimes broad blown, as flush as May; And how his audit stands who knows save Heaven?
19082He waits passively for the resistless round of fate to bear him away, ah, whither?
19082Here we are, And there we go: but where?
19082His disciples once asked him,"What shall be the sign of thy coming, and of the end of the world?"
19082How came the notions of punishment, fire, brimstone, and kindred imagery, to be connected with it?
19082How can it be remedied?
19082How can men be guilty of a sin committed thousands of years before they were born, and deserve to be sent to hopeless hell for it?
19082How can we demonstrate that it does not fall within the same class on the laws of evidence?"
19082How can we pass to its citizenship?
19082How does any one know that the mind of Jesus dialectically grasped the metaphysical notion of eternity and deliberately intended to express it?
19082How does it comport with the old traditions?
19082How does that event, admitted as a fact, rest in the average personal experience of Christians now?
19082How has the earth found room for all the bodies buried in it?
19082How have these horrors obtained such a seated hold in the world?
19082How is it possible for any one to doubt that the text under consideration teaches his subterranean mission during the period of his bodily burial?
19082How is this to be done?
19082How much of the current representations in relation to another life were held as strict verity?
19082How much, now, does this second fact imply?
19082How, then, can it be said that the doctrine of a future life for man is revealed by it or implicated in it?
19082I a lost soul?
19082I separated from hope and from peace forever?
19082If Nirwana be simply annihilation, why is it not so stated?
19082If a building tumbled upon him, would he not have been crushed?
19082If a man believe in no future life, is he thereby absolved from the moral law?
19082If by"the dead"was meant"the bodies,"why are we not told so?
19082If death be absolute, is it not an evil?
19082If light can thus deceive, wherefore not life?"
19082If man be not destined for perennial life, why is this dread of non existence woven into the soul''s inmost fibres?
19082If on the first day you should shatter it, and thus rob it of one day''s life, would you be guilty of murder?
19082If the souls of men are ideas of God, must they not be as enduring as his mind?
19082If there be no future for him, why is he tortured with the inspiring idea of the eternal pursuit of the still flying goal of perfection?
19082In a little while, as the ravaging reaper sweeps on his way, who will not have still more there, or be there himself?
19082In distinction, then, from the monstrous mass of mistakes denoted by it, what is the truth carried in the awful word, hell?
19082In reference to the question, Can ephemera have a moral law?
19082In reply to those who argue thus, it is obvious to ask, whence did they learn all this?
19082In that case, would not his mind have dwelt upon the wonderful anticipated phenomenon?
19082In the first place, what view of the Father himself, the absolute Deity, do these writings present?
19082In the resurrection, whose shall it be?
19082In what sense can the passing of Christ''s soul into heaven after death be said to have done away with sin?
19082Into the transparent sphere of perfect intelligence?
19082Into the vacant dark of nothingness?
19082Introduction to Study of Natural History, p. 57. of man?
19082Is a threat efficacious over men in proportion to its intrinsic terror, or in proportion as it is personally felt and feared by them?
19082Is he merely taunted with the starry sky, and mocked with an infinite illusion of progress, suddenly barred with endless night and oblivion?
19082Is he not in a competent hell?
19082Is it absolutely unending?
19082Is it not a gratuitous fiction of theologians?
19082Is it not a peurility to suppose that God has such documents?
19082Is it not an absurdity to affirm that nerves and blood, flesh and bones, are responsible, guilty, must be punished?
19082Is it not astonishing how these theologians find out so much?
19082Is it not fitter that he be welcomed by triumphant initiation into the family of the deathless Father?
19082Is it not so in the usage of John?
19082Is it not strictly true that the thought that even one should have endless woe"Would cast a shadow on the throne of God And darken heaven"?
19082Is it not the same law, still expressing the same meaning?
19082Is it possible that the hero and the martyr and the saint, whose experience is laden with painful sacrifices for humanity, are mistaken?
19082Is it worse to have nothing than it is to have infinite torture?
19082Is not an agent necessary for an action?
19082Is not the truth of ignorance better than the falsity of superstition?
19082Is not this notion of the judgment being delegated to Jesus plainly adopted from the political image of a deputy?
19082Is not this paragraph a disgusting combination of ignorance and arrogance?
19082Is the overthrow of a country foretold?
19082Is the sin measured by the dignity of the lawgiver, or by the responsibility of the law breaker?
19082Is there a contradiction, then, in Paul?
19082Is there any more real reason for believing this doctrine than there is for believing the other kindred schemes?
19082Is there leisure for sport and business, or room for science and literature, or mood for pleasures and amenities?
19082Is there no mind behind it and above it, making use of it as a servant?
19082Is there not just as much reason for holding to the literal accuracy and validity of the result in one case as in another?
19082Is there not truth in the poet''s picture of the meeting of child and parent in heaven?
19082Is this Christ''s Father?
19082Is this revelation, science, logic, or is it mythology?
19082It demands,"Who art thou, O, maiden, uglier and more detestable than I ever saw in the world?"
19082It has been asked,"If the incendiary be, like the fire he kindles, a result of material combinations, shall he not be treated in the same way?"
19082It is an arrant begging of the question; for the very problem is, Does not an invisible spiritual entity survive the visible material disintegration?
19082It is said that Araf seems hell to the blessed but paradise to the damned; for does not every thing depend on the point of view?
19082Jochanan was dying, his disciples asked him,''Light of Israel, main pillar of the right, thou strong hammer, why dost thou weep?''
19082Let one pass in absence from childhood to maturity, and who that had not seen him in the mean time could tell that it was he?
19082Life crowd a grain, from air''s vast realms effaced?
19082Lord?"
19082Meanwhile, shall we not be magnanimous to forgive and help, diligent to study and achieve, trustful and content to abide the invisible issue?
19082Milton asks,"For who would lose, Though full of pain, this intellectual being?"
19082Mohammed replied,"When day comes, where is night?"
19082Moreover, what had occurred to effect the alleged new belief?
19082Much is implied in this term and its accompaniments, and may be drawn out by answering the questions, What is heaven?
19082Must not that be to the right port?
19082Must not the pilgrim pine and tire for a goal of rest?
19082Now, as a solitary exception to this, are minds absolutely destroyed?
19082Now, does not the consciousness of infinity imply the infinity of consciousness?
19082Now, if there be in man no personal entity, what is it that with so much joy attains Nirwana?
19082Now, of what was it intended as the symbol?
19082O Death, thou last enemy, where is thy sting?
19082O Death, where is thy sting?
19082O Hades, thou gloomy prison, where is thy victory?''"
19082O Hades, where is thy victory?''"
19082O blessed wealth and wretched freedom, how shall we perfect and reconcile them?
19082O grave, where is thy victory?"
19082Oh, how shall I escape, and obtain eternal bliss?''"
19082Oh, when shall we learn that a loving pity, a filial faith, a patient modesty, best become us and fit our state?
19082On entering heaven, what magic shall work such a demoniacal change in him?
19082On what grounds are we to believe them?
19082On what principle is a part of the undivided apocalyptic portrayal rendered as emblem, the rest accepted as absolute verity?
19082Or are they a direct vision and audience of it?
19082Or shoot they out to the height ethereal?
19082Or who could find, Whilst fly and leaf and insect stood reveal''d, That to such countless orbs thou mad''st us blind?
19082Or, to go still further back, why did he not, foreseeing Adam''s fall, refrain from creating even him?
19082Orphal, Sind die Thiere blos sinnliche Geschopfe?
19082Ought not Christ to have suffered these things, and to enter into his glory?"
19082Peter Lombard says,"What did the Redeemer do to the despot who had us in his bonds?
19082Plotinus said,"If God repents having made the world, why does he defer its destruction?
19082Regarding the Hebrew narrative as an indigenous growth, then, how shall we explain its origin, purport, and authority?
19082Schlegel has somewhere asked the question,"Is life in us, or are we in life?"
19082Secondly, if the resurrection did not take place, what became of the Savior''s body?
19082Secondly, when he exclaims,"Know ye not that the unrighteous shall not inherit the kingdom of God?"
19082Shall he deliver his spirit from the hand of Sheol?"
19082Shall heaven be held before man simply as a piece of meat before a hungry dog to make him jump well?
19082Shall not Heaven pluck and wear them on her bosom?
19082Shall their unbelief make the faith of God without effect?"
19082Shall"infants be not raised in the smallness of body in which they died, but increase by the wondrous and most swift work of God"?
19082Should we not take a case in which God''s will is so far plainly fulfilled, in order to trace that will farther and even to its finality?
19082Should you not think at least once a day of the fifty thousand who that day sink to the doom of the lost?"
19082Since we can not eat sweet and wholesome food forever, shall we therefore at once saturate our stomachs with nauseating poisons?
19082Studien and Kritiken, 1885, band i.,"Ist die Lehre von der Anferstehung des Leibes nicht ein alt Persische Lehre?"
19082That is to say, was it of human or of Divine origin and authority?
19082That is to say, whence originated the sentence of death upon man?
19082The Persian poet, Buzurgi, says on this theme,"What is the soul?
19082The Pharisee rejoins,"Can not God, then, who formed man of water,( gutta seminis humida,) much more re form him of clay?"
19082The consequence has been that while elsewhere the ultimate standard by which to try a doctrine is, What do the most competent judges say?
19082The deluge he certainly regarded as literal: was not, then, in his conception, the fire, too, literal?
19082The dirge like burden of their poetry was literally these words:"What man is he that liveth and shall not see death?
19082The essence of the controversy, then, is exactly this: Is the mind an entity?
19082The ghost of miserable Patroclus calve to him and said,"Sleepest thou and art forgetful of me, O Achilles?"
19082The ghost summoned from beneath by the witch of Endor said,"Why hast thou disquieted me to bring me up?"
19082The important question here is, What did the Fathers suppose the essence of Christ''s redemptive work to be?
19082The king accused them of theft; but they severally replied, the lame man, How could I reach it?
19082The leaf a world, the firmament a waste?"
19082The man that loves the Lord shall have length of days; the unjust, though for a moment he flourishes, yet the wind bloweth, and where is he?
19082The only question is, what meaning was it intended to convey?
19082The problem to be solved is, Does the man who is now a soul in a body remain a soul when the body dissolves?
19082The question is,"What difference should it make to us whether we admit or deny the fact of a future life?"
19082The question now arises, What did the Greeks think in relation to the ascent of human souls into heaven among the gods?
19082The reply to the question, What is that relation?
19082The second question that arises is, What was the significance of the funeral ceremonies celebrated by the Egyptians over their dead?
19082The termination of all the functions he knows, what else can it be but his virtual annihilation?
19082The theories in theological systems being but philosophy, why should they not be freely subjected to philosophical criticism?
19082The unsatisfied and longing soul has created the doctrine of a future life, has it?
19082The will is free now: what shall suddenly paralyze or annihilate that freedom when the soul leaves the body?
19082The world reflecting from every corner the lurid glare of hell, who can do any thing else but shudder and pray?
19082Then Jesus asked, But who think ye that I am?
19082Then shall be brought to pass the saying that is written,''Death is swallowed up in victory?"
19082Then the question arises, In what way is this done?
19082There are invitations and opportunities to change from evil to good here: why not hereafter?
19082Therefore does it not follow by all the necessities of logic?
19082They once asked Jesus,"Who did sin, this man or his parents, that he was born blind?"
19082This believing instinct, so deeply seated in our consciousness, natural, innocent, universal, whence came it, and why was it given?
19082This, what is it but great Nature''s testimony, God''s silent avowal, that we are to meet in eternity?
19082Thus to ignore the only solemn and worthy standard of judging an abstract doctrine, namely, Is it a truth or a falsehood?
19082To be saved, and in paradise, what is it but to be a pure instrument to echo the music of divine things?
19082Upon the mist veiled ocean launching then, he will sail where?
19082Was Jesus sent among men with a special commission?
19082Was Jesus the Son of God?
19082Was Jesus the subject of a peculiar glory, bestowed upon him by the Father?
19082Was there no path for the wisest and best souls to climb starry Olympus?
19082We are met upon the threshold of our inquiry by the essential question, What, according to Paul, was the mission of Christ?
19082We, whose minds comprehend all things?
19082Well, is not the resurrection a pendant to the doctrine of Satan?
19082Well, then, how does God treat offenders now?
19082Were the angels who came down to the earth with Christ to the judgment never to return to their native seats?
19082Were they not honest?
19082Were they permanently to transfer their deathless citizenship from the sky to Judea?
19082What animal can there be superior to me?
19082What are presentiments but divine wings of the spirit fluttering toward our unseen goal?
19082What are the results or penalties of it?
19082What are they?
19082What can be plainer than that?
19082What can the everlasting deprivation of all good be called but an immense evil to its subject?
19082What caused the snake to crawl on his belly in the dust, while other creatures walk on feet or fly with wings?
19082What could be a more explicit declaration of this than the following?
19082What crucible shall burn up the ultimate of force?
19082What did he accomplish?
19082What did he really mean to teach by it?
19082What do they mean?
19082What does Strauss mean by"the nerve spirit"?
19082What does the great harmony of truth require?
19082What does unprejudiced reason dictate?
19082What fate has befallen him?
19082What force is there to compel them into nothing?
19082What good is there in the baseless conceit and gratuitous disgust of saying,"The next world is in the grave, betwixt the teeth of the worm"?
19082What hems us in when we think, feel, and imagine?
19082What in the hidden future portions of our destiny would be harmonic and complementary as related with the parts here experienced?
19082What is death?
19082What is it, expressed by the term"death,"which is found by the adherents of the devil distinctively?
19082What is that common ground and element but the presence of a percipient volitional force, whether manifested or unmanifested, still there?
19082What is the Brahmanic method of salvation, or secret of emancipation?
19082What is the complete doctrine to which fragmentary references are here made?
19082What is the real character of the retributions in the future state?
19082What justice, what justice, is here in this?
19082What material processes shall ever disintegrate the simplicity of spirit?
19082What moral conditions alter the case then?
19082What portions were regarded as fable or symbolism?
19082What profiteth it?
19082What profiteth it?
19082What proof is there that the symbol denotes this?
19082What shall, we add to man To bring him higher?"
19082What sort of a figure would the segments which we now see, compose, if they were completed?
19082What then?
19082What though Decay''s shapeless hand extinguish us?
19082What though the number of telescopic worlds were raised to the ten thousandth power, and each orb were as large as all of them combined would now be?
19082What tree is man the seed of?
19082What was the Jewish idea of salvation, or citizenship in the kingdom of God?
19082What was the condition of acceptance in the Pharisaic church?
19082What was the meaning of this ceremony?
19082What was the meaning or aim of his death and resurrection?
19082What, now, is the real meaning of these pregnant phrases?
19082What, then, do they mean?
19082What, then, does the phrase"redemption by the death of Christ"mean?
19082What, then, is the meaning of the fear, suffering and horror, which so often accompany or follow sin?
19082What, then, shall we say?
19082What, then, were the essence and method of Christ''s redemptive mission according to the Fathers?
19082When the engine madly plunges off the embankment or bridge of life, does the engineer perish in the ruin, or nimbly leap off and immortally escape?
19082When the fireman risks his life to save a child from the flames of a tumbling house, is the hope of heaven his motive?
19082When the soldier spurns an offered bribe and will not betray his comrades nor desert his post, is the fear of hell all that animates him?
19082Whence and how arose this heterogeneous mass of notions?
19082Where could man, scorched by the fires of the sun of this world, look for felicity, were it not for the shade afforded by the tree of emancipation?
19082Where, then, did he suppose the soul of his crucified Master had been during the interval between his death and his resurrection?
19082Whither has he gone?
19082Whither?
19082Who among us can dwell in everlasting burnings?"
19082Who are citizens of, and who are aliens from, the kingdom of God?
19082Who but must feel the pathos and admire the charity of these eloquent words of Henry Giles?
19082Who can answer the question which rises to heaven from the abyss of the damned?
19082Who can believe it, knowing what it is that he believes?
19082Who can believe that it was for either of those purposes that they embalmed the multitudes of animals whose mummies the explorer is still turning up?
19082Who can count the confessors who have thought it bliss and glory to be martyrs for truth and God?
19082Who can linger there and listen, unmoved, to the sublime lament of things that die?
19082Who could consent to that?
19082Who has not endeared relatives, choice friends, freshly or long ago removed from this earth into the unknown clime?
19082Who will save me?"
19082Who would wish anything worse for him?
19082Why do we not live immortally as we are?
19082Why is he gifted with powers of reason and demands of love so far beyond his conditions?
19082Why is it so calmly assumed that God can not pardon, and that therefore sinners must be given over to endless pains?
19082Why may not pardon from unpurchased grace be vouchsafed as well after death as before?
19082Why may not that untraceable something which has gone still exist?
19082Why should recourse be had to a phrase partially descriptive of one feature, instead of comprehensively announcing or implying the whole case?
19082Why should the power of hope, and joy, and faith, change into inanity and oblivion?
19082Why should thy cruel arrow smite yon bird?
19082Why should we shudder or grieve?
19082Why then do we shun death with anxious strife?
19082Why, or how, then, would a similar feat prove the opposite doctrine?
19082Why, then, did he die?
19082Why, then, has that of Christ alone made such a change in the faith of the world?
19082Why, then, shall we select from the mass of metaphors a few of the most violent, and insist on rendering these as veritable statements of fact?
19082Why, then, was he not left in peaceful nonentity?
19082Why, then, we ask, is the faith in a future life for man suffering such a marked decay in the present generation of Christendom?
19082Will Daniel Lambert, the mammoth of men, appear weighing half a ton?
19082Will he do it?
19082Will not the unimpeded Spirit of Christ lead all free minds and loving hearts to one conclusion?
19082Will the King connive at this nefarious prowler and permit him to carry out his design?
19082Will the Siamese twins then be again joined by the living ligament of their congenital band?
19082Will the time ever come when that tortoise shall so rise up that its neck shall enter the hole of the yoke?
19082Will you accept the horizon of your mind as the limit of the universe?
19082Will you pass to meet them not having thought of them for years, having perhaps forgotten them?
19082With which shall he be raised?
19082World on world Are they forever heaping up, and still The mighty measure never, never full?"
19082Would a designing knave voluntarily reveal to a suspicious scrutiny actions and traits naturally subversive of confidence in him?
19082Would he not, then, in all probability, believe in a local hell?
19082Would it not, moreover, be most marvellous if they were such heated fanatics, all of them, so many men?
19082Would not his whole soul have been wrapped up in it, and his speech have been almost incessantly about it?
19082Would they have done this save from simple hearted truthfulness?
19082Yes; but if Paradise be above the heavens, and hell below the seventh earth, then how can Sirat be extended over hell for people to pass to Paradise?
19082Yes; but the inquiry is, what is the mind itself?
19082Yes; but what is it that presides over, takes up, and preserves this succession?
19082Yet are not the principles of science as much glimpses of the mind of God as any sentences in the Bible are?
19082Yet logically what separates it from the resurrection of Christ?
19082a doctrine, or a coming event?
19082a general truth to enlighten and guide uncertain men, or an approaching deliverance to console and encourage the desponding Jews?
19082and how, in their estimation, did he achieve that work?
19082and that the slattern and the voluptuary and the sluggard, whose course is one of base self indulgence, are correct?
19082and what details are connected with them?
19082and with what body do they come?"
19082are will, conscience, thought, and love annihilated?
19082art thou that prophet?"
19082art thou the Messiah?
19082blasphemy any further go?
19082but it is wherever God''s approving presence extends: and is that not wherever the pure in heart are found?
19082can the yearning prophecies of the smitten heart be all false?
19082eternal pain for me?
19082has old Adam snorted all this time Under some senselesse clod, with sleep ydead?"
19082he who once was rich but for our sakes became poor?
19082he who poured his blood on Judea''s awful summit, be satisfied?
19082he whose loving soul breathed itself forth in the tender words,"Come unto me, all ye that labor and are heavy laden, and I will give you rest"?
19082how can ye escape the condemnation of Gehenna?"
19082in glory?
19082in his life, and brought to a focus in his martyr death?
19082in temptation?
19082in theology it is, What do the committed priests say?
19082is it not enough to have borne the wretchedness of this life, that we must also endure another?"
19082must they not have considered him as a pledge that their sins were forgiven, their doom reversed, and heaven attainable?
19082not, what are its acts?
19082or is it a collection of functions?
19082or the capacity of the higher?
19082or the fifth?
19082or the last?
19082or will the power of God distribute them as they belong?"
19082or with all?
19082or, across that dark gulf, shall we be united again in purer bonds?
19082somewhere in the ample creation and in the boundless ages, join, with the old familiar love, our long parted, fondly cherished, never forgotten dead?"
19082that is, to bring Christ down; or,''Who shall descend into the under world?''
19082the blind man, How could I see it?
19082the genius of a Shakspeare, whose imagination exhausted worlds and then invented new?
19082the heart of a Borromeo, whose seraphic love expanded to the limits of sympathetic being?
19082the soul of a Wycliffe, whose undaunted will, in faithful consecration to duty, faced the fires of martyrdom and never blenched?
19082what difference would that make in the facts of human nature and destiny?
19082what hadst thou to do in hell When thou didst bower the spirit of a fiend In mortal paradise of such sweet flesh?"
19082what other definition and affirmation of salvation conceivable?
19082what shall I do?
19082will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?"
19082with the first?
36672And did you go to Wellington?
36672And how much are you to get?
36672And what is that? 36672 And why did n''t you?"
36672And you?
36672Are you Molly Brown of Kentucky?
36672Are you aware of the fact, girls, that there is no gas in these rooms? 36672 Are you to be in Charleston long?"
36672Are you, really? 36672 But what will my father say?"
36672But what will your father say?
36672But will they let girls run one?
36672But you-- how do you know all this?
36672But, Dum, what on earth are household novelties?
36672But, papa, what is he to do? 36672 But, papa, what pulpit?
36672Can you smell it, too? 36672 Claire,"said his Eminence of the Tum Tum,"have you extended an invitation to tea in the garden of our home to the Misses Laurens and their guests?"
36672Dee sick?
36672Did it hurt very badly?
36672Did you tell Cousin Park I was in town?
36672Do you feel that way?
36672Do you know you have not stopped once for half- an- hour?
36672Do you think it is a girl''s fault always if a man kisses her?
36672Do you think it would be wise to go without knowing? 36672 Do you think we can ever know the one who sang, well enough to ask her to sing to us?"
36672Do you young ladies know where the Misses Laurens live?
36672Do''white fo''ks wan''we- all sin''li''l''song?
36672Do? 36672 Does n''t it seem ridiculous that we have known her only since this afternoon?
36672Does n''t that sound romantic? 36672 Dressed already, Page?"
36672Foolish of me, was n''t it? 36672 Good?
36672Had n''t I better get a doctor for Dee?
36672Have you collected your money yet?
36672Have you talked business yet with either of the ladies, Professor Green? 36672 How are they going to help it?
36672How are we going to sleep? 36672 How do I know?
36672How do you know it''s from her?
36672How long does your job last?
36672How old do you reckon Mrs. Green is? 36672 I wonder if he wrote his''Reveries of a Bachelor''before or after the ceremony?"
36672I wonder if you would like my old college, Exmoor? 36672 I wonder why it is that no one ever seems to feel very sad or quiet in old, old graveyards?"
36672Is n''t it awful to let a place like this go to pieces so? 36672 Is n''t it funny that we should have peeped into the very garden belonging to the pretty rumpled girl in the bus?
36672Is n''t our young father a wonder?
36672Is n''t she a great girl, though?
36672Is n''t this a jolly place?
36672Is she pretty?
36672Is that all you can say when I chased back from the meeting in Norfolk expecting to find three lone ladies so glad to see me? 36672 Is that where the azaleas are so beautiful?"
36672It was a very risky thing for both of my girls-- they might have got in no end of scrapes-- but what am I to do? 36672 Know it?
36672Molly, do you hear that? 36672 Now do n''t you wish we had a guide book and map?
36672Oh, Edwin, do you hear that? 36672 Oh, Edwin, do you think we will really get into that house?
36672Oh, have you got a baby? 36672 Oh, is your name Gaillard?"
36672Oh, sing us a little song?
36672Oh, you?
36672Red?
36672See them without Zebedee? 36672 That is to say, Tweedles will not be?"
36672This Gaillard is our great, great grandfather, is n''t he, Louis?
36672Was anyone in all the world ever so wonderful as our Zebedee?
36672We have come to you, hoping you will take us to--Mrs. Green, who was spokesman for us, faltered; could she say"board"to those two?
36672Well den, Missy lak nig sing fer heh?
36672Well, girls, are n''t you going to take your poor old father in out of the cold?
36672Well, how about the Magnolia Gardens this afternoon? 36672 Well, is that any reason why you should n''t be glad to see me now?"
36672Well, now, how do you know that?
36672Well, on the other hand, little girl, how about my feelings? 36672 Well, then, Sullivan''s Island, where Poe''s''Gold Bug''was written?"
36672Well, what was my fault, then?
36672Well, why do n''t you go to college now? 36672 What are you going to do with it?"
36672What are you going to write?
36672What difference does that make? 36672 What do you fancy this thing is for?"
36672What do you reckon he wants to say to Zebedee?
36672What is he to do? 36672 What is it?"
36672What made you girls so late?
36672What on earth are you selling?
36672What''s the matter with you, honey? 36672 What''s the matter?"
36672What''s this?
36672What?
36672When may we come?
36672Where are you, Dee?
36672Where does that door go? 36672 Where have you and she just been?"
36672Who is Mabel Binks?
36672Who''s a''fraid cat now?
36672Who''s the old cove over there with the Venus de Milo effect of arms?
36672Why did you only come near doing it?
36672Why do n''t you earn it?
36672Why do n''t you tell them how you got Miss Plympton out of the window in her pink pajamas?
36672Why do n''t you tell your father?
36672Why should he not put on smoked glasses or look the other way? 36672 Will it be Miss Judith?"
36672Wo n''t you have some butter on your rice? 36672 You did n''t really keep it?"
36672You hear that, Page?
36672You mean as a warning to all young authors?
36672You must know Charleston pretty well, Mr. Gaillard, do you not?
36672You suggested it?
36672You will have room, then, for all of us?
36672You would like to go to college, would you not?
36672You would like to stay there, would n''t you, girls?
36672''Berry well,''yer say?
36672A favor for you?"
36672Ai n''t I see my gal dere waitin''Stannin''by de gate?
36672And now I want you to do us a big favor----""Me?
36672And you, Miss Gaillard?
36672And you-- do you write poetry, too?"
36672Are n''t you sorry for Claire?
36672Are we not Huguenots?
36672Are you counting upon going to college?"
36672But do n''t these palmetto trees have a strange swishy sound?
36672But do n''t you reckon I saw him holding on to it for dear life?
36672But how?
36672But is n''t it fascinating?
36672But must I tell him everything?
36672CHAPTER XV WHO WON THE BET?
36672Ca n''t you ever say I?
36672Ca n''t you hear their hymn of thanksgiving?"
36672Ca n''t you make up some plan?
36672Claire?
36672Could n''t we sneak off and go down there?
36672Did you cut it down?"
36672Did you ever in all your life see anything quite so lovely?
36672Did you notice they had an ugly, new, unpainted, board gate?
36672Do n''t you know that there are only two ways for a Charleston lady to make a living?
36672Do n''t you write, Mrs. Green?
36672Do you have to lump yourself with Dum and Dee about everything?"
36672Do you know she saved up two weeks so as to get her money''s worth?
36672Do you really think that is the truth about them?
36672Do you reckon it means lovers meet here?"
36672Do you suppose those two little old ladies live there all by themselves?"
36672Do you think Professor Green is as old as I am?"
36672Do you usually arise so early?"
36672Does the idiot think I could keep it up all night?
36672Does the maiden still swing in thy giant clasp?"
36672Edwin, you remember Mattie Ball, do you not?"
36672Green?"
36672Green?"
36672Had she caught the young man''s malady and gone a little off her hooks?
36672Has not Louis been brought up in that faith and how could he preach any other?
36672Have I done something?
36672Have you counted up my pledges yet?"
36672He knew that rice and sugar and cream were mixed up in it, but how?
36672Here I had come tearing home from Norfolk expecting to find three charming girls, all of them overjoyed to see me, and what do I find?
36672How about the bedrooms?
36672How account for this young man?
36672How could anybody grow with that-- that ponderous weight on him?"
36672How does a ghost smell?
36672I was nearly scared to death when I saw him there, were n''t you?"
36672If you write that splendid a letter to a mere afterthought, what would you do for a beforethought?
36672Is anybody dead?
36672Is n''t their name romantic?
36672Kindred souls must manage to get together or''What''s a heaven for?''"
36672Me?
36672Now ai n''t I glad?"
36672Now you are high- minded, too; fancy yourself in Louis''place-- what would you do?"
36672Of course you want to go?
36672Oh, my love, doth thou love me?''"
36672Parvenues!_ What business have they to ask a Gaillard to dig in their dirt?
36672She is the one Miss Ball told us about who got in such funny scrapes at college-- you remember, Judy Kean, who dyed her hair black?"
36672Surely you are not going to wear pants?"
36672They call their father Zebedee, because of the old joke about"Who''s the father of Zebedee''s children?"
36672They seem to take for granted that anyone they are on speaking terms with must be well born or how did they get to be on speaking terms?
36672WHO WON THE BET?
36672Was he trying to fit that awful noose around his neck again?
36672Was there ever a moment when we could broach the subject, girls?"
36672We ca n''t let you give us the money, and how will we ever pay it back?"
36672Were they attractive, too?"
36672Were you going to be all twenty right from the first?"
36672What are they going to do now?"
36672What business did he have coming home before he was expected?
36672What business was it of guests to dictate to the hostess what their sleeping arrangements should be?
36672What color are you going to get, Dum?"
36672What could it have been?"
36672What did you make, Dee?
36672What did you want there, please?"
36672What do you mean, Dee, by having on my coat and cap?
36672What do you mean, Dum, by fifteen orders?
36672What do you reckon the lazy thing would be doing while I was doing all that for her?
36672What do you think of these?
36672What father would simply accept a situation as Zebedee did this one?
36672What had our masculine contingent done?
36672What hurts you?"
36672What if I did burst in the effort?
36672What is the matter?
36672What is the matter?"
36672What is the matter?"
36672What next?
36672What on earth was I to say to him?
36672What was Dee driving at?
36672What was Dee to say to her father?
36672Where are those girls?
36672Where do you feel sick?
36672Where is Dee?
36672Where was Dee?
36672Where will we go first?"
36672Where''s Dum?
36672Where''s the morning paper?"
36672Who wants Shrimp ter- day?
36672Who''s here?"
36672Whose appearance is not?
36672Why did n''t they come on in?
36672Why did n''t you ask me to attend to it?"
36672Why did n''t you call me?"
36672Why do it?
36672Why, oh, why did n''t they come on?
36672Would you be afraid?"
36672You do n''t mean that both of them have had the heartlessness to go out at one time and leave you all by yourself?
36672You have heard of persons like that, have n''t you?
36672You hear me, sir?"
36672You mean money terms?
44837Who are most conspicuous of those pressing this bill upon Congress and the American people? 44837 274; one a curse to the public, 274; why are banks so fond of issuing these small notes? 44837 49; the question of corporation unreliability in England, 49; do such law ordinarily extend to corporations at all? 44837 53; why this distinction? 44837 And when can we be stronger than we are now? 44837 Any refusal on the part of the northern members to legislate the remedy? 44837 But what has been the practice in our own country? 44837 But, how is it here? 44837 Has it been sinking in price since the year 1835? 44837 He says:Does not your inquiry give too broad a meaning to the section?
44837Is not all this exemplified in our own case?
44837Now, how came the lords to possess this right?
44837Now, how is it with slave property, tried by this unerring standard?
44837What would our ancestors have thought of it?
44837Will delay bring to our assistance the slaveholding States?
44837and whether that election is to be governed by the virtue and intelligence of the people, or to become the spoil of intrigue and corruption?
44837since the year of the first alarm manifesto in South Carolina, and the first of Mr. Calhoun''s twenty years''alarm speeches in the Senate?
40389Are they, then, ripe for civil war, and ready to imbrue their hands in kindred blood? 40389 Can it possibly interest either their feelings or their judgment?
40389Can our Countrymen be caught by so flimsy a pretext? 40389 Could any friend of his kind be neutral?"
40389Did not the American Revolution produce the French Revolution? 40389 If Gen. MARSHALL thought them unconstitutional or dangerous to liberty, would he"be content merely to say they were unnecessary?
40389If vast exertions were then made to acquire independence, will not the same exertions be now made to maintain it?
40389In what manner would France have treated any foreign minister, who should have dared to so conduct himself toward this republic?... 40389 It was cruelly insinuated to G[eorge] W[ashington],"writes Marshall''s sister- in- law,"by an after great S[olo?
40389Nay,exclaimed the sarcastic savant,"what will become of the people named King?
40389Shall we never see you again in Richmond? 40389 Was he[ the President] to be a_ menial_ to the House in a business wherein himself was seriously charged?
40389Was it wise, then, to do so while such a probability existed?
40389We hear, incessantly, from the old foes of the Constitution''this is unconstitutional and that is,''and, indeed, what is not? 40389 Where,"asked Publicola,"is the power that should control them[ Congress]?"
40389Would a man of General MARSHALL''S force of reasoning, simply denominate_ laws useless_,if he thought them unconstitutional?
40389[ 1199] What had become of the French mission? 40389 [ 1326] Who should be Secretary of State for the remaining fateful four weeks?
40389[ 318] And our envoy to carry out this shameful programme!--was it not that same Jay who once tried to barter away the Mississippi? 40389 [ 447] But how should the address be worded?
40389[ 726] Who should answer Talleyrand? 40389 [ 985] How, now, could the Federalists repel Republican assaults on this direct tax?
40389And all this for what?
40389And could not the consequences have been avoided by a different line of conduct on our part?
40389And did anybody play backgammon in that way?
40389And did not the French Revolution produce all the Calamities and Desolations to the human Race and the whole Globe ever since?"
40389And who but the National Government would dare make a treaty with British Monarchy, sacrificing American rights?
40389And why did Marshall talk of ejecting him by force of arms?
40389And why had Adams done this?
40389And, in any event, why ask the President to send for the court proceedings?
40389Are we already so degenerate as to acknowledge a superior in the United States?"
40389But what did Jefferson mean by"heresies"?
40389But where could anything be found in the Constitution"authorizing Congress to express terms or to assume the debts of the states?"
40389But... shall the officers of our government prescribe rules of conduct to freemen?
40389By whom?
40389Could any but this question have been asked by Marshall?
40389Did it extend to the banishment of the printers& to the slavery of the press?
40389Did the treaty revive the debt thus extinguished?
40389Does not your Government"know that nothing is to be obtained here without money?"
40389Even majorities have no right to do as they please; if so, what security has the individual citizen?
40389Had he not become the voice of the majority?
40389Had not mobs been the precursors of our own Revolution?
40389Had they the money ready?
40389How long would the[ British] Government be content with unsuccessful remonstrance and unavailing memorials?"
40389If he thinks he has done right, why should he be afraid of letting his measures be known?"
40389If so, what were its doctrines?
40389If the Legislature of Virginia had gone so far before the infant National establishment was under way, how far might not succeeding Legislatures go?
40389If the party recover its pristine energy& splendor, shall I ascribe it to such cunning, paltry, indecisive, backdoor conduct?
40389If"a French army should be crossing the Atlantic to invade our territory,"would anybody insist on disbanding our army?
40389In fine, are you disposed to advocate any other, or a closer connection with that nation, than exists at the ratification of the treaty of 1794?
40389In what manner would the American Government have treated him[ Genêt] had he been the representative of any other nation than France?"
40389Might not Marshall become a candidate for Congress?
40389On some occasion Madame de Villette approached him:--"Why will you not lend us money?"
40389One of Talleyrand''s many secretaries asked Gerry"what it contained?
40389Or, in the event of your election, will you use your influence to obtain a appeal of these laws?
40389Should his friends submit to this?
40389Suppose events did develop a formal declaration of war with France?
40389Suppose, said Senator Ross, that"persons should claim to be Electors who had never been_ properly_ appointed[ elected], should their vote be received?
40389Suppose, says Marshall, that America should do the things Great Britain was doing?
40389The question was,"whether self- government and national liberty be worth the money which must be expended to preserve them?
40389Then"what has led to our present conversation?"
40389To whom?
40389Was Paine''s pamphlet"the canonical book of scripture?"
40389Was it not the prison where kings thrust their subjects to perish of starvation and torture?
40389Was that"principle"sound?
40389Was this criminal deed done in British jurisdiction?
40389What American,"asks Marshall,"could hesitate in the option?"
40389What answer could the Federalists make to these Republican charges now?
40389What is your answer?"
40389What must Marshall have thought?
40389What should be done to avert this misfortune?
40389What should be done"by the friends of order and true liberty to keep the[ presidential] chair from being occupied by an enemy[ Jefferson] of both?"
40389What situation would the country be in if such a case was to happen?
40389What was the result?
40389What was to become of"law and order"when the Nation''s head thus sanctioned resistance to both?
40389What were such"means?"
40389What were these measures of the Directory?
40389What would have happened if Great Britain had been victorious?
40389When might they expect an answer?
40389When we see men like General Marshall voting for such a principle in a Government of a portion of the American people is there no cause for alarm?"
40389Where now were our free institutions?
40389Where then would America be?
40389Where, then?
40389Who are the creditors?
40389Who could discern in this kindly person, with"lax, lounging manners,"indolent, and fond of jokes, the heart that dared all things?
40389Who is the superior of the people?
40389Who knows the real conditions in Europe?--the"effect of the late decisive victories of France?...
40389Who was the best lawyer in Richmond, asked he of his host?
40389Why be precipitate?
40389Why did the envoys treat the money proposition as coming from the Directory?
40389Why did we not aid French Republicans against the hordes of"despotism"?
40389Why not Patrick Henry?
40389Why, he asks, have the Americans made no proposition to the Directory?
40389Why, he asks, is Marshall so vague on the constitutionality of the Alien and Sedition Laws?
40389Why, then, he asked,"should the confiscation of British property be deemed less just in the event of an American triumph?"
40389Will it be believed that the word was retained by a very small majority?
40389Will not this, or something like it, be the wretched fate of our country?...
40389Will the Directory stop further outrages on American commerce, ask the envoys?
40389Would the envoys now give it?
40389[ 1152] Marshall wondered whether this simple way out of the tangle could"afford just cause of discontent to France?
40389[ 228] And why was this tribute exacted?
40389[ 230] Should such a despotic law be obeyed?
40389[ 351] I take the earliest opportunity of asking if you will accept the appointment?
40389[ 367] With whom, asked Thompson, was the treaty made?
40389[ 421]"What am I to do for a Secretary of State?"
40389[ 635] Why hesitate?
40389[ 996] Who should prepare the answer of the House to the President''s speech?
40389_ 3d._ Are you in favor of an alliance, offensive and defensive, with_ Great Britain_?
40389_ 5th._ Are you an advocate for the Alien and Sedition Bills?
40389he exclaimed,"what can a straggling pamphlet... do against a hundred thousand volumes of miscellaneous falsehood in folio?"
46906Could not the Missionary board send out an assistant?
46906replied the doctor, courteously,"who is he?"
29870A daughter of Myron Holly?
29870And why is she required to pay her husband''s poll tax?
29870Are all those Mexicans dead?
29870How can you expect me to say a word?
29870What is meant,said he,"by this mysterious dictum,''Out of her sphere?''
29870Why was your campaign precipitated when our hands are so full?
29870Would she be able to speak?
29870), Are Women Citizens?
29870), Why Do Not Women Vote?
29870***** What were the causes of this unique success?
29870A dear and noble friend, one who aided our work most efficiently in the early days, said to me,"Why do you say the''emancipation of women?''"
29870A man was asked,"How are you going to vote on the constitution?"
29870After the meeting Miss Anthony said to me,"Anna, what did I say to make the people laugh so?"
29870All we ever have asked is simply,"Do you believe in perfect equality for women?"
29870And while they are both out what will become of the children?
29870Are not these the very qualities most needed in our electorate?
29870Are the rights of that class of citizens more sacred than ours?
29870Are the violations of the fundamental principles of our Government in their case more dangerous than in ours?...
29870Are the women of Wyoming and Washington better than your women, and do the men of those Territories love their women better than you love yours?
29870Are they more so than the slaves were when the right of suffrage was conferred on them?
29870Are they not constantly declaring themselves our slaves?
29870Are they not worthy?
29870Are they to take care of themselves?
29870Are we prepared, after a hundred and twenty years, to own ourselves defeated?...
29870Are you afraid to do right?''
29870Are you making a single law which does not touch me as much as it does you?
29870Are you women not human beings?
29870As a police judge and an independent voter?
29870Ask her whether she would not want to have a vote then?
29870At present this would be ruinous, and why?
29870At the first evening session Miss Anthony, in her president''s address, answered the question,"What has been gained by the forty years''work?"
29870Behind all of these has been the persistent demand for political rights, and the question naturally arises,"Why do these continue to be denied?
29870Blackwell_--May I inquire what the organization is that the gentleman refers to?
29870But did it give that family any accurate or adequate representation?
29870But to them, what is that now?
29870But what is a woman afraid of on a lonely road after dark?
29870But why does she not possess it herself?
29870But, it is asked,"Have not women had some sort of protection without the ballot?"
29870By what power do the Mormons perpetuate their system of polygamy?
29870Ca n''t you contrive an interview with the Queen?"
29870Came it from nature?
29870Can any one doubt which list represents the spirit of the future?
29870Can it be that outside of all we have known, there lies a great unexplored universe to which the mind of man can yet attain?"
29870Can it be that we distrust our mothers and sisters?
29870Can she not prosecute one charged with the larceny of a whip?
29870Can they not serve the nation as well as those men, who during the last war sent substitutes and to- day hold the highest places in the Government?
29870Can we afford to dispute the benefit of this counseling in the advancement of our race?
29870Can we ever cultivate any proper sense of self- respect as long as women take such sentiments from the mouths of the priesthood?...
29870Citizens in the fullest sense of the word, why are they deprived of the suffrage in a country whose institutions rest upon individual representation?"
29870Could this small hand that held a sickle hope to cut down those forests of time- honored prejudice and superstition?
29870Did he renounce the faith of a lifetime?
29870Did the suffragists offend him?
29870Did we banish Mrs. Rose?
29870Did women meet in council and voluntarily give up all their right to be their own law- makers?
29870Do gentlemen claim it is unconstitutional to amend the Constitution?
29870Do n''t you know that we are your natural protectors?"
29870Do n''t you know that women will attend to such needs sooner than men?
29870Do women deserve nothing?
29870Do you ask why people can not see this?
29870Do you not see it?
29870Do you say that whenever all women wish the ballot they will have it?
29870Do you think our sons can rise from such studies with a high ideal of womanhood?
29870Do you wonder at the low estimate of American politics?
29870Does it appeal to any one''s sense of fairness to give the stronger party in a struggle additional advantages and deny them to the weaker one?
29870Does not Emerson say that friendship is the slowest fruit in the garden of God?
29870Does not an emergency exist for a political influence which shall counterbalance these and tip the scale the other way?
29870Educated, property- owning, self- reliant and public- spirited, why are women still refused a voice in the Government?
29870Elizabeth Stuart Phelps wrote:"With all my head and with all my heart I believe in womanhood suffrage; can I say more for your convention?"
29870Even a Mugwump is becoming a doubtful being.... Do not these wrongs which men suffer appeal to our tenderest sympathies?
29870Even the advertisements in the street cars began with the query in large letters, Should Women Vote?
29870From whence arises this misdirected ambition?
29870Gentlemen, is this justice?
29870Had any one of these beneficent propositions been submitted to the masses, do you believe a majority would have placed their sanction upon them?
29870Has he had just standards set before him as to what a wife should be?
29870Has the millennium yet dawned?
29870Have the fears and predictions of the local opponents of woman suffrage been verified?
29870Have the wheels of progress stopped?
29870Have we not heretofore been the silent sex?
29870Have we outlived this principle?
29870Have women degenerated into low politicians, neglecting their homes and stifling the noblest emotions of womanhood?
29870Her question to God is,''Who shall interpret Thee to me?''
29870How are justice and liberty depicted?
29870How are these evils to be remedied?
29870How can the young men of this nation be inspired with a love of justice?
29870How can you expect such women as have addressed you here in this convention to teach the youth to honor a Government which thus dishonors women?
29870How could he have represented all of them by his one vote unless he had voted"early and often?"
29870How dare a man plead his private ease or comfort as an excuse for neglecting his public duties?
29870How do you know?
29870How has the transformation come?
29870How is this mighty power embodied?
29870How often do you think of the women of your States and of their interests in the laws you pass?
29870How was that man to represent both his daughters by his single vote on the suffrage question?
29870I will ask the American question"will it pay"to enfranchise the women of this nation-- I will not say republic?
29870If it is not religion to promote a cause that will make men better and women wiser and happier, what is it?
29870If it were proposed to take away our right to vote, we would think it a satisfactory answer that our influence would still remain?
29870If not, why is it supposed to have no application to women?
29870If she venture to obey, what is man that he should attempt to abrogate her sacred and divine mission?
29870If that which is should therefore remain, why abolish the slavery of men?
29870If the Chinese would have the right to vote if they were citizens, have not we the right to vote because of citizenship?
29870If the right to vote be not that difference, what is?
29870If the sacrifice is necessary, well and good; but how if it is not?...
29870If there had been women on the commission, would they have pitched the camp five miles from water?
29870If thus fitted to rule, are women unfitted to have a voice in choosing rulers?
29870If women had some control over the conditions which tend to make men brutes, might the number not be lessened?
29870If"governments deriving their just powers from the consent of the governed"does not mean that, what can it mean?
29870In my section men are chivalric and say,"Do n''t you know that you shall have everything you ask as ladies?
29870In speaking of the event after she had returned to the Riggs House, she said:"Was n''t it wonderful?
29870In what a category is this to place women, after one hundred years and at the close of this nineteenth century?
29870Is all progress at an end?
29870Is democratic government impossible after all?"
29870Is it any wonder that the tender grace of a day that is dead even now lingers and makes men loath to welcome change?
29870Is it any wonder that women at large are dead to the importance of this matter?...
29870Is it because they are untrained in public affairs?
29870Is it indeed a fact?
29870Is it just to American men?
29870Is it not strange that men think that what to them would be degradation, slavery, is to women elevation, liberty?
29870Is it not the highest exhibit of the moral superiority of our women that so very few consent to exchange pinching penury for gilded vice?
29870Is it not too bad to leave him longer alone in his misery?
29870Is it not, indeed, barbarous?
29870Is it other than simple justice which I ask for them?
29870Is it said that women must not vote because they can not bear arms?
29870Is it to be the director of a hospital?
29870Is it to the presidency of a board of visitors of an eleemosynary institution?
29870Is it wilder than the dream of him who, oppressed by the tyranny of Alva, could dream of a day of perfect religious toleration?
29870Is n''t this a case, kind mistress of a home, where you should remember those in bonds as bound with them?
29870Is not every human being, who is of age, according to your Constitution, entitled to equal justice and freedom?
29870Is not the right of petition a constitutional right?
29870Is not this symbol a mockery while the women of the country are held in political slavery?
29870Is not this the land where foreigners flock because they have heard the bugle call of freedom?
29870Is that fair to Americans?
29870Is that the office to which woman suffragists of this country ask us now to admit them?
29870Is the recognition of this right desirable?
29870Is there any reason why women should not have a vote in regard to water- works?
29870Is there any very good reason why women should not be free to be consulted in this direct manner?
29870Is this just?
29870It proposed to take a vote of the men and women of the State on the question"Is it expedient that Municipal Suffrage should be extended to women?"
29870MISS ANTHONY: Yet why should she have a right to vote?
29870MISS LUCY E. ANTHONY: What salaries do the women legislators receive?
29870MR. EUSTIS: I will ask the Senator whether he knows that under the laws of Washington Territory this is a legal excuse from serving on a jury?
29870Men of the republic, why make life harder for your daughters by these artificial distinctions?
29870Mrs. Mary B. Clay( Ky.) opened the last day''s session with a forcible address entitled, Are American Women Civil and Political Slaves?
29870Must the Twentieth Century be consumed in securing for woman that which man spent a hundred years in obtaining for himself?
29870My friend, who gave you the right to determine what that sphere should be?
29870My friends, what is man''s idea of womanliness?
29870Now I ask you if our religion teaches the dignity of woman?
29870Now, what can be said to such a person?
29870Now, why did he fail us?
29870O, sun, what legend shines your arch above?
29870Of what crime have we been guilty?
29870Olympia Brown replied to the question, Where is the Mistake?
29870Or is it probable that the advocates of territorial expansion will pause a moment to ponder on the woman side of that question?
29870Or is our mere sex a fault for which we must be punished?
29870Or ordered the soldiers to filter and boil their drinking water, without furnishing any filters or any vessels to boil it in?
29870Or provided only one horse and one mule to bring the water for two companies?
29870Ought we not admit that men have wrongs to complain of?
29870Protect them from whom?
29870Second, Is it desirable?
29870Shall Immigration Be Restricted?
29870She exclaimed,"Oh, when did Mrs. A. become a voter?
29870So they have, but, gentlemen, has your sex been more generous to women than they have been generous toward you in their favors?
29870Suffrage is representation, and it has been given in free governments to such class of persons as in their judgment[ whose judgment?]
29870Suppose during these fifty years we had asked only for what we thought we could secure, where should we be now?
29870That is what right bower means, is n''t it?"
29870The day has come when the counsel and service of women are required by the highest interests of the State, and who shall gainsay their conscription?
29870The maternal instinct is stronger in the hearts of most women than any moral sense.... What is the suffrage going to do for motherhood?
29870The query persists in thrusting itself upon my mind, why should I be amenable to a law that does not accord me recognition?
29870The question is, shall we secure that right by fundamental law?
29870The question then arises why is the qualification of masculinity required?
29870The text was chosen from Joshua, 1:9:"Have I not commanded thee?
29870Then you think it would be much better to give the women the right to vote than the men?
29870Then, too, have not men, poor fellows, had to do all the talking since the world began?
29870There are women''s clubs all over the country; did you ever hear of one organized for other than an uplifting purpose?
29870These statistics answer conclusively the question,"Do women want to vote?"
29870These were not all phrased alike, but each asked the recipient:"What can be done to defeat the woman suffrage bill?
29870They have everything they need, why ask the ballot?
29870Third, Is it expedient?
29870This pamphlet of over five thousand words which began,"What is the law of woman- life?
29870To secure to the poor forsaken wife the right to her earnings?
29870Upon what principle in a Government like ours can one- half the minds be denied expression at the polls?
29870VOICE IN THE AUDIENCE: How many women are there in the Colorado Legislature?
29870Valuable discussions were held on State and National Banks, Should the Governor Exercise the Veto Power?
29870Was there ever apparently a more hopeless quest?
29870We are Daughters of Evolution, and who can stop old Dame Evolution?...
29870We ask,"Is the way difficult?"
29870What brought about those improvements?
29870What can they offer to offset the influences behind these bodies?
29870What do these assertions mean?
29870What do we know as yet of the womanly?
29870What does this mean?
29870What does this show if not that women wish to vote?
29870What elections pertain to school matters?
29870What excuse can be made for this monstrous perversion of liberty?
29870What future election could be of more importance to women than this, and why should they hesitate to show their interest?
29870What had she to work from?
29870What had she to work with?
29870What has been the verdict upon the work of those women on the poor- law board?
29870What has caused heretofore the downfall of nations?
29870What have women?
29870What holds the Turkish woman in the harem?
29870What is a republican form of Government?
29870What is education for, what is religion for, but as a means to the end of the development of humanity?
29870What is fanaticism?
29870What is the gift, O winds, that ye have brought?
29870What is the industrial condition of women to- day?...
29870What is the name of it?
29870What man in his senses would take from woman this sphere?
29870What man would close to her the charitable institutions and eleemosynary establishments of the country?
29870What mysterious power has brought it?
29870What power is it that makes the Hindoo woman burn herself on the funeral pyre of her husband?
29870What rights can women expect to have that they do not have now?
29870What shall be the result of this double demand?
29870What sort of a star shall we call Boston?
29870What sort of justice is there in excluding from the basis of representation Indians who are not taxed and including in this basis women who are taxed?
29870What then would be the status of the cases in which Mrs. Leach and other women had acted as attorney?
29870What though it may have meant repression?
29870What was she made woman for, and not man?"
29870What was the result?
29870What would Christianity be if it had only the Ten Commandments and not the Golden Rule?
29870What would a herdsman say if you told him his sheepfold was all that was needed, and refused to give him a gun?
29870What would her Parliament have thought?
29870What would other nations have thought?...
29870What would the farmer say if you gave him a cultivator but no plough?
29870What, say they, shall we do to hasten the work?
29870What, then, is the suffrage, and why is it necessary that woman should possess and exercise this function of freemen?
29870When John Adams went courting Abigail Smith, her proud father said to her:"Who is this young Adams?
29870When a ticket is presented to her, she asks,"Are these good men?"
29870Whence came my right to speak those words?
29870Whenever any of the delegates said,"Why, have n''t you read Maloney''s opinion that a woman can not hold the office or vote for trustee?"
29870Where are the localities in which the strain upon popular government must come?
29870Where are their large cities?
29870Where did he come from?"
29870Where else should a true woman be found?
29870Which Would Benefit Boston Most, License or No License?
29870Which is it?
29870Which would you do?
29870Who are the people?
29870Who are they, and to what class do they belong?
29870Who can tell now whether these commentaries may not prove a great help to woman''s emancipation from old superstitions which have barred its way?
29870Who defends woman''s individuality in our modern State?
29870Who have periled their lives for it?
29870Who is to care for and train the children while she is absent in the discharge of these masculine duties?
29870Who is to draw the line?
29870Who made it?
29870Who shall interpret to a woman the divine element in her being?
29870Who to- day can tell the difference between a Democrat and a Republican?
29870Who would think of calling a new- born infant antique?
29870Why do I believe it?
29870Why is it that, having accomplished so much, the woman suffrage movement does not force itself as a vital issue into the thoughts of the masses?
29870Why is this true?
29870Why not reach out a hand to woman and say,"Come and help us make the laws and secure fair play"?
29870Why should I go to one- half of the people and ask whether so clear and explicit a declaration as this includes me?
29870Why should man alone determine these conditions which often counteract all the mother''s training?
29870Why should they not participate in the election of officers who are to govern them?
29870Why should they think that we would pick out fools for our husbands?...
29870Why, indeed, should I owe loyalty and allegiance to a Government that stamps my brow with the badge of servility and inferiority?
29870Why, then, this change?
29870Why?
29870Why?
29870Will not voting destroy the womanly instincts?
29870Will not women be contaminated by going to the polls?
29870Will the possession of the ballot multiply and widen these avenues to self- support and independence?
29870Will they not take away employment from men?
29870Will they not, under this influence, in a little while be driven to the wall and obliged to step down and out?
29870Will this House take a step backward on this question?
29870With the freedom she now has, see how she is arousing the public conscience on all questions of right.... What is conservatism?
29870With this mass of prejudice, selfishness and inertia to overcome is there any hope of future success?
29870Without her what is the prospect in this regard?
29870Would not any body of men look upon disfranchisement as"a cruel and degrading penalty?"
29870Would that be considered honorable-- would it be considered tolerable-- even among prize- fighters?
29870Would they have done so if it had proved injurious to their homes?
29870Would this be possible had they been obliged to have the duly recorded permission of a majority of all the men over twenty- one years old?
29870Yet without the weapons of defense what could individuals and nations do in time of war for their own protection?
29870You may ask, What reforms has Wyoming to show?
29870You who have not hitherto been woman suffragists, why not espouse this cause now, when it is in the full flush of its heroic struggle?
29870[ 171] Immediately afterwards the ladies said to one of the members,"Why did you break your pledge to us and vote against the bill?"
29870[ 38] As every private family urgently needs the man and the woman, why are both not needed in this"great aggregation?"
29870[ 39] Do women have no hardships or hazards in time of war?
29870[ 40] If her duties are just as laborious, responsible and important as man''s, do they not entitle her to a voice in the Government?
29870[ 43] Would any man be willing to exchange his influence for that of a woman in the affairs of government?
29870[ 8] If a mother can confer this right on a son, why not on a daughter?
29870[ Which?]
29870and she quickly received the reply,"Why, the hen does not mind it"; and in her heathen innocence she inquired,"Did you ask the hen?"
29870answered the question, Are Women Represented in our Government?
29870but what sort of an office- holder?
29870gave a brilliant address entitled What Answer?
29870gave an eloquent address on The Outlook, answering the four stock questions: Why do not more women ask for the ballot?
29870have you given her an opportunity of saying so?
29870made a strong speech upon Partisan or Patriot?
29870she would answer,"Yes, but have n''t you read my opinion that she can?"
29870suff.?
29870take part in?
46493*** Or will you by flight seek to hide yourselves in mountains and forests and thus oblige us to hunt you down?
46493*** Will you then by resistance compel us to resort to arms?
46493Is it any wonder that the springs of hope should dry up within their breasts?
46493Second, If not, do they derive any such power or right by the provisions of any of the treaties between the United States and the Cherokees?
45609Are not two more than one? 45609 If the Union can no longer protect us,"they asked themselves,"why should we remain parties to that compact?
45609And have not we the two to our enemy''s one?
45609Are we, after all, only savages under a thin veneer of pretended civilization?
45609At the North no less than at the South men anxiously asked of themselves and of their neighbors"What is going to happen?"
45609But how much did this resolution signify?
45609Did Halleck?
45609For who was this$ 800 Galena clerk?
45609Has the reader any conception of what it means to have an eleven- inch shell penetrate the side of a vessel and explode within its wooden walls?
45609If so with what boundaries?
45609If the contract was to be repudiated on the one hand, why, they asked, should it not be equally repudiated on the other?
45609If we can not be members of the Union upon equal terms with other members of the Union, why should we continue to be members of the Union at all?"
45609Is there any wonder that McClellan found it necessary to devote many months to the task of creating an effective army out of such stuff as this?
45609Should California be admitted to the Union as a free state?
45609Should that part be open to slavery?
45609The Nation having acquired the vast Louisiana territory, invitingly fruitful as it was, the question arose"What shall we do with it?"
45609The question at once arose, What shall we do with these new lands?
45609The question remained"will they come?"
45609What right had he to plan campaigns and carry them to a success that reflected no credit upon his regular army military superiors?
45609What right had he to the credit of any victories he had been graciously permitted to win?
45609Who was Grant, anyhow?
45609Why should General Halleck permit this interloper Grant to go on winning victories?
45609Why should McDowell, who had remained in the regular army, give place to Sherman, who had resigned to become a professor in a school?
45609Why should it continue to exist at the dawn of the twentieth?
45609Why should this hideous wrong have existed after the middle of the nineteenth century?
45118And what then?
45118Are the haversacks filled?
45118Does n''t the prospect begin to look gloomy?
45118Then? 45118 Was that you?"
45118What are you doing in those coats then?
45118What are you thinking about, Baldy?
45118What are your plans, general, for the conduct of the campaign?
45118What is your name?
45118What''s in a name? 45118 Where could you have retreated if you had been beaten, general?"
45118Why do n''t you do it?
45118Why do you not obey my orders to report strength and position of your command?
45118Will you keep that pie till I send an officer for it?
45118At last his patience was exhausted, and he cried out,--"Father, why do n''t you say something?"
45118But what has he done for three minutes more than Private McMullen and Corporal Mullinstock have done during the entire battle?
45118But who doubted his sentiments?
45118Can I be unmoved while I look at The Man?
45118Could such a man be the slave of his own appetite?
45118Hancock extended his hand to Stuart, whom he had known before, exclaiming,"How are you, Stuart?"
45118How stands Grant among them?
45118Is he not responsible for every life sacrificed at his order after he knew that the strife was hopeless?
45118The destiny of a nation seemed to be placed upon his shoulders; and what wonder was it that he regarded mere applause as distasteful?
45118Was it seen even then that he was a probable or a possible candidate in the future?
45118Was the solemn tragedy to be repeated again?
45118Was this success an accident?
45118Were those marshalled hosts once more to be forced back, and another great man to be hurled from his high eminence?
45118What am I?
45118What is the Great Captain, the illustrious hero of the Modern Republic?
45118What other man could, or would?
45118What was Andrew Jackson?
45118What was Napoleon?
45118What was Washington?
45118What was he but a"butcher"?
45118What were Cæsar, Wellington, Marlborough, Scott?
45118Where are McClellan, Fremont, Buell, Rosecrans, Pope, Hooker, Burnside?
45118Who am I?
45118Who shall say that an inspiration higher than his own thought did not suggest to the anxious father the idea of sending his son to West Point?
45118Why was it necessary, when the illustrious soldier had only taken a couple of steps towards fame, to make this astounding declaration?
45779(?
45779(?)
457795- 1/4( dry) fresh venison, 4 Bushels Roots, 50(?
45779But what of the other side?
45779But where is the proof of this?
45779But where were his wife and children?
45779For white men to steal horses was quite generally recognized as a capital crime; why, then, compunction for Indians?
45779Had a man employed these two days past cutting(?)
45779How to Do It?
45779I said to one of the older merchants:''It is easy to say that all the agents pilfer in this way, but what do you know about it?''
45779Is it any wonder, then, that liquor dealers violate the law with impunity when it is such a difficult matter to secure conviction?
45779La( Course''s?)
45779One of the(?)
45779Saturday Morning.--Perspective in History, President C. J. Bushnell, Pacific University; Training for Citizenship-- What to Do?
45779The Indians inform us that a large party went off to Spokane yesterday, and that the Flat Heads and( Pendius?
45779The Spokans will not be pleased at the removal of the Fort but you must(?)
45779Two of the men employed repairing a canoe to to below to the Le(?)
45779What was the total of the product from the labor and capital invested in the mining advance?
45779What were America''s"morning wishes?"
45779Would it be well?
45779[ 261] Part of the road in the middle of the woods the snow is deep&?
45779boat, Mr. Dease passenger 53 pieces.--Grosse( Chalon''s?)
45779gun(?
38940''Raphael,''cried I, and extended both hands toward him,''do you recognize me?'' 38940 Are you ready, sir?"
38940Brother,said he,"why do you grieve thus; do you see anything in my life or death which can cause you to feel any shame?
38940I am just going; have me decently buried, and do not let my body be put into the vault until three days after I am dead-- do you understand me?
38940Impossible,said he, lifting his arm:"how could I move my fingers so, if the pulse were gone?"
38940Is there anything else?
38940Say not, alas; but how do you know?
38940Sir,said she,"will you not take your tea?"
38940Too late,he said;"is this your fidelity?"
38940What am I better than my fathers? 38940 What have you to do with that?"
38940When a sick man is given over, and he suffers frightful pains, can a friendly physician refuse to give him opium?
38940Why weep ye? 38940 _ Are the doctors here?_"to his wife who had just asked him if he wanted anything.
38940_ Are we not children, all of us?_TAYLOR( Jeremy, distinguished bishop in the English Church, and author of"Holy Living and Dying."
38940_ Brother Ranney, will you bury me? 38940 _ Can this be considered a calamity?
38940_ Can this last long?_to his physician.
38940_ Did you know Burke?_He referred to Edmund Burke, the celebrated orator, statesman and philosopher.
38940_ Do you hear the music? 38940 _ Earth, dost thou demand me?
38940_ Give me back my youth_,to Taylor who had asked him"Is there anything I can do for you?"
38940_ I am not well, and should like to lie down-- will you call me in ten minutes? 38940 _ I do_,"in response to his sister''s question,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?"
38940_ I have known thee all the time_,to his niece in response to her question,"Do you know me?"
38940_ I must sleep now._It has been asserted, upon what authority the compiler does not know, that the last words of Byron were,"Shall I sue for mercy?"
38940_ I pray you all pray for me._Some authorities give his last words thus:"And must I then die?
38940_ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?"
38940_ Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?_He looked anxiously round the room-- said several times,"Is Lawrence come-- is Lawrence come?"
38940_ Is this death?_RABELAIS( François), about 1483- 1553.
38940_ Is this death?_to his physician.
38940_ Know Him? 38940 _ Mais quel diable de mal veux- te que cela me fosse?_"he said, and ate the apricot.
38940_ Must I leave it unfinished?_He referred to his"History of Poland."
38940_ My Lord, why do you not go on? 38940 _ O Florence, what hast thou done to- day?_"He was strangled and burnt by the commissioners of the Pope, May 23, 1498.
38940_ O my poor soul, whither art thou going?_Adrian wrote both in Greek and Latin.
38940_ O, better_,in response to his wife''s question,"How do you feel now?"
38940_ O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee? 38940 _ Oh death, why art thou so long in coming?_"The punishment inflicted upon Damiens for his attack upon the king was horrible.
38940_ Oh, Lord, shall I die at all? 38940 _ Wally, what is this?
38940_ Were you at Sedan?_He asked the question of Dr. Conneau.
38940_ What can it signify?_Said to Miss Perowne, one of his attendants, who offered him some refreshments.
38940_ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?"
38940_ What is that?_He felt a sudden pain in his head, and, clasping his forehead with both hands, he exclaimed,"What is that?"
38940_ Who is near me?_he was told Gutman-- his favorite pupil.
38940_ Whose house is this? 38940 ''Now?'' 38940 ''Whence comes the sunshine?'' 38940 ( Quoi, déjà?) 38940 --And when?"
38940106 Is not this dying with courage and true greatness?
38940114 Murder of the Queen had been represented to me, The, 19 Must I leave it unfinished?
38940123 Are the French beaten?
38940153 But the consummate and perfect knowledge--, 249 Can this be considered a calamity?
38940165 Is this death?
38940189 Deep dream of peace, 142 Did I not say I was writing the Requiem for myself?
38940189 O, my poor soul, whither art thou going?
38940199 Are we not children, all of us?
38940201 Well, my God, I consent with all my heart, 171 Were the Church of Christ what she should be, 53 Were you at Sedan?
38940202 Did you know Burke?
38940229 O Florence, what hast thou done to- day?
38940233 Is this dying?
38940233 Why weep ye?
3894025 Anderson, you know that I always wished to die, 199 Are the doctors here?
38940254 Joy, 200"Justum et tenacem propositi virum,"82 King should die standing, A, 177 Kiss me, Hardy, 207 Know Him?
38940256 Did you think I should live forever?
38940270 Do you hear the music?
38940271 Will no one have pity on me?
38940274 Why dost thou not strike?
3894028 Is Lawrence come?--Is Lawrence come?
38940288 Will you tell the archdeacon?
3894031 Is there no priest at the château?
3894039 Very little meat for the mustard, 134 Vex me not with this thing, but give me a simple cross, 55 Vos plaudite, 19 Wally, what is this?
3894047 Observe how they are swelled, 13 Oh, the insufferable pangs of hell and damnation, 209 Oh death, why art thou so long in coming?
3894052 What can it signify?
3894070 What I can not utter with my mouth, 232 What is that?
389409 With all my heart: I would fain be reconciled to my stomach, 98 Whose house is this?
3894092 Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all?
3894097 Is this death?
3894098 Dream has been short, The, 247 Dying, dying, 134 Dying man can do nothing easy, A, 102 Earth, dost thou demand me?
38940A certain priest, named Nerotto, asked him,"in what spirit dost thou bear martyrdom?"
38940After standing on the plank for a few seconds the executioner said:"Are you ready, sir?"
38940Alive again?
38940And dost thou prune thy trembling wing, To take thy flight thou know''st not whither?
38940But what are the facts?
38940Can I make men live, whether they will or no?
38940Did you think I should live forever?"
38940Did you think that I could live forever?
38940Died he not in his bed?
38940Do I tremble like a criminal or boast like an Atheist?
38940He arose, turned to the soldiers, and said, his face wearing an expression of superhuman courage:--"Will no one have pity on me?
38940He frequently asked,"Are the French beaten?"
38940He knows best, 289 Well, ladies, if I were one hour in heaven, 186 Well, my friend, what news from the Great Mogul?
38940He started, and said,"Know Him?
38940He whispered as I placed the water to his lips,''Do n''t you remember that passage I once quoted to you from"King John?"
38940Here is the package,"continued Mr. Coyle, producing a letter envelope from his pocket;"what shall I do with it?"
38940His sister, Catherine of Schwartzburg, asked,"Dost thou commend thy soul to Jesus Christ?"
38940How long, O Lord, how long?_"NEWPORT( Francis, once famous as an opponent of Christianity).
38940I am having Paul''s understanding, 237 Amen, 48 An Emperor ought to die standing, 289 And must I then die?
38940I quote Prior''s version:"Poor little, quivering, fluttering thing, Must we no longer live together?
38940I taste death; and who will support my dearest Constanze if you do not stay with her?"
38940Is that you, Dora?
38940Is that your heaven?''
38940Is this all that I feared when I prayed against a hard death?
38940Is this all that I feared?
38940Is this all?
38940Is this all?
38940Just before this he exclaimed:"Is this dying?
38940Later his father said,"Dudley, do you know the Lord Jesus Christ?"
38940O Lord, be merciful, 122 Oh, Lord, shall I die at all?
38940Others say that his last words were these addressed to the hesitating headsman,"Why dost thou not strike?
38940Peters?"
38940Shall I die at all?
38940Some authorities give his last words thus:"Is it not true, dear Hammel, that I have some talent after all?"
38940The watcher is with me; why tarry the wheels of his chariot?"
38940Then she kneeled down, saying,"Will you take it off before I lay me down?"
38940Then she tied the handkerchief about her eyes, and, feeling for the block, she said,"What shall I do?
38940Thinking that he saw paper lying on the floor, he said:"Why is Schiller''s correspondence permitted to lie here?"
38940Thou and this body were house- mates together; Wilt thou begone now, and whither?
38940To test his consciousness, the Pastor asked,"Who prayed thus?"
38940Well, they can, 318 Can this last long?
38940What company has that, I pray?
38940What doth all my glory profit, but that I have so much the more torment in my death?_"PIUS IX.
38940What street are we in?
38940What street are we in?
38940When he was dying his father said to him,"Dudley, your mother has your hand in hers, can you press it a little that she may know you recognize her?"
38940When this was done, he said:"Now, is my finger upon them?"
38940Where is it?
38940Where is it?"
38940Whither wilt thou go?_"MAZARIN( Hortense Mancini, sister of the celebrated cardinal), 1647- 1699.
38940Why do you thus look at me?
38940Why, then, oh, Lord, if ever, why not now?_"His mother, Monica, was a woman of the most devoted piety.
38940Will not all my riches save me?
38940Will not all my riches save me?
38940Wilt thou break a bruised reed?
38940Wilt thou break a bruised reed?_"So great was his cruelty and so oppressive his tyranny, that his own subjects rose in desperation and slew him.
38940Yet more trouble?"
38940Yet more trouble?_"These words he is reported to have spoken after the executioner had opened his body to extract his heart.
38940[ 4][ 4]_ Enter the KING, SALISBURY, WARWICK, to the CARDINAL in bed.__ King._ How fares my lord?
38940away!--why thus do ye look at me?"
38940bury me?
38940enquired one,"are you not afraid of becoming food for birds of prey and wild beasts?"
38940how deep will be thy sorrow at the news, 68 O, my poor soul, what is to become of thee?
38940is there no bribing death?
38940lower your arms, otherwise you will miss me or only wound me._"Some say his last words were:"Is there no priest at the château?--is there no priest?"
38940said she,"I dare not, lest--""Emma, will you?
38940she exclaimed,"is_ must_ a word to be addressed to princes?
38940where should he die?
44943Alice, may I? 44943 And, Joe,"said Phil,"we are to go in the country, and you are to go with us; is not that nice?"
44943But did you?
44943But how come the monkey to have the money?
44943Did it?
44943Do n''t you s''pose we could go back an''get it?
44943How about his hat?
44943I s''pose you''ve been to see the skeleton an''his mountain of a wife?
44943I say, now, Joe,shouted Burr Whitcomb, as the great white pile came up to his shoulders,"who''re we going to sculp out?
44943I was brought up in his mother''s family as seamstress, and went to live with her when she married Mr. Randolph, and--"Who did you say? 44943 Joe, can you cut out the other one like a boot?"
44943Mamma,responded Patty, soberly,"did you ever have any love- letters?"
44943May I see it?
44943No?
44943Oh, Archie,said Alice,"must you go-- all alone must you go?"
44943So you are Phil''s good friend Lisa?
44943Stubbs-- thrown-- the-- money-- away?
44943The rest gone?
44943Well, Patty,said Mrs. Keniston, cheerily,"what kind of turn- overs shall it be?"
44943Well, ye-- es,said Burr, doubtfully;"but what about his legs?
44943What is it, Toby? 44943 What''s he a- sitting on, anyhow?"
44943Who is your letter to, Patty?
44943Why, then, have you the care and charge of him?
44943And-- I may send it, may n''t I?"
44943Anybody in partikler?"
44943Can the painter color a door green?
44943Do n''t you think so?
44943Do you think you can?"
44943He had followed his big brothers down upon the ice, and now he eagerly squeaked:"Boys, why do n''t you scoop out Ben Franklin?
44943How are you related to him, and who were his parents?"
44943How can I ever thank you enough for telling me all this?
44943How did yours begin?"
44943I hope they will_ never_ quarel again do nt you?
44943I may, may n''t I, mother?"
44943Oh, what made you?"
44943Randolph?"
44943That is n''t the same as if I wrote to Matty, is it?
44943The name of what State do these letters spell?
44943Was Handel aware that, he was a great musician?
44943Was the"tiny tot"in the story of Prince Charlie the Duke of York, after whom the State and city of New York was named?
44943What ever put it into your head to ask such questions, child?
44943What is it?"
44943What made you, Mr. Stubbs, what made you do such a bad, cruel thing?
44943What''ll we do for buttons?"
44943What''s the matter?"
44943Will Dinah bring home the washing to- night?
44943Without me, what is life?
44943Yet shall I give up Betsy Baker, Who has n''t a shoe nor a hat, Because you''ve a splendid dressmaker?
44943[ Illustration][ Illustration] Here comes the train; We watch it from the bars; Who will stop the engine And put us in the cars?
44943a letter for me?"
43589Has Man a Conscience?
43589Have you finished harvesting? 43589 Well with the child?"
43589Well with the child?
43589Well with the child?
43589Well with the child?
43589And in what arm of the service?
43589And must he not arise?
43589And perhaps you may ask, does it meet my expectations?
43589Besides, it prohibited fire- water, and does not a father prevent his children from drinking fire- water?
43589Ca n''t we learn from our enemies?
43589Daniel is a first- rate business man, and, as he likes farming, why not make it his business?
43589Did I not come through your country one year since?
43589Did I then make promises to you?
43589Did you gather many walnuts?
43589Do you run as erect as you walk?"
43589Do you think the characters of Pitt, Fox, and Burke, as described by the author in the former work, are correct?
43589Do you think we could get Governor Everett?"
43589Does my venerable friend Seattle object?
43589Governor Stevens:"Does any one object to what I have said?
43589Great Chief, what shall we eat if we do so?
43589Have I told you that we are living in the government palace?
43589Have you any school in view now for next summer?
43589Have you ever read any volumes of the''Spectator''?
43589How could Oliver and the girls, if any are at home, pass the time better than reading or studying till perhaps ten in the evening?
43589How long a leave had I better get?
43589Is he not needed?
43589Is it good?
43589Is it not because your young men go out on war parties, and thus the flower of your tribe is cut down?
43589Is it not better that your young men should have wives and children, and that your numbers should increase?
43589Is it to be wondered at?
43589Is it vacation with John Loring now?
43589Is not here a work for a Moses or an Alfred?
43589Is not his speech in the case of Blake v. Wilkins admirable?
43589Is not the dissolution of the Union a subject of fearful foreboding?
43589Is this good, and do you want this?
43589Now, what have you to say?
43589Shall I hear from you there, and how many letters will await me?
43589Shall I hear from you there?
43589The Great Father desires this, and why am I able to say this?
43589The Indians had some discussion, and Governor Stevens then put the question:"Are you ready?
43589The first question Isaac put,"Can a sincere Universalist be saved?"
43589The following beautiful lines were written by Mr. Brooks, in condolence upon the sad loss:--"Well with the child?"
43589To this the governor rejoined:--"''Why is it that you have two or three women to one man?
43589Was this meant to vanish into thin air?
43589Were not many of you now present witnesses of the fact?
43589What are we to do?"
43589What did the Whigs gain by representing General Jackson to be in leading- strings?
43589What do you think of them generally?
43589What had I best do?
43589What is the lowest grade that you would be willing to accept?
43589What should they do, they asked, in case the Blackfeet came near their camp at night?
43589What will a man do for his own children?
43589Where, then, shall we find these?
43589Why not let us live together with you?
43589Why not send them to the east?
43589Why should we sell all?
43589Will you meet them in council?''
43589Wo n''t your women prefer husbands to scalps and horses?
43589Would you desire such a transfer?
43589You say you will give us land, but why should you give us the mouth of the river?
43589p. 373 dress of a chief?
44438Are you ready?
44438How is the loan bill getting on, Sir?
44438If the Yankee triumphs,cried one speaker,"what ecclesiastical property or what religion will be left us?"
44438Soldier, will you fight?
44438What better can we do?
44438Who will lend on American securities?
44438Who would not regret,asked Senator Mangum,"to see the choice of this great and free people thrown into shadow by over- topping talent?"
44438Why the Hell do n''t Colonel Wynkoop file to the right?
44438[ 25.18][ TO SAN AGUSTÍN] But again, where were the Mexicans? 44438 16, 1848)? 44438 1851[ 1852?]. 44438 1902?] 44438 73, p. 325):Shall the insolent Mexican go unpunished?
44438All military men believed the next President would be one of them, and what commander had acquired a more brilliant reputation?
44438And how could he say the pretexts were"all unfounded"?
44438But what more could be done?
44438But who was it that directed this tempest?
44438Can this be called liberty?
44438Did he fail to see that his other"pretexts"had not been offered by Polk as grounds for passing the war bill?
44438Did he suppose that Mexico had paid our claims?
44438Did he suppose that she had welcomed Slidell?
44438Do you not then owe it to your children, and owe it to your God, to make peace for yourselves?"
44438Had Clive and Hastings any substantial bodily existence?
44438Had not Scott lost a good part of his little army in the recent fighting, and made the armistice in the desperate hope of receiving fresh troops?
44438How are they able to wear the mask so long?
44438Is Hindostan more than a fiction?
44438Might not fickle fortune change in the next battle?
44438Naturally_ Britannia_ pronounced our invasion of the country"a great mistake,"and asked in deep concern, How are the Americans going to get out of it?
44438One ingenious writer said: If Santa Anna will not sacrifice his vanity by admitting he is incompetent, why should we sacrifice our lives and property?
44438Other Whigs, after doing all they could to make the war aimless, argued, We are fighting for nothing, why persist?
44438Polk?"
44438Santa Anna with perhaps 4000 or even 5000 reserves so near-- might he not come round the hill?
44438The camp slogan of a sturdy North Carolina company was:"Soldier, will you work?"
44438The churches would be robbed, and"when churches are ransacked will houses be spared?
44438The great question is, shall we become the dependants and vassals of a Southern political ascendancy?...
44438What has been lost after all, he said, except a position and some cannon?
44438Whatever its result, could the Americans venture to demand more than was now demanded?
44438When saints are despoiled will citizens be spared?"
44438Who was the mysterious Person, overwhelming the government of Mexico with darkness and confusion at this critical hour?
44438Why had they not slept in the city?
44438Why not have another throw of the dice, and then make the treaty, if it could not be avoided?
44438Y.?]
44438Y.?]
44438[ 1875?]
44438[ 25.15] But what had the enemy been doing?
44438[ 28.9] But where?
44438[ 32.25] Here, then, came the real crisis: would Congress ratify the treaty?
44438[ 33.7] Where, then, were funds to come from?
44438[ Lester, C. E.][?]
44438[ N. Y.?
44438[ N. Y.?
44438[ N. Y.?
44438[ Puebla?
44438exclaimed the_ American Review_;"Is it true that the English bombarded Copenhagen?
31809Captain Payn in the harbour?
31809Do you think it an unusually good guide- book?
31809John, do you see that bed of resignation?
31809Putis described quite differently from your version in a book I have; what are your rules?
31809This ship is on fire, I see that; but why a pantomime?
31809Var?
31809You do n''t look a strong man,said the doctor;"but are you sound?"
31809( 2) But what does she love me for?
31809( Why ca n''t I spell and write like an honest, sober, god- fearing litry gent?
31809--"What then?
3180911?
3180912)720(60 72 Is it possible?
31809All at once?
31809Also, could I have a look at Ewing''s_ précis_?
31809Also, do you remember my strong, old, rooted belief that I shall die by drowning?
31809Also, wherefore not a word, dear Colvin?
31809Am I very sorry?
31809Am I wrong?
31809And O, why have I allowed myself to rot so long on land?
31809And again:"to say all"?
31809And anyway, is not excitement the proper reward of doing anything both right and a little dangerous?
31809And can you believe that, though it is gaily expressed, the thought is hag and skeleton in every moment of vacuity or depression?
31809And do you never come east?
31809And how about me, sir, me?
31809And if I had?
31809And if he fails, why should I hear him weeping?
31809And if the thing you do is to call upon others to do the thing you neglect?
31809And if you are, why take a wilfully false hypothesis?
31809And is it not perhaps a mere folly to attempt, from so hopeless a distance, anything so delicate as a series of papers?
31809And now is this news, Cogia, or is it not?
31809And now to the main point: why do we not see you?
31809And now-- I wonder if I have not gone too far with the fantastic?
31809And that again brings back( almost with the voice of despair) my unanswerable: why is it false?
31809And that you would aiblins pay for me?
31809And who has not?
31809Are they fairly lively on the wires?
31809Are they wooden, and dim, and no sport?
31809Are we artists or city men?
31809Are you aware that the praiser of this"brave gymnasium"has not seen a canoe nor taken a long walk since''79?
31809Are you, too, not in the witness- box?
31809As for my seamen, did Runciman ever know eighteenth century Buccaneers?
31809As for not giving a reduction, what are we?
31809Besides, in this year of-- grace, said I?--of disgrace, who should creep so low as an Englishman?
31809But suppose, for the sake of argument, any money to be left in the hands of my painful doer, what is to be done with it?
31809But the odd problem is: what makes a story true?
31809But to what end should we renew these sorrows?
31809But what is man?
31809But what of that?
31809But whaur?
31809But who is Miss Green?
31809But who was Miss Green?
31809But why has he read too much Arnold?
31809But why should I blame Gladstone, when I too am a Bourgeois?
31809But why should I gird at you or anybody, when the truth is we are the most miserable sinners in the world?
31809But why should you forget yourself and use these same italics as an index to my theology some pages further on?
31809By the way, have you seen James and me on the novel?
31809By the way, who wrote the_ Lion of the Nile_?
31809By why?
31809Can it be got and sent to me?
31809Can it be?
31809Can the elder hand_ beg_ more than once?
31809Can you help a man getting into his boots for such a huge campaign?
31809Cannae he no be made to understand that it''s beneath him?
31809Christianity-- which?
31809Comment aimez vous le pays?
31809Comment celà va- t- il?
31809Comment va le commerce?
31809Comment vous portez- vous?
31809Could it be Warminster?
31809Could one get out of sight of land-- all in the blue?
31809Could you get any one to tell me particulars?
31809Could you send her this?
31809Dear Thomson, have I ony money?
31809Dear artist, can you do me that?
31809Did I ever tell you that the Admiral was recognised in America?
31809Did I tell you that S. C. had risen to the paper on James?
31809Did you ever read St. Augustine?
31809Did you see my sermon?
31809Did you see that I had written about John Todd?
31809Do n''t you like it?
31809Do ye no think Henley, or Pollick, or some o''they London fellies, micht mebbe perhaps find out for me?
31809Do you blench?
31809Do you ever read( to go miles off, indeed) the incredible Barbey d''Aurévilly?
31809Do you feel( you must) how strangely heavy and stupid I am?
31809Do you know our-- ahem!--fellow clubman, Colonel Majendie?
31809Do you know that Dew Smith has two photographs of him, neither very bad?
31809Do you know that_ Treasure Island_ has appeared?
31809Do you know what they called the_ Casco_ at Fakarava?
31809Do you not feel so?
31809Do you play All Fours?
31809Do you remember acting the Fair One with Golden Locks?
31809Do you remember making the whistle at Mount Chessie?
31809Do you remember, at Warriston, one autumn Sunday, when the beech nuts were on the ground, seeing heaven open?
31809Do you see the situation?
31809Do you think you are right to send_ Macaire_ and the_ Admiral_ about?
31809Does nature, even in my octogenarian carcase, run too strong that I must be still a bawler and a brawler and a treader upon corns?
31809Et vous, mon très cher ami?
31809Even as a boy, the Sibyl would have bust me; but I never read the VIth till I began it two days ago; it is all fresh and wonderful; do you envy me?
31809Excellent, say you, but will you save and will you repay?
31809First, I had to sink a lot of money in the cruise, and if I did n''t get health, how was I to get it back?
31809For then, what is life?
31809From your leads, do you behold St. Paul''s?
31809Had you not better send me the bargains to sign?
31809Has Davie never read_ Guy Mannering_,_ Rob Roy_, or_ The Antiquary_?
31809Has Hyde[35] turned upon me?
31809Has her house the proper terrace?
31809Have I at last got, like you, to the pitch of being attacked?
31809Have I fallen, like Danvers Carew?
31809Have I other means?
31809Have I yet asked you to despatch the books and papers left in your care to me at Apia, Samoa?
31809Have you a_ Tourgueneff_?
31809Have you heard that he became a stout, imperialist conservative?
31809Have you no rich Catholic friends who would send him an organ that he could play upon?
31809Have you observed that the famous problem of realism and idealism is one purely of detail?
31809Have you read Meredith''s_ Love in the Valley_?
31809Have you read_ Huckleberry Finn_?
31809Have you seen Hyde''s( Dr. not Mr.) letter about Damien?
31809Have you that fetish still?
31809Have you, like Pepys,"the right to fiddle"there?
31809Health?
31809Herewith I pause, for why should I cast pearls before swine?
31809Home no more home to me, whither must I wander?
31809Hoo mony pages will there be, think ye?
31809How about a law condemning the people of every country to be educated in another, to change sons in short?
31809How am I to vote?
31809How ape your agreeable frame of mind?
31809How are you?
31809How came it that you never communicated my rejection of Gilder''s offer for the Rhone?
31809How does your class get along?
31809How goes_ Keats_?
31809How has the_ Deacon_ gone?
31809How is Miss Boodle and her family?
31809How much do you make per annum, I wonder?
31809How should I come through?
31809Hudson, Mrs. Hudson, Rowland, O, all first- rate: Rowland a very fine fellow; Hudson as good as he can stick( did you know Hudson?
31809I am pained indeed, but how should I be offended?
31809I am pleased that Mr. Gilder should like my literature; and I ask you particularly to thank Mr. Bunner( have I the name right?)
31809I am still of the same mind five years later; did you observe that I had said"modern"authors?
31809I am trying to write out this haunting bodily sense of absence; besides, what else should I write of?
31809I am very sorry to hear you have been so poorly; I have been very well; it used to be quite the other way, used it not?
31809I can imagine how you will wag your pow over it; and how ragged you will find it, etc., but has it not spirit all the same?
31809I did not answer your letter from the States, for what was I to say?
31809I do feel as if I was a coward and a traitor to desert my friends; only, my dear lady, you know what a miserable corrhyzal( is that how it is spelt?)
31809I do not say my attitude is noble; but is yours conciliatory?
31809I fear men who have no open faults; what do they conceal?
31809I have never dared to say what I feel about men''s lives, because my own was in the wrong: shall I dare to send them to death?
31809I like the first?
31809I mean if I fail, why should I weep?
31809I shall be off, I hope, in a week; but where?
31809I should say he would not use this privilege(?)
31809I suppose, if you please, you may say your verses are thin( would you so describe an arrow, by the way, and one that struck the gold?
31809I think the receipt of such a letter might humble, shall I say even----?
31809I was vexed at your account of my admired Meredith: I wish I could go and see him; as it is I will try to write; and yet( do you understand me?)
31809I wonder did any of my letters from beautiful Tautira ever come to hand, with the descriptions of our life with Louis''s adopted brother Ori a Ori?
31809I wonder how you liked the end of_ The Master_; that was the hardest job I ever had to do; did I do it?
31809I wonder if I anywhere misapprehended you?
31809I wonder if I have managed to give you any news this time, or whether the usual damn hangs over my letter?
31809I wonder if Trélat would let me cut?
31809I wonder if you saw me plunge, lance in rest, into a controversy thereanent?
31809I wonder if you saw my book of verses?
31809I wonder whether there are already enough, and whether you think that such a volume would be worth the publishing?
31809I wonder, has Omond?
31809If I ever write an account of this voyage, may I place this letter at the beginning?
31809If I were there I should grind knives or write blank verse, or---- But at least you do not bathe?
31809If it is, how can I help what is true?
31809If it might be-- could it not be smoothed?
31809If it was_ Captain Singleton_, send it to me, wo n''t you?
31809If not, what do you complain of?
31809If you have not got them, would you like me to write to Dew and ask him to give you proofs?
31809If you knew I was a chronic invalid, why say that my philosophy was unsuitable to such a case?
31809If you think it a dream, will Bain get me a second- hand copy, or who would?
31809In the matter of the dedication, are not cross dedications a little awkward?
31809Insatiable gulf, greedier than hell, and more silent than the woods of Styx, have you or have you not lost the dedication to the_ Child''s Garden_?
31809Is it altogether your own?
31809Is it not angelic?
31809Is it not strange?
31809Is it on the proper side of the hospital?
31809Is it possible I have wounded you in some way?
31809Is it possible for a man in Samoa to be in touch with the great heart of the People?
31809Is it quite fair then to keep your face so steadily On my most light- hearted works, and then say I recognise no evil?
31809Is not this wonderful?
31809Is repentance, which God accepts, to have no avail with men?
31809Is that not pretty?
31809Is there any Greek Isle you would like to explore?
31809Is there no chance of your coming hereabouts?
31809Is there no word of it?
31809Is there not some escape, some furlough from the Moral Law, some holiday jaunt contrivable into a Better Land?
31809Is there one?
31809Is this all?
31809It is one that appeals to me, deals with that part of life that I think the most important, and you, if I gather rightly, so much less so?
31809It scarce seems life to me; what must it be to you?
31809It was strangely like old times to read the other; do n''t you remember the poisoning with mushrooms?
31809Je ne puis même pas m''exprimer en Anglais; comment voudriez vous que je le pourrais en Français?
31809Je regrette beaucoup le dédicace; peutêtre, quand vous viendrez nous voir, ne serait- il pas trop tard de l''ajouter?
31809Little?
31809Longman fetched by_ Otto_: is it a spoon or a spoilt horn?
31809Look at the names:"The Solitude"--is that romantic?
31809MY DEAR CHARLES,--Will you please send £ 20 to---- for a Christmas gift from----?
31809MY DEAR MISS FERRIER,--Are you really going to fail us?
31809Martha, Martha, do you hear the knocking at the door?
31809May I beg you, the next time_ Roderick_ is printed off, to go over the sheets of the last few chapters, and strike out"immense"and"tremendous"?
31809Millais( I hear) was painting Gladstone when the news came of Gordon''s death; Millais was much affected, and Gladstone said,"Why?
31809Must we likewise change religions?
31809My wife, hearing the order given about the boats, remarked to my mother,"Is n''t that nice?
31809Ninth Objection: But am I not taken with the hope of excitement?
31809No?
31809Now when the spring begins, you must lay in your flowers: how do you say about a potted hawthorn?
31809Now, look here, could you get me a loan of the Despatches, or is that a dream?
31809Of course, if I go in the_ Morning Star_, I see all the eastern( or western?)
31809Perhaps your daughter''s house has not a balcony at the back?
31809Preaching the dankest Grundyism and upholding the rank customs of our trade-- you who are so cruel hard upon the customs of the publishers?
31809Proavidence is a fine thing, but hoo would you like Proavidence to keep your till for ye?
31809Proavidence( I''m no''sayin'') is all verra weel_ in its place_; but if Proavidence has nae mainners, wha''s to learn''t?
31809Query two plates?
31809R. L. S. When will your holiday be?
31809Seraphina made a mistake about her Otto; it begins to swim before me dimly that you may have some traits of Seraphina?
31809Seriously, do you like to repose?
31809Shall I ever have money enough to write a play?
31809Shall I?
31809Shall we never shed blood?
31809Should we not gain all around?
31809Sixteen, you say?
31809So I jest, when I do n''t address my mind to it: when I do, shall I be smit louting to my knee, as before the G. O. M.?
31809Suppose that to be the case, will they be of any use to me in my place of exile?
31809Suppose they_ are_ wrong?
31809TO EDMUND GOSSE[_ Saranac Lake, March 31, 1888._] MY DEAR GOSSE,--Why so plaintive?
31809Take a larger view; what is a year or two?
31809Tenth Objection: But am I not taken with a notion of glory?
31809Thank you again: you can draw and yet you do not love the ugly: what are you doing in this age?
31809Thank you for it; my wife says,"Ca n''t I see him when we get back to London?"
31809That sounds rather lofty work, does it not?
31809That''s a good idea?
31809The lad?
31809The last is a great thing for life but-- query?--a bad endowment for art?
31809The palm- trees?--how is that for the gorgeous East?
31809The physician must heal himself; he must honestly_ try_ the path he recommends: if he does not even try, should he not be silent?
31809The reason of my_ dèche_?
31809The thermometer was nearly down to 50 ° the other day-- no temperature for me, Mr. James: how should I do in England?
31809The valet is no end; how long can you live on a valet?
31809The whole piece is marked allegro; but surely could easily be played too fast?
31809There are you; has the man no gratitude?
31809There has been offered for_ Treasure Island_--how much do you suppose?
31809There is Smeoroch[8]: is he blind?
31809This is a great order, is it not?
31809This is lightness of touch indeed; may I say, it is almost sharpness of practice?
31809To be idle at Dover is a strange pretension; pray, how do you warm yourself?
31809To which of these does B. J. refer?
31809To"say all"?
31809Was I well inspired?
31809Was she there in the summer of 1884?
31809We are like to be here, however, many a long week before we get away, and then whither?
31809We can not get any fruit here: can you manage to send me some grapes?
31809We should be paid if we give the pleasure we pretend to give; but why should we be honoured?
31809Well, am I not tolerated, are you not tolerated?--we and_ our_ faults?
31809Well, what can we do or say?
31809Well, what is the odds?
31809Well, what then?
31809Were they as tall as alps, if still unsavoury and bleak, what matters it?
31809Wha kens?
31809What are Cassells to do with this eccentric mass of blague and seriousness?
31809What are you about?
31809What can I say?
31809What do you do when people to whom you have been the dearest of friends requite you by acting like fiends?
31809What do you say, my dear critic?
31809What do you think this is?
31809What does it prove?
31809What is man''s chief end?
31809What is the reason?
31809What reasons can you gather from this example for your belief that Mr. S. is unable to write any other measure?"
31809What ship?"
31809What, it would not have been the same if Dumas or Musset had done it, would it not?
31809What, then, to do with them?
31809Whaur the devil did ye get thon about the soap?
31809When I saw you ten years ago, you looked rough and-- kind of stigmatised, a look of an embittered political shoemaker; where is it now?
31809When will this activity cease?
31809Where does he learn that?
31809Where has fleeting beauty led?
31809Where, then, is the ground of this horror in any intelligent Servant of Humanity?
31809Wherefore now Should Locker ask a verse from me?
31809Who would?
31809Why am I so penniless, ever, ever penniless, ever, ever penny- penny- penniless and dry?
31809Why did I hold my peace?
31809Why do people babble?
31809Why do we sneer at stockbrokers?
31809Why had Apollonius no pimples?
31809Why have I not written my_ Timon_?
31809Why not do something of the same kind for the"culchawed"?
31809Why should_ you_ hear_ me_?
31809Why throw cold water?
31809Why was I silent?
31809Why was Jenkin an amateur in my eyes?
31809Why will he avoid-- obviously avoid-- fine writing up to which he has led?
31809Why will people spring bills on you?
31809Why?
31809Will Cassell stand it?
31809Will the correspondents be more copious and less irrelevant in the future?
31809Will this beginner move in the inverse direction?
31809Will you oblige me by paying in for three articles, as already sent, to my account with John Paton& Co., 52 William Street?
31809Will you please send me the Greek water- carrier''s song?
31809Will you pray send us some?
31809Will you take this miserable scrap for what it is worth?
31809Will_ Treasure Island_ proofs be coming soon, think you?
31809With every good wish from me and mine( should I not say"she and hers"?)
31809Would I like to see the Scots Observer?
31809Would it bloom?
31809Would n''t I not?
31809Would not the Englishman unlearn hypocrisy?
31809Would not the Frenchman learn to put some heart into his friendships?
31809Would you be surprised to learn that I contemplate becoming a shipowner?
31809Yes, it is like old times to be writing you from the Riviera, and after all that has come and gone, who can predict anything?
31809Yet we see that he has left an influence; the memory of his patient courtesy has often checked me in rudeness; has it not you?
31809You can give me that much, can you not?
31809You may remember Walter had a romantic affection for all pharmacies?
31809You remember my lectures on Ajax, or the Unintentional Sin?
31809You say you are"a spoon- fed idiot"; but how about Lenz?
31809You see how this d-- d poeshie flows from me in sickness: Are they good or bad?
31809You will tell me, perhaps, that you carry the coin yourself: my dear sir, do you think you can fool your Maker?
31809[ 31] What is a haole?
31809[_ Campagne Defli, St. Marcel, January 1883._] MY DEAR MR. SYMONDS,--What must you think of us?
31809[_ Saranac Lake, February 1888?_] MY DEAR ARCHER,--It happened thus.
31809[_ Saranac Lake, Winter 1887- 88._] MY DEAR ARCHER,--What am I to say?
31809[_ Wensleydale, Bournemouth, October 1884?_] DEAR BOY,--I trust this finds you well; it leaves me so- so.
31809_ Apropos_ of old days, do you remember still the phrase we heard in Waterloo Place?
31809_ Bonallie Towers, Bournemouth[ December 1884?
31809_ Business._--Will you be likely to have a space in the Magazine for a serial story, which should be ready, I believe, by April, at latest by autumn?
31809_ La Solitude, Hyères[ November 1883]._ MY DEAR HENRIETTA,--Certainly; who else would they be?
31809_ Marseilles, June 1884._ DEAR S. C.,--Are these four in time?
31809_ N.B._--Where I have put an"A"is that a dominant eleventh, or what?
31809_ Saranac Lake, January''88._ DEAR CHARLES,--You are the flower of Doers.... Will my doer collaborate thus much in my new novel?
31809_ Vous ne détestez pas alors mes bonnes femmes?
31809_ À qui le dites- vous?_ And I am not supporting that.
31809about Scott and his tears?
31809and has it brought you luck?
31809and have you ever read it yourself?
31809and if the latter, is that allowed?
31809and just what the soom was?
31809and one giving a lively, though not flattering air of him in conversation?
31809and the bottles in the window were for him a poem?
31809and though the verse is not all your fancy painted it, has it not some life?
31809and what about the sailors''food?
31809and will you observe again that this passage touches the very joint of our division?
31809et l''enfant?
31809et la femme?
31809how is that?
31809how?
31809is it so long?
31809nor even with the dead?
31809or just a seventh on the D?
31809or the Battle of Saratoga?
31809pleased; a great variety of small ships launched or still upon the stocks--(also, why not send the annotated proof of_ Fontainebleau_?
31809query Campagne Debug?
31809that he is rarely out of the house nowadays, and carries his arm in a sling?
31809what does it change?
31809what return But the image of the emptiness of youth, Filled with the sound of footsteps and that voice Of discontent and rapture and despair?
31809what was the context?
31809what?
31809when I have held my peace?
31809£ 60!!??
31809£ 60!!??
36712''But were you not afraid,''I asked,''downstairs?'' 36712 ''How do you mean, killed?''
36712''Incident?'' 36712 ''No,''I said, and then I stammered,''Have you?''
36712''That she might follow me? 36712 ''What can I have done to her that she follows me so?''
36712''What could happen?'' 36712 ''What else?
36712''What is that?'' 36712 ''What?''
36712''Where had I got to? 36712 ''You do n''t mean to say you saw her?''
36712''You felt her?'' 36712 ''You remember nothing else?''
36712Alive?
36712Am bheil thu''dol do Fhionphort?
36712And are not these poor people right? 36712 And can you speak to him here?"
36712And could He give a soul to me?
36712And do you know the future of your friend?
36712And do you love him still, as of old?
36712And for what?
36712And how do you gain the information desired?
36712And how would that thing be done?
36712And is it to one of these that he says,''Thy will be done''?
36712And the evil does not abide?
36712And what has his will to do with that?
36712And what will it be, then, you that are my friend, and sure knowing me as Aulay mac Luais-- Aulay Macneill that never grudges you bit or sup?
36712And where is your witch? 36712 And who are you?"
36712And why is that, mother?
36712And why that... why till this day?
36712And why that?
36712And you are not going there?
36712And you will be alone now, too, I am thinking, Sheen?
36712And you will be knowing what is done?
36712Are a few years, then, as nothing?
36712Are you the friend of Sheen Macarthur?
36712As of old?
36712But what are their ceremonies? 36712 But what is it done for?"
36712Do you know there is a death here, Macallum?
36712Do you think you could learn to say it, too?
36712Even if it separates you from your friend?
36712For a purpose?
36712For loving you?
36712From Tiree... from Coll?
36712From the Long Island... or from Uist... or maybe from Benbecula?
36712Have you never heard of God?
36712How can it separate me from my friend, if the Father is the Self of him?
36712How could our Father help me?
36712How dare you appear before us? 36712 How long do you suppose elapsed between the boy''s murder and his breaking the nursery window?"
36712I am thinking it is a long time since you have been in Iona?
36712I asked,''What has happened?'' 36712 If a man die, shall he live again?"
36712Indeed? 36712 Is it likely,"she resumed,"that a person born under such circumstances is like others-- is what you call sane?"
36712Is it possible you never came across these fossils in European museums? 36712 Is that you, Neil Ross?"
36712It will be a thing often done, is it not?
36712Little old man, sir? 36712 Nothing?"
36712She?
36712Soon he repeated the question,''Lost anything?'' 36712 The One he will re- become?"
36712The corpse- lights?
36712The man Macallum?
36712The village? 36712 Then how will you be getting across to Iona?
36712Then is the Father in heaven really the Self of my friend?
36712There is no harm to it?
36712This a woman''s voice? 36712 To France?"
36712Well, have you more to be saying to me? 36712 Well?
36712Well?
36712Well?
36712What can this be?
36712What curse?
36712What curse?
36712What do you mean by coming here and trying to blackmail me?
36712What do you wish, sir?
36712What does he call Him?
36712What ground have you for saying so, I wonder?
36712What harm could be done by it? 36712 What is the matter with him?"
36712What is your name, for I seem to know you?
36712What laugh?
36712What name?
36712What were you doing there?
36712What will the name of you be, shepherd?
36712What would you do for a silver piece, Neil, my man?
36712Where is your friend and master?
36712Where will you be staying this night?
36712Which way?
36712Who is he,I repeated--"the little old man who played the clavecin?"
36712Who knows? 36712 Why not?"
36712Why not?
36712Why?
36712Will you be remembering that?
36712With the bread... and the water...?
36712Would you kiss a dead man for a crown- piece-- a crown- piece of five good shillings?
36712You are determined to have my reason?
36712You are the man that was the Sin- Eater over there?
36712You live there, do n''t you?
36712You sent in word that you were in Mill Valley last night?
36712You that know who I am will be knowing that I have no kith or kin now on Iona?
36712''And never heard of him?''
36712''But,''he said,''I have the man''s portrait in my house in South Africa, how could you get it?''
36712''Do you mean him as died in the Transvaal lately?''
36712''Is he dead, then?''
36712''Well,''he said,''was he a man like that?''
36712''What are ye talkin''about?''
36712''What did they call him?''
36712''What makes you ask?
36712''What''s the matter with the room?''
36712''What,''I said,''do you know him?''
36712''Will you do so?''
36712''Yes,''I said,''what about it?''
36712All you say to me I feel that I have heard before, but where?
36712And again I sunk into visions of Ligeia-- and again,( what marvel that I shudder while I write?)
36712And now, tell me, is it safe that I am?
36712And the chin, with its dimples, as in health, might it not be hers?--but_ had she then grown taller since her malady_?
36712And they say ill of him, do they?"
36712And was he satisfied?"
36712And what do you think?...
36712And what thrill is comparable to that which comes from contact with the supermortal?
36712And with that he laughed, and then his wife that was behind him laughed, and then....""Well, what then?"
36712And you, now?
36712Are we not part and parcel in Thee?
36712Before he knew what he was saying he asked it,"Is she ill?"
36712But do you mean to say that this strange people worshipped Captain Pole also?"
36712But had not Jeanne her visions?"
36712But may I be asking your name?"
36712But what was this?
36712But when?
36712But where is it that I can be sleeping this night, Sheen Macarthur?"
36712But where, what, with whom?
36712But who would have gripped that thing if he were for seeing what I saw?
36712But why did the fear so afflicting to her health and spirits so suddenly leave her, while it was still winter in the mountains?
36712But why is a sensitive necessary?
36712But why should I minutely detail the unspeakable horrors of that night?
36712But you will question on, untiringly, through the nights and days of years:"Who are you?
36712By what name am I to call you, since you will answer to none that I remember?
36712Can evil touch me between this and the sea?"
36712Could a simple"hallucination"have been so widespread and so prevalent?
36712Could it indeed be Rowena at all-- the fair- haired, the blue- eyed Lady Rowena Trevanion of Tremaine?
36712Could it, indeed, be the living Rowena who confronted me?
36712Did not these bushes grow on sacred ground?
36712Do you know any one of that name?''
36712Do you know him?''
36712Do you mean we are to watch her performance in complete darkness?"
36712Do you understand?"
36712For a moment I thought he must be walking in his sleep, but he turned to me quite naturally and said in his own boyish voice:"''Lost anything?''
36712Growth?
36712Had n''t they seen him with a sword on every''quid''they''d ever seen?
36712He takes them away; and are you for thinking God would let the innocent suffer for the guilty?
36712How do we know that the avouching unknown could not have been sold a gold brick?
36712How had I deserved to be so blessed by such confessions?
36712How had I deserved to be so cursed with the removal of my beloved in the hour of her making them?
36712How was she busy, occupied-- not here to give him tea?
36712I am conscious of low openings from time to time-- openings to what?
36712I but indistinctly recall the fact itself-- what wonder that I have utterly forgotten the circumstances which originated or attended it?
36712I fancied that my face showed all too plainly the incredulity I felt, for his darkened, and he muttered,"You not belief, Engelsch?
36712I waited for him, made sure of him, began to feel giddy, and then a man''s voice, deep and clear:"''There is some one there; who is it?''
36712I would be doing it myself, and that gladly, but the... the... passer- by who....""It is talking of the Sin- Eater you are?"
36712In my excitement I seized her by the arm, saying,"Who was the little old man in the black velvet coat with the ruffles?
36712Is it any money you are having upon you?"
36712Is it from Iona you are?"
36712Is not their sap impregnated with the incense of offerings, and the exhalations of holy anchorites, who once lived and breathed here?"
36712Is the.... Are you ready?"
36712It enabled him to choose the right thing to gratify the personal tastes of each demon, do n''t you see?
36712Many a reader will be disposed to answer the question"why?"
36712May I be so bold as to ask whose son, and of what place?''
36712Maybe you are for knowing it?
36712No?"
36712Now numbers are asking in addition,"Can we have communication with the dead?"
36712Now, what constitutes a sensitive, and why are they necessary?
36712Once again he appeared, and seemed to say to me,''Why did you do that, E----?
36712Or was it a test of my strength of affection, that I should institute no inquiries upon this point?
36712Or was it rather a caprice of my own-- a wildly romantic offering on the shrine of the most passionate devotion?
36712Say what''s this thou touchest?_ THE TOUCH.
36712Shall these things be undeviatingly so?
36712Shall this conqueror be not once conquered?
36712She was drawing the majority to her way of thinking when, from the corner where the girl sat, a hollow- sounding voice:"And the boy?
36712The bandage lay heavily about the mouth-- but then might it not be the mouth of the breathing Lady of Tremaine?
36712The... the... person... the person takes them away, and....""_ Them?_""For sure, man!
36712Then, before you could say"knife,"the Germans had turned, and we were after them, fighting like ninety...""Where was this?"
36712There is no harm in that, sure?"
36712This only I know beyond doubt-- that you are of the Past; you belong to memory-- but to the memory of what dead suns?"
36712Vainly you ask yourself,"Whose voice?
36712Ward?"
36712Was he not, too, another Judas, to have sold for silver that which was not for the selling?
36712Was it a playful charge on the part of my Ligeia?
36712Was it a special attention, or was it merely casual?
36712Was it not a matter for the knowing that the corpse could hear, and might rise up in the night and clothe itself in a clean white shroud?
36712Was it only a dream, a coincidence?"
36712We asked, thinking that the answer was absurd, as we knew him to be alive and well:"''Are you dead?''
36712We said:"''Who are you?''
36712What are you?
36712What could it have been that he had overlooked, left undone, omitted to see to?
36712What do you mean to see me about?
36712What do you want?"
36712What in the world was it, now?"
36712What is He?"
36712What is it you are muttering over against the lips of the dead?"
36712What is the rune that is said for the throwing into the sea of the sins of the dead?
36712What is this weird relation that you bear to me?
36712What was it-- that something more profound than the well of Democritus-- which lay far within the pupils of my beloved?
36712What will the name of your naming be, and of your father, and of his place?"
36712What would she think of him, now?
36712What, then, do we mean by this word"conditions"?
36712What_ was_ it?
36712When I was sitting, he said,''There he is, and I see the letter R. Is it Robert or Richard, do you think?''
36712Where is he?"
36712Where is he?"
36712Who can tell?
36712Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor?
36712Who knoweth the mysteries of the will, with its vigor?
36712Who spoke in those deep manly tones?
36712Who-- who knoweth the mysteries of the will with its vigor?
36712Whose face?"
36712Why had he not sent a tentative, tactful letter, feeling his way a little?
36712Why had he telegraphed the very day after his arrival in England?
36712Why have you come to tell me?"
36712Why in the world had he come?
36712Why is this?
36712Why tremble?
36712Why,_ why_ should I doubt it?
36712Why?
36712Will you be passing this way to anywhere?"
36712Will you have been hearing or seeing anything?"
36712You know, I am not superstitious.... Am I?..."
36712You recall our promise?"
36712You sall not see the clavecin yet?
36712_ Taste this bread, this substance: tell me Is it bread or flesh?_[_ The Senses approach._] THE SMELL.
36712he asked, in a weak voice hoarse with damp and fatigue;"how is it you will be knowing that I have been in Iona at all?"
36712how dare you to stand on this holy ground in boots made of a cow''s sacred skin?
36712tried the shepherd again:"Are you going to Fionnaphort?"
39406And a clear mark, Tom?--no mistake in it?
39406And his mark, that you were talking of in such mysterious terms,--what is that?
39406And the next thing I remember, you were sitting_ there_, and I-- Doctor-- did you hear a footstep? 39406 And who, if you please, is Nick of the Woods?"
39406Any kin to the governor what was?
39406Are we going?
39406Can you tell us where Charles Wolfe is buried?
39406Doctor Austin!--what_ day_ is this?
39406Doctor, have I been away?
39406Doctor, what has been the matter?
39406IS NOT THIS THE CARPENTER''S SON?
39406Is it clear?
39406Is it possible,said Roland,"that any one can believe such an absurd story?"
39406Sir, what would you do if you were one?
39406Whar?
39406What were you looking at so intently the whole time?
39406What would you do, madam, if you were a gentleman?
39406What, dear-- what, dear?
39406What,she asked,"if I walk forward and backward and turn and bow_ without_ music, is that dancing?
39406Who is the Jibbenainosay?
39406Who?
39406Why not?
39406Will you accept the proposition?
39406Would you,said he,"if you were very hungry, and had killed a deer, send your squaw to town to tell the news, and wait her return before you eat?"
39406Yes; but you certainly can repeat some portion of it to me?
39406You are from Rockford,''Lena tells me?
39406''But the great Tower?''
39406''Sides, dem names''s got er cur''us soun''-- You says I''s hard to please?
39406(_ Knocks again and looks round._)_ Alonzo._ Who can this be-- so late at night?
39406Ah, what avails the vain expense of tears?
39406Ai n''t thet what you preached?"
39406And Von Kluyden?
39406And can he now, to manhood grown, Tell why those notes, simple and lone, As on the ravished ear they fell, Bind every sense in magic spell?
39406And how was this to be enumerated among the high crimes which caused the colonies to sever their connection with the mother country?
39406And if I do the same when there_ is_ music, does that make it dancing?"
39406And now, how is the knowledge of this vast surrounding universe revealed to the mind of man?
39406And thar''s his marks, captain,--what do you make of_ that_?
39406And why, if he was a peace- messenger, he had not sent a runner?
39406Are the stars brighter than they are?
39406Are they indeed to us no more than the dull clods we tread upon?
39406Are you lonesome, my own sweetheart?
39406But does anybody pretend to tell me that man is always the lucky recipient of this devotion?
39406But is this really so?
39406But tears?
39406But where was Duluth?
39406But with such an admission, what is the cloud of reflections, which throng and startle the mind?
39406But, sir, permit me to inquire from whom these charges of bribery, of corruption, and of robbery, come?
39406By promise Vain of Universal Sway Lur''d you from Greece the beauteous Queen away?
39406By what race of beings was the vast undertaking accomplished?
39406By whiskey grog he lost his breath-- Who would not die so sweet a death?
39406Call me''Cousin Camilla''or''Aunt Camilla,''whichever you prefer; which shall it be, Quintil?"
39406Conrad kill''d Alonzo?
39406Could they be agreed, and could they walk together?
39406Did n''t you say thet God''retaineth not His anger forever, because He delighteth in mercy?''
39406Did they remain untouched and incapable of harm?
39406Did those first drops of sorrow fall To move God''s pity for us all?
39406Did you see How brief your beauty, and how brief, Therefore, the love of it must be, In that first garden, that first grief?
39406Do n''t you think it would sound better if you were to add a handle to my name, as common folks say?
39406Do you feel no fear When day is gone and the night is here?
39406Do you hear?
39406Editors, to publish a note in your valuable paper, offering the"Poets''Corner,"and save what you can of the fragments of"Olden Times?"...
39406For what have I to do with you?
39406Had the Declaration announced that the negroes were free and equal, how was the Prince to be arraigned for raising up insurrection among them?
39406Have you friends there?"
39406He called, endeavoring to throw his voice through the key- hole,"Aloysius, ai n''t you up yit?
39406He was immediately asked what news?
39406Her lord was lord of all the earth, Wherein no child had wailed its birth), Tears to a bride?
39406How can I discriminate?
39406How long ago?
39406I merely shouted to him across the stream--"the angle- worm once more, Piscator?"
39406In Eden?
39406In water or wine, In blood or in brine, What matter the sign?
39406Is it not white as pearl-- as snow?
39406Is there no hallowing interest associated with these aged relics-- these tombs, and temples, and towers''of another race, to elicit emotion?
39406Is there no place at all, where a knock from the poor, Will bring a kind angel to open the door?
39406Is this brat a humorist?
39406It is shocking to think of such competition, but how can we help it if young ladies give themselves up to dog worship?
39406It says,"Does the day seem long-- The scented and sunny day Because you must sit apart?
39406LOVE AMONG THE ROSES[19][ From_ Verses and Sonnets_( New York, 1910)]"What, dear-- what dear?"
39406Lacrymas at fundere inanes Quid juvat?
39406NICK OF THE WOODS[ From_ Nick of the Woods_( New York, 1853, revised edition)]"What''s the matter, Tom Bruce?"
39406No braver dames had Sparta-- No nobler matrons Rome-- Yet who or lauds or honors them, Ev''n in their own green home?
39406Or does the slayer of oxen yet sleep, supinely stertorous, heavy with the lingering fumes of the mighty Bourbon?
39406Our efficiency?
39406Remorseless Time!-- Fierce spirit of the glass and scythe!--what power Can stay him in his silent course, or melt His iron heart to pity?
39406Shall I to the_ abattoir_ and ask the slayer of oxen for a steak?
39406Such were their daily deeds: Their monument-- where does it stand?
39406That legion hath marched past the setting of sun: Beaten?
39406The bluegrass waves the bluest In Kentucky; Yet, bluebloods are the fewest(?)
39406The watchmen and citizens take her into an adjoining room, bearing her husband with her-- asking,"Who could have kill''d him?
39406Their epitaph-- who reads?
39406Then do you think that I will kneel Where such as you have trod?
39406Then why not have a heaven below, And let fair Hymen hence be sent?
39406Though much of sorrow mark its strain, Yet are its notes to sorrow dear; What though they wake fond memory''s tear?
39406Was ever such a pair?
39406Was he from the Long Knife?
39406Was not my love- seal on your brow For death, and not for days to break?
39406We hunted for them until ten o''clock, when two Spaniards came, and asked us what we would give them if they would find our mules?
39406Were they really any better than these?
39406What is the use of wasting so much sweetness when there are thousands of good, honest fellows actually pining away from unrequited affection?
39406What matter if you bid me now To go my way for others''sake?
39406What then ought we to think of them, when all this glorious intelligence is merely tributary to our salvation?
39406What was to be done?
39406What will become of me?
39406What_ time_ is it, Doctor Austin?"
39406When were these enormous earth heaps reared up from the plain?
39406Where are the doctrines of the Union and the Constitution so incessantly inculcated as here?
39406Where are those doctrines so enthusiastically adopted as here?
39406Where bosoms in mercy and kindness will heave, When the poor and the wretched shall ask and receive?
39406While every amorous rival billow Strives her buoyant breast to pillow?
39406Who can describe the surprises, the quaintness of song, the drolleries of action of the Offenbach school?
39406Who knows but one of them contains the lovely Caroline?
39406Who, in phrenzy''s flight of mind Such touch and tinctures bright may find To match her form and golden hair And naked paint the heavenly fair?
39406Why linger fondly around them, and meditate upon the power which reared them, and is departed?
39406Why should one wish to have known Goldsmith, or grudge him his place by the side of the great old Doctor, and Burke, and Reynolds, and Garrick?
39406Why then does the wanderer from the far land gaze upon them with wonder and veneration?
39406Wilt then make merry-- as of old?
39406Would you bless your fellow- men?
39406Would you crush the tyrant wrong, In the world''s free fight?
39406Would you wrest the wreath of fame From the hand of fate?
39406Would you write a deathless name With the good and great?
39406_ Alonzo._ What does he say?
39406_ Alonzo._ Who''s there?
39406_ Citizens._ Who, under God''s heaven, could have done this deed?
39406_ Conrad._ Where is my wife?
39406_ Doctor._ Did you see his face?
39406_ Lover._ But come, you saucy, pert romancer, Who is as fair as Phoebe?
39406_ Lover._ Has Phoebe not a heavenly brow?
39406_ Massachusetts!_ Which of her multitude of virtues shall I commend?
39406_ Watchmen._ Who did it?
39406cried the senior, eagerly,--"not in our limits?"
39406how did you know that?"
39406or a chop from the loin of sheep, a bell- wether of Kentucky''s finest flock-- Kentucky, state renowned for dainty mutton?
39406or was Secession a Constitutional Right Previous to the War of 1861?_( Baltimore, 1866).
39406so charming, uncontrolled, Guest and companion of my clay, Into what places wilt thou stray, When thou art naked, pale, and cold?
39406what a scene!_"But the majesty of the sight, and the interest of the moment, how depict them?
39406what_ do_ she''spec''dese chillum gwine o''be?
472631?_( syn.
472631?_= 2.=_ U.
472633, 349 Early Cream, 349 Early Cronesteyn, 349 Early Curtis, 349 Early Downton, 349_ Early Favourite?_( syn.
47263_ Early Favourite?_= 5.= Mas_ Pom.
47263_ Favourite Large Red Clingstone?_= 3.=_ Lond.
47263_ Frühe Montagne?_= 9.= Liegel_ Anweisung_ 68.
47263_ Newington Magdalene?_= 5.= Dochnahl_ Führ.
47263_ Pourprée tardive à petites fleurs?_= 8.= Thomas_ Guide Prat._ 50.
47263_ Scott Cling?_= 3.=_ Del.
47263_ Williams New York?_= 5.=_ Lond.
47263by, 492 Williams Catherine, 492 Williams Cling, 492 Williams Early Purple, 492_ Williams New York?_( syn.
47263of Beers Late Red Rareripe), 306 Beers Smock, 306_ Béguine de Termonde?_( syn.
47263of Early Purple), 351 Pourprée Joseph Norin, 444 Pourprée Tardive de Lyon, 444_ Pourprée tardive à petites fleurs?_( syn.
47263of Falcon), 358 Faut, 358 Favier, 358 Favourite, 358_ Favourite Large Red Clingstone?_( syn.
47263of Frühe Mignonne), 364 Frühe May von Brigg, 364 Frühe Mignonne, 364_ Frühe Montagne?_( syn.
47263of Jarle Late), 390 Jarrell Late Yellow, 390 Jarretts Late White, 390 Jaune d''Agen, 390_ Jaune d''Amerique?_( syn.
47263of Old Newington), 429_ Newington Magdalene?_( syn.
47263of Scott October), 463_ Scott Cling?_( syn.
45733''Did you take notes, Mr. Webster, of Mr. Hayne''s speech?'' 45733 ''You reply in the morning?''
45733Are you going to let me be devoured by these people?
45733Attack, sir; attack what?
45733Dinna ye hear the pibroch?
45733Do n''t you know me?
45733Had you not better defer your speech?
45733If there is a second battle to- morrow,he said,"what troops shall I fight it with?
45733If we succeed, what will the world say?
45733Was there ever,says Parton,"a public man, not at the head of a state, so beloved as he?
45733What is the matter?
45733What is to be done?
45733Who are you?
4573339, shown by Parker''s ships?"
45733A hundred years more have passed over our heads, and what do we behold?
45733Blücher''s Prussians, or Grouchy''s pursuing French?
45733Did he not ask himself then: what are glory and power worth, if this is the end of kingly greatness?]
45733Had they been swept away and the old wrongs of the people been brought back?
45733Hayne has made a speech?''
45733How does the nineteenth century compare with its predecessors?
45733In 1829, the long debate on the question:"Does the Constitution make us one sovereign nation or only a league of separate states?"
45733Is our signal for''close action''still flying?"
45733It is an idea that sounds well in rhyme and song, but it must stand the test of practice as well; and is it capable of this?
45733Looking back for a century, what do we see?
45733May this large Gospel of the Christ be realized by a nation, and this nation become in spirit and fact a church?
45733Shall it not in its turn be overthrown, and liberty and equality in this direction be also attained?
45733Shall this third of the great tyrants of the world retain its supremacy?
45733Should these haughty islanders contemn his power and defy his armies?
45733Three hundred years have passed, and what is the warship of to- day?
45733What are we not to lose by peace?
45733What are we to gain by war?
45733What brought about this great change?
45733What does it mean?"
45733What was it that stirred the larger patriotism that gave shape and purpose to this growing feeling of national pride and unity?
45733Who ever heard such cheers, so hearty, distinct and ringing, as those which his name evoked?
45733Who that ever read or heard it can forget the closing passage of that glorious speech?
45733Who were they?
45733[= Education, Discovery and Commerce=] In what else does the beginning of the twentieth stand far in advance of that of the nineteenth century?
45733[= Great Discoveries of the Nineteenth Century=] Now what has been the record since 1800?
45733[= How the Indians Live=] What, then, is the condition of the Indian to- day?
45733[= Peace Propositions of the Emperor of Russia=] What else shall be said of the state of affairs at the dawn of the twentieth century?
45733[= The Rights of Man=] As for the rights of the people, what had become of them?
45733[= The War with the Pirates of Tripoli=] But, after all, what else could the Government do?
31178''But_ what_ shall be done?
31178''Can that be_ innocence_ in the temperate zone, which is the_ acme of all guilt_ near the equator?
31178''Do you think,''says a third,''that honest, godly men would countenance a scheme which is not really benevolent?''
31178''Does this Society wish to meddle with our slaves as our rightful property?
31178''Does this Society wish to meddle with our slaves as our_ rightful property_?
31178''Entertaining these views of this fearful subject, why should our opponents endeavor to prejudice our cause with our southern friends?
31178''Has any one, in either of our southern States, given any thing like a thousand dollars to promote emigration to Africa?
31178''Has our country the resources demanded for the accomplishment of an object of such magnitude?
31178''Has the Colonization Society had no effect in producing these barbarous measures?
31178''How can this be effected, but by making our situation worse here, and closing every other door against us?
31178''In the third place, supposing all children born after January 1, 1831, were declared free, how are they to be educated?
31178''Nor do we think that the exhortation, to"do right and trust Providence,"applies at all to this case; for the very question is,"what is right?"
31178''Shall I not visit for these things?
31178''The question arises, where shall these outcasts go?
31178''We would ask, whence have the troubles, which have taken place among the slaves of Louisiana, originated?
31178''What can be done to mitigate or prevent the existing and apprehended evils, resulting from our black population?
31178''What has awakened that spirit of suspicion and enmity which is now manifested by these men in every form of open and active hostility?
31178''What is the free black to the slave?
31178''What is to be done?
31178''Who are the free people of color in the United States?
31178''Who would not rejoice to see our country liberated from her black population?
31178''Will not the people of the United States be induced to do something to remove their colored population?
31178**''How came we by this population?
31178**''Shall we... retain and foster the_ alien enemies_?''
31178**''There are those, Sir, who ask-- and could not a quarter century cease and determine the two great evils?
31178**''What effects does emancipation produce without removal?
31178***''Are they vipers, who are sucking our blood?
31178***''If, then, they are a useless and dangerous species of population, we would ask, is it generous in our southern friends to burthen us with them?
31178***''What is the true nature of the evil of the existence of a portion of the African race in our population?
31178***''Who is there, that does not know something of the condition of the blacks in the northern and middle States?
31178***''Who would not rejoice to see our country liberated from her black population?
31178*********''What effect have the evils of slavery in this_ happy_ land upon the mind of the liberal, the unprejudiced, and philanthropic Lafayette?
31178--''What mean ye that ye beat my people to pieces, and grind the face of the poor?
31178--Who can doubt the issue of this controversy, or which side has the approbation of the Lord of Hosts?
31178--Why does not Mr Clay increase this band of_ missionaries_, by sending out some of his own slaves?
31178--how would this advice sound?
31178--in what colleges were they taught?
31178--with whom did they serve an apprenticeship?
31178Again I ask, are we pagans, are we savages, are we devils?
31178Again, how is it that none but the free people of color have been chosen to evangelize Africa?
31178All go_ voluntarily_: of what, then, do you complain?
31178And are not you thus endeavoring to cure one species of wickedness by the instrumentality of another?
31178And can they set them free, and still suffer them to remain in the country?
31178And can they set them free,_ and still suffer them to remain in the country_?
31178And have these men the face to contend with the infidels of our land?
31178And how can they be governed?
31178And if it should, what can they do without the consent of the people of color to remove?
31178And if the blacks are willing to remove, why throw obstacles in their path or deprecate their withdrawal?
31178And now, let me ask, could ever a century, in the whole course of human affairs, be better employed?''
31178And the result of such a mustering of their energies-- who can look at it even in distant prospect without horror?
31178And what evidence do they give us?
31178And what is this but a libel upon the American people?
31178And what is this system which is to be held in so much reverence, and avoided with so much care?
31178And what will ye do in the day of visitation, and in the desolation which shall come from far?
31178And who are those christians and philanthropists?
31178And who, but the advocates of the Colonization Society, receive him as a welcome guest?
31178And why might not our brilliant and growing_ navy_ aid to some extent the humane and patriotic cause?
31178And why should we not cherish these invaluable graces?
31178And will He not make inquisition for blood?
31178And will not the prevalence for a century of a restoring commerce, place them on their own shores?
31178And will not the prevalence_ for a century_ of a restoring commerce, place them on their own shores?
31178And yet is there a single mechanic, farmer or merchant, who feels it to be his duty, or would be willing to go?
31178Are Right and Wrong convertible terms, dependant upon popular opinion?
31178Are these the men to stigmatize as foreigners?
31178Are they to be separated from their parents?
31178Are we not even prohibited from some of the common labor and drudgery of the streets, such as cartmen, porters,& c.?
31178Are we pagans, are we savages, are we devils?
31178Are you not willing people should choose their own places of residence?
31178Are you willing thus to be held up as tyrants and hypocrites for ever?
31178Because Jehovah overrules evil for good, shall we therefore continue to do evil?
31178But I was immediately strengthened by these interrogations:''Is any thing too hard for the Lord?''
31178But are they sure, or is it probable, that Congress will make this appropriation?
31178But has he been frustrated in his intentions?
31178But how else could he reduce the doctrine of immediate and complete emancipation to practice?''
31178But how is it that those wicked white men, who are in the habit of resorting thither for the most nefarious purposes, have access to these people?
31178But if any of the slaves should be exempted from sale or purchase, why not all?
31178But is it right to hold our fellow creatures as chattels, and to perpetuate their ignorance and servitude?
31178But is not this the colonization principle?
31178But suppose you were foreigners: would such an accident justify this persecution and removal?
31178But what are the remainder, the mass?
31178But what is the fact?
31178But what is the portrait worth, if it bear no resemblance to the living original?
31178But what is to become of this choice selection, when it is able( as it hopes to be) to send off even as many as seventy thousand annually?
31178But who is adequate to the task of delineating its horrors, or recording its atrocities, in full?
31178But who really prefers such means as these to the course proposed in this bill?
31178But why this restless, roving, unsatisfied disposition?
31178But-- the objector asks-- how shall we evangelize Africa?
31178By whom shall the plantations at the south be cultivated but by them?
31178Can high birth annul the rights of the lower classes?
31178Can it be attributed to any departure of the Society from its avowed original design and principles?
31178Can pagans, or savages, or devils, exhibit a more implacable spirit, than is seen in the foregoing extracts?
31178Can that be_ honesty_ in one meridian of longitude, which, at one hundred degrees east, is the_ climax of injustice_?''
31178Can they blame us if we attach the same credit to the declaration that they mean to colonize us''only with our consent?''
31178Can this class be animated by any feelings of patriotism towards a country by which they feel themselves oppressed?''
31178Can we hesitate in our choice?
31178Colonization orators, designing politicians, ministers of Jesus, tell me, how can you thus libel your countrymen?
31178Do colonizationists mean, that slave- dealers shall purchase or sell a few victims less this year than they did the last?
31178Do they actually_ court_ the perils of the sea,--the hostilities of a savage tribe,--the sickening influences of an African climate?
31178Do they base their objects, in full, upon such frivolous excuses as these?
31178Do we not almost daily see men running headlong into wild and injurious enterprises with the very best intentions?
31178Does any man in his senses desire this population to remain among us?
31178Does physical strength make valid this claim?
31178Does the reader wish for any additional proof that the governing motive of the American Colonization Society is fear-- undisguised,_ excessive_ FEAR?
31178Even in states, where our numbers have almost doubled, have we seen one statesman, one officer, or one juror?
31178FOOTNOTES:[ R] What right have we to an homestead in the red man''s country?
31178First-- Is the gospel of Jesus Christ calculated to lead to insurrectionary measures?
31178Fourth-- What neighborhood, where education and general information have been disseminated among the people of color, is the worse for it?
31178From what principles and probabilities shall we infer it?
31178Gradually abstaining from what?
31178Has the reader duly considered the fatal admissions of the advocates of the colonization scheme, presented in the preceding pages?
31178Have not the thirteen years''peaceful, yet efficient, operations of our Society attested the_ moderation of our views_ and the safety of our plans?
31178Have not they in the United States a field sufficiently extensive to show it in?
31178How came this change to pass?
31178How can a man be born in two countries at the same time?
31178How long, ye slavites, ye kidnappers, ye that traffic in human flesh, will you sleep?
31178How much must a man know to save him from transportation?
31178How white must he be?
31178How would you do, brethren, if your object was really to benefit the poor?
31178I appeal to the candor and common sense of the reader, if this grievous persecution be not justly chargeable to the Society?
31178If ignorance be a crime, where shall we begin to select?
31178If necessary, why might not_ the marine of other lands_ be chartered?
31178If so, why then send it to the heathen?
31178If their object is to benefit us, why not better our condition here?
31178If we are to send away the colored population because they are profligate and vicious, what sort of missionaries will they make?
31178If we send away a mixed breed, how many will be left?
31178If, on the anniversary celebrated by the free people of color, of the day on which slavery was abolished, they looked abroad, what did they see?
31178In what circumstance shall we discover it?
31178Is Error, though unwittingly supported by a host of good men, stronger than Truth?
31178Is Henry Brougham a madman?
31178Is he consistent?
31178Is it because they are in reality, as slaveholders tell us, an inferior race of beings?
31178Is it because they are pre- eminently qualified in point of morals and information for the missionary enterprise?
31178Is it because they are under an exclusive moral obligation to dispel the"gloom of Mahometan superstition?"
31178Is it because they instinctively prefer Africa to their native country?
31178Is it because those who cherish it are treated as the offscouring of all flesh, in the place of their birth?
31178Is it credible?
31178Is it not a contradiction to say that a man is an alien to the country in which he was born?
31178Is it not a fearful thing to fall into the hands of the living God?
31178Is it not as atrocious a crime to kidnap these, as to kidnap a similar number on the coast of Africa?
31178Is it not in the power of these gentlemen to subdue it?
31178Is it, then, proposed to buy the slaves of their masters, as if the claim of property were valid?
31178Is not the colony at Liberia in a flourishing condition, and expanding beyond the most sanguine expectations of its founders?''
31178Is not the position superficial to suppose that American born citizens are Africans?
31178Is not this a libel upon humanity and justice-- a libel upon republicanism-- a libel upon the Declaration of Independence-- a libel upon christianity?
31178Is our prejudice against persons of color more rational or more just?
31178Is that dearest of natural ties to be broken asunder?
31178Is the American Colonization Society a beneficial institution?
31178Is the charge inflammatory or unjust?
31178Is the slave trade therefore a blessing?
31178Is there any thing, say they, in this proposition at war with your interest, your safety, your honor, or your happiness?
31178Is this folly or villany?
31178Is this language calculated to allay animosity, or beget confidence, or suppress contempt, or heal division, or excite sympathy?
31178Is this necessary for your plan?
31178Is this the language of fanaticism?
31178It is an inquiry becoming of the utmost importance, what is to become of those children who are arriving at the age of manhood?
31178Its immediate abandonment to want and ruin?
31178Know ye not that the reward of your hands shall be given you?
31178Knowing themselves the evils of slavery, can they wish to impose upon us an evil scarcely less tolerable?
31178Luther was a madman in his day: what is he now in the estimation of the friends of civil and religious liberty?
31178Many of them fought, and bled, and died for the gaining of her liberties; and shall we forsake their tombs, and flee to an unknown land?
31178May we not address them in the language of Christ?
31178My dear Sir, this being the case,_ whether is it probable that they will come over to us, or we go down to them_?
31178Not-- what does God say?
31178Not-- what is my opinion?
31178Now what would they think, if we should tell them that they would be better off in New Holland or in Tartary?
31178Now, if all this be true, how can they, on their own principles, say we can_ never_ be a people in this country?
31178One passing by, asked him what he was doing?
31178Our political condition we admit renders us less respectable, but does it prove us an inferior part of the human family?
31178Our structure and organization are the same, and not distinct from other men; and in what respects are we inferior?
31178Probably I may be interrogated by individuals,--''Why do you object to a colony in Africa?
31178Reader, are they''enviable''--''a thousand times the best''--in comparison with those of the former?
31178Rep.]''What are these objects?
31178Second-- What gentleman, who has set his slaves free, has been murdered by them for so doing?
31178Shall not my soul be avenged on such a nation as this?''
31178Shall we be told that_ invincible_ prejudices render this great desideratum impracticable?
31178Shall we look to wealth as giving one a title to the labor and freedom of another?
31178Shall we not bestow upon it our charities, and commend it to the protection of Heaven?
31178Since then it does not appear that we are pre- eminently qualified for this work, why should it be pressed upon us?
31178Suppose they were all good-- would this fact prove infallibly that they could not err in judgment?
31178The accursed traffic still continues to increase-- and why?
31178The following is the evidence in confirmation of this charge:''How came we by this population?
31178The intelligent portion of the free negroes know very well what is going on.--Will they not see your debates?
31178The latter naturally inquire, why is it, that persons of the same color, are permitted to possess more privileges than they do?...
31178The question is not-- what is true?
31178There does exist in the United States a prejudice against us; but is it unconquerable?
31178They dare not lead to the onset against the forces of tyranny; and if_ they_ shrink from the conflict, how shall the victory be won?
31178Third-- What have those States, who have washed their hands clean of the cursed stain of slavery, lost by it?
31178Those by which the intelligent creatures of God are bought and sold and used like cattle?
31178To prove the assertion, we would inquire, how many of our sable brethren have been elevated to any post of distinction in this country?
31178True, he was a gentleman in character, manners and dress; but he had a black skin; and how could white skins sit at the same table with him?
31178Very well; under whom are they to get this training?
31178We would ask the Colonization Society, what are they doing at home to improve our condition?
31178Well, said he, I can raise a dust, ca n''t I?
31178Were or are the design and principles of the Society hostile to the rights and interest of the Southern States?
31178What better plea could they make?
31178What but sorrow can we feel at the_ misguided piety_ which has set free so many of them by death- bed devise or sudden conviction of injustice?
31178What conspiracy was ever more cruel?
31178What do we see?
31178What do you recommend?
31178What does the law term him who steals your pocket- book, or breaks into your dwelling, or strips you on the highway?
31178What have the abolitionists_ done_?
31178What have we done to raise them up from the earth?
31178What have we_ not_ done to keep them down?
31178What hypocrisy and tergiversation so enormous?
31178What is it but to say, there is in them a moral incapacity to do justice, love mercy, and walk uprightly?
31178What is the fact?
31178What is the inference?
31178What is the meaning of that declaration?
31178What is their response?
31178What is there in the burning sun, the arid plains, and barbarous customs of Africa, that is so peculiarly favorable to our improvement?
31178What keeps us down but the want of wealth?
31178What nation under heaven, will be able to do any thing with us, unless God gives us up into its hand?
31178What right have the hosts of foreign emigrants, who are flocking to our shores, to an homestead among ourselves?
31178What right, I demand, have the children of Africa to an homestead in the white man''s country?
31178What rights?
31178What shall be done?
31178What should be their reply?
31178What should we think of such religion as this?
31178What then?
31178What would be the decision of the assembled universe?
31178What would have been accomplished?
31178What, then, is our duty?
31178When will you awake to your best interests?
31178Where exists a more rigorous despotism?
31178Where is it to be found?
31178Where is the proof of such purpose?
31178Where is this vast sum to come from?
31178Where would such a detestable principle lead but to practices the most atrocious, and results the most disastrous, if carried out among ourselves?
31178Who are the individuals that applaud, that justify, that advocate this exclusion?
31178Who but they are the apologists for murder, theft, and all the horrid concomitants of slavery?
31178Who can foretel those scenes of carnage and terror which our own children may witness, unless a seasonable remedy be applied?
31178Who can number the stripes which it inflicts, the groans and tears and imprecations which it extorts, the cruel murders which it perpetrates?
31178Who does not desire to see Africa civilized and evangelized?
31178Who does not pray for deliverance from the evils of slavery?
31178Who does not readily perceive that the prevalence of this opinion must at once paralyze every effort for their improvement?
31178Who is so blind as not to perceive the peaceful and beneficial results of such a change?
31178Who would not laugh at the scheme-- who would not actively oppose it?
31178Who would not participate in any efforts to restore those children of misfortune to_ their native shores_?''
31178Whose bosom does not thrill with pleasurable emotion whenever he listens to that truest, sweetest, tenderest effusion,--''Home, sweet home?''
31178Whose heart does not leap in view of the suppression of the slave trade?
31178Whose indignation does not kindle, whose astonishment is not profound, whose disgust is not excited, in view of these sentiments?
31178Why do we not accumulate wealth?
31178Why not send away the vicious among the whites, for the same reason and the same purpose?
31178Why not use the funds of the Society to instruct and elevate our colored population at home?
31178Why should property be represented at the impoverished south, and not at the opulent north?
31178Why should the American people make this enormous expenditure of life and money?
31178Why should we exchange a temperate and salubrious climate, adapted to our constitutions as Americans, for one, to us, fraught with disease and death?
31178Why should we leave a land illuminated with the blaze of gospel light, for one enshrouded in pagan gloom?
31178Why should we leave this land, so dearly bought by the blood, groans and tears of our fathers?
31178Why then, in the name of God, should we hesitate to encourage their departure?
31178Why?
31178Will this plea avail aught at the bar of God?
31178Wo n''t you let me give you a cup of coffee?''
31178Would any one blame the above classes for steadfastly resisting it?
31178Would foreigners submit?
31178Would it be safe?
31178Would not an honest indignation burn within us?
31178Would not such effrontery amaze us?
31178Would the villain be acquitted, and, instead of a halter, receive the panegyric of the Court for his conduct?
31178Would this be policy?
31178Would this be policy?--Would it be safe?
31178Would you send them into a neighboring forest, and there deal out that food which they were famishing for?
31178Yea, what was the condemnation passed upon him by the Illustrious Sufferer?
31178You do not look for it, do you?
31178_ Is not this force?_''Mr Fisher said:''If we wait until the free negroes consent to leave the State, we shall wait until"time is no more."
31178and to put others out of the house, because they happen to be ignorant, or poor, or helpless?
31178and what communion hath light with darkness?
31178and what concord hath Christ with Belial?
31178and where will ye leave your glory?''
31178as less magnanimous and just than the populace of Europe?
31178but-- what do others believe?
31178but-- what is popular?
31178but-- what says the public?
31178do its supporters really know what they talk about?
31178if it be right for a driver to inflict a number of lashes, how many shall be given?
31178if justice require the liberation of the few, why not of the many?
31178is it so?
31178is it so?
31178or are they more insensible to rude assaults than forest- trees?
31178or because the density of population renders it impossible for them to obtain preferment and competence here?
31178or because they are estranged by oppression and scorn?
31178or because they are the victims of incorrigible hate and prejudice?
31178or because they are told that they must choose between exilement and perpetual degradation?
31178or because they cherish no attachment to their native soil, to the scenes of their childhood and youth, or to the institutions of government?
31178or because they consider themselves as dwellers in a strange land, and feel a burning desire, a feverish longing to return home?
31178or because they do not possess equal rights and privileges with other citizens?
31178or that the slaves shall be defrauded of their just remuneration, less and less every month or every year?
31178or that they shall be under the absolute, irresponsible control of their masters?
31178or who measure the innocent blood which it spills, or the degradation which it imposes, or the guilt which it accumulates?
31178or who reveal the waste of property, the perversion of intellect, the loss of happiness, the burial of mind, to which it is accessary?
31178or who trace its poisonous influence and soul- destroying tendency back for two hundred years down to the end of time?
31178or will it please the villain?
31178that slave- drivers shall apply the lash to the scarred and bleeding backs of their victims somewhat less frequently?
31178that slave- owners shall liberate one, two or three out of every hundred slaves during the same period?
31178those which are founded upon piracy, cruelty and outrage?
31178to whom will ye flee for help?
31178what higher justification could they need?
487941802?]).
48794It might not have survived to this day were it not for his awareness of its importance, as shown in his flyleaf inscription:?
48794Penciled on its front page are the name"Lewis Cass[ Esquire?]"
48794Why not, under these circumstances, give to the people on each side of the Mississippi separate territorial governments?
48794Why should we then divide and distract our people upon questions that they have no voice in determining?
48794[ Footnote 65: See Cyril E. Cain,_ Four Centuries on the Pascagoula_([ State College?
42247Any passengers?
42247Do n''t you_ see_ I''m blind?
42247Does the_ thief_ or_ hangman_ take precedence at executions?
42247How do you, then?
42247How long have you been in Cambridge?
42247How many sacraments are there, sir?
42247How so?
42247How was he to dispose of his_ corpus_?
42247Sir, I expect to be obliged; am I not your master?
42247The same as you had on Wednesday?
42247Una quod es semper, quod semper es optima, Princeps, Quam bene conveniunt hæc duo verba tibi? 42247 Very well, I thank you, sir,"said the wag,"how do you do?"
42247What is it?
42247What, sir,said he, addressing the Doctor,"do you mean to apply that word_ discipline_ to the_ officers_ of the army?
42247Who?
42247Who?
42247Yes, sir( said Gurnay;) and am I not your fellow?
42247_ Apropos_, my lord,exclaimed Harvest, during the meal,"whence do you derive your nick- name of_ Jemmy Twitcher_?"
42247_ Decline!_said the astonished orator;"what do you mean?
42247_ Quips, Quirks, and Anecdotes?_"Aye, that''s_ the_ Book!
42247''That''s a large sum for a philosopher,''observed Dr. Pope;''what would you do with so much?''
42247''Why,''said I,''who is so mad as to wish to be governed by force?
42247( said he) What cryes the University?
42247***** TELL US WHAT YOU CAN''T DO?
42247***** WAS OXFORD OR CAMBRIDGE FIRST FOUNDED?
42247After he had wiped his mouth, and begun to compose himself, Bozzy entreated to know what he was giggling about whilst he eat the mutton?
42247An envious scribe one day there saw him, and mocked his calamity by asking,"If it was not easy to write like a madman?"
42247And then, like Philip, I demand the cause?
42247And two Oxonians were of late PLUCKED AT THEIR DIVINITY EXAMINATION, Because one being asked,"Who was the_ Mediator_, between God and man?"
42247At another time, when asked what he would drink?
42247At the name of Dante, Mr. Gray suddenly turned round to him and said,"Right: but have you read Dante, sir?"
42247But what have we here?"
42247But what then?
42247Dean?"
42247Did he_ chalk double_?
42247Didst ever taste champagne?
42247Dr. Parr once asked the professor,"what he thought of the origin of evil?"
42247During one of these morning or evening calls, Dr. B. observing the embryo physician had but few books in his chambers, asked him"Where was his study?"
42247He one day asked his learned college contemporary, Dr. John Taylor, editor of Demosthenes,"why he talked of selling his horse?"
42247Heard ye the din of dinner bray?
42247Is it so?
42247Is the mealy''prentice fled?
42247Meadly, his biographer, relates, that when asked why he had exchanged his living of Dalston for Stanwix?
42247P.?"
42247PAGE Was Oxford or Cambridge first Founded?
42247Some of Dr. Parr''s hearers, struck with a remarkable passage in his sermon, asked him"Whether he had read it from his book?"
42247The Bishop was not a man to''_ bate_ an iota of his due, and stopped them and asked,"If they knew he was the Vice- Chancellor?"
42247The Vice- Chancellor imagining that he actually_ weighed his ale_, said,"They tell me you sell ale by the pound; is that true?"
42247The composer hummed again,--again Prior hissed the singer, who, enraged at the circumstance, demanded"Why he was subject to such indignity?"
42247The next time he met his friend, he addressed him with,"Well, have you succeeded in finding the_ value of nothing_?"
42247The other being questioned as to"why our Saviour sat on the right hand of God?"
42247This the Vice- Chancellor observed, and asked what he meant by it?
42247Unde mihi distichon?
42247Upon this, one of the party exclaimed,"You have told us a great deal of what you can do,_ tell us something you ca n''t do_?"
42247Walking, soon after he was liberated, in the streets of London, during a heavy shower of_ rain_, he was plied with,"A coach, your reverence?"
42247What cryes the boyes?
42247What cryes the town?
42247What would you more?
42247Where was it in the time of Tarquinius Priscus?
42247Where was it?"
42247Which is denied by Dr. Kippis, in the"Biographia Britannica,"and"when Doctors disagree, who shall decide?"
42247Whilst under examination by the Privy Council, the celebrated Duke of Newcastle, then minister, asked him,"If he were not a bishop?"
42247Why are not_ you_ a doctor?
42247Why should we smother a good thing with_ mystifying dashes_, instead of plain English high- sounding names, when the subject is of"honourable men?"
42247Will not the richness and plenty of the diet he wallowed in very well account for this, without supposing any great number of years of imprisonment?
42247Your simile, I own, is new, But how dost make it out?
42247e._ Sir, what is your pleasure?)
42247exclaimed Mr. H.;"Where to?"
42247exclaimed the other,"how so, Doctor?"
42247he exclaimed, in his significant way,"Shall these dry bones live?"
42247heard ye not yon footsteps dread, That shook the hall with thund''ring tread?
42247how am I to know_ the_ Inn?"
42247is it possible?
42247my man, can you tell me the way to----?"
42247or who is such a fool as to expect to be governed by virtue?
42247price ten guineas?
42247said he, as he sucked something he held in both hands;"_ Fish_, as well as flesh, my good woman?"
42247said the ghost,"what art doing below?"
42247think''st thou you essenced cloud, Raised by thy puff, can vie with_ Nature''s_ hue?
42247what every thing?
42247what we?
48822How was it with the rebels?
48822What was it that made it so still?
48822Who ever heard of a General skirmishing with a wagon train?
48822You may ask, where was Murphy all this time?
43571And pray, sir, who gave you the right to exercise any judgment in the matter?
43571But would Madam Washington come to a ball?
43571In God''s name,he writes to his brother, John Augustine,"how has Samuel managed to get himself so enormously in debt?"
43571Mammy,exclaimed a little Fredericksburg maiden of ten,"what do you think?
43571Oh, is there to be more fighting, more bloodshed? 43571 See here, do you expect to get to heaven?"
43571Sir,exclaimed Franklin,"is Philadelphia taken?"
43571Well, methinks I hear Betsy and Lucy say,''What is cousin''s dress?'' 43571 What did he say?"
43571Why not?
43571Why? 43571 _ Sed quid ego hæc nequicquam ingrata revolvo?_ It is vain to lament that corruption which no human power can prevent or repair."
43571''Does George need horses?''
43571''George,''said his father,''do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry tree yonder in the garden?''
43571( why, indeed?
43571Adams, have you got into your house?
43571And who can tell what heavenly messengers visited this great spirit and ministered unto her?
43571And, while she lived in retirement and in silence, how had great events rushed forward; how had the child become the father to the man?
43571At last with great gravity he asks,''_ What''s this?_''''Do you ask, Sir?''
43571At last with great gravity he asks,''_ What''s this?_''''Do you ask, Sir?''
43571At what point was it punishable?
43571Besides, where were Lawrence and Augustine during all those halcyon years?
43571But how about drunkenness?
43571But how was the aged mother to hear the news?
43571Call you this insensibility?
43571Could any admiring biographer ask more?
43571Could this monstrous woman have held an honored place in a social circle of stately, courteous, cultured people?
43571Do n''t you love walking?"
43571Do n''t you suppose I want to see General Washington?"
43571Do we not know of Miss Mary Philipse, whose father''s manor- house may still be seen on the Hudson?
43571George the Third found only this to say:--"Madam, have you taken a walk to- day?"
43571Had he not been her suitor in her girlhood?
43571Has not some one said"her eyes were blue"?
43571Has the reader ever sought an intelligent definition of the term"society"?
43571How could it be otherwise when Thomas Jefferson prescribed that his daughter''s time should be divided between dancing, music, and French?
43571How else did the colonial dames eat their peas?
43571How far out into the river does your unfortunate master live?"
43571If"hir"did not spell"her,"pray, what did it spell?
43571Is he as big as his sire?"
43571Is not"a shield of pretence"arms which a lord claims and which he adds to his own?
43571No Virginian( for were they not all British subjects?)
43571Pray what have we, my fastidious sisters, done for our country in our day and generation?
43571Pray, how do you like the situation of it?''"
43571Presently the mother forced matters to an issue by asking:"Boys, have you seen my fine sorrel colt lately?
43571Shall the great mammoth of the American forests leave his native element, and plunge into the water in a mad contest with a shark?
43571The title to these arms may have long been extinct-- but who will take the trouble to investigate?
43571Then there were Fashion, Eclipse, Selima, Ariel, Why Not?
43571Think you there was ever a Lady more curious than our Cousin the Squire?
43571This is the amended story:"''What are you doing there with my horses?''
43571Thus it would sometimes happen( and who so willing as the hosts?)
43571Turberville''s?''
43571Was it the"alliance"or the dearly loved beverage of which they had been so long deprived?
43571Was not that all right?
43571Was she responsible for the"hurt of the heart uncurable,"of which he wrote a few months later?
43571Well might he be more afraid of Mrs. Washington even than of his own parents( and what more could he say?
43571Were they not ordinary, commonplace fellows-- their own everyday playmates?
43571What are they worth?
43571What do we know of the mother of Daniel Webster, or John Adams, or Patrick Henry, or Andrew Jackson, or of the mothers of our Revolutionary generals?
43571What said the"Godlike"hero to all this?
43571What time had she-- married at fifteen-- to read or study?
43571Where could he sleep?
43571Who can describe a garden in the Virginia of 1770?
43571Who cares whether Thomas Carlyle liked his chops tender, objected to vermin, or abhorred the crowing of a cock?
43571Who could be majestic in clinging, willowy chiffon?
43571Who was Frances?
43571Who was looking after those lambs while the Shepherd was disporting himself at villas in Cookham?
43571Why do readers never complain of the monotonous round of their travels?
43571Why do we find in every journal of the day long columns filled with the comings and goings, the up- risings and down- sittings of our wealthy classes?
43571Why should he cross the ocean to gather the flower that grew at his threshold?
43571Why should it have been made at all?
43571Why should they not enjoy it?
43571Why take to water where he can neither fight or swim?"
43571With these for companionship, who can be utterly wretched?
43571Would her heart break with the sudden access of joy?
43571Would it be sinister to suggest that the lady was already won?
43571he exclaims,"who besides a Tory or a Briton could have predicted this?
43571or want of ambition?
43571said Lord Dunmore,"has it come to this?"
46476And has not Huxley, with yet keener sarcasm, designated them the_ hetairæ_ of philosophy, so often have they led men astray?
46476Are we again to resuscitate the phantom Teleology, which we had supposed at last safely buried between cross- roads and pinned down with a stake?
46476But hold, cries the scientific inquirer, what in the world are you doing?
46476By what name, then, shall we call this animating principle of the universe, this eternal source of phenomena?
46476Can we regard it as in any wise"material,"or can we speak of its universal and ceaseless activity as in any wise the working of a"blind necessity"?
46476Do I know how the corn sprouts?
46476Does this belief answer to any outward reality?
46476For, as St. Paul reminds us,"who hath known the mind of the Lord, or who hath been his counsellor?"
46476I can not see the wind; but what is it?
46476Is not the belief in God perhaps a dream of the childhood of our race, like the belief in elves and bogarts which once was no less universal?
46476Is there, in the scheme of things, aught that justifies Man in claiming kinship of any sort with the God that is immanent in the world?
46476Of what, then, is it the symbol?
46476Our question, then, becomes, What is this infinite and eternal Power like?
46476The diviners certainly do not give us rain; for how could they do it?
46476Was not Bacon right in characterizing"final causes"as vestal virgins, so barren has their study proved?
46476What are these personified forces but little gods who are supposed to be invading the sacred domain of the ruler Zeus?
46476What kind of language shall we use in describing it?
46476Whence come they-- who sends them?
46476and is not modern science fast destroying the one as it has already destroyed the other?
46476and why do not I see them with my own eyes when they go up to heaven to fetch it?
46476who brings it, makes it blow and roar and terrify us?
49089Where is he?
49089Another man said,"If you will go in I will go with you?"
49089Finally I said,"Well, what about it?"
49089He asked,"Who are you?"
49089He said,"Who are you?"
49089He stooped to feel for it and Brother Isaac asked,"Billy was that you shot?"
49089He then said,"Why in the hell do n''t you boys climb a tree?"
49089I said,"Have you?
49089My first thought was to wake the boys so I called out at the top of my voice,"Who are you?"
49089Nothing could be done but move on, but what was to be done with Robert''s body?
49089Smith saw them first and said to me,"Who is that?"
49089When I had got about ten steps away Fish said to Phelps,"Why do n''t you shoot him?"
49089Who are you?"
3375A little older?
3375And Cynthia? 3375 And have you any bad boys that frighten little girls in your school?"
3375And if I advised not, you would n''t?
3375And is Jeff as well satisfied as the rest?
3375And may I come in when I''m hungry, just as I used to do in Florence, and will you stay me with flagons in the old way?
3375And may we come to your studio to implore your protection?
3375And what''s he goin''to do with his college education?
3375And where do you come in?
3375And would you be willing to settle down here in the country for the rest of your life, and throw away your Harvard training on hotel- keeping?
3375And yet,another lady suggested,"what could Mrs. Marven have done?
3375And you expect me to take what she would n''t have?
3375And you have n''t worked Mr. Whitwell in anywhere?
3375And you think he has talent?
3375And you think,she asked,"that Mr. Durgin will be a good lawyer?
3375And you took it?
3375And you wo n''t forget about the picture?
3375And you''re at Harvard? 3375 Anything else?"
3375At once?
3375Bowdoin or Dartmouth?
3375Breakfast? 3375 Broken shaft?
3375But how did we happen not to see one another?
3375But what''s the hurry? 3375 But why do you confine your ministrations to one sex?"
3375But you do n''t expect hotel prices?
3375But you think I done wrong?
3375Did it get into the papers?
3375Did n''t you know it?
3375Did you?
3375Dinner over?
3375Do I?
3375Do n''t you know it?
3375Do n''t you- care for me?
3375Do n''t you?
3375Do you know them?
3375Do you know what I think of you, Cynthy?
3375Do you think Jeff would come to me, like a great crybaby, and complain of my lady boarders and the way they used him? 3375 Do you think he was bound to do so?"
3375Does Franky cry as much as ever?
3375Does she hate keeping a hotel as badly as she expected?
3375Does she? 3375 Ever seen much of the manifestations?"
3375Favorable opinion?
3375Favorable? 3375 Feel that tinglin''?"
3375Folks trouble you any, lookin''on?
3375Fully? 3375 Glad to get back, I presume?"
3375Go to Switzerland?
3375Has he been telling you?
3375Have I what?
3375Have you been to help Jackson up?
3375Have you come back to Boston for good now? 3375 Have you told your mother?"
3375Have you?
3375Hello?
3375His father''s father?
3375How are you? 3375 How are you?"
3375How is your mother?
3375How much will that be?
3375I hope you did n''t encourage him, Cynthy?
3375I? 3375 If you believe that a disembodied spirit can communicate with you, why not an embodied spirit?
3375In the Place Vendome?
3375Is Jackson as much interested in the other world as he used to be?
3375Is she? 3375 Is that so?
3375Is that so?
3375Is that so?
3375Is there anything else you want, Mr. Westover? 3375 It changes a good deal every year, and you have n''t been here for awhile, have you?"
3375Jackson still believes in the manifestations?
3375Jeff and his mother made their brags to you?
3375Jeff did?
3375Jeff, is that your notion about Jackson, or whose is it?
3375Like it? 3375 No chance of getting my old room, I suppose?"
3375Nor the things it stood for?
3375Now, young man,said the stranger,"will you go and do as you''re bid?
3375Now?
3375Oh, must, you go?
3375Oh, why did n''t you say you''d wait?
3375Old woman read you any of Jeff''s letters?
3375Perhaps the boys have reformed?
3375Plantchette say not?
3375Proof? 3375 Really,"said the lady,"what did they expect?"
3375Really?
3375Say, mother, a''n''t you never goin''to have dinner?
3375She done?
3375Should n''t?
3375Spirits?
3375Strangers at Lion''s Head, I presume?
3375That so? 3375 That so?"
3375That so?
3375That so?
3375That the idee you got?
3375The Vostrands? 3375 Then I''m the founder of your fortunes?"
3375Then you think he''s shown sense in choosin''of her?
3375Then you wanted I should accept him?
3375There a''n''t anything more, is there?
3375Think it''s a kind of chance?
3375To dodge their taxes?
3375Want I should help you get your things?
3375Want I should show you where to sleep?
3375Want to wash?
3375Well, Thomas Jefferson Durgin, will you show me the way to the pump and bring a towel along?
3375Well, mother took it just right, did n''t she? 3375 Well, now, I''m not afraid of anything she can say; and what could she do?
3375Well, sir,said Whitwell, pushing the paper, where he had written the letters in a line, to Westover,"make anything out of''em?"
3375Well,he concluded,"what''s goin''on in them old European countries?"
3375Well?
3375What are those strange things he has got in his hatband?
3375What are you here for, Jeff? 3375 What difference''d it make what I wanted?
3375What do the other fellows do with their Harvard training when they go into business, as nine- tenths of them do? 3375 What do you mean?"
3375What do you say, Cynthia?
3375What had your going back to Harvard to do with it? 3375 What has he got to do with it?"
3375What have you done to make him like you?
3375What hotel?
3375What kind of folks are they?
3375What kind? 3375 What makes you think he is n''t well?"
3375What notion have you got in your head, now?
3375What say?
3375What they got to do with it?
3375What was the rights of that scrape he got into?
3375What would your mother do? 3375 What''s crazy in wanting to go off on a drive and choose your own party?"
3375What''s it say?
3375What''s the matter with plantchette?
3375What''s their republic like, over there? 3375 What''s your name?"
3375Where do you live?
3375Where do you want the things?
3375Whereabouts do you think he''d best go?
3375Why a''n''t it good for her, too?
3375Why are you so hard on me, Cynthy?
3375Why did n''t you tell me sooner?
3375Why did n''t you? 3375 Why do n''t you come down to the house to- night?
3375Why need you say anything about that?
3375Why not yield, then?
3375Why, are you really going?
3375Why, do n''t you SEE?
3375Why, do you intend to go so soon?
3375Why, is that you, Franky? 3375 Why, man, do n''t you believe he''s as much alive as ever he was?"
3375Why, what''s happened?
3375Why?
3375Will you promise that if there''s ever anything like it again, you wo n''t wait for me to make you?
3375Wo n''t that satisfy you?
3375Would n''t you like to see it do some of your sums, Jeff?
3375Would n''t you rather miss him in the management?
3375Yes, you do n''t lose many chances to give me a dig, do you?
3375You do n''t think a doctor can do him much good?
3375You know these folks that Jeff''s so crazy about?
3375You know you do n''t mean that you''d give up your last year in college?
3375You much acquainted with Jefferson''s writin''s?
3375You think that all the college graduates turn out lawyers and doctors and professors? 3375 You think this fellow''s got sense enough to keep a hotel?"
3375You want my rooms?
3375You''re about eighteen?
3375You?
3375After a moment he suggested to Westover:"Then I s''pose, if you feel the way you do, you do n''t care much about plantchette?"
3375And his going out on a cattle- steamer?"
3375And if she asked me whether I''d known it all along, and I had to say I had, and that I''d supported and encouraged you in it, how should I feel?"
3375And that column that they, pulled down in the Commune that had that little Boney on it-- see that?"
3375Any call to show them any particular attention?"
3375Are those your children?"
3375At the end of their polite expressions he asked Jeff again:"What did you say the name was?"
3375At the gasps which Westover gave, with some despairing glances at the closed windows, Whitwell said:"Hot?
3375Big-- that is, to the naked eye, as you may say?"
3375But I should like to prowl round some them places where they had the worst scenes of the Revolution, Ever been in the Place de la Concorde?"
3375But it was quite a coincidence, do n''t you think?
3375But what are you in such a hurry to have mother know for?
3375But why in the world do people go out of town so early?
3375But you do n''t suppose that keeping a summer hotel would mean living in the country the whole time, do you?
3375But----""Well?"
3375Did I take you by surprise?"
3375Did n''t you know we were going to sail in June?
3375Did you ever see anything like it?
3375Did you prepare there?"
3375Did-- did your-- What did you say--""How should I know what I said?
3375Do n''t you feel ashamed of yourself?"
3375Do n''t you like her looks?"
3375Do n''t you see they''re gone?
3375Do n''t you think he ought to have a doctor?"
3375Do n''t you think so, Mr. Westover?
3375Do you expect to be there right along?"
3375Do you like it?"
3375Do you suppose I want to live on mother till I''m forty?
3375Do you suppose they are all schoolteachers?
3375Do you think mother''s ever noticed it?"
3375Do you think you will dislike it?"
3375Durgin?"
3375Durgin?"
3375Ever been in Europe?"
3375Ever noticed how a man on the mean side in politics always knows how to keep a hotel?
3375Franky look after you pretty well?
3375Got everything else you want?"
3375Growin''any?"
3375Have a good voyage?"
3375Have n''t you noticed it?"
3375Have you just tasted it?"
3375He came back and asked,"That do?
3375He cleared his throat before he asked:"Has Mr. Westover been saying anything about me?"
3375He said, almost immediately:"Lookin''at my almanac?
3375He seemed impelled by a sudden need to say,"How do you think Jefferson and mother will make it out together?"
3375He waited tranquilly for them to come up, and then asked, with a wave of his hand toward Westover:"Acquainted with Mr. Westover, the attist?"
3375How are you?"
3375How much do you want?"
3375How you gittin''along with Lion''s Head?
3375How''d New York look, after Paris?"
3375How''s Fox?"
3375I do n''t quite know what to do about it, do you?"
3375I have n''t heard from them for a year; not since-- You knew Genevieve was married?"
3375I presume Mr. Whitwell spoke to you about my father?"
3375I suppose,"he ended, unexpectedly,"that you hear from them, now and then?"
3375I-- I do n''t know what to say--""Why do n''t you let me have it, then?
3375If anything has happened to your brother''s ship, his mind would be strongly on you at home, and why could n''t it convey its thought to you?"
3375Is Cynthia at home?"
3375Is it so big as they let on?
3375Is n''t he very young?"
3375Is n''t it too bad he has to go back to college when it''s so pleasant in the country?"
3375Is this corn- bread-- that you''ve told me about so much?"
3375It wo n''t matter how long he stays--""What are you talking about, Jeff Durgin?"
3375Jackson came in presently with the little Canuck, whom Whitwell presented to Westover:"Know Jombateeste?"
3375Jeff say I needed a rest?"
3375Jeff tell you he had been at Lovewell Academy?"
3375Jeff, what was the name of that French boat you said you crossed on?
3375Jombateeste?"
3375Matches, or soap, or anything?"
3375Mr. Westover, is that you?"
3375Mr. Westover, may I trust you with something?"
3375Mrs. Durgin listened frowningly, but not disapprovingly, as it seemed; though at the end she asked:"And what am I going to do, with Jackson gone?"
3375Of course, you do n''t think of leaving Lion''s Head?"
3375Old woman talk to you about Jeff''s going to college?
3375Or is it their glasses?"
3375Ours?
3375Paris strike you the same way?"
3375Perhaps you wo n''t have room for me?"
3375Read you what he said about them scenes of the Revolution in Paris?"
3375See anything of it, how it works?"
3375Sets quiet enough for you?"
3375She added, sharply:"And did he expect to tell me what he intended to do for a livin''?"
3375She must have meant something, and if I could find out the name of the ship-- Tell the ladies about it?"
3375She stopped at the door of a room he had not seen yet, and looked out at him to ask:"Wo n''t you come in and set in the parlor if you want to?"
3375Suppose she asked you how long you had made up your mind against the law, how should you feel?
3375That a good climate for the-- his complaint?"
3375That he will- distinguish himself?"
3375That what you done?"
3375That''s about where it is?
3375The meanyous?
3375The young man waited till they were within whispering distance of each other, and then he gasped:"Where you been?"
3375Then you are-- are you a son of the house?"
3375They do n''t keep any record at Harvard, do they, of the way fellows are prepared for their preliminary examinations?"
3375They were both silent till the painter asked:"What do you do here when you''re not trying to scare little children to death?"
3375Treat you pretty well up at the Durgins''?
3375Vostrand?"
3375Vostrand?"
3375Well, now them Alps, now-- they so much bigger''n the White Hills, after all?"
3375Well, you see some changes about Lion''s Head, I presume?"
3375Westover almost feared to ask:"And how is Jackson?"
3375Westover laughed and asked:"And Fox?
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375Westover?"
3375What about a week''s board?"
3375What about waves runnin?
3375What did she do?
3375What did she say?"
3375What do you care for that?
3375What do you say to seven for a single week?"
3375What do you think of it, father?"
3375What do you think, Jackson?
3375What do you think?"
3375What good will it do to put it off?
3375What had it got to do with our being engaged?"
3375What would she do this winter?"
3375What''s that?"
3375What''s the need of doing it right off?"
3375What''s the reason India would n''t be as good for him as Egypt, anyway?"
3375What''s the use?
3375When I sent you my card, we were merely birds of passage, and now I do n''t know but we are-- What is the opposite of birds of passage?"
3375Whether Whitwell felt an ironic slant in the words or not, he paused a moment before he said:"Want to start her up, Jackson?"
3375Whitwell asked, after a moment''s impatience:"Ca n''t you git her down to business, Jackson?"
3375Whitwell asked:"Why, do n''t you think there''s any proof of it?"
3375Whitwell returned from his scientific inquiry to ask:"How''ll she take it?"
3375Whitwell?"
3375Who remembers him, or cares for him, or ever did?
3375Who''s going to support me?
3375Why did n''t you expect it?"
3375Why do n''t you tell her yourself?"
3375Why do you act so?"
3375Will you?"
3375Will you?"
3375Wo n''t you sit down?"
3375You believe it''s inhabited, do n''t you?"
3375You do n''t believe it?
3375You do n''t know where Mrs. Vostrand is going to be this winter, I suppose?"
3375You may take my word for it, though?
3375You remember Jombateeste?"
3375You seen Cynthy yet?"
3375You think that because I''ve been at Harvard-- Oh, ca n''t I make you see it?
3375You think there''d be any chance of my gettin''summer folks to come here and board if I was to put an advertisement in a Boston paper?
3375You''ll come?
3375You''ll see''t plantchette''ll have something more to say about it: Heigh, Jackson?"
3375You''re not afraid of me, are you?
3375You''ve heard about Chicago growing?"
3375and"Are you going up Lion''s Head to- day?"
3375and"Do n''t you think it will rain?"
3375her voice broke off to call after him as he hurried by,"Wo n''t you come in here a minute?"
3375mountains high?"
45353''And why not?'' 45353 ''How can the choice of subject be absolutely unrestricted?''
45353Dorothy Qdevotes thirty- two lines to the quaint fancy"What would I be if one of my eight great, great grandmothers had married another man?"
45353Suppose,said the doctor,"I had n''t found her a good woman, should I have told her to hold her tongue?"
45353Waldo, why are you not here?
45353Well, did n''t they listen to you, that time?
45353*****"And after that?"
45353And so he wrote: What, then, is the American, this new man?
45353And the first reaction to such teaching is to ask with shocked disapproval,"What would happen to the world if all men followed his advice?"
45353And were not_ they_ knit together by a higher logic than our mere senses could master?
45353And will you cloud the muse?
45353And will you scorn them all, to pour forth tame And heartless lays of feigned or fancied sighs?
45353Are passages in which it suddenly appears the result of forethought or merely the result of whim?
45353Are there any points in common?
45353Are you?"
45353BALTIMORE SATURDAY VISITER, 1833----(?).
45353Because one half of humankind Lives here in hell, shall not the other half Do any more than just for conscience''sake Be miserable?
45353But suppose she had missed it from the Creed As a child misses the unsaid Good- night, And falls asleep with heartache-- how should I feel?
45353But why should you keep your head over your shoulder?
45353Can you cite political events and characters and novels or plays on political life which belong to this period?
45353DEMOCRATIC REVIEW, THE UNITED STATES, 1837- 1859(?).
45353Do either or both throw light on the chief characters discussed in this chapter?
45353Do his writings give evidence of patriotism in the usual sense of the word?
45353Do the dates of the three poems suggest a progressive change?
45353Do these throw any light on the history of his neighborhoods and his period or are they purely personal in their interest?
45353Do they droop and end their lesson, wearied, over there beyond the seas?
45353Do you find a distinction between Mark Twain''s attitude toward religion and his attitude toward religious people?
45353Does Mark Twain''s consistent interest in history appear in his writing through the use of allusion and comparison?
45353Does Stedman''s own verse confirm the theory of his criticisms of Whitman?
45353Does the poem fulfill Lanier''s intentions?
45353Does this list include any personal lyrics?
45353Emerson visited him at the jail, where ensued the historic exchange of questions:"Henry, why are you here?"
45353From 1844(?)
45353Has any other educated person lived so many years and lost so many days?"
45353How far does he rely upon the symbol in any one of his more effective shorter stories?
45353If asked what was left?
45353In 1819 Sidney Smith''s contemptuous and famous query,"Who reads an American book?"
45353In 1902 he wrote: Shall we ever have an American literature?
45353Is all this to be at end?
45353Is it more like Emerson''s or Lowell''s, more like Whitman''s or Longfellow''s?
45353Is it not well, therefore, that, sharing none of its pleasures and happiness, I should be free of its fatalities, its brevity?
45353Is there a connecting unity in these passages?
45353Is there a legitimate connection to be mentioned between Gilder''s poems on civic themes and the movement for better citizenship in the 1890''s?
45353Is there any clear reason for this common dissent?
45353Is there any real likeness between Thoreau and Whitman in these respects?
45353Is there evidence that he was affected by Shakespeare''s poetic form?
45353Is this golden band of kindred sympathies, so rare between nations, to be broken forever?
45353Is this the way for us To lead these creatures up to find the light, Or the way to be drawn down to find the dark Again?
45353It is nearly a century and a half since he tried to answer the question"What is an American?"
45353NEW YORK REVIEW AND ATHENÆUM MAGAZINE, THE,(?)-1827.
45353Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea?
45353Or had they some, but with our Queen is''t gone?
45353Read Zangwill''s play"The Melting Pot"in the light of this letter on"What is an American?"
45353Read the letter entitled"What is an American?"
45353Shall I raise the siege of this hen coop, and march baffled away to a pretended siege of Babylon?"
45353Suppose you should contradict yourself; what then?...
45353The next New Englander to give proof that the Puritans were not having an easy time in their"new English Canaan"was Nathaniel Ward( 1578- 1652?
45353These can be supplemented by his own article in the_ Independent_ on"What is Poetry?"
45353To what objects of satire does he most frequently revert?
45353Were we enthusiasts?
45353What can my anger do but cease?
45353What company has that lonely lake, I pray?...
45353What is the likeness in the general drift of the two and what are the essential differences in the treatments of the theme?
45353What is wrong with the American drama?
45353Whitman wrote fairly in a letter:"The book is therefore unprecedently sad( as these days are, are they not?
45353Who can listen unmoved to the sweet love- tales of our robins, told from tree to tree, or to the shrill cat- birds?
45353Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race?
45353Who knows?"
45353Whom shall I fight and who shall be my enemy When he is I and I am he?
45353Why drag about this corpse of your memory, lest you contradict somewhat you have stated in this or that public place?
45353Why should Tamenund stay?
45353a newer page In the great record of the world is thine; Shall it be fairer?
45353is it well To leave the gates unguarded?
45353nor blush for shame To cast away renown, and hide your head from fame?
45353or have they none?
45353sings of America for the world, with its thrillingly prophetic fourth stanza, Have the elder races halted?
45353what we carried home?
47208''What do you mean?'' 47208 ''What have you heard?''
47208C. M. T.WHAT IS BEAUTY?
47208''In God''s name, what do you mean?''
47208Allan honor his father an''his mother?''
47208An''what''s de love of earth ter dat waitin''for me, sinful an''onworthy though I am?
47208And why need we copy the Doric or the Gothic model?
47208Another time, when she was five years old, she was asked:''For what was Abraham blessed?''
47208Before the war, Sydney Smith''s cutting question might have been answered with greater suggestion of truth in the form,"who reads a Southern book?"
47208But why had it ever been made the boundary of Florida?
47208Can not hopes that await you here loosen the tether Which a birthright descended has cast over you?
47208Could Gordon have been taken ill?
47208Could he even be dead?
47208Did Jones County Secede?
47208Do n''t you know dat joy itse''f is sometimes more dan a breakin''heart kin bear?
47208Do you remember how my Lilian exhausted her raptures after the first layer of her box, and sat afterwards in a mute adoring ecstasy?
47208Has the slave no rights because he is deprived of his freedom?
47208How did she accomplish it?
47208How was the difficulty to be solved?
47208Is there nothing of this kind in Mississippi that is worthy of loving care and devotion to public use?
47208Kin you say it over ter me?"
47208Must it still a secret be?
47208Naughty Katie, saucy Katie, Is your secret aught to me That you hide it, nor divide it, In a tree?
47208Need I say that the significance of this historical movement in our literature is vital and profound for every man and woman before me?
47208Returning from this digression, the question may be asked, when was Nanih Waiya built, who were its builders, and how long was it in building?
47208Was there an accident on the journey?
47208Was there ever a gift so delicately bestowed?
47208Where the moon its arrows slid, Piping forth with cunning glances, Katie did, Katie did n''t, Yes, she did, No, she did n''t, Katie did?
47208Where was the State, under such control, that showed even a trace of honest, intelligent government?
47208Why do you torture me?''
47208Why, wusn''t my arms de fust ter hol''him-- a little soft helpless innocent-- even before you held him to yo''own mother''s heart?
47208Will you tell it, Katie, never?
47208cried the old woman,''Ai n''t you got yo''ole nuss to love you an''pet you?''
47208do you want to break my heart?
47208what''s de flowers here ter de flowers in de gyardin younder?
47208what''s de sunlight of earth to de glory roun''de throne of God?
5019Is it to be conceived that such immense powers would have been left by the framers of the Constitution to mere inferences and doubtful constructions?
5019Shall the dissimilarity of the domestic institutions in the different States prevent us from providing for them suitable governments?
49393''Then,''said he,''where are the primers?''
49393Finally, under which of the old tyrannical governments of Europe is every sixth man a slave, whom his fellow citizens may buy and sell and torture?"
49393He said:"What is war?
49393He suddenly showed himself breast- high, whooping in derision, and said,''Why do n''t you shoot?''
49393How is a battle gained?
49393Sydney Smith wrote in the_ Edinburgh Review_:"In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book?
49393Were the spoils less rigidly exacted by a seventy- four- gun ship than by a privateer of four guns?
49393What difference to the sufferer is it that his property is taken by a national or private armed vessel?
49393What does the world yet owe to American physicians or surgeons?
49393What have they done in mathematics?
49393What new constellations have been discovered by the telescopes of Americans?
49393What new substances have their chemists discovered, or what old ones have they analyzed?
49393What produces peace?
49393Who carries on the war?
49393Who drinks out of American glasses, or eats from American plates, or wears American coats or gowns, or sleeps in{ 351}American blankets?
49393``` When, for the wrongs that were,```` Hath she lilted a single stave?
49393and were not all equally condemned?
49393or goes to an American play?
49393or looks at an American picture or statue?
42526''Did Lincoln give you an order of that kind?'' 42526 ''Did Stanton say I was a d-- d fool?''
42526''Do you mean to say the President is a d-- d fool?'' 42526 ''That is too true,''he replied,''but how can we prevent it?''
42526''Well, what is it?'' 42526 Do you remember, Mr. President, a request from a stranger a few days since for your autograph?
42526Do you see those papers stuffed into those pigeonholes?
42526Have you any orders?
42526Now, gentlemen,he said,"if I can not enforce the Constitution down South, how can I enforce a mere Presidential proclamation?
42526Oh, that''s the trick, is it?
42526So you think I better put those two little fellows end to end, do you?
42526What do you mean by leg cases, sir?
42526What do you mean, madam?
42526What does this mean?
42526What is it about?
42526What is your height?
42526What shall be done with him?
42526Who is Captain McClellan and why is he not here?
42526Who is Henry Knox?
42526Why is not the company ready to go to trial?
42526Will you keep it entirely secret?
42526''Halloo, Dana,''said he, as I opened the door,''what is it now?''
42526''How is that?''
42526''Well,''said Mr. Lincoln,''don''t you think this is an almighty small crop of fight to gather from such a big piece of ground?''
42526''What does Stanton say?''
42526''Why did n''t you follow them up and kill the rest?''
42526''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks out to the steamer?''
42526A Senator who noticed an expression of anxiety and dejection upon his face, inquired,--"Has anything gone wrong, Mr. President?
42526A few months later Lincoln wrote Johnston again in regard to his contemplated move to Missouri:"What can you do in Missouri better than here?
42526After a few moments''thought he said,''Well, gentlemen, do n''t you think I have honestly earned twenty- five dollars?''
42526After the trial one of his friends came to him and said,--"Why did n''t you get that feller to swar on your side?"
42526And what do you think his ideas of a good education were?
42526As he was about to sign the pardon, he turned to Lamon, saying,--"Lamon, do you know how the Patagonians eat oysters?"
42526As soon as I arrived Baker hurried to me, saying,''How is it?
42526As soon as he had uttered the last word, Mr. Lincoln asked eagerly,--"Mr. Blank, how tall are you?"
42526But how?
42526But these college- trained men, who have devoted their whole lives to study, are coming West, do n''t you see?
42526But what next?
42526But who is so perfect or so wise as to judge Abraham Lincoln?
42526Can you there, any more than here, raise corn and wheat and oats without work?
42526Could you not break him?"
42526Did anybody here witness that warlike proceeding?
42526Did anybody in this audience hear him use such language?
42526Do n''t you see it?"
42526Do you believe you could bear that patiently?
42526During his interview with the President he complained of this, and Lincoln remarked,--"You have had hard luck in Baltimore, have n''t you, Garrison?
42526Has a man what''s been elected justice of the peace a right to issue a marriage license?''
42526Have you heard bad news from Fort Sumter?"
42526He recognized her, and, with a pleasant smile, said,--"''Well, my dear, have you seen the Secretary?''
42526I have never had much to do with bishops where I live, but, do you know?
42526I said to him,--"''Is it known that you ride thus alone at night out to the Soldiers''Home?''
42526I said,''Do you mean to say that you never tasted it?''
42526I wonder who he is?"
42526If Almighty God gives a man a cowardly pair of legs, how can he help their running away with him?"
42526In the midst of a bombardment at Fort Donelson, why could not a gunboat run up and destroy the bridge at Clarksville?
42526Is he an abolitionist or a Whig?"
42526Is the land any richer?
42526It was too big to haul out, too knotty to split, and too wet and soggy to burn; what did you do?"
42526Lincoln, I come to you to know whether the public interest will permit you to explain to me what this Southern commission means?
42526Lincoln, wo n''t you help us?
42526Lincoln?"
42526Lincoln?"
42526Looking gravely at his visitor, whose head was very bald, he remarked,--"Did you ever try this stuff for your hair?"
42526Mr. Chase, wo n''t you make a draft of what you think ought to be inserted?"
42526Mr. Lincoln had observed this, and as soon as he was seated he said to Major Eckert,''What is the woman crying about just outside your door?
42526Mr. Lincoln said,--"''What shall I do?
42526Mr. Stanton stated the reasons why it should be retained, and before deciding the question Mr. Lincoln turned to me, saying,--"''Well, Dana?''
42526Nasby?''
42526Now, do n''t you see what kind of a fix I will be in if I interfere?
42526Now, have any of you heard of any machine or invention for preventing the escape of gas from newspaper establishments?"
42526Now, my friends, can this country be saved on that basis?
42526Now, what I want to know is, how are you going to pay my bill?"
42526One man whispered to the boy as he went by,''Look here, boy, hain''t that horse got splints?''
42526President?''
42526The President appeared to be attracted to the lad, and asked,''And who is the little boy?''
42526The proposition irritated Judge Douglas, who, with his usual arrogance, inquired,--"What does Lincoln represent in this campaign?
42526The question is, Will it be wiser to take it as it is, and help to improve it, or to reject and disperse it?
42526The worthy farmer, greatly astonished, exclaimed,"Is that Old Abe?
42526These were often disconcerted by the President''s loud and hearty,''Well, friend, what can I do for you?''
42526This being explained to the President, he said, in his frank, off- hand way,''Come, now, let''s send her down: what do you say?''
42526Was it possible to lose the nation and yet preserve the Constitution?
42526What are you talking about?''
42526What do you think of it?''
42526What ought to be done?
42526When I delivered the letter, Mr. Lincoln read it carefully and handed it back to me, saying,--"''What is the matter between Blair and Stanton?''
42526When asked''How?''
42526Who can say, after looking at it, that New Hampshire''s only product is granite?''"
42526Who would have thought when we were married that I should so soon be called upon to save my country?"
42526Why not send them all down there to dig the canal?
42526Will anybody there, any more than here, do your work for you?
42526Will you make that promise and try to keep it?''"
42526Will you not for me take that place?
42526Wo n''t you speak to him for me?''
42526Would it not be possible to export them to some place, say Liberia or South America, and organize them into communities to support themselves?''
42526You know how that Illinois farmer managed the big log that lay in the middle of his field?
42526how can I have a butcher''s day every Friday in the Army of the Potomac?''"
42526said they,"how did you do it?
42526shall there any man be put to death this day in Israel?"
49777Giraffe, Hold your, sir?
49777Going far?
49777What are the wild Waves saying?
49777Dombey, Paul, and Florence--"What are the wild Waves saying?"
49777FROGS:--The poor little Frog escapes from its Enemies, 309; Frog on Toad- Stool--"I wonder duz my Mudder want me?
49777Goose, Who''s afraid of a?
49777How far can you swim?
49777How shall I make a Living?
49777PAUL GRAYSON, WHO WAS?
49777PAUL GRAYSON, WHO WAS?
49777PENELOPE:--Mrs. Bruce asks a Favor, 668; The old- fashioned Hand Screen, 684;"Penelope-- is it Penelope?"
49777Sparrows on Table--"Have we killed him?"
49777Swimming, 649;"How far can you swim?"
49777TIM AND TIP:--Tim shows the Mark of Captain Babbige''s Whip, 625; Peppermint or Lemon?
49777Was the Day a Failure?
49777What are the wild Waves saying?
49777Whittington, Richard, 610. Who got the Mitten?
49777Why, And?
49360And so has Austrian Moritz here-- haven''t you, old fellow?
49360But who''s to get it?
49360Ca n''t we get a boat, an''go''way round to the other side of the island, where nobody lives?
49360Can you see him?
49360Did n''t you hear me say that the boat had left the dock? 49360 Rita,"again exclaimed Ni- ha- be,"what are they?"
49360Traders?
49360Were they miners?
49360Wha-- wha-- wha''ll I do?
49360What are you doing here?
49360What is it?
49360Did that best of grandmas show her how?
49360Have any of you ever watched the wrigglers in your mother''s barrel of rain- water, and have you seen them change to mosquitoes?
49360Have you added some of them to a cabinet where all the members of your society can enjoy them?
49360Have you been successful in finding facts for your societies, and securing specimens for their collections?
49360How are you progressing with your studies in natural history?
49360How could any human being have cast away in the wilderness such a treasure?
49360Loula and Bessie M. sent beautiful little letters; and do n''t we wish we could see Beauty and Topsy, and go with the girls to watch Ponto swim?
49360Ni- ha- be?"
49360Perhaps you''re runnin''this craft, and are goin''to take her out on a fishin''cruise?"
49360Then I said,"How came you to lose your pocket- book?
49360Those of you who have staid at home, plodding on in the same old paths, have you noticed anything wonderful there?
49360Was there a hole in your pocket?"
49360Were there any white women?
49360What are they?"
49360What do you think of that?"
49360What shall I do?"
49360Who ever heard of their being beautiful?"
49360Who need care If I just-- bang her hair?"
49360Will John B. T. please tell us how he preserves spiders for the cabinet?
49360_ Ca n''t_ you get it somehow?"
49360ca n''t you really, Karl?"
49360cried a voice beneath my window early one( cape in New Jersey) morning,"do you want to go( lake in Canada) with me?"
45631And did n''t take it?
45631And your wife''s name before her marriage?
45631Are you going without a pass?
45631Captain, where''s Platt?
45631D''ye hear that?
45631Did n''t I tell you last night to get a keg of nails of Chapin?
45631Did you ever live there?
45631Did you write a letter for a colored man at that place to some gentleman in Saratoga Springs?
45631Do you see those pine trees yonder?
45631Hav''nt you asked that fellow, Armsby, to mail a letter for you at Marksville?
45631Have you a family?
45631He is rather a smart boy, ai n''t he?
45631How came you here?
45631How do you like_ tanning_?
45631How do you like_ tanning_?
45631How do you think you''ll get there?
45631How long have you owned this plantation,_ say_, you d----d nigger?
45631How would you like to work for me?
45631I say, who wrote that letter?
45631Now, then,inquired one of Tibeats''companions,"where shall we hang the nigger?"
45631Platt, do you know this gentleman?
45631Platt, you lying nigger,_ have_ I?
45631So, Platt, you''re tired of scraping cotton, are you? 45631 Stop a moment,"said he;"have you any other name than Platt?"
45631Wan''t you over to Shaw''s night before last?
45631Well, boy, where did you come from?
45631Well, how''s this?
45631Well, my boy, how do you feel now?
45631What did you say to Pats?
45631What is her_ price_? 45631 What is the matter with the nails?"
45631What is the matter?
45631What is your name?
45631What were your children''s names?
45631When did you last see him, and where is he?
45631Where are you going now, Platt?
45631Where do your niggers hold Christmas?
45631Where does William Ford live?
45631Where does he live?
45631Where does that gentleman live?
45631Where?
45631Which is the way to his place?
45631Who are you? 45631 Who are you?"
45631Who married you?
45631Who shipped_ that_ nigger?
45631Why, Platt, what put that into your head?
45631You have seen none of those in this part of the country, I presume?
45631You worked under Myers at Peter Tanner''s, did n''t you?
45631You''re the nigger,he said to me on my arrival--"You''re the nigger that flogged your master, eh?
45631Your name is Platt, is it?
45631''He that is writing for me--''Where did Bass work last summer?"
45631Ah, yes-- like to travel for your health, may be?
45631And what difference is there in the color of the soul?
45631Are all men created free and equal as the Declaration of Independence holds they are?"
45631But this question of_ Slavery_; what_ right_ have you to your niggers when you come down to the point?"
45631Did''nt he want you to hire him for an overseer?"
45631Goin''wid''em?
45631He must take me for a soft, to think he can come it over me with them kind of yarns, musn''t he?
45631How could I write a letter without any ink or paper?
45631How did you happen to get here?
45631If they do n''t know as much as their masters, whose fault is it?
45631Is every thing right because the law allows it?
45631It runneth as follows:"Who''s been here since I''ve been gone?
45631Now you d----d nigger,"he exclaimed,"why did you not tell me that when I bought you?"
45631Now, in the sight of God, what is the difference, Epps, between a white man and a black one?"
45631Now, who is it?"
45631O, de lor'', did''nt Platt pick his feet right up, tho'', hey?
45631Pointing towards Northup, standing a few rods distant, he demanded--"Do you know that man?"
45631Pray, what is it?"
45631So you''re going into the tanning business?
45631Soon Arthur would rejoin his family, and have the satisfaction of seeing his wrongs avenged: my family, alas, should I ever see them more?
45631Suppose they''d pass a law taking away your liberty and making you a slave?"
45631Talk about black skin, and black blood; why, how many slaves are there on this bayou as white as either of us?
45631They are held in bondage, generation after generation, deprived of mental improvement, and who can expect them to possess much knowledge?
45631Walking up to Bob, the sheriff inquired:"Where''s the boy they call Platt?"
45631We were busily at work in the afternoon, when I stopped suddenly and said--"Master Bass, I want to ask you what part of the country you came from?"
45631Were the events of the last few weeks realities indeed?--or was I passing only through the dismal phases of a long, protracted dream?
45631What had I done to deserve imprisonment in such a dungeon?
45631What have you got to say to that, ha?"
45631What was the meaning of these chains?
45631What would become of me?
45631What would become of them?
45631Where was I?
45631Where were Brown and Hamilton?
45631While hoeing by the side of Patsey, she exclaimed, in a low voice, suddenly,"Platt, d''ye see old Hog- Jaw beckoning me to come to him?"
45631Whither should I fly?
45631Who would befriend me?
45631Why could they not be purchased together?
45631Why do n''t you come forward?"
45631Why had I not died in my young years-- before God had given me children to love and live for?
45631Why not let her have one of her dear children?
45631Wonder if you know who he is?"
45631You would like to change your master, eh?
45631You''d call them feller citizens, I s''pose?"
45631You''re a''portant character-- you''re a great nigger-- very remarkable nigger, ai n''t ye?
45631You''re fond of moving round-- traveler-- ain''t ye?
45631You''re the nigger that kicks, and holds carpenter Tibeats by the leg, and wallops him, are ye?
45631_ Buy_ her?"
45631and"What is coming off to- night, Platt?"
45631what d''ye think?
45631what have you been doing up there?"
45631what''ll become of me?"
45634And now, how do you like this?
45634And what are they made of?
45634But why did n''t you come in to dinner?
45634Cadmus, what means this? 45634 Did you find it?"
45634Do n''t you see?
45634Do you find it good?
45634How does it sound with me?
45634Is it good?
45634Is this where you live?
45634So you are going to kill me?
45634What did the cannibals do to you?
45634Why do you say that?
45634Why is your wife crying?
45634Why not come now and have supper with me?
45634Why not come with me?
45634You bad boys,said their father,"have you come here?"
45634''Oh,''said he in answer,''the bear understood me very well; did you not observe how ashamed he looked while I was upbraiding him?''"
45634), Cauchi( Nacoochee?
45634A close parallel to the Cherokee story is found among the Nisqualli of Washington, in a story of three[ four?]
45634About the year 1700 Lawson estimated them at 1,200 warriors( 6,000 souls?)
45634According to Haywood, an aged Cherokee chief, named the Little Cornplanter( Little Carpenter?
45634According to tradition a party of Spaniards advancing into the mountains was attacked here by the Cherokee, who threw one of them( dead?)
45634Ani''sgaya''yi--"Men town"(?
45634Another spring(?)
45634Are you hungry?"
45634Are you the fellow they call Flint?"
45634As he listened one said to the other,"Where''s the water?
45634At the governor''s suggestion, one chief, called Wrosetasatow(?)
45634But how could they join the birds when they had no wings?
45634Canogacole(?).
45634From here a trail went northward to Guatari, Sauxpa, and Usi, i. e., the Wateree, Waxhaw( or Sissipahaw?
45634From there they followed"along the mountains"to Tocax( Toxaway?
45634Ge`yagu''ga( for Age''hya- guga?)
45634Gûlsadihi''( or Gûltsadihi''?)
45634He kept on running and jumping up at the vine until the Deer came along and asked him what he was doing?
45634He saw the queer black thing by the well and said,"Who''s there?"
45634He was almost dead with fear, and said,"What kind of horrible place is this?
45634His wife, whose name was Cuhtahlatah( Gatûñ''lati,"Wild- hemp"?
45634In one version of the story the medicine- man uses a long udâ''i or cohosh( Actæa?)
45634In the Creek story,"The Lion[ Panther?]
45634In the night a voice spoke to the younger woman,"Is that where you are resting?"
45634In the night when two Pins met, and one asked the other,''Who are you?''
45634John Ax says the pregnancy was brought about by the"Little People,"Yuñwi Tsunsdi'', who commanded the woman to rub spittle( of the brother?)
45634Leaving Otariyatiqui, they went on to Quinahaqui, and then, turning to the left, to Issa, where they found mines of crystal( mica?).
45634Meherrin?.
45634One Cherokee informant told Hagar( see above) that"Thunder is a horned snake(?
45634Ross(?
45634Said the old man to his wife,"Well, what luck did you have?"
45634See number 19. ha''tlû-- dialectic form, ga''tsû,"where?"
45634Shall we go home now like cowards, or shall we raise the war whoop and let the Seneca know that we are men?"
45634Suddenly the old woman said to her husband,"Who is over in the corner?"
45634Tali''wa-- the site of a traditional battle between the Cherokee and Creeks about 1755, on Mountain(?)
45634Tennessee river was crossed at Tuckers(?)
45634The Muscogee, Alabama, Koasati, Hichitee, and Taskigi(?)
45634The Period of Spanish Exploration--1540-?
45634The cow- ant( Myrmica?
45634The first incident is paralleled in a Creek story of the Rabbit and the Lion( Panther?)
45634The giga- tsuha''`li("bloody mouth,"Pleistodon?)
45634The hunter had killed a deer and had the meat drying over the fire, so he said,"What kind do they want?"
45634The large horned beetle( Dynastes tityus?)
45634The man thought again,"How can I get anything to eat?"
45634The name was originally applied to a mountain to the northeast( Rock mountain?
45634The poisonous wild parsnip( Peucedanum?)
45634The snapping beetle( Alaus oculatus?)
45634Then his mother said,"You say you had dinner there?"
45634There was also, for a time, a"Pretty- woman town"( Ani''-Gilâ''hi?).
45634These three subtribes were:( 1) The Minsi or Munsee( people of the"stony country"?
45634They sat down in a corner, but soon the bears scented the hunter and began to ask,"What is it that smells bad?"
45634Ukte''na--"Keen- eyed(?)"
45634Uyâhye is also a peak of the Great Smokies, while Gâtegwâ''hi,"Great swamp or thicket(?
45634What luck did you have?"
45634When inquiring as to the sex of the new arrival the Cherokee asks,"Is it a bow or a( meal) sifter?"
45634When the hunter had despatched the bear, I asked him how he thought that poor animal could understand what he said to it?
45634Where are both thy shoulders and thy hands?
45634Where are thy feet?
45634Where is thy color?
45634While standing on a hill overlooking the valley he saw several Cherokee on an opposite hill, and called out to them,"Do you still own Cowee?"
45634Why do n''t he wait?
45634[ 152] Martin(?)
45634[ 204] Foote(?
45634[ 542] In a Jicarilla myth a somewhat similar incident is related of the Fox( Coyote?)
45634[ 69] Meadows(?
45634and, while I speak, where all else besides?"
45634are you here again?"
45634dasûñ''tali-- ant; dasûñ''tali atatsûñ''ski,"stinging ant,"the large red cow- ant( Myrmica?
45634ga''tsû ga''tsû ha''tlû how much?
45634hila''gû?--how many?
45634how much?
45634nakwisi''usdi''--"little star"; the puff ball fungus( Lycoperdon?).
45634or,"Is it ballsticks or bread?"
45634the reply or pass was,''Tahlequah-- who are you?''
45634udâ''i-- the baneberry or cohosh vine( Actæa?).
34754''Can you aid me?"
34754''Which side?"
34754''Who are you?"
34754''Whose house is this?"
34754''You are a royalist?"
34754''And who is your master?'' 34754 ''And who''s_ me_?''
34754''And you Olinska; you have disregarded our wishes, and thrown the gallant admiral overboard?'' 34754 ''Are you then so insensible to----''"''Will you give me five thousand doblas for her?''
34754''Brother Dominique, are you mad?'' 34754 ''Brother Dominique, if your soul is burthened with crimes, why not confess to the superior who is our father confessor?''
34754''But where is the mistress, of whom you boasted a short time since?'' 34754 ''But you have them not?''
34754''Can you do it soon?'' 34754 ''Dear Bobadil, you would not kill me?''
34754''Did you sue for them like a man?'' 34754 ''Do I dream?''
34754''Do n''t you hear it yell?'' 34754 ''Do you understand my object, Mynheer Hermann?''
34754''Does such a fate please you, Zara?'' 34754 ''Fair lady,''said he,''can it indeed be true that your charms are destined to wither in the Sultan''s harem?''
34754''Father,''he said, laying one hand on each of my shoulders, and staring fixedly in my face,''Will you hear me confess?'' 34754 ''Has some fair sonora smiled upon you?''
34754''Has your ladyship combined with my enemies to make a madman of me?'' 34754 ''Has_ she_ betrayed me?''
34754''Have my actions been those of an enemy?'' 34754 ''Have you seen the cantankerous spot where we fit?''
34754''Help me?'' 34754 ''Her ward Olinska?''
34754''His name? 34754 ''How do I know that?''
34754''How in heaven''s name do you know this? 34754 ''How much gold do you want for the girl?''
34754''I am happy to have been of service to a brave man,''replied Garstoff,''but who were those scoundrels?'' 34754 ''Is not your name Garstoff?''
34754''Is that your death warrant?'' 34754 ''Is this a moment for merriment?''
34754''May I know the name of my new friend?'' 34754 ''Must I kill you, too?''
34754''Shall I engage the conveyance?'' 34754 ''She is the Countess Walewski?''
34754''That is true, follower of Isauri--_you go not hence alive!_''''What mean you, woman?''
34754''What animal have you in your litter that you keep it closed like a cage?'' 34754 ''What can this mean?''
34754''What is it, boy?'' 34754 ''What say you Praxin?
34754''What say you to this charge?'' 34754 ''What sum would do it?''
34754''What would you do for me?'' 34754 ''What''s all this?''
34754''Who are you?'' 34754 ''Who wrote this?''
34754''Who''s that?'' 34754 ''Whose steps are those?''
34754''Why did she not tax me with my perfidy? 34754 ''Why do you not_ buy me_, then?''
34754''Why!--what-- who has done this?'' 34754 ''Wilhelm, you are not trifling with me?''
34754''Will you hear a tale of crime from a criminal?'' 34754 ''You were, doubtless, surprised to find me here?''
34754''Zara, tell me, for heaven''s sake, have you listened to the Sultan''s words of love? 34754 And do you mean to tell me that it was in_ my_ house he was secreted?"
34754And how is this, my little chit?
34754And how is this?
34754And what excuse have you to offer, my trooper?
34754Are these all your prisoners?
34754Are you pious?
34754Are you sure of that, my Alcibiades?
34754BOB!--you here?
34754BOB, my boy,said he,"how the mischief did you get into this scrape?"
34754But did you think, love-- did you think to put a quart of ice- cream and a few hair- pins in the package?
34754Ca n''t I have a room to myself?
34754Can it indeed be real?
34754Did I remind you forcibly of the bard of Avon?
34754Do n''t I tell you that I did n''t break cover until quarter- past?
34754Do you know how I came to be arrested?
34754Do your orbs liquidate so freely?
34754Friend of the human race,says I,"how now?"
34754Hev any tracts been left with our suffering frens?
34754How far have the collegians progressed?
34754How now, my Jack of Spades?
34754Is JAKE your child?
34754Is that one on exhibition?
34754Is the general a gentleman?
34754Is the weather clear, my child?
34754Is this the Confederate Congress?
34754Miss Milliner,says he,"do n''t you see you''re all in a blaze?"
34754No,says the Lieutenant, agitatedly:"but we miss two--""Not baggage wagons?"
34754Oh,returned the haughty Virginian, scorning to show how deeply he was affected,"you''re watchin''for that, are you?"
34754See here, my patriotic invalid,says I, skeptically,"how do you come to be exempt?"
34754See here, my self- denying Brutus,says I, as we took Richmond together at the bar,"who commissioned you to pledge so much as all that?"
34754That reminds me,observed Mr. PETERS,"what time is it?
34754The we d kind?
34754We shall meet again?
34754Well, my bold dragoon,says I, cordially, noticing that Pegasus had already fallen into a peaceful doze,"how go enlistments?"
34754Well, old Honesty,says I, affably,"what is our next scheme for the benefit of the human race?"
34754Well, old swallow- tails,says I, affably,"what are you doing in this section?"
34754What did they do with them?
34754What do you call this stuff?
34754What do you mean by the observation?
34754What do you mean, sir?
34754What do you mean, you ridiculous thing?
34754What for?
34754What has the culprit to say to these charges? 34754 What time is it now by the repeater?"
34754What''s that?
34754What''s the matter, dear?
34754Where are your guns, my child?
34754Where is it?
34754Why BOB, what can you mean?
34754You do, hey?
34754You say that quarter- past twelve is the hour?
34754''And now, Christian, do you know what you came here for?''
34754''Are you intoxicated, that you do not perceive I am an officer?
34754''Because my father''s aim is truer than theirs, ought he to be looked upon as one demented?
34754''Have you any more change?''
34754''Why should you wish to we d the child of such a man?
34754After the above_ chanson_ had been read, the Spanish member gave us his story of DON BOBADIL BANCO; OR, WHO OWNS THE BABY?
34754And Adam?
34754And by whom the Land''s great debt was paid To the Soldier old, in the graves they made?
34754And how''s the pigs and ducks, Biddy?
34754And tell me, young man, what is to prevent my offering you as a sacrifice to my counsellor, the devil?
34754And the men?
34754And was this_ all_ the procession?
34754And what is the reason?
34754And where is Don Bobadil?''
34754And yet, would you believe it, my boy?
34754Are not both the fruits of original sin?
34754Are not the walks wide enough for both of us, that you must needs knock a man''s breath out of his body in this way?
34754Are you drunk?''
34754Are you willing to yield your bride to the army, and let the navy remain a bachelor?''
34754Are you, are you-- his-- slave?''
34754BY MARTIN FARQUHAR TUP----R. I hold it good-- as who shall hold it bad?
34754Because he refuses to join in their low revels, should they regard him as a ghost- seer?
34754Because you and your neighbors chance to buy a barrel of bad eggs, are you satisfied that good ones are not to be had?
34754Because, by his skill in woodcraft, he surpasses their success, should they shun him with looks of horror?
34754But how is it that her father will allow her to we d a Catholic?''
34754But suppose it should prove lower than his?
34754But what possessed you to run away with this little rebel, man?
34754But why should we make such a distinction between these two qualities?
34754Can I have fifty?
34754Captain Villiam Brown placed the bottle on the table again, and says he:"At which joint were the tails amputated, Samyule?"
34754Christian,''interrupted the maid;''I have never seen your face before, and how can I trust a stranger?
34754Columbia asks:"Wherefore this digging?"
34754Columbia, how''s the blaze?
34754Columbia, how''s the blood?
34754Columbia, how''s the end?
34754Columbia, how''s the groan?
34754Columbia, how''s the roar?
34754Columbia, how''s the war?
34754Columbia, how''s the woe?
34754Could I get a hundred tolerably intelligent men, with their wives and children, to partake of all this bliss?
34754Dare you appear in the field as a rival to the sultan, for my favor?''
34754Davis?"
34754Did he say that our idolized Commander was a dead- beat?"
34754Did this prove that Man''s love is weaker and shorter- lived than Woman''s?
34754Did you ever notice how you always keep your eyes shut when you are asleep?
34754Did you not know that she was affianced to Admiral Praxin?''
34754Do ye ask who reared those headstones there, And crowned with thorns a sire''s gray hair?
34754Do you know what feeling that is?''
34754Do you mark that long train of army wagons down there near my quarters?"
34754Do you not see at least a dozen goblins climbing the barrel of my rifle?
34754Do you promise?''
34754Do you see what it is?"
34754Do you see, my boy?
34754Does the widower profit by his experience?
34754Does the widower profit by his experience?
34754Eat-- What is your name?''
34754For what do our heroes wait?
34754He was about to leave her, when she caught his arm, and hissed in his ear:"''Is this your love that you once boasted of?''
34754Hey?
34754How are you to day?
34754How could I help what has passed?
34754How did I get into this scrape?
34754How many men have learned wisdom by experience?
34754Husbands and wives, have I spoken truly?
34754I looked at the devoted and nearly- sober beings clustered about the struggling chap, and says I:"Has mutiny reared his horrid front, my veterans?
34754I looked up at Smith- Brown, my boy, and says I:"What does he mean by the''State of Charleston,''my fat friend?"
34754I should think the people would grumble about it-- don''t they?''
34754I want to know,"says Samyule thoughtfully,"which of them two bodies of infantry is the army, and which is the prisoners?"
34754If a man buys an image supposed to be made of marble, and discovers that it is plaster, does he never buy another image?
34754If a sailor is shipwrecked, and nearly killed on his first voyage, does he forsake the sea forever after?
34754Is it for india- rubbers, or umbrellas, or fine- tooth combs?
34754Is it not the_ White_ of an egg that bears the yolk?
34754Is it so?
34754Is not this gentle fawn, a bloodthirsty spectre metamorphosed?
34754Is there anything I can send you to make you more comfortable?"
34754Is''t strange that the cry of blood did seem Like the roll of drums in a martial dream?
34754Is''t strange that the tranquil soul of age Was turned to strife in a madman''s rage?
34754It may be asked why I have made"Woman"the subject of this letter, and why I have adopted such a Frenchy style?
34754It may be asked: Why do widowers so often marry again, if they were so disappointed in their first wives?
34754It was Jakey who did this deed of kindness, and says he:"What''s the matter with you, my covey?"
34754Like a meteor, in thine ending leaving only darker night?
34754Look around you, my honored guest; is not my daughter some horrid witch in disguise?
34754Mark his glance of pride and exultation as he says:"''Don Philip, will you assist me?
34754Might you not find a devil in me?
34754My name is Orloff, and I wish you to answer one inquiry: Does the ward of the Countess Walewski have an interview with Admiral Praxin to- day?''
34754My pastor would say to me:''These men- slaves are black, you say; but have they not the same feelings with you, the same features-- only handsomer?''
34754Need I say that our victorious general is the man?"
34754Nothing has happened, I hope?''
34754Now really do n''t you think the Emperor or Czar should pay more attention to lighting the streets?
34754Now, if modesty, as well as curiosity, was the result of Satanic temptation, why should one be called a weakness and the other a virtue?
34754Oh, my Juleyer, how long is this to continue?
34754Perhaps you will inform the court how such a strange phenomenon_ could_ occur?"
34754Prove that her Modesty and Love are anything but heavenly, and what remains to make Woman angelic?
34754Samyule gave such a start that he split one of his boots, and says he:"_ Which_ line?"
34754Seeing me put my hand in my pocket, he said, tearful:"Tellum me, I conjure ye, are there any such things as quarters in the round world?
34754Seward?"
34754Shall it be said that twenty- two millions of people can not put down eight millions without injuring those eight millions?
34754Shall it be said, after this, that republics are ungrateful?
34754Shall the watching world behold thee falling from thy starry height?
34754Shall we presume to talk of drafting, my boy, when there is such readiness on the part of the people to lead the troops?
34754Soon after hearing of this, I met him at Willard''s, and says I:"Well, my sagacious Mirabeau, what is your final opinion of our Honest Abe?"
34754Speak boldly, as becomes a man; would you we d the daughter of_ Hermann, the Demented_?''
34754Stuart?"
34754Supposing Mr. Bull should die, the question might arise: Will he be wanted down below, or wafted to the skies?
34754The Honest Abe cracked a walnut, and says he:"You say, neighbor, that the organization still insists upon a vigorous prosecution of the war?"
34754The creatures which is trying to break up this here beneficent Government, ask us what we are fighting for, then?
34754The latter approached the wounded man and kindly asked;"Can I do anything for you, old fellow?"
34754The next day the breastpin- chap called at his Louvre again, and says to him:"Have you taken Sary''s portrait?"
34754The respectable chap stared at him aghast, and says he:"Did you tell them to have faith?"
34754The sturdy trooper straight repeated,"When all the village cheers us on, That you, in tears, apart are seated?
34754The veteran Mackerel sighed deeply, as he spread open the package to full view, my boy, and says he, respectfully:"Are you a married man, my cove?"
34754Then picking up the bit of shrapnell, and laying it upon his heart, he kicked once, and says he:"Is it almost morning, mother?
34754Then why should the white man turn the yoke altogether over to the black man?
34754Then, turning to the keeper,--"How long is my imprisonment in this terrible place to be continued?"
34754There ca n''t be no tacks way out in the middle of the floor here, can they?''
34754This street should be better lighted, and yet if it had been, I should never have known you-- don''t you think so?
34754Up sprang the general, in a violent perspiration, and says he:"Where''s my horse gone to?"
34754Villiam assumed a thoughtful demeanor, and says he:"Is it a miss fire?"
34754Was it a dream?
34754Was it not?
34754Was there the tiniest, wee- ist, smallest fragment of sarcasm in his speech?
34754Was this a case of purely disinterested philanthropy?
34754Was this a proof the depth and vitality of Woman''s love?
34754Were those devoted men about to change their base of operations and entrap Stonewall Jackson''s whole force again, without waiting to receive a shot?
34754What ails our gymnastic friend?"
34754What are yes doin''with lights this time ernight?
34754What can such people know about Love?
34754What did his visitor mean by accusing him of not making his appearance at the appointed time?
34754What made you put off the end of the show till next spring?''
34754What shall I do?''
34754What was it?
34754What was that to me?
34754What wonder, when our former pal, A vulgar, sneakin''knave is, They hang our pictures in a row With Floyd, and Cobb, and Davis?
34754What would you have, monsieur?"
34754When I thought it was a quarter past Twelve and fled the residence, it was really a quarter_ of_ Twelve-- don''t you see?
34754When will you fly with me?''
34754Where is she?
34754Where is your father, mademoiselle?"
34754Who are you?''
34754Who could tell what was working in the mind of each?
34754Who should draw the line between those men, when all was dark for the white and a luckless wight was the black?
34754Why ca n''t you leave out some of those absurd advertisements, and publish an article telling Mr. Lincoln that the war is ruining society?
34754Why can not these turbulent denouncers of each other be like me, who recognize no division of party in this national crisis?
34754Why did not her angel soul arise in its innocent love, to crush me with the glancing of an eye?
34754Why does not the Mackerel Brigade advance?
34754Why is she not here to meet me?''
34754Why should I be treated thus?
34754Why should I love a being whose lips have declared my father a demon?
34754Why should we need more light, sirrah, when the moon is shining brightly?
34754Will you not grant me that favor?''
34754Will you swear to this?"
34754Will you, bub, will you?"
34754Would you repay me by robbing me of my richest treasure, or forever blighting her existence by arousing in her bosom a hopeless passion?
34754Ye mind the hot place down below?
34754You are loved by the lady?''
34754You do n''t see exactly how this is to be done, eh?
34754You may ask me, my boy, with which side rested the victory in this remarkable movement?
34754You think that young man there is sleeping upon a rude couch?
34754You will not betray me?''
34754You wo n''t be angry with me for it, will you, dear BOB?
34754You''ll be kind to him, bub, wo n''t you?"
34754_ Bismillah!_ dare you laugh at our beards?
34754asked EVE, in some haste;"were you not arrested at a quarter of Twelve?"
34754continued Wilhelm, with enthusiasm--''yet why should infancy monopolize all the richest pleasures of life?
34754dare you insult me?''
34754he blubbered,''miserable wretch, that I am, what shall I do?
34754he exclaimed, kissing her p. 276: are you-- his-- slave?''
34754he gruffly said, A moment pausing to regard her;--"Why weepest thou, my little chit?"
34754p. 168: of the skillful retrogade[retrograde] advance to which i p. 169: beheld the idolized genral[general] of the mackerel brigade p. 172: child?"
34754said he, in a suppressed manner,"what are you doing here?"
34754says Samyule, ponderingly,"what is this sight mine eyes behold?"
34754says Villiam, with dignity;"do you discover a flaw in the great chain woven by the United States of America around the doomed Confederacy?"
34754says Villiam,"is the Confederacy again advancing upon the United States of America?"
34754says Villiam,"which way was the conqueror''s face turned at the time?"
34754says he,"or is it but a quarter of the mind?"
34754says the general, winking very violently in the sunlight, and rattling his sword in a fearless manner,"where''s my cap gone to?"
34754says the patriotic chap to him;"how does the canvas proceed?"
34754says the young staff- chap, eagerly--"is it the sticky we d kind, Fwed?"
34754she exclaimed, reproachfully,"what are you doing here, you ridiculous thing?"
34754shouted BOB, ceasing his Terpsichoreanism for a moment;"do n''t you see the joke?
34754shouted Colonel Wobert Wobinson, breaking through the group.--"Could you make it convenient to pay me that dollar you owe me, Samyule?"
34754what is the matter, Don Bobadil?''
34754what''s this noise about?
34754what''s this?"
34754who has rifled my chest?
34754wretch that I was-- why did I not fall a withered corpse at the feet of that innocent girl, who sacrificed a father''s love for me?
34754you will ask; did nothing come after the Brigade itself?
5016And if they were so disposed would it be the duty of this Government to protect them in the attempt?
5016And is it supposed that the wandering savage has a stronger attachment to his home than the settled, civilized Christian?
5016And unless they did would it not be the duty of the General Government to support them in resisting such a measure?
5016Could the Indians establish a separate republic on each of their reservations in Ohio?
5016Does Humanity weep at these painful separations from every thing, animate and inanimate, with which the young heart has become entwined?
5016Doubtless it will be painful to leave the graves of their fathers; but what do they more than our ancestors did or than our children are now doing?
5016If it be a bad one, why is it suffered to exist?
5016If the States feel themselves competent to these objects, why should this Government wish to assume the power?
5016If the existing system be a good one, why should it not be extended?
5016Is it more afflicting to him to leave the graves of his fathers than it is to our brothers and children?
5016May he not be tempted to name his reward?
5016What, then, shall be done?
5016Would the people of Maine permit the Penobscot tribe to erect an independent government within their State?
49260Go on with the case, gentlemen,or to be asked,"What are you waiting for?"
49260What shall it be? 49260 ( Whence comest thou?) 49260 ( Where yonder?) 49260 (? 49260 ),_ The Argus,_ weekly( 1875), daily( 1876),_ The Liberal Sentinel_( 1881),_ The News_( 1883),_ The Jeffersonian_( 1886? 49260 ),_ The Forum_( 1897), and the_ Worker''s Advocate_( 1899?). 49260 1810 William Hedges Newburgh(?) 49260 1821 Theodore Wells Goshen(?) 49260 And who will say when and how this vast body of water broke through these adamantine hills, or by what Cyclopean process of upheaval they were formed? 49260 Any way, the vanquished( or conquering?) 49260 But did this satisfy Judge Barnard? 49260 But was it a mistake? 49260 Does not this prove that the whole of a first- class aurora was within the cloud- bearing regions of the atmosphere? 49260 Dunning Goshen(?) 49260 He reports it as follows:When meeting, the white man would say in the Indian language''Hitah takoman?''
49260Inc. O. C. M. S. P.1806 Elijah Welch Newburgh(?)
49260Indeed, if we wait until all contemporaries have passed away, who is left to determine whether the estimates are just?
49260Is it not success, after all, to live in lasting institutions?
49260Is it to be wondered at that I recall them with a chastened delight?
49260Morrison Newburgh P.1776 Hugh Morrison Newburgh P.1776 James Stukney Newburgh P.1780- 1810 William Elliott Montgomery P.1783 John Smedes Montgomery(?)
49260Moses[?]
49260N. Y. P.1806 Elijah Randall Monroe(?)
49260O. C. M. S. 1814 Marcus Ostrander Port Jervis(?)
49260O. C. M. S. 1821 Jonathan Sears Montgomery(?)
49260O. C. M. S. 1825--r. Wynans Rush Pine Bush(?)
49260O. C. M. S. 1832 Abel Lybolt Port Jervis(?)
49260O. C. M. S. 1835 William Everett Goshen(?)
49260O. C. M. S. P.1824 John J. Wheeler Warwick(?)
49260Of what possible interest is it to know the number of a lawyer''s children, or the building in which his office is located?
49260P.1806 Henry I. Hornbeck Port Jervis(?)
49260P.1807 Nathaniel Gillespie Goshen(?)
49260S. Halsey Chester(?)
49260Starting on the drive homeward Mr. Rysdyk inquired,"How do you like the Seely farm, my new purchase?"
49260Then the white man,''Tony andagowa a kee weekin?''
49260Who shall succeed these old families who have so loyally supported the Church, the State and the School?
49260Why not in Newburgh, where so many great events in connection with the Revolutionary period occurred?
49260i d., and Pres.,''32 P.1816 Joseph Hallock Ridgebury(?)
49260p.1816--r.1832 Israel Green Monroe(?)
43693ALASMODONTA EDENTULA?
43693ANODON AREOLATUS?
43693Ahwaynain döpwaugunid en- eu?
43693Ahwaynain e- mah ai- aud?
43693Ahwaynain iau we yun?
43693Ahwaynain kau keegoedood?
43693Ahwaynain kau tödung?
43693Ahwaynain kau weendumoak?
43693Ahwaynain kös?
43693Ahwaynain nain dau wau bumud?
43693Ahwaynain oh- amau_ ai_ auwaud?
43693Ahwaynain way dyid?
43693Ahwaynain way weegewomid?
43693Ahwaynain waynönik?
43693And, if so, does not this coal formation extend quite across the southern portion of the peninsula of Michigan?
43693Are not these clear indications of his, views respecting the Chippewas?
43693Are not these proofs of his care and attention?
43693Are you sick?
43693Auneen ah- ow ainud, woh- ow gämau ewaidde?
43693Auneen ah- ow- ainud?
43693Auneen aindeeyun?
43693Auneen aizheekauzoyun?
43693Auneen akeedöyun?
43693Auneen eh- eu ewaidumun oh- oo gämau ewaidde?
43693Auneende ain deyun, What ails you?
43693Auneende aindauyun?
43693Auneende azhauyun?
43693Auneende ka oonjeebauyun?
43693Auneende ke baushkizzigun?
43693Auneende ke döpwaugun?
43693Auneende ke gwiss?
43693Auneende ke waubumud?
43693Auneende ke waubundumun?
43693Auneeshween eh eu ekeedoyun?
43693Auneeshween eh eu todumun?
43693Auneeshween eh- eu izzhewaibuk?
43693Auneeshween ke peëzhauyun?
43693Auneeshween ke pukketaywud?
43693Auneeshween matyauseewun?
43693Auneeshween nishkaudizzeyun?
43693Auneeshween wee matyauyun?
43693But what, you will ask, can be reported of its quadrupeds, birds, reptilia, and general zoology?
43693For instance-- Who is there?
43693HYDRATE OF MAGNESIA?
43693Have you not seen a small green roll in a sapling?
43693How shall he address the Deity?
43693I asked him if anything had been subsequently given them in acknowledgment of their right to the soil?
43693I asked him whether the saw- mill on the lower part of the Red Cedar, was located on Chippewa lands?
43693If, then, there is an acknowledged error in this respect, shall we hesitate to correct it?
43693Is not this marl the result of decomposed sea shells?
43693Ke dahkoozzi nuh?
43693Ke daukoozzinuh, Are you sick?
43693Ke minno iau nuh, Are you well?
43693One day he said to them:"Why do you not feed my dog?"
43693Tell me why?
43693The substantive takes this form, most commonly, after a question has been put, as_ Anindi ni môkoman- ais?_"Where is my penknife?"
43693The substantive takes this form, most commonly, after a question has been put, as_ Anindi ni môkoman- ais?_"Where is my penknife?"
43693U. VENTRICOSUS,_ Barnes?_ Wisconsin and St. Croix Rivers, and Shell Lake.
43693Waigonain aitaig mukuk- oong?
43693Waygonain e- mau iauyun?
43693Waygonain ewinain maundun?
43693Waygonain kad iauyun?
43693Waygonain kau oon dahme egöyun?
43693Waygonain kau wonetöyun?
43693Waygonain nain dahwau bundahmun?
43693Waygonain wau iauyun?
43693Waygonain wayzhetöyun?
43693Weendumowishin auneeshween?
43693What ails you?
43693What are you making?
43693What detained you?
43693What do you call this?
43693What do you look for?
43693What do you say?
43693What do you want?
43693What have you in that box?
43693What have you lost?
43693What have you there?
43693What is this?
43693What is your name?
43693What will you have?
43693Where are you going?
43693Where did you come from?
43693Where did you see him?
43693Where did you see it?
43693Where do you dwell?
43693Where is your gun?
43693Where is your pipe?
43693Where is your son?
43693Wherefore did you strike him?
43693Wherefore is it so?
43693Whether it was built with the consent of the Chippewas?
43693Which boy do you mean?
43693Which do you mean, this or that?
43693Which do you mean, this or that?
43693Who are you?
43693Who did it?
43693Who is your father?
43693Who sent you?
43693Who spoke?
43693Who told you?
43693Whom do you seek?
43693Whom have you here?
43693Whose dog is it?
43693Whose lodge is it?
43693Whose pipe is that?
43693Why are you angry?
43693Why do you do so?
43693Why do you say so?
43693Why have you come?
43693Why will you depart?
43693Why will you not depart?
43693_ Kewau bemuasee_, I said to one of the men,_ en petite chose ver, mittig onsing_?
43693_ Scirpus frigetur?_ Lake of the Isles, Northwest Ter."
43693_ lævis?_ Willdenow.
43693_ puberula?_ Michaux.
43693where are they?
5042But we should not be asking:"In what country were you born?"
5042Can we achieve these goals?
5042How many men who listen to me tonight have served their Nation in other wars?
5042How very many are not here to listen?
5042Is there anyone in this Chamber tonight who doubts that the course of freedom was not changed for the better because of the courage of that stand?
5042It shall lead us as we enter the third century of the search for a more perfect union?
5042Not, is there abundance enough for all?--but, how can all share in our abundance?
5042We ask now, not how can we achieve abundance?--but how shall we use our abundance?
5042Well, let us rather ask them: Who will they sacrifice?
5042Why are we there?
5042Why did men come to that once forbidding land?
5042Why, then, this restlessness?
5042Will they sacrifice opportunity for the distressed, the beauty of our land, the hope of our poor?
49411''Going out, ladies?'' 49411 ''Return as what, madam?--prisoners or subjects?''
49411''Will you?'' 49411 And where?"
49411Colonel,said the Irish captain,"when we conquer this country, is it not to be divided out among us?"
49411Had you no arms?
49411Is he a rebel?
49411Is he at home?
49411Why not?
49411_ Dare_ you, CÃ ¦ sar, call me rebel?
49411''Ladies, do either of you own these horses?''
49411After a moment of silence, he said--"Were any of your family up, Lydia, on the night when I received company in this house?"
49411And for what, think you?
49411And will any one doubt that even Alexander believed he owed more to the blood and lofty ambition of Olympia, than the wisdom or cunning of Philip?"
49411But pray,''said he,''how came you here?''
49411But snapping her fingers, she replied;''You shall not have a morsel of it; why have you left your country to slay and rob us of our property?
49411But what was our surprise, when in the morning we beheld an inundation of those disagreeable objects filling our streets?
49411Did our legislature ever intend the military should prevail above the civil?
49411Did the brave General Gates ever mean this?
49411Hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?''
49411Should she awaken her husband and inform him?
49411They inquired of Mrs. Dillard whether Clarke and his men had not been there; what time they had departed; and what were their numbers?
49411What could they have done but for the home- sentiment to which they appealed, and which sustained them in the hour of trial and success?
49411What was now to be done?
49411When the traveller arrived at the ferry, he was promptly hailed by the sentinel, with"Who goes there?"
49411Where is the stern virtue of a--------, who opposed such infractions, in former days?
49411Who is there to plead our cause?
49411Wilkinson?''
49411Will you come with your children to my tent, and partake of a frugal dinner, offered with the best will?"
49411``` So weak Lamira, and her wants so few,``` Who can refuse?
49411he exclaimed,''What are you doing there?
44854And why was it decided to build a new city as the nation''s capital, on a site where there was not even a settlement? 44854 Have we at last really found a waterway across this new land of America?"
44854How,we are asked,"did it happen that the capital of a great nation was built almost on its eastern boundary?"
448543. Who founded San Francisco, and what was it first called?
44854After whom was the city named?
44854But was not the wealth of the West left, and the harbor and the railroads?
44854Can you tell why it was important for the United States to own New Orleans?
44854Could the fort hold out against such a terrible bombardment?
44854Do you know from what else we get sugar?
44854Do you know why so much cotton is sent to foreign countries?
44854Does the name"Golden Gate"seem appropriate to you?
44854Had not the fire undone the work of forty years?
44854How and when did the English first acquire Detroit?
44854How are the city of Washington and the District of Columbia governed?
44854How did Buffalo''s location make it one of the great centers of industry?
44854How did it happen that the people of New York first came to settle west of the Appalachian Mountains, and where were these first settlements?
44854How did the Civil War help the growth of the city?
44854How did the Dutch governor secure the land from the Indians?
44854How did the development of the farm lands about the city help the growth of Detroit?
44854How does Detroit rank among our great cities in population, manufactured products, and exports?
44854How does Philadelphia rank in size and manufactures among the great cities of the United States?
44854How does the Senate differ from the House of Representatives?
44854How is Buffalo furnished with power for her great manufacturing interests?
44854How is petroleum obtained?
44854How many come from each state?
44854How was the journey made between 1811 and 1825?
44854How was this done?
44854How?
44854In the manufacture of what three products does Boston, with her neighboring cities, rank high?
44854In what business has St. Louis held an important place from its beginning?
44854In what industries does Baltimore rank first in the United States?
44854In what lines does St. Louis lead the world?
44854In what manufactures does the city lead the world?
44854In what respects does Chicago stand first of American cities, and in what two things does she lead the world?
44854In what respects does New York rank first of all the cities of the United States?
44854In what respects is rail transportation better than water transportation?
44854In what year did Washington become the capital city, and what disaster visited it a few years later?
44854Is it any wonder that Boston ranks first of all the cities of the United States in the fish trade?
44854Is n''t it strange that there is a place in the United States where the citizens can not vote?
44854Of what was the great wealth of California supposed to consist at first?
44854To what does St. Louis owe her importance as an industrial center?
44854To what two events does Cleveland chiefly owe its rapid growth?
44854To whom does the beautiful city of Washington really belong, and why should we be proud of it?
44854What advantages of location does Baltimore possess?
44854What are its principal exports and imports?
44854What are some of her most important industries?
44854What are some of the natural beauties of the city?
44854What are the advantages of water transportation over rail transportation?
44854What are the chief exports of the city, and to what countries are they sent?
44854What are the chief imports and exports of New Orleans?
44854What are the chief imports of the city?
44854What are the chief manufactured products of New York City, and how can it produce so much without many great factories?
44854What are the duties of senators?
44854What are the duties of the Treasury Department, and what may be seen in the Treasury vaults?
44854What are the great advantages of San Francisco Bay?
44854What are the great wheat- growing states of the United States?
44854What are the leading exports of the city?
44854What are the leading exports of this city?
44854What are the most important industries of the Cleveland district?
44854What benefit will San Francisco derive from the completion of the Panama Canal?
44854What benefits does Cleveland derive from its location on Lake Erie?
44854What brought about the sudden and rapid growth of St. Louis after the purchase?
44854What commercial advantages does New York enjoy?
44854What conditions have made Detroit a great center for commercial relations with Canada?
44854What could the governor do?
44854What do you know of Niagara Falls and the power plants on both sides of the Niagara River?
44854What educational institution has won a splendid reputation for Baltimore?
44854What effect did the arrival of vast numbers of immigrants have upon the city?
44854What effect did the railroads have upon St. Louis''water transportation?
44854What events of great historical interest have taken place in Carpenters''Hall and Independence Hall?
44854What great advantages does its location on the Ohio River give Pittsburgh?
44854What great ceremony connected with the establishment of the government of the United States took place in New York?
44854What great disaster befell Chicago in 1871?
44854What great disaster visited Baltimore in 1904, and how did the people of the city make this great trouble result in a better city?
44854What great natural disadvantages were overcome in improving the city of New Orleans, and how was it done?
44854What great steel company is located near this city?
44854What has Chicago done to make her parks among the best in this country?
44854What interesting buildings are located here, and for what are they used?
44854What is interesting about Jackson Square?
44854What is the benefit of parks to a city?
44854What is the great wealth of the state considered to be to- day?
44854What is there of interest in Back Bay?
44854What means of communication with other cities did Cleveland have in the early days of its history?
44854What of all we have seen or heard is it most important for us to remember?
44854What other noted schools are in or near Boston?
44854What part has the Chicago River played in the development of the city?
44854What products in daily use are made from it?
44854What railroad facilities has Cleveland to- day?
44854What three bridges were built across the Mississippi at St. Louis, and why?
44854What three things are necessary to success in manufacturing?
44854What two fine buildings are on either side of the White House, and for what is each used?
44854What two products found a meeting place at Cleveland, and with what results?
44854What unusual arrangement of street cars is found in New Orleans?
44854What wars were they?
44854What was Cleveland''s first manufacturing plant, and what others did it soon have?
44854What was the first route from Albany to Buffalo, and why was it used?
44854What was the most important event in advancing the business growth of New York?
44854What were some of the reasons for selecting the location of the capital city?
44854What were the ambitions of the French governors, traders, and missionaries of Canada in the early days?
44854When and how did San Francisco become an American possession?
44854When did the great fire at San Francisco occur, and what damage was done?
44854When, how, and by whom was the site of Philadelphia acquired?
44854Where are her great steel works, and what do they manufacture?
44854Where are the workers secured to carry on the great industries of Chicago?
44854Where does Buffalo find a market for her products?
44854Where does Pittsburgh get her iron ore, coal, and petroleum?
44854Where does the Supreme Court of the country sit, and why is it called the Supreme Court?
44854Who has not read of the terrible disasters caused by suffocation from fire damp, by flood, the falling of walls, or the explosion of coal dust?
44854Why are Fort Myer, Arlington, and Mount Vernon very interesting to all citizens of the United States?
44854Why are there such tall buildings in New York?
44854Why are they necessary in handling grain?
44854Why did Jefferson buy the country included in the Louisiana Purchase?
44854Why did the Dutch settle on Manhattan Island?
44854Why did the French build forts on the narrow rivers and straits that connect the Great Lakes?
44854Why do we have two lawmaking bodies?
44854Why is Baltimore called the gateway to the South?
44854Why is Boston''s chief park called the Common?
44854Why is Pittsburgh called the"workshop of the world"?
44854Why is a codfish suspended in the hall of the House of Representatives in the State House?
44854Why is the ferry system of San Francisco so important?
44854Why was Chicago willing to spend millions of dollars to improve her water supply?
44854Why was New Orleans called the Crescent City?
44854Why was not some city already established chosen to be the chief city of the nation?"
44854Why was this ceremony held in New York?
44854Why?
44854Why?
44854Why?
44854Why?
44854Would it not be just as interesting to find out these things about the city we are to see on our journey?
44854[ Illustration: PAUL REVERE''S HOUSE] Are we tired of the noise and confusion of the crowded tenement district?
44854[ Illustration: SUBWAY TUNNELS][ Illustration: A FERRY BOAT] But what of the means of travel for those living outside of Manhattan?
44854in Copley Square?
46418Are ye obdurate? 46418 Are you Catholics or Lutherans?
46418Are you Lutherans?
46418Are you chartered?
46418Are you convinced, now, that what I have told you is true?
46418Do you know where a preacher lives, then? 46418 Speak this man for the rest of ye?"
46418Well, deacon, ca n''t you marry us just a little till the preacher comes home?
46418Where you going to sail for?
46418Why do you wish for him?
46418;"Do a good child tell stories?"
46418A bold Gascon succeeded in making the passage by swimming, when Melendez demanded,"Who are you?"
46418A night on the water alone with God and the stars, who can describe it?
46418And who can number those that have perished in the English pillories?
46418Can I go to my warriors?
46418Can volume, pillar, pile, preserve thee great?
46418Does any one know what a sailing- voyage, in a coasting- vessel, from Tampa to Key West-- a distance of two hundred and fifty miles-- implies?
46418Each captain, as he arrives, gives the morning salutation by asking his companions in turn,"Is your vessel entered?"
46418How much did you bring here for de Lord?
46418If robbers and assassins assail us, may we not defend our property and our lives, even with bloodhounds?
46418Is it an impossibility that the same crimson current which courses through his veins may not have descended from Solon or Socrates?
46418It is still believed, however, that they may be used with effect; and why should they not be used?
46418It was then the edict went forth, irrevocable and sanguinary as the laws of Draco, Father Corpa must die; and who should strike the fatal blow?
46418Let us now pause and inquire, Who were the architects of these earth- works?
46418May not these be identified with the sapphire foundations of which the Prophet Isaiah speaks?
46418On public days such a crowd comes to town, the mystery is, Where do they all stay?
46418Or must these trust tradition''s simple tongue?
46418Passengers all smoke in every car-- the interrogation never being used, Is smoking offensive?
46418The important question with most visitors wherever they go is, What do we have to eat?
46418The inquiry is often made by those who have never visited here, How do you kill time in that ancient city?
46418The old folks are very attentive; but where are the children?
46418The pleasure- yachts come in for their share of attention--"Take an excursion over on the beach?
46418Then the carriages--"Ride, sir?
46418What a climbing, scrambling, and tumbling down, amid exclamations from the boys:"Bob, what made you let go?"
46418What made this town so big?
46418What was their fate?
46418Who can witness such atrocities without admitting it to be lawful to use blood- hounds against such hell- hounds?
46418Whose ashes rest beneath your storm- beaten, time- scarred surfaces?
46418Whose unflinching arm can rid us of this our peace- destroyer?
46418Why this information, unless there were some designs for acting upon it?
46418Will she return to the paternal lodge, and dwell among her people, while her father''s hand is stained with the drippings of her lover''s scalp?
46418Would an embassy of Americans, with authority from Washington, be more acceptable to the Cubans than their present rulers?
46418_ Negro_--"What is dem, Miss?"
46418and are there any among you who will go to confession?"
46418and whither did they flee when overpowered?
46418are there no refreshments coming in soon?"
46418have n''t you got this machine turned around, and taking us back into Georgia?"
46418now do n''t you hear him?"
46418or do ye not comprehend that your lives rest upon your speech?
46418take a nice ride?"
46418was it the hand of violence or disease that severed the silver cord, and ushered you into the presence of the Great Spirit?
46418what prowess could you boast beyond your peers?
35810''Did you ever hear of te Adventure Galley?'' 35810 ''It ish, schipper; vill you go on boart?''
35810''Tis a temptation, i''faith, Howel,he said, laughingly;"but wouldst have me keep a false log?
35810''Vhen do you leave te creek, schipper Schenk?'' 35810 ''Where-- what?''
35810''Where?'' 35810 ''Would you have his heart rather than all else in the world?''
35810A tyke, sure; vat is te citee mitout te tyke? 35810 Action, captain?"
35810All?
35810Am I?
35810And Edwin, his secretary?
35810And did you escape as you just now said?
35810And she has scorned thee?
35810And she is now in thy state- cabin?
35810And so, when he was appointed governor, she came hither with him? 35810 And still she loved him?"
35810And to this title seek to annex that of the house of Bellamont?
35810And who art thou, woman?
35810And who was this interloper?
35810And will you be less indulgent? 35810 And yet you loved her not?"
35810Ay-- ish''t plack he ish, schipper Schenk?
35810But beside?
35810But what is this confusion and heavy firing?
35810But will she hear me still? 35810 Can I now hope to confess thee, maiden?"
35810Can you cope with him, should he come down upon you under cover of the night?
35810Canst prove it?
35810Comes he in the right spirit?
35810Darest thou delay?
35810Did I not promise thee this?
35810Did I?
35810Did not thy art teach thee this?
35810Did you see her often?
35810Do I? 35810 Do you bring news of Captain Fitzroy, or come you to confirm my suspicions?"
35810Do you feel so much for me?
35810Do you not love me, Kate?
35810Do you promise it?
35810Do you say that truly?
35810Dost know him?
35810Dost remember how thou didst leave me, and to what end? 35810 Edwin Gerald, is it you?
35810Fair, gentle, and good?
35810For what is this, my lord?
35810From fear, captain?
35810Gentle?
35810Good?
35810Ha, Fitzroy, is it thou? 35810 Ha, dost thou know this Kyd?"
35810Ha, say you? 35810 Ha, was it so?"
35810Has she a lover?
35810Have I seen him? 35810 Have they come?"
35810He pressed upon thee his former passion?
35810Her thou wouldst have me love, then?
35810How could you put me to such a trial?
35810How do you make her out now, Kenard?
35810How far off is she?
35810How fares it with thee, my child?
35810How is the wind, Kenard?
35810How know you my name and rank?
35810How learned you this?
35810How mean you?
35810How? 35810 If she pe a voman, comrate?"
35810If she will not listen to thee?
35810In what time will she overtake us?
35810Is he black?
35810Is it thou, Elpsy? 35810 Is not that the bold youth who saved my niece?"
35810Is she heavily armed?
35810Is there a probability that we shall be pursued, Kenard?
35810Is there no room for pardon-- none for forgiveness? 35810 May it not have been love?"
35810Must it be, my child?
35810My child is not injured? 35810 My child wedded to a pirate--""Who calls him a pirate?
35810My mother?
35810Nay, Rupert, did you doubt it?
35810Nay, but did you not love me then?
35810Nay, my sweet Grace, will you give all your adieus and affectionate partings to your cousin?
35810Nay-- if you loved another?
35810None to your love?
35810Of our own men?
35810Of whom?
35810Oh, Lester, Lester, why have you brought this on yourself?
35810Oh, Lester, must you die?
35810Our ancestors smoked long pipes, wore breeches and buckles, spoke in a strange tongue, and were called Dutchmen; for what saith the chronicle? 35810 Rupert Fitzroy, have you not been told from what peril I was but now saved?
35810Said you she was fair?
35810Shall I come to the deck again after I have changed my dripping dress?
35810Shall we board the nearest yacht?
35810Shall we pull back by the way we came?
35810She has fired, captain?
35810Speak; what would you?
35810Stay, Elpsy; should she discover that Kyd and Lester are the same?
35810The Mark Meredith?
35810The amulet?
35810The fisher''s daughter?
35810The oath?
35810The pledge, the pledge?
35810The seal, the seal?
35810Then there is hope?
35810Think he means the Holy Bible, Captain Kyd?
35810Think you I would crush the seed, when, by a little patience, I can pluck the fruit of the full- grown tree? 35810 This rover?"
35810This source-- the witch?
35810This young Robert of Lester?
35810Thou hast nothing, then, to ask?
35810Thou hast sent for me, Lester? 35810 Vat, Hanse, heh?"
35810What became of the lady?
35810What cause have you to suspect it?
35810What course, captain?
35810What fate met he? 35810 What flag?"
35810What headway do we make? 35810 What is it ye fear, Master Warden-- what is it leads ye to leave your bench, schipper-- is''t your own shadows ye fear?"
35810What is that you say? 35810 What is the meaning of these hostile preparations, Kenard?"
35810What is the name of the chase?
35810What is this to me? 35810 What lad is that?"
35810What mean these preparations?
35810What means this, dearest Kate?
35810What way has she?
35810What''s in the wind, captain? 35810 What, dreaming, my Gracy?
35810What?
35810What?
35810When it o''ersteps the bounds of maidenly propriety?
35810When?
35810Where am I? 35810 Where away?"
35810Where does he hail from now?
35810Where was Fitzroy? 35810 Wherefore should I kneel?"
35810Wherefore?
35810Wherefore?
35810Wherefore?
35810Who are you, mysterious young man?
35810Who is he other than he seems?
35810Who is the blacker murderer, sir-- this man who robs of me my good name, or I, who merely take his life?
35810Who is this Daniel come to judgment?
35810Who shall hinder me, woman? 35810 Who speaks?
35810Who speaks?
35810Who told thee this?
35810Who was this village maiden that supplanted her?
35810Who, then, art thou?
35810Who-- who art thou? 35810 Who?"
35810Why did you delay to tell this, and lead me to blame you in my thoughts for supineness?
35810Will ye not unbar? 35810 Will you forgive me?"
35810Will you to your duty, sir?
35810Will you walk to the gangway, sir, or shall my men conduct you?
35810Wilt thou go with me to perform the rites?
35810Wilt thou resign her if she will not?
35810Woman, what hast thou caused me to do?
35810Woman,said Fitzroy, with forced calmness,"art thou his wife?"
35810Would you not rather despise her?
35810Wouldst thou have done this?
35810You have met him, then?
35810You love him?
35810You were attached to him?
35810You will not be jealous again?
35810''Ish tat your craft pelow in te creek?''
35810''Now,''says he to her,''fair lady, what do you love best on earth?''
35810''Tish aight ov de klock, Hanse,"he said, stopping and addressing his comrade as Elpsy approached;"te relief shall''ave peen here py dish time, heh?"
35810''Twas a wrong ding, Hanse, to put away te olt name, heh?"
35810''Who, tink you, is your entertainer?''
35810A pirate?"
35810An''if it vas de peoplesh, vat matter so dey pe inside ov te valls?
35810And this dead body?"
35810And this humble youth loved her in return?"
35810And what are your eyes doing aft?
35810And_ who_ besides Robert, have I seen?
35810As she chanted this reproof, she turned to the slave and continued in the same strain,"Hast thou the murderous lead From the grave of the dead?"
35810As she ended her third sibylline circuit around the fire, she turned to the slave and said,"Is such this lead?
35810Back, hounds,"he shouted to his men;"will ye press me?
35810But did she tell him of her love?"
35810But did she, am I not beyond the reach of justice, should she seek my death on suspicion of slaying thee?
35810But what has changed the devils about so?
35810But whither do my thoughts wander?
35810But why are you so anxiously looking through your glass to the windward?"
35810But, if conscience goad thee not to it, why thus a suppliant?"
35810Can you have forgotten our childhood?"
35810Can you recall it and bid me leave thee?
35810Dere ish no more use to keep guart, Hanse, heh?"
35810Did I not tell thee then he reminded me of one whom I had known under peculiar circumstances in my boyish days?"
35810Did she expect one?
35810Did she hope, yet fear; doubt, yet believe, that the outcast Lester would seek her presence once more?
35810Did she listen for one?
35810Did she love him in return?"
35810Do ye fear me singly?
35810Does Lady Lester know of thy presence here?"
35810Does she live?"
35810Dost thou not wish me to marry her?"
35810Dost thou swear?"
35810Fitzroy lives, said you, lady?"
35810Ha, dares he?
35810Had Lester altogether forgotten Kate Bellamont while running this career?
35810Hast forgotten thy crimes?
35810Hast heard me, sir?
35810Hast thou had revenge?"
35810Hast thou the nerve to go through the initiating rites?"
35810Hast thou the will to perform?
35810Have they had fighting enough?"
35810He gently took her passive hand in his as he spoke, and said in a voice of love, that vibrated along every chord of her heart,"Will you be mine?"
35810He was silent for a moment, and then said,"What would you have me do?"
35810Ho, my lads, which of you will take a couple of fathoms from the topgallant- halyards and go aloft and fish that stick?"
35810How came you here?"
35810How could she love a lowborn boy like me?
35810How escaped you?"
35810How had she borne the terrific sounds of battle?
35810How was it, fair sir?"
35810How was it?"
35810Howel?"
35810I tried love at first, but it would not do, and--""You then tried force?"
35810Is all prepared?"
35810Is all ready there at the gangway?
35810Is there aught in the name to call up the rich blood to the face?
35810Is there no hope for me, Kate?"
35810Is there no hope of pardon for the penitent?"
35810Is there no pathway to your forgiveness?"
35810It ish lockt insite ve pe, Hanse, heh?"
35810It vas batriotic, heh, Hanse?
35810Lester-- Lester, said you?
35810Lives he?"
35810Mutiny?"
35810My lord, what shall be done with him?
35810Now vere vas I?
35810Our new fighting lieutenant will command us now; and suppose he should, as he is like to do, take a fancy to your bit of womankind?"
35810Shall I to_ her_ refer this altered air-- this cold look-- this hand that''s neither given nor withdrawn?
35810She confessed it?"
35810Tell me what has happened?
35810Tell me,"he added, with irresistible curiosity,"who are you?"
35810The following misprints have been corrected: Page 140,"ita"changed to"its"( Till it fulfil its destiny?)
35810The manacles were unlocked and removed, when Kyd, turning to him, asked with bitter malice,"What else?"
35810The youth sighed, and then said,"What motive induced her to take this interest in you?"
35810Then art thou not guilty?"
35810There is none, save thyself, that know I am not the true Lester?"
35810Thou hast ensured me victory in love and revenge?"
35810Ve lets nopoty in, to pe shure-- nor lets nopoty out neider, heh?
35810Vitch vomans, vat ish te password, heh?"
35810Vot vas te passvoord, Hanse?
35810Was I not tried and nothing found against me-- as how should there be?
35810Was it he?
35810We can increase our sail; you have studding- sails, captain?"
35810What became of him, seaman?
35810What can it mean?
35810What can it mean?
35810What has transpired?
35810What is this firing and sudden alarm?
35810What secret?"
35810What wilt thou now do?"
35810What wouldst thou?"
35810What, is it I of whom you speak?"
35810Whence came it?
35810Where is my second lieutenant?"
35810Where is my uncle?
35810Where is she?"
35810Where were my wits I did not suspect as much?"
35810Wherefore this shrinking form and averted eye-- this wild look of alarm-- this struggle to reprove when your heart gushes with returning love?
35810Who am I, then?
35810Who can have done this?
35810Who is it ye would kill with your silver bullet, Master Von Schmidt?"
35810Why are you here, and flying as if for life?"
35810Why is thy eye with such fierce scrutiny fixed upon me?"
35810Will you land and let me lead you, men?"
35810Wilt give the amulet?
35810Wilt thou forgive me, lady?"
35810Woman,"he cried, sternly addressing her,"know you this Rupert Fitzroy well?"
35810Would it humble thy pride to have her know it?"
35810Yet why this flag?
35810Yet you met?"
35810You have heard me, Fitzroy?"
35810am I not getting work to do?
35810and he?"
35810and thou, monster, do I not know thee?
35810asked one of the men of his comrade, whose arm he had grasped;"sall ve lets her go?"
35810cried the former, after looking an instant,"lines on the sun?
35810dere ish von footshteps along te vall-- no heh?"
35810did not the main- topgallant- sail flap then?"
35810do you know me?"
35810do you not know me?
35810does the sea give back its dead?"
35810hast thou not given cause?"
35810how doesh dou know dat he ish plack?"
35810how fares my dear uncle?"
35810how had she been occupied during the fearful conflict above and around her?
35810no more dey can, Hanse, heh?
35810what have we here?
35810what mean you?"
35810what?
35810what?
35810who have we here?"
35810who?"
35810why are you silent?
35810why do you gaze upon the water?
35810why will you seek to cast a cloud over the heaven your presence makes so bright?"
35810will no faint- heartedness come over thee?"
5038Abdicated?
5038Many people ask,"When will this war end?"
5038Need I recall either the scene or the national circumstances attending the occasion?
5038Now go and hoe your own row?"
5038Shall we abandon the reasonable support and regulation of banking?
5038Shall we restore the dollar to its former gold content?
5038Shall we say that values are restored and that the Congress will, therefore, repeal the laws under which we have been bringing them back?
5038Shall we say to the unemployed and the aged,"Social security lies not within the province of the Federal Government; you must seek relief elsewhere?"
5038That is your affair?"
5038What were the terms of that new relationship?
5038Why?
5038Within those other Nations-- those which today must bear the primary, definite responsibility for jeopardizing world peace-- what hope lies?
45130''Do n''t you know me, Mr Bradlaugh?'' 45130 And did you?"
45130Could_ that_ be the redoubtable Iconoclast?
45130DEAR LINTON,--Do you know Thomson''s address or how to get at it? 45130 How dared she write her brother?
45130My dear Mr Bradlaugh,Can you?
45130Outlaw or citizen?
45130Where did you walk during that time? 45130 Who will buy our bishopric?"
45130''Were you ever in a casual ward?''
45130''You know where Cheshire is?''
45130: Did you ever take legal proceedings against the_ Saturday Review_ for publishing this article?
45130: Do you believe in the truth of the Christian religion?
45130: Have you not made statements in public against the existence of God?
45130: Have you not said,"There is no God"?
45130After asking a number of questions about Broadhead and trades unions, Mr O''Malley asked:"Do you believe in the existence of a God?"
45130Again Mr Wood put the question:"Do you believe in God?"
45130All this he did in his opening half- hour''s address, but where could anything like''fun''be found in it all?
45130Am I a Secularist that I should lie, or an infidel committee- man that I should violate a ratified agreement?"
45130Am I outlaw or citizen-- which?
45130And so it came to pass that the pamphlet appeared with the title--''Tyrannicide: is it Justifiable?
45130Approaching me, the leader then asked, in the name of his Majesty Carlos VII., in a mixture of French and Spanish, if I had anything contraband?
45130Are the representations of Deity in the Bible irrational and derogatory?
45130Are you( to plaintiff) a writer in the_ National Reformer?_ And have you written under the name of"Iconoclast"?
45130Are you( to plaintiff) a writer in the_ National Reformer?_ And have you written under the name of"Iconoclast"?
45130Believe in what?
45130But did the Commune initiate the struggle of force?
45130But in the present case is it so?
45130But is it not the wages of iniquity?
45130But you are something else besides editor?
45130By the following evening the temper of the Wiganites had become-- what shall I say?
45130Can you conceive anything more wretched?
45130Do they remember the procession, I wonder, when men and women marched through the incessant downpour, the women as earnest as the men?
45130Do you believe in the existence of a supreme God?
45130Has not this been the law of England, and is it not in fact the sentiment of certain Englishmen even to- day?
45130He asked,"But why?"
45130Hence, according to the usual procedure, Mr Digby Seymour began:"You are the proprietor of the_ National Reformer_, I think?"
45130How dared she ask such a question?"
45130If they had been Communists instead of Carlists, what then?...
45130In spite of all these precautions( or was it because of them?)
45130In the meantime, who can tell how many were the visitors to that little study at the back, over the kitchen?
45130Is it in your library?
45130Is the doctrine of Original Sin, as taught in the Bible, theoretically unjust and practically pernicious?
45130Is the doctrine of personal existence after death, and of eternal happiness or misery for mankind, fraught with error and injurious to humanity?"
45130It may be asked, but what was the outcome of all these meetings, what was their practical value?
45130It may well be asked, What has become of all this Republican fervour?
45130It was cruel and cowardly to kill the hostages, but was it for the Versailles troops to reproach the Commune with that?
45130It was originally intended to hold a set debate upon the subject"Has Man a Soul?"
45130J. H. Rutherford, and was held in Liverpool in October 1860; another upon"What does the Bible teach about God?"
45130Je lis quelque fois vos discours-- vous traversez une crise-- quel en sera le résultat?
45130May I ask if you think Christianity has a ludicrous aspect?
45130More Christian?
45130Mr Bradlaugh had scarcely commenced to speak when a Royton Police Sergeant called roughly to him to come down:-- ICONOCLAST:"Why?"
45130Mr Bradlaugh pointed out that the Temperance advocates used the Park; why should not he?
45130Mr Prentice:"Do you believe in a future state of rewards and punishments?"
45130Mr S.: At all events, under your eloquent handling, I believe Christianity has been made to assume ridiculous aspects?
45130Mr S.: Do you know a work called"The Ludicrous Aspects of Christianity"?
45130Mr S.: I think you hold strong opinions on political subjects as well as on religion?
45130Mr S.: Oh, you state that, do you?
45130Mr S.: Then you think that Christianity has a ludicrous aspect?
45130Mr Truelove, however, suggested that it should be called''Tyrannicide: is it Justifiable?''
45130Mr. S.: Without putting it unfairly, you hold extreme opinions?
45130My father asked,"What wages?"
45130My object in now addressing you is to ascertain if there is any probability of my obtaining my articles from you, and if so, at what period?
45130My question to you now is, Do you feel willing to give me my articles?
45130Naples 1861, France 1861, Germany 1863, Geneva 1866, Rome 1866, France 1871, Germany(?)
45130Specially to settle the question, Will the authorities put in force the laws against blasphemy?"
45130The JUDGE: Do you believe in a state of future rewards and punishments?
45130The subject for the discussion, which was held in the Temperance Hall, was"Is the Bible a divine revelation?"
45130The subject for the evening address was,"Were Adam and Eve our first parents?"
45130The_ Standard_ on the 11th of March reprinted from it the article,"Who are the Leaguers?"
45130To many Mr Bradlaugh was known only by fame, and if a fresh person came into the hall the question,"Is that he?"
45130To seek a situation seemed useless: what was to be done?
45130To try the actual value of the argument,"he said,"it is not unfair to ask, Did a Theist ever steal?
45130To whom should he turn for help and sympathy if not to those for whose opinions he was now suffering?
45130WHICH AM I?
45130What am I to do?
45130What is the difference between finding belief in God impossible and an Atheist?"
45130What is your business?
45130What secular principles has he advanced which are inconsistent with the position I take?
45130What were the comments of the Press on this great triumph so hardly won for them?
45130When the jury was called only ten gentlemen answered to their names; thereupon the Associate asked the Attorney- General,"Do you pray a tales?"
45130Who has not seen or heard of the Sunday marketing in Petticoat Lane, Leather Lane, Golden Lane, Whitecross Street, and many such another place?
45130Who shall show against it any just cause or impediment?"]
45130Why should I?
45130Will you?
45130You are one of the members of the International?
45130You make great speeches?
45130You presided at a meeting in Hyde Park the other day?
45130You wo n''t answer the question?
45130[ Footnote 159: This debate is published in pamphlet form, under the title,"What does Christian Theism teach?"]
45130what was his home life, and in what way was he earning his bread?
45130what was that?
45954How do those people treat you now, since they have come to close quarters with you? 45954 They assailed Sumner because he said,''Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing?''
45954Who can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, Loyal and neutral, in a moment? 45954 Who is the HONEST MAN?
45954_ Bru._ All this? 45954 ''Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing? 45954 ***** And first, what are our present duties here in Massachusetts? 45954 ***** Here two questions occur, absorbing all others:_ first_, what are our political duties here in Massachusetts at the present time? 45954 Am I not right in this parallel? 45954 Am I not right, then, in calling it the worst bill on which Congress ever acted? 45954 Am I not right, then, in calling this bill the best on which Congress ever acted? 45954 Am I right? 45954 And yet the honorable Senator asks,Did we ever bring this subject into Congress?"
45954Ay, more: fret, till your proud heart break:_ Go, show your slaves how choleric you are, And make your bondmen tremble._ Must I budge?
45954But what is the use of petition, or polished sentences and rounded periods, in a contest with the pirate honor of Slavery?
45954Did not the honorable Senator from Ohio some time ago bring in such a bill?
45954Do I understand the Senator to say without notice given?
45954Do I understand the gentleman to say that the Rule of Three was applied to representation in the United States?
45954Do you ask me if I would send back a slave?
45954Does any Senator here dissent from this rule?
45954Does any one question this?
45954Does the Senator allude to my State?
45954Does the Senator from South Carolina?
45954Does the Senator from Virginia?
45954Has the Senator a right to debate the question, or say anything on it, until leave be granted?
45954Has the Senator done?
45954He then asked if Massachusetts"would send fugitives back to us after trial by jury or any other mode?"
45954Here the question was distinctly presented, whether any such property was recognized by the British Constitution?
45954How often must I say this?
45954I put the question in general language: Does he recognize the obligation to return a fugitive slave?"
45954I wish to inquire of the Senator from New Hampshire whether he has withdrawn his motion?
45954I wish to know, before voting, what will be the effect of a vote given in the affirmative on this motion?
45954I would inquire whether there is not a bill already pending for the repeal of the Fugitive Slave Law?
45954I would inquire whether there is not such a bill pending?
45954I would respectfully ask the Chair what has become of the motion submitted by the Senator from New Hampshire?
45954If the Constitution and laws appoint officers, and require them to discharge duties, will he abandon them to the mob?
45954In what school of blackguardism was Clay of Alabama graduated?
45954Is that in order?
45954Is that motion in order?
45954It was entitled,"Shall Slavery be permitted in Nebraska?"
45954Mr. Butler rose to reply, when Mr. Badger asked his"friend from South Carolina, whether it would not be better for him to allow us now to adjourn?"
45954Must I give way and room to your rash choler?
45954Must I observe you?
45954Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humor?
45954Now, Sir, upon what ground do gentlemen make any discrimination in the case of the power over the National Militia?
45954Oh, when will the North be aroused?
45954On what motion have the yeas and nays been ordered?
45954Our slaves being our property, why should they be taxed more than the land, sheep, cattle, horses,& c.?"
45954Pray, why incumbent on him?
45954Sir, can you wonder that our people are moved?
45954Sir, who has pretended that all men are born equal in physical strength or in mental capacities, in beauty of form or health of body?
45954Suppose some of us object to it?
45954The question arose, whether leave should be granted to the Senator from Massachusetts to introduce the bill?
45954The question for the Chair to put is, Shall the Senator have leave?
45954The question is, whether, on the motion for leave to introduce the bill, there shall be debate?
45954The question was then raised, whether it could be received, if there was objection?
45954Then he exclaimed:"Why, Sir, am I speaking of a fanatic, one whose reason is dethroned?
45954Then how can we ever reach the question of leave, when objection is made?
45954Then, turning to Mr. Sumner, he demanded, with much impetuosity of manner,"Will this honorable Senator tell me that he will do it?"
45954To which Mr. Sumner promptly replied,"Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this thing?"
45954WHEN WILL THE NORTH BE AROUSED?
45954What and how?
45954What higher praise could I offer?
45954What is the date of that statute?
45954Who can doubt the result?
45954Who can fail to see the difference between the two cases, and how far the tyranny of the Slave Act is beyond the tyranny of the Stamp Act?
45954Why not?
45954Will it carry the bill and the whole subject on the table?
45954Will the Chair allow me to make a single statement?
45954Will the Senator allow me?
45954Will the Senator from Massachusetts give leave to the Chair to explain?
45954Will the Senator refer to his own speech?
45954Will the gentleman for Marshfield allow me to make one more inquiry?
45954Will the gentleman state who was the author of that Essex paper?
45954Will the honorable Senator allow me to interrupt him?
45954[_ Applause and laughter._] What may we expect from the Whig party?
45954_ Sic itur ad astra._ Mais que dis- je?
45954and,_ secondly_, how, and by what agency, shall they be performed?
45954in reply to the question, whether he would assist in the capture of a fugitive slave?
45954must I endure all this?
45954which way shall I fly?
44625''A stranger? 44625 ''And this?''
44625''I will do anything you ask,''replied the passenger,''but what shall I write?'' 44625 ''The matter, sir?
44625''Well, Mr. Bruce,''said the Captain,''did not I tell you that you had been dreaming?'' 44625 ''What were you doing?''
44625''Why, Mr. Bruce,''said the latter,''what in the world is the matter with you?'' 44625 ''You say that this is your handwriting?''
44625But are there no real ghosts? 44625 Have you then forgotten our promises to each other, pledged in early life?
44625I again addressed it, this time in the language of the country,''What do you want?'' 44625 I strove to speak-- my voice utterly failed me; I could only think to myself, Is this fear?
44625Tell me,I said,"Lord Tyrone, why and wherefore are you here at this time of the night?"
44625The men saluted him; and the captain called out:''How''s she heading?'' 44625 This I immediately did; and the next day when my sister arrived, she asked me if I had complied with her request?
44625Upon hearing this the captain said to the second mate:''When did you heave the lead? 44625 ''Could anyone have been stowed away?'' 44625 ''Well, do you like it?'' 44625 ''What are ye talkin''about?'' 44625 ''What is up?'' 44625 ''What was this gentleman about at noon to- day?'' 44625 13 The Terror of the Dark 14 What is a Ghost? 44625 18 Historic Investigations 20 Death Coincidences 21 Are They Due to Chance? 44625 ARE THEY DUE TO CHANCE? 44625 After all, is n''t there some reason for the fears that we all feel, more or less, at that time? 44625 After all, were not his arguments somewhat impressive? 44625 And why did_ It appear_? 44625 At last:''What is the meaning of this?'' 44625 Bruce?'' 44625 But how about those ghosts which appear some time after death? 44625 But you say,''he added, turning to the passenger,''that you did not dream of writing on a slate?'' 44625 But, after all, what_ is_ a ghost? 44625 CAN HAUNTED HOUSES BECURED"?
44625Can I be of use to you?''
44625Can I do anything for you?''
44625Can not you see why I hate it so?"
44625Can that be right?
44625Can this be done?
44625Chance, you say?
44625Could a simple"hallucination"have been so widespread and so prevalent?
44625Could a_ hundred_?
44625Did the animal succeed in affecting his master by telepathy?
44625For, if a living mind can influence the living by telepathy; why not a"dead"one?
44625For, if the phantom were a mere hallucination, as many claim, how did several see it at once?
44625Had n''t they seen him with a sword on every''quid''they''d ever seen?
44625He then called his first mate, as he was going off watch, and asked him how all things fared?
44625How came you here when you are so ill?"
44625How can a telepathic impulse from a distant mind cause a picture to appear in space, as it were, before the recipient?
44625How can there be real ghost stories when there are no real ghosts?
44625How do they manifest?
44625How is yours, sir?''
44625How many of us have seen the microbe that kills?
44625I called aloud:''May n''t I strike a light and show you the way along this dark hall?''
44625I exclaimed,''Good God, how and where?''
44625I fell on my knees before her and kissed-- what?
44625I got annoyed and said,''Can you not speak, man, and tell me if anything is wrong?''
44625I had not been awake long enough to remember that she was dead, and exclaimed quite naturally,''Why, dear, what''s the matter?''
44625I said:''Who are you?''
44625I started up and said:''Edward, is there anything wrong?''
44625If not, why the coincidence?
44625If we were to believe that a simple hallucination caused the figure, how account for this identification?
44625In my dreams, in the wild fantasies that had oft- times visited by pillow at night-- in delirium, in reality, where?
44625In short, we are back to our original question: What are ghosts?
44625In what do they consist?
44625In what may it be supposed to consist?
44625It asked:''Who is the lady in white?''
44625It had not yet come in, and Sir Tristram asked:''Why are you so particularly eager about letters to- day?''
44625It is this: Can so- called Haunted Houses be_ cured_?
44625It would lie down by my side; perhaps touch me; perhaps-- who could tell?
44625Mrs. Claughton said:''Am I dreaming, or is it true?''
44625My curiosity, however, was far greater than my fear, and I kept asking myself what the thing was, and why it was there?
44625On seeing Z. a few days afterwards, I inquired:''Did anything happen at your rooms on Saturday night?''
44625So far so good, but how about apparitions of the living?
44625So, after all, as I said, is n''t there some reasonable ground for one''s fear at such times?"
44625TELEPATHIC HALLUCINATIONS How may the theory be said to work?
44625TRUE GHOST STORIES CHAPTER I WHAT IS A GHOST?
44625The first chapter deals with the interesting question,"What is a Ghost?"
44625Then, before you could say"knife,"the Germans had turned, and we were after them, fighting like ninety....''"''Where was this?''
44625This, therefore, is one very strong point in favor of this hypothesis; but if the ghost is a real, outstanding entity, how account for his clothes?
44625WHAT IS A GHOST?
44625WHERE?
44625Was it real?
44625Was it the result of imposture?
44625Was it the work of imagination?
44625Was there something amiss with my own hearing, then, that I could distinguish no word amid these deeply emphasized tones?
44625Was this hallucination, or some vision of the unseen, coming in so unexpected a fashion?
44625What did your mate see?''
44625What do they do with themselves?
44625What do we mean by this?
44625What had I seen?
44625What has been said by way of explanation of these cases?
44625What should I do if I were in darkness?''
44625What water had you?''
44625When we regained the avenue( in silence) Miss Moore asked Miss Langton,''What did you see?''
44625Where do ghosts live, and how?
44625Who else would venture down without orders?''
44625Who is that at your desk?''
44625Who wrote the_ other_?''
44625Who?''
44625Why do they believe?
44625Why do they return?
44625Why should not the surviving spirit of man continue to influence us, by telepathy?
44625Would they believe if they had no cause to do so?
44625Yet if we can not believe this, how are we to explain this difficulty-- and the fact that ghosts wear ghostly garments?
44625Yet, after all, why should they?
44625Yet, if there are real, objective, outstanding ghosts, how can we explain them?
44625You ask me why?
44625You do n''t mean to tell me you did n''t see her?''
44625_ One_ case of this character might be explained in such manner; but could_ fifty_?
44625_ What is_ this connection?
44625_ Who_ or_ what_ was it that waked the captain and bade him save the ship?
44625_ Why_ should Lord Brougham have dreamed this particular dream at the very moment his friend died?
44625during its early years-- a terror which is, to a certain extent, shared by animals and even insects-- does all this signify nothing?
4597''Are you sure?'' 4597 ''Do you think he is alive?''
4597''In this village?'' 4597 ''Where do you think Livingstone is?''
4597''Who are you?'' 4597 And who are you?"
4597Bless me, what does the child mean?
4597But how shall I know the place?
4597But the sun and moon are round,replies Columbus,"why not the earth?"
4597But where shall I go?
4597Daniel, Daniel,he said sorrowfully,"do n''t you mean to take that office?"
4597How can trees grow with their roots in the air?
4597How much does he ask for it?
4597If the earth is a ball, what holds it up?
4597My lord,cries the agonized parent;"what horrible command is this you lay upon me?
4597W----?
4597What didst thou intend to do with it?
4597What do you, who already have so much to be grateful for, want with diamonds?
4597What holds the sun and moon up?
4597What if the earth is round?
4597What is the lowest price you can take for this book, sir?
4597What shall I do?
4597What will He do,asked the boy one day,"when we do n''t do the best we can?"
4597Who did you say is waiting for me?
4597Who is the sculptor of this group?
4597Why dost thou hesitate?
4597Why, what do you want to be now?
4597Why,thought he,"ca n''t I gather and sell enough to buy my dictionary?"
4597You''d make a pretty president, with all your tricks and jokes, now would n''t you?
4597''That''s my fate, is it?
4597''Will you,''said one of them,''take us and our trunks to the steamer?''
4597A learned doctor asks,"How can men walk with their heads hanging down, and their feet up, like flies on a ceiling?"
4597And little Pierre?
4597And the story of William Tell,--is it not dear to every heart that loves liberty?
4597And the words, too?"
4597And what were the experiences that led to it?
4597And where is that band, who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more?
4597And who was this young man who was chosen to undertake a work which required the highest qualities of manhood to carry it to success?
4597Angel or demon?
4597But if a fellow has to grub away ten or twelve hours out of the twenty- four, what time is left to do anything for one''s self?"
4597But stay, what is this?
4597But why is this master artist at work, in secret, in a cellar where the sun never shone, the daylight never entered?
4597Can ships sail up hill?"
4597Did he get the dictionary?
4597Did he give up his dreams of being a great man?
4597Did influence, a"pull,"or financial considerations have anything to do with the merchant''s choice of a partner?
4597Do n''t you remember young W----?"
4597Do you mean me to go to Central Africa?''
4597FRANKLIN''S LESSON ON TIME VALUE Dost thou love life?
4597Gessler cries in a loud authoritative voice:"Wherefore is this assembly of people?
4597Has Ali Hafed returned?"
4597He was starving and almost naked, and the diamonds-- which had lured him away from all that made life dear-- where were they?
4597Heralds, in thunder tones, repeat,"Who is the sculptor of this group?"
4597Is Dr. Livingstone here?''
4597Is it the work of the gods?
4597Is there in all the length and breadth of the United States to- day a boy so poor as to envy Abraham Lincoln the chances of his boyhood?
4597It lies, like a block of pure, uncut Parian marble, ready to be fashioned into-- what?
4597It was hard, was n''t it, for a little fellow only eight years old to have to leave off going to school and settle down to work on a farm?
4597Now, of all things in the world; of what use was a cow to an ambitious boy who wanted to go to college?
4597Perhaps-- But what is this?
4597Shall it be one of beauty, or of deformity; an angel, or a devil?
4597Tell me how and where you found it?"
4597The latter wrote back without delay:"What has poor Horatio done, who is so weak, that he, above all the rest, should be sent to rough it out at sea?
4597Then a light broke in upon them, and they cried out,"Is it possible that you had the valedictory in mind when you put that''V''over your door?"
4597Then, turning toward him, she asked, in amazement:"Did you compose it?
4597To what purpose didst thou destine the second arrow?"
4597WHAT WILL YOU DO WITH IT?
4597Was it any wonder that he was popular with all kinds of people?
4597Was it any wonder that his"middies"almost worshiped him?
4597What change has come o''er the spirit of his dreams?
4597What does all this mean?
4597What has happened to check the laughter on their lips, and dim their bright eyes with tears?
4597What is it?"
4597What schoolboy or schoolgirl is not familiar with those stirring lines from"William Tell''s Address to His Native Mountains,"by J. M. Knowles?
4597What was to be done?
4597What will you do with it?"
4597Which will you call into life?
4597Who art thou, and why dost thou hold that man a prisoner?"
4597Who called for help?
4597Who could his benefactor be?
4597Who did it?"
4597Whom do you mean?"
4597Why did she do it?
4597Will you shape it into a statue of beauty which will enchant the world, or will you call out a hideous image which will demoralize every beholder?
4597With his arm linked in that of the philosopher, we see-- but why prolong the list?
4597Without waiting for a reply, she added quickly,"Would you like to come to my concert this evening?"
4597You will lose your place; or, supposing you to retain it, what are you but a clerk for life?
4597aim at a mark placed on the head of my dear child?
4597could it be possible that the great artist who had been so kind to him would sing his little song before this brilliant audience?
4597groans the stricken youth,"why have ye deserted me, now, when my task is almost completed?
4597or-- and, with bated breath, the question passes from lip to lip,"Can it have been fashioned by the hand of a slave?"
4597said I,''do you really think I can find Dr. Livingstone?
4597say, can you see, by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming?
4597say, does that star- spangled banner yet wave O''er the land of the free and the home of the brave?
4597they said,"and you sail down the other side, how can you get back again?
47135And who are these citizens? 47135 Are we honoring Jesse Seligman because he was a successful, self- made man?
47135But how could absolutism be consistent with equality? 47135 But what if it were true that the Jews are unsocial?
47135Or do we admire Jesse Seligman above others because he was a patriotic man? 47135 Shall we not rather consider it as a matter of shame and remorse to ourselves?
47135What nation ever contended more manfully against overwhelming odds for its independence and religion? 47135 While the bloody code of Elizabeth was enforced against the English Roman Catholics, what was the patriotism of Roman Catholics?
47135( florins?
47135And for whom is this done?
47135And is there no feeling for a father?
47135And this new age, the age that we have so ardently invoked, what will it bring us and how will it fulfil its boasted promises?
47135Are there many dissensions amongst them?
47135Because he was a rich man?
47135But do we consider him worthy of envy now, since he is dead?
47135But in how many feeble minds was not an uncertainty left?
47135But should it be nothing to such persons that when, as they believe, the Creator would incarnate himself, He became a Jew?
47135But were they always a mere money- changing, money- getting, money- hoarding race?
47135Could they overlook the feeble and the poor?
47135Do you?"
47135Does any one call this an evil pride?
47135Does he not bring energy and labor?
47135Driven from all other branches of trade, with a price on his head, and his home at the mercy of others, how could the Jew protect himself?
47135Has not similar antipathy often been felt by persecuted Christians to the society which persecuted them?
47135Has the agitation been justified by time?
47135Has the grafting of these scions on the rooted stem degenerated the stock?
47135Here is a petition to the Secretary of War; you know him well; will you present it or will you go with me to introduce me?
47135How about the Scandinavians and the Holland Dutch, the French and Italians?
47135How many will take the trouble to read over the Sacred Books, when the reading of the daily papers absorbs all their time?
47135I admit that he knows how to deal in money, but, who gave him points in the game of usury?
47135If England were now invaded by Roman Catholics, how many English Roman Catholics would go over to the invader?
47135If France were now attacked by a Protestant enemy, how many French Protestants would lend him help?
47135If the Jews, under centuries of restriction, ostracised from social life, did cling to money and its uses, whose fault was it?
47135In 1749 the Maroons in the east, known as_ Tempati(?)
47135Is his thrift and industry likely to impoverish our community?
47135Is that Jewish or Christian?
47135Shall we exclude the Russian Jew, who is driven from his native soil by the stupid villany of the same Tartar barbarism?
47135Shall we exclude the poor Roman Catholic Pole, who is driven from his home by the vindictive policy of his barbarous conquerer?
47135Since then and up to this time is it not the same sentiment?
47135The cause of this desertion[ from the Portuguese troops?]
47135Their habits and institutions, inspired by the parental sentiment-- were they not full of kindliness and foresight?
47135To exalt a daughter who absconds and robs him whom she should honor?
47135To this faith Israel clings with devoted love, and from this faith shall Shylock turn to become a Christian?
47135Two Portuguese[ Jews?]
47135Well, who has instigated it?
47135What else existed, before the laws of Moses, than that paganism which legalized all vices?
47135What has the anti- Semite to answer?
47135What if it were true that they do not regard England as their country?
47135What is against this man?
47135What is left to the poor Jew, whom you have trodden under foot, when you rob him of his faith?
47135What more deadly enemies had France in the day of Louis XIV, than the persecuted Huguenots?
47135What nation ever, in its last agonies, gave such signal proofs of what may be accomplished by a brave despair?
47135What then?
47135What will be the verdict of history as to the effects upon Judaism of the harsh policy of Alexander III?
47135Where shall this line be drawn?
47135Where then shall we draw the line?
47135Where then shall we draw the line?
47135Who was it that so signally changed the current of the world''s affairs?
47135Whose influence yet remains as mysterious as it was far- reaching?
47135Why do we honor his memory, and wish that, when we shall be gone, we should, in many respects, be remembered as he is?
47135Why does he deal in money?
47135Why is this?
47135Would not the treatment which they have undergone explain and excuse their antipathy to the society in which they live?
47135XII( 1863) p. 323- 324, record, that the ringleader in this conspiracy was Joan Fernandes Víníra(?
47135or will you get Mr. Benjamin to recommend it?''
47135was that the Lieutenant- Colonel, Garstman, had been sufficiently impolitic to put to death( in 1645 or 1646?)
47135why not reveal what you know and feel?"
5048And if we do n''t do it now, when will we ever get around to it?
5048And let the final test of everything we do be a simple one: Is it good for the American people?
5048And without blinking an eye, she looked at 40 governors and she said, when my boy goes to school and they say"What does your mother do for a living?"
5048And, third, how do we meet these challenges together, as one America?
5048Do we need common sense and fairness in our regulations?
5048Do you believe we can become one nation?
5048Do you believe we can create more jobs over the long run by cleaning the environment up?
5048Do you believe we can expand the economy without hurting the environment?
5048How many other families have never had that same opportunity?
5048How will we mark that passage?
5048Is it paid for?
5048My tests for our proposals will be: Will it create jobs and raise incomes?
5048Now why should Americans be concerned about this?
5048Now, why?
5048Second, how do we preserve our old and enduring values as we move into the future?
5048Should we cut the deficit more?
5048That was encouraging, you know?
5048The title of a best- selling book asked:"America: What went wrong?"
5048Tonight, my fellow Americans, we are summoned to answer a question as old as the republic itself, what is the state of our union?
5048What are we to do about it?
5048What does it mean?
5048What does that mean?
5048What should we do with this projected surplus?
5048What we have to do in our day and generation to make sure that America truly becomes one nation, what do we have to do?
5048Who would say that this age of possibility is not for all Americans?
5048Who would say that, having come so far together, we will not go forward from here?
5048Why do we want guaranteed private insurance?
5048Will it build the middle class and shrink the underclass?
5048Will it strengthen our families and support our children?
46400''Where?'' 46400 But why did n''t you say''Give me liberty or give me death,''Uncle John?"
46400Did you say one of these Hobson sisters was my ancestor, and did she do anything heroic?
46400Do you not see that these are no questions for you? 46400 For such a thing as this?"
46400I stand before you to know; have you chosen the part of men or traitors?
46400Is Charlie Mackey at home?
46400Is she Agnes Hobson?
46400Make way there, ye spalpeens,he shouted,"sure do n''t ye see the great Ginral Burgyne a comin''along?
46400The General wishes it was in his power to conduct the troops into the best winter quarters; but where are those to be found? 46400 Thinkest thou existence doth depend on time?
46400Tut, tut, my good woman,said he, boiling with rage,"do you know what you are doing?
46400Well, what did Agnes Hobson do?
46400What greater cause could there be?
46400Why are the dead not dead? 46400 Why, Mary,"he exclaimed,"what are you doing there, hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?"
46400Why, Steptoe, is that all?
46400Young maidsaid the gallant Chief Hiawatha,"Is this where the Indians Land?"
46400''Do you know where he is?''
46400''What have you for dinner, Boys?''
46400''What is your supper, lads?''
46400A discussion arose:"What about the girls?
46400Alarmed by the expression of their grief- stricken faces he exclaimed:"Where is Yaho Hadjo?
46400And can you not almost hear Thankful telling her father about the wonderful journey around Cape Horn?
46400Beckon lost music from a broken lute?
46400Brocade, woven with silver thread?
46400Brothers, are you tame?
46400But from which side did they come?
46400But how to land the prize?
46400But pray, how came you here?"
46400But were they not subjects of the British king?
46400But what woman would?
46400By whom could it be authorized?
46400Did he not deserve the name of seer?
46400Did those shouts mean the defeat of her husband; or did they mean his triumph?
46400Had not the troops come out in obedience to acknowledged authorities?
46400Has God led us so far to desert now?
46400Have you been squattin''in the thicket yonder?"
46400He said:"You have something for sale, I presume?"
46400He wuz er standing on dis very spot, and he lif''up his voice like a lion and he sez, sez he--""What did he say?"
46400How could there be anything of humor connected with the struggle?
46400How many times during the war did he clothe his soldiers and supply their wants when the country could n''t?
46400Is it any wonder that in such environment the boy''s dreamy aspirations crystallized into the high resolve of becoming a patriot and statesman?
46400Is not that a pleasing portrait?
46400Mrs. Arnett, in dignified silence, listened until they had finished, and then she asked:"But what if we should live after all?"
46400Of course, was not his motto"cur non?"
46400Of what?
46400Or dig the sunken sun- set from the deep?"
46400Ought it to be so?
46400Renew the redness of a last year''s rose?
46400This is very different from the wills of today, is n''t it?
46400This was the very first voyage ever made around the Cape, and can you not imagine how proud young William Cleghorn was?
46400Toward the loom in the kitchen she drew, She had finished that day, A beautiful blanket of brown and blue,"Was it plaided this way?"
46400Was it justifiable?
46400Was not this unselfish love of liberty of the plainest type?
46400Was resistance practicable?
46400What I have said applies to men, but what about the young women of the same period?
46400What could this crazy skipper mean by attacking a fleet with one dinky little schooner?
46400What was it if not generosity, when at his own expense, he fitted out the ship that brought him and the other officers to this country?
46400What was it?
46400What was this she saw?
46400What?
46400When this story was read to the ladies present, one of the men asked:"Where lives there such a woman now?"
46400Where are her high- heeled silken shoon That stepped in time to the wedding tune?
46400Where are her ruffles of fine point lace?
46400Where are the pearls that graced her head?
46400Where breathes a foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us?
46400Where is the gown in which she was we d?
46400Who can undo What time has done?
46400Who can win back the wind?
46400Whose gold is in his pouch?
46400Why did Washington elect to put his army in winter- quarters?
46400Why do n''t you lay down your arms and disperse?"
46400Why does the Morning Star linger in the forest?"
46400Will He who led our fathers across the stormy, wintry sea forsake their children, who have put their trust in Him?
46400Will you submit?
46400Wud yees be standin''in the way of the conquerer?
46400You got upset in a rail car-- and where are you?"
46400my more than brother, have we met at last, after so many long and weary years of separation, each of which has seemed an eternity?"
46400whar did you cum from?
46400what breaks upon the autumn stillness and the quiet of the colonial household on the Mataponi,----?
46400woman in this world of ours, What boon can be compared to thee?
50374Now, what was this Holy Ghost and spirit of truth, and where are we to find it? 50374 Some may query, what is the cross of Christ?
50374A second query was to the effect,"Did God send him into the world purposely to suffer death?"
50374And are not the histories of passing events, written by candid men of the present age, which thousands know to be true, as authentic as the Bible?
50374And what was it that was a Saviour?
50374But how, in his time, could he have had any knowledge of evolution?
50374But what is this Jesus Christ?
50374Do n''t we see how different the precepts of the law of God are?
50374In reply to the query,"By what means did Jesus suffer?"
50374Is it like coming home to justice?
50374It is a plain way, a simple way which all can understand, and not be under the necessity to go to a neighbor, and to say,''Know thou the Lord?
50374Its clear- sightedness; how comes it that the eye is single to the true course?
50374Its quickening sympathy; what is the sweet secret?
50374Its strength to endure; from what fountain flows unfailing strength?
50374Now can we hesitate a single moment, in regard to the truth of this declaration?
50374Or such a place as hell, or a gulf located in some interior part of this little terraqueous globe?
50374Shall we say that the love of God is equally manifested in all these?
50374Speaking of the"Comforter"which was to come, he said:"And what was this Comforter?
50374The Lord had declared beforehand unto them in plain characters, that none need to say,''Know ye the Lord?
50374The text was,"What is the chief end of man?"
50374The unswerving rectitude; whence is its divine directness?
50374Using the term,"washed clean in the blood of the lamb,"he proceeded to explain himself as follows:"And what is the blood of the lamb?
50374What is this, but this Comforter which reproves the world of sin?
50374Who has the authority, in the language of Whittier, to..."fix with metes and bounds The love and power of God?"
50374which proves it to be immortal; and can any thing, or being, that is not immortal in itself, receive the impress of an immortal desire upon it?
23192And whenever we camp we can wash out gold, ca n''t we?
23192Anybody with you?
23192Anything to eat at Chagres? 23192 Anything wrong?"
23192Are these the Californy diggin''s?
23192Are they better?
23192Are they up there now?
23192Are those the same?
23192Are you dry?
23192Are you getting anything?
23192Are you going on the_ Georgia_?
23192Are your family here, Colonel? 23192 Aw-- honest?"
23192Because we''ll be twice as long-- see? 23192 But are n''t your rates pretty high?"
23192But he could n''t enter your cabin when he was n''t here, could he? 23192 But he gave the stuff away, did n''t he?"
23192But horses and mules? 23192 But you are n''t certain?"
23192By the way, Jim,spoke the Frémonter,"are there any quartz workings around here?
23192By the way, where''s Colonel Frémont?
23192Ca n''t you get in there and do something for your country? 23192 Can I do anything more for you, gentlemen?"
23192Can you see the old fort on it?
23192Cleaned up your pile already?
23192Coming on?
23192Davidson? 23192 Did I hit him?
23192Did n''t see them aboard ship, then?
23192Did n''t you have a good time? 23192 Did you get a berth?"
23192Did you get that up on that hill?
23192Did you get-- find it?
23192Did you kill any bear?
23192Did you lock the cabin door when you went out?
23192Did you look on deck, where you were?
23192Did you mine in California?
23192Did you shoot anything on the way across?
23192Did you sleep well?
23192Did you? 23192 Did you?
23192Do we land in that big bay?
23192Do we stop?
23192Do you know what flour''s selling at, in California? 23192 Do you know where you are?
23192Do you know who it was?
23192Do you like her looks?
23192Do you reckon we''ll have time to eat?
23192Do you suppose he is?
23192Do you suppose the whole rock''s full of gold?
23192Do you think I could forget one of my own men? 23192 Do you think I''ll get well again?"
23192Do you think he''s going on our boat?
23192Do you think it will be Christmas present enough for you?
23192Do you think our men will be back?
23192Do you think that''s his?
23192Do you think we''ll catch them?
23192Does Crosby know of him?
23192Drunk, is n''t he?
23192Eh, Charley?
23192Feel sick, Charley?
23192From where, sir?
23192Getting anything?
23192Going out to the_ California_, strangers?
23192Gold is plentiful?
23192Gold?
23192Gold?
23192Got any room to spare?
23192Had a good time? 23192 Had n''t many, had he?"
23192Have I, stranger? 23192 Have n''t got any flour for trade, have you?"
23192Have you any news for us gold seekers, Lieutenant?
23192Have you got the quinine?
23192He does n''t act like it, does he?
23192He is, is he? 23192 He told me to keep it, anyway, did n''t he?"
23192Hello? 23192 High, my friend?"
23192His name was Jacobs, was n''t it?
23192How about it?
23192How about other business? 23192 How about you, Charley?"
23192How are things at the mines?
23192How are things at the saw- mill diggin''s?
23192How are things at your diggin''s?
23192How are we to get on?
23192How are you, Jim? 23192 How are you?"
23192How are you?
23192How are you?
23192How did they know enough to trade on your name, Grigsby?
23192How do you know it?
23192How far across to the Pacific at Panama?
23192How far to Sutter''s?
23192How far''s the Pacific Ocean, now?
23192How far?
23192How large is Sacramento, stranger?
23192How long have you been here?
23192How long were you gone?
23192How long were you in finding this, then?
23192How long will that take?
23192How long''ll it take us, to Sacramento, captain?
23192How many are there? 23192 How many have you got?"
23192How much are your potatoes, my man?
23192How much can one man dig in a day?
23192How much do you suppose it makes?
23192How much more is there of it? 23192 How much?"
23192How''d you get here?
23192How''d you make it?
23192How''ll we get our trunk up to the hotel, I wonder?
23192How''ll you fry your meat?
23192How''s the horse and mule market? 23192 How''s the trail?"
23192Howdy, strangers? 23192 Howdy, strangers?"
23192Howdy?
23192I''d better give him a little hot milk, if he can drink it, had n''t I?
23192I''m glad, are n''t you?
23192Injuns after you?
23192Is Marshall mining?
23192Is he badly frozen, Charley?
23192Is he still out here?
23192Is it always this hot in Californy?
23192Is it gold, Charley?
23192Is n''t my word as good as his?
23192Is that Sacramento, cap''n?
23192Is that San Francisco?
23192Is that their mine? 23192 Is that you, Bentley?"
23192Is there a laundry near here?
23192Is there gold in those hills yon, mister?
23192Is there lots of gold out there?
23192Is this Californy?
23192Is this all your party?
23192Is this still San Francisco Bay?
23192It is a paved road, you say, sir?
23192It''s a scheme to get rid of me, is it, and take my share in that gold mine you''re making for? 23192 It''s almost time that we met some of the overland crowd, is n''t it?"
23192Jumped yore claim, have they?
23192Just coming in, or have you made one pile?
23192Just what do you mean, sir?
23192Large, you say?
23192Looks as though a toler''ble lot more passengers were comin''aboard, do n''t it?
23192Looks as though we were in for a fight, then; eh, Grigsby?
23192Much baggage?
23192Need me?
23192Never heard of a claim called the Golden West, in those parts, did you? 23192 Not off to the mines yet?"
23192Nothing new, is there?
23192Now will you have a drink?
23192Now''s our chance to divvy, then, is n''t it?
23192Only six weeks old?
23192Our old stamping- ground of the American fork, eh?
23192Papers only six weeks old? 23192 Pardner, what are the lodging- houses here now?
23192Plenty of gold?
23192Rest for two hours, and eat, is it?
23192Rope makes the shape of a diamond-- see? 23192 Say, where is Chagres?"
23192See my shirt?
23192See that gap? 23192 See them?"
23192See? 23192 See?"
23192Shall I try some more?
23192Shall I?
23192So proud of your new clothes that you do n''t recognize old friends, eh? 23192 So you think somebody was bent on cutting that boat down, do you?"
23192So you''ve been to the mines, have you?
23192Sure?
23192Taking a trip?
23192That is a much better site; not? 23192 That nephew does n''t get any of it, just the same; does he?"
23192That will help you out, wo n''t it? 23192 That''s Goat Island, is n''t it?
23192That''s a burro, ai n''t it? 23192 The captain thinks he''ll keep us aboard all night, does he?
23192The first of the California missions was here, was n''t it?
23192The gate to the Land of Gold, eh?
23192The pirates captured it, did n''t they, couple of hundred years ago?
23192Then we''ll see the survey, to- morrow?
23192Then why did the company sell us tickets?
23192There''s more, is n''t there?
23192There''s no chance for a berth, I suppose, is there?
23192There''s still plenty of gold, is there?
23192This is an emigrant trail, then, too, is n''t it?
23192This is the American, ai n''t it?
23192This is the man, is it?
23192This is where the gold was discovered in Forty- eight, is it?
23192Three men, with a bay mule-- one man small and dark, long nose?
23192Want a tow?
23192Want to earn fifty cents?
23192Was he? 23192 Wash what we''ve brought, but do n''t you dare to iron them; eh, Grigsby?"
23192We can take them in, ca n''t we, Grigsby?
23192We wash, and for zis meesairable caban-- what you call it? 23192 We''d better go right on down to the beach, Grigsby, had n''t we?"
23192We''d better talk it over, first, had n''t we?
23192We''ll take care of ourselves; eh, Charley?
23192Well, Eph, what''s the trouble? 23192 Well, we do n''t expect anything this time; do you, Grigsby?"
23192Well, what of it, Charley?
23192Were there many other people searching?
23192Were you ever there?
23192Whar''d you get it?
23192What about night?
23192What are dry diggings, Charley?
23192What are they worth now?
23192What are you doing? 23192 What are you going to do?
23192What camp''s this?
23192What color eyes?
23192What color rock?
23192What did I get for all I did when I opened that mill- race? 23192 What did you bring me up here for?"
23192What did you see?
23192What do you mean?
23192What do you say?
23192What do you think, Charley? 23192 What doorway, sonny?"
23192What else did he do, bub?
23192What had we better do with him, George?
23192What have you got? 23192 What in the world are we to do with it?
23192What is a quartz claim?
23192What is it you want, now?
23192What is it?
23192What kind of time did you have? 23192 What might be the name of that claim, then, stranger, if it was given to you?"
23192What might your names be, strangers?
23192What will you do with it, señor?
23192What''ll we do about it?
23192What''ll you charge to carry us in from here, now?
23192What''ll you do with him there?
23192What''s going on, Grigsby?
23192What''s here? 23192 What''s quartz diggin''s, then?"
23192What''s that big point? 23192 What''s that for?"
23192What''s that, dear?
23192What''s that?
23192What''s the charge?
23192What''s the matter here?
23192What''s the matter up there?
23192What''s the matter, Charley?
23192What''s the matter, boy?
23192What''s the matter?
23192What''s the matter?
23192What''s the meaning of this attack?
23192What''s the meaning of this?
23192What''s the news from yonder?
23192What''s the proper hotel, Grigsby?
23192What''s the tariff?
23192What''s there?
23192What''s this about?
23192What''s your price?
23192What?
23192When did you leave?
23192When do we start?
23192When we take it out we can look about and get what other supplies we need; eh, Grigsby? 23192 When''s the office open, sir?"
23192When?
23192Where are we to stow ourselves, then?
23192Where do we land?
23192Where from?
23192Where is Chagres?
23192Where is your lot, sir?
23192Where were you, then?
23192Where you folks from, and where you bound?
23192Where you from?
23192Where you from?
23192Where''d you come from?
23192Where''d you get it?
23192Where''d you hit him?
23192Where''d you leave Crosby?
23192Where''ll you sleep, then?
23192Where''s Mr. Grigsby? 23192 Where''s Sacramento?"
23192Where''s San Pablo Bay, then?
23192Where''s the dock of the Isthmus steamers?
23192Where''s the gold? 23192 Where''s the mission?"
23192Where''s your gold?
23192Where''s your warrant for it? 23192 Where?"
23192Where?
23192Which one was it?
23192Which way were they bound?
23192Who accuses me?
23192Who are they, anyhow?
23192Who is he?
23192Who knows, señor? 23192 Who knows?
23192Who were they?
23192Who?
23192Whose?
23192Why do n''t you come with us? 23192 Why do n''t you give him that extra ticket?"
23192Why so?
23192Why''s that?
23192Why, she''s full already, is n''t she?
23192Why? 23192 Why?"
23192Will I have time to get our tickets?
23192Will they all come this way?
23192Will you give us a berth in place of it?
23192Will you have supper with us, sir?
23192Would you rob a helpless stranger? 23192 Yes, of Sutter''s Fort-- but where is that now?"
23192You are Americans, are n''t you, gentlemen? 23192 You are n''t sick, are you, dad?"
23192You can prove that, can you?
23192You do n''t mean a dollar and a half a_ pound_?
23192You do n''t think a Frémont man would shoot for any other mark, do you?
23192You do washing?
23192You have, have you?
23192You know how Mare Island gets its name? 23192 You mean the Golden West?"
23192You mean the Marshall who discovered this California gold, for Americans?
23192You mean to say you''ll go along with Charley and me?
23192You saw my own city of Sutter''s Ville, below?
23192You say you found the Golden West mine, and the Jacobs party ran you out, Charley?
23192You say you''ve got fust location on that quartz claim?
23192You want to catch the_ Georgia_?
23192You want to see gold? 23192 You will go, wo n''t you, George?"
23192You''re chalking up another score to settle, are you?
23192You''re shore it''s yourn?
23192You''re sure they are n''t around the cabin somewhere?
23192You''ve been out there?
23192You''ve never heard of Tom, have you?
23192Your rancho is prosperous, Colonel?
23192Your word? 23192 A little sand went along with it, but who cared? 23192 A quartz claim?
23192Ach, what is the country coming to?
23192Ai n''t that right?"
23192Ai n''t that so, boys?"
23192And did his nephew know about the mine?
23192And do you know what rent we pay, for this building?
23192And does m''sieur wish ze_ repassage_--what you call ir- ron?"
23192And was he out here looking for it?
23192And what do I get?
23192And what was his nephew''s name?
23192And why?
23192And yours, General?"
23192And, to his fellows:"What do you say, boys?
23192And--"Shall we tell him?"
23192Another boa threatening?
23192Another strike?"
23192Answered the Colonel:"Gold?
23192Any sleeping place?"
23192Anybody want to land?"
23192Are n''t you feeling well?"
23192Are n''t you going to shoot?
23192Are these the regular diggin''s?
23192Are things going well?
23192Are you awake?"
23192Are you?"
23192Ask him, wo n''t you?"
23192Billy''s bullet knocked out a piece of gold quartz-- see?"
23192But tell me, you being so lately from the United States, what is the report upon this Panama Railroad?
23192But would she come?
23192By the way, did the poor fellow say anything else?
23192Can I, dad?"
23192Can you please come over here a minute?"
23192Can you swim?"
23192Can you take us aboard?"
23192Charley and I''ll take care of ourselves; wo n''t we, Charley?
23192Charley enjoyed that breakfast-- how could he help it when he was hungry and the food was something new?
23192City Hotel still running?"
23192Could it be possible?
23192Did I hit him?"
23192Did I hit him?"
23192Did it storm at sea?
23192Did n''t I tell you I was half wild hoss and half alligator?
23192Did n''t he tell his last name?"
23192Did n''t we, Billy?"
23192Did they put that sign up?
23192Did you fight in the war?"
23192Did you get wet?"
23192Did you have a lot of fun?
23192Did you kill any Injuns?
23192Did you see any of that gang go ashore, Charley?
23192Did you stay in San Francisco?
23192Do n''t you know enough to make room for a lady?"
23192Do you agree?"
23192Do you have to go on?
23192Do you know it?"
23192Do you know?"
23192Do you think that''s fair?
23192Do you want me to show you how to pan?"
23192Does your father know anything about mining?"
23192Eh, Pascal?
23192Eph, here, has called a meetin''for a purpose; have n''t you, Eph?"
23192Even that does n''t matter, though, for they found it, stake and all, and----""What did you say the name is?"
23192Ever see any dust?"
23192Ever see any, Charley?
23192Fetch your boat alongside, will you?"
23192Fleas?
23192Give any directions of any kind?"
23192Go on-- understand?
23192Going across the Isthmus, I reckon?"
23192Going up the American?"
23192Got a pan?
23192Got a ticket to San Francisco?"
23192Grizzly?
23192H.,''in capital letters?
23192Have you found much gold?
23192Have you made your pile?
23192Have you tried?"
23192He was n''t entitled to it, was he-- even if the man in St. Louis had been looking for him?
23192How about another canoe?
23192How about it, Grigsby?"
23192How about that, sir?"
23192How are you going to beat us?
23192How could he tell his father, and Mr. Grigsby?
23192How do you account for that?"
23192How do you know?"
23192How do you like it, Grigsby?"
23192How does that strike you?
23192How far away is that range, do you think?"
23192How is he?"
23192How long''ve you been here?
23192How many canoes ahead of us?"
23192How many in your party?
23192How many shots you got left?
23192How much do you s''pose a man can dig in a day, up there?"
23192How much gold can I dig in a day?"
23192How''d you make out?
23192How''ll we engage a canoe?
23192How''ll you beat us?
23192However, who cared, when they were off to the mines and this was one way to get there?
23192I can see''em plain; ca n''t you?"
23192If a man could make and spend$ 20,000 and then expect$ 50,000 more, why should anyone remain poor?
23192If they''ll take us on the ship you can come along with us, and welcome; ca n''t he, Charley?
23192If you need us, we''ll come straight home, wo n''t we, Charley?"
23192If you were n''t up here last night, how did you get that bruised cheek, and those finger- marks on your throat?
23192In fact, he had not locked the door, had he?
23192Is he all right?
23192Is it time?"
23192Is n''t it so, Grigsby?"
23192Is that not so, amigo?"
23192Is that so?"
23192Is this all your crowd?
23192Lend a hand, will you, and help us carry this truck into the cabin?"
23192Louis?"
23192Lucky Bullet?"
23192Marshall?"
23192Never heard of a claim called the Golden West, did you?"
23192No, he would not say anything to his father, for perhaps he had been mistaken-- and what was the sense in being scared?
23192Now do you want to go ashore, Grigsby?"
23192Now how about something to eat, I wonder?"
23192Now, was n''t that a cowardly thing even to think of?"
23192Off yonder was the Isthmus, but who could see it?
23192One of Mr. Jacobs''s cronies yelled, mockingly:"Want a tow?"
23192Ought to make up a party and send a man ashore at once, ought n''t we?"
23192Porto Bello?"
23192Ready to start?"
23192Remember I spoke about it?
23192Remember those old Liz, our cook, made?
23192Remember?"
23192See it?
23192See the tents, yonder?"
23192See those lines of hopefuls?
23192See----?"
23192See?
23192See?
23192See?
23192See?
23192See?"
23192See?"
23192See?"
23192See?"
23192See?"
23192See?"
23192Seems to me you''re late on the up- river trip, are n''t you?"
23192Shall I leave the letter open for you?"
23192Shall he, Mary?"
23192Shall we throw them overboard?"
23192So the long- nosed man''s party were planning to go ashore anyhow, were they?
23192So the ship wo n''t do anything about it, according to the mate?"
23192Somebody got the dead- wood on you?"
23192Sugar, salt, flour, bacon and potatoes will be enough, wo n''t it?"
23192That was so, for going directly to him, Mr. Grigsby extended his brown, sinewy hand, saying:"Colonel, do you remember me?"
23192That was the favorite question:"How much gold do you suppose a fellow can dig in a day?"
23192That was they, was n''t it, in the second boat?
23192That''s Limon Bay, is n''t it?
23192The main thought now was, when could he and Mr. Grigsby get ashore and find his father?
23192The miners whom they passed, at work, gazed curiously; and one or two hailed with--"Where you bound, strangers?
23192The northern mines, or the southern?"
23192The ticket gave first- class cabin privileges, but what did these amount to, when 1500 passengers were being crowded upon a 500-passenger boat?
23192The_ Panama_?
23192Then down he would drop, boat and all, into the wash of the steamer; the steamer would go on without him-- and where would_ he_ go?
23192Then will you help another American?
23192Think about it?
23192This is the man, is it, after all?"
23192Thought you''d catch us, did you?
23192Thought you''d give me the slip, did you?"
23192Three?"
23192Tom who?
23192Understand that?"
23192Understand?
23192Understand?
23192Understand?
23192Understand?"
23192Up at the saw- mill?"
23192Want me to help you?"
23192Want''em?
23192Was he booked on the_ Robert Burns_?
23192Was it a joke?
23192Was n''t this the Land of Gold, at last?
23192Was that the town of Chagres?
23192Was this the way they did it?
23192We ca n''t find Charley''s man, can we?
23192We two bunkies can paddle our own canoe, ca n''t we?"
23192We were there first, were n''t we?"
23192We''ve come 6000 miles, and what do we know?
23192We''ve got things in our own hands-- understand?
23192Well, what can I do for you, my friends?"
23192Were they crazy?
23192Were they to be left behind, after all?
23192Were you doing that shooting?"
23192Were you seasick any?
23192What are you doing?"
23192What are you going to take?
23192What are your plans?"
23192What do you say, Adams?"
23192What do you think about it?"
23192What do you think o''that, men?"
23192What do you want?"
23192What had happened?
23192What had he seen and done, in California?
23192What is the chance in San Francisco?"
23192What trail do you take, Grigsby?
23192What was the matter in the night?"
23192What''d you lose?
23192What''ll we call it?
23192What''ll we do with this specimen?"
23192What''s four bits, in these diggin''s?
23192What''s the matter?"
23192What''s the name of this place?
23192What''s to hinder me from going out to Californy, too?"
23192What''s wanted?"
23192What''s your hurry?"
23192What''s your outfit?
23192What''ve you heard?
23192When can we get it?"
23192When did they leave?
23192When do we get to the mine?
23192When do you start?
23192When do you start?"
23192When was the_ Panama_ due?"
23192When were you there last?"
23192Where are those sacks?"
23192Where are we going now?
23192Where are you going?"
23192Where is Colon?"
23192Where is Jim Marshall?
23192Where was he going in St. Louis?
23192Where you from and where you going?"
23192Where''ll we put him?"
23192Where''s the Sacramento?
23192Where''s the other one?
23192Where''s your father?
23192Where''s yours?"
23192Whereabouts are you?"
23192Who could he be?
23192Who else is going?"
23192Who found it?
23192Who is he, Charley?"
23192Who is your extra man?"
23192Who robbed your cabin?
23192Who was the man that urged you to jump over?"
23192Why do n''t you stop now and mine?
23192Why was that?
23192Why?
23192Will you be here after a while?"
23192Will you sell him?"
23192Wo n''t you consider our documents in this matter?"
23192Would you drive three honest men off ground to which they''ve got rights according to evidence?
23192Would you sell them?"
23192XI CHARLEY LOSES OUT"Who are you?"
23192Yes, indeed; where was Chagres?
23192Yes?
23192You are n''t afraid of him, are you?"
23192You do n''t expect us to walk through this mud, do you?"
23192You savvy?"
23192You saw them ashore, too, did n''t you?"
23192[ Illustration: Down slipped Charley''s horse from the trail]"Hurt?"
23192[ Illustration:"I''ve lost the papers"]"What?"
42593Boys,said he, in a broken voice of indignant but mournful inquiry,"have any of ye seed the skillet?"
42593But will you not read it, please?
42593Could you lend me a small iron pot?
42593Do n''t you know me, Grant? 42593 Dost thou not know?"
42593Had_ all_ their talk for its subject, in my infant ears, that happy time?--did it deal only with London and Piccadilly and the Green Park?... 42593 Hast thou not yearned for me?"
42593How can they see what is not visible?
42593How did he get his theological education? 42593 How do they come on, Cain?
42593If the son of the reader... should look confidingly into his parent''s face, and inquire--''Is that true, Papa?'' 42593 Lookee here,"said Yuba Bill, with fine irony,"had n''t you better go back and sit in the coach till yer introduced?
42593Was it_ Lorna Doone_, I wonder, that changed the drift in historical fiction? 42593 We shall see what?"
42593What are some of the most unusual phases of this unique epoch?
42593What upon arth is that?
42593Where-- did all that-- blood come from?
42593Why do n''t you toast your bread, mother?
42593Will Monsieur be so good as to explain himself?
42593You are?
42593***** Strange, was it not?
42593--_Little Breeches._ There are similarities in others of the poems: Do n''t know Flynn,-- Flynn of Virginia,-- Long as he''s been''yar?
42593A generation has arisen to whom he is but a tradition and a set of books; what is the verdict of this generation?
42593A pretty little story, undoubtedly, but is it possible that the author of it once wrote"Posson Jone"and"Jean- ah Poquelin"?
42593And again,"What do we know, for instance, of the local distribution of our birds?
42593And then, as he caught her to him at last,''Oh-- Oh-- are you_ sure_ it''s right?''"
42593And what is this but poetry?
42593And what other poet save Whittier could after victory burst into Hebraic ecstasy of joy like this?
42593Are not all together in the heap; shall the diamond say to the potsherd, I am better than thou?
42593Are thy wings plumed indeed for such far flights?
42593Burroughs writes of the same subject in this way: From what fact or event shall we really date the beginning of spring?
42593Can you observe two young people at play on the meadows of Life and Love without seeing in them a pair of these brief moths of the sun?
42593Could she do it?
42593Could_ Daisy Miller_ charm a gouty leg, or_ Lemuel Barker_ keep us awake till morning?
42593Curse your indolent worthlessness, why do n''t you rob your church?''
42593Did he realize his mistake when his art was more mature and his judgment more ripe?
42593Did it come as a sudden inspiration or as a deliberate consummation after a study of models?
42593Did she do it?
42593Disportest thou on waters such as those?
42593Do we ask of the poet and the seer simply for mere new material phenomena found out to add to our science?
42593Do you call these genteel little creatures American poets?
42593Do you term that perpetual, pistareen, paste- pot work, American art, American drama, taste, verse?
42593Does his material really come"from the hart out"or is he giving, what one always suspects, only excellent vaudeville?
42593Emerson had cried in 1844. Who"will ever forget what was somewhat vaguely called the''Transcendental Movement''of thirty years ago"?
42593From_ Marjorie Daw_ and_ The Lady, or the Tiger?_ it was but a step to the jugglery of O. Henry.
42593General Grant when asked,"Who is the foremost figure in civil life developed by the Rebellion?"
42593Had he not been reared by Henry James, Senior?
42593Had he not lived his whole life in the charmed circle of the highly civilized?
42593He followed his book down to what was to him the glorious city of art and of soul that would welcome him with rapture, for was he too not a bard?
42593How de debbil kin dat be?
42593How does it stand the test?
42593How much"Thus saith the Lord"?
42593How permanent is such work?
42593How shall the young man know the whether and when of his brother?
42593How valuable is it?
42593In all save the remotest camps there were churches and worshipers, yet who would suspect it from Harte''s tales?
42593In what soft sylvan waters will he bury his tired breast?
42593In"Night and Moonlight"he writes: Is not the midnight like Central Africa to most of us?
42593Is Nature then a thing simply to be observed and classified and reduced to formulæ?
42593Is anything the matter?
42593Is it more strange the dead should walk again Than that the quick should die?
42593Is more proof needed?
42593Is not this most strange?
42593Is not this the surest test of excellence in a book?
42593It asked eagerly of every foreign visitor,"And what do you think of us?"
42593Lines like these he now edits from his early editions: How dare a sick man, or an obedient man, write poems for these States?
42593Look''ee here, stranger, Whar_ hev_ you been?
42593May I not weep with you?
42593Most done?"...
42593My land of the sun, Am I not true?
42593My object in writing, as in preaching, is to do good; and the question is, Which can I do best?
42593No use, no use, do n''t you know?"
42593O soul, voyagest thou indeed on voyages like those?
42593Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea?
42593Perhaps that is, after all, the best answer to the question,"What is a novel?"
42593Poetry wo n''t do, do n''t you know?"
42593Rochester was like Verona; and Quebec--"on what perverse pretext was it not some ancient town of Normandy?"
42593Shall I not have words as fresh as my thought?
42593Shall I use any other man''s word?"
42593Soundest below the Sanscrit and the Vedas?
42593Taking a heavy stone from the road, he battered down the gate, and with the expressman entered the enclosure...."Do you know this Miggles?"
42593That you have n''t heard folks tell How Jimmy Bludso passed in his checks The night of the_ Prairie Belle_?
42593The sensation caused by_ The Quick or the Dead?_ by Amélie Rives( later Princess Troubetzkoy) in 1888 need only be referred to.
42593The supreme test that must come at last to all literature is the question: How much of human life is there in it?
42593Then the banker he say,"And you will go and blab, I suppose?"
42593To determine the average day on which the bluebird comes, or the wild geese fly, or the hyla calls, is there virtue in that?
42593True to life it undoubtedly is, but to what end?
42593Undoubtedly the best stories after Poe and Hawthorne and before Harte are Fitz- James O''Brien''s"Diamond Lens,"1858, and"What Was It?"
42593Was he really sincere in his child lyrics and his bibliomaniac writings or was he cleverly playing a part?
42593Was it the result of an evolution within the poet''s soul, an evolution extending over a period of years?
42593Was it the Ægean island of his birth or was it the West Indian island to which his father later was ordered with his regiment?
42593What are you?
42593What brought about this remarkable climax?
42593What far- off lands, streaked with mortal dawn, does he believe in?
42593What has he for his generation?
42593What of Harte?
42593What shall we say to- day of Mark Twain''s humor?
42593What strange attraction of the earth laid hold on this vagrant cloud- form?
42593What unexplained permanence of destiny solidified it and fixed it forever in the foundations of the range?
42593What would result if a baby were born in one of the roughest and most masculine of the camps?
42593When_ A Small Boy and Others_ appeared the world cried out,"Is it possible that at last Henry James has revealed himself?"
42593Where be you?
42593Where so long I have heard the prattling and moaning of the wind, what means this tenser, far- piercing sound?
42593Who else on this side of the water could have written"The Sisters''Tragedy,"with its melody, its finish, its distinction of phrase?
42593Who else_ could_ have dealt with it, especially in the new era that demanded reality and absolute genuineness?
42593Who knows what fertility and beauty, moral and natural, are there to be found?
42593Who outside of_ Don Juan_ has made us feel so fearfully a tropic hurricane?
42593Who was to voice that era?
42593Who will awaken us from this sleep?
42593Who will first show us the first signs of a genuine literary reviving?...
42593Who, if''t were his to choose, would know again The bitter sweetness of the last refrain, Its rapture and its pain?
42593Why dawdle over Theocritus when fields are newly green and youth is calling?
42593Why do n''t you behave desunt like other folks?
42593Why say more?
42593Why this eternal glorification of things simply and solely because it is the conventional thing to glorify them?
42593Will not this faith and expectation make itself ears at length?
42593With what result?
42593With what success?
42593have I not done All things for thine, for thee alone, O sun- land, sea- land thou mine own?
42593the very stars are gone, Brave Adm''r''l speak; what shall I say?"
42593what do you want?
3681Abstemious, be you? 3681 Ai n''t you the son of Hilary Vane?"
3681All the way to Mercer?
3681And I?
3681And are n''t you going to say good- by to your host and hostess?
3681And did you tell Zeb?
3681And how is it to- day, Zeb?
3681And what did he say?
3681And you?
3681Are all men simpletons?
3681Are n''t you afraid of nervous prostration, Ham?
3681Are our Millionaires entering Politics?
3681Are you going to take it?
3681Are you in politics?
3681Belief?
3681Blodgett? 3681 But what am I to think?"
3681But when am I to see you?
3681But where did you see him?
3681But-- what is to become of the other four hundred and ninety- nine? 3681 Ca n''t somebody move''em round to see the cows and what''s in the house and the automobile and the horses?
3681Ca n''t somebody stir''em up?
3681Candidate for representative, be you?
3681Caught a good many fish, have n''t you?
3681Collecting credentials?
3681Damn you, you''re a lawyer, ai n''t you?
3681Did Humphrey actually send for you to take up the injured horse case?
3681Did n''t I? 3681 Did n''t know Hilary Vane''s be''n here?"
3681Did n''t say it was from me-- didn''t say so-- did they--"No,said Mr. Crewe,"but--""Told Ball you wanted to have me see you, did n''t you?"
3681Did n''t see fit to mention it to me first-- did you? 3681 Did you hear any whistle or any bell?"
3681Did-- did that case against the railroad make him so popular?
3681Do n''t understand what?
3681Do you believe you and I could get along, Judge? 3681 Do you deserve one?"
3681Do you know him?
3681Do you mean he buys their votes?
3681Do you mean to say this Blodgett tried to kill you?
3681Do you mean to say this two- for- a- cent town has a boss?
3681Do you see this Braden once in a while?
3681Do you take much interest in politics?
3681Do you think you deserve to, after the shameful manner in which you have behaved?
3681Do you want to get rid of me?
3681Do-- do people dislike the railroad?
3681Does he really intend to go into politics?
3681Even with me?
3681Get the names of witnesses?
3681Goin''to invite Democrats, too?
3681Going to handle the case yourself, are you?
3681Has Jenney been putting such things into your head?
3681Hastings, do n''t you see that poor old woman over there? 3681 Have n''t I done enough for the town?
3681Have n''t you seen it?
3681Have some lemonade, Mr. Jenney? 3681 Have you a doctor aboard, Charley?"
3681Have you ever tasted my Pippins?
3681He''d come to see me, would n''t he?
3681He''s a young man, is n''t he?
3681He''s the man Mr. Jenney said wanted you to be a senator, is n''t he?
3681Hello, Austen,he said,"since when have you took to comin''here?"
3681Hello, Victoria,he said,"you do n''t know anything about gardens, do you?"
3681Hev''they be''n tamperin''with you?
3681Hold on, Phrasie,said Austen, seizing her by the apron- strings,"how about the Judge?"
3681Horses?
3681Hostess?
3681How about Blodgett?
3681How about my case?
3681How am I going to pay a lawyer, with a mortgage on my farm?
3681How am I to get along without the friendship of Brush Bascom?
3681How are the apples this year?
3681How are you going to prove it?
3681How are you, Crewe?
3681How are you, General?
3681How are you, Governor?
3681How are you, Hilary?
3681How are you, Senator?
3681How are you?
3681How are you?
3681How are you?
3681How be you?
3681How did this-- this affair start?
3681How do you define''the fittest?''
3681How do you do, Mr. Vane? 3681 How is the Duke of Putnam this morning?"
3681How many more of those bills have you got?
3681How much do they cost? 3681 How much does it cost?"
3681How much is gasoline by the gallon?
3681How much wages do they git?
3681How?
3681I mean, do you see him often?
3681I received a letter this morning, Mr. Flint, enclosing me an annual pass--"Did Upjohn send you one?
3681Is Crewe engaged to Miss Pomfret?
3681Is he handsome?
3681Is he likely to make a fuss?
3681Is it because you''re a lawyer, or because you''ve been out West and seen so much of life and shot so many people?
3681Is it not a fact,said Austen to this witness,"that Mr. Brush Bascom has a mortgage on your farm?"
3681Is that so?
3681Is that the way you spend your time in office hours,--throwing people out of the windows?
3681Is that you, Judge?
3681Is that you, Victoria?
3681Is this the way you affect everybody whom you meet?
3681It is so pleasant to see you here, Mr.--Mr.--"How be you?
3681It''s because you like the hills, is n''t it?
3681Judge,he asked,"is Mr. Flint up at his place this week?"
3681Land sakes alive, be you Mr. Flint''s daughter? 3681 Let me see,"said Mr. Crewe,"is n''t your father the chief attorney in this State for the Northeastern?
3681Let''s see,says Mr. Jenney,"there''s five hundred in the House, ai n''t there?"
3681Little early yet, hain''t it? 3681 Little mite hasty, wahn''t it?"
3681Looks bad, does it?
3681Loves''em-- does he-- loves''em?
3681M-- made all them bills out before you was chose?
3681May I ask you how you heard of it?
3681May I ask,said Austen, innocently,"who has been chairman of that particular committee in the lower House for the last five sessions?"
3681Mountain passes, Lish? 3681 Mr. Humphrey Crewe?"
3681Mr. Jenney live here?
3681Mr. and Mrs. Perley Wright, eh? 3681 Near- sighted, be you?"
3681No,said Austen,"but--"Would have told you if I had n''t wanted you-- wouldn''t I?"
3681Oh, he ca n''t have anymore; do you want to kill him?
3681Presumption multiplies tenfold in a woman, does n''t it?
3681Railroad Room?
3681S-- some in Noo York-- hain''t you?
3681Say, Victoria, who is that man?
3681Say,demanded Mr. Meader,"do n''t you know?"
3681Say,exclaimed Mr. Tooting, with a vexed laugh,"why are you always jollying me?
3681See here, Judge,he said,"what are you driving at?
3681Sell out?
3681Sent you an annual, has he? 3681 Sowed enough wild oats, have n''t you?"
3681That has a horribly dissipated sound-- hasn''t it? 3681 The first of October?"
3681Then why are you a fugitive from justice if you were acting in self- defence?
3681Then you wo n''t tell me?
3681This hain''t England-- is it? 3681 Up to some game?"
3681Victoria, what do you mean?
3681W-- want the Speaker?
3681Wahn''t much need of telling me, was there?
3681Want to move-- do YOU? 3681 Well, Vic, what is it now?"
3681Well, Victoria,said her father, kindly if resignedly,"what is it now?"
3681Well, what is it now, Waters?
3681Well,Mr. Flint interrupted, smiling somewhat blandly,"how much money do you think that pass would save an active young lawyer in a year?
3681Well,said Mr. Jenney, the same Mr. Jenney of the apple orchard, but holding out a horny hand with unmistakable warmth,"how be you, Austen?"
3681Well,said Mr. Meader, apologetically,"that was stupid of me-- wahn''t it?
3681Well,said Mr. Pardriff,"you know they tried to get Austen Vane to run for State senator, do n''t you?"
3681Well?
3681What about him?
3681What about it?
3681What are you thinking about?
3681What did Zeb say?
3681What did he say to that?
3681What did he say?
3681What did he want?
3681What did she want to know?
3681What did you expect, Phrasie?
3681What do you mean by that?
3681What do you want me to do?
3681What does it cost?
3681What else did Mr. Vane say?
3681What for?
3681What harm is there in that?
3681What have you been doing to my father?
3681What horse?
3681What if he does?
3681What man?
3681What other thing?
3681What was that?
3681What was the matter with your own horse, Victoria?
3681What''s got into you?
3681What''s that?
3681What''s that?
3681What''s the matter with him?
3681What''s the matter with seeing him now?
3681What''s the matter with these fellers?
3681What''s the railroad got to do with it?
3681What''s the railrud got to do with anything in this State?
3681What''s the trouble?
3681What''s the use of State sovereignty if you ca n''t have a glittering army to follow the governor round?
3681What''s this they tell me about your saving a man''s life?
3681When are you-- going back West?
3681When did you arrive?
3681When the railrud is represented by the kind of politicians we have in Putnam, it''s natural I should hain''t it?
3681Where did you hit him?
3681Where do you live?
3681Where''s room number twelve?
3681Where''s that?
3681Which question?
3681Whitredge told you to come to me, did n''t he?
3681Who are you for?
3681Who do you want to see?
3681Who is he in love with?
3681Who is it?
3681Who''s publishing this?
3681Who?
3681Whom have I the pleasure of speaking to?
3681Why did it terrify you?
3681Why did n''t you be a senator?
3681Why do n''t you drive''round to the stables?
3681Why do you feel badly about it?
3681Why not settle down?
3681Why not?
3681Why, how do you do, Cary? 3681 Why,"exclaimed the Speaker,"how are you, Mr. Crewe, how are you?
3681Why?
3681Why?
3681Why?
3681Why?
3681Why?
3681Will a little lemonade hurt him? 3681 Will you let me drive you home?"
3681Wo n''t you tell me?
3681Would n''t go?
3681You advise me to sell out?
3681You and I are getting to be friends, are n''t we, Pepper?
3681You are not one of the men who would not wish a woman to know, are you?
3681You''re not helping Humphrey Crewe, are you?
3681You''re railroad, ai n''t ye?
3681You''ve got a good brain, Austen, and what''s the use of wasting it chasing cattle and practising with a pistol on your fellow- beings? 3681 Your conscience a little finer than your father''s-- is it?"
3681Your son? 3681 ''Ai n''t your name Tooting?'' 3681 A voice cried out:--Is Manning here?
3681Adams''widow done well to trust their liberality, did n''t she?
3681Ai n''t that a handsome steel- engravin''of the gentleman?"
3681Ai n''t that about it, Brush?"
3681Ai n''t that luck for you?
3681Be you married?"
3681Beauty, is n''t he?
3681Blodgett?"
3681But how about this here appeal?"
3681But what are you going to charge?"
3681But why the uneasiness of the past few years?
3681By the bye, Mr. Crewe,"he added, coming dangerously near the varnish again, and drawing back,"you hain''t happened to have seen Job Braden, have you?"
3681Could it be that this boy whom he had so often chastised took a clearer view of practical morality than himself?
3681Crewe?"
3681Crewe?"
3681Crewe?"
3681Crewe?"
3681Did I ever tell you that story about the slide in Rickets Gulch?"
3681Did n''t I get''em rural free delivery?
3681Did n''t I subscribe to the meeting- house and library, and do n''t I pay more taxes than anybody else?"
3681Did they show you through the stables?
3681Did you see the mate to the horse I lost?
3681Do you believe that the politicians are owned by the railroad?"
3681Do you know these other gentlemen, Crewe?
3681Er-- why?"
3681Everywhere in Leith I am met with the remark,''Have you seen Job Braden?''
3681Fitch?"
3681Gave Mr. Flint your pass did you?"
3681Hain''t England?"
3681Hain''t I seen''em run their dirty politics there under Brush Bascom for the last twenty- five years?
3681Have another, Senator?"
3681Have you heard about that?
3681He needed encouragement,--what young lawyer does not on his first important case?
3681He rose and walked to the window and looked out for a few moments over the flower garden before he replied:--"On what conditions?"
3681He''s the division superintendent, is n''t he?"
3681How are the boys up in Wheeler?"
3681How be you?"
3681How could he--sitting under her in this manner?
3681How describe the noble figure of Mr. Crewe as it burst upon Austen when he rounded the corner of the house?
3681How do you happen to be on the other side?"
3681How long do you think it would last?"
3681Humphrey, just push the stable button, will you?"
3681I do n''t see how he does it, do you, Alice?"
3681I''ve certain bills--""Yes, yes,"agreed the Honourable Hilary;"do you know Mr. Brush Bascom and Mr. Manning?
3681If they are bad, why do n''t you go to him and tell him so?
3681Introduce me to him, will you?"
3681Is Mr. Flint your example of the fittest type to exist and survive, or Gladstone or Wilberforce or Emerson or Lincoln?"
3681Is n''t he silly?
3681Is that it?"
3681Is three hundred dollars too much?
3681Jenney?"
3681Just a very, very little, you know?"
3681Looking at my array of pamphlets, eh?
3681Manning?"
3681May I come over and see you sometime?"
3681Meader?"
3681Mrs. Flint, with a"Who is it?"
3681Much as a locomotive, do n''t they?"
3681My chicken woman is most apathetic, but do you wonder, with the life they lead?"
3681Never told you I did n''t want you here, did I?"
3681Pomfret?"
3681Poor devils, they do n''t get anything like what they ought to get, do they?
3681Said I was the man to see if you was a candidate, did n''t he?
3681See?"
3681Take pains over the smaller cases, and the larger cases will come of themselves, eh?"
3681That is the type we want-- eh?
3681There were twenty of us, and we were resistless, were n''t we, Brush?"
3681Three hundred dollars is not an insignificant sum to a young man on the threshold of his practice, is it?"
3681Told you to talk to Job Braden, did n''t he?"
3681Turn you out?
3681Vane?"
3681Vane?"
3681Vane?"
3681Vane?"
3681Vane?"
3681Vane?"
3681Vane?"
3681Vane?"
3681Was n''t it fortunate I had the proofs with me?
3681Was there to be a calf, or was there not?
3681Was this strange, bronzed, quietly humorous young man his son?
3681Well, Victoria, where have you been keeping yourself?
3681What could he do to show his appreciation?
3681What is it?"
3681What kind of man is this Meagre?"
3681What the deuce are those women doing here again?"
3681What was the matter last night?"
3681What was to be done about the calf?
3681What''d you go to Flint for?"
3681What''s all this mystery about Job Braden?
3681What''s happened to him?"
3681What?
3681What?
3681What?
3681What?
3681What?"
3681What?"
3681When can you come, Humphrey?"
3681When do you go?"
3681Who are you?"
3681Who asked him to run?"
3681Who be you?"
3681Who told you?"
3681Who was he to fling back an annual pass in the face of the president of the Northeastern Railroads?
3681Who was this young man of three and thirty to agitate him so?
3681Who would be governor?
3681Who''s the candidates?"
3681Why do n''t you come up and talk to him again?"
3681Why had he hesitated to initiate his son into many of the so- called duties of a railroad lawyer?
3681Why so ceremonious, Perley?"
3681Why waste your opportunities?"
3681Will you come along?"
3681Wo n''t you let me hold him?"
3681Wo n''t you tell me what you did to him?"
3681Would he suspect them of designs upon his hard won harp and halo?
3681You do n''t happen to have a pen about you?"
3681You do n''t know Mr. Crewe very well, do you?"
3681You got a letter from me, did n''t you, congratulating you upon your election?
3681You shot him, did n''t you?"
3681You''d think a fellow that only had to cut coupons would n''t be lookin''for another job, would n''t you?
3681You''ll get a good man to write your life, and what you done for the town and State, and all them societies and bills, wo n''t you?
3681You''re a farmer, ai n''t you?"
3681You''ve read over the bills I sent you by registered mail?"
3681he said hospitably;"we''re all friends here-- eh, Painter?
3681he said,"automobile going all right?"
3681she demanded,"or must I get it out of him?"
3681she said;"Austen''s coming home, is n''t he?"
3681who believe the acquisition of wealth to be exempt from the practice of morality?
52460But what about William Jennings Bryan?
52460Does it look very much as though we had withdrawn silver from use as currency?
52460In what way have we deprived silver of value?
52460Perhaps you have noticed already in this campaign that no one is quite so disgusted with remarks on the tariff as a Byranized democrat or a populist?
52460Shall the toilers of this land, the wage- earners on farm and in factory, be robbed every Saturday night of one- half of their weekly wages?
52460Shall the widow''s mite and the savings deposited in the banks of this country be cut in two by changing our money to silver monometallism?
52460Shall thrift and economy be rewarded by robbery?
52460The question is, do the people of the United States want these prices restored?
52460The question is, my countrymen, who will get these 48 cents on each dollar, who will be benefitted by this change?
52460WHY ARE THEY NOT HONEST?
52460What has happened during the last three and a half years of grace?
52460What party then is the real friend of silver?
52460What statement could be clearer and more concise than that?
52460Why not form an alliance all over this country to recradleize the cradle, and make common warfare against the up- to- date binder?
46692( company?)
46692( debauches?)
46692), 112 William, 112 Hiller, May C, 273 Hilt, Marie, 223 Hine, Anna, 144 Frank, 144[?]
46692.ever as to oath( other?)
46692225 Gilson, Clarence A., 123 Golden, Emily, 117 Goldsmith, Oliver N., 103 Gonsales, Maria, 12,[?
4669296[?]
46692Adella, 188 Alice, 184 Allen W.. 305 Belinda,^5 58 Belinda, 75, 174 Belle, 176 Benj.,^3 7,[?]
46692Benj.,^4 24, 25, 63 Benjamin,^5 63 Benjamin,[?
46692Children( Van Etten): Hannah,^6 b. Jan. 24, 1811(?
46692Could anything be more alluring to these after their experience in their native land?
46692Cuddeback, 255 Miner, William B., 148, 269 Mitchell, George, 126 Lyman Rose, 241 Moe, Ora, 118 Moore, Emaline, 160 Ralph, 153 Morgan, Catherine P.,[?]
46692Cuddeback,^6 254, 275[?]
46692David?
46692Edward, 263 Eletta, 265 Elizabeth, 96[?]
46692Eleanor, 183 Elmer, 188 Elson, 188 Eliza,^5 64 Elsie, 190 Elizabeth,^3 7, 203 Emma, 112,[?]
46692Eliza, 128 Ellen, 128 Emma, 128[?]
46692George,[?
46692Goodale, Bayard, 328, 331 Edna, 331 Sarah Augusta, 99 Gordon, Helen, 239 Levi, 123 Martha, 123 Sallie,[?]
46692H. B., Dr., 126 Jacob, 281[?]
46692Hannah,[?]
46692If a number precedes the[?
46692Joe Van, 111 Rosencrantz, Diana,^4 67 Herman, 26 Herman Hendrickson, 26 Jacob, 26[?]
46692John M., 281[?]
46692Many of the other company( purpose?)
46692Margaret, 130[?]
46692Notwithstanding all which though Rutsen& company ventured still privly to( soist?)
46692Reinold Cole, 102 Masten, Sarah Maria, 62, 184 Mather, Carrie, 108 James, 108 John, 108 Sarah, 108 Mathews, Martha,[?]
46692Said Jacob Codebec stands entitled(?)
46692Samuel, 123 Graft, George, 259, 322 Rose, 322 Graham, Belle, 103 Eleanor, 95 Emaline J., 97 Hattie, 132 James, 96 Mary, 96, 133 Thomas,[?
46692], 103, 104,[?
46692], 130, 135 Margaret,^6 98, 123 Margret Alice, 131 Margaret Ellen, 107 Maria,^5 45, 79, 112 Maria, 59, 105, 129 Maria J., 129 Marion E.,[?]
46692], 147, 260 William B., 260 Marvin, Alfred, 102 Sarah, 216[?]
46692], 190 Bertha, 102 Betsey,^4 26[?]
46692], 249 Eleanor,^3 7, 29 Eleanor,^4[?]
46692], 276 Eleanor, 108, 150, 275 Ellen E, 276 James, 150, 274 John, 131 John D., 51, 150 John J.,[?]
46692], 39,[?]
46692],[ ped: Westfall] Simeon,^5 44 Simon,^4 20 Simon,[?
46692],[?
46692],[?]
46692],[?]
46692and possessor?
46692appointed by and under them satt down upon the s^d land forcibly that it being far from the other Christian settlement& mountain( whethr?)
46692of Jacob( Yok) Van Etten of the Showockemack(?)
46692of them verbally( consutod?)
46692often into their houses to burn them in which violent practices those other company, their wives came to look on and render the indians&( hindor?)
46692patent for the 1200 acres and betook themselves to the improvement thereof( and?)
46692prudent( va^rd?)
46692them to( bad?)
46692to all right and the former orders without any patent or first giving( way?)
46692to make a joint purchase with the other company which being done they thereupon on the 14th of Oct. 1697 obtained his( mahos?)
46692with the indians and obstruct the lawful purchase until the middle of the year 1697, when the petitioners to obtain their rights( forms?)
50772''But you get a good salary,''said Mr. Armour,''do n''t you?'' 50772 ''Indeed,''replied Mr. Armour;''and who is the man?''
50772''What are you doing here, sir?'' 50772 ''What kind of a paper?''
50772How do you contrive to have your horses so gentle?
50772If this is done from affection, is it not misguided affection? 50772 Well, Leland,"said his mother,"what do you wish me to do?"
50772Why should men leave great fortunes to their children?
50772''Who knows what may come of that visit?''
50772''Who,''it said,''shall cook our food and mend our clothes if the girls are to be taught philosophy and astronomy?''
50772''Why, have you finished that already?''
50772--"Madam,"he replied, with a courtly bow,"did you ever know a mother who could forget the names of her children?
50772And could I complain?"
50772And what of Thomas Guy, whose example led to Matthew Vassar''s noble gift while the latter was alive?
50772Dare you cast your eyes upon my daughter, who will inherit my riches?
50772Did we, or did we not, use them to help our fellow- man?
50772Have you a mill like this?
50772Have you a single penny in your purse?"
50772He did not greet him, nor welcome him, nor congratulate him, but, shaking his angry hand, cried,''What for you not go to Mocha, sir?''
50772How can I forget them?"
50772How can we help to secure such homes?
50772How much do you owe?''
50772It would be interesting to know if the lad ever dreamed then of being perhaps the richest man in America?
50772Mr. Holloway had worked untiringly; he had not spent his money in extravagant living; and now, how should he use it for the best good of his country?
50772The king was indignant, and exclaimed,"Does the fellow mean to laugh at my guards?"
50772The question will be, What did we do with our treasures?
50772To this, exception was taken; and Dr. Seelye was frequently asked,"What use have young women of Greek?"
50772To what other uses should Mr. Holloway put his large fortune?
50772What better way to spend an evening than in listening to such lectures?
50772What better way to use one''s money than in laying the foundation of intelligent and good citizenship in childhood and youth?
50772What shall be the result for good many centuries from now?
50772What was to be done?
50772Who knows?
50772Who knows?
50772Who shall estimate the power and value of such a gift to the people as that of John Lowell, Jr.?
50772Whose heart hath ne''er within him burned As home his footsteps he hath turned From wandering on a foreign strand?"
50772Will it be said that this or that man has accumulated great treasures?
50772a painter burlesque a soldier?
42318And what,we inquired,"is this something that you have attained?"
42318Do you know who will be the next U.   S. Senator from this State?
42318In the hall of thieves,said the lady;"what on earth can be the meaning of that?
42318Of what must I take care?
42318What were they eating and drinking?
42318When did I hurt thee?
42318Where did she_ formerly_ live?
42318Where?
42318Will you try that over again?
42318''But how does friction produce heat in this case?''
42318''But it flows from the Gulf of Mexico?''
42318''But the Gulf Stream flows north; how, then, can the icebergs accumulate at its source?''
42318''Is she happy?''
42318''Is she in fault, or others?''
42318''That,''said I,''is false;''but not having heard from the family for several years, I asked again,''How many_ did_ she have?''
42318''Then why do n''t you go on?''
42318''What are you going to do with me?''
42318''What for?''
42318''What is the name of the living one?''
42318''What is your occupation?''
42318''What makes her unhappy?''
42318''When?''
42318''Why?''
42318''Will he ever pay me anything?''
42318''_ Three._''''Where are the other two?''
42318And again, what of that spicy colloquy in which Planchette writes the words"devil,""devil''s brother,""stir fires,""broil you,"etc.?
42318And how?
42318Are not many of the usages and familiar forms of speech of modern Christendom a return to old heathenism?
42318Are these the fruits of the misunderstood doctrine of total depravity?]
42318Are they not what St. Augustine calls a repudiation of the Christian faith?
42318At last I asked,''How many brothers has she?''
42318At this point she inquired:"Who is this that is giving this caution?"
42318But Satan can work only through human agents; and who were his instruments for the affliction of these children?
42318But is it a fact, then, that the great enemy whom Christ so constantly spoke of is dead?
42318But what is this doctrine?
42318But why should the devil connect himself with Planchette?...
42318Can you cite me some familiar fact to prove that man is actually surrounded and pervaded by a sphere such as you describe?
42318Curious, is it not?
42318DR. DODDRIDGE''S DREAM[ In concluding these Psychological discussions, what is there more appropriate than the following?
42318Do they believe they are united by intimate bonds with all Christ''s followers?
42318For example, she on one occasion said to it:"Planchette, where did you get your education?"
42318For illustration, suppose a man asserts at noonday that there is no sun, does he teach you there is no sun?
42318Green?''
42318Has it not looked with a jealous eye upon the progress of science generally?
42318He has been appointed to serve the world, and the world does not regard him; the negroes, and( who could believe it?)
42318He says:"How, then, shall we account for the writing which is performed without any direct volition?
42318How does that consideration stand?
42318How does that sound to you, my ingenious friend?
42318How so?
42318I then said:''Who are you?''
42318If I am not an intelligence, in the name of common sense what am I?
42318If a table may be made to spin around the room, why may not a wheel be made to turn as well?"
42318If it be called only a dream, or, even a delusion, what harm can come of it?
42318If thou believest the things which thou sayest to be true, why dost thou weep and lament and make a pageantry and a mock of thy singing?
42318If thou believest them_ not_ to be true, why dost thou play the hypocrite so much as to sing?"
42318In Planchette, public journalists and pamphleteers seem to have caught the"What is it?"
42318In justice to my little friend, however, I must not omit to state that in respect to questions as to the kind of weather we shall have on the morrow?
42318Is it anything more than the sheerest assumption?
42318Is it not in keeping with Scripture teachings, as now interpreted?
42318May I not, then, expect from_ you_ a solution of the mysteries which have thus far enveloped you?
42318May it not be spiritual food, of which their mother, the Church, has abundance, which she has neglected to set before them?
42318My friend C. here asked:"Ought she to go to Kentucky and attend to the matter?"
42318My question was,_ Can you tell me anything about my nephew?_''_ Mr.
42318Nevertheless, I am curious to know how you justify yourself in this disparaging remark on the theology and religion of the day?
42318Pray, how do you account for that fact?
42318She said to him:"For a further test, will you be kind enough to tell me where I last saw you?"
42318St. Chrysostom, speaking of funeral services, quotes passages from the psalms and hymns that were in common use, thus:"What mean our psalms and hymns?
42318Such were the answers to the questions:"How many brothers_ did_ she[ Mary C----] have?"
42318Such, for instance, is the answer"Nobody knows,"to the question"Where is Mary C----?"
42318Thinkest thou that I can not now pray to my Father, and he will give me more than twelve legions of angels?"
42318Well, by what description of intelligence?
42318Well, then, what is the way to deal with spiritualism?
42318What is this communion which death can not prevent, and which with prayer can impart consolation?
42318When this theory is offered in seriousness as a final solution of the mystery in question, we are tempted to ask, Who is electricity?
42318Where is the shadow of proof?
42318Why should we not hasten and run after them that we too may see our fatherland?
42318Why?
42318Will you have the kindness to gratify me in this particular?
42318Would not a sermon conceived in the terms of this standard treatise excite an instant sensation as tending toward the errors of Spiritualism?
42318[ 2] Query: Have we here the_ spiritus mundi_ of the old philosophers?
42318_ I._ And what of the changed aspects of science that is to grow out of this alleged peculiar Divine manifestation?
42318_ I._ I see the point, and acknowledge it is ingeniously made; but do you not see that the argument fails to meet the whole difficulty?
42318_ I._ Of course they do; how otherwise?
42318_ I._ On what ground do you assert that the religion of the day stands in a position"negative"to other influences?
42318_ I._ Pray tell us what you mean by the dream- region that lies between the two worlds?
42318_ I._ Well, I should say he would teach the latter; but what use would the knowledge that he is such a fool be to us?
42318_ P._ Can you, then, bear an announcement still more startling than any I have yet made?
42318_ P._ Did not the heathens consult familiar spirits as petty divinities, or gods, and as such, follow their sayings and commands implicitly?
42318_ P._ May you not, then, from all this learn a rule which will always be a safe guide to you in respect to the matters under discussion?
42318and how and where did he get his education?
42318and is this the road our ancestors had to travel in their pilgrimage in quest of freedom and Christianity?
42318and was not that the reason, and the only reason, why the practice was forbidden?
42318and would not the Israelites to whom the Old Testament was addressed have violated the first command in the decalogue by adopting this practice?
42318is my money in jeopardy?"
42318or does he teach you that he is blind?
42318or shall I see, or do this, that, or the other thing?
42318so great an event heralded by so questionable an instrumentality as the rapping and table tipping spirits?
42318that is to say, between mere verbal utterances and phenomenal demonstrations?
42318what is his mental and moral_ status_?
42318will such person go, or such a one come?
47647Ah,said Red Jacket, thoughtfully,"is that it?
47647Am I not King of this country? 47647 And what, pray, did my red brother dream?"
47647Are you friendly to these English invaders, or would you care to see them exterminated?
47647Art thou Winsnow?
47647Art thou, indeed, Winsnow? 47647 Captain Brant wants to know why you came here?"
47647Did I not tell the Great White Eagle( General Carrington) so, in the council at the house, called Laramie by the palefaces? 47647 Did I not tell you that the Long Knives would move against us?"
47647Do all these men want to talk with Captain Brant also?
47647Have you then any method by which you can change your palates every time you change your plates? 47647 Have you tried Opechancanough?"
47647Have you tried the Chickahominies?
47647How do you know this, Chanco?
47647How is it that you are doing this kind of work while your neighbors are all being murdered around you?
47647How many are there?
47647I want to know whether you intend to ally yourself with the British or not?
47647If all you want to do is to see the poor Indians, why, pray, do you bring all these white soldiers with you?
47647Is he dead?
47647Is it for warfare against the French that they are preparing?
47647Is that so?
47647May I inquire the reason of my being honored by a visit from such an eminent man as yourself?
47647Men, will you follow me?
47647Merciful Providence, what shall we do?
47647We Indians have never objected to that, and what business is it of yours what we do among ourselves? 47647 What can we do against you English?"
47647What did my paleface brother dream?
47647What do you wish for them?
47647What does he want?
47647What have the English ever done for us,he exclaimed,"that we should become homeless and helpless wanderers for their sakes?"
47647What is he saying?
47647What is your name?
47647What is your name?
47647What say you, good Captain, if I and two others go ashore with our fowling pieces to look for game?
47647What will you do now?
47647What, Captain Brant?
47647Who has come?
47647Why do I see so many of my father''s young men standing in the street with their guns?
47647Why do you not go to see this affair?
47647You are scared, are you not?
47647Am I not as I have been?
47647Am I too feeble to revenge myself upon my enemies?
47647And what can you get by war if we escape you and hide our provisions in the woods?
47647Are not all the towns about here of my dominions and the people in them?
47647But how came it that he was called Red Jacket, when these other names were so much more distinguished and musical?
47647But how could he secure the Indian maiden, for she appeared to manifest no desire to go on board the vessel?
47647Did I not say that if he and his Long Swords stole the country of our fathers without asking my permission that we would take their scalps?
47647Did I not tell him that the fireboat which walks on mountains( locomotive) could not come into our hunting grounds and scare off all the game?
47647Do I not own it by direct descent from my parents?
47647Does the Indian not hold this land from the Great Father?
47647Fire flashed from the beady eyes of Tecumseh, as he exclaimed in a loud tone:"My father, eh?
47647Have they ever violated any of the treaties made with the red men?
47647Have they taken anything from you?
47647He even called Tecumseh before him, and said:"Why are you trying to bring about a union of the different Indian tribes?"
47647He paused for a reply, and then added,"Now let us kill all our women and children and go out and fight the palefaces until we die?"
47647He said but little, but his appealing looks seemed to ask,''Is this treachery?''
47647How can I have faith in you?
47647How can he answer to his country?
47647How dare you wreak vengeance upon defenseless men?
47647How do we know this to be true?
47647How is it, then, that you now no longer wish to honor the very man for whom you used to pray?"
47647How shall we know when to believe, being so often deceived by the white people?
47647I replied:''_ Can he be heard in the morning?_''The General looked at me steadily for an instant, but did not answer.
47647I say to myself,''Which of these things can you do?''
47647If there is but one religion, why do you white people differ so much about it?
47647In a tone of great anger and scorn, the red leader rose, and said:"For what purpose do you come here?
47647Is it true?"
47647That I will do, for do not I command all the country about you?
47647Then, turning to the interpreter, he continued:"What is the meaning of this?
47647To see every day dead bodies floating down the river, mangled and disfigured?
47647Turning suddenly around, he saw an Indian near by, and raising his hayrake for protection, cried out:"Red man, what do you want?"
47647Was it not very agreeable to hear every day of the savages cutting, carving, boiling, and eating our companions?
47647What can your few brave warriors do against the innumerable warriors of the Seventeen Fires( Seventeen States)?
47647What did this alkali- covered column mean-- there upon the bleak, unpopulated Wyoming plains?
47647What do you expect to gain by destroying us who provide you with food?
47647What harm is there in this, pray?
47647What have the English done for us?
47647What reason have you to complain of the Seventeen Fires?
47647What was that for?"
47647What will they do for us if they win, but insist upon a division of our land?"
47647What will they think of this in England?"
47647When I am gone to the other world-- when the Great Spirit calls me away-- who among my people can take my place?
47647Who can reckon what bitter thoughts must have assailed this red Napoleon when he considered the humiliating close of his campaign?
47647Who is there to mourn for Logan?
47647Why not all agree, as you can all read the book?
47647Why should we give up everything for these men, I say, when we are happy and peaceful here?
47647Why these grim- visaged warriors: these munitions of war: these scouts and vigilant- eyed officers of the Government?
47647Will any man try for the opposite bank with me?"
47647Will you oppose our surveyors when we send them into this country?"
47647Will you sign a treaty with me?"
47647Would it not be well if we made a treaty of peace and lived in friendly relations to these invaders?"
47647You must then suppose that the plates and knives and forks retain the taste of the cookery?"
50958''Any fruit?''
50958''Good morning, gentlemen,''said she; Brother Pratt looked up--''Is it morning?''
50958''Phoebe,''she said, impressively,''will you come back to me if you find Mormonism false?''
50958A number are going to the North Beach to- morrow, will you go?''
50958All had to be met, could I bring the gray hairs of my parents in sorrow to the grave?
50958Among the many admirers of her poems the English Saints regard her with special fondness, for is she not their own?
50958And wherefore should I cease to sing Of Zion and the Latter Day?
50958Are their posterity following in their footsteps?
50958Could I like Abraham of old, arise and go to a far country-- even the wilds of America?
50958Could I reduce my family to comparative poverty and reverses of every kind?
50958Could I say more?
50958Could I_ so_ lay my all upon the altar of my God?
50958He asked,''Where is Caroline?''
50958He looked at me reprovingly, and said,''Will you tell me who to teach it to?
50958He said pleasantly,"You have?"
50958I could not accept the fact till President Young,( speaking to me of my husband), emphatically said,''Do n''t you know he asked for his mission?
50958I said,"Half of him is mine, is it not?"
50958I said,"Is he worth a thousand dollars?"
50958If its principles were practiced and strictly adhered to would there be a trespass upon virtue?
50958Joyce, is n''t this like Boston?''
50958My husband came to my bedside, and as he was admiring our three days''old darling, I said,"What is the boy worth?"
50958My mother asked,''When shall we see you again, my child?''
50958Should not this teach us a lesson?
50958Then said Mr. Kimball,"How will that reserve block north of the Temple suit?"
50958To the heirs of salvation what is the worth, In their perishing state, the frail things of earth?
50958Turning to my mother Brother Pratt asked,''Sister Joyce, have you renewed your covenants?
50958Was I not blest?
50958What avail the parade and the splendor here, To a legal heir to a heavenly sphere?
50958What is death to the good, but an entrance gate That is placed on the verge of a rich estate Where commissioned escorts are waiting by?
50958Who will replace them?
50958Would the honorable wife or daughter be intruded upon with impunity?
50958shall their example and their labors be lost on me?
50958their hopes meet disappointment?
50958though thy flesh and thy strength should fail?
53375And now how do you like this?
53375Does he linger in the mountains, Far up toward the radiant sky? 53375 How does it sound with me?"
53375Tell me, vale or rippling water, Tell me if ye can or will, If you''ve seen my long- lost lover Known as wandering Whippoorwill?
53375Why and where now does he linger? 53375 Will he come back with the morning, Borne upon its wings of light, From the shade that long has lingered, From the darkness of the night?
53375And when Whippoorwill had left them, Good old Junaluska said To his daughter Occoneechee,"Would you like this brave to we d?"
53375Ani`-sgayaiyi--"Men town"(?
53375Bitterly she wailed in sorrow, Saying"Tell me, tell me why I am left out here so lonely, And my tears are never dry?
53375Ge`yagu`ga( for Age`hya`-guga?)
53375Gulsadihi( or Gultsadihi`?)
53375Has some evil spirit seized him, Hid or carried him away Far beyond the gleaming sunset, Far out toward the close of day?
53375He saw the queer black thing by the well and said,"Who''s there?"
53375How?
53375Is there none to bring me answer?
53375Shall we go home now like cowards, or shall we raise the warwhoop and let the Seneca know that we are men?"
53375So he gathered up his chattels, Springing spryly on his steed, Made inquiry of the warrior,"Which of us shall take the lead?"
53375Tali`wa-- the site of a traditional battle between the Cherokee and Creeks about 1755, on Mountain(?)
53375Tell me, silver, crescent moon, Shall our parting be forever-- Shall our hopes all blast at noon?
53375Ukte`na--"Keen- eyed(?)"
53375When love''s bright star shines the brightest Shall it be the sooner set?
53375Why he comes not at my calling, Why he roams some lonely way, Why does he not come back to me-- Why does he not come and stay?
53375dasun`tali-- ant; dasun`tali,"stinging ant,"the large red cowant( Myrmica?
53375ha`tlu-- dialectic form, ga`tsu,"where?"
53375hila`gu?--how many?
53375how much?
53375nakwisi` usdi`--"little star"; the puffball fungus( Lycoperdon?).
53375uda`i-- the baneberry or cohosh vine( Actaea?).
23637''Do you mean it?'' 23637 ''Do you still hold to that offer?''
23637''Indeed?'' 23637 ''Is that so?''
23637''Oh, Mr. Watts,''he said grinnin'',''how do you like a coal black stump- sucker?'' 23637 ''What?
23637''Will he be fool enough to do it?'' 23637 Ah- hem-- ah- ha-- Aunt Maria"for Kingsley had caught on to the better class of Southern ways--"inform me-- ah, what does all this mean?"
23637Ai nt he at the mill?
23637Alice?--and what does he mean? 23637 An you know what I''m gwine do with my other nickel every day?
23637An''Bonaparte went down the road with the monkey holt his tail-- the champion dorg-- an''you won all that?
23637An''hog- jowl, an''corn- bread-- anything else Maw?
23637An''me?--I''ll be the gran''pap of''em-- won''t I, Sally?
23637An''played hookey?
23637An''what you reckin''she done-- the ole''oman? 23637 An''will you go right away-- to- morrow mornin''?"
23637An''you do n''t think that was nothin''?
23637An''you won, of course, Archie B., you won in a walk?
23637And Coquette-- the saddle mare?
23637And I do n''t suppose one should do a corporation harm,she said quickly,--"even to do humanity good?"
23637And now the other one?
23637And you''ll bring sister Helen, too?
23637Anything wrong?
23637Archie B., sho''ly, sho''ly, not all that? 23637 Aunt Maria-- in heaven''s name-- where?"
23637Bud,he said cheerily after a pause,"did I ever tell you the story of this here Ben Butler here?"
23637But are you altogether pleased with it in all its features?
23637But how is it there?
23637By chance-- by chance,she repeated,"but if there be great fixed laws, how can there be any-- chance?"
23637By gad, sah, but, Flecker, do n''t you think Lizzette went smoother that last heat? 23637 Ca n''t you see that Italian knows what he''s about?
23637Ca n''t you tell me where you''re gwine, then?
23637Can I do that-- do the marryin''in Utah an''keep sendin''the-- the chilluns down to the mill?
23637Cap''n Tom, Cap''n Tom,he whispered--"don''t you know me-- the Bishop?"
23637Carpenter, had you ever thought of Helen Conway-- I mean-- of getting Conway''s two daughters into the mill?
23637Come to think about it, but ai n''t we foolish an''hypocritical the way we go on over the dead that we have forgot an''neglected whilst they lived? 23637 Come to think of it, an''that''s about the way with the rest of us?
23637Cris Ham?
23637Davy, ai n''t you a trifle previous in this?
23637Dees is greet!--dees is too goot!--Jud, we peek it oop in de road, heh?
23637Did he say_ damn_?
23637Did mother tell you that?
23637Did n''t I always tell you so? 23637 Did n''t eat none at all,"asked Jud--"not even a little?"
23637Did you ever hear that love is not love if it is a minute late? 23637 Did you ever notice Ben Butler''s eyes, Bud?"
23637Did you notice how much brighter, an''sech, she''s been for a day or two?
23637Did you put up that ten dollars yo''Granny lef''you?
23637Did you think we were never coming back? 23637 Do I?
23637Do n''t know anybody there?
23637Do n''t wanter see me go an''git even with the man that''s jus''licked you for nuthin''?
23637Do n''t you know a wood- pecker''s nest when you see it?
23637Do n''t you think my dress is pretty?
23637Do n''t you think you have queer ideas of love-- of winning a woman''s love-- in this way? 23637 Do you believe Tom is not dead-- that he will one day come back?"
23637Do you believe it, Jack?
23637Do you believe that? 23637 Do you know Browning''s most beautiful poem?"
23637Do you know I have thought lots about what you said last Saturday night?
23637Do you know that voice, Eph?
23637Do you know who this money belongs to?
23637Do you know who''s at the head of all this?
23637Do you know, Archie B., I prayed for this las''night? 23637 Do you know,"he added quickly,"how many idle parents these hundred and twenty- five children support-- actually support?
23637Do you know-- oh, will you mind if I speak to you-- or perhaps I shouldn''t-- but-- but-- don''t you see that he loves you?
23637Do you know? 23637 Do you mean it?"
23637Do you not see,she said,"how hopeless it is?
23637Do you not think?
23637Do you really mean it?
23637Do you remember little Jack, Cap''n Tom-- him that died? 23637 Do you remember the first time I ever heard you sing, Alice?"
23637Do you remember when I was six years old?
23637Do you say that, Marse Hillyard?
23637Do you suppose I could hit the string?
23637Do you think I am a coquette?
23637Do you think I''m fool enuff to tackle that crowd of hillbillies? 23637 Do you think I''ve got a show yet?"
23637Do you think you could learn to love me?
23637Do you think you have any right to ask-- having treated her as you have?
23637Dreams-- ah, mother mine--she answered with forced cheeriness--"but what would life be without them?"
23637Ever think of it, sah,went on Jud,"that they could make you a livin''in the mill?"
23637For a man of your age ar''n''t you learning to talk too much out loud? 23637 For-- what?"
23637Good God, Helen Conway, are you crazy?
23637Has he asked her to marry him?
23637Have I changed so much since then?
23637Have you noticed Uncle Bisco lately, mother?
23637Have you representatives from each camp present, Silos?
23637Hello, yo''se''f--finally drawled Jud--"whatcher doin''up thar?"
23637Home? 23637 How about the gloves and candy now?"
23637How are the horses to- night, Jim?
23637How are you to- day, Majah, sah?
23637How come you to think you was dyin''anyway?
23637How did I ever come to marry Hillard Watts? 23637 How did he say it?"
23637How did you learn all that?
23637How do you know that''s a fly- ketcher''s nest and not a wood- pecker''s, then?
23637How does Cheatham estimate his loss?
23637How many times must I tell you, Jim,he said at last rather gruffly--"never to bring them out, even for the road, without their boots?
23637How many whippings did you git, Archie B.?
23637How much did Joe Hopper''s chillun fetch''i m in this week?
23637How much in all, Jack?
23637How much?
23637How old is she?
23637How, how,she said slowly and looking him steadily over,"did I ever love such a thing as you?"
23637Hungry, John Paul?
23637I am dying myself,it said--"why not kill him?"
23637I am mounted and do not need them as much as you do?
23637I will imagine she is there--she whispered--"in that world-- O mother-- mother-- will you-- cannot you help me?"
23637I''ll come for my answer-- soon?
23637If I had the entrance fee I''d do it once-- jes''once mo''befo''I die? 23637 In God''s name, Hillard Watts, what does all this mean?
23637In other words, how many under twelve do we work there?
23637Is mother in one of you?
23637Is n''t it time you were learning? 23637 Is she willin''?"
23637Is they very pretty?
23637It was here-- and what was it? 23637 Jack, do you know we must go there this week and see it again?
23637Jack,said the old man,"wo n''t you tell me about yo''self an''how you ever got down to this?
23637Ma,she whispered,"I''ve heard o''fun''rals in Irelan''where they passed around refreshments-- d''ye reckin this is goin''to be that kind?
23637Mammy''s baby-- did you think old Mammy dun run off an''lef''her baby?
23637Marse Hillyard, do you believe it? 23637 May I give you some nourishment now, Maggie?"
23637May I stay a little while longer?
23637May we look for brother?
23637Me, me give it up, Jack? 23637 Might n''t I kiss you once,--you''re so pretty an''fresh?"
23637Mine Gott, but we peek it oop in de road, Jud?
23637My little one,he said--"my little one"--"Mammy,"asked the little girl as the old woman came out--"how did you get all this?"
23637Next Sunday, do you remember-- Alice-- next Sunday night you are to tell me-- to fix the day, Sweet?
23637No one knows the comfort of a dog''s company,he said,"who does not love a dog?"
23637No, he''s only took a deserted young''oman in out of the cold-- he''ll take care of her, but he ai n''t the marryin''kind, is he?
23637No-- why?
23637No?
23637Now Hillard,said Uncle Dave, rising--"do you think it necessary to bring in all that?"
23637Now you sho''ly ai n''t goin''to be sech a fool as that? 23637 Now, look here, lad,"he said, changing the subject,"but do you know you''ve got an''oncommon ac''rate gun in this old weepon?"
23637Now, what happened? 23637 O Jud-- Jud-- if I marry a grass- widder whut-- whut''ll I be then?"
23637O Tom-- Tom-- why-- why did you make me love you here and then leave me forever with only the memory of it?
23637Of course you did n''t eat no supper?
23637Of what?
23637Oh, Clay, do you really think that? 23637 Oh, God, Ben Butler, what is it-- what?
23637Oh, I ca n''t?
23637Oh, Tom,said Alice when they were alone--"how-- how could you do it?"
23637Oh, Uncle Dave is dyin'', is he? 23637 Oh, how can we ever thank you enough?"
23637Oh, it wa''nt?
23637Oh, mother, why were you taken from your two little girls? 23637 Oh, you are?--Well, do n''t be in sech a hurry an''look heah at yo''snake- skin fust-- didn''t I tell you it''ud be lined with a snake- skin?"
23637Oh,said Jud, surprised,"an''what is it?"
23637Oh,said Ozzie B.,"that''s it, is it?"
23637On what, Bishop?
23637One on''em busted a plate on yo''head?
23637Only fairly-- can you?
23637Our children earned the money and do we not own the children?
23637Overpowered? 23637 Promise me that if I tell you all-- all, Jimmy, when you are fifteen-- promise me-- will you be patient now-- with poor mother, who loves you so?"
23637Richard?
23637She''s mine, is n''t she? 23637 Shoot-- Richard Travis-- why the devil do n''t you shoot?"
23637Soon?
23637Sorry to disturb you, but be you a surveyor also?
23637Surely, I did n''t earn all this, did I? 23637 Swear it, swear it, on yo''honor as a gentleman--""On my honor as a gentleman, sah?
23637Tell me what it is?
23637Tell me,she said after a while,"you have moved father and Lily to-- to-- one of the Cottontown cottages?"
23637The dog-- and that other one?
23637The finest iron ore!--who-- who-- ever heard of such a freak of nature?
23637Then you do care some for me?
23637Then you''ve stopped to see Nellie, and that is why you are late? 23637 They were nothing,"she went on,"but to be forgotten, forsaken by-- by--""Clay?"
23637To shoot rabbits?
23637To- morrow at daylight?
23637To- morrow----"So soon?
23637Tried to kiss you, did n''t I?
23637Tush--he said bitterly--"tush-- that''s the way Richard Travis talks, ai n''t it?
23637Twice does it bloom, dear Heart,--can not my love bloom like it-- twice?
23637Vot''s dat?
23637Wal, I declar, Bishop,grinned Bud,"kin yo''critter fetch a caper?"
23637Wal, what ails her, doctor?
23637Want me to give you a few lessons?
23637Wanter kno''what I shet you up for, Mother of all Holiness? 23637 Was it not when father dressed me as a gypsy girl and I rode my pony over to The Gaffs and sang from horse- back for your grandfather?"
23637We are game, sir-- but-- but, will you do as I tell you an''swear to me on yo''honor as a gentleman never to speak till I say the word? 23637 We wanted to know, sir, if you were willing for us to do the work to- night, sir?"
23637We were all aligned but the old pacer-- why did n''t you let us go?
23637Weepons? 23637 Well, I do n''t kno'',"said Uncle Davy--"you sho''ly ai n''t got no notion of marryin''agin, have you, Sally?"
23637Well, at Franklin, when I seed Cap''n Tom dyin''as I tho''rt, shunned by the Yankees as a traitor----"As a traitor?
23637Well, it''s this way, Jack,said the old man,"jes''this away an''plain as the nose on yo''face: Now here''s me, ain''it?
23637Well, suh, hu''many to- day?
23637Well, take her and thank Jud Carpenter for the Queen of the Valley-- eh?
23637Well, what about it?
23637Well, what did you eat-- I wanter find out what ails you?
23637Well?
23637Whar did you come from? 23637 What ails you, Samanthy?"
23637What do you mean, suh? 23637 What do you mean, you little imp?--what mill?"
23637What does all this mean?
23637What else kin I do for you at the request of yo''Master?
23637What is it, chile?
23637What is it?
23637What is yo''name?
23637What shall I do, General?
23637What then is our little sins of the flesh to the big goodness of the faith that is in us? 23637 What was Uncle Bisco''s dream?"
23637What was it?
23637What will become of Lily, in the mill, too?
23637What yo''name?
23637What you been eatin'', Samanthy?
23637What you doin'', Archie B.?
23637What you done put up now, Jud?
23637What you reckin''Bud done, Mister Kingsley? 23637 What''ll you do?"
23637What''s a fly- ketcher, Mister Know- It- All?
23637What''s that, Pap?
23637What''s the matter with Willis?
23637What''s the matter with you takin''yo''queen at the same time?
23637What''s the matter, Archie B.?
23637What''s the matter, Bud?
23637What''s up, Joe?
23637What''ud He say?
23637What-- what?
23637What?
23637When are you going out to get in more hands for the mill?
23637Where are the babies, Ned?
23637Where are you from?
23637Where is General Cleburne, men? 23637 Where is my child?"
23637Who must you hug then?
23637Who?
23637Whut-- whut-- whut,--he stammered,"Whut_ did he do_ to Bonaparte?"
23637Why are you so much happier than last week?
23637Why did you marry father, then?
23637Why do n''t you shoot?
23637Why have you brought me to this-- here-- at night alone with you-- to tell me this-- to make me-- me-- oh, change in my feelings-- to you? 23637 Why should I not dissipate in the misery of it, since so much of it has fallen upon me at once?
23637Why, how did that happen?
23637Why, it is true, my queen-- of The Gaffs?
23637Why, what do you mean, Alice?
23637Why, what''s the matter, Archie B.?
23637Why, what?
23637Why-- why-- did you? 23637 Why?
23637Why?
23637Why?
23637Why?
23637Why?
23637Why?
23637Wo n''t Tilly be proud of herse''f as the daughter of Old Judge Biggers? 23637 Wo n''t you come in, Archie B.?"
23637Wo n''t you set down an''res''yo''hat?
23637Would n''t it be fine, Mattox,she cried,"if we did n''t have to work at the mill to- day an''cu''d run up on the mountain an''pick up that star?
23637Would not the others have done as well?
23637Would you really like to know?
23637Yes, of course; if a man do n''t look out for his own hide, whose goin''to do it for him? 23637 You Archie B.,"yelled his mother, a sallow little woman of quick nervous movements,"air you havin''a revulsion down there?
23637You do n''t say so-- that critter!--cock- eyed?
23637You say that''s twenty years old, Hillard?
23637You sho''ly do n''t mean that, Jud Carpenter?
23637Your flag,said Alice hotly--"your flag that would overrun our country and kill our people?
23637''_""David?"
23637--asked the old man, grasping the outlaw''s shoulder--"Didn''t he die?
23637A Travis?--and marry a mill girl?"
23637A mill girl, in name, to have him notice her?
23637Am I not now your guardian?
23637An''drillin''?
23637An''licked the dorg, an''that gang, an''cleaned''em up?"
23637An''now you wanter know what I come for?
23637An''reddishes-- we had some new reddishes fur dinner-- didn''t we, Samanthy?"
23637An''so I found him an''tuck him in my arms an''carried him to my own cabin up yonder on the mountain-- carried him an''----""An''whut?"
23637An''what may have sent the angel of the Lord to honor us with another visit?"
23637An''why should it be?
23637An''you saved my money, old man, an''that damned rascal''s name by that trick?
23637And by the way, Cousin Alethea, I just added five- hundred dollars more to the principal,--thought, perhaps, you''d need it, you know?
23637And did I make you with your strength-- your conquering strength, and-- Oh, could I overcome my environment?''
23637And had not, perhaps, God given him this opportunity for this very purpose?
23637And is not the honor of a white woman more than the hide of a broncho?
23637And was it not a triumph-- a social triumph for her?
23637And was not the eagle rampant then?
23637And what does it matter?
23637And what is one tot of them from another?
23637And where, pray, is that city, Miss Conway?
23637And why in cabins?
23637And you have been here and seen all this and not raised your hand?"
23637Are there not hundreds of others, born of ignorance and poverty and pain, to take their places?
23637Are you crazy, sah?
23637At present he could not, for was he not too poor, and were not his mother and sister dependent upon him?
23637Besides, what right had he to plan to bring another to share his poverty?
23637Bud Billins thar, what did he do?
23637But as he rode away he was heard to say again:"Whut-- whut-- whut_ did he do_ to Bonaparte?"
23637But how are we to remedy it?
23637But in which room was the elder sister?
23637But what have they done that we ai n''t never heard of?
23637But what in the worl''do you want to hold up as po''a man as me-- an''if I do say it, yo''frien''when you was a boy?"
23637But what you reckin he done?"
23637But when he saw the line led by his own grandsire the blood in him was thicker than water and----""An''whut?"
23637But who, but God, controls the course of an honest mind?
23637But, Lord, who''d done that but Ben Butler?"
23637CHAPTER VII MRS. WESTMORE TAKES A HAND"What are you playing, Alice?"
23637CHAPTER X MARRIED IN GOD''S SIGHT Night-- for night and death, are they not one?
23637Ca n''t we be hones''without bein''selfish, fair without graspin'', make a profit without wantin''it all?
23637Ca n''t you sho''Shiloh the squirrels?
23637Ca n''t you talk?
23637Can I talk to you two?"
23637Can he be-- dare he be-- coming down?
23637Can they be indifferent to our fate?
23637Can you not see that she has lost her mind and is not responsible for her acts?
23637Can you not wear this now?
23637Can you shoot true, little''un?"
23637Children they are-- tots-- and why should they know that they are trading-- life for death?
23637Colonel Troup flushed:"What''ll you do, then?
23637Coming back, he said:"Pardon me, Mr. Travis-- but the oldes''gyrl-- what-- what about her, you know?"
23637Could Bonaparte''s army have planted more on the ramparts of Mount St. Jean?
23637Could he buy her-- bribe her, win her to work for him?
23637Could he take the next heat from Lizzette?
23637Could such a thing be and he live to tell it?
23637Could you love a dying lion, child?"
23637Destiny?
23637Did I make myself?
23637Did Sinai speak louder than this?
23637Did he think a woman could be loved that way-- scientifically-- as coal and iron are discovered?
23637Did n''t I tell you to have the blacksmith move her hind shoes back a little?"
23637Did n''t you see Lizette grab her quarters and fly up just now?"
23637Did you get Mr. Shipton to carry it at the bank for another year?"
23637Do n''t you think so?"
23637Do we hafter wuck with niggers?"
23637Do you call it disgrace to work-- to make an honest living-- to be independent and self- reliant?"
23637Do you hear the bell clanging?"
23637Do you know any two- legged fly- ketchers a- doin''that?"
23637Do you know where you''ll end?
23637Do you not know it, feel it, Sweet?"
23637Do you not know that I was terribly tempted-- weak-- maddened-- deserted that night?
23637Do you think they have forgot how to cook an''wash?
23637Do you understand me, child?"
23637Does not my very voice sound like his?
23637Even the bold staring eyes of the eagle seemed proud of the age of the side- board, for had it not been built when the stars numbered but thirteen?
23637Ever been to Lenox?"
23637Fate?
23637Father?"
23637Feel like you got enough?"
23637For God?
23637For was she not Zion, the Lord''s chosen, the sanctified one, and the powers of hell were naught?
23637Goin''down to take a drink or two?
23637Got nothin''?
23637Got nothin''?
23637Have somethin''?
23637Have you quit on me, ole hoss?--you, Ben Butler, you that come in answer to prayer?
23637Having no real heart, how was it possible for her to know, as Alice could know, the happiness of love?
23637He came over to Helen gallantly-- his blue eyes shining through a smile which now lurked in them:"This is Miss Conway, is n''t it?
23637He cut me down when they were about to hang me for a spy-- you heard about it?"
23637He hung aroun''a while an''said:"''I was up in the country the other day, an''do you kno''I saw a dead match for yo''black?
23637He laughed:"Do you remember Giant Jim, the big negro Grandfather used to have to oversee his hands on the lower place?
23637He mounted his horse and rode-- where?
23637He repeated softly to her, as she stood looking forward-- to him-- into the future:"What thou art we know not, What is most like thee?
23637He scarcely looked at Helen nor at Jim, who kept saying nervously:"You''ve killed him-- you''ve killed him-- what will Mr. Travis say?"
23637He smiled:"I guess you an''I could easily understan''each other, lad-- what can I do for you?"
23637He wakened and smiled:"Am I falling in love with that girl?
23637Her limbs shook so she sat down in a heap at the door and said pleadingly:--"Are you lyin''to me, white man?
23637Hillard Watts, are you handin''it out to me straight about this here Jesus Christ?"
23637How can I ever repay you for what you have done for me?"
23637How do you know it ai n''t lyin'', I say?
23637How do you like it?
23637How now can I ask you to repudiate your oath and turn your back on your rearing?
23637I am dying-- is not part of me already dead?"
23637I am-- I am to be-- after this-- just a mill girl, you know?"
23637I ca n''t_ make_ a character, why should I_ take_ one?
23637I j''ined''em-- yes,--for was n''t I the agent of the Lord?"
23637I tell you, Uncle Billy, the Lord''s on the monkey''s side-- can''t you see it?"
23637I useter hate''em worse''n sin-- but now what do you reckon?"
23637I was late because I had to steal the Gov''nor''s new mare-- isn''t she a beauty?"
23637I''ve puzzled an''wonder''d-- I''ve thought of a dozen fo''ks-- but I sed nothin''--was it you?"
23637If you go to school now, old Triggers will tan yo''hide, see?
23637In bein''a scrub?
23637In her despair, doubting, she cried:"Is there really a God, as Mammy Maria told me?
23637In her own home an''yard-- her that you''ve sworn to love an''cherish agin bed an''board-- ter call her a heifer?"
23637Is civilized man merely a case, at last, of reversion to a primitive type?
23637Is it not a fact that for years in every newly settled western state lynch- law has been the unchallenged, unanimous verdict for a horse thief?
23637It had something that the trees an''birds an''mountains did n''t have-- a soul-- an''do n''t you kno''He''ll finish all such lives up yonder?
23637It is atrophied-- yours and mine and all of us-- the soul has gone and mine?
23637It is true, he had the two years of redemption under the Alabama law, but can a drunkard redeem his land when he can not redeem himself?
23637It makes me think, perhaps-- I-- ain''t-- ain''t worthy of-- the bestowal of-- the grace-- you know, the kind I heard you speak of?"
23637It was also an attitude which asked:"What are you going to do about it?"
23637It was bed time that night before the child finally whispered it out:"Maw, did you ever see two men hug each other?"
23637It''s my atonement-- ain''t that the word?
23637Jack, do you want to hear the gran''est verse ever writ in poetry?"
23637Jud could scarcely believe his eyes-- Bonaparte-- the champion dog-- running-- running like that?
23637Jud elevated his eyebrows"An''for dinner?"
23637Jud laughed:"Say, excuse me, sah-- but hanged if you ai n''t got all the symptoms, y''self, boss?"
23637Jud''s voice came again:"Want to kno''now why you''ll stay there till mornin''?
23637Just see how long I have waited here for you?"
23637Let him rob you an''me, sah?
23637Mattox, ai n''t this jes''fine, bein''out of the mill?"
23637Me an''Ben Butler quit like yeller dogs?
23637Me?
23637My God, can we make it-- can we make it?"
23637My God, why did you give it back to me now-- this ghost soul that has come to me with burning breath?"
23637My daughters-- grandchildren of Gen. Leonidas Conway-- my daughters work in the mill by the side of that poor trash from the mountains?
23637No?
23637Not hunt''sang an''spatterdock an''clean up an''wash an''scour an''cook an''--""No, why not, Tabitha?
23637Now do you see?
23637Now what''ll happen if you go to school?
23637Now you tell me God do n''t answer prayers?"
23637Now you--""How''s that, Archie B.?"
23637O Bud, who would not love to go like Ben Butler?"
23637O voice of the cotton- plant, do we need to go to oracles or listen for a diviner voice than yours when thus you tell us: Pluck?
23637Oh my, but who''d a thought of it?"
23637Oh, God, your blow-- I care not for death, but, oh, not this death?"
23637Oh, has anything happened to them?"
23637Oh, it wus ag''in nachur then, but it looks mighty nach''ul now, do n''t it?
23637Oh, must I say it?"
23637Oh, yes:--''Some men repent to God''s smile, some to His frown, and some to His fist?''"
23637Only five lengths behind?
23637Ozzie B. burst out crying:"Oh, Archie B., do you reckin the po''man got hurt?"
23637Real eggs like a hen or a duck?"
23637Richard Travis-- it looks bad-- he may be bad-- but think what he may do yet-- if God but touch him?
23637Right into my jaws, too?
23637Rob the public in a fake race, sah?
23637Say, old man,"he laughed,"you wo n''t feel bad if we shut you out the fust heat, eh?"
23637See these arms?
23637Shall I tell you?"
23637Shall not her life of unselfishness and good deeds be put against this one insane act of her old age?
23637Shall we take another?"
23637She bit her nails, she picked at the cover, she looked toward the bed and asked feebly:"Are they asleep?
23637She did not show any surprise-- only tears came slowly:"Do you know that I felt that something of this kind would happen?
23637She fell back on her pillow:"In God''s sight... married... married... my-- Oh, I have never said it before... but now,... ca n''t I?"
23637She flushed and Helen heard her say:"Forget you-- ever?
23637She listened a while with a half- amused smile on her lips:"Well, do n''t you think his spindles need oilin'', Pap?"
23637She lost control of herself, for all day she had felt this queer presentiment, and now was it really true?
23637She turned white with a hidden shame as she said:"Jimmie-- Jimmie-- who-- who--?"
23637She was silent, then:"Oh, I-- I-- don''t you think I am entitled now-- to have something end happily-- now-- once-- in my life?"
23637She''s never seed one yet, have you, pet?"
23637Shiloh''s eyes opened wide:"Why, do they lay eggs, Archie B.?
23637Should he expose Travis?--Ruin him, ruin him-- here?
23637Sixty hours at five cents an hour-- wal, but did n''t the chillun wuck no longer than that?
23637Steal my two thousand, and Flecker''s?
23637Suddenly he stopped and fired this point blank at Jud:"But see heah, Mister- man, is thar any niggers thar?
23637Suppose Clay loved her-- suppose this was her solution?
23637Tempted as she was, young as she was, deserted and forsaken as she thought she was, might not indeed the temptation be too much for her?
23637That little thing dividing honors with him in Cottontown?
23637That mare Lizzette is a wonder, an''by gad, sah, did n''t the old pacer come?
23637That now I know what Clay''s love has been?
23637That''s scriptural authority for cotton mills, ai n''t it?"
23637That''s what we''ve met for to- night-- ain''t it, gents?"
23637The Bishop took the infant tenderly and said:"Sister Scruggs, which church shall I put him into?"
23637The Bishop was silent a while, and then he asked:"Ned, it ca n''t be true that you are goin''to put them girls in the factory?"
23637The Colonel turned red:"What do you mean, sah?"
23637The bishop slid off his horse:"What is it, Jack?
23637The consummate boldness of it made Carpenter''s eyes twinkle-- a gentleman and in a race with gentlemen-- who would dare to suspect?
23637The first horseman was just saying:"Things look mighty natural at the old place, Eph; I wonder if the old folks will know us?
23637The house was dark and empty, and Helen uttered a surprised cry:"Why, what does all this mean?
23637The old man looked at it in wonder:"Two fifteen an''not shet out, Ben Butler?
23637The old man softened:"How was it, Jack?
23637The old man turned pale and his voice trembled so with excitement he could hardly say:"Where is he, Jack?
23637The problem was not new, indeed, it has been Despair''s conundrum since the world began: Whose fault that my life has been as it is?
23637The starter laughed as he recovered himself, and winking at the others, asked:"What''s this for, old man?"
23637Then he stood up proudly, and his blue eyes flashed defiance as he said:"And what will Mr. Travis say?
23637Then the old Travis spirit came to him and he smiled:"_ Dominecker-- oh, my old grandsire, will you think I am a Dominecker now?
23637Then you will marry Clay--""Do you really think so?
23637Then you''ll see a change in the Queen-- hey?"
23637Then,"But ai n''t that Helen about the pretties''thing you ever seed?"
23637Then:"Mattox, did you ever see a rabbit?
23637There are queens born and queens made-- I shall call you the queen of the mill, eh?"
23637There was a moment''s silence and then:"General?"
23637They were silent at last:"When did you say Richard was coming again, Alice?"
23637This is the nineteenth century and we''re talking business and going to win a thing or two by common sense and business ways, eh?"
23637This was not the romantic, yet buffeted, beautiful girl who had come so near being the tragedy of his old life?
23637This was something like the babel that greeted the old soldier''s ears as he rode forward:"The Fourth Mississippi-- where is the Fourth Mississippi?"
23637Travis bit his lip--"what did it all mean?
23637Travis followed at a brisk gait:"Hello, Bishop,"he said banteringly--"got a new boarder to- day?"
23637Travis smiled and called out:"Lights waked you up, eh, Dick?
23637Travis turned quickly:"Is that true?
23637Travis?"
23637Wake- up, pet?_ Oh, do sho''me the squirrel!
23637Wanter see me git even with him?
23637Was it a bluebird?
23637Was it not He giving him a chance to right a wrong so long, so long delayed?
23637Was it not He who caused him to look at the open mouth of the first mare?
23637Was it not the noblest thing of life?
23637Was it symbolic to- night,--the swan- song of the romance of Alice Westmore''s life, begun under those very trees so many summers ago?
23637Was not God,--God, the ever merciful but ever just, behind it all?
23637Was this a coincidence-- or as some think-- did the boys in blue retreat before they would fire on an old Continental and the spirit of''76?
23637We are now on the verge of a tragedy or a farce, or--""Sometimes plays end well, where all are happy, do they not?"
23637We''ve got a good excuse-- overpowered-- don''t you see?"
23637Well, listen: It''s to keep you there till to- morrow-- that''s good reason, ai n''t it?
23637What a strong hand it was, and how could so weak a hand as her''s resist it?
23637What air you been doin''anyway?
23637What can I do but go with him?
23637What did he care?
23637What do you say to tryin''it, Josiah?"
23637What home?"
23637What is it worth?
23637What is most like thee?
23637What matter to me if their star is a world?
23637What mental telepathy in great crises cause us to see the trifles on which often the destiny of our life hangs?
23637What other flower among them can thus copy Nature, the great master?
23637What right has a blacksmith to pry into a grand piano to find out wherein the exquisite harmony of the instrument lies?
23637What then can I, a lion, dying, care for the doe that crosses my path?
23637What was it the old preacher said-- that''touch of God''business?
23637What you all doin''?"
23637What''ll you charge?"
23637What''s your authority?"
23637What''ud we do if it warn''t for our chillun?"
23637What''ud you do with a ginger man''cept to eat it?"
23637When Flecker of Tennessee saw the time hung out, he jumped from his seat exclaiming:"Six heats and the last heat the fastest?
23637When-- when did you say the ceremony''d be performed?"
23637Who ever heard of a tired mare cutting ten seconds off that way?
23637Who ever heard of children workin''at all befo''these things come into the country?
23637Who has seen General Cleburne?"
23637Who is happier for any money more than he needs in life?"
23637Who made me as I am and gave me poverty with this fatal beauty-- poverty and a drunken father and this terrible temptation?"
23637Who that has ever heard a negro give in his religious experience but recognizes it?
23637Who took my mother before I knew her influence?
23637Why did he come?
23637Why did n''t you send her up to the mill an''let us lay a hot steam engine on her?"
23637Why do n''t you shoot?"
23637Why do you grasp at the shadow an''shy at the form?
23637Why had he noticed it?
23637Why indulge in weak modesty and fool self- depreciation?
23637Why may not man learn this simple lesson-- the lesson of work-- of pedigree, but the pedigree of achievement?
23637Why should it be told?
23637Why should it be wondered at?
23637Why should the South be singled out for blame?
23637Why should we not be kinder an''mo''liberal with each other in business matters?
23637Why, who''d ever have thought that good old Uncle Dave Dickey was that triflin''when he was young?
23637Whyncher run-- whyncher dodge him?"
23637Will you swear to keep sacred what I show you, until I let you tell?"
23637Will-- will he marry her or--""Did you ever hear of him marryin''anybody?"
23637Wo n''t do it?
23637Work-- and did not he himself love to work?
23637Would a merchant or manufacturer or anybody else do that?
23637Would n''t Richard Travis chuckle with him?
23637Would you hang this poor old woman without a trial?
23637Would you like to shoot at that tree?"
23637Would you mind jes''droppin''him a line, you know?
23637You believe me, do n''t you?"
23637You do not understand-- love-- love-- can it be won this way-- apprenticed, bargained-- given away?"
23637You hain''t kilt anybody, have you?"
23637You know I done took down that sign I useter have hangin''up in my house in the hall-- that sign which said,_ God bless our home_?
23637You offer me bread"--"But may it not turn into a stone, an exquisite, pure diamond?"
23637You were born to be queen of-- well, The Gaffs, eh?"
23637You will do it, Dick?"
23637You''ll not be forgetting us now that you will not see us again, will you?"
23637Your purse that you''ve already won-- yours-- yours, right this minute?
23637_ Was it-- could it be?
23637an''you say you had that thing on her stomach?
23637and if the dead are immortal, can they forget us of earth?
23637and"Who is he?"
23637bam-- bam-- bam!_""What''s that fur?"
23637exclaimed Billy Buch--"Vot''s dat, man, you say?
23637he asked, after a while as they stood by the gate,"that I should have a sweet answer soon?"
23637he exclaimed--"where?"
23637said Bud slapping his leg--"didn''t I tell you so?"
23637said Conway, now purple with anger--"is that the way you respect your sworn oath?
23637said Flecker excitedly--"you, Col''nel?
23637said Uncle Davy between his sobs--"I ai n''t a dyin'', Hillard?
23637she asked,--"in New England?"
23637she shrieked--"to tattle- tale to the house- cat about yo''own spliced an''wedded wife?
23637that was Harry; why did I name it for him?"
23637w- h- a- t?
49352And why is it ealled the rebel flower?
49352And why,said the governor,"do you ask that?"
49352Did he hit you?
49352How far is it to the next gate?
49352Robert, what security canst thou give?
49352Were any of your family up, Lydia,he asked,"on the night when I received company in this house?"
49352What can you do for me?
49352Who told you to say that?
49352Why so gloomy at a ball?
49352Will it be advisable to hazard a general engagement?
49352''Jemmy Steptoe,''he said to the clerk,''what the divil ails ye, mon?''
49352''Who did this?''
49352* Alluding to this fact, an anonymous poet wrote:"But where, O where''s the hallowed sod Beneath whose verd the hero''s ashes sleep?
49352*"Dear Doctor,--I have asked Mrs. Cochran and Mrs. Livingston to dine with me to- morrow; but am I not in honor bound to apprise them of their fare?
49352** It was to one of the prisoners, taken at this time, that Arnold put the question,"If the Americans should catch me, what would they do with me?"
49352And what have we to oppose them?
49352Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation?
49352But neber mind; need n''t work''less I''m a mind too;''nough to eat, and pretty soon I die?"
49352But when shall we be stronger?
49352But why dwell upon the sad and sickening scene of the battle- field with the dead and dying upon it?
49352Can escape from death he possible?
49352Do you suppose they will stand by, idle and indifferent spectators to the contest?
49352Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of armies and navies?
49352Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win us back to our love?
49352He asked the question,"If we should be obliged to abandon the town, ought it to stand as winter quarters for the enemy?"
49352I ask, gentlemen, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
49352I''m amazed-- have we routed the foe?
49352Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
49352Is there not public spirit enough in Virginia to complete this memorial of her most honored daughter?
49352Is this the cold, neglected, moldering clod?
49352May it not be a part of the circumvallation of a city of the mound builders?
49352No one seemed willing to break that silence, until a grave- looking member, in a plain, is it?"
49352No one seemed willing to propose it; and when, to Gates''s remark,"Gentlemen, you know our situation, what are your opinions?"
49352Or that the grave at which I ought to weep?
49352Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
49352Shall we try argument?
49352The great men who composed our first council-- are they dead, have they deserted the cause, or what has become of them?
49352This effected, Washington rode back to Lee, and, pointing to the rallied troops, said,"Will you, sir, command in that place?"
49352To show the spot where matchless valor lies?
49352What consequences have we rationally to expect?"
49352What is it that gentlemen wish?
49352What is the cause?
49352What orator or sage ever expressed more in so few words?
49352What would they have?
49352Where is the man that will dare to advise such a measure?
49352Where is the man?
49352Where were the landgraves, and caciquies, and lords of manors to be found among them?
49352Where will they be all this while?
49352Wherefore?
49352Who had the courage?
49352Who is there to mourn for Logan?
49352Who wandered there alone?
49352Why rises not some massy pillar high, To grace a name that fought for Freedom''s prize?
49352Will it be next week, or next year?
49352Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
49352Wraxall asked Lord George Germain how North"took the communication?"
49352[ Illustration: 9358] As Chatham sat down, his brother- in- law, Lord Temple, said to him,"You forgot to mention what we talked of; shall I get up?"
49352[ Illustration: 9790] Instead of being its destroyer, who, in like circumstances, would not have been its defender?
49352``` Shall we yield?
49352``` Though too true to herself, e''er to crouch to oppression,``` Who can yield to just rule more loyal submission?
49352``` Would you worry the man that has found you in shoes?
49352```` Who shall thy gay buffoonery describe?
49352and how is it to be remedied?
49352and where were mansions for the nobility and aristocracy?
49352be asleep all this time?
49352general, why would you be overpersuaded by men of inferior judgment to your own?
49352shall we lie down like dogs beneath``` The keeper''s lash?
49352what measure should be first proposed?
49352what notes of discord are these which disturb the general joy, and silence the acclamations of victory?
49352where is Holland?
49352where is Spain?
49352who shall know the might"But wouldst thou know his name, Of the words he utter''d there?
49352{ 267}the various delegates were then presented, and now came a pause; who should take the lead?
49352{ 348}why is not the latter commenced without hesitation?
55314And ought there, or ought there not, to be a Separation of the Church from the State?
55314Are there now a greater proportion of women whose minds are really cultivated than there were formerly?
55314But are not their superiors ungrateful?
55314But is it so?
55314Dr. KITCHENER observes,"God sends us victuals, but_ who_ sends us cooks?"
55314How often is the manner of attempting at all calculated for attaining the object so earnestly sought?
55314Is there not rather a greater pretence of learning with less of it in reality?
55314Is"the ingratitude of the world,"of which philosophers of the earliest ages have said so much, confined to the lowly and unrefined?
55314Or, What is the Right which the Lords, Baronets, and Squires, have to the Lands of England?
55314True, they are paid for what they do; but how paid?
51743And who would now be so simple as to think of spirits when the medium was not searched?
51743Are there not certain conditions for the appearance of all scientific phenomena, they ask us?
51743Are we to see no spots on the egregious"Dr."Monck, who pretended that he was taken from his bed in Bristol and put to bed in Swindon by spirit hands?
51743Are we to take it that Summerland is really a material universe, not an ether world?
51743Blavatsky?
51743Blavatsky?
51743But does Sir Arthur never read the_ Proceedings of the Society for Psychical Research_?
51743But how could it be done if the plate was never in the hands of the photographer?
51743But what would you?
51743But why puzzle over details where all is a challenge to common human reason?
51743Did not a Serbian diplomatist talk to the spirit in Serb, which Mrs. Wriedt did not know, and answer for the genuineness of the phenomena?
51743Do they not know the features of their dead son or daughter or wife?
51743Does Sir A. C. Doyle want us to go back to the pure early days of the movement?
51743Does any man think it is a matter of indifference whether this ministry of consolation is based on fraud and inspired by greed?
51743Does he not warn us in a footnote that he has"not yet traced the source of all this supposed information"?
51743Does it matter?
51743Has Sir A. C. Doyle never heard of Browning''s"Sludge"?
51743Has your child been torn from you?
51743How had he smuggled them into the room?
51743How is it possible, he will ask, that so many distinguished men have given their names to the movement if it is all fraudulent?
51743IS SPIRITUALISM BASED ON FRAUD?
51743Is not darkness a condition of certain scientific processes?
51743Is there any need to settle whether we shall live after death?
51743Must we forfeit this new hope that we may see them again?
51743Now, which of these were ever"white"?
51743Was Charles Williams white?
51743Was Colchester, who was detected and exposed, white?
51743Was Florence Cook, the pupil of Herne( the transporter of Mrs. Guppy at sixty miles an hour) and bewitcher of Sir W. Crookes, white?
51743Was Foster white?
51743Was her friend and contemporary ghost- producer, Miss Showers, never exposed?
51743Was she ruined?
51743Well, who are they?
51743Were Bastian and Taylor white?
51743What can be said for Sir W. Crookes?
51743What chance has the ordinary inquirer, much less the eager Spiritualist, against guile of this description?
51743What chance have you in a poor light?
51743What chance have you, then, against a man or woman who has been conjuring for twenty years?
51743What earthly chance have you in the dark?
51743What is the evidence which Sir W. Barrett, knowing that the general public has no leisure to investigate these things, endorses as satisfactory?
51743What is the value of such conversions?
51743Where, then, are the snow- whites?
51743Who are the"distinguished"Spiritualists_ to- day_?
51743Who could doubt either the word or the competence of the Chief Judge of the Supreme Consular Court of China and Japan?
51743Who in England knew anything about Piet Botha and his death?
51743Who is this mysterious lady?
51743Why not simply_ imagine_ that the dead still live, and save the guinea?
51743Will he ask why?
27889If it is not,he replied,"when will it be?"
27889Pray, what is that?
27889Shall I beat the bush and another take the bird?
27889We are by nature all as one, all alike, if you see us naked; let us wear theirs and they our clothes, and what is the difference?
27889What muscles are those?
27889Why, then,said some one to him,"do not you die?"
27889''T is insensible, then?
27889--an echo answers,"Where?
278891, 20._ What find you better or more honourable than age?
278891._ Can one desire too much of a good thing?
278891._ Condemn the fault, and not the actor of it?
278891._ Has this fellow no feeling of his business?
278891._ Is it so nominated in the bond?
278891._ Is she not more than painting can express, Or youthful poets fancy when they love?
278891._ Is she not passing fair?
278891._ Is this a dagger which I see before me, The handle toward my hand?
278891._ Is this that haughty gallant, gay Lothario?
278891._ Shall I never see a bachelor of threescore again?
278891._ She was a wight, if ever such wight were,--_ Des._ To do what?
278891._ Think you I am no stronger than my sex, Being so father''d and so husbanded?
278891._ What seest thou else In the dark backward and abysm of time?
278891._ What, will the line stretch out to the crack of doom?
278891._ Why may not that be the skull of a lawyer?
278891._ Why should a man, whose blood is warm within, Sit like his grandsire cut in alabaster?
278891._ Yet who would have thought the old man to have had so much blood in him?
278891.__ Cornelia._ What flowers are these?
2788910._ Seest thou a man diligent in his business?
2788911._ Can a man take fire in his bosom, and his clothes not be burned?
2788911._ Canst thou bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?
2788912._ Is it not lawful for me to do what I will with mine own?
2788913._ Is there no balm in Gilead?
2788914._ For a man can lose neither the past nor the future; for how can one take from him that which is not his?
2788916._ How long halt ye between two opinions?
2788917._ Do you seek Alcides''equal?
278891773._ Was ever poet so trusted before?
2788918._ The Lord opened the mouth of the ass, and she said unto Balaam, What have I done unto thee, that thou hast smitten me these three times?
278892, 8._(_ 675._) What now if the sky were to fall?
278892._ A simple child That lightly draws its breath, And feels its life in every limb, What should it know of death?
278892._ Are you good men and true?
278892._ Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots?
278892._ Condemn you me for that the duke did love me?
278892._ Didst thou never hear That things ill got had ever bad success?
278892._ Do you think I am easier to be played on than a pipe?
278892._ For where is any author in the world Teaches such beauty as a woman''s eye?
278892._ In law, what plea so tainted and corrupt But being season''d with a gracious voice Obscures the show of evil?
278892._ Is not old wine wholesomest, old pippins toothsomest, old wood burns brightest, old linen wash whitest?
278892._ Is not this a lamentable thing, that of the skin of an innocent lamb should be made parchment?
278892._ No scandal about Queen Elizabeth, I hope?
278892._ Tell me where is fancy bred, Or in the heart or in the head?
278892._ Think''st thou existence doth depend on time?
278892._ Use every man after his desert, and who should''scape whipping?
278892._ Was ever book containing such vile matter So fairly bound?
278892._ Was ever woman in this humour wooed?
278892._ What imports the nomination of this gentleman?
278892._ What precious drops are those Which silently each other''s track pursue, Bright as young diamonds in their infant dew?
278892._ What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba, That he should weep for her?
278892._ Who is here so base that would be a bondman?
278892._ You are not like Cerberus, three gentlemen at once, are you?
278892._ Your fathers, where are they?
278892._"Darest thou, Cassius, now Leap in with me into this angry flood, And swim to yonder point?"
278892._[105- 4] What''s in a name?
278892._[120- 1] Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand?
278892.__ Cel._ Not a word?
278892.__ Clo._ What is the opinion of Pythagoras concerning wild fowl?
278892.__ Falstaff._ What wind blew you hither, Pistol?
278892.__ Ham._ Do you see yonder cloud that''s almost in shape of a camel?
278892.__ Ham._ His beard was grizzled,--no?
278892.__ Ham._ Is this a prologue, or the posy of a ring?
278892.__ Pol._ What do you read, my lord?
278892.__ Serv._ Where dwellest thou?
2788920._ Am I my brother''s keeper?
2788920._ Doth perfect beauty stand in need of praise at all?
2788922._ If they do these things in a green tree, what shall be done in the dry?
2788922._ Who is this that darkeneth counsel by words without knowledge?
2788923._ What is a man profited, if he shall gain the whole world, and lose his own soul?
2788925._ Canst thou draw out leviathan with an hook?
27889254(?
2788928._ A wounded spirit who can bear?
2788928._ Hath not the potter power over the clay, of the same lump to make one vessel unto honour, and another unto dishonour?
278893._ For when did friendship take A breed for barren metal of his friend?
278893._ Have you summoned your wits from wool- gathering?
278893._ Hear you this Triton of the minnows?
278893._ I said, an elder soldier, not a better: Did I say"better"?
278893._ Is it a world to hide virtues in?
278893._ Is there no respect of place, parsons, nor time in you?
278893._ O, who can hold a fire in his hand By thinking on the frosty Caucasus?
278893._ Shall I not take mine ease in mine inn?
278893._ Shall quips and sentences and these paper bullets of the brain awe a man from the career of his humour?
278893._ Should I have answer''d Caius Cassius so?
278893._ Sits the wind in that corner?
278893._ Stands Scotland where it did?
278893._ Under which king, Bezonian?
278893._ What are these So wither''d and so wild in their attire, That look not like the inhabitants o''the earth, And yet are on''t?
278893._ What, all my pretty chickens and their dam At one fell swoop?
278893._ Wherefore are these things hid?
278893._ Who can not give good counsel?
278893._[120- 2] Who can be wise, amazed, temperate and furious, Loyal and neutral, in a moment?
278893.__ 2 Watch._ How if a''will not stand?
278893.__ Brutus._ Then I shall see thee again?
278893.__ Iago._ What, are you hurt, lieutenant?
278893.__ Sir To._ Dost thou think, because thou art virtuous, there shall be no more cakes and ale?
2788931._ Canst thou guide Arcturus with his sons?
2788932._ Hath not thy heart within thee burned At evening''s calm and holy hour?
278894._ Call you that backing of your friends?
278894._ Can such things be, And overcome us like a summer''s cloud, Without our special wonder?
278894._ How is''t with you, That you do bend your eye on vacancy?
278894._ What act That roars so loud, and thunders in the index?
278894._ What doth gravity out of his bed at midnight?
278894._ Who ever loved that loved not at first sight?
278894.__ Duke._ And what''s her history?
278894.__ Macb._ What is the night?
2788940._ Is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing?
2788946(?)-120(?)
278895._ Art thou there, truepenny?
278895._ For who hath despised the day of small things?
278895._ Indeed, what is there that does not appear marvellous when it comes to our knowledge for the first time?
278895._ Seest thou a man wise in his own conceit?
278895._ What the devil did he want in that galley?
278895._ What will not woman, gentle woman dare, When strong affection stirs her spirit up?
278895._ Where''s my serpent of old Nile?
278895.__ 1 W._ When shall we three meet again In thunder, lightning, or in rain?
2788950._ Did not our heart burn within us while he talked with us?
2788952._ O death, where is thy sting?
27889570(?)-490(?)
2788959._ Why is it that we entertain the belief that for every purpose odd numbers are the most effectual?
278896._ Must I hold a candle to my shames?
278896._ Why doth one man''s yawning make another yawn?
278897._ You have the Pyrrhic dance as yet, Where is the Pyrrhic phalanx gone?
278897.__ Macb._ If we should fail?
278898._ Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone?
27889809._ Who knows but life be that which men call death,[699- 3] And death what men call life?
278899._ Can there any good thing come out of Nazareth?
278899._ Is Saul also among the prophets?
278899._ Is there anything whereof it may be said, See, this is new?
278899._ Watchman, what of the night?
278899._ Why should the Devil have all the good tunes?
27889A Tragedy._ But whither am I strayed?
27889A better buckler I can soon regain; But who can get another life again?
27889A woman asked the coachman,"Are you full inside?"
27889ANNE CRAWFORD( 1734- 1801):_ Kathleen Mavourneen._ Who can refute a sneer?
27889Ah, who can tell how hard it is to climb The steep where Fame''s proud temple shines afar?
27889Ah, who shall lead us thither?
27889Am I not a man and a brother?
27889And echo answered,"Where are they?"
27889And happy always was it for that son Whose father for his hoarding went to hell?
27889And is there love In heavenly spirits to these Creatures bace?
27889And that which was prov''d true before Prove false again?
27889And the prophets, do they live forever?
27889And who gave thee that jolly red nose?
27889And why does thy nose look so blue?
27889Antagoras replied,"Do you think, O king, that Agamemnon, when he did such exploits, was a peeping in his army to see who boiled congers?"
27889Apology for Raimond Sebond._ When I play with my cat, who knows whether I do not make her more sport than she makes me?
27889Art thou not, fatal vision, sensible To feeling as to sight?
27889As a bankrupt thief turns thief- taker in despair, so an unsuccessful author turns critic.--SHELLEY:_ Fragments of Adonais._ You know who critics are?
27889Be she fairer than the day, Or the flowery meads in May, If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?
27889Book i. Stanza 1._"But what good came of it at last?"
27889Bright jewels of the mine, The wealth of seas, the spoils of war?
27889Burned at Smithfield, Feb. 14, 1554._[687- 2]***** And shall Trelawny die?
27889But if you chance to be placed in some superior station, will you presently set yourself up for a tyrant?
27889But will it not live with the living?
27889Ca n''t I another''s face commend, And to her virtues be a friend, But instantly your forehead lowers, As if_ her_ merit lessen''d_ yours_?
27889Can honour set to a leg?
27889Can honour''s voice provoke the silent dust, Or flatt''ry soothe the dull cold ear of death?
27889Can imagination boast, Amid its gay creation, hues like hers?
27889Canto i. Stanza 1._ Where the virgins are soft as the roses they twine, And all save the spirit of man is divine?
27889Canto i. Stanza 1._ Who hath not proved how feebly words essay To fix one spark of beauty''s heavenly ray?
27889Canto i. Stanza 17._ But, oh ye lords of ladies intellectual, Inform us truly,--have they not henpeck''d you all?
27889Canto i. Stanza 216._ What is the end of fame?
27889Canto iii._"What is good for a bootless bene?"
27889Canto v. Stanza 16._ And dar''st thou then To beard the lion in his den, The Douglas in his hall?
27889Canto v. Stanza 30._ Where, where was Roderick then?
27889Costs it more pain that this ye call A"great event"should come to pass From that?
27889Could not the grave forget thee, and lay low Some less majestic, less beloved head?
27889Cui Bono?_ In the name of the Prophet-- figs.
27889Dear son of memory, great heir of fame, What need''st thou such weak witness of thy name?
27889Dialogue i.__ Lord M._ What religion is he of?
27889Did Shakespeare?
27889Do your joys with age diminish?
27889Doth he feel it?
27889Doth he hear it?
27889Drinking._ Fill all the glasses there, for why Should every creature drink but I?
27889Edinburgh Review, 1828._ How does the poet speak to men with power, but by being still more a man than they?
27889Else whence this pleasing hope, this fond desire, This longing after immortality?
27889Fast asleep?
27889Fond hope of many nations, art thou dead?
27889HARRIET W. SEWALL( 1819- 1889):_ Why thus longing?_ Do n''t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?
27889HARRIET W. SEWALL( 1819- 1889):_ Why thus longing?_ Do n''t you remember sweet Alice, Ben Bolt?
27889Hark, in thine ear: change places; and, handy- dandy, which is the justice, which is the thief?
27889Hast any philosophy in thee, shepherd?
27889Hath he not always treasures, always friends, The good great man?
27889Hath not a Jew eyes?
27889Hath not a Jew hands, organs, dimensions, senses, affections, passions?
27889Hath thy toil O''er books consum''d the midnight oil?
27889Heaven sends us good meat, but the Devil sends cooks?
27889Honour hath no skill in surgery, then?
27889How a good yoke of bullocks at Stamford fair?
27889How begot, how nourished?
27889How can ye chant, ye little birds, And I sae weary fu''o''care?
27889How would you be, If He, which is the top of judgment, should But judge you as you are?
27889I can not play alone: The summer comes with flower and bee,-- Where is my brother gone?
27889I love it, I love it, and who shall dare To chide me for loving that old arm- chair?
27889III._ What gentle ghost, besprent with April dew, Hails me so solemnly to yonder yew?
27889In parts superior what advantage lies?
27889Is it for that the winds, slipping the smooth oil, have no force, nor cause any waves?
27889Is it not man that keeps and serves me?
27889Is there no physician there?
27889Is this the great poet whose works so content us?
27889JAMES G. PERCIVAL( 1795- 1856):_ To Seneca Lake._ What fairy- like music steals over the sea, Entrancing our senses with charmed melody?
27889JOSEPH E. CARPENTER( 1813-----):_ What are the wild Waves saying?_ Well, General, we have not had many dead cavalrymen lying about lately.
27889Last line._ I am his Highness''dog at Kew; Pray tell me, sir, whose dog are you?
27889Let her and Falsehood grapple: who ever knew Truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter?
27889Life let us cherish, while yet the taper glows, And the fresh flow''ret pluck ere it close; Why are we fond of toil and care?
27889Line 1._ Is there no bright reversion in the sky For those who greatly think, or bravely die?
27889Line 1003._ He''s gone, and who knows how he may report Thy words by adding fuel to the flame?
27889Line 1073._ Why comes temptation, but for man to meet And master and make crouch beneath his foot, And so be pedestaled in triumph?
27889Line 13._ Say first, of God above or man below, What can we reason but from what we know?
27889Line 139._ Why has not man a microscopic eye?
27889Line 197._ What needs my Shakespeare for his honour''d bones,-- The labour of an age in piled stones?
27889Line 203._ What can ennoble sots or slaves or cowards?
27889Line 207._ Who but must laugh, if such a man there be?
27889Line 213._ Was I deceiv''d, or did a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night?
27889Line 217._ Ask where''s the North?
27889Line 221._ Can any mortal mixture of earth''s mould Breathe such divine enchanting ravishment?
27889Line 254._ Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land?
27889Line 257._ Why should not conscience have vacation As well as other courts o''th''nation?
27889Line 270._ Who shall decide when doctors disagree, And soundest casuists doubt, like you and me?
27889Line 282._ Among unequals what society Can sort, what harmony, or true delight?
27889Line 283._ But who can paint Like Nature?
27889Line 293._ What boots it at one gate to make defence, And at another to let in the foe?
27889Line 309._ For what is worth in anything But so much money as''t will bring?
27889Line 316._ Must helpless man, in ignorance sedate, Roll darkling down the torrent of his fate?
27889Line 317._ He that imposes an oath makes it, Not he that for convenience takes it; Then how can any man be said To break an oath he never made?
27889Line 379._ O little booke, thou art so unconning, How darst thou put thy- self in prees for drede?
27889Line 379._ Say, shall my little bark attendant sail, Pursue the triumph and partake the gale?
27889Line 463._ And would''st thou evil for his good repay?
27889Line 47._ Falsely luxurious, will not man awake?
27889Line 472._ Who hath not own''d, with rapture- smitten frame, The power of grace, the magic of a name?
27889Line 51._ What is it but a map of busy life, Its fluctuations, and its vast concerns?
27889Line 55._ Which way shall I fly Infinite wrath and infinite despair?
27889Line 65._ What though the field be lost?
27889Line 666._ Whence and what art thou, execrable shape?
27889Line 687._ What makes all doctrines plain and clear?
27889Line 775._ Must I thus leave thee, Paradise?--thus leave Thee, native soil, these happy walks and shades?
27889Line 873._ But how carve way i''the life that lies before, If bent on groaning ever for the past?
27889Line 88._ Ever charming, ever new, When will the landscape tire the view?
27889March, 1775._ Is life so dear or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
27889Mark you His absolute"shall"?
27889Methought I saw the footsteps of a throne.--WORDSWORTH:_ Sonnet._[ 26- 2] If she be not so to me, What care I how fair she be?
27889Must in death your daylight finish?
27889Need I say She was enchanted by the wicked spells Of Gebir, whom with lust of power inflamed The western winds have landed on our coast?
27889Nemo est nisi ipse( Do you seek Alcides''equal?
27889No feat which, done, would make time break, And let us pent- up creatures through Into eternity, our due?
27889No forcing earth teach heaven''s employ?
27889Not one now, to mock your own grinning?
27889Now, in the names of all the gods at once, Upon what meat doth this our Cæsar feed, That he is grown so great?
27889O grave, where is thy victory?
27889Of the Art of Conversation._ What if he has borrowed the matter and spoiled the form, as it oft falls out?
27889Of two such lessons, why forget The nobler and the manlier one?
27889Oh when shall it dawn on the night of the grave?
27889Oh why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
27889Or cloy the hungry edge of appetite By bare imagination of a feast?
27889Or if I would delight my private hours With music or with poem, where so soon As in our native language can I find That solace?
27889Or make pale my cheeks with care,''Cause another''s rosy are?
27889Or that his hallow''d relics should be hid Under a star- y- pointing pyramid?
27889Or wallow naked in December snow By thinking on fantastic summer''s heat?
27889Or whence this secret dread and inward horror Of falling into naught?
27889PRIOR:_ Upon a passage in the Scaligerana._[ 180- 2] What beckoning ghost along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade?
27889Pay every debt, as if God wrote the bill?
27889Perhaps it was right to dissemble your love, But-- why did you kick me down stairs?
27889Prelude to Part First._ And what is so rare as a day in June?
27889Prithee, why so pale?
27889Prithee, why so pale?
27889Question ix._ Why does pouring oil on the sea make it clear and calm?
27889Quite chap- fallen?
27889ROBERT HAWKER( 1753- 1827):_ Benediction._ Roy''s wife of Aldivalloch, Wat ye how she cheated me, As I came o''er the braes of Balloch?
27889Said he,"How are we fallen among them more than they among us?"
27889Said one to Iphicrates,"What are ye afraid of?"
27889Shall I bid her goe and spare not?
27889Shall I, wasting in despair, Die because a woman''s fair?
27889She coldly said, her long- lasht eyes abased,_ Is this the mighty ocean?
27889Shikspur?
27889Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days o''lang syne?
27889Since no man has aught of what he leaves, what is''t to leave betimes?
27889Sister Anne, do you see any one coming?
27889St. 12._ And is there care in Heaven?
27889St. 43._ Who will not mercie unto others show, How can he mercy ever hope to have?
27889Stanza 1._ And after all, what is a lie?
27889Stanza 1._ Art thou a friend to Roderick?
27889Stanza 1._ But what am I?
27889Stanza 10._ Can storied urn, or animated bust, Back to its mansion call the fleeting breath?
27889Stanza 100._ And who( in time) knows whither we may vent The treasure of our tongue?
27889Stanza 11._ Where''s the coward that would not dare To fight for such a land?
27889Stanza 145._ Scion of chiefs and monarchs, where art thou?
27889Stanza 2._ Where is it now, the glory and the dream?
27889Stanza 4._ But how can he expect that others should Build for him, sow for him, and at his call Love him, who for himself will take no heed at all?
27889Stanza 55._ Forever, Fortune, wilt thou prove An unrelenting foe to love; And when we meet a mutual heart, Come in between and bid us part?
27889Stanza 8._ And what is friendship but a name, A charm that lulls to sleep, A shade that follows wealth or fame, And leaves the wretch to weep?
27889Streaming eyes and breaking hearts; Or all the same as if he had not been?
27889Tell( for you can) what is it to be wise?
27889The Rat- catcher and Cats._ Is there no hope?
27889The Shepherd and the Philosopher._ Whence is thy learning?
27889The Shepherd and the Philosopher._ Where yet was ever found a mother Who''d give her booby for another?
27889The references are to the text of Umpfenbach._[702- 1]) Do not they bring it to pass by knowing that they know nothing at all?
27889This Goldsmith''s fine feast, who has written fine books?
27889To that dry drudgery at the desk''s dead wood?
27889To the inquiry of"What religion?"
27889To what strange shores This gain of our best glory shall be sent T''enrich unknowing nations with our stores?
27889Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason?
27889Was ever woman in this humour won?
27889Was man made a wheel- work to wind up, And be discharged, and straight wound up anew?
27889Was she not fair?
27889Was she not fruitful?"
27889Was thy dream then a shadowy lie?
27889Was your youth of pleasure wasteful?
27889Washing._ FOOTNOTES:[ 20- 1]_ Falstaff._ What wind blew you hither, Pistol?
27889What art can wash her guilt away?
27889What cat''s averse to fish?
27889What female heart can gold despise?
27889What if I doe?
27889What is honour?
27889What is in that word honour; what is that honour?
27889What is it?
27889What is matter?
27889What need a vermeil- tinctur''d lip for that, Love- darting eyes, or tresses like the morn?
27889What news on the Rialto?
27889What shall I do to be forever known, And make the age to come my own?
27889What shall I render to my God For all his gifts to me?
27889What will Mrs. Grundy say?
27889What worlds in the yet unformed Occident May come refin''d with th''accents that are ours?
27889What would the world do without tea?--how did it exist?
27889What would you have, O man?
27889What''s not devoured by Time''s devouring hand?
27889When Adam dolve, and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman?
27889When cowards mock the patriot''s fate, Who hangs his head for shame?
27889Where are the snows of last year?
27889Where be his quiddities now, his quillets, his cases, his tenures, and his tricks?
27889Where be your gibes now; your gambols, your songs?
27889Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us?
27889Where left you Chrononhotonthologos?
27889Where''s Troy, and where''s the Maypole in the Strand?
27889While Cato gives his little senate laws, What bosom beats not in his country''s cause?
27889Who blushes at the name?
27889Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?
27889Who fears to speak of Ninety- eight?
27889Who hath it?
27889Who in widow weeds appears, Laden with unhonoured years, Noosing with care a bursting purse, Baited with many a deadly curse?
27889Who would not weep, if Atticus were he?
27889Who wrote it?
27889Whose heart hath ne''er within him burn''d[488- 1] As home his footsteps he hath turn''d From wandering on a foreign strand?
27889Why all this toil and trouble?
27889Why ar''n''t they all contented like me?
27889Why choose the rankling thorn to wear?
27889Why do n''t the men propose?
27889Why flash those sparks of fury from your eyes?
27889Why is thy countenance sad, and why are thine eyes red with weeping?
27889Why may not imagination trace the noble dust of Alexander, till we find it stopping a bung- hole?
27889Why should I hurt thee?
27889Why shrinks the soul Back on herself, and startles at destruction?
27889Why wish we warfare?
27889Why"small"?
27889Why, man of morals, tell me why?
27889Why?
27889Will, when looking well ca n''t move her, Looking ill prevail?
27889With these dark words begins my tale; And their meaning is, Whence can comfort spring When prayer is of no avail?
27889Ye are the salt of the earth: but if the salt have lost his savour, wherewith shall it be salted?
27889Yea, but how if honour prick me off when I come on,--how then?
27889Yet who would tread again the scene He trod through life before?
27889You have the letters Cadmus gave,-- Think ye he meant them for a slave?
27889[ 171- 2] Is not old wine wholesomest, old pippins toothsomest, old wood burns brightest, old linen wash whitest?
27889[ 26- 2]_ Poem._ If she seem not chaste to me, What care I how chaste she be?
27889[ 292- 1]_ Introduction to Polite Conversation._ Do you think I was born in a wood to be afraid of an owl?
27889[ 318- 1] Why may not a goose say thus?
27889[ 352- 1]_ The Double Falsehood._ FOOTNOTES:[ 352- 1] Quæris Alcidæ parem?
27889[ 360- 1]_ Maxims prefixed to Poor Richard''s Almanac, 1757._ Dost thou love life?
27889[ 405- 1]_ King Cophetua and the Beggar- maid._"What is thy name, faire maid?"
27889[ 405- 2]_ King Cophetua and the Beggar- maid._ And how should I know your true love From many another one?
27889[ 406- 4]_ Sir Launcelot du Lake._ Shall I bid her goe?
27889[ 449- 2]_ I hae a Wife o''my Ain._ Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind?
27889[ 560- 1] What is mind?
27889[ 598- 1]_ Good Bye._ For what are they all in their high conceit, When man in the bush with God may meet?
27889[ 709- 2]_ Maxim 262._ What is left when honour is lost?
27889[ 717- 1] Why does pouring oil on the sea make it clear and calm?
27889[ 718- 4] How many things, too, are looked upon as quite impossible until they have been actually effected?
27889[ 725- 1] The pilot telling Antigonus the enemy outnumbered him in ships, he said,"But how many ships do you reckon my presence to be worth?"
27889[ 725- 5]_ Life of Lysander._ Did you not know, then, that to- day Lucullus sups with Lucullus?
27889[ 741- 1]_ Which are the most crafty, Water or Land Animals?
27889[ 758- 7]"How thick do you judge the planks of our ship to be?"
27889[ 782- 1]_ First Week, Third Day._ For where''s the state beneath the firmament That doth excel the bees for government?
27889_ 2 Clo._ But is this law?
27889_ A Death in the Desert._ What?
27889_ A True Hymn._ Wouldst thou both eat thy cake and have it?
27889_ Advice to a Lady._ What is your sex''s earliest, latest care, Your heart''s supreme ambition?
27889_ After._ Ah, did you once see Shelley plain, And did he stop and speak to you, And did you speak to him again?
27889_ Areopagitica._ Who shall silence all the airs and madrigals that whisper softness in chambers?
27889_ B._ What more?
27889_ Ballad upon a Wedding._ Why so pale and wan, fond lover?
27889_ Beauty._ Wilt thou seal up the avenues of ill?
27889_ Bonny Lesley._ Ye banks and braes o''bonny Doon, How can ye bloom sae fresh and fair?
27889_ Circa_ 720(?)
27889_ Cos._ Pray now, what may be that same bed of honour?
27889_ Eveleen''s Bower._ Shall I ask the brave soldier who fights by my side In the cause of mankind, if our creeds agree?
27889_ Extempore Effusion upon the Death of James Hogg._ Those old credulities, to Nature dear, Shall they no longer bloom upon the stock Of history?
27889_ Faustus._ Was this the face that launch''d a thousand ships, And burnt the topless towers of Ilium?
27889_ Fly not yet._ When did morning ever break, And find such beaming eyes awake?
27889_ For a Very Little Child._[535- 1] Who ran to help me when I fell, And would some pretty story tell, Or kiss the place to make it well?
27889_ From the Persian._ What constitutes a state?
27889_ Guy of Gisborne._ Have you not heard these many years ago Jeptha was judge of Israel?
27889_ Ham._ Or like a whale?
27889_ Hot._ Why, so can I, or so can any man; But will they come when you do call for them?
27889_ How shall I woo?_ A friendship that like love is warm; A love like friendship, steady.
27889_ In a Balcony._ Was there nought better than to enjoy?
27889_ Judges v. 27._ Is not the gleaning of the grapes of Ephraim better than the vintage of Abi- ezer?
27889_ Kitty._ Shikspur?
27889_ Landing of the Pilgrim Fathers._ What sought they thus afar?
27889_ Letter, Jan. 28, 1821._ What say you to such a supper with such a woman?
27889_ Life of Coriolanus._ A Roman divorced from his wife, being highly blamed by his friends, who demanded,"Was she not chaste?
27889_ Lines by a Clerk._ Where go the poet''s lines?
27889_ Morning._ Why should we faint and fear to live alone, Since all alone, so Heaven has willed, we die?
27889_ Of Man''s Progress in Virtue._ What is bigger than an elephant?
27889_ Old England is our Home._"Will you walk into my parlour?"
27889_ On his Blindness._ What neat repast shall feast us, light and choice, Of Attic taste?
27889_ Poem._ If she undervalue me, What care I how fair she be?
27889_ Political Precepts._ Leo Byzantius said,"What would you do, if you saw my wife, who scarce reaches up to my knees?
27889_ Poor Jack._ Did you ever hear of Captain Wattle?
27889_ Ruth._ When he is forsaken, Wither''d and shaken, What can an old man do but die?
27889_ Sacrifice._ For what avail the plough or sail, Or land or life, if freedom fail?
27889_ Stanzas._ Hear ye not the hum Of mighty workings?
27889_ The Death of the Virtuous._ Child of mortality, whence comest thou?
27889_ The Dying Christian to his Soul._ Tell me, my soul, can this be death?
27889_ The Dying Christian to his Soul._ What beckoning ghost along the moonlight shade Invites my steps, and points to yonder glade?
27889_ The Gardener''s Daughter._ Of love that never found his earthly close, What sequel?
27889_ The Hermit._ But when shall spring visit the mouldering urn?
27889_ The Issues of Life and Death._ Who that hath ever been Could bear to be no more?
27889_ The Last Rose of Summer._ When true hearts lie wither''d And fond ones are flown, Oh, who would inhabit This bleak world alone?
27889_ The Little Cloud._ Friend after friend departs; Who hath not lost a friend?
27889_ The May Queen._ Ah, why Should life all labour be?
27889_ The Rock of Rubies, and the Quarrie of Pearls._ Some asked how pearls did grow, and where?
27889_ The World._ What then remains but that we still should cry For being born, and, being born, to die?
27889_ This Lime- tree Bower my Prison._ Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course?
27889_ Tumble- down Dick._ Can any man have a higher notion of the rule of right and the eternal fitness of things?
27889_ Welcome me Home._ Why do n''t the men propose, Mamma?
27889_ What is Prayer?_ Prayer is the burden of a sigh, The falling of a tear, The upward glancing of an eye When none but God is near.
27889_ Which are the most crafty, Water or Land Animals?
27889_ Why do n''t the Men propose?_ She wore a wreath of roses The night that first we met.
27889_ Written the night before his death.--Found in his Bible in the Gate- house at Westminster._ Shall I, like an hermit, dwell On a rock or in a cell?
27889a soldier, and afeard?
27889alive, and so bold, O earth?
27889are you yet living?
27889become of me?
27889can Sporus feel?
27889can a Roman senate long debate Which of the two to choose, slavery or death?
27889can it be That this is all remains of thee?
27889could not one suffice?
27889do n''t ye hear it roar now?
27889has she done this to thee?
27889hast thou wandered there, To waft us home the message of despair?
27889he turned to his friend and said,"Have I not unawares spoken some mischievous thing or other?"
27889how have I frighted thee, That thou no more wilt weigh my eyelids down And steep my senses in forgetfulness?
27889ii._ FOOTNOTES:[ 769- 2] But where is last year''s snow?
27889iii._ When is man strong until he feels alone?
27889iv._ Can we ever have too much of a good thing?
27889iv._ Have you found your life distasteful?
27889iv._ How does the meadow- flower its bloom unfold?
27889iv._ What can they see in the longest kingly line in Europe, save that it runs back to a successful soldier?
27889ix._ Very late in life, when he was studying geometry, some one said to Lacydes,"Is it then a time for you to be learning now?"
27889ix._ Would yee both eat your cake and have your cake?
27889know ye not, Who would be free, themselves must strike the blow?
27889l._ Would you damn your precious soul?
27889line 303._[ 261- 1] One of our poets( which is it?)
27889must one swear to the truth of a song?
27889no: or an arm?
27889no: or take away the grief of a wound?
27889note 8._[ 686- 1] The same proverb existed in German:-- So Adam reutte, und Eva span, Wer war da ein eddelman?
27889once more who would not be a boy?
27889or art thou but A dagger of the mind, a false creation, Proceeding from the heat- oppressed brain?
27889p. 38._ Are these the choice dishes the Doctor has sent us?
27889p. 8._ Live or die, sink or swim.--PEELE:_ Edward I._( 1584?).
27889paragraph 53._ What Heraclitus would not laugh, or what Democritus would not weep?
27889shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice?
27889that parchment, being scribbled o''er, should undo a man?
27889the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it; This little speck, the British Isles?
27889to the hurried question of despair:"Where is my child?"
27889v._ Shall I show you the muscular training of a philosopher?
27889vi._ Why do you lead me a wild- goose chase?
27889vii._ When the liquor''s out, why clink the cannikin?
27889viii._ Euripides says,-- Who knows but that this life is really death, And whether death is not what men call life?
27889viii._ Have you not heard it said full oft, A woman''s nay doth stand for naught?
27889viii._ Who is so deafe or so blinde as is hee That wilfully will neither heare nor see?
27889what boots the long laborious Quest?_ Of blessed consolations in distress.
27889what light through yonder window breaks?
27889what power divine Shall henceforth wash the river Rhine?
27889what would you have with my wife?"
27889where are the charms That sages have seen in thy face?
27889where is thy blush?
27889where is thy sting?
27889where is thy victory?
27889wherefore art thou Romeo?
27889wherefore welcome won Xerxes, Xantippus, Xavier, Xenophon?
27889why dost thou shiver and shake, Gaffer Grey?
27889why should sorrow O''er that brow a shadow fling?
27889why should they know their fate, Since sorrow never comes too late, And happiness too swiftly flies?
27889will you not bear with your own brother, who has God for his Father, as being a son from the same stock, and of the same high descent?
27889wilt thou the spigot wield?
27889wouldst thou have a serpent sting thee twice?
27889x._ Are we to mark this day with a white or a black stone?
27889x._ To what happy accident[402- 4] is it that we owe so unexpected a visit?
27889xi._ I would have nobody to control me; I would be absolute: and who but I?
27889xi._ Who is worse shod than the shoemaker''s wife?
27889xix._ When lovely woman stoops to folly, And finds too late that men betray, What charm can soothe her melancholy?
27889xlvi._ How shall I be able to rule over others, that have not full power and command of myself?
27889xvi._ What is the first business of one who studies philosophy?
27889xx._ Why, then, do you walk as if you had swallowed a ramrod?
27889xxi._ Who is there whom bright and agreeable children do not attract to play and creep and prattle with them?
27889xxiii._ How does the water Come down at Lodore?
27889your flashes of merriment, that were wo nt to set the table on a roar?
45654This comes from the particular friends of the Secretary of the Treasury,--can it be true? 45654 What has become of the Cortes of Spain?
45654What reason,said he,"have we to suppose that hostile attempts will be made against our rights?
45654... And have you really set aside a mother''s partiality and then decided that our boy was a lovely child?
45654... Another year has revolved over our heads, and on a retrospect( how shall I ever dare to accuse you with want of fortitude or resignation?)
45654... Are you as tired of modern Congressional debates as I am?
45654... Do you not admire our unanimity and good nature?
45654... Do you want to know the fashionable news of the day?
45654A catastrophe which they, which even we alone could prevent with so much facility and almost without danger?
45654Again, can a foreign state be admitted in the Union without the unanimous consent of all the parties to the compact?
45654All these considerations are, however, for Congress; and at this moment the first question is, what ought the Executive to do?
45654And after all that, the question recurs, When shall I go and visit New York?
45654And if we do not submit, in what manner shall we act ourselves?
45654Another, of the year 1759, is on business:"Comment se porte notre malade, notre chère voisine, notre chère fille?
45654Au nom de Dieu, dis- nous où es- tu, que fais- tu, es- tu mort ou en vie?
45654Avez- vous quelques commissions à faire à Genève et voulez- vous me donner le plaisir de vous y être utile en quelque chose?
45654But ought much more to be done?
45654But what else could be done?
45654But what kind of opposition?
45654But what tone is assumed to us by some gentlemen on this floor?
45654But who is to fill the Vice- President''s chair?
45654But with whom?
45654But, all personal considerations waived, what would be the probable result of my acceptance of the proposed post?
45654But, then, is there no reverse to that medal?
45654Can it be that the father has sacrificed a daughter so lovely to affluence and influential connections?
45654Can the President or Senate, in making a treaty with another power, disregard the stipulations of a treaty with a third party?
45654Can you guess at the reason?
45654Conscious of the purity of my motives and( shall I add when I write to my bosom friend?)
45654Could you then form a wish to destroy the future peace of your child and prevent her being united to the man of her choice?
45654Croyez- vous donc, monsieur, à votre âge, calculer mieux que les personnes qui ont quelque expérience?
45654Des terres incultes à acheter?
45654Did you feel very, very sorry at hearing that your old house was burnt?
45654Do they eventually mean not to support Burr as your successor, when you shall think fit to retire?
45654Do they mean not to support him at next election for Vice- President?
45654Do you not think Pennsylvania entitled to some notice?
45654Do you now live with any of your children, and with which of them?
45654Do you recollect my suggesting to you, soon after the work came out, a suspicion that the Niger was the true Nile?
45654Does that power embrace the right of declaring war?
45654Dumont, dis- tu, te retient; mais qu''est- ce qui retient Dumont?
45654Est- ce parceque à l''exception de quelques cathédrales, l''Angleterre n''avoit aucun édifice public qui pût leur être comparé?
45654Even now what can I say but what must renew and embitter your grief?
45654Except yourself, who has been distinguished by Federal favor?
45654France the agent?
45654Has Mr. G. a favorable opinion of this man of talents, or not?
45654How are the exigencies of the government for the next year to be supplied?
45654How could the Administration stand without him?
45654How is Maria?
45654How much do we pay to the State governments?
45654How much for poor- rates, county taxes,& c.?
45654If they shall act so, shall we submit?
45654In that case what will be the plans of the Federalists, having, as they have, a majority in both Houses?
45654In the first place, does the treaty- making power imply a power to annul existing treaties?
45654Is he so devoted to the customs of the world as to encourage such a match?...
45654Is not Paris the place?
45654Is the Administration impressed with this sentiment and prepared to act on it?
45654Is the deficiency to be derived from taxes?
45654Is there something more of system yet introduced among you?
45654Is this personality?
45654Is this the man, think ye?
45654Is this wisdom or apathy?
45654It is due to your presence,--do I not know that wherever man, struggling for liberty, for existence, is most in danger, there is your heart?"
45654MY DEAR MAMA,--Shall I venture to write you a few lines in apology for my late conduct?
45654McKean is to be our man, and James Ross the other.... Do you want a dish of politics till I see you?
45654Mon cher ami, pourquoi ne m''as- tu point écrit?
45654Mr. Gallatin suggested that there were probably one hundred thousand American citizens settled within that region, and what was to become of them?
45654Near fifty years ago Pennsylvania took him to her bosom, and warmed and cherished and honored him; and how does he manifest his gratitude?
45654Now, what do these assertions amount to?
45654Of the Diets of Denmark?
45654Of the States- General of France?
45654On Christmas- day occurs the following entry at Pittsburg:"Fait Noël avec Odrin(?)
45654Or is it extraordinary that in relation to cases of the first description there should have been a considerable degree of procrastination?
45654Ou serait- ce pour consoler la populace de la cité de Londres de ce que Paris n''a été ni pillé ni brûlé?
45654Ought we then to give further growth to an institution so powerful, so hostile?"
45654Qu''ordonnez- vous, madame, au voisin V.?"
45654Should they apply them to the building up of armies and navies?
45654Should they do away with the taxes?
45654Si toi, lui, Serre et moi étions réunis, ne formerions- nous pas une société très- agréable?
45654Sir, I, as a representative of the people, feel it my duty to resist it with all my energies.... Sir, is there anything of originality in his system?
45654Still, my dear sir, I believe your chance of success is now almost hopeless, and, assuming that as a fact, what is to be done?
45654Supposing the bank to be destroyed, was it worth while to attempt its reconstruction?
45654That being an indubitable position, what interest can the Federalists have in defeating an election?
45654The purchase of the Floridas the means?"
45654Then, if this reasoning be true, why stipulate for the_ uti possidetis_?
45654Was I not postponed to make room for Robert Smith, even when in my prime and with Mr. Jefferson and Mr. Madison to sustain me?
45654We can not yet conjecture whether the belligerent powers will alter their orders and decrees, and if they do not, what is to be done?
45654What are the precise ages and capacities of your children?
45654What are they?
45654What do we pay now?
45654What dozen men in the party could pretend to make good to him the loss of his old companion?
45654What idea, then, could he have of a government which was not administered at all?
45654What must be the consequence?
45654What now is the nature of the question which has been proclaimed lately,--the annexation of Texas?
45654What would be the expenses of bringing your family up the river?
45654What would your little property in Indiana sell for?
45654When will you be here?
45654Where is the man we could support with any reasonable prospect of success?
45654Where is the remedy?
45654Which has the better bargain, think you?
45654Who is to be our Vice- President, Clinton or Burr?
45654Who, then, was the person who introduced these violent resolutions?
45654Whom, then, could he put in the Treasury?
45654Will it be prudent for you to incur the expense and trouble of so long a journey merely in order to see me?
45654Will it please you to hear that I urged every reason against an adjournment that I could think of?
45654Will they only pass a law providing for a new election?
45654Will they usurp at once the Presidential powers?
45654You ask if I have seen Rennell''s new map of North Africa?
45654You ask,"What are your prospects?"
45654You ask,"Who_ is_ Curtius?"
45654[ March 4, 1811.?]
45654[ Sidenote 1793]... Well, my charming patriot, why do you write me about politics?...
45654_ Un ordre positif!_ Avec quels yeux nous avez- vous donc vos?
45654and dare I flatter myself that you will attend to them?
45654and why, therefore, prepare to resist them?
45654as prudish as ever?
45654au contraire, ne vous avons- nous pas déclaré en diverses occasions que nous vous laissions cette liberté?
45654avec quoi?
45654de leçons?
45654or are you still in chaos, without form and void?
45654said a fiery fellow in the committee,''do you blame that?''
45654vous défiez- vous de notre discrétion pour nous refuser la confidence qui nous était due du développement successif de vos sentimens?
45654whether it is the law of the land and binding upon the two nations?
5639Does Senator Harding intend to send an army to Germany to press her to our terms?
5639The bold challenge of the Governor to his opponent was stated by him on the platform in many parts of Ohio"Which law will you repeal?"
5639To a famous correspondent, Mr. Herbert Corey, who put the question,"Why do you wish to be President?"
5639What has happened in the united States Senate to prevent its acceptance by the upper branch of the American Congress?
5639What was the first?
50699And that is all you do to preserve your teeth, is it?
50699But how did you come to git to be an youmorist?
50699Do you know what a sump is?
50699Do you know where he is? 50699 Do you mean to say that you do not feel facetious all the time, and that you get weary of being an youmorist?"
50699How did Eau Claire county go?
50699Mean? 50699 What do you mean by that?"
50699Where is your boy to- night?
50699--_Omaha Herald._ Will the press of the country please provide us with a few more parents?
50699ARE YOU A MORMON?
50699Am I right?"
50699And what becomes of all this wealth of information-- this mammoth aggregation of costly knowledge?
50699Author of"Bill Nye and Boomerang,""Forty Liars and Other Lies,""Goose- Neck Smith,""How Came Your Eye Out, and Your Nose Not Skun?"
50699Can it be that his hard heart is at last touched with remorse?
50699Can we wonder, as we contemplate her history, that to her the soldier pantaloons of last year, and the bullwhacker''s straw hat of''79, are obnoxious?
50699DECLINE OF AMERICAN HUMOR|DEAR, mellow- voiced, starry- eyed reader, did you ever see something about"the decline of American humor?"
50699Dear reader, did you ever meet this man-- or his wife?
50699Did you ever have a large, angry, and abnormally protuberent boil somewhere on your person where it seemed to be in the way?
50699Did you ever have such a boil as a traveling companion, and then get introduced to people as an youmorist?
50699Does it make a permanent improvement on the minds and thoughts of the listener?
50699How could I walk over a corpse until life was extinct?
50699How long before the safe arrival of the ark, and the losses occasioned by the deluge, will be given to us in dollars and cents?
50699How long will it be before the whole bloody history of the war of the rebellion will be sent to every hamlet in the land?
50699How, did I do wrong in asking her those privileges at the party, I having no introduction to her?
50699I do n''t believe God had it in for''em bekuz they was like other boys, do you?
50699IS DUELING MURDER?
50699Is he at home under your watchful eye, or is he away somewhere nailing the handles on his first little joke?
50699Is it surprising, then, that to this decaying belle of an old family the sparkle of hope is unknown?
50699Science may be all right in its place, but does it make the world better?
50699Shall we portray her as she appears on her return from the great slaughter- house benefit and moral aggregation of digestive mementoes?
50699Shall we then rush in and with ruthless hand shatter this beautiful picture?
50699The health journals may mean well enough; but what are you going to do if you are editing a Democratic paper?
50699The hectic of the dying year saddens and depresses him, for is it not an emblem to him of the death of his race?
50699Then the poet comes to the close of the cowboy''s career in this style:```"Do I repent?"
50699There in the solemn night, robed in?
50699WHAT IS LITERATURE?
50699WHY DO THEY DO IT?
50699What object could he have in coming to me, not knowing who I am, and telling me of their great worth?
50699What''s the reason you do n''t want him in here?"
50699When a man is paid three dollars a week to play a Roman soldier, would you have him play the Greek slave?
50699When she reached the altar, to the question,"Wilt thou take this man?"
50699When wealthy people die why do n''t they endow a cast- iron castle with a draw- bridge to it and call it the youmorists''retreat?
50699Who will be left to mourn at Chipeta''s grave?
50699Why did they allow my chubby little feet to waddle down to the dangerous ground on which the sad- eyed youmorist must forever stand?
50699Why do n''t they do some good with their money instead of fooling it away on those who are comparatively happy?"
50699Why do they do it?
50699Why would he talk that way to me if he did not really feel it?
50699Will the editor of the_ Lancet_ please put our name on his list of subscribers and send the bill to us?
50699Will the editor of the_ Lancet_ please step over to the saloon, opposite the royal palace, and take something at our expense?
50699Will you rise to the proud pinnacle of fame as a pugilist, boys, or will you plug along as a sorrowing, overworked statesman?
50699Would you consider that a large pair of shoes or a large wife should be sought for just because you can get more material for the same price?
50699Would you have me march around three times when my military pants were coming off, and I knew it?
50699You have not?
50699if a man ca n''t endure that and smile, how will he behave when the clothesline falls down and the baby gets a kernel of corn up its nose?
50699|WHAT becomes of our bodies?"
50699|You are an youmorist, are you not?"
4938And did our character bring credit to that cause?
4938And if not now, when?
4938And should anyone in any case be content that his oath shall go unkept on a merely unsubstantial controversy as to how it shall be kept?
4938And what has been the effect?
4938And what object or consideration more pleasing than this can be presented to the human mind?
4938And, after all, why should n''t we believe that?
4938Are their rights alone not to be guaranteed by the application of those great principles upon which all our constitutions are founded?
4938Are there, indeed, citizens of any of our States who have dreamed of their subjects in the District of Columbia?
4938Are we enthralled with material things, less appreciative of the nobility of work and sacrifice?
4938Are we nearing the light-- a day of freedom and of peace for all mankind?
4938But are we not made better for the effort and sacrifice, and are not those we serve lifted up and blessed?
4938But have we changed as a nation even in our time?
4938But if no one among us is capable of governing himself, then who among us has the capacity to govern someone else?
4938But who can limit the extent to which the federative principle may operate effectively?
4938Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
4938Can anything essential, anything more than mere ornament and decoration, be added to this by robes and diamonds?
4938Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others?
4938Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
4938Can we forge against these enemies a grand and global alliance, North and South, East and West, that can assure a more fruitful life for all mankind?
4938Can we solve the problems confronting us?
4938Did our generation advance the cause of freedom?
4938Do my countrymen need any assurance that such a catastrophe is not to overtake them while I possess the power to stay it?
4938Do you not think an angel rides in the whirlwind and directs this storm?"
4938Does he expect to find among the ruins of this Union a happier abode for our swarming millions than they now have under it?
4938Has the sword of despots proved to be a safer or surer instrument of reform in government than enlightened reason?
4938Have we found our happy valley?
4938How did we accomplish the Revolution?
4938How long will those who rejoice that slavery no longer exists cherish or tolerate the incapacities it put upon their communities?
4938How sustain and pass with glory through the late war?
4938I have asked the Cabinet and my staff a question, and now I put the same question to all of you: If not us, who?
4938In explaining my sentiments on this subject it may be asked, What raised us to the present happy state?
4938In our own lives, let each of us ask-- not just what will government do for me, but what can I do for myself?
4938In our present differences, is either party without faith of being in the right?
4938In the challenges we face together, let each of us ask-- not just how can government help, but how can I help?
4938Is a new world coming?
4938Is it not possible for us now to make a truce with time by anticipating and accepting its inevitable verdict?
4938Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before?
4938Is it true, then, that any right plainly written in the Constitution has been denied?
4938Is our world gone?
4938Is there any better or equal hope in the world?
4938Is there such perfect identity of interests among the States to compose a new union as to produce harmony only and prevent renewed secession?
4938Let us ask again: Have we reached the goal of our vision of that fourth day of March 1933?
4938May Congress prohibit slavery in the Territories?
4938May we not cherish this sentiment without presumption when we reflect on the characters by which this war is distinguished?
4938Must Congress protect slavery in the Territories?
4938On whom has oppression fallen in any quarter of our Union?
4938One party to a contract may violate it-- break it, so to speak-- but does it not require all to lawfully rescind it?
4938Or are the shadows of another night closing in upon us?
4938Or have we found angels in the forms of kings to govern him?
4938Or that we stopped to ask if a sick child had gotten better, and stayed a moment there to trade a word of friendship?
4938Or, shall we continue on our way?
4938Shall fugitives from labor be surrendered by national or by State authority?
4938Shall the prejudices and paralysis of slavery continue to hang upon the skirts of progress?
4938Shall we call this the promised land?
4938Shall we pause now and turn our back upon the road that lies ahead?
4938That we were more driven to succeed than anyone around us?
4938The central question before us is: How shall we use that peace?
4938The challenge of our past remains the challenge of our future-- will we be one nation, one people, with one common destiny, or not?
4938Timidity asks,"How difficult is the road ahead?"
4938To how many thousands of our countrymen has it proved a benefit?
4938To those, however, who really love the Union may I not speak?
4938To what single individual has it ever proved an injury?
4938We bring all our wit and all our will to meet the question: How far have we come in man''s long pilgrimage from darkness toward light?
4938What are the dangers which menace us?
4938What can be more gratifying than such a retrospect as this?
4938What do we want the men and women who work with us to say when we are no longer there?
4938What does the change mean?
4938What has been the progress since that time?
4938What other form of government, indeed, can so well deserve our esteem and love?
4938Who dares fail to try?
4938Who has been deprived of any right of person or property?
4938Who restrained from offering his vows in the mode which he prefers to the Divine Author of his being?
4938Who shall assign limits to the achievements of free minds and free hands under the protection of this glorious Union?
4938Who shall live up to the great trust?
4938Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people?
4938Why, then, should we think that collectively, as a nation, we are not bound by that same limitation?
4938Will their successors falter and plead organic impotency in the nation?
4938Will we all come together, or come apart?
4938Will you hazard so desperate a step while there is any possibility that any portion of the ills you fly from have no real existence?
4938Will you join in that historic effort?
4938Will you, while the certain ills you fly to are greater than all the real ones you fly from, will you risk the commission of so fearful a mistake?
4938With which should we be most likely to live in harmony and friendly intercourse?
4938Without it what are we individually or collectively?
27279''How duz yo''sym''tums seem ter segashuate?'' 27279 ''How you come on, den?
27279And are they really dead, our martyred slain?
27279And how do you know that you have got to the right hand now?
27279And it was in this wilderness that Professor Mitchell lost his life sixteen or seventeen years ago, was it not?
27279And nobody lives in it? 27279 And what was that?"
27279And where are you?
27279And which_ are_ we for?
27279And who told you all about it?
27279Any more betting, sir?
27279Bill? 27279 But how was it possible to bring a dead body up these steeps?"
27279But what is a''sang- digger''?
27279Did the fox eat the rabbit?
27279Did you cross there?
27279Do the white persons pay such respect to niggers in Savannah? 27279 Do you forget, sir, that he said,''When one is a wanderer, one feels that one fulfils the true condition of humanity?''
27279Dunno-- what be they?
27279How do you know then where you are?
27279How long before this rain began was it that they quitted this house?
27279How would you like a scrummage, Andy, with them Scotchmen that stole your mother''s chickens this morning?
27279I''ve got some sandwiches, here-- won''t you have one?
27279Is n''t there an old field, about a mile from this, on that road?
27279Is no hatchet sharp for Occonestoga?
27279Is that all, on both sides of the river?
27279Jemmy Steptoe,said he to the clerk,"what the devil ails ye, mon?"
27279Mr. Murray, am I correct in my conjecture?
27279Mr. Murray, if you insist upon your bitter à � sher simile, why shut your eyes to the palpable analogy suggested? 27279 Nan?"
27279Not so, my dear madam, for are you not sure to lose?
27279S''that another langidge fuh some name a knows?
27279Shall I let loose upon them, Captain?
27279Shall not the mother say farewell to the child she shall see no more?
27279Southern Review), Theodicy, Is Davis a Traitor?
27279Thank you,said Gilman, and then, after a second''s hesitation, added:"Where are you going?
27279The red levin?_ ROBERT TOOMBS.--1.
27279Then the people on that side of the river are your friends?
27279Then you will bet again, madam?
27279Thou art come, Matiwan-- thou art come, but wherefore? 27279 To lose?"
27279Was not that mightily out of the way? 27279 Were you ever here before?"
27279What arms have you in the house?
27279What wouldst thou do, Matiwan?
27279Where do you take us to?
27279Where is Andy?
27279Where, then?
27279Wherefore sings he his death- song?
27279Who is Bill?
27279Who is at home with you?
27279Who, I?
27279Who,says he"will be there to sympathize with him?
27279Whose seat is that?
27279Why do you stand?
27279Would you keep a mother from her boy, and he to be lost to her for ever? 27279 Wouldst thou slay me, mother, wouldst strike the heart of thy son?"
27279_ Let us pass over the river and rest Under the shade of the trees._Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks?
27279''George,''said his father,''do you know who killed that beautiful little cherry- tree yonder in the garden?''
27279(_ From Cartoons._[24])[ Illustration:~Natural Bridge, Virginia.~] What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast?
27279(_ From Uncle Remus, His Songs and His Sayings._[42])"Did n''t the fox_ never_ catch the rabbit, Uncle Remus?"
27279(_ From the"Federalist,"14th No._) But why is the experiment of an extended Republic to be rejected, merely because it may comprise what is new?
27279* Chanler, Mrs. Amà © lie Rives, 1863- Va. A Brother to Dragons and Other Stories( 1888), Virginia of Virginia( 1888), The Quick or the Dead?
27279--"But where is Webster?
27279--"What thin- visaged man is that standing over yonder and constantly moving?"
27279--"Who is that sitting by Cass?"
27279--"Who is that walking down the aisle with that uncouth coat and all that hair about his chin?
272792. Who first manufactured sugar in Louisiana?
272792. Who has written his life?
272792. Who was his mother?
272792. Who was the first white child born in America?
272792. Who was the"Blind Preacher"?
272792. Who were Ridge and Ross?
272792. Who were some of its contributors?
272792. Who were the companions of Timrod''s vacations?
272793. Who have written his life?
272793. Who was H. W. Allen?
272793. Who was founder of the University?
272793. Who was governor of North Carolina in 1713- 1720?
272793. Who wrote a sketch of his life?
272794. Who was Mrs. White Beatty?
272794. Who was his most famous son?
272794. Who was the first Indian baptized?
272794. Who were lords of Louisiana in 1750- 70?
272795. Who first said,"To the victors belong the spoils,"as applied to public offices?
27279Am I a freeman?
27279Am I right, good woman?"
27279And I says to a man settin''next to me, s''I,''What sort of fool playin''is that?''
27279And how have they lost their liberties?
27279And what have we[ to] oppose to them?
27279And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more?
27279Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation?
27279Are such things tolerable, and to be tolerated in the present age and condition of our Government?
27279Are you going to take such gentlemen, and suppose that by intuition they will understand the Indian character?
27279Banister, John,?-1692 botanist Eng., Va. Insects of Virginia, Curiosities in Virginia.
27279Barbara Dering,[ sequel to The Quick or the Dead?]
27279Barney._--Why, did he marry a Hooer?
27279Barney._.--Who did he marry?
27279Bledsoe, Albert Taylor: A Theodicy, Is Davis a Traitor?
27279But was that gossamer- like illusion, lying upon the far horizon, the magic of nicotian, or the vague presence of distant heights?
27279But when shall we be stronger?
27279But where is that favored land?
27279But, look you, Mr. Horse- Shoe, you''re not thinking of going after them?"
27279By whom and when made?_ WILLIAM STRACHEY.--1.
27279C. Pinkney_ 233 WEEMS, MASON LOCKE 126 What is Music?
27279Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it?
27279Can they pursue a party who pounce down on a settlement and take property, and reclaim that property?
27279Can you guess what sentence most frequently recurs to me?
27279D''yuh eat them things ev''y day?
27279Did he behave handsomely, Mr. Robinson?
27279Did he ever come himself?__ 10.
27279Did n''t he marry a Ramsbottom?
27279Did the old rangers of Texas ever fail to do it, when they were seated on their Texas ponies?
27279Did you ever see such a swaggerer?
27279Does not every man feel that his own personal security and the security of his property depends on that fairness?
27279For what is it noted?__ 6.
27279For what special purpose was the Story of Mary Washington written?
27279For what was he noted?
27279For what was his daughter Evelyn noted?
27279For what was his daughter Evelyn noted?"
27279For what was his father distinguished?__ 3.
27279For whom is Fort Moultrie named?__ 4.
27279For whom is Montgomery named?
27279For whom was Lord Cornwallis exchanged?_ JAMES WOOD DAVIDSON.--1.
27279For whom was Murfreesboro named?
27279For whom was he exchanged?
27279From what States was Kentucky mainly settled?
27279From whom was he descended?
27279Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
27279Hath thy brow, Crowned with white blooms, begun To grow a- weary of its flagrant wreath, And do thy temples long to ache beneath A gilded, iron crown?
27279Have they ever done it?
27279Have we anything new to offer upon the subject?
27279Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled, that force must be called in to win back our love?
27279Having as much power and meanes as others, why should English men despaire, and not doe as much as any?
27279Her most famous one?
27279How did Fillmore afterwards become president of the United Stales?__ 7.
27279How did Judge Longstreet feel about"Georgia Scenes"in his later years?
27279How did Mrs. Dorsey gain her pen- name?
27279How did he spend his time after 1609?
27279How did you come on raisin''chickens this year, Mis''Shad?
27279How is this to be done?
27279How long and when was Madison President?__ 4.
27279How long was Louisiana under Spanish domination?__ 6.
27279How long was Texas independent and when did she enter the Union?__ 5.
27279How long was he Chief Justice?
27279How long was he professor at the University of Virginia?
27279How many mouths has the Mississippi River?__ 3.
27279How old was George Washington when William Byrd died?__ 6.
27279How old was Judge Bacon then?_ ROBERT YOUNG HAYNE.--1.
27279How old was she when her grandfather came back?__ 8.
27279How stands he among Georgian writers?
27279How was Mrs. Preston related to Stonewall Jackson?
27279How was he buried?
27279How watch?
27279How were Benton and Clay connected?_(_ Mrs.
27279How work?
27279How?
27279I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
27279I ask you, sir, what scenes followed?
27279If so when and by whom made?_ WILLIAM BYRD.--1.
27279If we, their countrymen, do not know and honor them, who can be expected to do so?
27279In what battle was Colonel Fisher killed?
27279In what family did he teach?
27279In what great fire was his property destroyed in Columbia?
27279In what languages did he write?
27279In what novel of Thackeray did he write a chapter?
27279In what year was the 250th anniversary of the settlement of Jamestown?
27279Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees?
27279Is it so very unreasonable as to furnish a justification for controlling the words of the Constitution?
27279Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
27279Is it the gurgle of waters whose flow Ofttime has come to him borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees?
27279Is it unreasonable that it should also be empowered to decide on the judgment of a State tribunal enforcing such unconstitutional law?
27279Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
27279Is my State a free State?
27279Is the Dismal Swamp so hard to cross now?__ 5.
27279Is the negro dialect the same in all the States?
27279Is this,"he asked,"the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty?
27279Is you deaf?''
27279It has no door to it?"
27279L. Hawks_ 226 Virginian or American?
27279Love?
27279Marry?
27279McDonald, Miss F. M. Va. Who Was the Patriot?
27279Men did absurd, undignified, preposterous things for her: and she?
27279Mention some of his poems?
27279My Life is Like the Summer Rose,& c. Wiley, Calvin Henderson, 1819- 1887 N. C., S. C. Roanoke, or Where is Utopia?, Alamance, Early Life at the South.
27279Name of Mrs. M''Cord''s father?
27279Name of his home?
27279Need I press the necessity of this?
27279Not they who have been trained with him in the same gymnasium?
27279O''c''ose, Providence put de bank dyah, but how come Providence nuver saved Marse Chan?
27279Of what church was he rector?
27279Of what does his"Mocking- Bird"remind one?
27279Of what magazine was he editor from 1847 to 1859?
27279Of what measures was he the author?
27279Of what paper is he editor?
27279Of what paper was he editor?
27279Of what political party is he considered the founder?
27279Of what profession were their daughters?
27279Of what race is he?
27279Oh, where, Among the sweet musicians of the air, Is one so dear as thou to these old solitudes?
27279Old Miss Stallins come out fust, and as soon as she seed the bag, ses she:"What upon yeath has Joseph went and put in that bag for Mary?
27279Over what great trial did Marshall preside?
27279Pendleton, James Madison, 1811- 1891(?)
27279Perhaps I can give you a lift on your way?
27279Refuse them, and what then?
27279Religion and morality enjoin this conduct; and can it be that good policy does not equally enjoin it?
27279Robinson?"
27279Shad._--Why, he married-- stop, I''ll tell you directly-- Why, what does make my old head forget so?
27279Shall she have no parting with the young brave she bore in her bosom?
27279Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
27279Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication?
27279Shall we try argument?
27279She got in and took the level on her knee, then burst out laughing again--"A reckon yuh wonders what a''m a haw- hawin''at?"
27279Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease?
27279Sir, what are we about?
27279So rich was the South in 1860, that Mr. Lincoln spoke but common sentiment when he said:"If we let the South go, where shall we get our revenues?"
27279Sprunt, James, 1846- merchant, British vice- consul Scotland, N. C. Wilmington( 1883), A Colonial Plantation, What Ship is That?
27279Tak''st thou the glint of Mammon''s glittering car To be the gleam of some new- risen star-- Yond clamor, for renown?
27279The Poetical?
27279The Quick or the Dead?
27279The name of his son?
27279Then why complain?
27279To curse, like the father-- to curse, like the Manneyto?"
27279To what poems does Barbe refer in his tribute to Lanier?_(_ See under Waitman Barbe._) 6.
27279To whom are Wilson''s poems dedicated?
27279To whom did she will her Mississippi home?
27279To whom does the fifth stanza refer?__ 3.
27279To whom is the poem addressed?
27279To whom was he related?
27279WHAT IS MUSIC?
27279Was Mrs. Motte''s house burned down?_ MASON LOCKE WEEMS.--1.
27279Was it vertue in those Hero[e]s to provide that[ which] doth maintaine us, and basenesse in us to do the like for others to come?
27279Was there any settlement in South Carolina at this time?__ 5.
27279Well, sir, there is a remedy for all this, and it is very easy to apply it; but how are we circumstanced there?
27279Were they such as should characterize an able general, a magnanimous warrior, and the President of a great nation numbering eight millions of souls?
27279Whar you fum, anyhow?
27279Whar you fum?"
27279What action did South Carolina take in 1832?
27279What action had the citizens of Boston taken in 1809?
27279What are the Peabody Symphony Concerts?_ JAMES LANE ALLEN.--1.
27279What are the marshes of Glynn?_(_ Salt marches on the coast of Ga._)_ 8.
27279What battles of the Revolution occurred in South Carolina during Drayton''s life?_ THOMAS JEFFERSON.--1.
27279What bold public statement did he make in April, 1776?
27279What book has his son published?
27279What caused the Texan war of independence?
27279What city was burned by the British in the year in which this song was composed?_ JOHN JAMES AUDUBON.--1.
27279What collections did he make?
27279What did Jefferson say of him?
27279What did La Fayette say of her when a child?
27279What did Oglethorpe write?_(_ See"List of Southern Writers.
27279What did Webster say the Union would be if the doctrine of State Sovereignty should be accepted?
27279What did Wirt say of life, in 1829?
27279What did his mother say of him?
27279What difference in their ages?_ WILLIAM HENRY DRAYTON.--1.
27279What disaster occurred in Washington in 1814?__ 6.
27279What discoveries did he make in Italy?
27279What distinction about his birth?
27279What distinction has Byrd among the writers of Virginia?
27279What do these rebels demand?
27279What do you think of this sketch of Virginians?
27279What does Calhoun say of it?
27279What does Everett say of them?
27279What does Judge Story say of him?
27279What does Paulding say of him?
27279What does Stephens say of Calhoun in 1850?_(_ See under A. H. Stephens._) 10.
27279What does Webster say of him?
27279What does he say of the earthquake and its effects?
27279What does he say of the relative positions of the upper and lower classes?
27279What famous Frenchman visited Jefferson in 1825?__ 9.
27279What famous men were teachers and students there?_ JOHN MARSHALL.--1.
27279What famous pioneer is also buried in Frankfort?__ 5.
27279What great orator was his uncle?
27279What had become of the wretched colonists?
27279What has his daughter Winnie written?
27279What has"My Maryland"been called?
27279What have been his services to Southern literature?
27279What have we inherited from England?
27279What induced Dr. Hawks to write a history of North Carolina?
27279What inscription is on his tomb?
27279What is Calhoun''s home now?
27279What is Jefferson''s title?
27279What is Professor Fiske''s estimate of him?
27279What is his national title?
27279What is it that gentlemen wish?
27279What is left of Jamestown now?_(_ See under John Smith._) GEORGE WILLIAM BAGBY.--1.
27279What is meant by"the Dark and Bloody Ground"?__ 4.
27279What is said of her in Washington?
27279What is said of his great work?
27279What is said of his"Science of English Verse"?
27279What is said of the poem"Florence Vane"?
27279What is said of the"Raven"in 1845?
27279What is said of"On the Plantation"?
27279What is the Beautiful?
27279What is the Koran?__ 6.
27279What is the Peabody Educational Fund?__ 4.
27279What is the mystical vision he sees?
27279What is the origin of the term"buncombe"as popularly used?__ 4.
27279What is the poem by which he is known?
27279What is the present name of Washington College?
27279What is the principle of Nullification?
27279What is the special fame of this description of a storm?
27279What is the story of"Sir Walter Raleigh''s Ship"?
27279What is the subject of most of Simms''novels?
27279What is the usual form of Manneyto?
27279What is there in the moon, that swims A naked bosom o''er the limbs, That all the wood with magic dims?
27279What kind of ancestry had he?
27279What loss had he during the war?
27279What made you come so far around?"
27279What monuments have been reared to him?
27279What occupation did Timrod''s father choose and why?
27279What office had Clay at the time?__ 6.
27279What other ex- president died the same day?
27279What other great man died the same year that he did?__ 6.
27279What other names had Osceola?
27279What other precedence can be assigned them?
27279What other settlement was in America at this time besides Jamestown?__ 5.
27279What other writers edited or wrote for the"Messenger"?_"Page 452--6. amended to 5.--"_5.
27279What other writers edited or wrote for the"Messenger"?__ 4.
27279What paper did he establish?
27279What part did he take in the Revolutionary War?
27279What passage of Grady''s does the extract illustrate?
27279What patriotic song was written the same year?_ ST. GEORGE TUCKER.--1.
27279What people are described in his stories?
27279What poet did he befriend?
27279What poet wrote his life?_ MIRABEAU BUONAPARTE LAMAR.--1.
27279What position had his father in 1802?
27279What prevented war?
27279What probably became of the Lost Colony of Roanoke and of the little Virginia Dare?
27279What race settled North Carolina?
27279What rank does he hold as a statesman and patriot?_ 12. Who are the others mentioned as contemporary with Calhoun in the Senate?
27279What rank does he hold as a statesman and patriot?_ 12. Who are the others mentioned as contemporary with Calhoun in the Senate?
27279What relation does Mr. Gladstone think should exist between England and America?
27279What relation was Lieutenant Hampton to General Wade Hampton, of South Carolina?_ WILLIAM WIRT.--1.
27279What relation was he to P. P. Cooke and to John P. Kennedy?
27279What relation was he to Robert Young Hayne?
27279What relation was he to St. George Tucker?
27279What relation were Maury and Herndon?__ 6.
27279What river did De Soto discover and when did he march through Alabama?_ PHILIP PENDLETON COOKE.--1.
27279What salary had he as Commander in Chief?
27279What shall I say?
27279What system was established by him in Alabama?
27279What terms shall we find, which have not been already exhausted?
27279What though fond hopes deferred Have overshadowed Life''s green paths with gloom?
27279What though, perchance, we no more meet,-- What though too soon we sever?
27279What title did he gain, and how?
27279What title did his sea studies acquire for him?
27279What title had he and why?
27279What title had he in the Revolution?
27279What title has been given him?
27279What title was given his son John?
27279What town is named for Governor Eden?_ SECOND PERIOD, 1750- 1800.
27279What two distinguished men besides Toombs were ordered to be captured after the war?
27279What two famous speeches by Wirt are here mentioned?
27279What two titles did he have, and for what reasons?
27279What war took place during that time?__ 5.
27279What was Dr. Bagby''s pen- name?
27279What was Mrs. Wilson''s first novel?
27279What was happening in America during his imprisonment, 1779- 1781?_ GEORGE WASHINGTON.--1.
27279What was her opinion as to going in to exile after the war?
27279What was his connection with the Peabody Institute?
27279What was his education?
27279What was his favorite pursuit?
27279What was his favorite remark on Art?
27279What was his motto?
27279What was his profession and what positions, if any, did he fill?
27279What was his service to the Atlantic Telegraph Cable?
27279What was his title?
27279What was the Conquered Banner?_ WILLIAM GORDON MCCABE.--_1.
27279What was the Forum?_ JAMES RYDER RANDALL.--1.
27279What was the Western Reserve?_ JAMES BARRON HOPE.--1.
27279What was the cause of the duel?__ 5.
27279What was the consequence?
27279What was the difference in the ages of Clay, Calhoun and Webster?_ FRANCIS SCOTT KEY.--1.
27279What was the name of her father and grand father?
27279What was the remark of Calhoun''s father about government?
27279What was the resolution of the Virginia Convention on adopting the Constitution of the United States?__ 7.
27279What well known words were first used by him?
27279What were his last words?
27279What were the Trenches?__ 2.
27279What whispered voices bless me, With welcomes dropping dew- like from the weird and wondrous stars?
27279What would they have?
27279What, then, am I to do?
27279When and where was he inaugurated president of the Confederacy?
27279When and where was his greatest speech made?
27279When and with whom was his great debate on Nullification?
27279When did Calhoun die?
27279When did Houston go to Texas?
27279When did Mrs. Washington die?_ AUGUSTA EVANS WILSON.--1.
27279When did Sir Walter Raleigh send his first colony?__ 9.
27279When did Washington make his Southern tour?__ 4.
27279When did he come to America and whom did he marry?
27279When did he come to America?
27279When did he live in Washington City?__ 4.
27279When did he say"If this be treason--"?
27279When did it occur?__ 6.
27279When did mother curse the child she bore?
27279When did the Civil War begin and end?__ 5.
27279When did the Seven Days''Battles around Richmond occur?
27279When did the battle of Noewee occur?
27279When was Berkeley governor of Virginia?__ 5.
27279When was Jamestown burned?
27279When was Kentucky admitted to the Union?_ JOEL CHANDLER HARRIS.--1.
27279When was Pierce president of the United States?__ 5.
27279When was South Carolina University founded?_ JOHN PENDLETON KENNEDY.--1.
27279When was Van Buren president?_ DAVID CROCKETT.--1.
27279When was Washington City laid off as the Capital of the United States?__ 8.
27279When was he in Belgium?_ 5.
27279When was he president of Texas?
27279When was it written?
27279When was it?
27279When was it?_ 3.
27279When was the Farewell Address written?
27279When was the Farewell Address written?"
27279When was the Louisiana Purchase made?__ 7.
27279When was the Seminole war?__ 5.
27279When was the University established and opened?_ THIRD PERIOD, 1800- 1850.
27279When was the University established and opened?_"Page 450--6. amended to 5.--"5.
27279When was the battle of Blue Licks?
27279When was the battle of Buena Vista?
27279When was the great earthquake in the Mississippi Valley?__ 4.
27279When was the monument unveiled?
27279When was the poem written?
27279When was this article published?
27279When?
27279When?
27279When?_ ALEXANDER BEAUFORT MEEK.--1.
27279Whence did Mrs. Dandridge get her first name?
27279Whence his name?_(_ He was a blacksmith._) HUGH SWINTON LEGARÃ �.--1.
27279Where and when did his inauguration as President take place?__ 7.
27279Where are Miss Murfree''s stories laid?
27279Where are fine statues of him?
27279Where are monuments to Poe?
27279Where are there monuments to Lee?__ 4.
27279Where are they now?
27279Where did he die?
27279Where did he die?
27279Where did he die?"
27279Where did he pass his life?
27279Where is Beauvoir?__ 6.
27279Where is Fort Moultrie and for whom named?__ 4.
27279Where is Forte Motte?
27279Where is Magnolia Cemetery?_ PAUL HAMILTON HAYNE.--1.
27279Where is Magnolia Cemetery?_"Page 453--6. amended to 4.--"_4.
27279Where is Mr. Davis buried?_ EDGAR ALLAN POE.--1.
27279Where is O''Hara buried?
27279Where is William and Mary College and when was it founded?__ 3.
27279Where is a set of his works to be seen?
27279Where is found the quotation--"Free will fixed fate, foreknowledge absolute"?_ GEORGE TUCKER.--1.
27279Where is it?
27279Where is the Alamo?__ 5.
27279Where is the Hermitage?__ 7.
27279Where is the Natural Bridge?_(_ See Jefferson''s Description._) CHARLES HENRY SMITH("BILL ARP").--1.
27279Where is the Natural Bridge?_(_ See picture under Mrs. Preston._)_ 5.
27279Where is the Virginia Military Institute?__ 5.
27279Where is the man?
27279Where is the necessity of this provision in the Constitution?
27279Where is the town named for him?_ 6.
27279Where is the use of it?
27279Where is there a monument to Lieutenant Herndon?
27279Where is there a monument to him?
27279Where is there a statue to Sergeant Jasper?_ JAMES MADISON.--1.
27279Where was the author born?
27279Which are the best lives of him?
27279Which particular Tenthredo of the buzzing swarm around my spoiled apple of life would you advise me to select for my_ anathema maranatha_?"
27279White- robed and fair to see, where goest thou now In haste from thy spiced garden?
27279Who are the three greatest statesmen of the"Compromise Period"( 1820- 1850)?_ 8.
27279Who are they, and what are such people called in London, in North Carolina, and in different other States?_ 3. Who was Mr. Ellington?
27279Who are they, and what are such people called in London, in North Carolina, and in different other States?_ 3. Who was Mr. Ellington?
27279Who can bind posterity?
27279Who can forget the cook by whom his youthful appetite was fed?
27279Who do you think were"the five greatest poets of the country"in his lifetime?_ CHARLES Ã � TIENNE ARTHUR GAYARRÃ �.--1.
27279Who have written the life of General Lee?
27279Who have written the life of President Davis?__ 4.
27279Who is the"Fair Daughter of the Sun"?
27279Who is"the Man"of the Yorktown Centennial Ode?__ 3.
27279Who succeeded him?_ FRANCIS LISTER HAWKS.--1.
27279Who that is a sincere friend to it can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabrick?
27279Who that knew him as a contented, well- treated slave, did not learn to love and admire the negro character?
27279Who was Ashby?_ JABEZ LAMAR MONROE CURRY.--1.
27279Who was Horse Shoe Robinson?__ 5.
27279Who was Jackson?__ 5.
27279Who was John Pendleton Kennedy?__ 5.
27279Who was Mrs. C. A Warfield and what did she write?_(_ See"List of Southern Writers.
27279Who was Pinckney?_ HENRY LEE.--1.
27279Who was Rubinstein?_ SARAH ANNE DORSEY.--1.
27279Who was Uncle Remus?_ ROBERT BURNS WILSON.--1.
27279Who was he, or what had he done, who had provoked such relentless and far- seeking revenge?
27279Who was his early teacher?
27279Who was his second wife?
27279Who was ruler of England at this time?_ JOHN LAWSON.--1.
27279Who was the American general?__ 6.
27279Who was then president of the United States?_ WILLIAM CAMPBELL PRESTON.--1.
27279Who was"Ned Brace"?
27279Who went with him to be educated?
27279Who were Carroll, Howard, Ringgold, Watson, Lowe, May?_ ABRAM JOSEPH RYAN.--1.
27279Who were Demosthenes, Ossian, Homer, Milton, Rousseau?_"Page 449--7. amended to 5.--"_5.
27279Who were Demothenes, Ossian, Homer, Milton, Rousseau?_ JOHN RANDOLPH OF ROANOKE.--1.
27279Who were Giotto Dante Tasso and Petrarch?_ AUGUSTUS BALDWIN LONGSTREET.--1.
27279Who were Jackson and Stuart?__ 3.
27279Who were Jasper, De Soto, Pulaski?_ MARY VIRGINIA TERHUNE("MARION HARLAND").--1.
27279Who were Jefferson Hamilton Jackson, Clay John Randolph?_ ALEXANDER HAMILTON STEPHENS.--1.
27279Who were Lord North and Lord Grenville?__ 4.
27279Who were Philip, Alexander, Cà ¦ sar, Brutus, Madame de Staël, Bonaparte?__ 6.
27279Who were Randolph and Clay?__ 4.
27279Who were her paternal grandparents, and what did they write?
27279Who were presidents before Jefferson?_"Page 449--Demothenes amended to Demosthenes--"_5.
27279Who were presidents before Jefferson?__ 7.
27279Who were the Huguenots?__ 3.
27279Who were the Moors and when did they rule Spain?_ LOUISA SUSANNAH M''CORD.--1.
27279Who were the Yemassees and when was the Yemassee war?__ 5.
27279Who were the four presidents of the Republic of Texas?__ 4.
27279Who wrote Dixie, and when?_ APPENDIX.
27279Who wrote Hayne''s Life?_ SAM HOUSTON.--1.
27279Who wrote Tristram and Iseult?_ SIDNEY LANIER.--1.
27279Who wrote his life?_(_ See under G in"List of Southern Writers.
27279Who wrote the lines on page 314?_ RICHARD MALCOLM JOHNSTON.--1.
27279Who, after him, up to the time of his death?__ 8.
27279Whom did Benton''s daughter Jessie marry, and what did she write?_(_ See"List of Southern Writers,"Frà © mont._) JOHN CALDWELL CALHOUN.--1.
27279Whom did he succeed as editor of the"Southern Literary Messenger"?
27279Whose brother and whose cousin was he?
27279Whose son was he, and whose half brother?
27279Whose son was he?
27279Why did Captain Smith fight against the Turks?
27279Why did he come to Carolina, and when?
27279Why did he go to Europe in 1771?
27279Why did he not sue for pardon?
27279Why did the Cherokees go beyond the Mississippi?_ ST. GEORGE H.
27279Why not establish a fencing- school for their benefit?
27279Why stand we here idle?
27279Will it be the next week or the next year?
27279Will it be when we are totally disarmed and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
27279Will the spirit of the Constitution justify this attempt to control its words?
27279Will you draw down this curse on Virginia?
27279Will you get in?"
27279With what distinguished men was he associated, and who were they?
27279With whom did he first write?
27279Woman''s condition certainly admits of improvement,( but when have the strong forgotten to oppress the weak?)
27279Yet why complain?
27279You besieged and took the Alamo: but under what circumstances?
27279You think Sir Archy will beat Selim?
27279[ Illustration:~State House, Columbia, S. C.~]"They took the route towards Ninety- Six, you said, Mistress Ramsay?"
27279_ What else can you learn of her?__ 6.
27279and from what source, men, animals, and elements of the universal fire have their origin?
27279hain''t that good, though?
27279in 1779?
27279say can you see by the dawn''s early light, What so proudly we hailed at the twilight''s last gleaming?
27279what is it?"
27279what power Can stay him in his silent course, or melt His iron heart to pity?
27279who could have wronged thee so?
27279who will set me adrift on this Nile?''"
35207A thousand of the devils, did you say?
35207Afraid of what?
35207Ah, Grafton, is that you?
35207Am I not a lady, now?
35207An''yo''un had them and let them go?
35207And Randolph Hamilton-- what of him?
35207And how is Bruno?
35207And the guerrilla who shot you was the same you told us not to shoot?
35207And where did he go when he disappeared so suddenly?
35207And who shot the guerrilla?
35207And will you let anything come between? 35207 And you found out what you were after?"
35207And you rode all the distance from there here, wounded as you were? 35207 Are n''t you going to take your horses?"
35207Are the teamsters armed?
35207Are they going to murder them all?
35207Are we to fight at last?
35207Are you Union or Confed?
35207Are you as friendless as that?
35207Are you certain he was killed?
35207Are you not my own, my true knight- errant?
35207Are you sure you are right?
35207Are you sure,asked Clay,"that your plans will not miscarry?
35207Are you sure?
35207Are you the boy whose father was tarred and feathered, and the Judge took you both in?
35207Be you sure, Josh?
35207Boys, which shall it be-- Mexico or Paris?
35207Bruno? 35207 But how can I leave you, papa?"
35207But how?
35207But what if I meet Colonel Clay?
35207But where did the two hundred men come from?
35207But-- but what became of what was in the pockets?
35207By what right do you arrest me?
35207Ca n''t you go and teach him a lesson he wo n''t forget, before you start for the Ozarks?
35207Can it be that Porter has slipped away without our knowing it?
35207Can it be that old man has been our guardian angel all the time?
35207Can they all be depended on?
35207Colonel Jennison, do you realize what you are doing? 35207 Cowardly?"
35207Did I not see two men with you, Captain?
35207Did Tilly have a little girl?
35207Did n''t Jerry leave men on guard?
35207Did you meet and exterminate the Yankees?
35207Did you think of all that? 35207 Do n''t you see my men are getting impatient?"
35207Do you know who commanded the Federals?
35207Do you know who wrote it?
35207Do you look that far?
35207Do you mean Mark Grafton? 35207 Do you mean it?"
35207Do you really think so, Harry?
35207Do you think Guitar can reinforce you by morning?
35207Do you think I was going to fight the whole Confederate army with my little regiment? 35207 Do you think we can handle them?"
35207Do you want me to corrupt you too, Mabel?
35207Does any one know anything about him?
35207Father, you are not angry with me, are you?
35207Father, you do not hate me?
35207Friend of yours?
35207General, do you remember Guilford Craig?
35207Going away so soon?
35207Going to show the white feather?
35207Grace, what do you mean?
35207Grafton? 35207 Had we not better dig a hole for the fire, and screen it with blankets?"
35207Has anything gone wrong?
35207Has the war disturbed you much?
35207Have you any suspicion?
35207Have you discovered the enemy?
35207Have you read it?
35207Hello, Josh, what''s up?
35207Hello, boys; whar yo''uns goin''?
35207Hello, you here already?
35207Here, what do you think of this, Dan?
35207How about Dorothy Hamilton?
35207How are the folks and how did they take my being wounded?
35207How can he be otherwise, when she whose colors he wears is so kind and merciful?
35207How can we find out where they are?
35207How could you do it? 35207 How do yo''un like it?"
35207How do you know it is bad, then?
35207How is it, Sergeant?
35207How is it, father?
35207How long since you heard from Edward? 35207 How many do you reckon there are?"
35207How many do you suppose there are?
35207How many men has Coffee?
35207How many men have you at Brown''s Springs?
35207How many men have you?
35207How many men will you need to go with you?
35207How many men will you need, Lieutenant?
35207How many?
35207How''s that?
35207I?
35207If you do n''t like the way we fight,he growled,"why are you here, urging us to rise?
35207In the mystery business?
35207Is it cowardly for twenty to flee before a regiment of Yankee cut- throats?
35207Is thar? 35207 Is that all, Grace?
35207Is that all? 35207 Is that so?"
35207Is that you, Stevens?
35207Is there any way out of this, Strachan?
35207Is your name Hiram Smith?
35207Jefferson City?
35207Lawrence, what do you mean?
35207Lick''em? 35207 Many hurt?"
35207Mark, what is it? 35207 Never had an easier job, did we, Jack?"
35207No, but what if I issue a proclamation that if the men who actually murdered Allsman are given up these ten men will be spared?
35207Plenty of rebs around then? 35207 Say, boy, do you know I was in that crowd?"
35207Say, what makes you dress like a blamed guerrilla?
35207Seen anyone since I left?
35207Sending a courier into Missouri?
35207Sent him word? 35207 Sergeant, what time was it when you reached this post?"
35207So it''s all settled between yo''uns?
35207Sure? 35207 The dawg?
35207The ole woman and children?
35207Then Porter is not heah?
35207Then why do you say you are so unworthy? 35207 Then you are a Federal soldier?"
35207Then you refuse to tell me?
35207Then your idea is to attack them in the morning?
35207Think so, do you?
35207This Middleton is the fellow who cut your command all to pieces last fall, is he not?
35207Thought what?
35207Trouble? 35207 Under whose command are they?"
35207Want to back out, do yer?
35207Was it at Pea Ridge you received your wounds?
35207Was it the same person that warned you that you were being pursued in the Ozarks?
35207We found,said the sergeant in charge,"whom do you think?
35207We''uns? 35207 Well, how do I measure?"
35207Well, how do you like it?
35207Well, what did you find?
35207Whar be yo''goin''?
35207Whar be yo''goin''in sich a hurry? 35207 Whar be yo''uns goin''?"
35207Whar hev''yo''uns been?
35207Whar is Bill?
35207What Federal officer did you say was in command?
35207What about the front?
35207What are you doing here, away from your command?
35207What are you waiting for?
35207What could have induced him to visit our camp?
35207What did I tell yo''un? 35207 What did you say, father?"
35207What difference should that make as far as Helen and I are concerned?
35207What do yo''un have to say before we''uns string you up?
35207What do you say, Billy? 35207 What do you think of that, Bruno?"
35207What do you think of that, Dan?
35207What do you think of that?
35207What do you think of the plan, Billy?
35207What do you think, Dan?
35207What do you think, Dan?
35207What have I done, child? 35207 What if someone should take me from you?"
35207What if we run into Porter and his whole gang?
35207What is it you want me to promise, Agnes? 35207 What is it, General?
35207What is it, child?
35207What is it, father?
35207What is it?
35207What is it?
35207What is it?
35207What is to be done now?
35207What is your name?
35207What made you buy it?
35207What makes you think so, Grace?
35207What makes you think so?
35207What now, Bruno? 35207 What shall we do, Dan?"
35207What was it, Carl?
35207What will be done with all the food and forage you have gathered? 35207 What''s that?
35207What''s that?
35207What''s the matter?
35207What''s the trouble?
35207When did it happen?
35207When?
35207Where are the other two divisions?
35207Where are you going if I do this?
35207Where are you taking me? 35207 Where can Warren be?
35207Where did he come from?
35207Where did you get that?
35207Where have I been?
35207Where have you been?
35207Where is Mark?
35207Where were you when this happened?
35207Which be yo''uns?
35207Who are yo''uns?
35207Who are you?
35207Who be yo''un?
35207Who be yo''uns, an''whar be yo''uns goin''?
35207Who is this fellow hanging around here?
35207Who wrote this?
35207Why are you without clothes?
35207Why ca n''t we occupy that ambush ourselves?
35207Why did General Price do it?
35207Why did n''t yo''uns lick''em?
35207Why did n''t you buy her too?
35207Why did n''t you occupy the road as ordered?
35207Why did n''t you send word to the General then that the enemy was passing along this road in force?
35207Why do you cry?
35207Why do you do this, Mark?
35207Why go at all?
35207Why go, Mark, if it is so dangerous?
35207Why in thunder did n''t Warren come?
35207Why not stop and fight them?
35207Why should I?
35207Why should he shoot at you?
35207Why so glum, Captain?
35207Why, Grace, what made you so long?
35207Why, am I growing homely?
35207Why, father, what is the matter?
35207Why, have n''t you heard? 35207 Why, what''s the matter with Guitar?"
35207Why, what''s the matter, Bruno?
35207Wrong to kill guerrillas?
35207Yes; what of it?
35207You are a soldier, are n''t you?
35207You are in charge of the rear guard, are you not?
35207You can send for Harry now, ca n''t you?
35207You have Indians in your command, have you not?
35207You have heard nothing of him, have you, Captain?
35207You knew, and never let on?
35207You pretend to be men and call this war?
35207You say the garrison did not surrender?
35207Young man,he hissed,"do you know what you are doing?
35207A tall, lank, cadaverous native ejected a mouthful of tobacco juice and drawled,"Directed to Joe Porter, is it?
35207Agnes, to lead you into danger-- how can I do it?"
35207Air yo''un Union or Confed?"
35207An''that dawg-- didn''t he make no fuss when yo''un crept up?"
35207And fought the two hundred?"
35207And why send it to me?"
35207Anything new at Fulton?"
35207Are there many Union men residing among these hills?"
35207Are you married, or have you committed some heinous crime?"
35207Are you sick?"
35207As they came abreast of Harry he heard one of them say,"What time do you expect to attack Palmyra, Colonel?"
35207Be yo''one of Porter''s men?
35207But am I not leaving her?
35207But now she asked,"What is the name of the book you girls are talking about?"
35207But were not the warnings you received in the mountains rather mysterious?"
35207But whar did the boy come from?
35207But what are you doing in St. Louis?
35207But what did Mark mean by saying Grace was for neither of them?
35207But what makes you think the South is all wrong?"
35207But where are the Yankees?"
35207But where were Lawrence and Dan all the time the battle was raging?
35207But who air yo''un carryin''the news to?"
35207But who could have written this?"
35207But why do I indulge in such vain hope that he is alive?
35207But would he have time?
35207By whom?"
35207CHAPTER X THE GUERRILLA''S BRIDE"How did you come to be with the soldiers I met?"
35207Can I ever forget what he and you were to Lyon?"
35207Can I forgit the brute that had his teeth in my throat?
35207Captain Jackson has charge of the advance; how many men has he?"
35207Coffee has n''t run clear away, has he?"
35207Could Jack have been captured by lurking guerrillas?
35207Could he find his way in the darkness?
35207Dan, tell the truth-- were you ever in love?"
35207Day by day Lola had become more precious to him, and as he looked at Lawrence he thought,"Why should she not prefer him to me?"
35207Did Grace know the feeling Mark Grafton had for her?
35207Did n''t you see the dawg?"
35207Did the Yankees get him?"
35207Did we not bring you back from the very brink of the grave?
35207Do n''t I know the boy, and do n''t I know the dawg?
35207Do n''t want to stay with the hosses, Josh?"
35207Do yo''uns know whar we''uns can find him?"
35207Do you know what I am going to do with you?"
35207Do you think I would have left you, if I had been one of the four?"
35207Does not the blood of the Union men murdered by Porter''s gang cry for vengeance?
35207Does that make you love me less?"
35207Father, what do you mean?"
35207For interfering with the hellish work of that murderer?
35207Grace grew restless, her father anxious, and Tilly kept asking,"Whar is mah boy?"
35207Grace, will you not say good- bye?"
35207Guilford, Guilford, are you still alive?
35207Had Big Tom told the truth?
35207Had Mark been talking about her to him?
35207Had he not taken a solemn oath to kill them on sight?
35207Had the time come for him to make that threat good?
35207Harry''s heart stood still; was the ambuscade to be discovered at the last minute?
35207Harry, what''s up?"
35207Has not many a plot been hatched right here?
35207Has not this house been a rendezvous for those passing to and fro between this State and Arkansas?
35207Have any trouble?"
35207He has been delirious most of the time, and what do you think?
35207Her secret was her own; why tell it?
35207How are both to be warned?
35207How are you, old fellow?"
35207How could that old man have come over the mountains and got ahead of us?"
35207How could you do it?"
35207How did he die?
35207How did he know we''uns was heah?"
35207How did it happen?"
35207How did you and she part?"
35207How did you come by them?"
35207How far is it from Platte City to where Judge Lindsly lives?"
35207How is Mrs. Hamilton now?"
35207How is everything?"
35207How many men has Thompson?"
35207How many men have you, Captain?"
35207How was he faring in these troublesome times?
35207How would you like to take Dupont''s place?"
35207I know you can, ca n''t you?"
35207I wonder what these can be?"
35207If I be Union, I get pay for my cohn and hawgs, do n''t I?"
35207If I had been, would you still love me?"
35207If he loved her why did he remain silent?
35207Is he here now?"
35207Is it strange that, as he went on his way, his thoughts were all of the beautiful girl he had just left?
35207It was hard for Grace to think the cause of Mark''s reticence was that he had fled for committing some criminal act, but what else could it be?
35207Jack gazed at him a moment in silence and then muttered,"Number Two, but who killed him?"
35207Jackson drew himself proudly up and growled:"Who''s in command of this train, you or I?
35207Just then Hicks caught sight of Duncan, and yelled:"Bill, did yo''un meet a party of about a dozen men a few minutes ago?"
35207Leave you here unprotected?
35207Looking at him with yearning eyes, she whispered,"Do you love me?"
35207Major Powell could only gasp,"Seen no Yankees?"
35207Mark gone, all alone?"
35207Mark, did it hurt you so?"
35207Mark, tell me what it is?"
35207Mark, what is it?
35207May they not interfere with your plans?"
35207Might he not get help from Hannibal?
35207Mr. Chittenden could only gasp,"What for?"
35207No sooner did Lola see Lawrence than she ran toward him with outstretched hands, crying,"Lawrence, Lawrence, is this indeed you?
35207Poindexter watched them until they were out of sight, and then, turning to Porter, said:"What do you think, Jo?
35207Ran into an ambuscade, did he?
35207Say, young feller, Did yo''un ever face the Merrill Hoss?"
35207Shall I finish him?"
35207Shall we attack them there?"
35207Steve and Sol were now there, excitedly crying,"What''s up?
35207Suddenly some one asked,"Where is Jack Harwood?"
35207The great dog was called, and he came and stood before his master, wagging his tail and looking up in his eyes, as if to say,"What is it?"
35207The hands of both went up, but one exclaimed,"One of Porter''s men?
35207Then a happy thought came to him,"Say,"he asked,"did n''t the Kunnel tell us whar to rally after this affair was over?"
35207Then she turned to her father and asked,"Will he get well?"
35207They halted at the sight of the two men and one cried,"Why, Sloan and Hicks, what''s up?
35207Think of him fighting Porter?"
35207This letter must have been written by another, but who?
35207Was he being robbed by both guerrillas and Federals?
35207Was he captured?"
35207Was n''t she splendid?"
35207Whar be yo''un goin''?"
35207Whar is Coffee?"
35207What could Mark mean by intimating that some great peril might be impending?
35207What did I tell yo''un?"
35207What did it mean?
35207What did they mean?"
35207What did you say your name was?"
35207What does this mean?"
35207What has skeered yo''?"
35207What have you done?"
35207What if he should discover this ambuscade?"
35207What is he like?"
35207What is it?"
35207What is one life to that?"
35207What kind of a book was it?
35207What news?"
35207What puzzles me is, who gave us the warning?"
35207What trouble?"
35207What was he to do?
35207What was it?"
35207What was to be done with Randolph?
35207What would he say if he knew she was for the Union?
35207What would the end be?
35207What''s the difference?"
35207What''s the matter?"
35207What''s the matter?"
35207What''s up?"
35207When Mr. Chittenden heard of the dead man''s request, he said:"Mark, will you go?
35207When he saw Harry he stopped and his hand went to his belt,"Who be yo''un,"he growled,"and what do yo''un want?"
35207Where in the world did he come from?
35207Where is Bruno?"
35207Who asked him to be more?
35207Who else could obtain the information contained in this letter?
35207Who else would write me, and me alone, and give such important information?
35207Who ever heard of a man wearing a nightgown?
35207Who is Bruno?"
35207Who is he?"
35207Who will volunteer to take this fellow''s place?"
35207Who would dream of finding such a girl in the Ozarks?
35207Who?
35207Why are n''t you with Red Jerry?"
35207Why could n''t we have stayed a few hours longer?"
35207Why did we leave them?
35207Why does n''t the fellow show himself, if he is our friend?"
35207Why had they not brought Colonel Warren to the rescue?
35207Why will you persist in fighting against those who were your friends?
35207Will it be destroyed?"
35207Will you always love me, even if I am not what you think?"
35207Would it be possible to bring help to the besieged men?
35207Would not one swerve to avoid the coming blow?
35207You are not with him now, are you?"
35207You have heard no news of him, have you?"
35207Your daughter?"
35207and how did he get here?"
35207chuckled the fellow,"yo''un did n''t count on that, did yo''un?
35207were you?
35207what will become of my daughter, if I am dragged away to a Federal prison?"
34408Ah, but who''s to watch you, Dowlas, and see you do it? 34408 Alone, Maggie?"
34408Although it is late, shall we not read a chapter together, as we always do before we go to bed?
34408And are n''t we to have the pipes and tobacco, after coming so far to- night?
34408And what did you answer?
34408And where, O maiden, is thy house? 34408 Are we going to live there?"
34408Are you certain?
34408Ay, and a partic''lar thing happened, did n''t it, Mr. Macey, so as you were likely to remember that marriage?
34408Behold thou,[ then?] 34408 But Arla, are you never, never coming?"
34408But_ you_ knew what was going on well enough, did n''t you, Mr. Macey? 34408 Cold, is it, my darling?
34408Day before yesterday he told you that he loved you?
34408Did ever anybody see the like?
34408Did you not see that she made herself conspicuous by taking such an interest in this outlived Lagerskiöld?
34408Did you notice Arla?
34408Do you know him?
34408Do you love him?
34408Do you think such little boys would dare? 34408 Eh?
34408Father,I murmured, as if in prayer,"what do you mean?"
34408Have you ever lost anything, Kors?
34408If thou art a guide, commanding the conduct of a company, seek for thyself every good aim, so that thy policy may be without error;[?] 34408 If thou art a successful man and thou makest a son by God''s grace[?
34408If thou sittest at meat with a gormandizer and eatest[? 34408 Is it not time to go back, sir?"
34408Is it so?
34408Is it the function of women to captain assassins? 34408 Is mamma in her room?"
34408Is she alone? 34408 It is not possible that you mean-- of course you do n''t mean-- him-- that you just spoke of-- Captain Lagerskiöld?"
34408Kors, my well- beloved,Rika said at last with a sigh, after a long and delicious silence,"do you not remember this room?"
34408No fair bet?
34408O God, where am I? 34408 Oh, is that it?
34408One word more,said Rika, catching hold of Kors''s blouse;"have you no recollection of a little thing which you lost one night on a journey?"
34408Pert? 34408 Poyser is not at home, is he?"
34408Say? 34408 Say?
34408Tell me, my beautiful one, where do such dainty maidens come from?
34408There is no need to hasten, is there, my Rika?
34408To what use is then all the striving and all the prayers?
34408Tut, tut,he said setting down his glass with refreshed irritation;"what''s the smell got to do with it?
34408Was it a red Durham?
34408Well, Mrs. Poyser, how are you after this stormy morning?
34408Well?
34408What do you say to that, eh, Dowlas?
34408What good then does it do to try to protect the children from evil, if just this makes them more of a prey to temptation?
34408What is your name, my flower of Viersel?
34408What then?
34408What will our descendants think of the Parliamentary oratory of our age?
34408What? 34408 Who is he, I wonder?"
34408Who is it that hath led thee? 34408 Why need you remind me of the moment of parting?"
34408Why, Gurli dear, why are n''t you asleep long ago?
34408Will you and the captain please to walk into the parlor?
34408Will you please to take this chair, sir?
34408You are very kind, Madame Verhulst, but we breakfasted late just before starting.... Kors, have our horses been fed?
34408You do not ask my name, Rika?
34408You do not suppose I have been listening?
34408You promise me? 34408 _ Baezine_ Davie, take one of these_ carbonades_?
34408( Madman or Saint?
34408(?)
34408), IIId(?
34408), VIth, Vth, IVth(?
34408Ah, Poyser, how do you do?
34408All wisdom is in the mouth of thy Majesty; The staff[?]
34408Always we two, is that it?
34408And couldst thou ask no other boon Than thy poor bracelet''s price?
34408And deemest thou as those who pore, With agèd eyes, short way before,-- Think''st Beauty vanished from the coast Of matter, and thy darling lost?
34408And even though I am treated like a child here at home, there are others who-- who--""Are you not a child?"
34408And for the matter o''that, if the talk is to be o''the Lammeters,_ you_ know the most upo''that head, eh, Mr. Macey?
34408And now why do you gaze on each other?
34408And she''d a white star on her brow, I''ll bet a penny?"
34408And so why not draw for these times a portrait gallery?
34408And the roof of the Mill-- where was it?
34408And the two little ones who were now sleeping soundly in the nursery?
34408And there''s the fetching and carrying, as''ud be welly half a day''s work for a man an''hoss--_that''s_ to be took out o''the profits, I reckon?
34408And thoughtest thou such guest Would in thy hall take up his rest?
34408And what did he say?
34408And what did you say?"
34408And what through the left- hand window?
34408And why did I ceaselessly repeat to myself, whatever the music, these three unimportant syllables"Mon Repos"?
34408And,''What is it, Guccio?''
34408Are larks still trilling Their numbers sweet?
34408Are the children asleep?"
34408Are there no girls at Wildonck, or in the town?"
34408Are these all my orders?"
34408Are these things material to our covenant?
34408Are they_ my_ poor?
34408Are you alone?
34408Are you the friend of your friend''s buttons, or of his thought?
34408Argue with him after a season, test[?]
34408Athet- taui( Lisht?)
34408Bata, Bull of the Ennead of the gods, art thou remaining alone, having fled thy village from before the wife of Anpu thy elder brother?
34408Beckon it when to go and come, Self- announced its hour of doom?
34408Behold, a good son that God giveth doeth beyond what he is told for his master; he doeth right, doing heartily[?]
34408Beware of interruption and of answering words with heat[?]....
34408Beware of overbearingness[?
34408But I am not stiff- necked; a man feareth if he knoweth[?
34408But Skrymir sat up, and stroking his cheek, said:--"Are there any birds perched on this tree?
34408But it was not the house,--the house stood firm; drowned up to the first story, but still firm;--or was it broken in at the end towards the Mill?
34408But let my errand first be told: For bracelets sold to thine this day, So much thou owest me in gold; Hast thou the ready cash to pay?
34408But now thou art taught to sing to the flute, To recite[?]
34408But on the representation in 1877 of''Locura o Santidad?''
34408But shall a wretched beggar desire to attain to my fortune?
34408But shall the heaven rain with arrows?
34408But she said,"Where then is Odin that laid me here alow?
34408But thou art[?]
34408But thou, my votary, weepest thou?
34408But what are the feats that thou and thy fellows deem yourselves skilled in?
34408But what hast thou done with my glove?"
34408But who cares for poor Rika?
34408But who''d have thought it?
34408Can I tell it to him, saying, I took thy children to the nome of Thebes, I killed them, I being alive; I came to Memphis, I being alive still?''
34408Can you not suggest some girl for him, my sweet Rika?
34408Can you write, read, and cipher?"
34408Canst thou shine now, then darkle, And being latent, feel thyself no less?
34408Canst thou silent lie?
34408Canst thou, thy pride forgot, like nature pass Into the winter night''s extinguished mood?
34408Death is ever before me like as a man desireth to see his house when he hath spent many years in pulling[ the oars?].
34408Death is ever before me[?]
34408Did ever a ghost give a man a black eye?
34408Did n''t he ask for me?"
34408Did not the incantation run:--"I command thee, charmed plant, to bring me the man who will wound me as I wound thee"?
34408Do I not see it?
34408Do you know when he''s likely to be at liberty?"
34408Do you not see clouds of dust rolling hither from the town?
34408Do you think he will find some fair ones to choose from at Viersel?"
34408Do you want me to tell you?
34408Do your parents live far from here?"
34408Does it not better mold the tone and manners from within than any imitative"fashion"from without?
34408Dost thou ignore that the shadow of God is over me, and he doth not fail in any undertaking of mine?
34408Doth not the heart of thy Majesty cool with these things that thou hast done unto me?
34408Eh, it''s a pity but what Solomon lived in our village, and could give us a tune when he liked, eh, Mr. Macey?
34408FROM''MADMAN OR SAINT?''
34408For I am thy younger brother in truth; thou art to me as a father; thy wife is to me even as a mother: is it not so?
34408For I had cut for it a broad boat of acacia- wood, sixty cubits long, thirty cubits broad, and built it-- all this[?]
34408For thus the wood- gods murmured in my ear:"Dost love our manners?
34408Guard thyself against opening the lacunæ[?]
34408Had not most of the nation''s gifted men sprung from the ranks of the people?
34408Has a man gained anything who has received a hundred favors and rendered none?
34408Has he gained by borrowing, through indolence or cunning, his neighbor''s wares, or horses, or money?
34408Has he gone back,[96] the good scribe, the learned man, to whom there is no equal?''
34408Has it not all been a dream, poor impressionable little thing?
34408Hast thou Hlorridi''s hammer hidden?"
34408Hath a matter come to pass in the Residence?
34408Have I ever opened his door, or leaped over his fence?
34408Have we not seen it, felt it?
34408Have you brought a boat?"
34408He consulted me with a feverish"Hey?"
34408He said to his page who was with him,"What is this that goeth behind the man coming along the road?"
34408He spake with his soul, saying:--''Can I go to Koptos and dwell there?
34408He that remembereth a man is kind unto him in the years after the staff[ of power?]."
34408He who was prosperous last year, even in this may be a vagrant.[?]"
34408Hence arose the saying,"If I love you, what is that to you?"
34408Her husband said to her,"Who hath spoken with thee?"
34408Hey?
34408How do I know whether the milk''ull be wanted constant?
34408How fares it with thee, Thor?"
34408How goes it with the Alfar?
34408How shall fate be known?"
34408I acted according to his Majesty''s desire in performing the choosing of the guard[?
34408I alighted on the ground between the gates of reception[?
34408I am well, am I not?
34408I answered with the answer of one terrified,"What is it that my lord hath said?
34408I crossed the river on a raft without a rudder, by the aid of a west wind, and landed at the quay[?]
34408I directed them to the Island of the North, the Gate of I- hetep, the_ Uart_[?]
34408I gave thee sight-- where is it now?
34408I have not been lazy.[?]
34408I have not been very well.... Oh, a mere nothing; a small ailment, a neglected cold.... A slight cold, was it not, Yana?
34408I have not caught fish in their pools.[?]
34408I have not coveted.[?]
34408I have not made bubbles.[?]
34408I saw men of the Sati; and an alien amongst them-- he who is[ now?]
34408I strode around my tent rejoicing and saying:--"How is this done to the servant, whose heart had transgressed to a strange country of babbling tongue?
34408I suppose he dances awfully well, eh?"
34408I would not hearken to him:''Behold, am I not thy mother, is not thy elder brother to thee as a father?''
34408I''ve been looking at your wife''s beautiful dairy: the best manager in the parish, is she not?"
34408If I return in three days''time; if I repeat then that I love you madly; if I ask you to be my wife, will you refuse me?"
34408If Messer Domeneddio means so well by us as your Frate says he does, Ser Cioni, why should n''t he have sent the French another way to Naples?"
34408If he err and transgress thy way, and refuseth[?]
34408If it happen that I have not a child after two children, is it the law to marry the one with the other of them?
34408If malice and vanity wear the coat of philanthropy, shall that pass?
34408If one of you enters upon the wall there will be no stand against him[ for a moment], the levies[?]
34408Impossible?
34408Is a man to be declared mad because he is resolved to do his duty?
34408Is he going to prepare the groundwork of artistic labor with a view to ethical design, or pure artistic design?
34408Is it really true?"
34408Is mining done by dint of cutting through the snow?
34408Is that right, or do you desire higher cushions?
34408Is the interior of a house the nursery of insurgents?
34408Is there no one else?"
34408Is there perhaps any man who has told you that he loves you?
34408Is there?"
34408Is this the thrilling Nightingale''s beat?
34408It is vain[?]
34408Its onward force too starkly pent In figure, bone, and lineament?
34408Know''st thou what wove yon wood- bird''s nest Of leaves, and feathers from her breast?
34408LORELEI''Tis very late,''tis growing cold; Alone thou ridest through the wold?
34408Macey?"
34408Macey?"
34408Macey?"
34408May I come in?"
34408Mother, where are you?
34408Must I go away again?
34408Must we return home desolate?
34408My soul said unto me:[238]"Lay aside[?]
34408Nail the wild star to its track On the half climbed zodiac?
34408Naneferkaptah said to him,''For what art thou laughing at me?''
34408Nor see the genius of the whole Ascendant in the private soul?
34408Now when I was judge, his Majesty made me a sole friend and superintendent of the garden of Pharaoh, and I instructed[?]
34408Now when the days were multiplied after these things, he said to the youths,"What is it that ye do here?"
34408Now, in such private solace, in such solitary joys, is there not culture?
34408Of what interest is a soldier''s name to you?
34408Oh come, as late thou cam''st unsought, Or was it but some idle dream?
34408On my saying,"What have I to do with the sacredness of traditions, if I live wholly from within?"
34408One tribe passed me on to another: I departed to Sun[?
34408Or a spoonful of saffron rice?
34408Or how the fish outbuilt her shell, Painting with morn each annual cell?
34408Or how the sacred pine- tree adds To her old leaves new myriads?
34408Or perhaps you will have some more of this chine, which has been specially kept for your visit?
34408Otherwise, if it be that I go to Memphis, the moment that Pharaoh asks me after his children, what shall I say to him?
34408Perhaps she could find a sweetheart for lonely Rika?
34408Pharaoh said to him,''What is it that thou desirest?''
34408Pharaoh said,"Is it drinking that hath brought thee thus?"
34408Pharaoh said,"Setna, what has befallen thee in this state in which thou art?"
34408Poyser?"
34408Put your face to one of the glass panes in the right- hand window: what do you see?
34408Rebellious thoughts can find no place in her heart; but who that sees her can fail to think it and to say it?
34408Rika, when I return in three days''time, on Monday, will you meet me here?"
34408Rose Naneferkaptah on the couch; he said:"Art thou Setna, before whom this woman has told these misfortunes which thou hast not suffered-- all?
34408Seest thou that lofty gilded spire, Above these tufts of foliage green?
34408Setna said to the old man,"Thou art of the appearance of a man great of age: knowest thou the places of rest in which are Ahura and Merab her child?"
34408Setna said,"Naneferkaptah, is there aught that is disgraceful?"
34408She called out in a loud piercing voice:--"Tom, where are you?
34408She said to him,"How much of the corn that is wanted, is that which is on thy shoulder?"
34408She said to him,"Who then art thou?"
34408Should not the society of my friend be to me poetic, pure, universal, and great as nature itself?
34408Skrymir, awakening, cried out:--"What''s the matter?
34408So, after a few moments''silence, he looked up at her and said mildly,"What dost say?"
34408Sold to mine?
34408Soon, from the window of the attic in the central gable, she heard Tom''s voice:--"Who is it?
34408THE RHODORA ON BEING ASKED, WHENCE IS THE FLOWER?
34408THRYM"How goes it with the Æsir?
34408Taught he not thee-- the man of eld, Whose eyes within his eyes beheld Heaven''s numerous hierarchy span The mystic gulf from God to man?
34408Tell me how you and the Egyptians liked my envoys?"
34408That will make you grow.... What do you say to it?...
34408That''s what you''d like to be doing, is it?
34408The awful question"What is the use of it?
34408The book named, canst thou take it only by strength of a good scribe?
34408The bronze... are worn out, the horses[ oxen?]
34408The deep Heart answered,"Weepest thou?
34408The eating of bread is under the management of God: it is the ignorant that rebelleth[?]
34408The end of justice is that it endureth long; such as a man will say,''It is from_[?]
34408The list following the name of Tafnekht seems to name localities representative of the VIIth(?
34408The more definite question is: How can such a girl realize the great world of ideas?
34408The nature is better than the memory."[?]
34408The prince spake of it, saying,"The son of which of the princes is it?"
34408The remembrance of a man is of his kindliness in the years after the staff[ of power?].
34408The weak man[?]
34408The youth spake with his elder brother, saying:--"Wherefore earnest thou after me to slay me wrongfully, when thou hadst not heard my mouth speak?
34408Then he looked on his bare bright blade, and he said,"Thou-- what wilt thou do?
34408Then he said to me:--"For what hast thou come hither?
34408Then his Majesty came forth disposed to hate his soldiers, raging at them like a leopard:"Doth it yet remain for you to fight?
34408Then said Thrym, the Thursar''s prince:--"Where hast thou seen brides eat more voraciously?
34408Then the prince of Naharaina was exceeding angry; he said,"Shall I indeed give my daughter to the Egyptian fugitive?
34408Then there came a soft knock at her door; it was opened a little, and a timid voice whispered,"Is mamma alone?
34408Then they slew many men of them, and horses without number, in the charge[?].
34408Then what pray shall establish the assembly?
34408There are several inns between here and your fort, are there not?
34408There was given to me the house of Neb- mer[?
34408There''s a fine state of things.... What will Begga say?
34408Thereupon she asked me again,"Where then are you wandering so early in the morning?"
34408They are soft as butter.... A slice of ham?
34408They''ll run as fast as geese-- don''t you see they''re web- footed?"
34408Those heavy fragments hurrying down the Ripple,--what had they meant?
34408To be alone wilt thou begin, When worlds of lovers hem thee in?
34408Under her veil he stooped, desirous to salute her, but sprang back along the hall:--"Why are so piercing Freyja''s looks?
34408Verily that which cometh out of the store doth not enter[?
34408Was it not justice?
34408Was it still the kermesse organ which obsessed me, lingering above all other sounds, growing fainter and fainter but never quite dying away?
34408What are you waiting for?
34408What can so quickly magnetize a people into this harmonic mood as music?
34408What can we do, what can we do, Ernest?
34408What did my uncle''s authoritative tone mean in my father''s house, in_ our_ house?
34408What do you know about that?
34408What does it matter whether I live or die?
34408What is that dirge- like murmur that I hear Like the sea breaking on a shingle beach?
34408What is the manner of going to Memphis that I can do, there being no clothes on earth upon me?"
34408What is the reason to be given for this extreme attraction which_ persons_ have for us, but that they are the Age?
34408What is this great wickedness that thou hast said?
34408What is this?
34408What mad race has he been running?
34408What new fatality floats in the air and hangs threateningly above my head?
34408What shall I do to you, you naughty, naughty gell?"
34408What shall so temper and tone down our"fierce democracy"?
34408What sorrow filled the heart of this fair young girl of eighteen summers?
34408What then shall I say to my mother, To whom I come daily Laden with wild- fowl?
34408What was happening to them at the Mill?
34408What was it that filled the ears of the prophets of old but the distant tread of foreign armies, coming to do the work of justice?
34408What were those masses?
34408What would he have us do?
34408What would people say if they met me with you?
34408What''s up now, you grumbling devil?"
34408Where do you come from?
34408Where is mother?"
34408Which is the way home?"
34408Which way did the river lie?
34408While he conducted Nitetis to the carriage, she pressed his arm against her breast and whispered,"Are you satisfied with me, my father?"
34408Who are you to part me from my child?
34408Who began talking of me?
34408Who bought them, I should like to know?"
34408Who can analyze the nameless charm which glances from one and another face and form?
34408Who can say?
34408Who could become acquainted with noble Croesus without loving him?
34408Who could help admiring the excellent qualities of the young heroes, your friends?
34408Who heard the cry?
34408Who is it that hath led thee?
34408Who is it that led thee?
34408Who is like unto thee in these things?
34408Who is thy servant that he should be considered, that words should be spent upon him?
34408Who taught you to scrub a floor, I should like to know?
34408Why are they together?
34408Why are your lips drawn as if with pain?
34408Why art thou come alone to Jötunheim?"
34408Why be visited by him at your own?
34408Why did Yana look at him respectfully but sullenly?
34408Why do my family worry me with their advice?
34408Why do your eyes shine, Ernest?
34408Why go to his house, or know his mother and brother and sisters?
34408Why insist on rash personal relations with your friend?
34408Why should she speak of remorse?
34408Why should the vest on him allure, Which I could not on me endure?
34408Why should we desecrate noble and beautiful souls by intruding on them?
34408Why this week''s separation?
34408Why, the Squire used to invite him to take a glass, only to hear him sing the''Red Rovier''; did n''t he, Mr. Macey?
34408Why?"
34408Will God forget what is ordained for him?
34408Wilt thou freeze love''s tidal flow, Whose streams through Nature circling go?
34408Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach, and sunsets show?
34408Wilt thou, uncalled, interrogate,-- Talker!--the unreplying Fate?
34408Wo n''t you even wear a scapulary?"
34408Wo n''t you please to sit down, sir?"
34408Would it be well to take advantage of the absence of her master and mistress and consult the fortune- teller?
34408Would rushing life forget her laws, Fate''s glowing revolution pause?
34408You do not love each other like brother and sister, then?
34408You must have been a little rude to him?"
34408You remember when first Mr. Lammeter''s father come into these parts, and took the Warrens?"
34408You were live enough, eh?"
34408[ 131] Tehneh(?)
34408[ 140] Who is it that hath led thee?
34408[ 151] Athet- taui( Lisht?)
34408[ 154] I shall be[ away traveling] three[?]
34408[ 235] Death is ever before me like a road watered[?
34408[ 239] I have not acted perversely[ prevaricated?
34408[ 282] Do not wash the heart[283] of him who agreeth with[?]
34408[ 282] Flatter(?).
34408[ 308] Do what is admirable; cause not thyself to be mocked;[?]
34408[ 30] I wandered across my estate[31][?]
34408[ 37] There I spent a year and a month[?].
34408[ 44] Meaning"reeds"(?).
34408[ 46] But is there a bull that loveth battle, a courageous bull that loveth to repeat the charge in terrifying him whose strength he hath measured?
34408[ 68] When the land was lightened, and the second day came,[69] there came some to summon me, four men in coming, four men in going,[70] to carry[?]
34408[ 71] Do not, do not, be silent and speechless; tell thy name; is it fear that preventeth thee?"
34408[ Do not repeat scandal[?].]
34408[ I was] chief of the_ debat_[?]
34408[??]
34408[??]
34408[?]
34408[?]
34408[_ Aloud._] What is this?
34408[_ Pause._] Did I not hear Inez-- the child of my heart-- speak of remorse?
34408], but bread is apportioned; he that is niggardly of face is remorseful;[?]
34408]; the royal children stood at the platform to greet[?]
34408_ Copy of the acknowledgment of this command._"The servant of the royal house[?
34408_ Edward_--And it would be vile, and criminal, and a source of remorse, to make Inez happy?
34408_ Edward_[_ with scornful vehemence_]--And what is that pallor, what are those tears, and what the tragedies you speak of?
34408_ Ernest_--Well, then, what do you wish?
34408_ Ernest_--What does he desire, Teodora?
34408_ Inez_--And why not?
34408_ Inez_--Do I rightly know myself what I mean?
34408_ Julian_--And he?
34408_ Julian_--Why do they not come to me?
34408_ Julian_--You ask my pardon?
34408_ Julian_[_ to Teodora and Ernest_]--You are afraid, then?
34408_ Julian_[_ watching them with instinctive distrust_]--Ah, would you deceive me to my very face?
34408_ List of their names_:-- The King Usorkon in Per Bast and the territory of Ranefer; The King Auapeth in Tentremu and Taanta[?
34408_ Lorenzo_--What do you mean by those words?
34408_ Teodora_--What do you wish?
34408_ that obtain wealth; never did the greedy_[?]
34408are not these the years of thy life upon earth?
34408art thou awake, Thor?
34408conjured up anything more beautiful?
34408did an acorn fall on my head?
34408do you think I can sleep before I have heard something about the ball?
34408e._, What does Egypt do without the king?
34408e._, he did not impress men( wrongfully?)
34408four[?]
34408how?"
34408in seventeen days, in the third month of harvest,[201] when behold there was no water on the junctions[?]
34408in the neighborhood of Nehat; I reached the island[ or lake] of Seneferu, and spent the day[ resting?]
34408is put upon thy forehead, driving away from thee the beggarly[?]
34408lord of all the gods, Who see him[?]
34408says he, and then he says,''Wilt thou have this woman to thy wedded husband?''
34408weapons were brandished[?
34408what is it?
34408what is the use of it?"
34408why, traitors?
40533But is Dartmouth College such an institution? 40533 But,"he continues,"is this a case of''confidence''?
40533Did you hear what the Chief Justice said the other day?
40533Do you believe, that the Legislature will pass a bill of attainder, or an_ ex post facto_ law? 40533 For what are the states talking about disunion, and for what are they going to war among themselves?
40533Have you ever seen anything to equal the exhibition in Charleston and in the far South generally?
40533If a judge can repeal a law of Congress, by declaring it unconstitutional, is not this the exercise of political power? 40533 If this power over vessels is not in Congress, where does it reside?
40533In what does the office of a Judge consist? 40533 Is a suit, brought against an individual, for any cause whatever, a suit against a state, in the sense of the constitution?
40533Is it from the act of incorporation? 40533 Is there one sentence in the constitution which gives countenance to this rule?"
40533Is this[ conscription]... consistent with the character of a free Government?... 40533 On what safe and intelligible ground can this exception stand?"
40533Reason and argument? 40533 The question constantly recurs-- do you mean that the Judges shall be removable at the will of the Legislature?
40533This was inserted, for what?
40533What has since occurred to strip it of its inviolability? 40533 What hinders Vermont... from resuming her grants,"upon the ground that she, equally with New Hampshire, is"the representative of the publick?"
40533What is a bill of credit?
40533What is this right of search? 40533 What is to become of us and of our constitution?
40533What shall restrain independent nations from making such a compactas they please?
40533What would then be the condition of the court, should the Legislature prosecute a man, with an earnest wish to convict him?... 40533 What... is our condition?
40533Who ever appointed a legislature to administer his charity? 40533 Who has any private interest either in the objects or the property of this institution?"
40533Who... can remember, without regret, his conduct in relation to the batture of New Orleans?
40533[ 1078] If the Bank brings suits on a contract, the very first, thefoundation"question is,"has this legal entity a right to sue?...
40533[ 1081] Just what will be the result if the National courts have not this power? 40533 [ 1138] In what respect did the steamboat monopoly violate any of these restrictions?
40533[ 1179] And to what will all this lead? 40533 [ 1181] And why, at the present moment, insist on this"new construction of the Constitution?...
40533[ 1308] If the Constitution means this, why is it not so expressed? 40533 [ 1478] What is the capital question in dispute?
40533[ 1479] Can States decide? 40533 [ 419] What, then, is the"nature and extent of the appellate jurisdiction of the United States"?
40533[ 589] Why the scarcity of money when that commodity was most needed? 40533 [ 603] What are the arguments that such law does not violate the Constitution?
40533[ 692] Vermont has given lands to the College; was this a gift to New Hampshire? 40533 [ 741] This being so, is such a contract"protected"by the Constitution, and do the New Hampshire College Acts impair that contract?
40533[ 745] Does the fact that the purpose of the College is the education of youth make it a public corporation? 40533 [ 750] For whose benefit was the property of Dartmouth College given to that institution?
40533[ 755] Can such a contract be impaired by a State Legislature? 40533 [ 756] Can the courts now make such an exception?
40533[ 760] Do the New Hampshire College Acts impair the obligations of Dartmouth''s charter? 40533 [ 788] Assuming the law which established the Bank to be Constitutional, could Maryland tax a branch of that Bank?
40533[ 793] Could powers of Congress be inferred as a necessary means to the desired end? 40533 [ 844] Regardless of this fact, however, can States tax instrumentalities of the National Government?
40533[ 871] Are the people preparedto give_ carte blanche_ to our federal rulers"?
40533[ 968] Why was the Constitution established? 40533 (_ Ib._) CHAPTER VII THREATS OF WAR Can not the Union exist unless Congress and the Supreme Court shall make banks and lotteries? 40533 And had not Georgia ordered her Governor to resist the enforcement of that provision of that ancient act of Congress? 40533 And how does your system work? 40533 And must not commerce between Statesremote"from one another, pass through States lying between them?
40533And why were"ample powers"given to that Government?
40533Are all teachers public officers?
40533Are the rights of the Trustees any the less sacred"because they have undertaken to administer it[ the trust] gratuitously?...
40533Are there not already causes enough of jealousy and discord existing among us?...
40533Are these all perished?
40533As to the constitutionality of Section 25 of the Judiciary Act--"could it be new, especially to a Virginia lawyer"?
40533But as our country fills up how shall we escape the evils which have followed a dense population?
40533But can the operation of that clause be confined to paper money?
40533But is this true?
40533But who will it be?"
40533But why not navigation?
40533But"for what do you make a Constitution?"
40533But, asked Marshall, were the words"office and Court synonymes"?
40533By what reasoning is a protective tariff made Constitutional?
40533Can States tax these branches, as Maryland has tried to do?
40533Can States"annul the law of Congress"?
40533Can it be supported by reason?
40533Can the charter"be such a contract as the constitution intended to withdraw from the power of state legislation?
40533Can the wise men of the East answer that question?
40533Can these appearances prove fallacious?
40533Did not such expressions import that Congress could"conform the constitution to their own designs"by the exercise of"unlimited and uncontrouled"power?
40533Did the framers of the Constitution"when granting these powers for the public good"intend to impede"their exercise by withholding a choice of means?"
40533Do you believe, that the Legislature will put forth their grasp upon private property, without compensation?
40533Do you believe, that they will pass a law impairing the obligation of contracts?
40533Do you see any great evil in such a provision?
40533Does it give the State"any exclusive right to the property of the college, any exclusive interest in the labors of the professors?"
40533Does it reside in the States?
40533Does not every man feel that his own personal security and the security of his property depends on that fairness?
40533Does public policy demand a construction which will exclude it?
40533Does"the nature and reason of the case itself... sustain a construction of the constitution, not warranted by its words?"
40533Finally one of the youthful combatants turned to him and said:"Well, my old gentleman, what think you of these things?"
40533For the people at large, as counsel insist?
40533Had not Ellsworth, when Chief Justice, so decided in the famous case of Isaac Williams?
40533Have they altogether lost the memory of Washington''s farewell address?...
40533Have they"come into collision with an act of Congress, and deprived a citizen of a right to which that act entitles him"?
40533How are your Senators apportioned on the State?
40533How is this to be prevented?"
40533How should these invasions of the rights of the States be checked?
40533How, asked Johnson, had the Bank fulfilled expectations and promises?
40533How?
40533I know he was not deemed a profound common lawyer; but was there ever a profound common lawyer known in one of the Eastern States?
40533If a judge can repeal a law of Congress, by declaring it unconstitutional, is not this the exercise of political power?
40533If any one of them were valid, would anybody"point out where the state right stopped?
40533If not, why provide against it?...
40533If they may be removed at pleasure, will any lawyer of distinction come upon your bench?
40533In the four quarters of the globe, who reads an American book?
40533In this situation can the title to the vessel be adjudicated by American courts?
40533In what phraseology would you make such a provision?"
40533Is education altogether in the hands of government?"
40533Is it a meteor we have seen and mistaken for that splendid luminary which dispenses light and gladness throughout creation?
40533Is it nothing to sow the seeds of incurable alienation?
40533Is it to legislate under the sword of the Commander- in- Chief?...
40533Is not their independence preserved under the present system?
40533Is then the court to decide the_ degree_ of"interest"necessary to make a State a party?
40533Is there any remedy for this state of things?
40533Is this a time to increase those jealousies between different quarters of the country already sufficiently apparent?"
40533Is this the case with the New York steamboat monopoly acts?
40533Is this true?
40533It is this:"Whose prerogative is it to decide on the constitutionality or unconstitutionality of the laws?
40533It is true, they assembled in their several states-- and where else should they have assembled?
40533Need I press the necessity of this?
40533Of what avail the power given Congress by the Constitution if the States may thus"derange the measures of Congress to regulate commerce"?
40533One of these questions was: What, in international law, is the status of a revolting province during civil war?
40533Or who ever heard, before, that a gift to a_ college_, or_ hospital_, or an_ asylum_, was, in reality, nothing but a gift to the state?
40533Ought Spanish property, for that reason, to be"condemned as prize of war"?
40533Plainly it will work well for everybody:"If the Senate would protect the East, will it not protect the West also?"
40533Responsibility to what?
40533S.(?
40533Shall their fate depend upon"the rise and fall of popular parties, and the fluctuations of political opinions"?
40533Should that Territory come into the Union only on condition that slavery be prohibited within the new State, or should the slave system be retained?
40533Should"a public officer... receive the public money any longer than he renders service to the public"?
40533Since the new Justice must come from New England,"can any other bring equal qualifications?...
40533So the only practical question is:"Can a state regulate commerce with foreign nations and among the states while Congress is regulating it?
40533Some concession must be made on both sides.... What is the real situation of the parties?"
40533Such declarations... will have no... effect upon me.... Is it... the intention of gentlemen to arouse... the South to rebellion?
40533Suppose the courts at the mercy of the Legislature?
40533The State banks would not resist-- were they not under the control of the people''s Legislature?
40533To what point are we verging?
40533To what purpose enumerate the particular modes of violation which should be forbidden, when it was intended to forbid all?...
40533Walking straight up to a bowl of mint julep, he poured a tumbler full of the liquid, drank it off, said,"How are you, gentlemen?"
40533Was a big new house desired?
40533Was not the object of the Embargo, which"engaged the attention of every man in the United States,"avowedly"the protection of commerce?...
40533Was this act of Congress Constitutional?
40533Was war at hand?
40533What can we hope for in such circumstances?
40533What could be easier or more just than to enact legislation that would lift the burden of debt that was crushing the people?
40533What does the world yet owe to American physicians or surgeons?
40533What has the Legislature done to the College?
40533What is meant by"a strict construction"?
40533What is the injury which Ogden complains that Gibbons has done him?
40533What is the one involved in this case?
40533What is the prop[erty] qualification for your Senate?
40533What is the real meaning of the anti- National crusade; what the certain outcome of it?
40533What is this but despotism?
40533What new constellations have been discovered by the telescopes of Americans?--what have they done in the mathematics...?
40533What new substances have their chemists discovered?
40533What now shall fill these widow''d arms?
40533What shall be done?
40533What then ought America to do?"
40533What were the duties of a judge?
40533What were the rights of citizens in war- time?
40533What, asks Webster, is the meaning of the words,"no state shall pass any... law impairing the obligation of contracts"?
40533What, then, could"arrest this calamity"?
40533Whence comes the power of Congress to prescribe punishment for violations of National laws?
40533Whence, then, comes"the idea that Dartmouth College has become a public institution?...
40533Where does Marshall''s"artifice of verbalizing"lead?
40533Who shall touch these blind eyes?
40533Who would have dreamed of such an occurrence?
40533Whose opinion shall prevail?
40533Why has M^{r.} Barlow been unable to obtain a paper which might consult the honor& spare the feelings of his government?
40533Why ought the powers"expressly granted"to the National Government to be"construed strictly,"as many insist that they should be?
40533Why provide that"no bill of attainder, or an_ ex post facto_ law, shall be passed?
40533Why refuse this adjustment?
40533Why should a private charity, incorporated for the purpose of education, be excluded from the rules that apply to other corporations?
40533Why should not the National Judiciary be made answerable to the people?
40533Why then expunge the prohibition?...
40533Why then is this obvious fabrication such as we find it?
40533Why, then, did the Constitution_ expressly_ confer powers which, of necessity, must be implied?
40533Will you draw down this curse upon Virginia?
40533Would the people of any one state trust those of another with a power to control the most insignificant operations of their state government?
40533You might as well reason and argue with the marble columns encircling them[ Congress and the Supreme Court].... Are we then_ to stand to our arms_?...
40533[ 1024]"Can not the Union subsist unless Congress and the Supreme Court shall make banks and lotteries?
40533[ 1144] But what were New York waters and what were New Jersey waters?
40533[ 1192] What was the state of the country with respect to transportation?
40533[ 1197] What commerce is to be regulated by Congress?
40533[ 1208] What does the word"commerce"mean?
40533[ 1212] What is this power to"regulate commerce"?
40533[ 1480] The people... have declared that this Constitution shall be the supreme law....[1481] Who is to judge between the people and the Government?
40533[ 277]"Is it possible,"asks Tyler,"that a man who can assert this, can have any true sense of sound veracity?
40533[ 357] Was the Territorial act, under which the local court at Key West ordered the auction sale, valid?
40533[ 600] What is the effect of that law?
40533[ 601]"What is the obligation of a contract?
40533[ 689] Does Dartmouth College stand alone in this respect?
40533[ 973] What will be the result if Virginia''s attitude is confirmed?
40533[ Illustration: JOHN TAYLOR] Whence this effort to endow the National Government with powers comparable to those of a monarchy?
40533and what will impair it?
40533can there be no responsibility, unless your Judges shall be removable at pleasure?
40533exclaimed John Rowan, another member of the Legislature, shall Kentucky again petition"like a degraded province of Rome"?
40533he wrote;"the death of George III?
40533or goes to an American play?
40533or looks at an American picture or statue?
40533or what old ones have they analyzed?
40533that of the legislators and President, or that of the Court?
40533to the will of the Legislature?
40533under which of the old tyrannical governments of Europe is every sixth man a Slave, whom his fellow- creatures may buy and sell and torture?"
40533when his decision may offend a powerful and influential man?
40533will nothing short of this satisfy gentlemen?
51973Ai n''t it funny?
51973Have you got any antidote with you?
51973How long ago?
51973There''s no rum in it, is there?
51973Think so?
51973*****"It''s going to be a long, cold winter; do n''t you think so?"
51973A long life, perhaps, for longevity is one of the characteristics of this class of hens; but of what has that life been productive?
51973And what has such a hen to look back upon in her closing hours?
51973And yet, what thanks do I get?
51973Are you going to snap your fingers in disdain at men who admit that they are superior to anybody else?
51973But why should we, here in the West, take readily to all other institutions common to the cultured East and ignore the forefather industry?
51973But would it not do Columbus good to come among us today and look over our free institutions?
51973But, Henry, why will you insist on fighting the young man from Ohio?
51973Could you assist us?
51973Did it ever occur to the average thinking mind that we might squeeze along for weeks without a dog?
51973Do you not think that possibly you have made a mistake and got your ointment and cement formula mixed?
51973Do you think them yourself, or is there some boy in the school that thinks all the thoughts for the rest?
51973Finally she breathed a long sigh and murmured,"Where am I?"
51973Finally the Correjos man ventured:"Do you have to use an antidote to cure the thirst?"
51973Have n''t heard of anybody who has lost a star of the fifteenth magnitude, about thirteen hands high, with light mane and tail, have you?"
51973Have you forgot how I fatted up the old cow and beefed her so that you could go and monkey with youclid and aigebray?
51973Have you forgot how the other boys pulled you through a mill pond and made you tobogin down hill in a salt barrel with brads in it?
51973How can I discover whether he is or is not playing and old, threadbare star on me for a new one?
51973How could you describe the jimjams so graphically?"
51973How do I know that it was there when I bought it?
51973How''s that?
51973I said, did I understand you to say"ropium?"
51973If I did not turn on my own heel when I went away, whose heel would a lonely man like me turn upon?
51973In Denver your friend says:"Will you come with me and shed a tear?"
51973Is it not sad to contemplate?
51973Now, how do I know that he has discovered a brand new star?
51973Now, how would it do to make a collection of the signatures of the presidents and cashiers of national banks of the United States in the above manner?
51973Now, what do you care for an administration which will only gratify those two old parties?
51973Still, what does a man know about the proper costume of a woman?
51973Then why can not the poor gradually taper oft on dogs?
51973These I would ask in all seriousness and in a tone of voice that would melt the stoniest heart:"Why in creation do you do it?"
51973Was it because they were blest with a bluer sky or a more genial sun?
51973What has the drunkard ever done for you, that you should fill his grave for him?
51973What must those precautions be?
51973What shall we do to avoid getting impregnated with the American dog and then saturating our systems with the alien dog of Paris?
51973Who hath woe?
51973Why Haul Your Wheat Through the Sand to Herculaneum, When We Pay the Same Price Here?
51973Why did trade and emigration turn their backs upon Babylon and seek out Minneapolis, St. Paul, Kansas City and Omaha?
51973Why does a man frown on a certain costume for his wife, and admire it on the first woman he meets?
51973Why does he fight shy of religion and Christianity and talk very freely about the church, but get mad if his wife is an infidel?
51973Why should a seanyour in a colledge tromp onto the young chaps that come in there to learn?
51973Why was it, I asked, that matrimony should ever single out the young and fair?
51973Why was it?
51973Will ye give it up to slaves?"
51973You sabbe me?
51973of sixteen aggregated circuses, and eleven congresses of ferocious beasts, fierce and fragrant from their native lair, went by us?
51973who hath sorrow and some more things of that kind?
56698Has that time come, think you? 56698 After a time Joseph whispered to Dan Jones who was lying beside him,Are you afraid to die?"
56698But what was to be done now?
56698But which church should he join?
56698Do you think you are as earnest in your prayers?
56698Do you wonder why Oliver was with Joseph instead of Sidney Rigdon, or Frederick G. Williams?
56698He read one, and looking up with a frown on his face said:"What can I do?
56698Joseph refused to see him without witnesses, and as they spoke he pointed to Foster''s breast and said,"What have you concealed there?"
56698Now what should the two men have done in such a position?
56698The Prophet said,"Do you not believe in Jesus Christ?"
56698The life of a Prophet is not the easiest in the world, is it?
56698The two sheriffs were frightened nearly to death, thinking they were going to be punished at once, and Reynolds asked,"Is Jem Flack in the crowd?"
56698Then his angel came and said,"Joseph, why are you here?"
56698They thought to themselves,"How can we get our land back and drive away these cursed Mormons if we agree to be at peace with them?"
56698What could show more gratitude?
56698Why did not all in Ohio move to Missouri, the land which the Lord had said was Zion?
56698Why did they remain apart?
56698have I not seen it?
3683A lawyer?
3683A particular reason?
3683A picture?
3683Ah, Vane,he said, in his most affable tones,"how are you?"
3683An attack?
3683And Mrs. Pomfret tells me they play many detestable tricks on you-- yes?
3683And all this has been going on without my knowledge, when you knew my sentiments towards the man?
3683And do you think,she asked,"that I would allow you to go the rest of the way alone?"
3683And he gave you the impression,she continued slowly,"that he was deceitful, and dishonourable, and a coward?
3683And the-- lady?
3683And what is that essential?
3683And what''s that?
3683And why should he dirty himself with politics?
3683And you believe that, by taking thought, you can get the kind of a wife you want?
3683And you refused?
3683And you tell me he has not done these things?
3683And you thought,she asked slowly,"that I was that kind of a woman?"
3683And your father?
3683Are you comfortable?
3683Are you going to lie down under that?
3683Are you in much pain?
3683Are you sick?
3683Are you sure you can spare the time?
3683Are you sure you have done right?
3683Austen Vane was n''t here to- night?
3683But has n''t he had-- a victory?
3683But what are you doing at home in the middle of the morning?
3683But-- do you think I could cultivate the rest?
3683But-- dreadful thought!--suppose I should lack an essential?
3683But-- have you time?
3683Came in here to find out-- didn''t you, Whitredge?
3683Can you get tickets for ten?
3683Caucus-- caucus? 3683 Certainly,"he replied;"does that strike you as strange?"
3683Did Hilary Vane tell you he would go to the convention?
3683Did n''t you know who it was?
3683Did she scold you-- Phrasie?
3683Did you come up here with orders for me to get out?
3683Do n''t you think this is a little-- marked?
3683Do n''t you think we should be going back?
3683Do n''t you think,asked Victoria, summoning her courage,"that Austen Vane ought to be told?"
3683Do n''t you think,she asked bravely,"that Mr. Austen Vane ought to be told that his father is-- in this condition?"
3683Do you always beat people if they do wrong?
3683Do you believe it now?
3683Do you honestly believe that?
3683Do you mind if I go a bit farther, Miss Flint?
3683Do you realize what it means if we lose control? 3683 Do you think I could be deceived?"
3683Do you think old Hilary does n''t know what he''s about?
3683Do you think,she asked, glancing at him,"do you think you have money enough to go abroad-- just for a little while?"
3683Do you-- remember the verse?
3683Do you?
3683Does Hilary Vane defend him?
3683Dreaming, Victoria?
3683Flint''s daughter?
3683For God''s sake, Brush,cries the Honourable Elisha,"has n''t this thing gone far enough?
3683For how long?
3683Had n''t you better see her?
3683Had n''t you better write him?
3683Has Miss Victoria retired?
3683Have I?
3683Have n''t I spent the days of my active life in the service of that road--and is this my reward? 3683 Have you got orders to sit down there?"
3683Have you ordered your uniform yet, Ham?
3683Have you the right to tell Austen?
3683He resigned three days ago?
3683He thinks he''s got the nomination cinched, do n''t he?
3683Hearing things?
3683Henderson?
3683His daughter?
3683How are you, Hilary?
3683How are you, Mr. Giddings? 3683 How can I tell when these idiots will give me any rest?"
3683How do you know?
3683How free have you been?
3683How is your father this afternoon?
3683How long have you cared, Victoria?
3683How many times have you spoken with Austen Vane?
3683How much did you say you''d spent, Adam?
3683How much have you spent?
3683How''s Hilary?
3683Hunt had been promised the governorship for a long time, and when Ridout became out of the question--"Why did Ridout become out of the question?
3683I am going away to- morrow, but--"Away?
3683I have n''t been very hospitable, have I?
3683I hear you are what they call reform in America?
3683Is Mr. Hilary Vane here?
3683Is he a delegate?
3683Is n''t it natural that I should wish to have my judgment vindicated?
3683Is n''t that Mr. Putter, who keeps a livery- stable here?
3683Is n''t that borrowing trouble, Victoria?
3683Is n''t there another place,he asked,"where I might lose my way?"
3683Is n''t this-- victory enough?
3683Is the fellow drunk?
3683May I ask you something?
3683Might I not linger-- a few minutes?
3683No new row?
3683Now the question is, what are we going to do? 3683 Obstinate?"
3683Ought n''t he to be told-- at once?
3683Pass?
3683Perhaps-- if it were not too much to ask-- perhaps you might come to see him, sometime? 3683 Rode down to look at the scrap- heap,--did he?"
3683She ai n''t married?
3683She''s not going to marry that chap, is she, Miss Chillingham?
3683She''s not playin''with you?
3683So you refused to be governor? 3683 So you think Austen''s in love?"
3683Superannuated-- unfit for duty--unable to cope with the situation ready to be superseded? 3683 Suppose Crewe goes into the convention with enough delegates to lock it up, so that none of the three has a majority?"
3683Suppose I did tell you so,said Victoria,"would you believe me?
3683Suppose,she added gently,"suppose that the kind of wife you''d want would n''t want you?"
3683That''s part of my business, is n''t it?
3683They do n''t often have governors that young, do they?
3683This is kind of mysterious, ai n''t it, Hilary?
3683Tim,he says,"where can we sit down?
3683Towers, who was that?
3683Towers,he said, when the butler appeared,"is Mr. Freeman still in my room?
3683Victoria, can you guess who that friend is?
3683Was I?
3683Was yours-- easily mended?
3683We''re flattered-- aren''t we, Beatrice?
3683Well, Victoria?
3683Well, father?
3683Well?
3683What are you trying to get at, Hilary,he inquired, sending for me to meet you out here in the woods in this curious way?
3683What became of all the hopes, Words and song and lute as well? 3683 What can you expect when a railroad owns a State?
3683What did it come to?
3683What difference does that make?
3683What do you mean?
3683What do you mean?
3683What do you mean?
3683What for?
3683What in the world''s the matter with you?
3683What is it?
3683What is that?
3683What is their business?
3683What were they?
3683What''s that?
3683What''s that?
3683What''s the matter with you, Vane? 3683 What''s the matter?
3683What''s the matter?
3683What''s the use of both of us knowing the language?
3683What''s this?
3683What''s your diagnosis?
3683What,asked Victoria, with her eyes on the river,"what are the wages?"
3683What-- for instance?
3683What? 3683 What?"
3683What?
3683When is that woman going away?
3683Where are you from?
3683Where are you going?
3683Where have your eyes been to- night, my friends? 3683 Who have you picked?"
3683Who is the dark horse?
3683Who is the man whose name is signed to that message?
3683Who makes this offer?
3683Who?
3683Who?
3683Who?
3683Why did n''t he understand her? 3683 Why did you pretend it was the view?"
3683Why did you think that?
3683Why have n''t you tried it, Phrasie?
3683Why not?
3683Why, if I got out--"What then?
3683Why,he exclaimed, with a masculine lack of delicacy,"he may be in love--""That''s struck you, has it?"
3683Why?
3683Will Flint put up a bond of one hundred thousand dollars that I''ll be nominated and elected next year? 3683 Will you come up for tea?"
3683Will you ever change?
3683Would you take a cheque, Adam?
3683Yes?
3683Yes?
3683Yes?
3683You ai n''t exactly what they call a tyro, are you?
3683You ca n''t be in love with any one else?
3683You do n''t smoke, do you?
3683You do n''t?
3683You have seen my father?
3683You mean my son?
3683You mean they fight with the fist-- so? 3683 You will remember me to your father?"
3683You wo n''t marry me?
3683You''d have done it for anybody along the road, would you?
3683You''ll see her?
3683You''ve known him a good while, have n''t you, Tom?
3683You?
3683( How about the last ballot, Senator, which showed 1011?)
3683A new railroad commission that we ca n''t talk to, and lower dividends-- lower dividends, do you understand?
3683A persistent and terrifying rumour goes the rounds, where''s Tom Gaylord?
3683A very funny picture-- it is in fun, yes?"
3683After that I become a lawyer-- lawyer, do you understand?"
3683Although Victoria had a memory( what woman worth her salt has not?
3683And Giles Henderson is nominated-- Hilary?"
3683And are they not quite as important in government, if not more important, than material interests?
3683And does Austen Vane desire it?
3683And have you any right to keep the news from him?
3683And he-- would he, too, be denied it?
3683And if this government proves a failure, how long do you think the material interests of which you are so solicitous will endure?
3683And must she go on all her life hearing praises of him?
3683And to her?
3683And what explanations can I make which can be printed in a public report?"
3683And what now?
3683And who have we got to put in his place?
3683And who''s the dark horse?"
3683And yet, would the eagle attempt the great flights if contentment were on the plain?
3683Are the supporters of the People''s Champion crest- fallen, think you?
3683Are there no such things as moral interests, Mr. Flint?
3683Are we not at the mercy of any and all unscrupulous men who build up a power of their own, and start again the blackmail of the old days?"
3683Are you ill?"
3683Are you sick?"
3683As we see her this morning, could she indeed ever have had a love affair?
3683Austen, ai n''t you going to see her?"
3683Austen, are you feeling poorly?"
3683Austen?"
3683But how?
3683But now?
3683But the cause of this trouble is mental-- can''t you see it?
3683But then, you seemed in such a hurry to go, did n''t you?
3683But was it not Mr. Henderson''s duty?
3683But what so natural( to one who had lived the life of Austen Vane) as that she should marry amongst those whose ways of life were her ways?
3683But who and what is this?
3683Ca n''t we go,"she added, with an inspiration,"ca n''t we go into-- the kitchen?"
3683Ca n''t you see that it has eaten into his soul?
3683Can you get a deal through between Giles Henderson and Adam Hunt?
3683Could he think that she would make advances to tempt his honour, and risk his good opinion and her own?
3683Could it be that Hilary felt remorse?
3683Could it be that he loved Austen in some peculiar manner all his own?
3683Could she care?
3683Could there be another standard by which men and women were measured and judged?
3683Could this indeed be her figure, and this her face on which he watched the colour rise( so he remembered afterwards) like the slow flood of day?
3683Did Hilary send you down here?"
3683Do n''t you ever think of that?"
3683Do n''t you think that he would come to his father if he knew?
3683Do the gods ever confer the rarest of gifts upon him to whom they have given pinions?
3683Do they mate him, ever, with another who soars as high as he, who circles higher that he may circle higher still?
3683Do you know what I am?"
3683Do you know what a caucus is?"
3683Do you know, Euphrasia, there were two reasons why those were the best pies I ever ate?"
3683Do you remember how you took hold of me that day, and begged me to stay?
3683Do you remember the last night you came to Jabe Jenney''s?
3683Do you think that I''d love her, that I''d plead for her, if she did n''t?"
3683Do you understand?"
3683Do you understand?"
3683Do you wish a greater victory than this, or a sadder one?
3683Does he know what he''s about?
3683Does n''t he realize the danger?
3683Flint?"
3683Had he been confounded by the advent of the Honourable Giles?
3683Have n''t I done what Flint wanted always?"
3683Have the pipers warned the Honourable Adam of the rising tide against him?
3683Have they asked him to gird up his loins and hire halls and smite the upstart hip and thigh?
3683Have you a telephone?"
3683Have you any right to decide what their vengeance shall be?"
3683Have you got orders to sit down there?"
3683Have you seen the people coming into these headquarters?
3683Have you seen''em pouring into any other headquarters?
3683He seems the only calm man to be found in the hall-- but is the calm aberration?
3683Here the puzzled expression returned to his face,"But they are birds, are they not?"
3683How are the cows?
3683How are you going to stop it?
3683How can you be so cruel?"
3683How could I have known that you were just-- stupid?"
3683How could you?
3683How do you know?"
3683How in blazes can you call the roll when you do n''t know who''s here?
3683How much are you getting out of this?
3683How would Mr. Flint take it?
3683I was going to ask you-- have you thought of Mr. Austen Vane?
3683I''m going to Ripton-- do you understand?
3683If you ca n''t be landed this time, it''s common sense for you to get out, and wait-- isn''t it?
3683If you wanted to see me, why did n''t you get me to go down to Ripton, or come up and sit on my porch?
3683Individual:"Do you want to come in and see the convention and vote?"
3683Is it possible that there is a split in the feudal system at last?
3683Is n''t Mr. Tooting one of your right- hand men?"
3683Is n''t that so, Flint?"
3683Is n''t there a sofa in--in the parlour?"
3683Is that about it?"
3683Mr. Vane unquestionably realized what he was doing, but-- was it not almost time to call in the two gentlemen and-- and come to some understanding?
3683Mystery of mysteries how can it be?
3683Now if that could have been handled otherwise--""Who told Hunt to go in?"
3683Now was the psychological moment for Austen Vane, but who was to beard Hilary?
3683Now-- to- day?"
3683Oh, how could you ever have doubted it?
3683On you, do you understand?"
3683Or do you care whether they endure beyond your lifetime?
3683Or-- traitorous thought!--doesn''t he care?
3683Rangely?"
3683Shall I tell you what they were?"
3683She enters voluntarily into an agreement whereby she puts herself under the control of her husband: his interests, his career, his--""Comfort?"
3683Suppose I told you that Austen Vane has avoided me, that he would not utter a word against you or in favour of himself?
3683Suppose I told you that Austen Vane was the soul of honour, that he saw your side and presented it as ably as you have presented it?
3683Suppose I told you that he was intriguing now, as he has been all along, to obtain the nomination for the governorship?
3683Suppose there''s a deadlock, as you say there will be, how are you going to handle it?
3683That sounds like nonsense, do n''t it?"
3683That''s what he said, is it?
3683The thing must be said and who would say it?
3683There was anxiety on his face as he asked:--"There has n''t been any accident, has there, Euphrasia?"
3683They say he''s got Adam to cough up six thousand extra since five o''clock, but the question is-- ain''t he stringin''us?
3683This remark made him wonder seriously whether the lawyer''s mind were not giving away; and if so, to whom was he to turn at this eleventh hour?
3683Vane?"
3683Vane?"
3683Vane?"
3683Was Hilary Vane in his right senses?
3683Was it contentment?
3683Was it possible that a woman lived who would even hesitate?
3683Was not perfection at war with the world''s scheme, and did not achievement spring from a void?
3683We are going to take him to the convention-- and if you''d care to go, Victoria--?"
3683We shall have to work together, perhaps, to that end-- who can say?
3683Well, Tooting, are the headquarters ready?
3683Were Messrs. Bascom and Botcher going to act the part of Samsons?
3683Were there so many Victorias, that a new one-- and a strange one-- should confront him at every meeting?
3683Were they working for revenge and a new regime?
3683What can be done?
3683What manner of young woman was this who fell off horses?
3683What must he think of her for coming again?
3683What then?
3683What was coming?
3683What was happiness?
3683What was the matter that I could n''t get you on the telephone?"
3683What was this curious attraction that roused the interest of all who came in contact with him?
3683When and where had he seen her?
3683When will you do it?"
3683When you are ambassador to France, you know, it would be humiliating to have to have an interpreter, would n''t it?"
3683Where did you meet him to- day?"
3683Where is Hilary Vane?
3683Where is he all this time?
3683Who can answer?
3683Who can say?
3683Who sent the solid citizens to see Mr. Henderson?
3683Who was this woman?
3683Who will pick a flaw in the character of the Honourable Giles Henderson?
3683Who would be the new Captain- general?
3683Why had she done that?
3683Why, in the name of political strategy, has United States Senator Greene been chosen to nominate the Honourable Giles Henderson of Kingston?
3683Why?
3683Why?
3683Will you take the gentlemen into the library?"
3683Wo n''t you set down?"
3683Would She have waited for such a victory as you demand?
3683Would he see her?
3683Would you believe me?"
3683Would you believe me?"
3683Would you object to waiting a little while, Miss Flint?
3683Yes, and that spirit itself must have felt her own reaching out to it--who can, say?
3683You will excuse me-- yes?"
3683You''re not sick, are you?"
3683a man who would enter your house and seek out your daughter and secretly assail your character?"
3683a man who would say things behind your back that he dared not say to your face?
3683cried Mr. Flint,"Why did n''t you tell me?
3683he cried;"for God''s sake, what''s the matter?
3683he laughed;"the years are coming over us a little, are n''t they?
3683she cried;"Augustus P. Flint''s daughter?"
3683that he had refrained in many matters which might have been of advantage to him-- although I did not hear of them from him-- on account of his father?
3683that the two feudal chiefs( who could be named) are rebels against highest authority?
3683who desired reward for himself at any price, and in any manner?
49039An''what does he say?
49039An''what''s he doing now?
49039And do you know who I am?
49039But will it work?
49039How far is it to Willow Spring?
49039How much do you charge?
49039I say, boys,cried Charley,"is n''t this-- ugh-- worth going to California for?"
49039Quantos ligos a Managua?
49039Quantos reales?
49039Roast turkey and plum pudding,answer half a dozen voices,"do n''t you wish you could get some?"
49039Si, mañaña.--"Frijoles?"
49039Si, pan.--"Milk?"
49039Sixty- one days,was the ready and self- satisfied answer;"how long have you?"
49039That''s what made the river rise?
49039There,said he, as I dipped my iron spoon into the shallow tin plate he had provided,"what do you say to that?"
49039There; do n''t you see?
49039Well, Capting, how much has us got to- night?
49039Well, John,asked one, with as much sympathy as could be expected to remain in his oblivious stomach,"how do you feel this morning?"
49039Well, boys,cried our democratic president,"and what shall we do now?"
49039Well, doctor, and how much have you made?
49039What are you doing there?
49039What do yer see-- a whale?
49039What do you say to once a week?
49039What in the d---- are you making such a hullabaloo for, at this time o''night?
49039What name?
49039What they got for dinner?
49039What''s the cap''n doing?
49039What''s the matter? 49039 Where do you wish to go?"
49039Who knows,I said to myself,"but that we may have, before long, to resort to the same expedient?"
49039Women-- yes; but where are the children?
49039Yes, me save; do_ you_ save?
49039You save?
49039--"Cinquo reales por uno?"
49039A thousand dollars is a good deal, I know, to give for a machine; but what of that?
49039But our hombre, instead of stopping, as we expected, held straight on his course, and to our impatient inquiries,"What place is this?
49039But the Burke rocker?
49039But where shall I go?
49039But would it prove a failure?
49039Could it be that the hollow was so deep, or had it,--and I trembled at the thought,--fallen so short a distance as to make no noise?
49039Every change of wind was watched with intense anxiety, and"How''s she head?"
49039Every sigh is a book of Ecclesiastes, and is there any other philosophy like his?
49039For why?
49039Here women and boys seated behind rude tables kept up an incessant cry to attract the attention of some loitering Californian,"Comprar oránges?
49039I vash schmoked myself mit a pipe, and tinking I vished I vash at home, and Hans, I say, you ish von great fool; why you do n''t go home?
49039Is it because it is so far off?
49039Let me see: what is this?
49039Not love to be clean?
49039Sampson the Hoosier or Who za?
49039Shall those rose- coloured recollections, with wings softer than the softest cloud, ever cease to rise in my soul?
49039Tape?"
49039The end when will that be?
49039The mosquitoes were as thick as, what shall I say?
49039The pies would hardly have passed muster with Aunt Chloe;"they were pies sartin, but then what kind o''crust?"
49039The salutations and inquiries usual on such occasions were followed by the never- failing invitation,"Well, boys, what''ill you take to drink?"
49039There are other countries equally distant equally valueless and in the same ocean but they contain no gold; why then I say should California?
49039There are places a plenty now but in fifty years or ten who can tell that there wo n''t be a hundred thousand trampling over my grave?
49039There is no gold in New York-- why should there be any in California?
49039Was it for this that I had braved the hardships of a six months''voyage and the sickness and toil of two years in the mines?
49039Was it for this that I had spoilt forever the beauty of my hands and the delicacy of my complexion?
49039Wash that off and what is there but a withered wrinkled old hag?
49039What have we here?
49039What was that railroad train the other day at Norwalk but a train of hearses a great funeral procession?
49039Where am I?
49039Where is Managua?"
49039Where is my life?
49039Wherever I turned, I was headed off by the ugly question,"If you do n''t go to Ford''s Bar, where_ will_ you go?"
49039Who is there to mourn for Logan?
49039Who would not, for such reward, endure the discomforts of a four months''voyage, even though every week should be like the first?
49039Why in the world was n''t he sick during the voyage when he had nothing else to do?
49039[_ He lays down the paper with a cold shudder._] Who said I was old?
49039_ You_ think I''m drunk?"
49039a man or a fish?
49039and shall I ever grow too old for thee?
49039and who can tell what it will be?
49039bueno?"
49039but where are the mourners?
49039but who''d have thought of ever seeing a swing in California?"
49039comprar lemona?
49039cry to be washed?
49039dead or alive?
49039do the stars miss one of their number?
49039gallina."--"Pan?"
49039how?
49039huevos."--"Gallina?"
49039is that you?"
49039is the ship sinking?"
49039or because it is good for nothing else?
49039or because it lies on the Pacific?
49039or why not wait till he got home when he could have things comfortable about him?
49039piped he, innocently,"is this Sunday?
49039quantos horas?"
49039quantos reales?"
49039repeated the doctor,"Jerusha, do n''t I wish I had some?"
49039said I, in affected surprise, for I really did n''t suppose the poor fellow had any more notion of religion than a Hottentot,"do you work Sunday?"
49039says Jimmy, and"How much to a sheer?"
49039so sudden and effectual in its operations?
49039that dives down so deep to the very root of pride and self- laudation?
49039the soup is all gone"--"can''t help it; it''s all there is"--"give me a mug, I say"--"what the d---- do you call this?"
49039ven all to vunst, I see te pull put ish head in his tail, and come like von vat you call him?
49039when?"
49039where?
49039who was that talking about being buried?
49039who would give thirty dollars to secure you a quiet sleep?
49039will its ashes reach their sphere?
49039wo n''t that make''em stare?"
49039yes,"we replied coldly, for we considered it a duty to dash his enthusiasm somewhat,"that is very fair certainly, but is there any more dirt like it?"
36678''You ca n''t come that, old man,''I repeated;''I could tell you in the streets of Jerusalem in the night; what are you about, old feller? 36678 ''You do n''t say so, though, do you?''
36678Ai n''t goin''to bleed to death?
36678Ai n''t that la'', Squire Longbow?
36678And did n''t know nothin'', ha?
36678And do n''t the plaintiff know more about his rights than all the witnesses in the world?
36678And how, in all created airth, would you punish such a person for perjury? 36678 And so they really built a dam?"
36678And so you do n''t use the old''Franklin''stove any more?
36678And that large farm you live on, Mrs. Brown, is_ the_ spot you first settled? 36678 And was n''t old Sally Beadle, Charity Beadle''s grandmother?"
36678And what then?
36678Any turkeys or chickens?
36678Any- thing- wrong? 36678 Any_ what_?"
36678Anything else?
36678Anything, Seth, about Filkins''character?
36678Are they good pay?
36678Are you well, Aunt Sonora, to- day?
36678Beaver here?
36678But have you heard_ Beadle say_ anything about Filkins''character?
36678But let us know what this city is called?
36678But what did she say about_ Philista Filkins_?
36678But what have children to do with a principle of law?
36678But what have you heard her say about Philista Filkins?
36678But what supports it?
36678But what?
36678But you got through all safe?
36678Can it be possible?
36678Can you secure them?
36678Cook_ eggs_?
36678Did he catch that feller who ow''d him and run''d away?
36678Did n''t old Zeb Flummer marry old Sally Beadle?
36678Did she roll and tumble much?
36678Did she say she warn''t no better than she ought to be?
36678Did she? 36678 Do n''t eat grass, do they?"
36678Do n''t you never have the blues, and get sorter obstrep''rous?
36678Do they eat up men and women?
36678Do you think they will come back again, Venison?
36678Does Whistle& Sharp live hereabouts?
36678Ever been in state- prison?
36678Ever heard Beadle say anything about Filkins?
36678Goin''on?
36678Got anything for''em or agin''em?
36678Hain''t form''d_ nor_''spressed any?
36678Hain''t had the rheumatiz, nor shakin''ager, nor any of that buzzing in your head?
36678Hain''t said that Turtle was a jackass for pushin''on this''ere suit?
36678Hain''t said that you hop''d the old maid would come out hunk?
36678Hain''t thought he was?
36678Has he got_ claws_?
36678Has she any children?
36678He did n''t put''em_ in_ his butes,said Mrs. Swipes;"how could they come out on''em?"
36678How can he get it out?
36678How did she rest last night?
36678How did you catch''em?
36678How do they ketch''em?--how do they ketch''em?
36678How long have you been attackted?
36678How long?
36678How many States are there in the Union?
36678How much is the debt?
36678How, in the world, did you manage to get through the country twenty years ago?
36678How?
36678I say, mister,stammered the Squire, again rising,"are them''are raal ribbons?"
36678In my_ beaver_ hat?
36678Inter the_ airth_?
36678Is Lavinny at school this winter?
36678Is her fever brok''t onto her?
36678Jes so,replied Bates;"and where was that?"
36678Know Filkins and Beadle?
36678Know Miss Beadle?
36678Know''em? 36678 Marry?
36678Marry? 36678 Mr. Buzzle_baum_,"exclaimed Ike,"you a juryman in this case?"
36678Mr. Tumbleton,exclaimed Ike,"form''d or''spressed any''pinion in this case?"
36678Mrs. Brown, have you lived long in this country?
36678Much on your mind, Squire, now?
36678Now do n''t you think-- and have n''t you_ said_, that Turtle was a jackass for pushin''on this suit?
36678Now what do you''spose I know about Filkins''character? 36678 Now, feller citizens, what''s the reason you hain''t got any more money?
36678Now,exclaimed Ike, pushing his fee in his vest pocket,"who''s the woman?"
36678Old Zeb? 36678 On where?"
36678Puddleford against itself, both residents-- a woman and two children against a man?
36678Sir?
36678Sleep well, last night?
36678So, this your man? 36678 Sot up at her house any?"
36678Sot up_ where_?
36678Spoken of in Holy Writ?
36678Squire Longbow,said Ike,"arn''t it rather on- parliamentary to be speaking when you hain''t got no secretary to take things down?"
36678Stranger,said Ike,"travelled long in these ere parts?"
36678The man says''what of it?'' 36678 To turn a_ what_?"
36678Turtle,exclaimed Swipes, at last, breaking the solitude--"is that man goin''to die?"
36678Very likely,said I;"but is Puddleford law all made for widows, babies, and residents?"
36678Wal,''bout that,said Strickett-- our applicant called his name Izabel Strickett--"''bout that, why, it''s where the battle was fit, warn''t it?"
36678Warn''t I sworn, or was''t you? 36678 Was n''t old Zeb Flummer your grandfather?"
36678Washes? 36678 Well, Venison,"said I,"how long have you been around in these parts?"
36678Well, what of it?
36678Well, whose business is that, if it is?
36678Well,said I,"about those trees that they cleared off?"
36678What are principles to folks in a new country? 36678 What became of Molly?"
36678What became of the woman?
36678What did you do when you first arrived here?
36678What do you want me to say she said? 36678 What does the soil want_ tilling_ for?
36678What hain''t she? 36678 What has she done?"
36678What is she growlin''about, then?
36678What is the man a- goin''-ter to do?
36678What is the matter with Squire Longbow''s woman?
36678What now?
36678What on airth does anybody want to till the soil for?
36678What''s that you say?
36678What,said Uncle Ben,"is the old stage company entirely broken up?"
36678When was the deed executed?
36678Where did you eat and sleep?
36678Where has he gone?
36678Where''s Bates, and the Colonel, and Bulliphant, and the other Puddlefordians?'' 36678 Where''s Bunker Hill?"
36678Where''s Spain?
36678Where''s Turkey?
36678Where''s the honey?
36678Where?
36678Which side? 36678 Who answers for Charity Beadle?"
36678Who did the fightin''there?
36678Why do n''t all the blackbirds go into one flock, Venison?
36678Why do n''t they climb it?
36678Why, did n''t you know I was old enough to be your grandmother? 36678 Why, in the name of old Babylon, do n''t you marry?"
36678Why, on to the next place?
36678Why, what a nice caliker you''re got on, Mrs. Brown; was it one- and- three or one- and- six?
36678Will they sting?
36678Wo n''t it, though?
36678You do know the''oman then?
36678You hear_ that_, do n''t you, gentle_men_? 36678 You live up on Poverty Common-- don''t you?"
36678You want me to_ answer_, do you? 36678 Young?"
36678_ Claws!_exclaimed the keeper, looking astonished;"the great-- African lion-- got claws?
36678_ Did_ sign it?
36678_ Flum_ what?
36678_ Sni_-ping?
36678_ Sni_-ping?
36678_ What''s_ a lie?
36678_ Who_ says that''s a lie?
36678_ Your_ name is Flummer?
36678''But,''said I,''who are you, if I am not John Smith?
36678''How much was the rifle worth?''
36678''Simple, too, is n''t it?''
36678( What physician ever did?)
36678("Was anybody killed?"
36678--sittin''up with the defendant_ nights_ a- courtin''her, and then wants to know what of it?
36678A''n''t that true, Luke Smith?"
36678Ai n''t there enough to eat, and drink, and wear, growing nat''ral in the woods?
36678All his wants were supplied, and what did he care about the possessions of his neighbors?
36678And Jim said--""When-- in thunder--_was_ it?"
36678And to whom will the posterity of Puddleford be more indebted?
36678Any more questions, ladies and gentlemen?"
36678Any more questions?
36678Any more questions?"
36678Any- thing- wrong?"
36678Are not the extremes equally ridiculous?
36678Ay, whose?
36678Because the Jesuits did not till the earth, and sow, and reap, and swell the commerce of the world: but did n''t they sow?
36678Bird?"
36678Brown?"
36678But do you know, reader, that Longbow, and Turtle, and I do not know how many more, trace their blood directly back to the Pilgrims?
36678But the treble-- what shall I say of_ it_?
36678But what has all this to do with Puddleford?
36678But where was Venison?
36678But who killed her?
36678But who knows anything about the sciences in Puddleford?
36678But why speak of individual cases?
36678Buzzlebaum?"
36678Did n''t she, Philist_y_?"
36678Did n''t you know that?
36678Did n''t you tell old Soper, if she warn''t so old and rusty- like, you''d strike, hit or miss?
36678Do n''t it make your head swim, to think on''t?
36678Do n''t it_ burn_, mister?
36678Do n''t the bees have their queen?"
36678Do n''t you want some help?
36678Do they sleep on the wings of the wind, or hide themselves in a scroll of snow?
36678Do they_ sing_?"
36678Do you not agree with me, that Puddleford had its blessings?
36678Do you not think so?
36678Does not poverty often"bring healing on its wings"?
36678Ever talk of marryin''the''oman, hey?"
36678Five were jist as good in this case, as six;''cause if five could n''t agree, how could six?''"
36678For what purpose was this winged mystery sent upon the earth?
36678Furi_a_tion alive, why do n''t you speak?
36678Hain''t you heer''d him blow his horn, away in the sky, as he led''em on up the rivers and takes?
36678Have you a little plug by- yer jest now, as I have n''t had a chew sin''morning, as it may help a feller some?"
36678Have you never heard of_ this_, gentlemen?
36678He would like jist to know what a company would be good for, on a field- er battle, that could n''t turn an angle?
36678He would"jest like to know how they could carry around a salt- water animal on land?"
36678Higgins, with an affected pleasantry, asked Turtle"how long it was since he run''d away from the State of New York, for debt?"
36678How can they be otherwise?
36678How could I help loving him?
36678How is it in a new country?
36678How is it that these little singing harps live on amid such dreary scenes?
36678How many have been girded and helmeted in her halls?
36678How many, reader?
36678How was it, how is it made up?
36678How, in all created natur, do you s''pose a woman can get dinner?
36678I said_ three_--but were there not more?
36678If confidence will sustain a bank, ought not confidence to sustain Squire Longbow?
36678If it warn''t opodildoc?"
36678Inhabitants only?
36678Is his song for the present or the past?
36678Is it strange that I felt sober?
36678Is not this fame?
36678Is not this something?
36678It looked like a hand reached out from eternity; but_ whose_ hand?
36678It''s a king that leads the ducks in their flight, ai n''t it?
36678Jefferson asked the little man"whether the Federalists or Democrats were in power?"
36678Keeper?"
36678Keeper?"
36678Longbow?"
36678May not something be learned in the very contrast which is thus afforded?
36678Mr. Bates wanted to know what"a jungle was, while he was about his lion story?"
36678Mrs. Bird asked the Squire what the lions ate?
36678Of what force a labored pulpit disquisition?
36678Of what importance is a nice theological distinction with them?
36678Old Gulick''s boy broke that are glass just out of sheer dev''ltry, and you s''pose this ere school_ de_-strict is a- goin''to pay for''t?
36678One generation rides over another, like waves over waves, and"no such miserable interrogatory,"as Where has it gone?
36678Order being restored, Mrs. Bird wanted to know why the lion"had n''t got any_ har_?"
36678Puddleford does, and fails to do, a great many things, just like the"rest of mankind,"and yet who knows and cares anything about Puddleford?
36678Puddleford fame, say you?
36678Seth''s fees were paid him, at last, and the question was again put, if he heard"Beadle say anything else?"
36678Shall we ever forget her?
36678Starve a child?
36678Stumbled?
36678The songs of a people stir them up to revolution-- and what are they but the glowing language of the associations of the soul?
36678The woods were filled with beast and bird, warn''t they?
36678These are your friends, I suppose?"
36678They breed every spring in great numbers; but how, when, and where do they die?
36678Those old airs, that used to echo among the mountains of New England-- where are they?
36678To the eighth point, as follows,--"''Got inter a passion?''
36678Try it again?
36678Tumbleton?"
36678Turtle asked the Squire"if a hat would not do to collect votes?"
36678Turtle rose, and inquired,"What he put on his head?
36678Turtle where his wife was?
36678Turtle''s office?"
36678Turtle, how can you think so?
36678Turtle?"
36678Turtle?"
36678Uncle Ben asked Jefferson if he would''not like to move up to the fire and warm his feet?''
36678Warn''t the airth made right in the first place?
36678Was it a summer chime of bells that tolled the sunlight into the temple?--the forest clock, that opened and shut the hours?
36678Were they equipped for the beauty and glory of the world, or their own?
36678Were you not appointed by Polk, Secretary of the Interior, and did I not put a word in his ear favorable to you?''
36678What alchemist wrought those magical colors?
36678What are residents to non- residents?
36678What are snow birds?
36678What are they?
36678What armies of scholars have walked forth into the battle of life from her cloisters?
36678What becomes of the rest?
36678What brush touched those rich and delicate wings?
36678What but Saxon blood, and Saxon spirit, could have accomplished so much?
36678What can the old man be dreaming about?
36678What cathedral like this, with its living pillars-- its dome of sun, and moon, and stars?
36678What constitutes a man?--a nation?
36678What do you s''pose these ere staterts was passed for?
36678What do you s''pose you was''lected for?
36678What do you say?"
36678What has law got ter do with a widder and two children out here?
36678What if an attempt should be made to build up such a society in a new country?
36678What if he did drink?
36678What is Bannockburn to a savage?
36678What makes''em flockin''around us to- day, and soarin''around in companies, if they do n''t understand each other?
36678What of it?
36678What shall I say of the theology of Puddleford?
36678What shall a feller do?"
36678What son of New England does not look back upon her with pride?
36678What to a Scotchman?
36678What to the Puddlefordians were the refinements of religious exercises?
36678What were this little band of red men, thought I, but so many autumn leaves?
36678What woman was to be placed at the head of society in Puddleford?
36678What, sir?"
36678When she became composed, Ike inquired if"she knew Charity Beadle?"
36678When?
36678Where are his fires now?
36678Where are your children now?"
36678Where did that little piece of melody come from?
36678Where do they live?
36678Where does the merchant creditor find his western customer of last year?
36678Where is the spot where her footsteps are not imprinted, her cheering voice heard?
36678Where was she the day before?
36678Where would we begin?
36678Where''s that?''
36678Who built it?
36678Who cares?"
36678Who does not love the quail?
36678Who ever saw a pigeon trifle or frolic, or put on airs?
36678Who has not been impressed with this truth?
36678Who is there that could do Bigelow''s work better than he?
36678Who is there that will ever toil and sweat more hours in his Master''s vineyard?
36678Who put on those gorgeous uniforms?
36678Who was to be the next Mrs. Longbow?
36678Who was to have the honor of presiding at the Squire''s table?
36678Who would n''t?
36678Why the animal has n''t got any hair?
36678Why the animal has n''t got any hair?
36678Why was civil and religious liberty planted, amid December snows, upon her inhospitable coast?
36678Why was it committed to her rugged elements of Nature, if not to harden the men, and strengthen and preserve principles?
36678Why, maybe, you do n''t know, Mr. Pettifogger, that there are folks in state''s prison_ now_ for lying in a court of justice?"
36678Why?
36678Wife and children-- how many?
36678Will the gentleman show the bill for the benefit of all?
36678Would n''t he be a pretty man to try this case?"
36678You do n''t expect_ ue_ will carry home a_ tree_, do you?"
36678_ I_ talk about it myself, and"( the same man rose again, and ask''d Wiggins if he would"vote agin licker?"
36678_ Who_ died?
36678_ who''s_ the widow?
36678and streams and lakes were scattered everywhere?
36678and the whole face of natur covered with grass and wild fruits?
36678and what else does anybody want, stranger?"
36678and who can lecter?
36678exclaimed Aunt Sonora, her knitting- needles rattling with surprise,"how_ did_ she get out-- got into the stars?"
36678exclaimed Ike, rising on his feet, a little enraged,"do you know anything about what Charity Beadle said about Philista Filkins?
36678exclaimed Longbow,"what comes of the rest on''em?"
36678exclaimed Turtle;"how do they catch''em, then?"
36678exclaimed the Squire,"the_ rattles_--what is that?"
36678he continued, as he reached out his finger towards Luke, whose daily conversation was a string of oaths;"a''n''t that true?
36678is put; but What did it do?--What has it left behind?
36678or How did it go?
36678repeated Strickett--"Spain?
36678said Bates, turning the subject of conversation,"do you ever hunt?"
36678she exclaimed involuntarily to those around her, starting back, as she saw the bars of a cage in the distance,--"are them bars iron?"
36678what are they?"
36678what can he do?
36678what does he know?
36678what in the name of massy sakes are you about?
36678what is he?
36678what is_ sni_-ping?"
36678where is it?"
36678where?"
36678which side?"
36678who''s afraid of a justice of the peace?"
36678you_ will_ be keerful, now wo n''t you?''
20033A farm? 20033 A job?"
20033A tea?
20033About what time did she leave here?
20033Ah, my friend,said Mr. Martel, shaking his head and smiling,"what can be avoided whose end is purposed by the mighty gods?
20033All ready, Nellie?
20033Am I going to get a commission for all this?
20033Am I too old and decrepit to be consulted any more? 20033 Am I?"
20033And I suppose they''ve got a rabbit hutch, and a monkey, and some white mice?
20033And I suppose you propose to go back and tell her so?
20033And Queen Vic wo n''t hear of it?
20033And do you think I am going to sit here, and do nothing while all this is taking place?
20033And since then you have been a soldier of fortune, eh? 20033 And the silver one in the middle?"
20033And this is final? 20033 And what about you?"
20033And what if I do?
20033And who are you, pray?
20033And you actually believe that I will get to New York to study?
20033And you ca n''t even sit up to eat?
20033And you have no people in America?
20033And you mean you''d be willing to come out here and live four months in the year?
20033And you?
20033And_ have_ you written a part especially for me?
20033Anything you wanted, sir?
20033Are n''t they too little for the buttonholes?
20033Are n''t you coming home to supper?
20033Are n''t you going to ask me to the party?
20033Are these the ones?
20033Are they going to try to move her?
20033Are they really sending you away on my account?
20033Are we going to have a fire in the sitting- room?
20033Are you Mrs. Randolph Bartlett?
20033Are you a doctor?
20033Are you cold?
20033Are you coming with me, or are you going to stay here?
20033Are you going to do as I advise?
20033Are you joshing me?
20033Are you lying?
20033Are you out for keeps? 20033 Are you ready for dinner?"
20033Are you sharing my unpopularity with the family?
20033Aw, what you tryin''to put over on us?
20033Awkward? 20033 Backer?"
20033Bartlett_ versus_ Martel, eh?
20033Being asked to spend the winter at Mrs. Ranny''s? 20033 But I thought the orchid king was in Chicago?"
20033But ai n''t you going to finish this dance with me?
20033But before you go in would you mind doing something for me? 20033 But do n''t you expect me to meet the young ladies?"
20033But do n''t you see, Miss Nell, you are in honor bound not to go on with this?
20033But do n''t you want any supper?
20033But have n''t you told her what you know about him?
20033But how can we? 20033 But how?
20033But it is beating the railroads, is n''t it?
20033But suppose I''m a failure?
20033But what can we_ do?_ The more people talk about him, the more she''s going to take up for him. 20033 But what could she have told?
20033But where is she now? 20033 But who will tell her?"
20033But why ca n''t we sit here?
20033But why did you have to see him?
20033But why do you go, then?
20033But you surely do n''t_ like_ it?
20033But you surely wo n''t be going now?
20033But you''ll be joining some other company, I suppose?
20033But you? 20033 But, my boy, where would_ you_ turn?
20033But-- but-- Miss Eleanor?
20033Ca n''t they get another doctor?
20033Ca n''t you say he''s sick?
20033Can you keep a secret?
20033Can you tell me where I can find Miss Eleanor?
20033Captain Phipps? 20033 Cold?"
20033Commercial or professional?
20033Cosmopolitan? 20033 Could n''t you have pushed up the stroke and got there on time?"
20033Could you find it again?
20033Did Uncle Ranny tell you the way we shocked the aunties?
20033Did grandmother send you up here to see if I was keeping my word?
20033Did grandmother send you?
20033Did he? 20033 Did n''t she say where she was going?"
20033Did n''t the Captain call it on the porch?
20033Did one of them get a telegram in the night or this morning?
20033Did you ever see such bully old trees? 20033 Did you hear me?"
20033Did you know they were smoking in the dining- room, Nellie? 20033 Did you really see all that in me the first night?"
20033Did you see Rose''s telegram?
20033Did you see him?
20033Did you see much actual service?
20033Did you want to see me about something?
20033Do I look like a cripple? 20033 Do n''t you love the feel of wings everywhere?
20033Do n''t you suppose I''ve exhausted every possible argument? 20033 Do n''t you think you had better give it up?"
20033Do n''t you think you might try a different tack with the old lady?
20033Do n''t you want some grub?
20033Do n''t you- all like me?
20033Do you believe I could pull it off, Quin? 20033 Do you have to lie flat on your back like that, with no pillow or anything?"
20033Do you know that?
20033Do you know what time she left the car?
20033Do you know where she was last night?
20033Do you know where-- the-- Aristo Apartments are?
20033Do you know,he said, gaining time by presenting a grievance,"you never have danced with me but twice in your life?"
20033Do you mean he is to be here in New York?
20033Do you mean it?
20033Do you play chess?
20033Do you really think I could act if I got the chance?
20033Do you really think that? 20033 Do you remember the first time you came here?"
20033Do you remember,she began ponderously,"a check I gave you the day of Enid''s wedding?"
20033Do you suppose I spend my time talking about my precious family?
20033Do you take me for a landlady?
20033Do you think she would like me?
20033Do you want me to put a splint on it?
20033Do you want to know, honest?
20033Do you-- do you-- still feel about me the way you-- you did-- that night on the bus?
20033Does Papa Claude know?
20033Does anybody know where Papa Claude is?
20033Does he know who I was with?
20033Does the traffic manager have to classify the exports?
20033Does your grandmother know?
20033Does-- does Miss Eleanor know about all this?
20033Dr. Vaughn, then?
20033Flower in the buttonhole, or anything like that?
20033For me?
20033Friday?
20033Give who a dance?
20033Got an appointment?
20033Graham,said Mr. Bangs,"what salary are you drawing?"
20033Had n''t you any better studs than those, my boy?
20033Has anybody telephoned Ranny?
20033Has he give up?
20033Has somebody sent for Randolph?
20033Has the plumber come?
20033Have n''t I asked you to drop the''Captain''? 20033 Have n''t I got enough to stand without that?"
20033Have n''t I written enough for the family?
20033Have n''t you a kiss for me?
20033Have you been sick?
20033Have you got enough money?
20033Have you got the ticket?
20033Have you spoken to mother yet?
20033He does n''t answer?
20033He''s terribly rich, is n''t he?
20033Headway? 20033 Hello, Quinby; what are you doing here?"
20033Honor bound? 20033 How about your heart disease, Graham?"
20033How are you going to get on your feet until you get your strength back?
20033How can I?
20033How did they ever get her consent?
20033How did you know my name?
20033How did you know?
20033How do these ends buckle up?
20033How do they expect me to know what they are all about?
20033How do you know he''s ashamed to be seen with her?
20033How do you know you can?
20033How do you know? 20033 How do you know?"
20033How do you know?
20033How do you know?
20033How do you know?
20033How do you mean?
20033How do you mean?
20033How do you mean?
20033How do you mean?
20033How is Miss Isobel taking it?
20033How long have you been at the factory?
20033How much do you want?
20033How much will this put us behind?
20033How much?
20033How''s the leg coming on?
20033I suppose you are trying to frighten me off from engaging you?
20033I suppose you mean I do n''t?
20033I suppose you mean this?
20033I think he might go up and speak to mother, do n''t you, Isobel?
20033I want you to have three months at the Kendall School, and then do you know what I am going to do?
20033I wonder how he ever managed it?
20033I wonder how it would do,she said,"for you to telephone that we are both out of town for the night, spending the week- end in the country?"
20033I wonder if I could get word to the Captain to- night?
20033I wonder if you could?
20033I wonder if you would care to use one of my tickets for the Symphony Orchestra next week?
20033I wonder if you''d do something for me?
20033I''d just as leave put him to bed for you if you like?
20033I''d like to know if you did n''t take me in and treat me like one of the family? 20033 I''ve spent thousands of dollars on that girl''s education,"Madam continued,"and what do you suppose she elected to specialize in?
20033I? 20033 If that''s the case,"said Quin, with his jaw thrust out and his nostrils quivering,"what do you want me to do?"
20033If you are going to send me away, why not send me to New York and let me do the one thing in the world I want to do?
20033If you mean my mother,she said with reproving dignity,"she has asked me to tell you-- that is, we all think it best----""For me to go?"
20033Interested in you? 20033 Is Queen Vic mad at me?"
20033Is anybody dead?
20033Is n''t that absurd?
20033Is n''t that exactly like her?
20033Is she living?
20033Is that all the family?
20033Is that better?
20033Is that the doctor?
20033Is the house very grand?
20033Is there a house on it?
20033Is there a part I could play?
20033Is there any sign of clearing?
20033Is this the Hotel Kington?
20033Is this the sort of thing you get let in for often?
20033It''s Rose?
20033Like you?
20033Madam Bartlett? 20033 May I come on later?
20033May I have the next dance, Miss Eleanor?
20033Meaning, I suppose, that he understands you?
20033Meaning, I suppose, that your standards are so much higher than those of the rest of us that you can not trade in the market- place?
20033Mind?
20033Miss Nell,he blurted out,"if I stay and get a job and make good, will you marry me?"
20033Miss Nell,said the persistent voice beside her,"do you know what I intend to do while you are away?"
20033More than when you left Kentucky?
20033Next July Miss Nell will be of age and have her own money to do as she likes with, wo n''t she?
20033Next Sunday?
20033No; do you?
20033No; what?
20033No; where is she?
20033Not Myrna?
20033Not in_ his_ play?
20033Not_ really!_ When will it be produced?
20033Now what were we talking about?
20033Now,she said, when he had got a cushion at her back and a stool under her foot,"tell me: where''s Ranny-- drunk as usual?"
20033Of course-- why not?
20033Office- boy? 20033 Oh, Sergeant Slim?
20033Oh, would you?
20033Ought you to dance again?
20033Perhaps you would prefer an office job?
20033Quin Graham, have you had a drink?
20033Quin,--her voice dropped so low he could scarcely hear it,--"have you ever forgiven me for the way I behaved in New York?"
20033Quin,she said,"did you know I am not going back?"
20033Quinby,she said,--it had been"Quinby"ever since the discovery of his grandfather,--"I wonder if you can help me?
20033Really? 20033 Right through here,"said Quin, holding back the branches,"Now, ai n''t that a nice old place?"
20033Rose,she was asking,"what''s the first thing you notice about a man?"
20033Saturday afternoon? 20033 Say, Miss Eleanor,"Quin blurted out unexpectedly,"do you like me?"
20033Say, would you mind stopping a bit?--just for a second?
20033Say, you have n''t got a pin, have you?
20033School?
20033See here, is this a frame- up?
20033Serving here to- night, are you?
20033Serving?
20033Shall I go or will you?
20033Shall I really tell him to send the letters to you?
20033Shall I see you again before you go?
20033Shall I take it?
20033Shall I tell you?
20033She ca n''t collect what you have n''t got, can she?
20033She-- she-- hasn''t married him?
20033Silver fox?
20033So he is the-- backer?
20033So it''s the parlor instid of the pantry, is it? 20033 So you are actually going to leave me next week?"
20033So you were the chap that played the good Samaritan? 20033 Tell me honestly, not what you want me to do, or think I ought to do, but what would you do in my place?"
20033That sounds mighty fine; but who is going to take two children to board for nothing?
20033That''s perfect nonsense; and besides, what can I do? 20033 The little gold slippers?"
20033Then I take it you sympathize with the strikers?
20033Then he has been writing to you? 20033 Then it is n''t_ me_ that you remember?
20033Then it''s just_ you_ who do n''t trust me?
20033There, is that comfy?
20033They''ve succeeded in working me through you, have they? 20033 Thrown together?
20033To China?
20033To leave you? 20033 To- morrow night?"
20033Tom? 20033 Uncle Ranny?"
20033Was he at the office to- day?
20033Was n''t that what you wanted?
20033We wo n''t mind being a bit crowded in the motor, will we?
20033Well, I could n''t tell her Mr. Bartlett was stewed, could I?
20033Well, it is n''t especially gay for her here, is it?
20033Well, when you come back, then?
20033Well, where is the bag you bought with it?
20033Well, you do n''t think I am going to let Miss Nell in on a deal like that, do you?
20033Well,said Madam,"what about you?"
20033Well,said the Captain, who had been lazily observing her,"are n''t you about through with your mental monologue?"
20033Well,she said, addressing her at last,"why did n''t you make it midnight?"
20033Well?
20033What I want to know is whether you are home to stay?
20033What about Queen Vic?
20033What about Sunday afternoon?
20033What about those that want to go on a farm? 20033 What are you all standing around like fools for?
20033What are you doing here?
20033What are you going to do with them?
20033What are you going to say when I tell you I''ve sold him a farm?
20033What are you two ragging about, anyhow?
20033What can you do?
20033What did he do?
20033What did he say to that?
20033What did you come for?
20033What difference does it make if it_ is_ invested? 20033 What do all those stars on the rainbow ribbon mean?"
20033What do they mean by sending me this jumble of stuff?
20033What do they say?
20033What do you know about wild flowers?
20033What do you mean by that?
20033What do you mean to do?
20033What do you mean? 20033 What do you mean?"
20033What do you mean?
20033What do you mean?
20033What do you mean?
20033What do you want to be going back to school for?
20033What does she mean?
20033What does the Captain know about it?
20033What farm? 20033 What good would that do?
20033What has happened?
20033What in the devil are you up to?
20033What is her line?
20033What is she like?
20033What is the joke?
20033What is the matter?
20033What made you tell her?
20033What of that?
20033What on earth did he mean?
20033What on earth shall I do?
20033What play?
20033What question?
20033What shall I do if grandmother refuses to send me?
20033What sort of compromise? 20033 What time is it?"
20033What time is the officers''mess?
20033What time shall I be ready?
20033What time shall I come Saturday afternoon?
20033What was your object?
20033What would you do?
20033What would you say if I told you I had written a rôle especially for you? 20033 What would_ you_ do, Quin?"
20033What''ll I have to wear?
20033What''s Dr. Snowden''s telephone number?
20033What''s all the racket about?
20033What''s all this fuss about?
20033What''s all this nonsense you are talking?
20033What''s got into you lately? 20033 What''s he doing there?"
20033What''s he like, Rose?
20033What''s that got to do with it?
20033What''s the matter with Valley Mead?
20033What''s the matter with me beginning now?
20033What''s the matter, Hannah? 20033 What''s the matter?"
20033What''s the matter?
20033What''s the shindy?
20033What''s the trouble?
20033What''s up?
20033What?
20033What?
20033What_ made_ you come?
20033When are you coming home?
20033When can I see you?
20033When did Mr. Bartlett give you these letters?
20033When do you have to give an answer?
20033When do you have to have the money?
20033When is the wedding to be?
20033When shall I come?
20033When_ are_ you coming back?
20033Where are Aunt Isobel and Aunt Enid?
20033Where are the papers?
20033Where are we going?
20033Where are we? 20033 Where did I come in?"
20033Where did you see him?
20033Where else could I go? 20033 Where in the devil have you been?"
20033Where was she?
20033Where''d you ever git to know a girl like that?
20033Where''s the house?
20033Where?
20033Where?
20033Which leg is hurt?
20033White gloves, I suppose?
20033Who are?
20033Who is Nell?
20033Who is he?
20033Who is that talking so loud downstairs?
20033Who is this nice boy?
20033Who knows but this time next year she will be playing in''Phantom Love''?
20033Who moved my desk out like this?
20033Who said so? 20033 Who said so?"
20033Who would n''t have been? 20033 Who?"
20033Who?
20033Why are n''t you?
20033Why did n''t he write me?
20033Why do n''t you ever come around and see the folks?
20033Why do n''t you give her a dance?
20033Why do n''t you let their standards go to gallagher and live up to your own?
20033Why do you think he is out of town?
20033Why not ship''em both to the country? 20033 Why not?
20033Why not? 20033 Why not?"
20033Why on earth are you so late, sweetheart? 20033 Why should I mind leaving you?
20033Why turn round?
20033Why, your time''s up Saturday, is n''t it? 20033 Why?"
20033Will you dance it with me?
20033Will you dance this with me, Miss Enid?
20033Will you please go down and tell Mr. Pfingst that I am not coming to his party?
20033Will you please page the dining- room, and if he is not at breakfast send a bell- boy up to waken him? 20033 Will you please try again to get Mr. Phipps-- Harold Phipps?
20033Will you wait for me here just a second?
20033Will you?
20033Would Mr. Bangs agree?
20033Would you by any chance have time to leave a package of papers at Bartlett& Bangs''for me the first thing in the morning? 20033 Would you go on with it?"
20033Would you go with me?
20033Would you know him if you saw him again?
20033Would you like me to?
20033Yes; why?
20033You are Mr. Bartlett, I believe?
20033You are all ready to start on Monday? 20033 You are not actually in earnest, Flo?
20033You are not going in yourself?
20033You ca n''t deny that you love me just a little bit, can you?
20033You could n''t hold it up for half an hour, could you?
20033You decline the promotion?
20033You do n''t happen to have a job for me?
20033You do n''t love Mr. Phipps very much, do you?
20033You do n''t mean that you''re going to act for_ pay_?
20033You do n''t see a very cross- looking Captain charging around near the door, do you?
20033You heard what she said, did n''t you?
20033You look like going to work, do n''t you?
20033You mean a one- step?
20033You mean he''s traveled a lot, knocked around in queer places, like me?
20033You mean that you will dare to stop me from getting out of my own car? 20033 You mean you are going on seeing Mr. Phipps and letting him send you flowers and things?"
20033You never did try letting her have her head, did you?
20033You still have the money?
20033You surely are n''t_ tired_?
20033You surely do n''t imagine that I would get out on the floor with all this hoi- poloi?
20033You surely remember the Easter party?
20033You want it straight?
20033You want to know? 20033 You wo n''t speak to him,"she implored,"and you wo n''t tell Cass?"
20033You''ll be there every Sunday?
20033Young lady? 20033 _ Do n''t_ she?
20033_ Will_ I?
20033_ Would_ I? 20033 ''They reach the ground,''he said;''what more can you ask?''
20033A return, perhaps, to your native city?"
20033After all, what did the plaudits of hundreds of unknown people count for, when the approval and affection of those nearest and dearest was withdrawn?
20033Ai n''t Cass the best friend a man ever had?
20033And now for her to turn against me like this----""Why do n''t you wait till you hear her side of it?"
20033And now?
20033And we could get him interested in fixing the place up, and he could keep dogs and cows and things----""But what about his mother?"
20033And were n''t they all silly and make- believe?"
20033And what did he think little old Myrna had done?
20033And what have I got?
20033And what is the result?
20033And why should she care for a fellow like him, with no education, or money, or position?
20033And would n''t he do as much and more for me?"
20033And your family?"
20033And yours?"
20033And, if she did, would she ever be willing to come home again?
20033And, upon being informed sorrowfully that he did, he added obligingly,"Do n''t you want me to bring him in for you?"
20033Any others?"
20033Anything else I can do for you?"
20033Are n''t you already a little ashamed of getting angry with me just now?"
20033Are you in love with him?"
20033Are you sure Nellie is safe?"
20033Are you sure?
20033At the office door he was dismounting from the car with his silence still unbroken, when Quin asked nervously:"Shall I go on with my old job, sir?"
20033Back in his fringe of consciousness he was frantically groping for the name the Captain had mentioned: Barnet?
20033Bangs?"
20033Bangs?"
20033Barret?
20033Bartlett?
20033Bartlett?
20033Besides, it''s an actress''s business to cultivate her emotions rather than repress them, is n''t it?"
20033But did she honestly want to make another start?
20033But how was he ever going to get any better lying there on his back?
20033But if she had n''t cared for him, why had she come to him with her troubles, and followed his advice, and wanted his good opinion?
20033But it was worth it, was n''t it-- Sergeant Slim?"
20033But just tell me one thing: is there anybody you_ are_ interested in?"
20033But the old cough remained, as was evident when he presented himself breathless at the Martels''door and demanded of Cass:"Has she gone?"
20033But then, six thousand dollars is very little, is n''t it?
20033But then, what can he do?
20033But what can we do?"
20033But what has that to do with it?
20033But what was it she wanted, she asked herself, in place of this gay kaleidoscope of light and color and ceaseless confusion?
20033But where was Eleanor?
20033But-- do you like me enough to let me come to see you when you come back?"
20033Ca n''t we have a window open?"
20033Ca n''t you see that this ca n''t go on?
20033Ca n''t you tell me something about the position of women in China?"
20033Ca n''t you trust Rose to take care of herself?"
20033Can you beat that?"
20033Chester?"
20033Confess, would n''t you?"
20033Could n''t you have withdrawn the sunshine of your presence from the hospital half an hour sooner?"
20033Could there be anything between them?
20033Did n''t you know it was your duty to be in before five?"
20033Did n''t you know your grandmother would be fretted?"
20033Did the play fail?"
20033Did you ever feel anything so hot and stuffy as that room?
20033Do n''t you believe she will get over it?"
20033Do n''t you know you ca n''t dance?"
20033Do n''t you think either Ranny or Isobel had better take her on to New York to- morrow?"
20033Do n''t you think you can stop them?"
20033Do n''t you think you might----""Who left that front door open?"
20033Do n''t you want me to shift that pulley a bit?
20033Do stay, Quin; wo n''t you?"
20033Do the Bartletts know?"
20033Do you believe we can pull him through?"
20033Do you have to use your crutches now?"
20033Do you know who this is?"
20033Do you know, none of them ever write to me any more?"
20033Do you like me any better than you did in the spring?"
20033Do you mind walking the rest of the way?"
20033Do you remember living in this house?"
20033Do you remember the big blue parrots that swung in hoops from the chandeliers?
20033Do you suppose I could send her a telegram to be delivered on the train?
20033Do you suppose it''s pleasant for me to know that everybody in the company is whispering about my infatuation for you and your indifference to me?
20033Do you suppose that stage lovers are going to stand in the wings and throw kisses to you?"
20033Do you think I ought to go back?"
20033Do you think a girl has the right to go ahead and do as she likes, regardless of her family?"
20033Do you think it was a frame- up?"
20033Do you think, when she finds out that I am actually on the stage, that she will ever forgive me-- that she will ever want me to come home again?"
20033Do you understand?"
20033Do you understand?"
20033Do you want me to go or to stay?"
20033Do you want to buy a farm?"
20033Do you_ have_ to take back an answer?"
20033Does Papa Claude think he is_ very_ talented?"
20033Does he belong here?"
20033Does she want me to get down on my knees and apologize?"
20033Edwin Booth used to say----""Sir?"
20033Eleanor Bartlett?
20033Eleanor, why do you play with me like this?
20033Ever hear of him?"
20033Go to a hotel alone?
20033Go to his apartment?
20033Good God, Rose, ca n''t we do something?"
20033Had n''t Miss Nell told him that she did n''t care what he said or did, just so he left her alone?
20033Had n''t it been enough for him to come to her party in that idiotic coat, with his shirt- front bulging and his face swollen?
20033Had n''t she let him come away without expressing a regret for the past or a hope for the future?
20033Has Aunt Enid come home?
20033Has Madam found out about her going out to camp?"
20033Has n''t Cass ever told you about Nell?"
20033Has she let me go for good and all?"
20033Have I made any headway?"
20033Have n''t I been coming out here all the time?"
20033Have n''t I swallowed my pride and promised to say nothing if she comes back?
20033Have n''t we got past that?"
20033Have n''t you ever heard them speak of me?"
20033Have n''t you had enough noise for one night?
20033Have they called up?"
20033Have you come to stay?"
20033Have you heard about Myrna?"
20033He has a lovely, detached soul, as impersonal-- What is the matter, Rosalind?"
20033How about you, Nell?
20033How are Rose and the children?"
20033How are we going to emancipate her, Ran?"
20033How can she pretend to care for me when she ignores my letters and treats me with perfect indifference?"
20033How do you mean?"
20033How do you mean?"
20033How do you mean?"
20033How long has she been here?"
20033How long will you be here?"
20033How long would it take her to get out to Ranny''s?"
20033How much have you missed me?"
20033How on earth_ did_ you know that?"
20033How''s everybody at grandmother''s?
20033How''s the play coming on?"
20033How_ could_ they sit there saying such kind things to him, and at the same time shut the door between him and the great opportunity of his life?
20033Hurry up with those crutches, Graham; do you think I am going to wait all night?"
20033I hope you are a little bit interested in me?"
20033I know I am regarded as a visionary, a dreamer, but I assure you----""What about the ground?"
20033I leave it to my distinguished collaborator: could any toilet, however elaborate, be more becoming?"
20033I suffer from the excess of my virtue; you see?"
20033I think that''s better taste, do n''t you?"
20033I told sister then that if you got well----""But what about Madam?"
20033I wonder if we_ could_ give the dear child a party?"
20033I wonder if you would consider taking up some night courses at the university?"
20033I''ll only be a minute?"
20033If he got a raise, would he be justified in putting his fate to the test?
20033If the university classes have done this much for you in four months, what will you be by the end of the year?"
20033If you could jump right in and say you think it''s a bully idea, and that you are coming out to see what he has done, and----""Do you want me to lie?"
20033Is he going to follow Enid''s high- handed way of deciding things without the slightest reference to my wishes?"
20033Is it good- by?"
20033Is n''t it funny, Quin?
20033Is n''t it too funny for words?"
20033It''s just some more of grandmother''s tyranny, and I''m not going to submit much longer; would you?"
20033It''s pouring rain and I have n''t any umbrella, and if I get to the hotel and he is n''t there, what shall I do?
20033Leg off at the knee, crutches for life?
20033Little flying things going home?
20033Look at Uncle Ranny; would you ever take him for the same person he was six months ago?"
20033Look at the way they have treated me at home?
20033May I ask what yours is to be?
20033Miss Isobel pushed him toward the door as she spoke:"You-- you do n''t think anything dreadful could have happened to her, do you?"
20033Miss Nell?"
20033Now you will go, wo n''t you?"
20033Now, suppose I construct a great plot, and he supplies great dialogue?
20033Of course I am sorry for Madam Bartlett, but what can I do?
20033Oh, Captain, would n''t that be glorious?"
20033On the bare chance of his not meeting her, what would she do?
20033Papa Claude''s?
20033Perhaps you prefer to go inside and be pushed about and eat messy things with your fingers?"
20033Phipps?"
20033Pretty?
20033Put-- what?
20033Quin had said,"Tails, yes"; and who knows but that down there under the pavement that coin of fate was registering"Heads, no"?
20033Ranny?"
20033Right now?"
20033Say in the spring?"
20033Shall I lend you some?"
20033Shall I play on the piano, Papa Claude, or will you?"
20033Shall we go in and dance?"
20033Shall we show him, Miss Enid?"
20033She flashed a look at him from under her tilted hat- brim:"What on earth''s the matter with you?
20033She''s going to stay right here and let me make love to her-- isn''t she?"
20033Shields?"
20033Stung by his silence, she burst out afresh:"Does n''t she ever ask about me?
20033Suppose Papa Claude was as visionary about her career as he was about everything else?
20033Suppose she did not make good?
20033Suppose she did not want to see him again?
20033Suppose she had no talent, after all?
20033Suppose she should be angry at him for coming to her party?
20033Suppose she should be too taken up with all these strange friends of hers to have time to dance with him?
20033Take the next train home?
20033That is-- whose money?"
20033The colored chauffeur who had driven them out came to the door and asked:"Shall I lay the table for two or three, sir?"
20033Then he added inconsequently:"Who was that fat man you were talking to when I came up?"
20033Then she dismissed the subject abruptly:"Rose, if I tell you something will you swear not to tell?"
20033Then, in answer to a plaintive voice from the library,"Yes, Aunt Enid?"
20033Then, seeing a humorously unsympathetic look flit across Quin''s face, she burst out angrily:"What right had you to follow me over here?"
20033Then, trying very hard to keep his voice steady, he asked gently:"What does this mean, Miss Nell?
20033These orchids are perfectly sweet, and the candy that came yesterday----""Was also_ perfectly_ sweet?
20033Uncle Ranny?"
20033Want to go out with me next Saturday and see''em?"
20033Was it any wonder that Quin''s foot began to twitch, and that, in spite of repeated warnings at the hospital, a blind desire seized him to dance?
20033Was it possible that that absurd boy had actually followed her up to the Bartletts''with the intention of going with them on their expedition?
20033We fooled them, did n''t we?"
20033Well, what are you waiting for?"
20033Were n''t they the funniest and the dearest people he had ever known?
20033Were you or were you not glad to see me?"
20033Were you the boy on the porch?
20033What are you doing here?"
20033What are you smiling about?"
20033What are_ you_ laughing at, Quinby Graham?"
20033What business has he got worrying you with letters and flowers when you have told him you are through with him?"
20033What did it all mean?
20033What did you say he said about Ranny?"
20033What do you see in that silly coxcomb, anyhow?"
20033What else do you like about him?"
20033What had"you"meant to him then?
20033What happy fortune blew you hither?
20033What influence could you bring to bear?"
20033What is it?"
20033What is six thousand dollars to me if it turns Papa Claude out in the street?"
20033What is your name?"
20033What other girl of your acquaintance has her own car, all the pretty clothes she can wear, and as much pin- money as she can spend?"
20033What possible chance would there be of rousing people like that to sympathy for poor, visionary Papa Claude?
20033What right had he to take Shields''s place, when he had said exactly the things that Shields had been fired for saying?
20033What sense was there in his ordering more of this fool rest business?
20033What sort of a place is this you are living in?"
20033What time do you start?"
20033What time does your train go in the morning?"
20033What was the use in going on?
20033What will be the inevitable result?
20033What will she say when she sees your name blazing over a Broadway theater?"
20033What would happen if Cass should die?
20033What''s happened?"
20033What''s happened?"
20033What''s it to you?"
20033What''s the box by the door?"
20033What''s the harm?
20033What''s the matter with them, anyhow?"
20033What''s the matter with us getting Cass and Fan Loomis and going down to Fontaine Ferry to- night?"
20033What''s the trouble?"
20033What''s the trouble?"
20033What''s the use?
20033What_ will_ the family say to me?
20033Whatever made you think I did n''t?"
20033When can I see you again?"
20033When do you go?"
20033When?
20033Where did you get that notion?"
20033Where had he failed?
20033Where had he heard that name?
20033Where have I seen you before?
20033Where in the dickens have I met you?
20033Where is Tom?"
20033Where is that contemptible Phipps?
20033Where''s Quinby Graham?
20033Where?"
20033Which way do we turn?"
20033Who is going to carry Madam up and down stairs?
20033Who is going to stay here at night?
20033Who would take care of her and the children, helpless and penniless, with only Papa Claude and his visions to stand between them and the world?
20033Whom are you going to sell it to?"
20033Why ca n''t you be sensible and see it as we do?"
20033Why ca n''t you trust me, Quin?"
20033Why did n''t you dress yourself properly before you came in here?"
20033Why do n''t they rig you up a pulley, so''s you can change the position of your body without disturbing your leg?"
20033Why do n''t they send for Ranny?"
20033Why do n''t you get a soap- box and preach on the street- corners?
20033Why do n''t you give her just barely enough to live on, and let her try it out on the seamy side for the next six months?
20033Why do n''t you have me stay on until things get to running easy again?"
20033Why do n''t you help me, Quin?
20033Why do n''t you like him, Quin?"
20033Why do n''t you send Tom for the doctor?"
20033Why do n''t you stay down?"
20033Why do n''t you stay with me till he comes?"
20033Why do n''t you try it, Aunt Flo?"
20033Why do n''t you try to get one here in New York?"
20033Why does she sometimes almost seem to hate me?"
20033Why does she treat me the way she does?
20033Why have n''t you told me this before?
20033Why not put an end to everything?
20033Why not?
20033Why not?"
20033Why should n''t they throw discretion to the winds and answer the call?
20033Why then?"
20033Why was she even now flying in the face of authority and risking a serious reprimand by letting him ride in her car?
20033Why?"
20033Will you go to him, child?
20033Will you go?"
20033Will you leave the matter with me until Sunday night, Mr. Martel, and let me see what I can do?"
20033Will you listen while I tell you all about it?"
20033Will you plead our cause for us?"
20033Will you watch the front door and let me know as soon as Mr. Chester arrives?"
20033Wo n''t you come the moment you get this, and try to persuade her?
20033Would Miss Nell believe what she heard?
20033Would he be willing?
20033Would it go very hard with her?
20033Would n''t it be too wonderful, Rose, if Captain Phipps should produce one of his plays?
20033Would she accept Madam''s offer?
20033Would she give Phipps up?
20033Would she recognize him?
20033Would she speak to him if she did, when he looked like that?
20033Would you be willing to go with me?"
20033Would you dare to take it?"
20033Would you mind bringing him into his bedroom?"
20033Would you mind putting this one down?
20033Write every day?
20033You ai n''t going to turn me down, are you?"
20033You are satisfied, I take it?"
20033You do n''t happen to have a cigar about you, do you?"
20033You do n''t mean that you would consider the place seriously?"
20033You do n''t mean to- night?"
20033You do n''t mind, do you, Fan?"
20033You do n''t want to be a thin- blooded little old maid, do you?"
20033You do n''t want to pitch the fat back in the fire, do you?"
20033You have doubtless heard me speak of a very wealthy and talented young friend of mine-- Mr. Harold Phipps?"
20033You love me, do n''t you?"
20033You remember meeting him at our apartment last spring?"
20033You remember that night at Ran''s when you recited for me?
20033You remember the night over home when he talked about his lovely detached soul?
20033You understand definitely that I do not wish you to see him again?"
20033You will go right away, wo n''t you?
20033You''ve definitely decided?"
20033Your clothes are in good condition, I presume?"
20033said the Captain with icy decision,"were n''t you instructed to stay in bed?"
20033she said, then added shrewdly:"Are n''t you the soldier that put the splint on my leg?"
20033they inquired daily;"think it''s going to be chronic?"
42190''And how many of his infernal old widows-- I mean how many of your mother-- are there?'' 42190 ''Since what wedding?''
42190''Wha- wha- wha- what d''you say?'' 42190 ''What affair?''
42190''You do n''t say?'' 42190 And now, Mrs. Adeler, would it not be well to close our record, as the hero and the heroine depart?
42190And the professor of avoirdupois-- whom did she affect?
42190And what are you going to say?
42190And who was it that did so vile a thing?
42190And who,said another man, addressing the editor,"authorized you to print this hideous stuff about my deceased son?
42190And you, I suppose, are willing to give up everything for the cause? 42190 Another railroad accident?"
42190Are you the editor?
42190Can I come in now?
42190Cap.,observed the judge, after a brief interval of silence,"you''re one of them fellers that writes for the papers and magazines, a''n''t you?"
42190Did he die?
42190Do n''t it seem a little bit rough,said Bob,"to bring in such a story as that in connection with my engagement?
42190Do n''t you fear it might perhaps give offence? 42190 Do n''t you think he can be induced to insure?"
42190Do you hear me, miss?
42190Do you know,he observed,"that them school- books that they make now- a- days is perfectly bewilderin''to a man like me?
42190Do you want me to? 42190 Good?
42190Had a personal encounter with the lieutenant?
42190Had you merely picked it up and put it on in jest?
42190He is in good health, I suppose? 42190 How did you lose it, major?"
42190How''s yer pertaters comin''on?
42190I ca n''t do anything for you, then?
42190Indeed?
42190Judge, did you ever try to convert Cooley to temperance principles? 42190 Man of steady habits, I s''pose?"
42190May I ask if he has any considerable wealth?
42190May I inquire what your Christian name is?
42190Not while such men as you are around, at any rate, I suppose?
42190Oh yes; but hold on for a few moments, will you? 42190 Oh,"laughed the lieutenant,"you refer, of course, to our relations with the Magruders?
42190Riot? 42190 Strange how he clings to that fancy about a man named Ball, is n''t it?"
42190Talking about menageries,observed Mr. Bob Parker,"did I ever tell you about Wylie and his love affair?"
42190That placed Archibald in a somewhat peculiar position?
42190The valves a little worn, I suppose?
42190Think of it? 42190 To what did the article refer?"
42190To what do you refer?
42190To what special department of learning do you refer?
42190Was it Tom Willitts?
42190Well, when_ will_ he be in, then?
42190Well?
42190What dates?
42190What is that?
42190What kind of things?
42190What right have you to interfere with me upon my own ground, you ruffian?
42190What story, for instance?
42190What was the nature of the suggestion?
42190What, to- night?
42190What?
42190When are you going to speak to Bessie''s father?
42190Where did you get it?
42190Where did you get that, I say? 42190 Where did you get that?"
42190Who could have done it?
42190Who was Mott?
42190Whose was it? 42190 Why do n''t you call a couple of policemen?
42190Why do n''t you speak to Mrs. Dr. Magruder, then? 42190 Why do n''t you wear it now, Mary?"
42190Why not?
42190Why, Dick, what''s the matter?
42190Why, I thought he agreed to supply the supper?
42190Why? 42190 Why?
42190Why?
42190Would n''t it be better to wait until to- morrow? 42190 Yes, and can you imagine anything that would be more likely to give a woman the heartache than such a recollection?
42190You are positive of that, are you?
42190You do n''t believe in second marriages, then?
42190You do n''t mean to say that Bangs declined to publish that narrative?
42190You do n''t think this story is false, do you, and that all such statements are untrue?
42190You know old Magruder''s? 42190 *****Is that the whole of the article?"
42190*****"Mrs. Adeler, do you feel any interest in the subject of pirates?"
42190A healthy moral lesson, was n''t it?
42190A little paradise, in fact; but, Adeler, why do n''t you buy a horse?"
42190Adeler?"
42190After the usual salutation she asked,"Is Mr. Parker not at home?"
42190An''it_ was_ pretty fair for a joke, was n''t it?"
42190And besides, what would I say at the mass meeting?
42190And when all these arrangements are completed, so that I feel equal to the promised emergency, suppose that thunder- storm does not come?
42190As we went around to the rear of the house to get it, the judge said:"I reckon you do n''t use no terbacker, do you?"
42190Besides, does it seem precisely proper to treat such a solemn subject as death with so much levity?"
42190Besides, who could be base enough to play such a dastardly trick upon a pretty young girl?
42190But Mr. Collamer misunderstood the motion:"Goin''to sing another hymn, hey?
42190But as Cooley is certainly dead, what''s the odds if we ca n''t agree as to what killed him?
42190But has the government no duty in the matter?
42190But is it any wonder that boy''s spiled?
42190But who do you suppose told your father these things?"
42190But you will save her now, doctor, will you not?
42190But, cap., do n''t it strike you that a man who''d lie like that ought to have somethin''done to him?
42190By gracious, it''s rough, is n''t it?
42190By the way, I wonder if he has gone down there now?"
42190Ca n''t you come over an''help me clear them out?"
42190Can he suppose that I could write poetry without rhymes?
42190Can the idiot know that it was necessary to have a rhyme for''bed''?
42190Could n''t make it, could n''t I?
42190D''you hear that, you wretch?
42190Did I ever tell you about old Sparks, of Pencadder Hundred?"
42190Did I ever tell you the story of the African chieftain who determined to surpass all his rivals in this respect?
42190Did n''t he desire me to throw a glamour of poesy over commonplace details?
42190Did you ever reflect upon the difference between the real and the ideal Irish maiden?"
42190Do I look like a man who would slay a human being in cold blood?"
42190Do n''t you know where little story- tellers go?
42190Do you feel like hearing it?"
42190Do you remember the Sawyers, who used to live near us in the city?
42190Good, was n''t it?"
42190Has he complained lately of being sick?"
42190Have n''t I told you often enough to let terbacker alone?
42190Have you ever seen the_ Colleen Bawn_?"
42190He was standing by the prostrate trees, and he at once remarked,"Did you ever know of a man havin''sich luck as this?
42190Healthy old parent, ai n''t he?"
42190How about your annual free pass to Philadelphia?"
42190How could he perform his vow?
42190How could he pray at the commodore''s tomb?
42190How was this villainy consummated?
42190I asked, carelessly,"or a riot in Philadelphia?"
42190I have met with a misfortune, and I--""Why, what''s happened?"
42190I suppose he travels sometimes-- goes about in railroad cars and other dangerous places?"
42190I tell you, Adeler, this yer rum drinkin''''s a fearful thing any way you take it, now, ai n''t it?"
42190I turned to the man next to me, and said, with suppressed emotion,"May I ask your name, my friend?"
42190I''d like to hand you, for him, a few pamphlets containing statistics upon the subject; may I?"
42190I--""Well?"
42190In a few moments, however, he remarked:"Training for a prize- fight, Adeler?"
42190In order to prepare the way for him, I asked him:[ Illustration]"Why were you so late last night, Bob?"
42190It is a gratuitous insult to my family, and I distinctly want you to say_ what do you mean_ by such conduct?"
42190It is probable, I suppose, that you would never, under any circumstances, marry any woman but Bessie Magruder?"
42190It is quite good, is it not, lieutenant?"
42190Let''s see; where d''I put them things?
42190Magnificent, is n''t it?
42190Mr. Blodgett, missionary to the Fiji Islands?
42190Mr. Magruder began the conversation:"Well, Mr. Parker, I trust you have been successful in your efforts?"
42190Mrs. Adeler immediately asked:"Do you believe what that man says?"
42190No chance, had n''t I?
42190Now, which is correct?
42190Of course, Mrs. A.,_ you_ know the secret of real happiness in married life?"
42190Oh, doctor, can not something be done to save her?
42190Or suppose I say,''Jane is kissing''?"
42190Perhaps you do n''t know him?''
42190Perhaps you have fished for eels?
42190Perhaps you knew him, Parker?"
42190Perhaps you may have observed an enthusiastic fisherman in pursuit of worms?
42190Philadelphia man, I reckon?"
42190Queer sort of an affair, was n''t it?"
42190Shall I read it?"
42190Shall I?"
42190Slimmer to the foreman, who with him was listening,"that the corpse had n''t a pink wart?
42190Some do not; but where do they go?
42190The chief priest asked the maiden, when the services began, If her papa had said she might annex this fine young man?
42190The editor read as follows:"We have lost our little Hanner in a very painful manner, And we often asked, How can her harsh sufferings be borne?
42190The following conversation then ensued:"I suppose,"said Gunn,"Mr. Kemper has no insurance on his life?"
42190Then he asked,"''Who was your father?''
42190There was that fuss''round at Dr. Hopkins''s a couple o''year ago; did you hear''bout that?"
42190They make the Best Cocktails._''""The temperance society did n''t like that, of course?"
42190Very good of the old man, was n''t it, to smash up his steps in that manner?
42190Want to take it out now?"
42190Was he asked to Simms''s balls?
42190Was he noticed by the Thomsons?
42190We know, from a painful experience, what the peasant- girl of real life is, do we not?
42190Well, sir-- Do you know old Hillegass?"
42190What bishop?''
42190What d''you mean by putting such stuff as this in your paper about my deceased son?
42190What d''you mean by sich conduct?
42190What d''you mean by writin''of my grandson in that way?
42190What do you think of that, Max?"
42190What do_ you_ know about Jane and Artemas, you wretched buccaneer, you despicable butcher of the English language?
42190What is the use of joint high commissions if these things are to be allowed?
42190What on earth was I to do now?
42190When Lieutenant Smiley bade us good- night, I said,"Mrs. Adeler, what do you think of that young man?"
42190When will he be home?
42190Where did you get the brooch, Mary?"
42190Where''s the man who wrote this?
42190Who shall say that we do not advance in civilization?
42190Whose was that article?
42190Why did you permit all this misery and shame to fall upon the defenceless head of a woman for whom an honest man should have sacrificed his very life?
42190Why do n''t they go home?"
42190Why should a view of Cooley suggest such a thing?"
42190Why should n''t I?"
42190Willitts?"
42190Would not the tomb, as it were, be very apt to prey upon him, to snatch him up and assimilate him?
42190You do n''t suppose I''d be such a fool as to engage myself to a girl without thinking seriously about it?"
42190You know old Smiley-- Fiji Island Smiley?
42190You think the subject is an odd one?
42190You''ve read the''Atlantic Monthly,''have n''t you?"
42190[ Illustration] A snap, a fizz, a rumble; some stupendous roaring tones-- And where upon earth''s surface was the recent Mrs. Jones?
42190[ Illustration] There was absolute silence in the room as Mary, pale and calm, replied:"Why do you ask, sir?"
42190[ Illustration]"And killed him, I suppose, of course?"
42190[ Illustration]"Anything the matter?"
42190[ Illustration]"Are you sure of that?
42190[ Illustration]"How did you succeed?"
42190[ Illustration]"It is an awful thing, Mrs. Adeler, to think of two young lives being made miserable for want of one Roman nose, is n''t it?"
42190[ Illustration]"It was not the custom then, I suppose, to make a display on such occasions?"
42190[ Illustration]"Mr. Nippers,"I said,"do n''t you think it would be a good idea for me to engage you permanently to labor upon that boiler?
42190[ Illustration]"Was Mr. Wylie what you might consider a man of veracity?"
42190[ Illustration]"What is that?"
42190[ Illustration][ Illustration]"A patent medicine man, I suppose?"
42190did you ever see sich weather as this?
42190exclaimed Bishop Potts, turning pale;''you do n''t mean to say that there is a pack of children, too?''
42190how about that policy?
42190indignantly demanded Mrs. Adeler, whose family pride was aroused;"what did he hear?"
42190is it possible you''ve begun to chaw this ornary stuff?
42190said the doctor, unable to restrain his scorn and contempt;"why did you not say this before?
42190said the general;''have your fathers been teaching you rebellion, and sent you to exhibit it here?''
42190she said, in a voice broken by sobs,"wh- what d''you mean by publishing this kind of poetry about m- my child?
42190what bark is that?"
59344True, they were the bones of Revolutionary soldiers; but they were black men; and shall a city that kidnaps its citizens, honor a Negro with a grave? 59344 What, General?"
59344But what have they ever done for Stephen, or for Stephen''s posterity?"
59344But, Sir, whose fault is this?
59344Does the''Nigger''deserve a tomb?
59344Have they ever refused to do military duty when called upon?
59344He soon joined the fleet on Lake Champlain, under M''Donough; was with him in the celebrated battle which gave honor(?)
59344It is haughtily asked, who will stand in the ranks shoulder to shoulder with a negro?
59344Who endured the hardships of the camp, or faced with greater courage the perils of the fight?
59344Who rallied with more alacrity in response to the summons of danger?
59344Yet who more than they deserve the thanks of the country and the gratitude of the succeeding generations?
60145Who Were the Romans?
60145One would ask, on hearing such a person mentioned,"Does he belong to the sects or to the church people?"
60145Speranza, Gino,_ Race or Nation?_ Stanard, Mary Newton,_ The Story of Virginia''s First Century_.
60145When General Braddock, whose army was nearly wiped out by the French and Indians in 1755, sighed,"Who would have thought it?"
60145Why should outsiders be allowed to come in and take the jobs and lower the living standards of American labor?
56041I have the fullest confidence in his word,& c. And what does this ex- Catholic, for whom Cardinal Newman vouched, have to say about convents?
56041******* In the palace of the Popes themselves, what was the result of celibacy?
56041And why were these American Catholics willing to wade in blood for popery?
56041But who made the system?
56041Did poor Margaret Shepherd, or Maria Monk make any accusations that were worse than these which we find in a standard history of England?
56041Did these Fathers of the Christian Church grossly slander those celibate heretics?
56041Do you marvel that Roman Catholic countries are the immoral countries?
56041Do you wonder at the mania for vice and crime among the lower Italians, Spaniards and Portuguese?
56041Have men and women changed?
56041If the word of Christ is not conclusive and binding, where shall we seek the truth?
56041In Delisser''s powerful book,"Pope, or President?"
56041Is human nature the same?
56041King Edgar of England wrote--"What shall I say of the clergy?
56041Many of you have visited Paris, and do you not see there a lying- in hospital attached to every nunnery in the city?
56041Read again that tremendous sentence of Saint Bernard, and then ask yourself,_ Has human nature changed_?
56041Take away honorable marriage from the priests, and what do you get in place of the bed undefiled?
56041What Happens to Full Sexed Women When They Foolishly Take Vows Which Insult Nature and God?
56041What answer was made to him?
56041What is the evidence and the verdict of impartial History?
56041What is the object of these hospitals?
56041What was this furnace of licentiousness?
56041What will_ they do_, inside the cloistered convents?
56041When adultery is elevated into a system which is recognized as a religion, who is to punish the adulterer?
56041When the robber is_ the Law_, who is to punish the criminal?
56041Who is it, at the age of thirty, that has not committed a crime for the sake of love?
56041Why is it that a human document ten thousand years old has the same effect upon us, as a newspaper story of yesterday?
56041Why is it that we love or hate the men and women who live in the songs of Homer?
56041Why should loose men_ pay_, when there were so many places of gratuitous entertainment?
56041Why?
48273''A song for our banner?'' 48273 And how can a man die better Than facing fearful odds For the ashes of his fathers And the temple of his gods?"
48273And this one was good to the oppressed, He was gentle and brave, and so Was n''t he greater than all the rest? 48273 Bennie?
48273God bless you, sir,said Blossom; and who shall doubt that God heard and registered the request?
48273Was Lincoln a king?
48273Well, my child,he said, in his pleasant, cheerful tone,"what do you want so bright and early in the morning?"
48273What is this you say, child? 48273 Who says I''m a coward?"
48273( Albert_ goes to sofa and buries his face in his hands._) What in the world are you doing, Sally Caroline?
48273( Mrs. Mortimer_ takes_ Clementina''s_ hand and leads her to Lincoln''s picture._) Do you know who this is?
48273(_ Closes book with a bang._) Was there ever any stuff like that?
48273(_ Draws long breath._) Lieutenant: But go on; you said they did n''t kill the worthless cur?
48273(_ Exeunt at right._) Clementina(_ enters at right, waving fife, followed by_ George,_ carrying drum_): Golly, wa''n''t that fine?
48273(_ Exeunt._) Sergeant(_ saluting_): Had n''t I better go, too, Lieutenant?
48273(_ Goes up stage._) John: We do mean it, too, do n''t we, Tom?
48273(_ Goes up._) Sergeant: Come back and tell the rest; what happened then?
48273(_ Laughs and gesticulates._) John(_ enters at right_): Where''s Abe, mother?
48273(_ Shivers._) But it''s cold in here, what on earth is the matter with your fire?
48273(_ placing right- hand forefinger to lips_): Albert, do you forget that our father is one of them?
48273--_Luther Laflin Mills_ May one who fought in honor for the South Uncovered stand and sing by Lincoln''s grave?
48273--_Youth''s Companion._ WAS LINCOLN KING?
48273A FLAG EXERCISE L. F. Armitage FOR EIGHT LITTLE GIRLS AND BOYS, EACH CARRYING A FLAG First Child: What flag is this?
48273Albert, was that you speaking like that to your sister?
48273Albert: In Tennessee?
48273All(_ excitedly_): Have_ seen_ him?
48273And so, I think his way-- don''t you?
48273Are those not wonderful words?
48273Auntie Temp(_ excitedly_): Laws honey, ye doan mean it?
48273Auntie Temp: Go''long ye good- foh- nuthin''shif''less niggah; doan ye see de mist''ess?
48273Both: What''s that?
48273But has n''t he learned the trick of telling a good lie?
48273But what''s his name, do you know?
48273C. Hassler_ 21''Tis Splendid to Live So Grandly_ Margaret E. Sangster_ 17 Tributes to Lincoln 48 Was Lincoln King?
48273Clementina(_ running in from right_): O, mammy, did you- all heah de music?
48273Did he ask For homage when glad Victory Followed his flags from sea to sea?
48273Did n''t I hear you say something about ploughing?
48273Did n''t you ever hear how he came to be captain?
48273Do n''t you feel chilly, mother?
48273Do n''t you remember how the grand Lincoln closed his inaugural address?
48273Do n''t you remember the other day when you had the tooth- ache, Abe got in all the wood and would n''t let you do a thing?
48273Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait and sue their heirs?
48273Fifth: What do these colors mean?
48273George(_ comes down quickly_): Seed''i m?
48273George: Where''s she gone ter?
48273H. Stoddard_ Who can be what he was to the people, What he was to the State?
48273Harm a picture which his father loves so well?
48273Helen(_ impatiently_): Boys, why do n''t you brace up and study as you ought to?
48273Her face is buried in her hands and she seems to weep as he recites:"How can I bear to leave thee?
48273How can he accept those low- down Northerners as his associates?
48273How can you talk so?
48273How could you say things like that with his noble, benign face looking straight at you?
48273How will it be now, I wonder?
48273I overheard your bad plans; how can you talk that way about going to school instead of being glad that you have the chance to go?
48273I wonder what made the child think of singing that?
48273Jackie?
48273John(_ calling back over his shoulder_): Bother on them, we''ll have time to study after school calls: if we do n''t, who cares?
48273John(_ coming towards them_): What are you two girls talking about over here?
48273John(_ sulkily_): And must I get that wood in all alone?
48273John: How''d he learn it if he has n''t been to school?
48273John: Is n''t here?
48273John: Just because he was fool enough to cut four cords of wood for a_ piece_ of a book?
48273John: O, who wants to be great?
48273John: We can work for the farmers until we get a little money and then---- Helen(_ enters at right and comes down_): O boys, are n''t you ashamed?
48273John:_ Glad_ of the chance?
48273LINCOLN''S FAVORITE POEM MORTALITY( O WHY SHOULD THE SPIRIT OF MORTAL BE PROUD?)
48273Lee has surrendered-- but where, O where(_ rises and walks up and down_) are my poor husband and our boy?
48273Let me see(_ reads_):"If the half of four be three, what will three- fourths of twenty be?"
48273Lieutenant(_ to the others_): Listen to that, will you?
48273Lieutenant: Well, did they fight him?
48273Lieutenant: Well, what_ did_ they do to make any fun?
48273Lieutenant: Well, why do n''t you do it, then?
48273Lieutenant} Did they kill him?
48273Messenger: What threatens the Union In this land of ours?
48273Mr. Lincoln(_ enters at right_): What''s that, mother?
48273Mr. Lincoln: Is n''t that a little hard on the others, Sallie?
48273Mr. Lincoln: Mother, what in the world is this?
48273Mrs. Lincoln(_ starting up_): John, why do you drop the wood in that noisy way?
48273Mrs. Lincoln: What for?
48273Mrs. Lincoln: What shall I do with that boy?
48273Mrs. Mortimer(_ enters at right_): Children, what in the world are you doing?
48273Mrs. Mortimer(_ jumping up_): For joy?
48273My papa was a soldier, too; No battles was he in, And when I ask him,"Why?
48273My son fight against the old flag?
48273O what have we to fear?
48273O why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
48273O, what shall we do?
48273O, why did she do it?
48273OLD FLAG Hubbard Parker What shall I say to you, Old Flag?
48273On whom shall we call?
48273Sally: O, Albert, how can you talk so?
48273Sarah: Shall I go and make him keep still?
48273Say, darkeys, hab you seen de massa, Wid de muffstas on his face, Go''long de road some time dis mornin'', Like he gwine to leav de place?
48273Seventh: Why are the flags up today?
48273Shall it be love, or hate, John, It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t your bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside?
48273Shall the ages bring us another As good and as great?
48273Shall we now see our flag bowed low?
48273Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And days of auld lang syne?"
48273The South says,"_ Poor folks down!_"John, An''"_ All men up!_"say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee?
48273The girl pours out a cup of tea for each during the words:"Should auld acquaintance be forgot, And never brought to mind?
48273They meet at right- front._) Sally(_ in excited undertone_): Auntie Temp, what do you think?
48273Third: What are its colors?
48273Thomas(_ enters at right_): What''s that, Jack?
48273Thomas: But, how about your sum and my geography lesson?
48273Thomas: What''s the use of_ his_ reading the Life of Washington?
48273What can you mean, Sally Caroline?
48273What could a woman do?
48273What did he make them with?
48273What do you mean?
48273What good will it ever do me, I''d like to know, to get the names of all these islands in my head?
48273What is he going to do?
48273What is your mission now, Old Flag?
48273What more need a fellow know?
48273What need hath he now of a tardy crown, His name from mocking jest and sneer to save?
48273What ruler ever won it like this dead President of ours?
48273What saith Dull history that reckoneth But coldly?
48273What shall we see if we wait?
48273What''s de matta, you crazy niggah gal?
48273What''s he going to do now?
48273What''s the use of all this foolish talk?
48273What''s your name?
48273What, then, if the enemy come, Creeping stealthily over the hill With never the sound of drum?
48273Where did he learn to_ do_ sums?
48273Who cares?
48273Who is Bennie?"
48273Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win,--ditto tails_?
48273Who now can save us?
48273Who shall guard the camp tonight, If no guard here is awake?
48273Why should he?
48273Why talk so dreffle big, John, Of honor when it meant You did n''t care a fig, John, But jest for_ ten per cent_?
48273Why was he famed above other men, His name upon every tongue and pen,-- The illustrious Abe Lincoln?
48273Wondah whar she went?
48273Ya mis''able good- foh- nuthin''lyin''niggah gal, how could ye seed''i m?
48273Ye s''pose he lib an''not sen''a perscripshun to de mist''ess befoh dis yere?
48273You wonder why we''re hot, John?
48273You''re not a fellow, are you?
48273did n''t you, Sallie?
48273how could he ever have gone against the flag of his forefathers?
48273what de wo''ld you- all do dat foh?
48273what was the secret, then, Of his being America''s honored son?
48273who''ll be a Volunteer?
51426Dost thou still haunt the brink Of yonder river''s tide? 51426 In your intercourse with the dwellers in the great city, have you alighted on Mr. Edward Palmer, who studies with Dr. Beach, the Herbalist?
51426Is thy brow clear again, As in thy youthful years? 51426 Nor king, nor duke?
51426Then how does he come by his English?
51426What bird wilt thou employ To bring me word of thee? 51426 What season didst thou find?
51426Where chiefly shall I look To feel thy presence near? 51426 Where is the finch, the thrush I used to hear?
51426Who is the speaker?
51426Who sings the praise of woman in our clime? 51426 ''Ca n''t we study up something?'' 51426 ''Why should I? 51426 *****Is''t then too late the damage to repair?
51426A fellow- sufferer from the same affliction, who lived in Cohasset, was asked, the other day, what in the world he took for it?
51426Along the neighboring brook May I thy voice still hear?
51426And is fear the foundation of that worship?
51426And may I ever think That thou art by my side?
51426And was that ugly pain The summit of thy fears?
51426Are not the Fates more kind Than they appear?
51426But as I am, equally with you, an admirer of Cowper, why should I not prove a sort of unnecessary addition to your neighborhood possibly?
51426But as I did not, will you allow me to seek you out, when next I come to Concord?
51426But is not their whole process marred by leaving out common sense, by which mankind are generally governed?
51426But what do I, or does any friend of mine in America care for a journal?
51426Ca n''t you ask her to write it for me?
51426Ca n''t you cut it into three or four, and omit all that relates to time?
51426Did they wait for his Counsell?"
51426Do I exercise the faith in the divine care and protection which I ought to do?
51426Do I not withhold more than is meet from pious and charitable uses?
51426Do you wish to swap any of your''wood- notes wild''for dollars?
51426Does a man deserve to be rewarded for refraining from murder?
51426Does anybody still think of coming to Concord to live?
51426Does that execrable compound of sawdust and stagnation L. still prose about nothing?
51426Dost thou, indeed, fare well, As we wished here below?
51426Have I done well to get me a shay?
51426Have I not been proud or too fond of this convenience?
51426He at once recognized his Concord friend, greeted him cordially with"How do you do, my little rebel?"
51426He can keep them as a literary_ curio_, and in his old age amuse himself with thinking,''How could ever I have liked these?''"
51426He has a vast many Talents,--is it an easy thing for so Wise a man to become a Fool for Christ?
51426His deeds may never be forgotten; but is this greatness?
51426How camest thou there?
51426How old should you think he was?
51426I mean new people?
51426I vow-- you-- what noise was that?
51426Indeed, what Greek would not be proud to claim this fragment as his own?
51426Is anything going on about it now?
51426Is fear the ruling principle of our religion?
51426Is hope a less powerful incentive to action than fear?
51426Is it a bargain?
51426Is it not rather the mother of superstition?
51426Is the greatest virtue merely negative?
51426May he not have a prospect of doubling his Wealth and Honours, if crowned with Success?
51426May we depend on you?
51426Should I not be more in my study, and less fond of diversion?
51426Should we not be likely to find the truth, in all moral subjects, were we to make more use of plain reason and common sense?
51426Some have asked,''Can not reward be substituted for punishment?
51426Thoreau?''
51426Was I not present to thee, likewise?"
51426Was the Lord first consulted in the affair?
51426What Demonstration has he given of being so entirely devoted to the Lord?
51426What about your book( the''Week'')?
51426What do you think of following out your thought in an essay on''The Literary Life?''
51426What images can be more natural, what sentiments of greater weight and at the same time more noble and exalted than those with which they abound?
51426What sun shines for thee now?
51426When a political pharmacopoeia has the command of both ingredients, wherefore employ the bitter instead of the sweet?''
51426When asked why he did not stop the trespasser, he replied,"Could not the poor man have a tree?"
51426Where was George Minott?
51426Who can predict his comings and goings?
51426Who wonders that the flesh declines to grow Along his sallow pits?
51426Why did not Emerson try it in England?
51426Will you finish the poem in your own way, and send it for the''Dial''?
51426Will you not send me some other records of the_ good week_?"
51426Wo n''t you send them again?
51426Would it be no advantage to his Estate to win the place?
51426Yet what could a companion do at present, unless to tame the guardian of the Alps too early?
51426You will see that they apply to himself:"--"Brother, where dost thou dwell?
51426and I wonder-- you-- if Henry''s been to see George Jones yet?
51426and that nutmeg- grater of a Z. yet shriek about nothing?
51426do you make the Lord your Guide and Counselor in ye affair?
51426or does it rather consist in the performance of a thousand every- day duties, hidden from the eye of the world?"
51426or that his life, To social pleasure careless, pines away In dry seclusion and unfruitful shade?
51426so great a man to become a Little Child?
51426so rich a man to crowd in at the Strait Gate of Conversion, and make so little noise?...
51426the reply was,"Why are you_ not_ here?"
51426you-- does he look as if he were two years younger than I?''"
5630A supreme opportunity had come and how was it used?
5630Already a North and a South were talked of-- why not set up also a West?
5630And had he not proved himself a Moses, aye and a Joshua, too?
5630And is this the promised land?
5630And what was the cause of this hurried departure of the military?
5630And who that has gazed upon these splendid shrines will say that the people who can do so much in poverty and tribulation are insincere?
5630But how long did they hesitate?
5630But of what use are theories and philosophies of religion without practical application?
5630But what of the internal work of the Church during these trying periods?
5630But, it may be asked, what necessity was there for a restoration if the Priesthood had been once established upon earth?
5630Did either the pulpit or the press through the state raise a note of remonstrance or alarm?
5630Did the state ever make one decent effort to defend them as fellow- citizens in their rights or to redress their wrongs?
5630Had these colonists of the wilderness not gone far enough to satisfy the hatred of their fellow- citizens in this republic of liberty?
5630Had they not seen, lo, these many times, organized battalions and companies surpassing fiendish mobs in villainy?
5630Has the state ever remunerated even those known to be innocent for the loss of either their property or their arms?
5630Have any who plundered and openly insulted the"Mormons"ever been brought to the punishment due to their crimes?
5630How then shall the dead receive the blessings and ordinances denied to them or by them neglected while in the flesh?
5630In return much assistance was rendered by the white refugees to their, shall I say savage friends?
5630In the dread alternative offered them, the people determined again to abandon their homes; but whither should they go?
5630Is it not notorious on the contrary that they were hunted like wild beasts from county to county before they made any resistance?
5630Is it unreasonable, is it unphilosophical, thus to look for additional light and knowledge?
5630Moreover, had the people been inclined to rebellion what greater opportunity could they have wished?
5630Of what avail is belief as a mere mental assent or denial?
5630Prof. Turner of Illinois College wrote: Who began the quarrel?
5630Shall religion be the one department of human thought and effort in which progression is impossible?
5630Shall we suppose that all of God''s good gifts to his children are restricted to the narrow limits of mortal existence?
5630The question,"What is the Book of Mormon?"
5630Was it the"Mormons?"
5630Were they not safe from savage foes both red and white?
5630What was there to fear in the voluntary association of six men, avowedly devoted to peaceful pursuits and benevolent purposes?
5630What would become of the rest?
5630Who are the dead but those who at some time have lived in mortality?
5630Who are the living of today but those who shortly shall be added to the uncounted dead?
28726''A coward?'' 28726 ''And if I do n''t come?''
28726''And the work?'' 28726 ''And the work?''
28726''And will ye not go after thim?'' 28726 ''And ye need a dollar?''
28726''But what''ll become of us?'' 28726 ''But what''s it fur, pard?''
28726''Ca n''t drown but once, can you? 28726 ''D''ye know where the patrol- leader lives?''
28726''Did you know, trumpeter, that, when I came to Plymouth, they put me into a line regiment?'' 28726 ''Do yez dig yer fun out of the ground like coal?''
28726''Do?'' 28726 ''Go?''
28726''Have you never heard of the League of the Red- headed Men?'' 28726 ''How do ye know?''
28726''How should it be with me? 28726 ''In her?''
28726''In your which?'' 28726 ''Is there no seagoin''craft in this harbor?''
28726''Land?'' 28726 ''Movin''?''
28726''They-- who?'' 28726 ''Troop Sergeant- Major Thomas Irons, how is it with you?''
28726''Trooper Henry Buckingham, how it is with you?'' 28726 ''Wall, what do you want, anyway?''
28726''Well,''says I seein''that it was poor fortune to be quarrelin''with a slip of a kid,''do yez want the dollar or not?'' 28726 ''Wha- what''s dat you say, boss?
28726''What are you settin''there for?'' 28726 ''What do you call purely nominal?''
28726''What in tunket do we want to drown for? 28726 ''What would be the hours?''
28726''What''s the matther with that scut of a skipper?'' 28726 ''What?
28726''What?'' 28726 ''Where could I find him?''
28726''Where you goin''?'' 28726 ''Which way?''
28726''Why in time,''says I,''did n''t you mind me and go up the ocean side? 28726 ''Why not?''
28726''Why that?'' 28726 ''Why wake me?''
28726''Why, pard,''says he,''what''s the matter? 28726 ''Why, what is it, then?''
28726''Ye have followed the sea for many years?'' 28726 A misfortune, my friend?
28726Am I so terrible as all that?
28726And I want you to tuck it away in your thinker-- savez? 28726 And am I to be put on the articles?"
28726And can ye put me on some craft bound in, cappen?
28726And did n''t?
28726And has your business been attended to in your absence?
28726And how could you tell that they would make their attempt to- night?
28726And how have you given your word?
28726And now a question for a question: Do you know Lady Vandeleur?
28726And sit in the dark?
28726And the trumpeter just lifted the lids of his eyes, and answered:''How should I not be one with you, drummer Johnny-- Johnny boy? 28726 And what are you doing in here, anyhow?
28726And what did you do then?
28726And what did you see?
28726And what of it?
28726And what, if you please, may be his name?
28726And you could not share them with anybody, could n''t you? 28726 Anything to do with it?
28726Are all the Ocean House boarders weak- minded?
28726Are you sure about that?
28726Are you the missing man o''that crew?
28726As we intered the hotel a tall man, with the mar- rk of aut''ority on him, observed me unifor- rm and addressed me:''What do you know about this?'' 28726 At what time?"
28726Aw, what for?
28726Awful thing, was n''t it? 28726 Beaver asked you and me the same question, you remember?"
28726Bill,says I,"there is n''t any heart disease in your family, is there?"
28726Boys, you were n''t quarreling, were you?
28726But does the Doctor know how it''ll break up the nine?
28726But his story, Abner?
28726But how could you guess what the motive was?
28726But surely you might have done your algebra before ten o''clock?
28726But the things we found, Abner?
28726But why a feint? 28726 But, Curly,"I asked,"did n''t you have any fun?
28726Butcher?
28726Ca n''t you? 28726 Ca n''t you?"
28726Ca n''t you_ ever_ come home without being telephoned for?
28726Clients?
28726D''ye see that light?
28726Dead broke, Scotty?
28726Della,he said to the cook,"do you know what I''d do if you was a crook and I had my ottomatic with me?"
28726Did Shifflet and Twiggs know Bowers?
28726Did not I tell you?
28726Did they tell you that when you stopped the drove?
28726Did you do that to- day at the matinée performance, chevalier?
28726Did you have a doctor look at it?
28726Do n''t you know whom he belongs to?
28726Do not I owe you my life?
28726Do you believe that there was any such person?
28726Do you mean that for me?
28726Do you reckon that there blue trail is smoke from the machine or remarks from the inhabitants thereof?
28726Do you say so?
28726Do you think the faculty will-- will----"Fire me? 28726 Do you think we would hang men on that?
28726Do you want to make me trouble?
28726Does Stevens know you''re here?
28726Does n''t he look after you in vacation- time?
28726Even to putting your head in his mouth?
28726Father,he said,"am I to do the trick to- night?
28726Fine, are n''t they, Scotty?
28726Have you ever observed that his ears are pierced for earrings?
28726Have you never had a curiosity yourself to pass a night in that house?
28726Have you the chisel and the bags? 28726 He has a rich friend, then?"
28726He is still with you, I presume?
28726He is still with you?
28726Hey, who''s on lookout?
28726Hit-- hit which? 28726 Honest?"
28726Honest?
28726How about Stubby?
28726How did he come?
28726How did you know, for example, that I did manual labor? 28726 How far is it to the stockade, kid?"
28726How long is it since the house acquired this sinister character?
28726How many of these plunkers does the devil need to buy your soul?
28726How many?
28726How so?
28726How, sir?
28726I am? 28726 I expect to wark where''er I be; but do I get pay, I''m askin''?"
28726I got to have my turn first, have n''t I?
28726I guess it ai n''t your father''s revolaver, is it?
28726I have n''t showed you how_ I_ do, have I? 28726 I know everything that''s in your yard and in your stable, and there is n''t a thing----""I did n''t say it was in the yard or in the stable, did I?"
28726I said, What''s the matter with your arm?
28726I say, Butcher,said the Big Man, in sudden fear,"you wo n''t go up to Andover and play against us, will you?"
28726I say,he began, according to etiquette,"is that you, Butcher?"
28726I wonder if the chevalier himself would be as safe if he were to make a feint of doing that?
28726I!--what?
28726I''m f''m Forty- second Street-- see?
28726I''m not goin''to keep it, am I? 28726 I?"
28726In what way am I to construe your attitude, sir?
28726Indeed?
28726Is Cappen Bolt in charge o''the_ Anita_ the neo?
28726Is any one doing anything?
28726Is it the lion again? 28726 Is it this old gentleman?"
28726Is that a fact?
28726Is that all?
28726Is there a bar? 28726 Is they just like squids?"
28726Is you sure he''s dead?
28726It is a little off the beaten track, is n''t it?
28726It would n''t?
28726Just a bit?
28726Ma''am?
28726Ma''am?
28726Make a feint of it? 28726 Me?"
28726My lady,said he,"what is an insult?
28726Now it''s better, eh, Big Man?
28726Of me?
28726Oh, I am, am I?
28726Oh, Mr. Cleek, have you any idea, any clue?
28726Oh, did it?
28726Or impress our senses with the belief in such effects-- we never having been_ en rapport_ with the person acting on us? 28726 Really haunted?--and by what-- ghosts?"
28726Really? 28726 Red Chief,"says I to the kid,"would you like to go home?"
28726Sam,says he,"what''s two hundred and fifty dollars, after all?
28726Say, Big Man-- feeling sort of homesick?
28726She is pretty, is she not?
28726She wo n''t?
28726Sir? 28726 Sir?"
28726Sir?
28726So he''s a little homesick, is he?
28726Stranger,said he, in a scared kind of whisper,"what''s them?"
28726Swell, ai n''t it, Chimmy?
28726That feller shore rubbed my hair th''wrong way th''minute he shot his mouth off, with:''Wall, what kin I do for you, young feller?''
28726The Baron von Steinheid?
28726The drummer walked past my father as if he never saw him, and stood by the elbow- chair and said:''Trumpeter, trumpeter, are you one with me?''
28726The man answered,''How should it be with me? 28726 The trumpeter looked down on him from the height of six- foot- two, and asked:''Did they die well?''
28726Then it is only when they are dressed and made up for the performance, eh? 28726 Then what happened?"
28726Then why should you?
28726They are not yours, are they not?
28726They never do, do they?
28726This little fool,she thought,"why should he not become my servant instead of the general''s?
28726To an end?
28726Want to get to New York?
28726Was he the only applicant?
28726Was it your own dog that bit you?
28726Was that you, sir?
28726Was you ever to that Op''ra The-_a_-ter, ol''man? 28726 Watson, I think you know Mr. Jones of Scotland Yard?
28726We looked at each other and he thin says:''Can ye run a gasoline engine?'' 28726 Well, I said I''d show you if you came on over, did n''t I?"
28726Well, I_ am_ goin''to, ai n''t I?
28726Well, Joshua, what''s the matter?
28726Well, Watson,said Holmes, when our visitor had left us,"what do you make of it all?"
28726Well, but China?
28726Well, the snuff, then, and the Freemasonry?
28726Well, then, why do n''t you?
28726Well, why do n''t you_ see_ if I will? 28726 Well, youngster,"he said, gruffly,"had enough?
28726Well,said Ward,"what then?"
28726Well,_ wait_ a minute, ca n''t you? 28726 Well?"
28726Were you quarreling with Penrod?
28726What advantage, Abner?
28726What am I to do?
28726What are you doing here?
28726What are you going to do, then?
28726What did Shifflet and Twiggs say to this story?
28726What did the man pay Twiggs and Shifflet?
28726What did you quit it for, then?
28726What did you see?
28726What do they prove,continued my uncle,"now that the signboards are turned?
28726What do you mean by the right way?
28726What do you mean exactly?
28726What do you think, Watson? 28726 What do you think?"
28726What does he do with his beak?
28726What for?
28726What has happened? 28726 What have you been up to, you boys?"
28726What is he like, this Vincent Spaulding?
28726What is the name of this obliging youth?
28726What is your name?
28726What like?
28726What makes you want to see me?
28726What on earth does this mean?
28726What then?
28726What then?
28726What things?
28726What were you and Sam talking about, Penrod?
28726What were you talking about?
28726What will you do if-- if they fire you?
28726What you doin''?
28726What you getting up so soon for, Sam?
28726What''s de matter, Smoke?
28726What''s he up to now?
28726What''s that in the tickle?
28726What''s the matter with your arm, Penrod?
28726What''s the matter? 28726 What''s the matter?"
28726What''s the score? 28726 What''s the trouble, Bill?"
28726What''s wrong with your face?
28726What''s_ your_ name?
28726What, in God''s name,said he,"is all this?"
28726What?--what?
28726What_ will_ the baseball team do?
28726When did it happen?
28726Where are you going, sir?
28726Where does he live?
28726Where izze?
28726Where''s Butsey?
28726Where''s Jack?
28726Where''s my bag?
28726Where''s your clo''s?
28726Where-- where did it hit you?
28726Which one?
28726Who are you to come flying over my wall and break my_ Gloire de Dijons_? 28726 Who are you?"
28726Who are you?
28726Who the deuce asked you for your opinion?
28726Who was this man?
28726Who''s on lookout here?
28726Who?
28726Whose ghosts, Matthew?
28726Whose gun you playin''with? 28726 Why could n''t you behave until after the Andover game?"
28726Why did you beat the pavement?
28726Why did you pick him?
28726Why do n''t you go on if you''re goin''to?
28726Why do n''t you tell the Doctor that?
28726Why do n''t you- all say something?
28726Why not?
28726Why not?
28726Why not?
28726Why serious?
28726Why should n''t it? 28726 Why''n''t you go ahead?"
28726Why, Curly,I asked,"how''s that?"
28726Why, indeed? 28726 Why, what is wrong with you?"
28726Why, you profane little cuss,said the Butcher, frowning,"who told you to swear?"
28726Why? 28726 Why?"
28726Will the boy do it to- night, then, chevalier?
28726Will you come and see me?
28726Will you have the goodness to look at this document? 28726 Will you look at this, madam?"
28726With a man to help you keep lookout, d''ye see it?
28726With other lessons?
28726With other lessons?
28726With that thing?
28726Would not!--and why?
28726Would they board at the Ocean House if they wan''t weak- minded? 28726 Yes, I do see, chevalier; but I wonder if he would be willing to humor me in something?
28726Yes, but why?
28726Yes, sir?
28726You are n''t going to get sentimental, are you, youngster?
28726You are not at all frightened?
28726You did n''t get caught with it, did you?
28726You do n''t suppose Crazy Opdyke could cover the bag, do you?
28726You do n''t think he''ll run away, do you, Sam?
28726You mean the law?
28726You mean these two blacklegs?
28726You remember yesterday in the Algebra class?
28726You say that all connected with the circus have so little fear of the beast that even attendants sometimes do this foolhardy trick? 28726 You were ill after ten o''clock?"
28726You wo n''t go away and leave me here alone, will you, Sam?
28726You wo n''t mind?
28726You''re sure you were n''t quarreling, Sam?
28726You''ve got a home, have n''t you?
28726You''ve got an uncle somewhere, have n''t you, youngster?
28726You, sir, are that great man? 28726 Your French gold?"
28726''Ai n''t scared of nothin'', I reckon-- hey?''
28726''And how will ye save thim that''s dyin''in deep watthers?''
28726''And the pay?''
28726''And what are they worth?''
28726''Are n''t the brave life- savers even now sitting be the fire waitin''for people to come and be saved?
28726''Are ye scared at last?''
28726''Did he say"Bayonne"?
28726''Do I get thim for breakfast?''
28726''Do you happen to know if the 38th Regiment was engaged?''
28726''Do you mean to say you''re reckonin''to save the_ car_?''
28726''For the love of mercy, what is that?''
28726''Get her under way, why do n''t you?''
28726''Go to Setuckit in a automobile?''
28726''Hear it?''
28726''Is there fifty foot of water underneath us now?
28726''Movin''?
28726''Say, pard, you ai n''t goin''to leave me here, are you?''
28726''Thin, why not work for it and stop pokin''yer nose down squirrel- holes, where there is neither profit nor wages?''
28726''Think I''m a blame fool?
28726''This is fine, ai n''t it?''
28726''Wh- what?
28726''What are you goin''to do?''
28726''What d''ee mean by crying stale fish at that rate?''
28726''What else d''you s''pose?
28726''What is that?''
28726''What news?''
28726''Where are they?''
28726''Where be you?''
28726''Who are you to be dictatin''the diet of yer betthers?''
28726''Who are you to give orders?
28726''Why do n''t we go where it''s dry?
28726''Why do n''t you come West some day?
28726''Will we drown?''
28726''Wud ye mind tellin''the ladies and childher that they can go ashore and get to the hotel?''
28726''You a coward?
28726''You ai n''t goin''to pack yourself twelve mile_ on that shingle_?''
28726''You will help save them?''
287264,''"''What, the red- headed man?''
28726A whale?
28726Abner''s eyes traveled over the speaker with a deliberate scrutiny; then he answered:"Are the roads of Virginia held by arms?"
28726Ai n''t it awful, Sam?
28726Ai n''t we got a good sailin''breeze and the whole bay to stay on top of-- fifty foot of water and more?''
28726All ready, Mr. Narkom?
28726And as long as it did not hurt anybody else-- what was really the difference?
28726And how, pray, should we live if that were to happen?"
28726And she-- ah, monsieur, why is she always with him?
28726And then, turning again to Lady Vandeleur,"What is this precious fellow''s errand?"
28726And what do they point to if we read them on the way we are going now?
28726And what might you be doin''here?''
28726And what''s a Brazilian doing in the army of the Kaiser?
28726And when does it happen in their case, during the course of the show, or when there is nobody about but those connected with it?"
28726And yet-- and yet---- Ah, monsieur, how can I fail to feel as I do when this change in the lion came with that man''s coming?
28726And, having been in it, what''s he doing dropping into this line; backing a circus, and traveling with it like a Bohemian?"
28726Another wreck, you say?
28726Are the stars hot?
28726Are there any real Indians in these woods?
28726Are you a married man, Mr. Wilson?
28726Are you nervous?
28726Are you not ashamed to go about the world in such a trim, with honest folk, I dare say, glad to buy your cast- off finery second- hand?
28726As I was turning away, a beer- boy, collecting pewter pots at the neighboring areas, said to me,"Do you want any one at that house, sir?"
28726At first he could see little, the garret was so dark, but a faint voice said from some burlap bags in the corner:"Is dat youse, Chimmy?"
28726At the jigger- shop, Al lifted his eyebrows in well- informed disapproval, saying curtly:"What are you doing here, you Butcher, you?"
28726Aw, do n''t you tell me that li''l nigger''s gone an''croaked?"
28726Billings, where be you?''
28726But do n''t youse worry, Mister, I''m runnin''the whole biz till Smokey''s to rights again-- see?"
28726But enough; do you comprehend my theory?"
28726But how do you propose to end it?"
28726But the writing?"
28726But what did he hit me for?
28726But what?
28726But who did that?
28726But why ruin a boy''s happiness forever because of a missed recitation?
28726But why should you connect these two persons with this inexplicable thing?
28726But, after all, if he is satisfied, why should I put ideas in his head?"
28726But, of a sudden:"You came here directly after the matinée, I suppose?"
28726But----""Why did you do it?"
28726By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says:"Sam, do you know who my favorite Biblical character is?"
28726Ca n''t you watch me a minute?"
28726Can Smokey walk?
28726Can we get to land, do you think?''
28726Cast off, wo n''t you?''
28726Cleek?"
28726Could n''t manage to take me round behind the scenes, so to speak, if Mr. Narkom will lend us his motor to hurry us there?
28726Could your patients spare you for a few hours?"
28726Could, eh?
28726D''ye hear?"
28726D''yuh get me?
28726D''yuh get me?''
28726Dear God, can this be true?"
28726Did you ever pause to ponder over the returns chickens would give on a small investment?
28726Did you prepare your lesson?"
28726Did you?"
28726Do oxen make any noise?
28726Do you feel pale?
28726Do you know the wretch who used you so?"
28726Do you know what was the trouble with the first two periods of the game to- day?"
28726Do you know?
28726Do you like it?"
28726Do you mind?"
28726Do you see any objection, Mr. Hartley, may I ask?
28726Do you see that extra bald place on the back of my head?
28726Do you think I would keep you here if I were not sure to save you?
28726Do you think anybody will pay out money to get a little imp like that back home?"
28726Do you think he can stand a trip?"
28726Do you think the riddle you have brought is beyond my powers?"
28726Do you think, if I take you with me, I may rely on your presence of mind, whatever may happen?"
28726Do you understand?
28726Does he turn a summersault or stick his tail between his ears and go over backward?''
28726Does the lion never''smile''for any of those?"
28726Does the trees moving make the wind blow?
28726Does your father do so, too?"
28726Doubtless you have heard of that?"
28726Everywhere was the same feeling of dismay; what would become of the baseball nine?
28726For suddenly a new, insidious question jumped into the forefront of his thoughts: Why had he blurted out everything to Mr. Beaver?
28726Get back to the others, and look for me again in two hours''time; and Scarmelli?"
28726Goin''the way we be, it would----''"''Which way do we go?''
28726Had a good time, did n''t you?"
28726Had this been done in the dark?--must it not have been by a hand human as mine?--must there not have been a human agency all the while in that room?
28726Hartley?"
28726Has he expectations of any kind?"
28726Has it anything to do with the case you have in hand?"
28726Have another round?"
28726Have you a family?''
28726Have you any idea?
28726Have you got a gun about you, Sam?"
28726Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave?
28726Have you hurt it?"
28726He glanced up at the Butcher, and, being very apprehensive, made bold to ask:"Butcher, I say, what does Cap think?"
28726He said nothing for at least half a minute, then, clearing his throat:"And what then?"
28726He will certainly break it in, and then, in Heaven''s name, what have I to look for but death?"
28726Heard anything definite?"
28726Help me, ca n''t you?''
28726Holmes?"
28726Homesickness-- the very word was an anomaly: what home had he to go to?
28726How about it, boys?
28726How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?"
28726How could they hear, in the teeth of that furious wind?
28726How do I know but that your box is full of teaspoons?"
28726How many are there of yez?''
28726How many does it take to make twelve?"
28726How many lobsters does you want?''
28726How''d he get picked up, I wonder?
28726How, then, had the Thing, whatever it was, which had so scared him, obtained ingress except through my own chamber?
28726Hush, ca n''t you?
28726I got a right to show you the way I_ do_, first, have n''t I?"
28726I had hoped that that might tempt a clever detective to take up the case; but what is such a sum to such a man as you?"
28726I hope that you have done what I asked you, Jones?"
28726I say, you-- you do n''t ever feel that way, do you-- homesick, I mean?"
28726I strove to speak-- my voice utterly failed me; I could only think to myself:"Is this fear?
28726I thought----''"''What were ye thinkin'', ye scut?''
28726I want another chance; and do you know why?"
28726I''ll----''"''Swim?''
28726I''m goin''to show you how I----""_ Watch_ me, ca n''t you?"
28726I''m no a shipped man, d''ye hear?"
28726If Butcher did n''t cover first, how could they ever beat Andover and the Princeton freshmen?
28726Is he the owner of the house?"
28726Is not that the second part of it?
28726Is that Captain Stitt?''
28726Is that it?"
28726Is the boy killed?
28726Is the chevalier well- to- do?
28726Is there any hope?"
28726Is your business with him private?''
28726It ai n''t possible that you''re scared?
28726It ca n''t hurt the roof, can it?"
28726It''s my father''s revolaver, ai n''t it?"
28726Landlady, see that we are not disturbed, will you, and that nobody is admitted but the parties I mentioned?"
28726Let me have a_ chance_, ca n''t you?"
28726May I ask you to see to it at once?"
28726Might I beg that you would have the goodness to sit down upon one of those boxes, and not to interfere?"
28726Never rode in an auto afore, did you?''
28726No one had thought to invite him for a visit; but then, why should any one?
28726No''smile''for your old Tom, is there, Nero, boy, eh?
28726No?"
28726Not dollars?''
28726Now a straight question: Do you smoke?"
28726Now then, what is it?
28726Now, are you going to be good, or not?"
28726Now, if you know, tell me what did the chevalier mean, what did his wife mean, when they spoke of a dream that might have come true but did n''t?
28726Now, my heroic college chum,''he goes on, callin''me out of my name as usual,''will you be so condescendin''as to indicate how we hit the trail?''
28726Now, suppose you had started the other way, what then?"
28726Oh, Harry, Harry, can you explain to me what makes you men so violent and unjust?
28726One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"''What might it be that you''ve got in the box?''
28726One question I think I may surely ask without indiscretion: Is he the master of this house?"
28726Or would you prefer to go direct to the home secretary?
28726Or, if you have not, do you think your fiancée has?"
28726Owe me?
28726Perhaps you think I do n''t know a gentleman when I see one, from a common run- the- hedge like you?
28726Pray what steps did you take when you found the card upon the door?"
28726Really?"
28726Seventy- five hundred what?
28726She loves her husband-- that''s certain-- and she''s a good little woman; and, Scarmelli?"
28726So he said,"Oh, Butcher, is it serious?"
28726So it looks like we could keep it for our revolaver, Penrod, do n''t it?
28726So why bilge at a single dollar?''
28726So you played on your drum when the ship was goin''down?
28726Sprung a leak, has it?''
28726Stevens?"
28726The Big Man was immensely relieved; but he added incredulously,"Then you''ll give up football and baseball?"
28726The Commissioner pointed at him and said, abruptly, breaking off his remarks:"By the way, what''s_ your_ name?"
28726The cellar?
28726The four pounds a week was a lure which must draw him, and what was it to them, who were playing for thousands?
28726The parson listened, and put a question or two, and then asked:"''Have you tried to open the lock since that night?''
28726Then he said, plunging in,"Doctor, is the Butcher-- is Stevens-- are you going to-- expel him?"
28726They would keep on talkin'', and I guess I had to be_ polite_, did n''t I?"
28726Think I''d let seventy- five hundred dollars''wuth of gilt- edged extravagance go to the bottom?
28726This assistant of yours who first called your attention to the advertisement-- how long had he been with you?"
28726Three slow, loud, distinct knocks were now heard at the bed- head; my servant called out:"Is that you, sir?"
28726Was it really so awful?
28726Well, if you ca n''t even do that much, you better watch me while_ I_----""Well,"said Sam reasonably,"why do n''t you go on and do it then?"
28726Well, what''s_ he_ good for?''
28726What could it be, once more?
28726What could it be?
28726What could it mean?
28726What did you cal''late I was tryin''to save-- the clam- flat?
28726What do you want me to do?''
28726What had he meant by that?
28726What has he done?
28726What have you done with it?''
28726What if it laid hold of the punt?
28726What if the squid were alive, after all?
28726What is his errand, madam?
28726What is it?"
28726What is it?''
28726What is your name?"
28726What kind of a game is it?"
28726What lion-- Nero?
28726What makes your nose so red, Hank?
28726What on earth can I do with the house?"
28726What sheet?
28726What the dickens did you mean just now when you spoke about''the lion''s change''and''the lion''s smile''?
28726What was the matter?"
28726What was this nocturnal expedition, and why should I go armed?
28726What you waitin''for?''
28726What you?"
28726What''s his little game, I wonder?
28726What''s that?
28726What''s the matter with your old derelict?
28726What''s the score?"
28726What''s wrong?"
28726What''s your name?''
28726When shall you be able to enter upon your new duties?''
28726Where are they?''
28726Where did he bite you?"
28726Where is he?
28726Where is that gasoline engine?''
28726Where is the bandbox?"
28726Where is the dory?
28726Where were we going, and what were we to do?
28726Where you git''at gun?"
28726Where''s he been?
28726Who are you?"
28726Who would be likely to connect him with the death of a beast- tamer in a circus, who had perished in what would appear an accident of his calling?
28726Who would, after having been promised wealth, education, everything one had confessed that one most desired?
28726Whose launch was that they took?''
28726Why a''misfortune,''pray?
28726Why are oranges round?
28726Why could you not say at first there was enough for two?
28726Why do n''t you teach''em to come to that brass horn, and save your voice?"
28726Why does it''smile''for no others?
28726Why does she curry favor of him and his rich friend?"
28726Why have you arrested the Señor Sperati?
28726Why is it only they, my father, my brother, they alone?"
28726Why not the actual thing?"
28726Why was he so anxious to be off?
28726Why, Joshua?"
28726Why?"
28726Why?"
28726Wilder ones have come true for other people; why should they not for you?"
28726Will it lock?"
28726Will this way lead me out?
28726Will you be ready to- morrow?''
28726Will you leave it with me?"
28726Will you, Harry?"
28726Wilson?"
28726Would you mind letting him make the feint you yourself made a few minutes ago?
28726Yes?
28726You ai n''t going to let the chance go, are you?"
28726You can have it when I get through, ca n''t you?
28726You have other demerits?"
28726You know what it is, do n''t you?
28726You want to make a team, do n''t you, while you''re here?"
28726You wo n''t leave me long with him, will you, Sam?"
28726You wo n''t take me back home again, Snake- eye, will you?"
28726You''re a hero, ai n''t you?''
28726You''re not going to ruin the show, are you, and after all the money I''ve put into it?
28726You-- you do not mean to tell me that he caused that?
28726Young or old?"
28726[ Illustration] XI.--The Lie[K]_ By Hermann Hagedorn_"DID you prepare this lesson, Burton?"
28726_ Why had n''t he just lied?_ That question thrust at the very roots of life, and Dick Harrington knew it.
28726_ Why had n''t he lied?_ The team was due back at Hainesburg, the railroad station for The Towers, at eight- thirty.
28726actually passed unsuspectingly by the door?
28726and bring him along here about 6.45 sharp to- morrow night-- Hear?"
28726and whither have I wandered?"
28726and why are you hurrying him away?"
28726cried he,"where was my head?
28726cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the terror of the plains?"
28726for what object?"
28726he added, shaking him;"and what may be your business here?"
28726he cried;"I suspect, do you say?
28726said I, rather disappointed;"have you not seen nor heard anything remarkable?"
28726says Bill,"would you like to have a bag of candy and a nice ride?"
28726you believe it is all an imposture?
5686Ai n''t ye afeard some steamboat will swash the life out of her?
5686And what ish dat?
5686And what of negroes?
5686Ca n''t you tie up here, just under yonder p''int on the bank? 5686 Did you find his trail?"
5686How do you get the interior details?
5686How much did she cost, any way?
5686Nuffin at all? 5686 Who could have done that?"
5686And where was the flat?
5686First came the sound of voices in the distance; then, as they came nearer, I heard such questions as,"Where is the feller?"
5686Hab you one poat, or hab you not?"
5686Had the poor fellow been murdered?
5686How LARGE was the boat you shipped last fall to Pittsburgh for twenty- five dollars?"
5686I asked them the name of the creek, when one replied,"Why, boss, you do n''t call this a CREEK, do you?
5686I exclaimed;"when did he die?"
5686Men whose humble lives had been spent along the rough coast in daily struggles with the storms of ocean and of life?
5686Now, for instance, how do common boats rank, as first or third class freight?"
5686Now, gentlemen, can you censure me for detesting the Carpet- bag government of my native state after you have heard this statement?
5686Of what use can geography be to girls who will never command a vessel?"
5686Upon consideration, it did not seem so strange a thing, however, for did not this boat represent the work of brains and hands for a generation past?
5686Was it not an attempt to bring chaos again into the universe?"
5686Was it not the result of the study and hard- earned experiences of many men for many years?
5686Whar did you come from?
5686What difference does it make to our business if it be round or flat?
5686What sort o''queer boat is she?"
5686What was his fate, and why did he not come up to time?
5686Where among all our colleges is there a well- supported chair of physical geography occupied by an American?
5686Where was Cloud?
5686Why must an American woman have a rocking- chair?
5686Why not mattress the muddy flat?
5686Why?
5686Would it not"waste its sweetness on the desert air"in the unpeopled wilderness?
5686nuffin at all?"
5686what''s that you are squinting at through the grass?"
53467The one whose wife wore that awful hat this afternoon?
53467What are the Tibers and Scamanders,he demanded,"measured by the Missouri and the Amazon?
534678?"
53467Am I fat and half decrepit, a man seldom noticed by cuties?
53467An alternative solution?
53467And we ourselves?
53467And what is the next worst?
53467And what was the theory at the bottom of all these astounding proceedings?
53467And why not?
53467Are they yet blind to the superior pull of a French maid, a chorus girl, a stenographer begauded like a painter''s palette?
53467As for Germany, he finds it a desert, with Arnold Schoenberg behind the bar of its only inviting_ Gasthaus._ Richard Strauss?
53467But I am forgetting the like phenomena on the other side of the bloody chasm?
53467But does it actually rebut?
53467But his liver is full of bile?
53467But what actually reveals itself when this small brotherhood of the superior is carefully examined?
53467But what of the underlying mystery?
53467But where is intelligence?
53467But why do all neutral and clear- headed men avoid it?
53467Can one imagine Roosevelt, with red- fire raging within him and sky- rockets bursting in his veins, holding his peace for a month and a half?
53467Did they nominate Thomas Hardy, Joseph Conrad, George Moore and company?
53467Elegance,_ esprit,_ culture?
53467England?
53467Have I forgotten them?
53467Have you ever climbed to the Acropolis by moonlight?
53467Have you ever stood bareheaded in the nave of Amiens?
53467Have you ever walked with whispers into the hushed presence of the Frari Madonna of Bellini?
53467He nourishes an intolerable grievance?
53467He will get his revenge, soon or late, at the polls?
53467His remedy is-- what?
53467How are we to account for that puckish and inexplicable rise and fall of inspiration?
53467How did the_ intelligentsia_ of These States bear up under that strain?
53467How did they conduct themselves in that universal whirlwind?
53467How has the issue replied to these visionaries?
53467I am overlooking the darker crimes of the celebrated German professors?
53467I indulge in a few specimens: Who has not heard of Asa G. Candler, whose name is synonymous with Coca- Cola, a Georgia product?
53467If they are so hot against"Madame Bovary"and the Decameron, then why the immunity of"Wein, Weib und Gesang"?
53467If they suppress"The''Genius''"and"Jurgen,"then why do they overlook"Rosen aus dem Süden"?
53467Is it any wonder that he gave a whoop, jumped upon his cayuse, and began screaming for war?
53467Is it because they are afraid?
53467Is it because they are not intrigued by it?
53467Italy?
53467New?
53467Of the future?
53467One now knows that it may cause insanity, but what of the lesser mental aberrations that it produces?
53467Or what the loveliness of Illysus or Avon by the Connecticut or the Potomack?
53467Perhaps Carlyle understood him, but who in America understood him?
53467Urbanity,_ politesse,_ chivalry?
53467Utterly?
53467Well, what is the worst curse of life?
53467Well, what of it?
53467What could be more untrue?
53467What happened?
53467What is the salient feature of the discussion of the drink problem, as one observes it going on eternally in These States?
53467What of his iconoclastic gayety, his boyish weakness for tweaking noses and pulling whiskers, his obscene delight in slang?...
53467What remains, then, of the old lure?
53467What was the reaction of our learned men to the challenge of organized hysteria, mob fear, incitement to excess, downright insanity?
53467What, now, of their achievement?
53467When, during the early stages of the war, they had occasion to woo the American_ intelligentsia,_ what agents did they choose?
53467Where are ease and surety of manner?
53467Where are enterprise and curiosity?
53467Where, then, is the tone poetry of to- morrow to come from?
53467Who are happy in marriage?
53467Who does not recall with pleasure the writings of... Frank L. Stanton, Georgia''s brilliant poet?
53467Who ever heard of an actor declining a fat part on the ground that it invaded his intellectual integrity?
53467Who is this prodigy?
53467Why did I waste two hours, or maybe three, reading those idiotic manuscripts?
53467Why does one hear so little about it from those who have no personal stake in it, and can thus view it fairly and accurately?
53467Why tear down without building up?"
53467Why, in the first place, did I answer her opening request-- the request, so inherently absurd, that I meet her in her father''s office?
53467Why, then, does n''t he fall head over heels in love with the first eligible woman that he meets?
53467Would a show of gratitude put her in a better light?
46202But who may abide the day of his coming? 46202 But whom say ye that I am?"
46202Do ye not know,he continues,"that the saints shall judge the world?
46202Is Christ divided?
46202Now, Judge, what do you think about Joseph Smith and Mormonism? 46202 What is prophecy but history reversed?"
46202What is to be done?
46202Who of all these parties are right? 46202 Who shall stand when he appeareth?"
46202Whom do men say that I the Son of Man am?
46202Will the Judge now acknowledge that Joseph Smith was a true prophet? 46202 *** The scriptures inform us that Jesus said:''As the Father hath power in himself, even so hath the Son power''--to do what? 46202 *** Would you think it strange if I related what I have seen in vision in relation to this interesting theme? 46202 ; and running parallel with that line of authority a continuation of all that is essential to the Gospel, both in doctrine and ordinances? 46202 A part of the inhabitants of Treves, having escaped from the ruins, petitions the emperor for-- what? 46202 A young man named Reuben Brinkworth was, in 1840(?) 46202 And if the world shall be judged by you are ye unworthy to judge the smallest matters? 46202 And the Son of man that thou visitest him? 46202 And what will follow it? 46202 And what will follow it? 46202 And what will follow it? 46202 And when the voice calls for the dead to arise, suppose I am laid by the side of my father, what would be the first joy of my heart? 46202 And where was there ever a father without first being a son? 46202 And who can question its divine inspiration? 46202 And who shall stand when he appeareth? 46202 And who shall stand when he appeareth?
46202And why are they not chosen?
46202Are all prophets?
46202Are all teachers?"
46202But is such an effect to us who know something of the force of steam contrary to the laws of nature?
46202But of what value is the objection of lowly birth and humble station?
46202But since modern Christianity finds itself so far separated from other truths of the gospel, may it not find itself wrong in this?
46202But was the prophecy fulfilled?
46202But what of Joseph Smith, whose suggestion preceded that of Mr. Emerson by eleven years?
46202But who may abide the day of his coming?
46202But why attempt to describe the infinite?
46202Could any one suppose that the Sanhedrim of Israel, the dignified senate of the Jews, could condemn anyone to death for righteousness?
46202Did Jesus do so when he was on earth nineteen centuries ago?
46202Did such a result as this follow the appearance and mission of Jesus in Palestine, when he came to be offered as a sacrifice for sinful man?
46202Did that come to pass when John the Baptist some nineteen centuries ago prepared the way for the coming of the Son of God, by crying repentance?
46202Did the great Civil War begin with the rebellion of South Carolina?
46202Do you believe it?
46202For who can better direct my judgment in its hesitation, or instruct my understanding in its ignorance?
46202Has he prophesied; and have his prophecies been fulfilled?
46202Has not their testimony withstood the assaults of unbelievers, atheists and agnostics alike for nineteen centuries?
46202Have they forgotten that the miracles of Moses were well nigh matched by those of the magicians of Egypt?
46202Hence, if Jesus had a Father, can we not believe that_ he_ had a Father also?
46202How else shall men be called of God as was Aaron?
46202How else shall the church have a divinely authorized ministry?
46202How else shall they be preserved from error in doctrine, and from the strife and division consequent upon it?
46202I had actually seen a vision, and who am I that I can withstand God?
46202If David then call him Lord, how is he his son?"
46202If any one of them be right, which is it and how shall I know it?"
46202If judged by it would he not be rejected as an imposter?
46202If such a message is not a subject of importance"to the conduct and happiness of human life"what message could be?
46202If the Master meant to announce his intention to build his church on Peter, one can not refrain from asking why he did not explicitly say so?
46202If the orthodox theory was wrong as to the time when those distant worlds were created, may it not be equally wrong concerning the age of the earth?
46202If they have, who can doubt the prophet''s inspiration, or the revelations of God to him?
46202If this recent testimony of the Catholic Church concerning miracles was to be rejected, could the earlier testimony of the Christian Fathers stand?
46202In the heavens are parents single?
46202In writing to the saints of Rome, Paul says:"Know ye not, that so many of us as were baptized into Christ were baptized into his death?
46202Is it so that there is not a wise man among you?
46202Jesus, what are you going to do?
46202Madler may have been mistaken in pointing to Alcyone as that centre, but who shall say that one does not exist?
46202My reply is:"Of what avail is argument in the face of facts which contradict it?
46202Ninety- two million miles of it?
46202No, not one that shall be able to judge between his brethren?
46202On another occasion Jesus said to the Pharisees:"What think ye of Christ?
46202On the untrustworthiness of the literature in question, he says:"Whence have the public derived their opinions about Mormonism?
46202Or are they all wrong together?
46202Or difficult to stand in that day of his appearing?
46202Or see the grand beginning, Where space did not extend?
46202Or that through them a divine authority and a divine mission has been transmitted to later and happier times?
46202Or view the last creation, Where Gods and matter end?
46202Or why does the world think to make me deny what I have actually seen?
46202Remember ye not that when I was yet with you I told you these things?
46202Replying to the cry of the multitude,"Men and brethren, what shall we do?"
46202So the mother took another of her daughters, and put her upon his knee, and said,"Sir, is that child blind?"
46202Some man must be chosen, why not he?
46202Some one said:''Here is Mrs. Johnson with a lame arm; has God given any power to men on the earth to cure her?''
46202Starting with today for a unit, I ask, what preceded it?
46202Tell me, was it difficult to abide that day of his coming?
46202That is to say, if the gospel was preached unto Abraham, wherefore serveth the law of Moses?
46202The atheist mockingly asks if there be a God why he does not make himself manifest to all the world; why he keeps himself shrouded in mystery?
46202The only question that remains to be considered is, do those who comply with the conditions receive the fulfillment of the promise?
46202The prophet said,''Do you believe in Jesus Christ?''
46202True, all kinds of sins are found among them; but what one is not found among us?
46202True, all men ought to pay their vows to God, but why should they seek his temples to propitiate him, only to go forth to provoke him?
46202Was it so when Jesus came in the meridian of time to make his great atonement for man?
46202We have three Gods anyhow, and they are plural; and who can contradict it?"
46202Well might the Psalmist say-- addressing himself to God:"What is man that thou art mindful of him?
46202What have we not deserved to suffer for such conduct?
46202What is beyond the sun in a straight line from us?
46202What need have we for a New Witness?
46202What preceded the present millennium?
46202What preceded this present century?
46202What preceded this present year?
46202What then could mean the saying of Peter--"This is_ that_ which was spoken by the prophet Joel?"
46202What then?
46202What was to be done?
46202What would have been the effect of such a sight on the mind of the old- time sailor?
46202When I leave this frail existence, When I lay this mortal by, Father, Mother, may I meet you In your royal court on high?
46202When shall I regain thy presence, And again behold thy face?
46202Whenever did a tree or anything spring into existence without a progenitor?
46202Where was there ever a son without a father?
46202Which of the animals, however strong, or fierce, has he not subdued?
46202Who so fit to restore the keys of the gathering of Israel and leading the ten tribes back from the north as Moses, the great prophet of Israel?
46202Why are they then baptized for the dead?"
46202Why did not some of the brilliant minds in the Senate or House of Representatives in 1832 make such a prediction?
46202Why not reveal himself to all as well as to a chosen few?
46202Why was it left for a mere lad in the wilds of Western New York to display more"genius"than all the imposters since the days of Christ?
46202Why?
46202Would there not be something manifestly wrong if it did not do it?
46202Yet why should it be so considered?
46202[ 17] Is it not a fair inference that he addressed himself to other Gods who were present?
46202[ 3] So much space is between us and them-- what is beyond those distant groups of stars in a direct line from us?
46202[ 43] Why should not Christians in all ages have the spirit of prophecy to enlighten and comfort their souls and warn them of events to come?
46202[ 5]"Are all apostles?
46202[ 8] Question twenty- nine of the larger catechism and the answer to it are as follows:"What are the punishments of sin in the world to come?"
46202[ 8]"Dare any of you,"Paul asks the Corinthian saints,"having a matter against another, go to law before the unjust, and not before the saints?"
46202[ 9] A little further on the apostle asks:"Wherefore then serveth the law?"
46202_ Jesus_--"Is it not written in your law, I said ye are Gods?
46202_ Jesus_--"Many good works have I showed you from my Father, for which of those works do ye stone me?"
46202what reigns there but disorders calculated to incense the Most High?
46202whose son is he?"
46202will exclaim both ministry and laity of Christendom;"are not the Old Witnesses sufficient?
46202xvi)?
6134Was there a man dismayed? 6134 And the Briton himself-- what became of him? 6134 If engines could be made to plough through the water, why might they not also be made to walk the earth? 6134 If such was the condition of the honest working poor, what was that of the criminal? 6134 Is it strange that the plantation in Massachusetts had fresh recruits? 6134 Is not every type of English manhood explained by such an inheritance? 6134 Was it not from their impious hands, that this new knowledge of the physical universe had been received? 6134 What sort of a race were they? 6134 What would be the need of a Parliament, if he did not require money? 41936 How much did the horse cost?"
41936( 1) What is human Government?
41936( c)_ What is Value?_ Plainly it is the result of a comparison instituted between two things, using the word,"things,"here in its broadest sense.
4193612. Who pays the INDIRECT TAXES?
41936And are the activities of men everywhere greatly and increasingly occupied with just those things, with which this science has exclusively to do?
41936And what is the influence on the Wages of those whose services are now in lessened Desire along the whole line?
41936And what is the remedy for them?
41936And what is the universal Law of it?
41936And where shall we find the terms for an immutable definition of it?
41936And who is competent to announce the result of it in Value?
41936And who would have to pay the taxes needful for the support of the new_ economical_ bureaus?
41936Any_ tendency_ in the one to bring the other?
41936Are CREDITS a legitimate subject of Taxation?
41936Are these facts easily separable in the mind and in reality from other kinds of facts perhaps liable to be confounded with them?
41936Are they facts of vast importance to the welfare of mankind?
41936Because one thing_ follows_ another in point of time, is that any proof that the second is the_ result_ of the other in point of cause?
41936But are borrowers, as a class, any more deserving of the fostering care of government than are lenders?
41936But can not Congress do something to help rebuild the ruined city?
41936But who institutes the comparison?
41936But why have I before me three possible classes of renderers?
41936Can anybody give a solid reason why they ought not to be so taxed?
41936Can it take the place of money entirely?
41936Can not these limits be overpassed in either direction?
41936Commerce by individuals creates great wealth; why should not the organized commerce of a State make everybody rich?
41936Could this profitable trade be easily increased?
41936Demand increasing, Supply remaining as before, market- rate rises: how far can it rise from this cause?
41936Did this astute objector ever hear of"domestic combination"to keep prices up to the highest possible point?
41936Do we fully understand, from the foregoing descriptions and distinctions, the_ Nature_ of Credit?
41936Does an alleged truth fall in with and fill out well some other demonstrated and accepted proposition, or a number of such other propositions?
41936Does that destroy the motive and the gain of an exchange between the countries in these two articles?
41936Does the former already sell to the latter and through the latter more goods than to all the world besides?
41936Does this look like becoming"_ independent_"of the rest of the world in the matter of woollen clothing for our great People?
41936Has Political Economy anything to say about the RATE of taxes per unit of that which is subject to tax?
41936Have not American protectionists shut out French and German products 100:1 under the same plea now used on the Continent?
41936Have we now compassed our first object?
41936Here and now we are dealing with the simpler concrete question, What is the value of any specific valuable thing?
41936Here the vexed question arises, how far has one generation_ the right_ to throw upon succeeding ones the burdens of a National Debt?
41936How can she sell so much of her own stuff?
41936How do new improvements in machinery and other enhanced facilities of Production in one country affect its foreign trade?
41936How does it read?
41936How does the Diversity of relative Advantage practically work in foreign trade?
41936How does the varying play of International Demand affect the value of articles in foreign trade?
41936How far can this simple action go?
41936How is the whole class of Labor- takers affected by prohibitory tariff- taxes?
41936How long and for what pay do you want to do it?
41936How many loaves shall he give for each?
41936How much Rent shall the tenant pay to the landlord for the present use of the latter''s old lands?
41936How much above?
41936How much did it cost to get ready for grazing the broad pastures?
41936How much does she sell_ per capita_ of her people?
41936How much must he charge for his goods in order to make himself whole?
41936How would any level- headed man, capable of seeing beyond the point of his nose, have prognosticated in the premises?
41936How?
41936If protectionist taxes made the manufacturers rich, why should they not also enrich the rural herdsmen?
41936If the legal rate be six, and the actual worth be eight, who lends at six?
41936If the question be, How much is it worth?
41936If the transfer took place, what was it that was sold?
41936If this were a matter of genuine taxation, ought there not to have been an_ excise_ on the domestic corresponding to the_ impost_ on the foreign?
41936In behalf of what sort of industries are these taxes ostensibly and plausibly levied?
41936In short, why may not such taxes make everybody rich?
41936In what PROPORTION ought the individual citizens to contribute to the fund annually necessary to be raised by Taxation?
41936In what cases may a Government properly step in to regulate or prohibit the buying and selling of its citizens?
41936In what does she pay?
41936Is Great Britain willing to take in goods from the United States?
41936Is capital abundant in England in bulk, and are its loanable rates low?
41936Is it a good thing for the United States, that Great Britain takes in her goods freely?
41936Is it any wonder that unfulfilled promises to pay invariably become less valuable than_ that_ which they promise to pay?
41936Is it the commercial salvation of the United States that Britain is immovably for free trade with her and the rest of the world?
41936Is not sauce for the goose sauce for the gander also?
41936Is she ever flooded with cheap goods?
41936Is speculation proper?
41936Is that market ever slack on the whole?
41936Is the United States willing to take in British goods in pay for her own goods exported thither?
41936Is the principle of"International Copyright,"so- called, correct?
41936Is there a Science by itself, clear and certain, that covers and controls Valuables?_ Here we must go slowly, if we would go surely.
41936Is there anything substantive and continuous in its_ personnel_ and purposes, as there is in the government of God?
41936Is this free trade profitable to Great Britain?
41936Now, cogitates A, what kind of goods from B had we better restrict or prohibit?
41936Now, what can limit the universal market for material products?
41936Now, what is the necessary effect of Protectionism upon the general Demand for Laborers?
41936Of what use is it to go out free and come back manacled?
41936On what industries do the protectionist taxes fall at first to weaken and discourage them?
41936Or can deny to him or them the_ results_ of such efforts, however embodied?
41936Shall I shave myself or go to the barber?
41936Should there be any EXEMPTIONS from Taxation?
41936Suppose the said nation to succeed, what then?
41936The lighter the old coins became, the scarcer became the new ones; for who would pay two ounces of silver when one ounce was legal tender?
41936The preliminary questions are: What sort of facts has Political Economy to deal with, to inquire into, to classify, to make a science of?
41936The question, Can Congress make such notes a legal tender for contracts made_ after_ the passage of the Act?
41936This is not merely the only possible answer to the question,_ What is Value?_ but it is also a perfectly complete and satisfactory answer.
41936To illustrate, How many ships does a commercial nation need to employ?
41936To make accessible the forests that yield the timber?
41936To open up the mines also and bring them into"touch"with the population?
41936To sell surplus stocks abroad for what can be gotten for them, in order to make prices at home up to the usual scarcity point?
41936To shut down mills and factories, to avoid depressing prices?
41936Well, when?
41936What about the immediate future?
41936What ails our manufactures, that we can not sell them abroad?
41936What are the bearings of the UNITED STATES CONSTITUTION on the whole matter of Taxation in this country?
41936What are the causes deciding the exportable articles of any nation, and their order of precedence in Export?
41936What are the economical reasons for an EXCISE or INTERNAL- TAX in connection with Tariff- taxes for revenue?
41936What are the invariable conditions that precede, accompany, and follow, any and every act of Trade?
41936What are the limits to her capacity to sell her own goods to foreigners?
41936What did it cost"_ to subdue_"the present tillable lands of this country?
41936What harm would ensue?
41936What impulse, pray, on the earth or under the earth, can serve to depress them on the whole average_ below_ that point?
41936What industry would decline?
41936What is a Dollar- Bill?
41936What is a Science?
41936What is a limited market?
41936What is a market?
41936What is an illimitable market?
41936What is her market?
41936What is it but the old confusion between_ names_ and_ things_?
41936What is it that binds all these persons together?
41936What is that but judicial blindness as to the_ nature_ of Credit?
41936What is that, but the monstrous incongruity that_ a promise_ is the same thing legally as its_ fulfilment_?
41936What is the SOURCE out of which Taxes are actually paid?
41936What is the difference between DIRECT and INDIRECT Taxes?
41936What is the difference between SPECIFIC and ADVALOREM Taxes, and why should the student take careful note of these both singly and combined?
41936What is the economical relation?
41936What is the fundamental GROUND of Taxes?
41936What is the matter?
41936What is the precise change, then, in the valuable chosen as Money when it becomes money?
41936What is the source of this vast volume of Capital?
41936What is the truth about raw materials in this country?
41936What is the_ principle_, under which these things have been done, are now being done, and are certain to be done in the time to come?
41936What is to be said about the DIFFUSION of Taxes?
41936What kind of goods shall we prohibit from B?
41936What of it?
41936What stimulus to work and save and grow rich would be weakened thereby?
41936What was it that was paid for by the party of the second part?
41936What was the Value of King Hiram''s cedar- timbers?
41936What was the Value of the oil and wheat sent northward by King Solomon?
41936What was the matter with these dollars?
41936What, accordingly, is the bottom characteristic of Money?
41936What, then, are the onerous elements that enter into the value of land- parcels and constitute their Cost of Production?
41936What, then, are the ultimate elements of Buying and Selling?
41936What, then, is Market- Value returned in the terms of Money?
41936What, then, is the BOTTOM- PRINCIPLE in the Mode of Taxation?
41936When valueless lands are made valuable by human efforts expended to that end, does not the"value"belong to those who made it?
41936Whence are these immense profits to come?
41936Where come in the solitary gifts, that may later be connected with Valuables, on the round earth as God fashioned it?
41936Where even are the unique cases of God- given talent or genius in men themselves, such as may become connected with Valuables of the second class?
41936Where lies in the technical sense the"balance of trade"between Great Britain and the rest of the world?
41936Where was the famous and fallacious"balance of trade"in that case?
41936Which is the superior party?
41936Which must look out for the interest of the other beyond the terms implied in the trade itself?
41936Which party in foreign trade pays the Costs of Carriage, or do each pay them in equal proportion?
41936Which should take off his hat, the other remaining covered?
41936Whither has it carried up her ocean- marine?
41936Who buys these bills when exposed for sale in New York?
41936Who can tell?
41936Who ever heard of even one man, who was in possession of all the products of all kinds, that he wanted?
41936Who is sufficient for these things?
41936Who pays the taxes needful for the support of the present_ political_ bureaus?
41936Who wants them?
41936Who would be impoverished?
41936Why not, then, inquires our nationalist innovator, organize new bureaus to undertake in their behalf the buying and selling of the people?
41936Why should more than half the wool needed to clothe the people be taxed in such a way as to double( in general) the cost of the people''s clothing?
41936Why should not the government have the proceeds of the last as well as of the first?
41936Why should there be a resort to force to settle an industrial dispute any more than to settle any other private dispute?
41936Why was lumber excepted?
41936Why?
41936Will such a resort be long tolerated by public opinion in civilized countries?
41936Within what exact field do its investigations lie?
41936Would not wages, and profits, and rents, all be lifted thereby, with no damage to anybody?
41936Would our protectionists like it?
41936Would the United States like it to be commercially treated by Britain exactly as the former treats the latter?
41936_ But where is the"Value,"of which we have been in search?_ The answer is easy and certain and unevadible.
41936_ What is a Dollar?_ A dollar is 25- 4/5 grains of a metal compound coined, of which nine parts are pure gold and one part a hardening alloy.
5337All right,said Mr. Howard,"but where will my brother and I stay to- night?"
5337An''you saw a man that high?
5337And an Indian fighter?
5337And each of us that sing?
5337And how with you, Riley?
5337And what in the name of God will you do with her when you get to Fort Yuma?
5337And you got whipped? 5337 And you had fifteen hundred men in that three days''fight?"
5337Are you going all the way on foot, and alone?
5337Are you sure?
5337Have they found the body?
5337How was it, Willie?
5337Is that so?
5337Mr. Drannan, do you tell me that you captured those horses from an Indian?
5337Now Willie,he said,"do you think you can do that to- morrow morning?"
5337Oh, kind sir,she said,"are you the Boy Scout?
5337Pizened?
5337Sure you saw him?
5337Then you were here in this part of the country at the time of the Mountain Meadow massacre?
5337Well, how are you, anyhow; and how have you been since you left, and who is this you have with you?
5337Well,said I,"you know they were all Gentiles that were killed and what''s the difference?"
5337What boy?
5337What shall I call you? 5337 What shall we do?"
5337Where is your father and what does he follow for a living?
5337Where were you raised,said the Colonel,"that you do not drink whiskey?
5337Who did this?
5337Why do you wish to go in an opposite direction?
5337Why, Lieutenant, do n''t you know who that is you are talking to?
5337You want to take me away with you and not let me see my wife and bid her good- bye?
5337A little, fat Missouri girl, spoke up and said:"Will you let any one that sings have a lock of your hair?"
5337After I had informed him that I would have to take them all back to Gen. Wheaton''s quarters, Charley said:"What for?"
5337After the Colonel had told me of the council and manner in which they were to meet Captain Jack, I said:"Colonel, do you really believe they will go?"
5337As I rode along Gen. Wheaton dashed up by my side and said:"Where can those Indians be and what kind of guns have they?
5337As I took the gun, I said to him:"Jack, where are you going?"
5337Beckoning to the sergeant, he dashed up to my side and said:"What''s up, Captain?"
5337But the fame of California Has begun to lose its hue-- When the soul and body is parting What good can money do?
5337Did n''t I tell you, Colonel, that he could shoot Injuns?"
5337Do you know how far it is?"
5337Do you men feel like accompanying him and bringing our mail back on your return?"
5337Do you want to go along?"
5337Drannan, the scout?"
5337Harding and said:"Which do you prefer, to make the upper or lower attack?
5337Harding asked;"Why not all go together?"
5337He dropped his gun and ran to me at once and said:"Captain, are you badly hurt?"
5337He said:"Where in the name of God did you get those horses?"
5337I then spoke to the white girl in Spanish, and said:"My dear girl, why do you hesitate?
5337I told him to be off at once, but before starting, he said to me:"Suppose the Indians should discover you while I am away?"
5337Is it safe for a small party to go in there?"
5337Jackson said to me:"Cap, shall we try them a whirl or not?"
5337Jim said:"If the girl is satisfied with the Injuns, why do n''t you let her alone?
5337Johnnie West, being the first to notice it, said:"Kit, what is the matter with the horses?
5337Louis?"
5337Louis?"
5337O, kind sir, what will I do?"
5337One of the crowd said:"What will we do with our provisions?
5337She said:"I want to know whether it was true that when you visited those Indians they always killed a dog and ate the meat?"
5337That evening after I had gone to bed, Mr. Hughes said:"Kit, what are you going to do with that boy?"
5337The Colonel said let him come in, and just as he entered the door, Col. Elliott said:"Beckwith, where do you suppose this scout got those scalps?"
5337Uncle Kit said:"Boys, how in the world are we to get out of this?
5337What are the balance of you goin''to do?"
5337What are you going to do with him while we are away trapping?"
5337What can I do for you?"
5337What shall I call you?"
5337What you think?"
5337When I rode up to camp and the negro cook saw that head of horns he exclaimed:"Hello, Marstah; what you got dar?
5337When I told the Colonel my intentions, he said:"How in the name of God will you get to San Francisco?
5337When he got to where our horses were he said:"Where are you shot?"
5337Where is it?"
5337While we were eating dinner, Jim said to me:"Do n''t you know them fellers did n''t think you''d ever come back?"
5337Why do you want to stay here and be a slave for those Indians?"
5337how are you?"
5337is that so?"
5337my boy, where are you going so early this morning?"
5337whar you git dem skelps?
5767Are you buying your limit of war bonds?
5767Are you growing all the food you can?
5767How and where can and should the government help to start an upward spiral?
5767A question you will ask is this: why are all the banks not to be reopened at the same time?
5767Also, let me put to you another simple question: Have you as an individual paid too high a price for these gains?
5767And how is the work progressing?
5767And where does this our dominating power come from?
5767Are you a businessman, or do you own stock in a business corporation?
5767Are you a retailer or a wholesaler or a manufacturer or a farmer or a landlord?
5767Are you better off than you were last year?
5767Are your debts less burdensome?
5767Are your working conditions better?
5767But have not those men a right to be counting on us?
5767Did England hold to the gold standard when her reserves were threatened?
5767Did England let nature take her course?
5767Do you work for wages?
5767Has England gone back to the gold standard today?
5767Have you lost any of your rights or liberty or constitutional freedom of action and choice?
5767How are we playing our part"back home"in winning this war?
5767How then could we proceed to perform the mandate given us?
5767If such a law as I propose is regarded as establishing a new precedent, is it not a most desirable precedent?
5767If we are willing to fight for peace now, is it not good logic that we should use force if necessary, in the future, to keep the peace?
5767Is it a dangerous precedent for the Congress to change the number of the justices?
5767Is it not a fact that ever since the year 1909, Great Britain in many ways has advanced further along lines of social security than the United States?
5767Is your bank account more secure?
5767Is your faith in your own individual future more firmly grounded?
5767The one question that recurs through all these thousands of letters and messages is"What more can I do to help my country in winning this war"?
5767What are their doubts?
5767What are their hopes?
5767What are they thinking?
5767What did we get for this money?
5767What did we get for this money?
5767What do they mean by the words"packing the Court"?
5767What is my proposal?
5767What, then, happened during the last few days of February and the first few days of March?
5767When Andrew Jackson,"Old Hickory,"died, someone asked,"Will he go to Heaven?"
5767When before have you found them really at your side in your fights for progress?
5767Who are these millions upon whom the life of our country depends?
5767Why was the age fixed at seventy?
47258''Do n''t you see,''said he,''that the piles_ have no discretion_, and that the cobblestones have?'' 47258 A tunnel?
47258A tunnel? 47258 Alice, what is there in this sauce?"
47258Alice,broke in Mabel,"what else is in the soup beside pepper?
47258And do you think that every farmer does all his planting by hand? 47258 Are electric cars coming into general use?"
47258Belper, the town of Belper? 47258 But do you realize what an inconvenience this ferry causes?
47258But what causes the traffic and where are all the vessels going?
47258Can you raise vegetables or grain in the woods?
47258Can you tell us what it is, James?
47258Did I understand you to say that this is a sleeper?
47258Did you say that there was no smoke?
47258Do n''t you see,said the drummer,"how attaching a dining car to a train required another change also?
47258Do you know where Sumatra is, Mabel?
47258Do you not think that these are remarkably fresh after having been brought so far?
47258Does not that look like charcoal?
47258For what, my dear friend?
47258Fred, how would the black pepper be brought to New York from Sumatra?
47258Friend Lewis,said Mr. Blank,"where have thee and our friend been, and where bound?"
47258Have you tried the California lemons yet?
47258How about the lettuce?
47258How can they be compared?
47258How far have these cars come that I see on the ferry?
47258How is it, Henry, that we did not feel the wind as we passed from car to car? 47258 I wonder whether the Sandwich Islands, being now a part of the United States, will interfere with the raising of sugar cane in our Southern States?"
47258Is it indeed so much?
47258Is my mother yet alive? 47258 Is not that something new?"
47258Is that the way grain is harvested?
47258Oh, Miss Turner, what is this curious- looking thing in this part of the seat- stone?
47258Steamers and railroad trains seem necessary for our dinner, do they not?
47258Suppose that all the forests in this country had been destroyed,the class was asked,"what would the people have done for fuel?"
47258Then if he desires apples, does he plant apples?
47258This car is wider than ours used to be, is it not?
47258Uncle,remarked the drummer,"how does this canal compare with the Delaware and Hudson canal, with which you were familiar?"
47258Well, Charles, how do you purpose to go to the city to- day? 47258 Well, now, it''s a full twelvemonth since I was around here afore, and do ye want me to make up their winter shoes for''em?"
47258Well, them that''s old enough goes to school, if that''s what you mean?
47258What are we going to do for meat when the natural increase in the amount of land devoted to cultivation uses up all the grazing regions?
47258What do you burn in the stoves in your houses?
47258What do you call this pudding, Alice?
47258What do you expect will be done?
47258What do you mean by two kinds of pepper, brother George?
47258What do you suppose our ancestors thought of these forests? 47258 What else is there in the sauce, Alice?"
47258What is the meanin''of that speech?
47258What part of Derbyshire?
47258What was the cost of making the copy of our sacred writings for the Queen of Sheba? 47258 Where does the butter come from?"
47258Why do you call it a rarity?
47258Would not such a tunnel be dark and damp, dirty and unhealthy in every sense?
47258Would you plant a kernel of corn in just the same way that you would a potato?
47258After another pause the shy little girl asked,"Did n''t they have more forests then than now?"
47258Are they trying to run us down?"
47258Are ye givin''''em all good healthy understandin''?"
47258Besides, if they had wished to travel, where could they have gone?
47258But do you know, Frank, where the apples were grown?"
47258But to answer your question by asking another, Did you ever hear of weeds?"
47258But was there not some way to avoid carrying so much freight in wagons drawn by horses?
47258But what better fortune could they expect at Naumkeag?
47258But what do you think of a tunnel?"
47258But what is that compared to the greater wonders of the telephone?
47258But what is this coal and where does it come from?"
47258But what makes the train move?
47258But what would you do?
47258But where do we get black pepper?"
47258But who knows how much assistance his skill in drawing may have been to him in his preparations of plans and models?
47258Can we look forward to the changes that may come in the future in the methods of heating our houses and cooking our food?
47258Can we see any improvement in this rough cottage over the Indian long house?
47258Can you explain it to me?"
47258Can you imagine a time, still further back, when none of the houses in your city or village were standing?
47258Can you think back still further to a time when the house in which you live had not been built?
47258Corliss, why did not you drive wooden piles on which to build your foundation?''
47258Could he be expected to invent a machine that would separate the cotton seed which he had never seen from the raw cotton which also he had never seen?
47258Could not some method be devised so that the spading or tilling could be done by horses or oxen?
47258Could the_ Clermont_ reach Albany in thirty- seven hours, or a day and a half?
47258Did you notice that machine shop which we passed when we were in Cleveland a few days ago?
47258Did you see those furnaces with the huge volumes of flame bursting out of the open doors?
47258Do n''t you know that if he wants potatoes he plants potatoes?"
47258Do you know of any old buildings that have been torn down in order that larger or better ones might take their places?
47258Does he not have tools to help him?"
47258Has n''t He filled your quiver full of childers?
47258Has the farmer nothing to plant but potatoes?"
47258Have any new houses been built?
47258Have we gained in knowledge and manner of living as greatly as in heating and lighting our houses?
47258Have you ever thought that men or human beings are very much like other animals?
47258Have you ever tried to find out the important differences between man and what are called the lower animals?
47258Have you seen any changes near where you live since you can remember?
47258Have you watched men making a new street or road, or, perhaps, working upon an old road to make it better?
47258Here the governor sprang from his seat, and staring at Ben, cried out:"Well, and where did you get your education, pray?"
47258How are my brothers and sisters?
47258How did our ancestors obtain it?
47258How early in human history was the eye made for the needle?
47258How is my old master, Mr. Strutt?
47258How long will it be before his next two lines will also prove a reality?
47258How many shekels have been paid to the scribes for their work?"
47258How shall we get it?
47258How should we be able to- day to transact business under such conditions?
47258How was it held together?
47258How was it made?
47258I mean, have they all good soles on which to keep their bodies healthy?"
47258If steam could aid water navigation, could it not be used in land travel?
47258If the heavens refuse to send rain to moisten the parched ground, can not the needed water be obtained in some other way?
47258If, however, no neighbors were near and coals could not be borrowed, how under circumstances like these could a new fire be kindled?
47258In the earlier times what was the mantle that covered the human person?
47258In this country, covered with forests, were there only wild animals?
47258Indeed, is not the lighthouse itself a great lesson in morals?
47258Is salt also brought half- way round the world?"
47258Is the old schoolmaster Jackson living?"
47258Is there a chance for further improvement?
47258It is halibut, is it not?"
47258Might it not be possible to build a telegraph line from Europe, starting from some point in Russia, across Northern Asia, to the Behring Straits?
47258Mr. Wilkinson took him to his brother''s house and said:"I have brought one of your countrymen to see you; can you find anything for him to do?"
47258Not under the river?
47258Of course he hurried, for was not mother all dressed and not a bit of fire in the house?
47258Rather a fantastic garb for a missionary, was n''t it?"
47258Shall we change again, and for a time let our heads get cool while we warm our feet?
47258Should he stay away from divine service?
47258Suddenly John exclaimed,"What are they doing?
47258The hunter needed the bird, for he was hungry, but how was he to obtain it?
47258The next morning, as the travelers went down to breakfast, the younger man asked,"Well, uncle, how did you sleep?"
47258The next thing a farmer does in the spring is to plant his potatoes and corn, is it not?"
47258There was a pause for a time; then one boy asked,"Did n''t they burn just what we burn?"
47258Under what circumstances was the remark made?
47258Upon what do you suppose those letters, sent so long ago and preserved to the present time, were written?
47258Was all the time and money so far spent thrown away?
47258Was it not Emerson who said that the thumb is the symbol of civilization?
47258Was it possible to make rivers, or at least to make water- ways, upon which boats might be used?
47258Was the trial to succeed or fail?
47258Was there any chance for further improvement?
47258Was there any other way to connect the two worlds by an electric wire?
47258We may now ask what was the object of all this whale fishery?
47258Were there no human beings: no men, nor women, nor children?
47258Were they glad to see them, or did they wish that they covered less ground?"
47258What can the cow give me for my third finger?"
47258What causes such a crowd to- day, particularly?"
47258What could be done?
47258What did Solomon mean when he made this sage remark,"Of making many books there is no end"?
47258What did the people do for light on a dark night in those times?
47258What do they do all summer?"
47258What do you mean?"
47258What does he do if he wants one rather than the other?"
47258What does he do that for?"
47258What has made the change?
47258What have you been in the habit of having?"
47258What interest had these colonists in travel?
47258What is a canal?
47258What is the difference between a dog and a boy, or, rather, what is the difference between the brute creation and mankind?
47258What may I call your name?"
47258What more could be asked of any machine?
47258What power is great enough to do this?
47258What powers have we found used in transportation up to a hundred years ago?
47258What present could be more appropriate, more honorable to him, more welcome to her, or more acceptable to Jehovah, the God of his people Israel?
47258What should it be?
47258What should we do to- day without the steam engine?
47258What was he about to do with such great quantities of pine knots?
47258What was that great machine that they were approaching?
47258What were the two men to do?
47258What will be the next wonderful invention?
47258What would a boy of the year 1800, could he return to the earth, say to see you strike a match, turn a stopcock, and light the gas as you do to- day?
47258What would this writer say to the safety of the trains of to- day, as they make forty fifty, sixty, and even seventy miles an hour?
47258What, then, is fire?
47258When was thread first used for the seam?
47258Where?
47258Why did not the Indian build a chimney?
47258Why does it not go out at the top?
47258Why had they not begun earlier?
47258Why?
47258With what was the sewing thereof?
47258Would you not like to see the needles that were in use hundreds of years ago?
47258You have no seasoning at all in the soup, have you, Alice?"
47258and is its only use that of changing quiet, liquid water into powerful steam?
47258and is n''t that the greatest blessing the Almighty can bestow on man that is a sinner?"
47258said the old man,"shear the cosset in January?
47258the press does thunder, literally, does it not?
47258what number?"
47258when the street in front of your house had not been made?
47258when there were no streets at all within sight of the place where you live?
47258who is it?"
5836Un jour, un individu etranger au camp l''arrete aver sa boite et lui dit:--Qu''est- ce que vous avez donc serre la dedans? 5836 A quoi estelle bonne?
5836And what has a poor foreigner like me done, to be abused and misrepresented like this?
5836Bless my life, did they never see any lightning- rods before?
5836Do you suppose I am going to speak of those cattle that way?
5836Do you suppose my subscribers are going to stand such gruel as that?
5836Does she mourn over the extinguished council- fires of her race, and the vanished glory of her ancestors?
5836Does the great Speckled Thunder sigh for the war- path, or is his heart contented with dreaming of the dusky maiden, the Pride of the Forest?
5836Does the mighty Sachem yearn to drink the blood of his enemies, or is he satisfied to make bead reticules for the pappooses of the paleface?
5836Est- ce qu''elle aurait quelque chose?
5836Has she ought against the paleface stranger?"
5836He said,"Sir, have I the honor of addressing the poltroon who edits this mangy sheet?"
5836I addressed the relic as follows:"Is the Wawhoo- Wang- Wang of the Whack- a- Whack happy?
5836I asked him if he learned to talk out of a book, and if I could borrow it anywhere?
5836I believe I have the honor of addressing the putrid liar, Colonel Blatherskite Tecumseh?"
5836I hesitated a moment, and then addressed her:"Is the heart of the forest maiden heavy?
5836I no saw not that that frog had nothing of better than each frog"?
5836I said,"Yes, yes-- go on-- what about it?"
5836Is it that she had something?
5836Is n''t it sinful to do this?
5836Is that all?
5836Is the Laughing Tadpole lonely?
5836Never saw''such a stack of them on one establishment,''did I understand you to say?
5836Nine hundred, dollars?
5836One day a feller--a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"''What might it be that you''ve got in the box?''
5836One day an individual stranger at the camp him arrested with his box and him said:"What is this that you have them shut up there within?"
5836Or does her sad spirit wander afar toward the hunting- grounds whither her brave Gobbler- of- the- Lightnings is gone?
5836The maiden said:"Faix, an''is it Biddy Malone ye dare to be callin''names?
5836The next time I swept around he said:"Got a match?"
5836Those joyous beans are passed away; Those onions blithe, O where are they?
5836What is that multitude of people gathered in the street for?
5836When I came round again, I said:"Excuse the seemingly impertinent curiosity of a drowning man, but will you explain this singular conduct of yours?"
5836Where are they from?"
5836Where do bad little boys go who gobble up their good kind mother''s jam?"
5836Why is my daughter silent?
5836in effect!--At what is she good?"
14697Aaron Burr?
14697Adam Gaudylock? 14697 All what, sir?"
14697All?
14697Am I a great one?
14697Am I so torn and breathless? 14697 Am I that man?"
14697And Deb?
14697And Mr. Jefferson, and all that you owe to him? 14697 And Uncle Dick and Uncle Edward?"
14697And did you not know that I knew?
14697And honest?
14697And how did you know that, sir?
14697And if it''s the other?
14697And my cornelian ring-- and the flowered scarf-- and-- and your fan, Jacqueline?
14697And no one suspected?
14697And on your own way home you repeated that to no one?
14697And that you cut yourself?
14697And the other with the sash?
14697And then and there to have given myself up?
14697And what other course, from time out of mind, does the disloyal pursue? 14697 And who,"asked Rand calmly,--"and who will prevent that?"
14697And you brought me here to- night to tell me so?
14697And you-- you will not go with him?
14697And, these three?
14697And-- and if he were there, what harm?
14697Are brocaded coats still worn in Gascony?
14697Are n''t you ever going to love me?
14697Are n''t you going to fight him at the Court House? 14697 Are there any ha''nts?"
14697Are we awake?
14697Are you done?
14697Are you from Albemarle, sir?
14697Are you going away to Richmond?
14697Are you going home now?
14697Are you going to take that Mathews case? 14697 Are you so indifferent?"
14697Are you still there, Tom? 14697 Are you there, Ludwell?
14697Are you there, Major? 14697 Are you thinking,''I should have left him in the tobacco- fields''?
14697Around the Blue Ridge?
14697At least, it does n''t matter much.--Is that all, Joab?
14697At what time of the night?
14697Black clouds in the sky,he said, in a curious voice,"and the seventh of September, M. de Pincornet?"
14697Burr got off, did n''t he? 14697 But Jacqueline,"she whispered,--"Jacqueline does not know?"
14697But am I the only one you''ve wronged? 14697 But if you_ did_ vote, Jacqueline?"
14697But no shepherdesses?
14697But-- but--stammered the scamp,"are you going over to the other camp?"
14697Ca n''t I go for you?
14697Can you prove that?
14697Can you tell me, sir, if Miss Dandridge is at home?
14697Colonel Churchill, for whom do you vote?
14697Could I stay on here? 14697 Could Mr. Rand arrive by such a day?
14697Could n''t you, poor old Tom? 14697 Could not Mr. Mocket take his instructions directly from you?"
14697Did I tell you,asked Jacqueline,"that Mr. Pincornet holds the dancing class at Fontenoy this week?"
14697Did all that came down to the island go away?
14697Did he tell you? 14697 Did he?"
14697Did n''t you like the story, Uncle Edward? 14697 Did n''t you teach the Carys?
14697Did the fireworks frighten you, honey? 14697 Did you hear?"
14697Did you like it?
14697Did you meet him?
14697Did you think of it as revenge?
14697Do I not know him, know him well? 14697 Do I not know that?"
14697Do I not know what it was? 14697 Do I?"
14697Do n''t I always stop? 14697 Do n''t the world move, sir?"
14697Do n''t you remember?
14697Do n''t you want me to start the fire?
14697Do n''t you want to see the brig from Barbadoes? 14697 Do n''t you?
14697Do they believe them at Greenwood?
14697Do you ask?
14697Do you believe that he is going West to join Burr?
14697Do you find it so?
14697Do you know what the Cherokees call me? 14697 Do you know what you are like in your narrow green gown and your blowing, yellow hair?
14697Do you know who that is?
14697Do you know, Jacqueline,--do you know what you are saying?
14697Do you mean my aim in life, or my last hour?
14697Do you mean you''re reading law?
14697Do you name them?
14697Do you really think that?
14697Do you remember that first day we rode to Fontenoy when I came home from England? 14697 Do you remember when, in November, I burned here, or thought I burned here, all papers, all letters--""Do I?"
14697Do you remember,asked Jacqueline,"how Lady Mary Wortley Montagu offended Mr. Alexander Pope?"
14697Do you remember,she asked, with her face still to the mirror,--"do you remember the last time I wore this gown?"
14697Do you think it is with fear?
14697Do you think that, Unity?
14697Do you think,asked the boy oddly,--"do you think I am really like that,--like a rattlesnake?"
14697Do you think,he demanded,"that mine is a stony heart?
14697Does Mrs. Rand wait here for you?
14697Does he come here often?
14697Does it so much matter that you are Federalist and he Republican?
14697Does she love him so?
14697Does your arm that is buried at Yorktown hurt you to- day, Uncle Edward? 14697 Does your head ache?"
14697Edward, come here a moment, will you?
14697Fair, Fair, will you not forego it-- forego vengeance?
14697Fair, Fair--Cary spoke with steadiness"What has brought you here, Eli?
14697Fair, would you not say from every appearance that Lewis Rand is as fixed in Albemarle and in Virginia as you or I or any honest man? 14697 Fontenoy draws you too, Fairfax?
14697Fontenoy will miss you-- eh, Unity, eh, Jacqueline?
14697Fontenoy, of course?
14697From-- from Monticello?
14697Give me a gourd of water, will you, Bates? 14697 Had they any guns?"
14697Has Joab gone to the post- office?
14697Has Lewis Rand a cloven hoof? 14697 Has he taken her to a strange country?"
14697Have I not chafed, ever since July, to see you in so poor a place? 14697 Have you any proof that he is conspiring with Burr?"
14697Have you got to work?
14697Have you had your breakfast?
14697Have you just come in?
14697Have you not lived here all these years?
14697Have you reflected, sir, that there is some danger in so free an expression of your mind?
14697Have you seen Mr. Ludwell Cary?
14697Have you seen that Barbary mare Dick has gotten over from England?
14697Have you spoken to her?
14697He sees a snake in the grass,he thought lazily"Who''s''Aurelius''?"
14697He told you that?
14697He''s a good master, is n''t he?
14697Her grief is deep, as is natural-- do we not all grieve? 14697 Hi, dat so?"
14697How can it but be a strange country?
14697How do you know that?
14697How do you know?
14697How great?
14697How have you come to know? 14697 How long has he been at Fontenoy?
14697How long have you known?
14697How long is he to lie there, stretched out upon the wet rocks, beside the stream? 14697 How much law have you read?"
14697How should I help my kind, now-- now?
14697I believe, Mr. Rand, that your father fought bravely in the war?
14697I ca n''t do that, can I? 14697 I ca n''t think of anything, Vinie"; then, after a moment, and very oddly,"Would you give me, once more, a cup of cool water?"
14697I hear your horse upon the gravel-- Selim, still, is it not? 14697 I may come too?"
14697I suppose Dick is making posset in his best racing cup? 14697 I thought I heard the stage horn?"
14697I will tell you what I have done, and where the danger''s greatest--"The danger?
14697I wish to know if you will be so good as to come to Monticello to- night? 14697 I wish, I wish-- but what''s the use in wishing?
14697If I know-- if I know Fairfax Cary-- Has the horse been captured-- and where? 14697 If you mean Mr. Cary--""Whom else should I mean?
14697Immediately upon your return from over the mountains?
14697In this room, what can I say? 14697 Indeed?
14697Indeed?
14697Indifferent?
14697Is Adam here?
14697Is I a- hidin''in de swamp? 14697 Is Young Isham there?
14697Is he home from Richmond?
14697Is he not over that?
14697Is it a sum you''re doing?
14697Is it an interesting game?
14697Is it not cruel that we hurt each other so? 14697 Is it so plain as that?"
14697Is it so you think of him?
14697Is it still,asked Cary slowly,"your opinion that she does not know?"
14697Is it to be always thus?
14697Is it you, Fair?
14697Is it your opinion that he would take her with him?
14697Is it? 14697 Is it?"
14697Is it?
14697Is it?
14697Is n''t that a way the world has?
14697Is not the picture fair enough, sir? 14697 Is she playing her harp to- night?
14697Is that feasible? 14697 Is that you, Mocket?"
14697Is the drawing- room finished?
14697Is there anything lacking?
14697Is there,asked Cary, in a low voice,"is there another before me?"
14697Is this true-- what this man says?
14697It will indeed,said Jacqueline, with a smile; and Unity,"Will I have time to order a black scarf from Baltimore?
14697It''s a promise?
14697Ithn''t there anything else?
14697Jacqueline, are you tired? 14697 Jacqueline,"said Deb,"whom do you vote for?"
14697Jacqueline,said the child,"do you believe in the Devil?"
14697Jim and Bob and Shirley, which road did Mr. Cary take?
14697Joab?
14697Just make believe?
14697Kin I go tell my ole mammy good- bye? 14697 Last winter?
14697Lawd hab mercy, marster, whar you come f''om? 14697 Lewis, Lewis, is it all so dark?"
14697Lewis, Lewis, what is it? 14697 Lewis, is there no way out with honour?
14697Lewis, what is the matter?
14697Lewis, what is the matter?
14697Lewis, who was the man?
14697Lewis, why did Colonel Burr come here to- night?
14697Lewis,spoke the scamp, with a queer note of affection and deprecation,"why do n''t you see Dr. Gilmer?
14697Lewis-- will you not tell them?
14697Lewis? 14697 Love Jacqueline?
14697Mahomet to the mountain? 14697 Major Edward?"
14697Marse Lewis, Marse Edward Churchill say kin he trouble you fer a few minutes''conversation? 14697 May I ask what Miss Churchill replied?"
14697May I ask who said that?
14697May I stay a few minutes?
14697Might what?
14697Miss Dandridge seals with a dove and an olive branch?
14697Miss Deb, ef I gets to de big gate fust, you gwine lemme hol''dat doll baby Marse Edward gin you?
14697Mr. Cary, can you think of any one who bore him ill- will-- a runaway negro, perhaps, or some vagrant who might have been along that stream?
14697Mr. Cary, had he any enemy?
14697Mr. Rand''s not here, I believe?
14697Mr. Rand, do you remember that frosty morning, long ago, when you and I first met? 14697 Mr. Rand, in the matter of the nomination for Governor, is it too late to recall your refusal?
14697Mr. Rand, may I have a word with you?
14697Mr. Smith, give the lad old Coke, yes, and Locke on Government, and put them to my account.--Where do you go to school?
14697Mrs. Rand does not know yet, does she, Lewis?
14697My dear old friend, what should be wrong?
14697My good old fellow, did you think only to see my ghost? 14697 Ned Hunter, is it you?
14697No one at home at Monticello?
14697No? 14697 No?"
14697Now and then, my dear, will you come to see me on the Three- Notched Road? 14697 Now things will grow!--Jacqueline, child, are n''t you going to sing to us?"
14697Now what is old Carfax doing on your land?
14697Now? 14697 Oh, would you like to?"
14697Olive branch?
14697On what specific proposition?
14697On whose, then? 14697 Open the window, will you?
14697Or afraid?
14697Or that you are a Cary, with all that that means, while he is Lewis Rand from the Three- Notched Road?
14697Or that you are rival lawyers? 14697 Permit me to hope, sir, that there is nothing wrong at Fontenoy?
14697Robin Hood? 14697 Royalist or Republican-- either air?"
14697Shall we not go in?
14697Shall we?
14697She''s coming-- she''s coming?
14697She?
14697Should I speak to him, too? 14697 So things are all right at Williamsburgh?
14697Strike a light, will you? 14697 Suspect?
14697Tell them--"Is it not-- oh, Lewis, is it not the only thing to do? 14697 Tell you?"
14697That is final, sir?
14697That was why you forced him to challenge you, and that was why you named a distant time and place? 14697 That''s true-- that''s true, Jacqueline?"
14697The fireworks were alarming, were n''t they, Mrs. Wickham? 14697 The matter, child?
14697The murderer?
14697There is, then, to be a battle?
14697There''s absolutely nothing, is there, in that desk of yours?
14697These lands that you are going to see, sir-- they are not as far as the Washita?
14697Think how terrible that would be for us all!--Did you know that Mr. Hunter once dined with General Washington?
14697Told my niece? 14697 Toward the Ohio?"
14697Uncle Edward, who pays the devil?
14697Uncle Edward?
14697Vinie, where''s your father?
14697Vinie, why do n''t you mend that gate?
14697Was I?
14697Was it?
14697Was it?
14697Was there any powder or lead?
14697Well, Fair?
14697Well, Fairfax Cary?
14697Well, I thought I''d tell you,said his colleague"I do n''t like the Carys, either!--And so I''m not to go into that land scheme?"
14697Well, why not? 14697 Were he Ludwell Cary, would he fare forth on his adventure alone?
14697Were you at the Amblers''?
14697What ails you, Jacqueline? 14697 What are you going to do-- what are you going to do now, Lewis?"
14697What d''ye think the verdict will be?
14697What did Fairfax Cary say, Tom?
14697What did Ludwell Cary say to you?
14697What did you answer?
14697What did you do to him, Lewis?
14697What did you say?
14697What do n''t you understand, poor little Deb?
14697What do you know about the man in the blue room?
14697What do you mean?
14697What do you think,he said,"of the one who turns it bitter?"
14697What have you been doing all the long day?
14697What have you done?
14697What have you there, mammy-- a dish of red pottage?
14697What induced them to leave the island at that hour of the night?
14697What is going to make it happy?
14697What is it, child?
14697What is it, man?
14697What is there that is steadfast?
14697What kind of guns; rifles or muskets?
14697What proofs? 14697 What reason?"
14697What shall I do,it asked,"O God?"
14697What shall I sing?
14697What shall we do?
14697What should I do in the West?
14697What should he do in a mere coffee house with mere earthly newspapers? 14697 What the Devil?"
14697What will you do? 14697 What will you do?"
14697What''s happened to anger him like that?
14697What''s he got to do with it?
14697What''s her name?
14697What''s this? 14697 What''s this?
14697What, pray, would Miss Churchill have?
14697What,demanded Cary, in a strained voice,--"what did he answer?"
14697Whatever it is?
14697When are you coming, Lewis?
14697When could that have been?
14697When did you ride that way, Edward?
14697When you quit Albemarle this time, you quit it alone?
14697When you went on, Mr. Cary, from Elm Tree, you too supposed that your brother would follow by the same road? 14697 When, in your country, the man you loved was to be avenged, and his murderers punished, you were glad of aid, were you not?
14697When,said the Major at last,--"when will you come with me, Fair, to Fontenoy?"
14697Where are all the people?
14697Where are you going?
14697Where does it lie, and who are your fellow travellers? 14697 Where first?
14697Where is Deb?
14697Where is he now?
14697Where is n''t it now?
14697Where is the best place in Richmond to buy books?
14697Where''s Gascoigne''s Steel Glasse? 14697 Where''s Tom?"
14697Where''s that?
14697Which do you think is the prettiest, Mr. Adam,--Miss Unity or Miss Jacqueline?
14697Which he would not take?
14697Which road,he asked, as he gave back the gourd,--"which road did Mr. Cary take?
14697Who do you hear, Smut?
14697Who gave you-- who gave you the right of inquisition? 14697 Who is it?"
14697Who is that with Mr. Wickham-- the tall, lean man?
14697Who knows?
14697Who said that he was?
14697Who was the guest,--the client from the country?
14697Who''s he looking at like that?
14697Who, then?
14697Who, then?'' 14697 Who?
14697Who?
14697Who?
14697Who?
14697Who?
14697Who?--William Gilmer?
14697Whose is he?
14697Why are you on the Monticello road? 14697 Why call it poor and pale?
14697Why did you come to- day, Unity? 14697 Why do you like it?
14697Why does your breath come long like that, Jacqueline? 14697 Why is that?"
14697Why not say''friend''?
14697Why not?
14697Why should I dream that he is preparing a moonlight flitting? 14697 Why should I not be serious?"
14697Why should n''t you be the man?
14697Why should you be''astounded''?
14697Why, Jacqueline?
14697Why,he demanded hoarsely,--"why did you not fire upon me?"
14697Why,she cried,--"why did you not go without me?
14697Why?
14697Will General Wilkinson be here?
14697Will he go alone?
14697Will he stay always upstairs in the blue room?
14697Will it be so hard?
14697Will you be so very good as to turn the leaves for me?
14697Will you come indoors, sir? 14697 Will you have another cup?"
14697Will you mourn for me when I am dead?
14697Will you not take a chair?
14697Will you not,asked Cary,--"will you not sing it to me now?"
14697Will you smoke with me, Mr. Bacon? 14697 Will you take Mrs. Rand with you?"
14697Will you tell me that, Jacqueline?
14697Will you tell me that?
14697Will you tell me what books I ought to buy? 14697 Will you wait for me, wait on no other terms than these?
14697Wo n''t you have another glass of water, ma''am? 14697 Wo n''t you sit down?
14697Wo n''t you sit down?
14697Wo n''t you tell me a story?
14697Would Miss Dandridge wish me to?
14697Would he,asked Cary sombrely--"would he agree?
14697Would she go?
14697Would you leave him to bleed to death by the roadside? 14697 Would you swear, Hunter, to what he said?"
14697Yet?
14697You and Mr. Rand are old friends?
14697You and he are over against each other in that case to- morrow, are n''t you?
14697You are not surprised?
14697You are sure?
14697You declined the invitation for her?
14697You do love me? 14697 You do n''t,"said Colonel Churchill slowly,"you do n''t by any chance love some one else?
14697You have been making Christmas for the quarter?
14697You have been writing? 14697 You left him-- lying there?"
14697You little brown prairie- hen, what are you doing so far from home? 14697 You love me still?"
14697You persevere in your intention of returning to Richmond and to your house on Shockoe Hill in November?
14697You put on the blue gown to remind me, did n''t you?
14697You remember it by nothing else?
14697You remember, Forrest? 14697 You stopped in January, too, did n''t you?"
14697You will lay aside your bonnet?
14697You will want to look these over? 14697 You wished me, sir?"
14697You wo n''t be coming in from Roselands?
14697You would take me, would you not, Mr. Rand, to be a man of my word?
14697You, Adam, what will you do?
14697_ As he said he should._ How do you know that he said he should?
14697''Have n''t you a tract of sugar- canes?''
14697''Is the sheriff in, Michael?''
14697A triumvirate, was it not?
14697About the governorship?"
14697Adam?"
14697Adam?"
14697Adam?"
14697Ain''I done ride behin''you bofe dese yeahs an''yeahs?
14697All''s well at Roselands?"
14697Am I, then, merely an acquaintance?"
14697Am_ I_ merely an agreeable acquaintance?"
14697An expedition against Mexico, an attack upon the dominions of the King of Spain with whom we are at peace?
14697And Major Churchill,"Are women blind?
14697And Mr. Fairfax Cary?
14697And as for that murderer, he might say when he heard them,''Are the dead so soon forgot?
14697And as long as I live, I''ll say that Uncle Dick and Uncle Edward are to blame--""Where are they?"
14697And he suspected nothing?"
14697And how shall we know the road?
14697And immediately after that you returned to the West?"
14697And so you wo n''t be Governor of Virginia?"
14697And then?"
14697And to rejoice the heart of my Maker-- if I have one?"
14697And what if Lewis Rand were at home?
14697And what will you do?"
14697And what, may I ask, are you going to do with the Mississippi now that you''ve got it?
14697And when''s the marriage, Fair?"
14697And why not, Fair?
14697And yet-- and yet-- Will you have it at last?
14697And your letter to him every month with all the public news?"
14697And, Vinie, can you give me a bit of supper?
14697Anyhow, Mr. Ludwell Cary did n''t ride that way-- events prove that, do n''t they, sir?
14697Are n''t you going to let me see the schoolroom?"
14697Are the horses ready?"
14697Are we free men?
14697Are you a lawyer, sir?"
14697Are you coming with me, Adam Gaudylock?"
14697Are you from Albemarle?"
14697Are you going in now?"
14697Are you going to be one?"
14697Are you going to stay to supper?"
14697Are you not my friend, whose opinion I value for me and mine?
14697Are you on your way to Charlottesville?''
14697Are you sure-- are you sure, Jacqueline, that you understand what they-- what they sent me to say?"
14697Are you tired, Uncle Edward?
14697As a boy, he would have been puzzled to choose between"Will you go to Heaven?"
14697At last Colonel Dick broke out,"What the devil ails her, Edward?
14697At no price, I presume?"
14697At what goal are you aiming?"
14697At what hour?"
14697Bah!--Where is Ludwell Cary this afternoon?"
14697Being Lewis Rand, will he go without her, leave her behind?
14697Besides-- would you fight this one?"
14697But I ca n''t see what you want it taken down for--""Perhaps not,"answered Cary patiently,"but you''ll swear to it, all the same?"
14697But I can not now that my aunt is ill.""Perhaps he will wait?"
14697But I''m no Samson or David-- I''m just Tom Mocket-- and still, why should n''t I have my pennyworth?"
14697But Tom says he has a bigger thing in mind--""Who?
14697But the thing itself-- is it so impossible?
14697But who, in this century and this land, shall say that to me-- or to you?
14697But why should Colonel Burr be amused, and why sarcastic?
14697By Meteor, ai n''t he, out of Fatima?"
14697Ca n''t a gentleman fight a duel?
14697Can not you convert him?
14697Cary?"
14697Cary?"
14697Cary?"
14697Cary?"
14697Cheat justice, see the law futile to protect an outraged people, stay the hangman''s hand-- am I one to will that?
14697Christmas is lovely, is n''t it?
14697Coles, if you will be so good!--It is a pity, is it not, to see this drouth?
14697Could he come just as soon as the jury, the press, and Mr. Jefferson hanged Aaron Burr?
14697Could he not even give largesse like one to the manner born, or was it only that all the air was hostile?
14697Curious, is n''t it?"
14697Curious, was n''t it, that passage between Mr. Rand and Fairfax Cary?
14697D''ye remember that damned place in the hill road where my mare Nelly threw me, coming home at dawn from Maria Erskine''s wedding?"
14697Dabney?"
14697Dead faith, hope, honour!--is this your trust, your faith?"
14697Dearest, have you been sitting here all this time?"
14697Deb arrived to- day, did she not?"
14697Denounce him now as a conspirator against his party and his country?
14697Did Joab not tell you?"
14697Did it not have once a minority?
14697Did we part at the guide- post?
14697Did you ride over from Greenwood to be scornful?"
14697Did you, Mr. Pincornet, have any scruple when you took vengeance, near Mauléon?"
14697Do n''t I like all your stories?
14697Do n''t you ever wear that Spanish comb I brought you?"
14697Do n''t you love Unity Dandridge?
14697Do n''t you remember Adam?"
14697Do n''t you remember the speech he made?
14697Do n''t you remember?
14697Do n''t you think it would be sweet and shady this morning, under the catalpa tree?"
14697Do n''t you want me to break some cherry blossoms for your parlour?"
14697Do n''t you want to see the Guard turn out at noon, and hear the trumpet blow?
14697Do n''t you want to see what I''ve got in my pouch?"
14697Do you go to- morrow to the Capitol?"
14697Do you hear the stream-- our stream-- hurrying past the apple tree?
14697Do you know what she thinks you, sir?
14697Do you really want to challenge me?"
14697Do you remember how he used to stride along with his black hair and his open shirt and his big stick in his hand?
14697Do you remember old Gideon Rand?"
14697Do you remember the night of the nineteenth of February?"
14697Do you remember?"
14697Do you stay to supper?"
14697Do you understand?"
14697Do you want to look over them?"
14697Does Fairfax Cary come to- night?"
14697Does he think he can win there, too?"
14697Does he think that he can always keep me here?--or only until-- until it is too late to go?"
14697Does it look, Fair, as though he were in marching order?"
14697Does it seem long to you since you were a boy?"
14697Does not every one say that he has a great future?
14697Does not its light even now fall upon us?
14697Does your arm hurt?
14697Fairfax Cary drew a gasping breath"Lying there, suffering, through the storm and darkness?
14697For the Lord''s sake, Lewis, is this the end of everything?"
14697From Richmond, sir?
14697From Richmond, sir?"
14697From what egg did he spring that he can play the traitor and the parricide-- and yet, and yet the rose bend to his hand?
14697Gaudylock''s voice floated in from the hall:"Is a little man with him?--a black- eyed man?"
14697Had n''t you better stay here, Miss Dandridge, until I see what really is the matter?
14697Had n''t you better try to get him away?"
14697Had some fool or knave or sickly conscience among the motley that was conspiring with him turned coward or been bought?
14697Had they not seen Lewis Rand walk into the yard-- had they not spoken to him and he to them-- had they not watched him enter the Court House?
14697Had you forgotten the Monticello road?
14697Harrison?"
14697Has anything happened?"
14697Have they not, time out of mind, stood the friend of all gentlemen of the road?
14697Have you been along the Three- Notched Road?"
14697Have you ever noticed what little things make all the difference?
14697Have you ever, in your wanderings, come across Aaron Burr?"
14697Have you heard the news about Unity Dandridge and Fairfax Cary?"
14697Have you seen Unity?"
14697He answered Jacqueline''s welcome and Miss Dandridge''s bright blush and brief"How d''ye do?"
14697He ca n''t be so very bad, can he, Cousin Jane?"
14697He came out of them like Pluto out of the earth--""He was alone?"
14697He delibered Daniel from de lions''den, An''de Hebrew Chillern from de furnace, He delibered David from de han''of Saul, An''why not ebery man?"
14697He ended in a deeper tone,"Why not?
14697He had a vision of a riderless horse, tearing away from a stream, through the woods, and he thought,"How soon?"
14697He had his expenses in his pocket, so why not?
14697He had no terror of it; what was it at last but the projection of a face and form with which his mind had long-- had long been occupied?
14697He is, perhaps, in the same category?"
14697He said we did not want any, the people had seeds where we were going--""Of what occupation were you upon the island?"
14697He should have done so that afternoon in the cedar wood; where was the black mote that kept the vision out?
14697He thinks,''Where can I best put myself in order, and remove this witness?''
14697He was not a vain man, nor over- sanguine, but he wondered,"Is the brightness for me?"
14697He''s not coming here to- day?"
14697Hey, my man, do n''t you miss old friends on the road?"
14697Hey, what did you say?"
14697How are they to be attained, true Liberty and true Happiness?
14697How are you, thir?"
14697How can I tell you at all?
14697How can I tell you at once?
14697How can she have the heart?"
14697How did it happen?"
14697How did you know?"
14697How did you manage?"
14697How does it feel to be a great lawyer, Lewis?"
14697How had the writer who signed"Aurelius"known or divined?
14697How is the arm?
14697How is the interesting patient?"
14697How long before you are back upon the Three- Notched Road?"
14697How long has he been breaking with Mr. Jefferson?
14697How long this time will be your stay in Albemarle?"
14697How many people and what kind of people?
14697How much does she know, how little does she not know?
14697How should he think our thoughts, see just with our eyes?
14697How was he dressed?
14697How yo ahm, Marse Lewis?"
14697I always thought it was the ninth--""Would you know again the place where this chase occurred?"
14697I am not at home among fools, so I came here-- though the Lord knows there''s many a fool to be found in a library!--Well, are any bones broken?"
14697I am sure you are not well?"
14697I am very much obliged to you for the books,--and had I best buy Blackstone with the two dollars?"
14697I am, and I say again, why the deuce did this damned Republican get himself thrown at our very gates?
14697I hope that Roselands has not suffered as Greenwood has done?"
14697I know that he interrogates that image,''Is it thus or so that you would do?''
14697I rode here to- day to say something to you-- Unity, do n''t you think you had better give me up?"
14697I thought it was n''t much of a reason--"The crowd pressed closer,"What was it, Michael, what was it?"
14697I was not averse to a word with him on certain matters, and I rode rapidly, hoping to overtake him--""Upon the main road, sir?"
14697I-- I-- I--""I--?"
14697If I gather it for you, will you wear one spray to- night?"
14697If I were as cool as Aaron Burr looks--"Mr. McRae questioned the witness:"Well, who went off this December night?"
14697If Miss Churchill or Miss Dandridge were at the harpsichord, should he wait at the door until the piece was ended?
14697If he served me once-- yes, and greatly!--have I not worked for him since, hand and foot?
14697If you are not happy, how can I be so?"
14697If you''re not fatigued, would you object to riding with me to West Hill?
14697Ill and fallen from his horse?
14697In these three years you have made yourself a great name in Virginia; and now your party-- It is still your party?"
14697Is Fairfax Cary at home?"
14697Is Fontenoy where Ludwell Cary lives?"
14697Is Lewis Rand so fixed in Albemarle?"
14697Is Mr. Gaudylock coming?"
14697Is Mr. Rand at home?"
14697Is a man ashamed of his English name?"
14697Is he to be so pitied?"
14697Is he writing or reading, or is he lying thinking, there in the blue room?"
14697Is it a long poem, sir?"
14697Is it not fairer when''tis blue?
14697Is it not for the welfare and the grandeur of the whole that each part should have its healthful life?
14697Is it not-- is it not the loveliest day?"
14697Is it your belief that he has told your niece?"
14697Is it, then, only a poor, pale friendship?"
14697Is n''t it sweet to say just''Unity''?"
14697Is n''t she lovely, Mammy?"
14697Is that so?"
14697Is that the apple- woman yonder?
14697Is that true?"
14697Is the whole oak, root, branch, and seed, in the acorn-- bound to come out just that way?"
14697Is there a message for Unity?"
14697Is there any message I may take for you?"
14697Is there nothing more you''ll have?
14697Is there treason in that?"
14697It is more than three months, is n''t it, since Mr. Cary''s death?"
14697It is n''t really late, is it?
14697It may be important--""Can not I give it to him?"
14697It''s as crisp as mint, this morning-- hey, Doctor?"
14697Jacqueline, are you sorry that I found you there?"
14697Jefferson?"
14697Jefferson?"
14697John Randolph of Roanoke and the new Republicans?
14697Kin I go now?"
14697Leveller, demagogue, and Jacobin I am not; but for the rest, who knows-- who knows?
14697Lewis, what is there to suspect?"
14697Life''s queer, ai n''t it?
14697Look out, will you, and see if Young Isham is there with Selim?"
14697Ludwell Cary is still away--""When are you going to marry his brother?"
14697Ludwell''s home?
14697Ludwell?"
14697Made her, sir, a confidante of his villainy, leagued her to aid him in cajoling the world?
14697Major Churchill, you understand that, for all that has been said, I must yet go my way?"
14697Major Edward Churchill, whom do you vote for?"
14697Make my excuses, will you, to Colonel Churchill and the ladies?
14697Marster, is you gwine tek me''way from Richmond?"
14697May I offer you my congratulations?"
14697May I stay to supper?
14697Mocket?"
14697Mr. Fairfax Cary, shall we walk a little to one side?
14697Mr. Ludwell came home last night?"
14697Must it be?
14697Must one forever sign under a captain?
14697My family-- or my lack of family?
14697My husband''s?"
14697My party?
14697My want of wealth is perhaps the least-- why should I not say that I know it is the least objection in your mind?
14697My wife is well?"
14697No letter will appear, seared on his shoulder or his hand, but is he less the thief for that?
14697Now shall we go fast as the wind?"
14697Now what, exactly, did you do in Williamsburgh?"
14697Now when, and where, and to how loud a singing?
14697Now, what''s the matter?"
14697Now, when do you go to Richmond?"
14697Now, will you or wo n''t you?"
14697Oh, all these months, have you been mistrusting Lewis Rand, believing him concerned with that man, suspecting him of-- of-- of_ treason_?
14697One day we may plant a mimosa in such a garden, and smile and say,''Do you remember the tree-- do you remember our wedding day?''
14697Or a revolution in the country west of the Ohio?
14697Or have I the honour, to- night, to entertain a Virginian Cæsar?--perhaps even a Buonaparte?"
14697Or that in politics he has defeated you?
14697Page, nor Jack Martin, nor-- you''re never in love with Fairfax Cary?"
14697Page-- I hope you''ll be so good as to meet them with me?
14697Pincornet?"
14697Rand laughed,"Did you say,''Yes, sire my brother?''"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Rand?"
14697Remus is to wait upon you-- you hear, Remus?
14697Say that there is some money lost and some vexation-- what does that count against this nearing home-- this making friends?"
14697Shall I pour for you, too?"
14697Shall I say,"Pray for me, sweet saint?"
14697Shall we become dead members of a sickly soul?
14697Shall we lift him now, sir?"
14697Sheriff?"
14697Should he speak first to Colonel Churchill as his host, or first to the ladies of the house, to Miss Churchill and Miss Dandridge?
14697Suppose I finish the story to- morrow?"
14697Suppose we go now and put the holly up?"
14697Suppose you try a little_ un_learning?
14697Suppose yourself of another party-- would you change Fairfax Cary?
14697Suppose-- suppose you teach me a minuet?"
14697Swartwout, Bollman, perhaps Burr himself?
14697Tell Adam, will you?
14697That is an ugly name, is it not?
14697That is n''t dead?"
14697That journey, too, to Philadelphia-- whom did he see there?
14697That letter signed''Aurelius''in the Gazette-- did you know''twas his?"
14697That was two days, was it not, before your brother''s death?"
14697That''s a brig from the Indies down there, and the captain''s our cousin-- ain''t he, Vinie?
14697The West is in a ferment just now, is it not?
14697The airs the angels sing, and the thundering march of the damned through hell-- why should I not listen to them both?
14697The fact that my father rolled tobacco, and that now and then I broke a colt for you?"
14697The main road or the river road?"
14697The matter is not private?"
14697The other passed yesterday--""Did Mr. Cary say which road he would take at the ford?"
14697The question is, is it imaginable that all this was of set purpose?"
14697The sea is the mother of life; why call her that of death?
14697The silence held for a heartbeat, then Rand spoke thickly:"So you, too, took the river road?"
14697Then Mary Wayne was your mother?"
14697Then where did we come together again?"
14697Then why do he and Uncle Dick call Mr. Lewis Rand the Devil?"
14697Then, was he on Burr''s trail?
14697There has been no quarrel?"
14697There is no one with you?"
14697There was a minute''s pause while the sun shone and the leaves drifted down, then,"Are you ready, gentlemen?"
14697There was a pause; then,"Do you love your cousin so?"
14697There was a silence, then Cary said quietly,"Are n''t you mistaken, Fair?"
14697There was a silence; then,"Ludwell-- Ludwell dead?"
14697There was blood, sir, about your brother?"
14697They got nothing from him?"
14697Think of us, and come to us--""When?
14697Those were his very words, were n''t they, Edward?"
14697Thrown?
14697To hear the poplars rustling and to smell the box again-- Is it not strange that I should have a light heart when they look so cold upon me?"
14697To himself he said,"Now why did he start like that a moment back?
14697Tom?"
14697Tom?"
14697Traitor and maker of traitors.... And where is your husband to- night?''
14697Unity, when are you going to let me fight all your battles?"
14697Vinie, why do n''t you have your gate mended?"
14697Was he-- is he badly hurt?"
14697Was it at the top of the hill?"
14697Was it for this?
14697Was this not worth the waiting?
14697We might have a hand at Loo-- eh, Unity?
14697We''ll part here, I think, unless you''ll come by Greenwood?"
14697Well, Mr. Rand, why not?
14697Well, how go matters west of the mountains?"
14697Well, sir, well?"
14697Well, sir, why should not pilgrimages be made to Roselands as to Monticello?
14697Well, sir?"
14697Well, why do n''t you cry, little dove?"
14697Well-- shall I not rest content with being a great lawyer?"
14697Well?"
14697Were it not a doom, were it not a frightful doom, that it should come to rule thee?
14697Were she and Lewis grown so much alike?
14697Were you at the Capitol yesterday also?"
14697Were you frightened over there in those woods when you really were a bird?
14697Whar dey gwine dis mawnin''?"
14697What I have done, can not I do again?
14697What I tell em?
14697What I want to know is at whom-- not at what, at_ whom_--you were firing?
14697What are you doing there?"
14697What are you going to Richmond for?"
14697What are you going to say to him, Jacqueline?
14697What are you looking for?"
14697What are you reading?"
14697What can I do here?
14697What did you say to her there in the dusk, by the window?
14697What do you propose to do now?"
14697What do you think, Edward?"
14697What do you want with books?"
14697What does he think as he rides from Red Fields?
14697What does he think will come after these two weeks he has me shackled?
14697What does that colour mean, Jacqueline?
14697What does that mean, Jacqueline?"
14697What had the child to weep for?
14697What has happened at Greenwood?
14697What has your soul or your way of thinking to do with mine?
14697What have you in your bag?"
14697What imaginable thing has brought him here?"
14697What is freedom?
14697What is happiness?
14697What is it, dearest, dearest?"
14697What is man but a Mercenary, a Swiss, to die before whatever door will give him moderate pay?
14697What is that tree by the gate-- all feathery pink?"
14697What is the fuss about?"
14697What is the ideal government?
14697What is the matter, Uncle Edward?"
14697What is the matter, little partridge?"
14697What is the message, Unity?"
14697What is the stuff-- roses and silver?"
14697What is the use?
14697What is wrong, Lewis?"
14697What is your book, sir?"
14697What matters it that he has in charge things of trust and moment which, by miscarrying, will work distress to many?
14697What matters it that he has lived in his employer''s house, and has found him no Egyptian taskmaster, but a benefactor, lavish of favours?
14697What may not happen over there in two weeks?
14697What pretext, now, she wondered, would serve to explain this visit?
14697What shall I sing?"
14697What the Devil is he going to do there?
14697What was it that they plotted that night while she talked to me of the new song she had learned?
14697What was the Spartan learning?"
14697What was the use of going to bed, of wasting the moonlit hours?
14697What was your deputation from Milton?
14697What would you do, Colonel Churchill, or you, Major Edward?
14697What you reckon you said to me?
14697What''ll you have, sir?
14697What''s Buonaparte himself but a poor Corsican lieutenant that stole an empire?
14697What''s Burr in hiding for?
14697What''s he doing at Fontenoy?
14697What''s his business there?"
14697What''s the frown for?"
14697What''s the matter now?"
14697What''s the matter, sir?"
14697What''s to be done?
14697What''s your interest, sir, in Aaron Burr?"
14697What, sir, is the matter?"
14697What, specifically, is it, Mr. Rand, that you''ll not endure?"
14697What, then, gave Lewis so dark a look?
14697When did he come back?"
14697When did he come?
14697When did it begin, your deep interest in my concerns?
14697When did you leave Richmond?"
14697When do you go?"
14697When do you propose to act?"
14697When do you return to Albemarle?"
14697When he left the house that night, he must have known--""Of whom are you talking?"
14697When he was done, would not the court adjourn until to- morrow?
14697When will the princesses come to see the shepherdesses?"
14697When you have done a thing, Adam, a thing that you have striven with all your might to do, does it at once seem to you a small thing to have done?
14697When, Unity?"
14697Where did you learn so much?"
14697Where did you put the holsters?"
14697Where had the pistol fallen?
14697Where have you been in hiding?"
14697Where have you been?"
14697Where is it?
14697Where is that man from the Bienville at Norfolk?"
14697Where is the litter?"
14697Where is this riven oak?"
14697Where lies the land of satisfaction?"
14697Where shall I send my challenge?''
14697Where was the simple right in so complex a wrong?
14697Where was_ he_ that night?"
14697Where were you after New Orleans, before you turned homeward?"
14697Where''s Edward?
14697Where''s he staying?"
14697Where_ was_ Mr. Ludwell Cary the night of the nineteenth of February?"
14697Which way did you come, sir?
14697Which, Unity, which?
14697Who are you to question me?
14697Who goes towards the Eagle?"
14697Who is it coming by?
14697Who is the young gentleman in blue?"
14697Who is this coming in-- the lady with Mrs. Carrington?
14697Who knows-- who knows?"
14697Who knows?
14697Who votes as General Hamilton and Mr. Adams and Judge Marshall vote?
14697Who votes as_ Washington_ would have voted?"
14697Who votes?
14697Who''s coming now, Smut?"
14697Who''s he?"
14697Who''s that-- I left my glasses in the coach-- who''s that speaking to Gabriel?"
14697Who, I say-- who?"
14697Who, sir, is the principal in this affair?
14697Whom have you passed on the road since you left the ford?
14697Why did I leave him at Elm Tree?
14697Why did he come like a shape of night, with the power of night?
14697Why did we not go, Lewis, days ago?"
14697Why did you come that way?"
14697Why did you go white and sick like that?"
14697Why did you think I had that exaltation of mind?
14697Why do n''t you care for him, Jacqueline?"
14697Why had he not been frank?
14697Why is it impossible that I should we d where I love with all my heart?"
14697Why not make the picture real that we are painting?
14697Why should n''t she be happy?"
14697Why should n''t you just speak to them at Elm Tree, then ride on to the inn at Deer Lick and sleep there to- night?
14697Why should the thought of you lie at the bottom of each day?
14697Why should you continue enemies?"
14697Why should you so greatly care to see these lands?
14697Why stain the ocean red?
14697Why was that?"
14697Why wo n''t you tell me?"
14697Why, if you were a soldier''s wife, would you hear all the bullets flying?
14697Why?"
14697Why?"
14697Will Mr. Cary honour me?"
14697Will Mr. Lewis Rand ever come to Fontenoy, Jacqueline?"
14697Will you face each other there like-- like General Hamilton and Aaron Burr?
14697Will you leave us mourning rings?"
14697Will you not accept me as amanuensis?
14697Will you not come with me-- and tell them?"
14697Will you not shake hands, sir?"
14697Will you practise it, or will Greenwood take all your time?"
14697Will you sing to me now?"
14697Will you sit on the porch, ma''am?
14697Will you sit?"
14697Will you tell Mammy Chloe not to whip Miranda?
14697Will you tell Mrs. Rand so, with my best regards?"
14697Wo n''t there be any brightness for you?"
14697Wo n''t you come in, ma''am?
14697Wo n''t you have some?"
14697Wo n''t you sit, sir?
14697Would Dr. Gilmer approve?"
14697Would Miss Churchill be there?
14697Would you leave it?"
14697Would you like to go away?"
14697Would you like to see it?
14697Would you prefer that she should return?"
14697Would you rather that I stayed with you?"
14697You are going home now?"
14697You are just and generous-- will you not try to be friends?
14697You did not chance to notice his holsters?"
14697You have n''t a portrait of your brother?"
14697You have not taken the murderer?"
14697You hear me?"
14697You know that, do n''t you?"
14697You met him yesterday, did you not?
14697You said,''Is dat you, Gineral Buonaparte?''"
14697You say you''re going to refuse the Amherst case?"
14697You see that?"
14697You understood the message, Jacqueline?"
14697You were at the trial?"
14697You were not at the inquest which was held?"
14697You will sleep, will you not?
14697You wo n''t?
14697You would have been better pleased, would you not, had I never left it?
14697You would have had me stay there as he stayed, watch there beside him until men came?"
14697You''ll take supper with us, I hope?
14697You''ll wear it, wo n''t you, Christmas Day?"
14697You''re growing up ambitious, ambitious as What''s- his- name-- him that you read of?"
14697You''re sure you are n''t hurt, Fair?"
14697You''ve no sign yet, have you, Cary, of the murderer?"
14697and what if, in the night- time, we turn irremediably aside?
14697and"Will you go to Fontenoy?"
14697are you not mistaken?"
14697as a conspirator with him against the peace of the country, against Virginia, against the Republic?
14697being you!--but what, Ludwell Cary, had you lain in my cradle?"
14697bills and bows!--or is it coffee and pistols?"
14697did you cotch dat horse?
14697does it open just there as easily as all that?"
14697don''you heah''um comin''?"
14697dream that I see him in the gold southwest, treading his appointed road, triumphant there as here?
14697had she been generous-- or just?
14697he asked,"just as far as the old Greenwood road?
14697he cried,"has the jade said Yes at last?
14697he said; then after a moment,"Are you serious?"
14697is she playing to Ludwell Cary?"
14697or monarchism and the Federalists?
14697said Cary, in a low voice; then,"This is all your assurance?"
14697she answered,"the month that I spent, summer before last, at Cousin Jane Selden''s, on the Three- Notched Road?
14697she cried,"what does he want with you?
14697then,"What if he is not from home?"
14697was it not once a New Thought?
14697what is the matter?"
14697what will you do yonder all the days the months-- the-- the years to come?
14697what you gwine do at de Co''te House?
14697what''s this?
14697where''s Weehawken?
14697who believes what a Federalist paper says of a Republican, or a Republican paper says of a Federalist?
14697whose words are you using?"
14697your intuitions are not very fine, are they?"
47220''Exports and imports of gold and silver during same period? 47220 ''_ Can the North understand the full import of the federation idea?_''This question of yours is pregnant with meaning.
47220''_ Q._ Did Mr. Tilden ever do anything for that ten thousand dollars?'' 47220 ''_ Q._ Did you retain him before this order was granted?''
47220''_ Q._ Who were they?'' 47220 And, who beneath the sun, can stand in the gap opposing that?
47220Are you not coming up this way this summer? 47220 But is such divergence inevitable even there?
47220Ca n''t you come or send some reliable man here at once to attend to this matter? 47220 Can we not nominate some one who will be acceptable to the_ Evening Post_ and those who are denounced by the Radicals as unsound on the impeachment?
47220Can you extricate yourself from the embarrassments to which you allude-- or be neutral on that case-- and come and help as to others? 47220 Can you look for will of Isaac Tilden conveniently?
47220DEAR SIR,--What about the military organizations being represented on the 4th of July? 47220 For what are we fighting?
47220Has Farragut been heard from, and what of him? 47220 How, it may be asked, can this desirable result be_ easily_ attained?
47220I do n''t think anything can be lost by the few days''delay, as a transfer just now would be so clearly for purposes of fraud as to make it of[ not?] 47220 I wish to ask you whether, in view of the foregoing, we are not justified in being surprised to find you against us_ without notice_?
47220If we are to change_ front_, why not take McClellan and Pendleton, who have been endorsed by national convention and the party at the polls? 47220 Is his nomination at Baltimore a necessity?
47220MR. TILDEN( smiling).--You remember the old adage which says,''You ca n''t tell who is Governor till after the election''? 47220 MY DEAR HETTY,--Why do n''t you answer my letter?
47220MY DEAR SIR,--Can you keep the_ Tribune_ from taking ground for Dix? 47220 MY DEAR SIR,--Is it not about time that you were instructing the faithful how to vote in convention on the 4th of July?
47220MY DEAR SIR,--When you have done with the paper which I gave you at Albany will you be kind enough to send it to me at your convenience? 47220 MY DEAR SIR,--Would it not be a good idea to publish a quantity of the veto message of the military bill for general circulation?
47220May I hope to hear from you at your convenience? 47220 Must such a man be the Democratic candidate for the Presidency?
47220Now what are we to do? 47220 Now what is to be done with New York?
47220Now, what say you about this? 47220 REPORTER.--Are you willing to state the motives for nominating Mr. Kernan?
47220REPORTER.--What were the others? 47220 Shall I mention another circumstance in a_ postscriptum_?
47220Shall that consent be given by special act or general law? 47220 Should we Democrats vote Fernando Wood and back pay?
47220The conquest completed at that enormous waste of human life to the North and Northwest, with at least$ 250,000,000 added thereto, and_ cui bono_? 47220 The preliminary question is, on what general theory is the new administration to be formed?
47220The question is now, not who is injured, but who has escaped? 47220 The_ Herald_ report is as follows:"''_ Q._ Did you employ any other counsel beside Messrs. Field and Shearman, in behalf of the Erie Railroad?''
47220This brings me to the question how the party in New York, as a whole, stand affected as between these two gentlemen? 47220 Well, who then shall be taken?
47220What are we to do? 47220 What do you say to this?
47220What essential difference is there between the two plans, so far as the extension or restriction of slavery is concerned? 47220 What have you been doing this summer, and why have you not looked in upon me?
47220What is the prevailing sentiment in your State? 47220 What should we do to counteract these plans?
47220Where you can not approve a bill, is not a simple withholding of your signature the true course? 47220 Why do n''t you get interviewed?
47220Will you be kind enough to ask him to send them to me? 47220 ''Do you mean to say, then, that the Nicholson letter was designed to cheat the South and get the nomination?'' 47220 1? 47220 Am not I a lucky fellow? 47220 And how is the latter condition to be avoided? 47220 And what is the difference between the original and the substitute? 47220 And would the Senate any longer be a curb upon the frenzy of the House, with an addition of 20 members from the negro- ized South? 47220 And, if this must be abandoned, what shall next be tried? 47220 Are they to be peaceful or warlike? 47220 Are you not coming West before the State convention? 47220 B. and C. D., citizens of New York and members of its militia, etc., etc.? 47220 B.?) 47220 But duty may force us to act, and then how do we stand? 47220 Ca n''t you come? 47220 Can his friends be made our friends in this campaign? 47220 Can it be done anywhere else as well as in New York? 47220 Can not the pressure be made for the Collectorship before election? 47220 Can the country be restored to''its first love,''and do its''first works,''and thus preserve the Constitution and the Union? 47220 Can this be done? 47220 Can you have your publisher send me fifty, with a line stating the cost, which I will remit? 47220 Can you oblige me by sending me some twenty copies, or as many as you can conveniently spare? 47220 Can you put us in a way to have a little funds at our disposal, and thereby enable us to forward the good cause? 47220 Can you watch the progress of things and summon me''_ to the front_''when the apprehended movement is made in the association? 47220 Can_ you_ say it for the country''s sake, and at once? 47220 Could I or should I have done otherwise? 47220 Could it be reasonably supposed that the Southern States would view it otherwise than as an attack upon what they deemed to be a vital interest? 47220 Could not some position be taken now which will do good in the way of foiling the attacks of our opponents? 47220 Did he ever act as your counsel?'' 47220 Diluted as they are, ca n''t the principles of the removal bill be applied to those Job''s comforters with some effect? 47220 Dix, one of your best clearheaded and pure- minded men? 47220 Do n''t I know that the little girl told me the truth?
47220Do n''t you_ know_ the principal fact?
47220Do you doubt the extent to which they would carry their revolutionary doctrines?
47220Gen. Dix, if elected, will not pardon him; will you?
47220Had I not best write to Harrisse at once and retain him?
47220Had I not best write to him at once?
47220Has any such man been thought or spoken of except Hancock?
47220Has not this object been accomplished in the case of Tweed?
47220How can Bancroft stand up against all the others?
47220How could I drop him?
47220How does Hall relish the position in which he has been forced?
47220How does the canvass go?
47220How is this to be done?
47220I agree with you heartily in your views: they are sound, wise, and patriotic; but what avails it to proclaim them?
47220I speak only as to the question,_ Who has the power to save the country?_"1.
47220I think Bryant would be satisfied with yourself, or some one else that you could name?
47220If his friends have your promise, when elected, to pardon, will they not put in a half million into a fund for your success?
47220If you do n''t know the connecting link, how can it be relied upon?
47220If you have not parted with my saddle and bridle, are you willing to let me have them?
47220In saying this I do not touch the question, What has caused the mischief?
47220In whose interest is this military representation called?
47220Is it not a good time to dismember the New York ring?
47220Is it possible at this late day to unite upon a man with whom we can head off Pendleton?
47220Is it to be general?
47220Is our substitute, the bestowal upon the race of universal suffrage, a successful device?
47220Is that to be done singly, or on one ballot?
47220Is there a strong peculation clique there?
47220Is there not some speculation by which I can do so?
47220May I hear from you at your convenience, and ask you to treat this as confidential?
47220Must you not in resolutions, etc., body forth the determination to compel robbers to disgorge and even to inflict punishment, etc.?
47220Now what are we to do?
47220Or Hancock and Adams?
47220Production of gold and silver in United States for each of five years?
47220Seymour; if not, to whom does it tend?
47220Shall this be?
47220Should not some definiteness be given to our future plans?
47220Soon France and England may interfere, and then, pray, what is our condition?
47220Suppose the convention should be animated by this spirit and nominate men of this generation, would the New York Democracy concur?
47220The question is what are our people morally able to do?
47220The question is, shall slavery be allowed to be established in it during its territorial condition?
47220The whole question is, Who''s most likely to win?
47220Their annual gross income or earnings?
47220Their annual income from foreign government?
47220Their annual net savings or accumulation?
47220Their annual outgo to pay interest on foreign debts?
47220Their exports?"
47220There is one way to[ head?]
47220Tilden?''
47220Tilden?''
47220Was centralism ever before so rampant as now?
47220What DeWolf?
47220What do you think of it?
47220What hope is there that anything I can do will be of any permanent use to you or your family?
47220What is the best estimate of their aggregate capital at such period?
47220What shall I do?
47220What will New York do?
47220What would Jarvis Lord do?
47220What would be the consequence of a successful assertion of that right?
47220What would you think of putting five thousand dollars in Erie income bonds if you do not take it?
47220What''s to be done?
47220What, at a given period, was the population of England, France, United States?
47220When can you be there?
47220Where is the probate office in which wills were kept from 1702 to 1760 or 1780?
47220Who can compute the consequences of the loss of Washington, Baltimore, and, perhaps, Philadelphia?
47220Who could alter it if he would?
47220Who dare say that, on the whole, he would alter it if he could?
47220Who is to control it?
47220Who of the great Free- soil leaders would have had the hardihood to persist in their course if they could have foreseen the consequences so clearly?
47220Why ca n''t such a nomination be made?
47220Why did you not touch them up at Rochester?
47220Why not Hancock and Hendricks, who had high votes in our late convention?
47220Why not McClellan and Hendricks?
47220Why should they be allowed to dispose of the highest without having consulted the people?
47220Will Mr. Kernan be elected?
47220Will all the prayers be continued after the thirty days have expired?
47220Will they be represented in it?
47220Will they concur in the nominations made by it?
47220Will you mention this to the Governor?
47220Will you not devote some time to- morrow to get letters from the money kings-- Messrs. Beekman and Morgan and Williams-- to have the bill defeated?
47220Will you oblige me by letting me know when you are in your office, that I may come and bore you?
47220Will you put me in the way of it?
47220Will''Slippery Dick''stick to his integrity steadily for weeks, in the face of a hazard like this?
47220With such a body in session asking for a military man, can you refuse putting one on, either at the head or tail of the ticket?
47220Would it affect in the slightest degree the actual extension or restriction of slavery which should be decreed by them?
47220Would it have any effect on the extent of the liability of the corporations?
47220Would it not be well to appoint him again?
47220Would it not be well to have a meeting of ten or twelve persons who should talk matters over clear through the coming year?
47220Would not its necessary effect be to force unanimity among them in opposition to the policy?
47220Would you allow your opinion to be public, and attend at the place where a convention should be held?
47220You inquire,''How can this be done?''
47220at Large?
47220imports?
5205And does he not do so with reason?
5205And now, my friends, I would ask you, further, of what value would a congressional decision upon that subject be?
5205And what is the other question of difference now?
5205And who is the criminal?
5205Are they but evanescent clouds that flit across but can not obscure the great purposes for which the Constitution was established?
5205Are you willing to leave that to Congress?
5205But what further do they couple with these demands which they make for congressional legislation?
5205But, my friends, who is a pauper, or who is a criminal?
5205By what standard do they measure it?
5205Can it be that any of you tread that soil and forget the great purposes for which those men bravely fought, or nobly died?"
5205Could I be insensible to such recognition of the honorable fame of Mississippi?
5205Do they fear to allow Southern men to converse with their philosophers, and seek thus to silence or exclude them?
5205Do they mean treason to the Constitution and the destruction of the Union?
5205Do you pay taxes to an agent that he may destroy your property?
5205Do you support him for that purpose?
5205Does any one ask, then, how it is that a State is to be held to its obligations?
5205Good or evil?
5205Has Congress the right to say that foreigners shall not vote within the limits of your State?
5205Has patriotism ceased to be a virtue, and is narrow sectionalism no longer to be counted a crime?
5205Have the purposes for which our Union was formed, lost their value?
5205Have we so degenerated, that we can no longer emulate their virtues?
5205If Congress had the power to prohibit the introduction of slave property into the territories, what would be the purpose?
5205If so, upon what?
5205If so, where is it?
5205If the constitution is to be sacredly observed, why should there be a struggle for sectional ascendency?
5205In this state of the case, my friends, why is the country agitated?
5205In what other land could a countryman go so far from his home and receive among strangers the attention which could only be expected from friends?
5205Is a man a pauper merely because he comes here without property, without money in his purse?
5205Is it because the opinion which had been formed has been found to be unjust, and the reaction has been in proportion to the previous impulse?
5205Is it boastful to say that American troops, and an American treasury, would have encountered and have overcome such an obstacle?
5205Is it fortunate or otherwise?
5205Is it in the cause of Christianity?
5205Is it in this mode that the spirit of mutual support and common effort for the common good, is to be cultivated?
5205Is it thus that confidence is to be developed and the sense of security to grow with the growing power of each and every State?
5205Is that seen in the diminished comfort of the world?
5205Is that seen in the diminished resources of the country?
5205Is that to be decided by the ruling of other countries, by the laws of France, or of England?
5205Is there any political power to authorize such interference?
5205Is this aggression?
5205It was natural to ask, whence come these manifestations?
5205Mississippi has decided it for herself; who has the right to gainsay her decision?
5205Now, I ask, what power has Congress over the question?
5205On the other hand, what do we see?
5205Or do they vilely practice on credulity and passion for personal gain?
5205Or is it the exhibition of your regard for loyalty to one''s friends, and devotion by a citizen to the community to which he belongs?
5205Or is it to be decided by your own laws, by your own rules of judicature?
5205Or is not the reverse exhibited?
5205Shall the Rocky Mountains prove a dividing barrier to us?
5205Shall we preserve and transmit it to posterity?
5205The good of mankind?
5205Then, who are the paupers and criminals?
5205They proclaim their purpose to be to exclude paupers and criminals from abroad.--Do paupers and criminals come for the right of suffrage?
5205Was he asked, what then was to become of the interest of ship- building?
5205Was it for this cause that he had been signalized as a slavery propagandists?
5205What do those laws confer?
5205What has been the result?
5205What is there practical or rational in the present excitement?
5205What now is the basis of opposition to the democratic party?
5205What power has Congress to declare what shall be property?
5205What was the Government to do?
5205What, my friends, must be the consequences of this agitation?
5205What, then, has been the foundation of all this controversy?
5205What, then, is their standard?
5205Where else will one find a more happy union of magnificence and comfort, where better arrangements to facilitate commerce?
5205Where in this vicinity will you go and not meet some monument to inspire such sentiments?
5205Where is the grant of the Constitution which confers on the federal government a right to determine what shall be property?
5205Where so much of industry, with so little noise and bustle?
5205Where, in a phrase, so much effected in proportion to the means employed?
5205Who can measure the value of such incidents in a people''s history?
5205Who gave them a right to decide that it is a sin?
5205Who now stand arrayed against the democratic party?
5205Who shall gainsay your decision?
5205Who wishes to withhold those privileges from foreigners?
5205Why is it that the peace of the country is disturbed in order that one people may assume to judge of what another people should do?
5205Why is it, I say, that you are thus agitated in relation to the domestic affairs of other communities?
5205Why was it so?
5205Why, then, I would ask, do we see these lengthened shadows, which follow in the course of our political day?
5205Why, then, in the absence of all control over the subject of African slavery, are you agitated in relation to it?
5205Why, then, this accusation?
5205Would it be to promote emancipation?
5205Would it be to promote the civilization and progress of the negro race?
5205You are a practical people and may ask, how is that contest to be avoided?
5205but,"Is this a town of my brethren?"
5205is it because the sun is declining to the horizon?
5205why longer remain a part of the Union?
40316--And a man?
40316A surprise?
40316A tyrant, then?
40316A_ what_?
40316Alfred?
40316Alone?
40316Always? 40316 And Rufe is n''t going down?"
40316And Waterloo does n''t give you any trouble while you''re trying to work, does he?
40316And do n''t you feel that way in church?
40316And do n''t you know what to do with me?
40316And what have you to say for yourself about Doctor Morgan''s book, my lady?
40316And you are afraid that he will join Blake-- in some way?
40316And you are asking me to release you?
40316And you are going away so soon-- and for so long?
40316And you are very happy?
40316And you really were telling some child about the little pigs going to market one night when he heard you?
40316Ann, is it Chalmers?
40316Ann, is that Richard Chalmers down- stairs?
40316Ann,he said finally, speaking in a remarkably low, gentle voice,"why does it seem to give you such pleasure to torture me that way?"
40316Are n''t we_ still_ barbarians-- at heart?
40316Are you for it or''ginst it?
40316Are you glad to see me, Ann?
40316Are you talking? 40316 Are you tired?"
40316Big?
40316Blames you?
40316But how can you ever amount to anything without an education?
40316But surely you do n''t think that I am marrying Richard for his money?
40316But what has_ he_ to do with Richard Chalmers?
40316But what_ is_ he?
40316But who wants to go through life with a marble up the coffee- pot spout?
40316But who''ll get the calf out of the fence corner?
40316But why paint to- night?
40316But you know that Alfred Morgan would-- would--"Would let me use his name?
40316But--_does it fit_?
40316Ca n''t Miss Fielding and I make you a mustard plaster-- or something?
40316Ca n''t you rescue me from Clayborne''s relentless newspaper spirit?
40316Did you tell him the truth or did you take the credit to yourself?
40316Do n''t you know that there is nothing in the world I own or could get too valuable for me to give to you, Ann?
40316Do you care for politics any more than you used to?
40316Do you desire that most? 40316 Do you know what I do on such nights as this?
40316Do you suppose they let anybody as young as Alfred do_ this_?
40316Do you think I might double the amount of his fee?
40316Do you think it will do?
40316Do you think that there is any new danger in Evelyn''s case?
40316Do? 40316 Does n''t he tear, or break, or_ chew_, or sprinkle over with talcum powder everything he can get his hands on?"
40316Does n''t that whistle sound_ close_ on these clear, still mornings?
40316Even if frankness were the right name for-- this, do you consider that now is the time for it? 40316 False impression?"
40316Frankness?
40316Gas stove?
40316Granted that I look as well as you say, and that I live in an earthly paradise-- can''t you see that there is no-- that it is_ lonesome_?
40316Has it seemed a long time since last night?
40316Have you been waiting long?
40316He admitted that you had sense enough to?
40316Heathen? 40316 How did you feel when you heard that news?"
40316How did you manage to get your hat out of the wardrobe?
40316How do you know? 40316 How glad?
40316How is my little girl?
40316How long do you expect to keep this up?
40316How many years ago to- day was it that we looked down into the old well in the lot and tried to see our future husband''s face?
40316How old did the book say this Eve was?
40316I have n''t heard the train whistle, have you?
40316I suppose that is partly on account of your age?
40316I wonder if our friend, Mr. Chalmers, is a domestic tyrant?
40316I wonder if you are ever going to be really great?
40316I-- wonder?
40316If the telephone had n''t summoned him I wonder which of you would have come off victorious?
40316If you''ve stood a lot, do n''t you think that I have, too?
40316Incompatible? 40316 Is Mrs. Barnette such a big personage, then?"
40316Is he dead?
40316Is he unkind to_ you_, too?
40316Is it money?
40316Is n''t it a devilish old day?
40316Is n''t it a sign of the times when a child of his age does n''t know a coffee- pot when he sees one?
40316Is n''t there anything we can do?
40316Is she going to marry him this morning?
40316Is the trip such a long one?
40316Is there but_ one_ man on earth I''d turn the name o''my vittles up- side- down''ards for?
40316Is there some sort of political trouble?
40316Is this sudden''wanderlust''the outcome of collecting all those nickels?
40316It was during the year of Alfred''s internship and you remember that Burke was always doing him an ill turn? 40316 Jewels?"
40316Little runaway, where have you been all morning?
40316Love you? 40316 Mercy, what should one say?"
40316Mr. Chalmers, will you call the power- house and have them turn on the lights?
40316Mrs. Clayborne, Ann has told you of our happiness?
40316Mrs. Clayborne,_ do_ you think I am too stout for one of those loose cloaks?
40316No? 40316 Now is n''t that_ too_ bad?"
40316Now, I''ll put it to you, Miss Ann, ai n''t that enough to make a woman wish she had n''t never saw a child? 40316 Now, did you ever hear anything that sassy?
40316Now, do n''t you think I''m sentimental?
40316Of course, if it is only an ordinary case of appendicitis_ you_ might do,he admitted grudgingly,"but-- suppose there are complications?"
40316Oh, do n''t they_ know_ that I would promise him my very soul if he should ask it?
40316Oh, is n''t there always a gala feeling about eating out of wedding presents? 40316 One of_ my_ Texas cyclones?"
40316Perhaps this is my opportunity for pressing my suit-- isn''t that what they call it in novels? 40316 Secret?"
40316Shall I close these doors? 40316 Shall I close these doors?"
40316Shall we go back into the house? 40316 Shall we walk around and look at things, too?"
40316Shock?
40316So I am going to have you all to myself to- night?
40316So soon?
40316So you think that people ought to get spiritual upliftment from going to church, do you?
40316So you''re satisfied with yourself?
40316So? 40316 Some august company to dinner?"
40316Some professional_ what_?
40316Something to show me?
40316Sophie, have you been traveling in vaudeville?
40316Stella Hampton? 40316 The truth?"
40316Their Maker? 40316 Then I am_ good- looking_?"
40316Then there is no appeal to be made to your pride?
40316Then why did n''t you tell him plainly-- when you first met him here and saw that he remembered you?
40316Then why on earth did n''t she rub it on early this morning?
40316Then you''ve seen him?
40316Then, what''s the trouble?
40316They have to register before they can vote, do n''t they?
40316This is not going to make any difference between us?
40316This is what you mean?
40316This political business is the most infernal--"What, Richard?
40316Too late?
40316Torture you?
40316Well, do n''t you think the scar adds to my list of attractions?
40316Well, have I stayed away long enough?
40316Well, he''s a pretty decent chap, although he does look deucedly young to be cutting into people-- don''t you think so?
40316Well, if you should some day grow to know me''always,''could you-- even if I am thirty- seven-- could you call me Richard?
40316Well, shall we be off to church?
40316Well, she''d enjoy some of_ our_ politicians, would n''t she?
40316Well, so you decided to come for a walk?
40316Well, what good does it all do me?
40316Well, what good does it all do?
40316Well, what if it is? 40316 Well, who is he and where did he come from?"
40316Well,I answered with a laugh which I hoped would sound light,"have n''t you just said that I am a_ star_-gazer?"
40316Well?
40316Well?
40316What decent person does n''t denounce him?
40316What difference does it make about the actual number of years?
40316What difference would that make?
40316What do you mean, honey?
40316What do you mean?
40316What do''jepmen''want to ask such fool questions for?
40316What does Gordon think of her condition?
40316What for?
40316What is a summer girl?
40316What is my weak point?
40316What kind of people?
40316What on earth for?
40316What''s the trouble?
40316What?
40316What?
40316What?
40316When are you going to answer it, sweetheart?
40316Where the dickens were you?
40316Where you been at?
40316Whether she cares for politics or no, eh?
40316Who is he?
40316Who knows this better than I? 40316 Who told you that I live in Texas?"
40316Why could n''t he have gone to the foot- ball game with some one else-- or why could n''t he have come home?
40316Why should you look distressed over a mention of your age?
40316Why the Blakes?
40316Why''of course?''
40316Why, Richard,I cried,"did you go all the way to St. Louis to find them?"
40316Why, it''s like a dream, is n''t it? 40316 Why?
40316Would you object to hearing a word from me before your manipulations go further?
40316Yes?
40316You are bored?
40316You are inclined to be jealous?
40316You are_ sure_?
40316You do n''t suppose for a minute I''m going to give any other fellow a chance to steal you away from me now, do you? 40316 You do n''t think that he made them-- what they are?"
40316You have never imagined yourself in love before, Ann?
40316You mean--?
40316You mean?
40316You thought I wanted to catch him for Evelyn?
40316You took care of him when his head was hurt last year?
40316You want to marry me and be governor of this state-- now, on your honor, which do you desire the more--_Richard_?
40316You would imply then that I am-- that I am jealous of this yearling doctor?
40316You''ll be there-- if I am ever inaugurated?
40316You''ll be there?
40316You''re going, are n''t you?
40316You? 40316 You_ helped_ Rufe?"
40316Young?
40316_ Mary!_ Have I lived to hear you deny the faith of your fathers?
40316_ Might_ put a different aspect?
40316_ Sin?_ Why, Mis''Mary!
40316_ What?_she demanded.
40316''_ Want chew._''Mamma, have n''t I begged you not to go through life saying chew and Jew, unless you refer to mastication-- or an Israelite?"
40316--But you_ quite_ love some one else?"
40316And after all that, you did n''t get to see him?"
40316Are you already engaged to Richard Chalmers?"
40316Because the last three weeks have been dreary and barren to me shall I not rejoice in the happiness of some one else?
40316Before I have had time to realize my good fortune?"
40316But I had already bought it then, and I could n''t take it back to the jeweler and tell him that my lady had turned it down, could I?"
40316But do you know what that young''un done?
40316But she died still thinking her Richard was a lion- hearted king, so who can say that Fate was not kind to her?
40316But what else can you expect when you are engaged to an Olympian god?
40316But where would Richard come in then?
40316By the way, you''ll excuse me while I run back a few minutes and help give the little fellow a dose of medicine?"
40316Ca n''t you come over a little later on, or maybe after I''m dressed-- to see if I am fixed all right, and if the parlor looks swell?"
40316Can you deny it?"
40316Chalmers did n''t want anything special with me, did he?"
40316Chalmers?"
40316Clayborne?"
40316Could I forget that kiss in the hour of death?
40316Could it be that her desire to get Evelyn married off to him was going to carry her to such lengths as this?
40316Could n''t you have managed some way to smooth it a little before you reached here?
40316Did ever a girl have such dreams and such nightmares mixed up together?
40316Did he_ eat_ people when they dared to go contrary to his wishes?
40316Did you ever hear of a girl so deep in love that she''d_ curl her hair on a het augur_?"
40316Did you hear that?
40316Did you notice how I stayed clear away last night while you went to the door with him?
40316Do I please you, Coeur de Lion?"
40316Do n''t people call me up for miles around to ask who wrote_ Prometheus Bound_ and how to spell''candidacy?''"
40316Do n''t you believe that I came just to see you?
40316Do n''t you love me any more?"
40316Do n''t you see that I have been half crazy ever since I found it out?
40316Do you notice that I call it a_ record_, and not a diary?
40316Does n''t it?"
40316Fielding,"poor Mrs. Sullivan was saying beseechingly, as she looked at mother''s startled face,"_ do_ you know what''s happened to Tim?
40316Glad to see him?
40316Good I may occasionally be; wicked I shall certainly be, for are not we all born in iniquity?
40316Have n''t I been a mother to the boy ever since that time I read surgical anatomy to him when he had tonsillitis?
40316Have you ever noticed how often a woman, who has nothing better to do, will wash her hair?
40316He came to see you?"
40316He has to go up there to- night on business and he wants to know if you''ll let him come up to your door and say good- by?"
40316He quickly moved the gun and rags, but seeing that this offense was not the cause of my wrath, he meekly inquired:"What?"
40316How could I let Alfred know, without wounding him and spoiling our comradeship?
40316How deeply entangled-- and for what?
40316How glad,_ darling_?"
40316How_ could_ any one go against Richard''s expressed wish?
40316How_ do_ they manage it, I wonder, when one adjective too many would brand them as a female?
40316I believe you said that I placed it around his head?"
40316I could n''t go off into another car with him, could I?"
40316I could n''t refuse it, could I?"
40316I know this is true because the paper we take says so; and if you are going to doubt what your favorite newspaper says, why, then, do you take it?
40316I live near a little country town, and am vastly dissatisfied with the cramped stage and meager audience, else why should I be keeping a journal?
40316I might even lose him--"That train leaves at six- thirty, I believe?"
40316I wonder what kind of house Richard and I will keep?
40316I wonder why this is?
40316I wonder why?
40316Is_ them_ what you''re talking about?
40316It was possible he meant--"Could you?"
40316It will be-- expensive, but will it be harmonious?
40316Let me see-- shall I begin where I left off-- that sunny morning when I parried with Richard across half the state and lived to regret it?
40316Literally or figuratively?"
40316Maxwell?"
40316Men hate it, too, and when I sounded Rufe on the subject he just frowned and said:"Oh, it''s_ awful_, but what are you going to do?"
40316My own engagement?
40316Now, the question is, are you going to be guided by what I tell you in this matter, or not?"
40316Now, what started this digression?
40316Of course, you understand the cause of the political unrest?
40316Oh, why did I not realize at the time these papers were fresh and new that they held a"pearl of wondrous whiteness?"
40316Or shall I begin with my entrà © e into Charlotteville and then jot down the past happenings as they come to me?
40316Or would it be better_ not_ to let him know?
40316Our first thought always is,''Is there a letter on that train for me?''
40316Richard, what do you mean?"
40316Rufe had stopped her at the kitchen door with the usual query,"Well, Mammy, you''re not married again?"
40316Shall I forget Neva?
40316Shall we go?"
40316Should I say no and have a quarrel with him?
40316Should I say yes, and prove myself a coward-- or should I lie to him?
40316Since when?"
40316So this is good- by then?"
40316Sullivan?"
40316Supervision?
40316Surely you do n''t mean to tell me that I am already too late?"
40316Surely you do n''t really think it was the dance that brought it on?
40316The bait was a bag of gold and a handful of glory; and beneath it was written"Little fishie in the brook, can daddy catch him with a hook?"
40316The only deception you will have to practise will be to announce your own engagement to some one else this week, so that--""This week?
40316Then what next?"
40316Then you mean to ignore my rights?"
40316Tyrant?
40316Was Richard a monster then?
40316Was Richard hoping to gain, through his friendship with me, the support of the_ Times_?
40316Was it prophetic that just as I was thinking over the words"rare jewel"the object of my search met my eyes?
40316Was n''t I born and_ raised_ in the shadow of it?"
40316Was n''t that the thing hollerin''?"
40316Was there nothing in the world he could do except trample upon people''s feelings then offer to pay them to get in a good humor again?
40316Was this a lovers''quarrel?
40316What are you afraid of?"
40316What did it portend?
40316What do you say, dear heart?"
40316What shall I do with you?"
40316What would mother say to that?"
40316When are you going to marry me, Ann?"
40316When she is so wretched?"
40316Where was I?
40316Who is she?"
40316Who told you?"
40316Who wants to kiss something that looks about as lover- like as Rameses II?"
40316Who_ is_ here?"
40316Why did Richard leave home at this time to spend Thanksgiving with old man Blake if it did not mean that he was entangled with him?
40316Why should old man Blake give all the biggest portion of the plum to Richard, when he had never been governor himself?
40316Why should you torture yourself into a passion if I but mention anything even remotely connected with the medical profession?"
40316Will you be so good, madam, as to set forth your views?"
40316Will you forgive me-- and-- and kiss me?"
40316With their zest for canonizing their leaders I wonder what the temperance workers_ will_ do with a man as handsome as Richard Chalmers is said to be?
40316Wives?
40316Would we please wait outside?
40316You asked the man,''_ Do_ you know what the third little pig had-- or did?''
40316You remember you told me that you were booked to come home with them?
40316You''re not going to faint, nor-- anything, are you?"
40316_ What?_""''Tis true.
40316_ Will_ you hush talking about coffee- pots?
47746''Miss M----,''said one of the more timid servants,''do they want to kill us all dead? 47746 A line?
47746Ai nt he swelled powerful?
47746And what then?
47746And you will be merciful to the major?
47746Are you, indeed?
47746But suppose they would n''t halt?
47746But where were you wounded?
47746But why did you not intrench?
47746But why should you act upon a different rule from other men?
47746By what authority do you demand my surrender?
47746Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
47746Come on, come on, my men,said one Confederate colonel, with the grim humor of a soldier;"do you want to live forever?"
47746Do n''t you?
47746Do you consider your life worth more than other people''s?
47746Do you think any of your company would have missed you if you had been killed?
47746Does President Davis and the Congress know these facts? 47746 Does it hurt much?"
47746Does yer grease that har with ham fat, or how?
47746General, have you a knife about you?
47746Good morning, boys,said Captain C.,"where did you all come from?"
47746Has it taken you all this time to skin a horse?
47746How are you, Steuart?
47746How are you, Virginia?
47746How can it succeed?
47746How long has your sister been dead?
47746I say, stranger, buttermilk or corn- fed?
47746In whose brigade and division is that?
47746Is he going to die?
47746Longstreet''s,was the reply;"what''s yours?"
47746Run at the first fire, did you?
47746Say, mister, whar''d ye git that biled shut?
47746So that is your opinion, is it?
47746Stood your ground, did you?
47746Suppose they did n''t stop then, what would you do?
47746Then patriotism and honor are nothing to you?
47746Then you must value it very highly?
47746Well, but have you no regard for your reputation?
47746Well, lieutenant, have you mounted guard?
47746Well, what can I do for you?
47746Well, why did n''t you shoot back, sir? 47746 What bounty does He give?"
47746What division do you belong to?
47746What do you think of that?
47746What do you want, Pat?
47746What hurt?
47746What mout be the price o''them nail kags?
47746What satisfaction would dat be to me when de power ob feelin''was gone?
47746What, is Almond- eye dead?
47746Where did you get that turkey?
47746Where does this road lead to?
47746Who are you?
47746Who are you?
47746Who for?
47746Why did you not go before?
47746Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people? 47746 Why, Bob,"said he,"where did you get all that money?"
47746Why, what in the world did you make that thing for?
47746Wounded by a shell?
47746Yes, sa, I does; more dan all dis wuld; more dan a million of dollars, sa: for what would dat be wuf to a man wid de bref out of him? 47746 You do n''t mean to say you killed him?"
47746''Colonel, do you know what we are going to charge on?''
47746''Have you not seen it often enough to know it by this time?''
47746''Is n''t your line too much extended?''
47746''What does the general want me to do now?''
47746''Where is my support?''
47746''Why could he not have lived until I came?
47746--"Am I always to be like this, sergeant?"
47746--"Are you Virginians?"
47746--"Be you Christian men?"
47746--"But be you not rebels?"
47746--"Certainly,"was the response;"what is it?"
47746--"I am not in the habit of receiving my orders from General Jackson,"answered the officer;"what command do you belong to?"
47746--"Well, Bill, s''pose you should strike it rich, what then?"
47746A common exclamation of newly arrived prisoners, as they entered the appalling place, was,"Is this hell?"
47746A full- uniformed lieutenant, much disgusted at the"Who goes there?"
47746A sentence or two will suggest the drift of it:"Are you not over- cautious when you assume that you can not do what the enemy is constantly doing?
47746After supper the conversation turned upon the war, and the Confederate officer said:"What is the use of your persevering?
47746All at sea, he said:"Captain, where ought I to be now?"
47746And what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld?
47746Both arose, and, approaching Davis, one called out bluntly to the stranger,"Are n''t you Lieutenant Davis?"
47746But how was escape to be effected?
47746But if the rebellion is crushed before January 1st, 1863, what then?
47746Ca n''t we do something to bring it to a close?
47746Can I do nothing more for you?"
47746Can I not be permitted to save it?''
47746Can he strike?
47746Colonel McPherson rode up, and Grant said,''Well, Mac, how is it?''
47746Could she not bathe his head?
47746Cruel, haughty, and cold, He ever was strong and bold-- Shall he shrink from a wooden stem?
47746Dearest love, do you remember When we last did meet, How you told me that you loved me, Kneeling at my feet?
47746Death?
47746Do n''t yer see de door open?
47746Do you want dead men to decide your elections?
47746Fear?
47746Going to General Sherman to obtain reinstatement, the surgeon was asked:"Who caused your discharge?"
47746Grant telegraphed from army headquarters over his special field- wire:"Is there any difficulty in exploding the mine?"
47746Have you expressed an opinion as to the propriety of making terms, to President Davis or the Congress?"
47746He said:''Colonel, wo n''t you please write to my folks that I died a soldier?''"
47746He stopped me with his musket, demanding:"''Have you a pass, sir?''
47746His hilarious popularity was expressed in the common greeting:"You fights mit Sigel?
47746How could such a lady as you are come down here to take care of us poor, sick, dirty boys?"
47746I heard his teeth grate as he struggled to control himself, and then he spoke:"Doctor, will you do me a favor?"
47746I said to him,"What do you take us for?"
47746If the rebels turn loyal before that term?
47746If, amid the din of battle, Nobly you should fall, Far away from those who love you, None to hear you call, Who would whisper words of comfort?
47746In a letter of about that date he writes:''I am greeted on all sides with congratulations and"Where''s your hat?"
47746In answer to the hail,''What is the trouble?''
47746Is there any better or equal hope in the world?"
47746It is said that when his father gave him the name of the great Indian chief, Tecumseh, he remarked:"Who knows but this child may be a fighter?"
47746Just before he left I said to him:''Does my position suit you?
47746May I ask those who have not differed with me to join with me in this same spirit toward those who have?"
47746No one seemed to respond, and the only reply I heard was some one saying,''That man talks well, do n''t he?''
47746No sale for tar now?"
47746Now, general,"he said, looking me straight in the face,"what is to be done?"
47746On the way he was met by one of his brother servants, who inquired:"Wot''s de matter, Mingo?
47746One very young soldier who lay wounded said to her:"Where do you come from?
47746Reining in his horse, he accosted him with"How are you, North Carolina?"
47746Riding up to Colonel Colville, he said:"Do you see those colors?"
47746Shall I make preparations for retreat?''
47746Some one asked,''Auntie, where are you going?''
47746The officer who discovered him rebuked him sternly and asked,"Are you the sentinel here?"
47746The old negress, pointing her long finger at the old man, who was in the corner of the fireplace, hissed out,"What fer you sit dar?
47746The reply came quick and short:''Retreat?
47746The staff officer continued:"The blockade on turpentine makes you rather hard up, do n''t it?
47746To this the General made no reply, and McPherson continued,''Well, General Grant, under this condition of affairs, what do you propose to do, sir?
47746Virginia mud and Virginia swamps were celebrated by the invention of the response to the question,"Did you go through Virginia?"
47746WHAT IS TO BE DONE?
47746Want a weapon?
47746Want a weapon?
47746Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing?
47746Was the bright steel poisoned?
47746Was there death, green death, in the atmosphere?
47746Whar''s yo''gwine wid such a hurrification?"
47746What am I to do?
47746What are you doing here?
47746What interest of the South has been invaded?
47746What justice has been denied?
47746What kind of a hat do you want?"
47746What kind of a line?"
47746What on earth does the President want of your tar?"
47746What right has the North assailed?
47746What were the causes of this civil war?
47746When dey come flyin''troo de air singin''de chune, whar is yer, whar is yer?
47746When will I hear de banjo tumming, Down in my good old home?
47746When will I see de bees a- humming All round de comb?
47746Where is the eagle eye which ought to overlook the field and send swift- footed couriers to save this illustrious band from destruction?
47746Where, this day, is the commanding general?
47746Who call tell?
47746Who could estimate the number of officers and men he knew at the close of the war?
47746Who goes there?''
47746Who would soothe your pain?
47746Why should he not?
47746Why should we destroy our own property?"
47746Why?''
47746Will no one tell the Tenth of their fearful peril?
47746Will they keep doing this until we all die?''
47746You s''pose I wait sixty years for nutten?
47746and What was accomplished?
47746to reckon with the host, While we were marching through Georgia?
47746was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves?
47746what are you making all that fuss about over there?"
47746what flag is that?''
47746why do n''t you surrender?"
592Friend Chang,I said,"San Francisco sleeps as the dead-- Ended license, lust and play: Why do you iron the night away?
592Pocahontas''body, lovely as a poplar, sweet as a red haw in November or a pawpaw in May-- did she wonder? 592 What will you do to end war for good?
592''The Craftsman'':"Has America a National Poetry?"
592And do his bauble- bells beyond the clouds Ring out, and shake with mirth the planets bright?
592And do you laugh, when Jim, from Huck apart Gropes through the rain and night with breaking heart?
592And who is here to say us nay?
592And why, until the dawning sun Are flames coming up from the ground?
592But do you laugh when Jim bows down forlorn His babe, his deaf Elizabeth to mourn?
592But who can dodge this genius of the stream, The Mississippi Valley''s laughing dream?
592Can it go on in the absence of its initiators?
592Deep in the ages, long, long ago, I was your sweetheart, there on the sand-- Storm- worn beach of the Chinese land?
592Do you remember, ages after, At last the world we were born to own?
592I had a silvery name, I had a silvery name, I had a silvery name-- do you remember The name you cried beside the tumbling sea?"
592II What marching men of Buffalo Flood the streets in rash crusade?
592In the breezes nod and wheeze?
592Is it his deacon- beard, or old bald pate That makes the band upon his whims to wait?
592O market square, O slattern place, Is glory in your slack disgrace?
592One crow asked the other crow a riddle: The muttering crow Asked the stuttering crow,"Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle?
592Second Section America Watching the War, August, 1914, to April, 1917 Where Is the Real Non- resistant?
592Shall we be as weird as these?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WHAT DID YOU SEE IN PALESTINE?
592WILL YOU BRING YOUR FINE PEACE TO THE NATIONS TODAY?"
592Was it a palace or a barn?
592What landlord, lawyer, voodoo- man has yet A better native right to make men sweat?
592Where are those oddities and capers now That used to"set the table on a roar"?
592Which of our freemen did she greet the first, Seeing him come against the fires accurst?
592While the monster shadows glower and creep, What can be better for man than sleep?"
592Who can surrender till death His words and his works, his house and his lands, His eyes and his heart and his breath?
592Who can surrender to Christ?
592Who can surrender to Christ?
592Who shall end my dream''s confusion?
592Why did they mumble, brood, and stare When the court- players curtsied fair And the Gonzago scene began?
592Why does a bee have a sword to his fiddle?"
592Why?
592Will you die for the nations, making them whole?
592Will you stand by the book- case, be nailed to the wood?"
592You were the heir of the yellow throne-- The world was the field of the Chinese man And we were the pride of the Sons of Han?
592does she remember-- in the dust-- in the cool tombs?"
40445Are you then willing to hear doctor Bollman indicted?
40445Could it be necessary,he challenged the Federalists,"to_ increase_ courts when suits were_ decreasing_?
40445Did he mean that the dispatches... were impostures?
40445Did you ever hear Judge Chase apply any unusual epithets-- such as''_ young men_''or''_ young gentlemen_''--to counsel?
40445For a moment, admit it,argues Weems:"Does it follow that the Country is a mere blank, a cypher not worth your notice?
40445Have they ever sanctioned the principle that the judges should make laws for them instead of their Representatives? 40445 Have we not heard this doctrine supported in the memorable case of the mandamus, lately[186] before the Supreme Court?
40445Have we not seen a State[ Georgia] sell its Western lands, and afterwards declare the law under which they were sold made null and void? 40445 However he may err, he commits no crime; how, then, can he be impeached?
40445I again ask you, what said the Chief Justice?... 40445 I ask the judge where they[ the affidavits] should have been lodged?
40445I asked him,testified Truxtun,"if the executive of the United States were privy to, or concerned in the project?
40445If... they[ the judges] have offended against the Constitution or laws of the country, why are they not impeached? 40445 Is a grant a contract?"
40445Is it not extraordinary,said he,"that if this high power was intended, it should nowhere appear?...
40445Is not Congress as capable of forming a correct opinion as they are? 40445 Is the life of a man, lately in high public esteem... to be endangered for the sake of punctilio to the president?"
40445Is this charity, hypocracy, or federalism?
40445It was universally asked,he says,"what law had been offended, and under what statute was the indictment supported?
40445Let the judge be impeached,said the_ Enquirer_; the Wickham dinner was recalled-- why had Marshall attended it?
40445May we depend upon you?
40445Must it be direct corruption, or would interest or undue influence of any kind be sufficient? 40445 Ought judgment to be rendered in such a case?"
40445The effect of the present bill will be, to have no court for fourteen months.... Are gentlemen afraid of the judges? 40445 What has been the ruin of every Republic?
40445What security is there to an individual,he asked, if the Legislature of the Union or any particular State, should pass an_ ex post facto_ law?
40445What,said he,"must there be a departure from common sense to find out a construction favorable"to Callender?
40445Where was the hero with his seven- fold shield-- not of bull''s hide, but of brass-- prepared to prevent or to punish this Trojan rape? 40445 Where was the_ Ajax Telamon_ of his party"at that hour of fate?
40445Whether by the Yazoo act an estate did vest in the original grantees? 40445 Whether it was competent to any subsequent Legislature to set aside the act on the ground of fraud and corruption?
40445Why are you not in favor of selling the western lands?
40445Why... do the judges who passed this decision live and live unpunished?... 40445 Why... issue a subpoena to the President?"
40445Would the wounded veteran be without remedy?... 40445 [ 1060] If Wilkinson is so important a witness,"why is he not here?"
40445[ 1102] Luther Martin now took the lead: Was Jeffersona kind of sovereign?"
40445[ 1109] Why await the arrival of Wilkinson? 40445 [ 1254] What was the meaning of the words,"''levying war''?...
40445[ 1272] The testimony which the Government now proposed to offer was toprove-- what?
40445[ 238] This was the spirit that was now triumphant; to what lengths was it to carry the Republicans? 40445 [ 381] But was this remedy the writ of mandamus for which Marbury had applied?
40445[ 562] With what result? 40445 ... to multiply judges, when their duties were diminishing?
40445APPENDIX E EXCERPT FROM SPEECH OF WILLIAM WIRT AT THE TRIAL OF AARON BURR[1517] Who is Blennerhassett?
40445And what did he_ look_?
40445And what should he do about Bollmann?
40445And would the Federalists inform the House what phase of the common law they proposed to adopt for the United States?
40445And, to whom so pointedly as yourself will the public look for the necessary measures?"
40445Are all these evils originating either in fraud or error, remediless under the principles of your constitution?
40445Are gentlemen disposed to risk the consequences?...
40445Are not its members acting under a responsibility to public opinion which can and will check their aberrations from duty?"
40445Are they afraid that they will pronounce the repealing law void?
40445Are they not to obey their oath, and judge accordingly?
40445Are your numerous associates ready?
40445As the Chief Justice stated the question, could"an act, repugnant to the constitution... become the law of the land"?
40445At Frankfort?
40445Because there are 30,000 wealthy families in the City and but 20,000 in the Country, must nothing be tried to enlist 5000, at least of these 20,000???
40445Because there are 30,000 wealthy families in the City and but 20,000 in the Country, must nothing be tried to enlist 5000, at least of these 20,000???
40445Because there are 30,000 wealthy families in the City and but 20,000 in the Country, must nothing be tried to enlist 5000, at least of these 20,000???
40445Burr asked Marshall:"Do you recollect whether the conduct of the judge at this trial was tyrannical, overbearing and oppressive?"
40445But could"a subpoena_ duces tecum_ be directed to the president of the United States?"
40445But did this apply to the President of the United States?
40445But how can it be such, unless the laws, while they exist, are sacredly and impartially, without regard to popularity, carried into execution?"
40445But how had Marshall acted in the conduct of that trial?
40445But what of the Federalists''solicitude for an early sitting of the court?
40445But who can doubt that both are impeachable offenses, and ought to subject the offender to removal from office?"
40445But"shall an imposter be suffered to preside on the bench of justice?...
40445But"where are they to be found, if the property of an individual, fairly and honestly acquired, may be seized without compensation?"
40445But, asked the Chief Justice, what had this to do with Bollmann and Swartwout?
40445By the judges this bill will be declared null and void.... And we now ask the mighty victors, what is your triumph?...
40445By what pathway could the chosen escape their doom?
40445CHAPTER IX WHAT IS TREASON?
40445Can it be pretended that any man is better versed in their theory and practice?
40445Clayton was curious-- did Senator Thomas get the money for his share of the lands?
40445Collateral points may, say the books, be proved according to the course of the common law; but is this a collateral point?
40445Congress had ordered the Secretary of War to place the names of certain persons on the pension rolls; suppose that he should refuse to do so?
40445Could a National judge be impeached merely for"error, mistake, or indiscretion"?
40445Could any man deny the superiority of the latter?
40445Could anything be more undemocratic, more reprehensible?
40445Could it mean that his tenure should be limited by behaving well in an office, which did not exist?
40445Could it mean, that he should hold this_ office_ after it was_ abolished_?
40445Did Hay mean to"open the case more fully?"
40445Did Jefferson want Burr convicted?
40445Did Marshall''s prolixity know no limit?
40445Did his office take from a judge"the liberty of speech which belongs to every citizen"?
40445Did it appear to him that"the conduct of Judge Chase was mild and conciliatory"during the trial of Callender?
40445Did not these illustrations and many others that might be given prove that the Constitution must govern courts as well as Congress?
40445Did that give him"a right to resist the president''s orders to stop him?"
40445Did the Government''s counsel wish that"the multitude around us should be prejudiced by garbled evidences?"
40445Did the jury mean to"censure... the court for suppressing irrelevant testimony?"
40445Did the testimony show probable grounds for believing that Burr had committed treason?
40445Did the things proved to have happened on Blennerhassett''s island amount to the overt act of levying war?
40445Did they include the downfall of the Judiciary in their plans of general destruction?
40445Did they propose to make judges the mere creatures of Congress?
40445Does the Wealth of Nations, therefore, form a part of the Constitution of the United States?"
40445Even Judges of the Supreme Court should do something to earn their salaries; but under the Federalist Judiciary Act of 1801"what have they got to do?
40445Even if such legislation could be set aside on the ground of fraud in the enactment of it, to what extent must the impurity go?
40445For what did the Constitution authorize the House to impeach and the Senate to try an officer of the National Government?
40445For what purpose seize on Baton Rouge?
40445For,"to whom are they responsible?"
40445Fox?"
40445From whom is a corrupt decision most to be feared?...
40445Had Chase transgressed any State or National statute?
40445Had Martin shown that Chase was right in requiring questions to be reduced to writing?
40445Had any other"high crimes and misdemeanors"been proved or even stated against him?
40445Had he acted like a guilty man, he asked?
40445Had he overruled all these opinions in the Bollmann- Swartwout case?
40445Had he violated the common law?
40445Had he, in addition, reversed the natural interpretation of the Constitution which reason dictated?
40445Had not Marshall himself so ruled on that point in the matter of Attorney- General Lincoln at the hearing in Marbury_ vs._ Madison?
40445Had the Legislature of Georgia overstepped those limits?
40445Hay persisted:"Categorically then I ask you, Mr. Bollman, do you accept your pardon?"
40445He wished to know"what gentlemen can intend, expect, or hope, from these perpetual philippics against the government?
40445His"flight"?
40445How could that be and no tidings of it except from Wilkinson?
40445How had the Federalists contrived to gain their ends?
40445How have I been brought hither?"
40445How say you?
40445How say you?
40445How then could anybody pretend that a State could by legislation annul a contract?
40445How, asked Marshall, could the court decide that question without inspecting the papers?
40445I am more afraid of an army of judges,... than of an army of soldiers.... Have we not seen sedition laws?"
40445I would ask where they got that power, and who checks the courts when they violate the Constitution?"
40445If it could, ought it to be"in this case"?
40445If not, why does the Constitution require judges"to take an oath to support it"?
40445If so, where was the boasted beneficence of democracies?
40445If the courts must look into the Constitution at all, as assuredly they must do in some cases,"what part of it are they forbidden to read or to obey?"
40445If then the procurement be substituted in the place of presence, does it not also constitute an essential part of the overt act?
40445If they will neither die nor resign they give Mr J the trouble of correcting the_ procedure_.... Tell me what the judges say-- are they frightened?"
40445In the Federal Courts?
40445In what terms of decency,"growls Jefferson,"can we speak of this?
40445Is Samuel Chase guilty of the high crimes and misdemeanors as charged in the articles just read?"
40445Is Samuel Chase, the respondent, guilty of high crimes and misdemeanors as charged in the article just read?"
40445Is it humanity?
40445Is it law?
40445Is it to be contended that the heads of departments are not amenable to the laws of their country?
40445Is such a character"fit to preside in a court of justice?...
40445Is the fact, without which the accused does not participate in the guilt of the assemblage if it were guilty, a collateral point?
40445Is the law paramount to this, which calls on him on behalf of a single one?"
40445Is there a candid man in the U S who does not believe some one, if not all, of these overt acts to have taken place?"
40445Is this reason?
40445It was, said Marshall; but could such an order be directed to the Secretary of State?
40445Jefferson''s mind dwells on Marshall''s work with increasing anxiety:"On the subject of the history of the American Revolution... who can write it?"
40445Judges often made political speeches on the stump--"What law forbids[ them] to exercise these rights by a charge from the bench?"
40445Just how should Marshall declare the Supreme Court to be the ultimate arbiter of conflicts between statutes and the Constitution?
40445Let Marshall smoke his own tobacco: suppose the Sheriff of Henrico County should summon the Chief Justice to help"quell a riot"?
40445Louis?...
40445Must the courts decide such a case"without examining the instrument under which it arises?"
40445Must the overt act be proved before hearing collateral testimony?
40445Must the vitiating cause operate on a majority, or on what number of the members?
40445New Orleans?...
40445Of the antidotes of truth to the misrepresentations of Marshall?
40445On this point"what said the Chief Justice of the United States,"on whose evidence Randolph said he specially relied?
40445One of these has survived:"Why did you not tell Judge Marshall that the people of America demanded a conviction?"
40445Or was it that of some intermediate period?
40445Or"shall we move to commit L M as_ particeps criminis_ with Burr?
40445Shall it be confided to men immediately responsible to the people, or to those who are irresponsible?...
40445Should it rise again?
40445Should like power be denied in America?
40445Should that power, then, be exerted?
40445Should this conclusion go unchallenged?
40445Something must be done to"put down"the troublesome"bull- dog":"Shall L M be summoned as a witness against Burr?"
40445Such being the case, ought the Supreme Court to act under this unconstitutional section?
40445The first two volumes had already cost the publisher far more than the estimate-- would not Washington persuade Marshall to be more concise?
40445Then turning to Bollmann, Hay dramatically asked:"Will you accept this pardon?"
40445They must be removed; they are obnoxious unyielding men;& why should they remain to awe& embarrass the administration?
40445To what motive should Marshall''s action be ascribed?
40445To what purpose are powers limited... if these limits may, at any time, be passed by those intended to be restrained?
40445To what were they to testify?
40445Today, haughty, violent, imperious; tomorrow, humble, penitent and submissive.... Is this a character to dispense law and justice to this nation?
40445Under the"general law"he is"a part of the_ posse_ of the State sheriff"; yet,"would the Judge abandon major duties to perform lesser ones?"
40445WHAT IS TREASON?
40445Warren Hastings had been acquitted;"but is there any who hears me, that believes he was innocent?"
40445Was Burr afraid to trust the court?
40445Was a June session of the Supreme Court"a source of alarm?"
40445Was a judge to be impeached and removed from office because his deportment was not elegant?
40445Was ever a man so pursued?
40445Was it that"of Sir Walter Raleigh and Captain Smith, or that which was imported by Governor Oglethorpe?"
40445Was it that"of the reign of Elizabeth and James the first; or... that of the time of George the Second?"
40445Was not that true?
40445Was not"an accused man... to obtain witnesses in his behalf?"
40445Was that criminal?
40445Were the Government and he"on equal terms?"
40445Were they in America?
40445What could be done to save the rights and the property of"the wise, the rich and the good"?
40445What did history tell us of the justice or mercy of the people?
40445What do the words"levying war"mean?
40445What effect will this law have upon this case?
40445What excuse was there for"conduct so grossly indecent"?
40445What had happened in France?
40445What is the triumph of the President?
40445What is to become of our past revolutionary history?
40445What more could be asked?
40445What now should the dethroned political leader do?
40445What shall I then do with him?"
40445What then would become the condition of the country?
40445What was expected of"that great accomplisher of all things?"
40445What were the facts?
40445What were the"orders,"military and naval, which had been described so thrillingly?
40445What would be the effect of a different doctrine?
40445What would this entail?
40445Where the righteousness and wisdom of the people?
40445Where was Morris, asked Mason, when his friends had committed that sacrilege?
40445Where, asked Marshall, was the evidence that Burr had assembled an army to levy war on the United States?
40445Where?
40445Where?
40445Which must the court obey-- the Constitution or the act altering that instrument?
40445Who could tell the effect on Burr of such dread tidings?
40445Who dared brave the wrath of that blind and merciless god, Public Prejudice?
40445Who is the author of these pieces?
40445Who will build upon the hills and cultivate the valleys which here surround us?"
40445Who will buy your lands?
40445Who will open your Western forests?
40445Why are they not proved?''
40445Why do not those who are opposed to the project, express in the public papers or by petitions their disapprobation?...
40445Why engage Spain against this enterprise, if it was designed against the United States?
40445Why had he been refused the use of pen, ink, and paper-- denied even the privilege of writing to his daughter?
40445Why had the Judiciary been made"as independent of the Legislature as of the Executive?"
40445Why had the guards who brought him from Alabama to Richmond"avoided every magistrate on the way"?
40445Why is it not proved?"
40445Why"not have said, at once, that any... officer... convicted on indictment should(_ ipso facto_) be removed from office?
40445Why, he asks, had not some one pointed out to him"some of those objections... to the plan of the work"before he wrote any part of it?
40445Why, then, had the article on impeachment been placed in the Constitution at all?
40445With an air of triumph Randolph asked:"Can anyone doubt Mr. Marshall''s thorough acquaintance with our laws?
40445With what result?
40445With what result?
40445With what sensations should the common herd of cattle look upon it?
40445Would Marshall adjourn court that this amicable arrangement might be brought about?
40445Would any one pretend to say that a State might enact an_ ex post facto_ law or pass a bill of attainder?
40445Would not Congress at last afford them relief?
40445Would the act be null, whatever might be the wish of the nation, or would its obligation or nullity depend upon the public sentiment?"
40445Would they abandon their posts as judges, and the interests of millions committed to them, to serve the purposes of a single individual?"
40445Yet who could tell what he would do?
40445Z. reference?
40445[ 1232] What was the moving force back of the prosecution?
40445[ 1483] Had the corruption of the Legislature destroyed the title of Peck, an innocent purchaser?
40445[ 374] Did the applicants have a right to the commissions?
40445[ 620] Are you sure they will feel a disposition to advance the work?
40445[ Illustration:_ John Wickham_] Did that testimony, then, prove the overt act of levying war on the United States?
40445_ Why are we here?
40445at Cincinnati?
40445at Nashville?
40445exclaimed Senator James Jackson of Georgia,"is it possible that I have heard such a sentiment in this body?
40445must it not also be proved?
40445must it not be proved in the same manner that presence must be proved?
40445that the prisoner was one of those who assembled at Blennerhassett''s island?
40445the overt act laid in the indictment?
47192''What for?'' 47192 ''What name?''
47192''Where are you going?'' 47192 ''Who leads the camp?''
47192And as they went on their way, they came unto a certain water, and the eunuch said, See, here is water, what doth hinder me to be baptized? 47192 And the disciples came and said unto Him, Why speakest thou unto them in parables?
47192But,said they,"is there not some one among you{ 70} whom you call your captain, or leader, or who is superior to the rest?"
47192How, then, shall they call on him in whom they have not believed? 47192 Jesus saith unto them, Have you understood all these things?
47192Well,said the scoffer,"what did you gain on this useless journey to Missouri with Joseph Smith?"
47192What thing?
47192Where are you going?
47192And besides, are not those who hold slaves, persons of ability, discernment and candor?
47192And further, if he was accepted of God, what were the ordinances performed further than the offering of the firstlings of the flock?
47192And he said unto them, Unto what then were ye baptized?
47192And how shall they believe in him of whom they have not heard?
47192And how shall they hear without a preacher?
47192And how shall they preach, except they be sent?
47192And if Abel was taught of the coming of the Son of God, was he not taught also of His ordinances?
47192And if it had ordinances what were they?
47192And if it was the Gospel, and that preached in the name of Christ, had it any ordinances?
47192And if you were afraid that your horses and property would be stolen in a strange country, would you not watch and keep guards?"
47192And is not the Gospel the news of the redemption?
47192And now, I ask, how righteousness and truth are going to sweep the earth as with a flood?
47192And now, why tarriest thou?
47192And what shall others receive who do not labor faithfully, and continue to the end?
47192And what was he to receive?
47192And why?
47192Are not such manifestly fitter witnesses than those who are untried?
47192Are our people bound to pay the ferriage on their return?
47192Are they to be accounted wholly deplorable, or as part of that experience of the Church which makes for advancement?
47192Are they to be found?
47192As for the calamitous events of the Church during the Kirtland period, what shall we say of them?
47192But I speak concerning my churches abroad-- there are many who will say, where is their God?
47192But if this life is all, then why this constant toiling, why this continual warfare, and why this unceasing trouble?
47192But what after all are such periods but times of purification, of cleansing?
47192But what of the world-- what of men?
47192But what saith He to His disciples?
47192Can we mistake such language as this?
47192Can we suppose that He has a kingdom without laws?
47192Consequently have need of nothing to govern or regulate them?
47192Could it flourish?
47192Could it prosper?
47192Did I say congregations would gnash their teeth at you?
47192Do not they need some such evidence back of those who shall testify of a new dispensation of the Gospel?
47192Do they not expect to give an account at the bar of God for their conduct in this life?
47192Do we not descend below our own knowledge, and the better wisdom which heaven has endowed us with, by such a course of conduct?
47192Do we not offer violence to our own good judgment when we deny the second coming of the Messiah?
47192Do we offer violence to the Supreme Intelligence of heaven, when we admit the truth of its teachings, and do not obey them?
47192Does your conduct merit such censures as exist against you?
47192Eight-- Shall any intelligence relative to the building up of Zion be withheld from the Council of Zion?
47192Fifth-- By what authority was one of the High Councilors disfellowshiped in the name of the High Council without their knowledge?
47192For a moment reflect: what could have been the purpose of our Father in giving to us a law?
47192Fourth-- Have two presidents authority to lay out a city, and build a House of God; independent of the counsel of the High Council?
47192From whence, then, hath it tares?
47192Had you not fought the good fight, and kept the faith, could you expect to receive?
47192Has not bitter experience taught you that they are the same now?
47192Have you a promise of receiving a crown of righteousness from the hand of the Lord, with the Church of the First Born?
47192He finally asked:"Does Mr. Smith live here?"
47192He then asked:"Wherein do you differ from other Christian denominations?"
47192He then read the revelation,[ 10] and said: Have you desired this ministry with all our hearts?
47192How could Abel offer a sacrifice and look forward with faith on the Son of God for a remission of his sins and not understand the Gospel?
47192How could a government be conducted with harmony if its administrators were possessed with such different dispositions and different principles?
47192How is it that these old Apostles should say so much on the subject of the coming of Christ?
47192How will the serpent ever lose his venom, while the servants of God possess the same disposition, and continue to make war upon it?
47192How, then, is the Lord to dwell in Zion if Zion be not built up?
47192I said they were snakes''eggs-- eat snakes''eggs, will you?
47192I would now ask if each one of the Twelve has not an equal right to the same accommodations from that store, provided they are alike faithful?
47192If I could or could not, would this be an honor or dishonor to me?
47192If in any other name, was it the Gospel?
47192If not, to what end serves the Gospel of our Lord Jesus Christ, and why was it ever communicated to us?
47192If not, was it the Gospel?
47192If slavery be an evil, who could we expect would first learn it: Would the people of the free states, or the people of the slave states?
47192If the Saints are not to reign, for what purpose are they crowned?
47192If the Savior in former days laid His hands upon His disciples, why not in latter days?
47192If the fact were learned first by those immediately concerned, who would be more capable than they of prescribing a remedy?
47192If the whole family of man were as well off without them as they might be with them, for what purpose or intent were they ever given?
47192If there is, why not that Being who had power to place us here, inform us something of the hereafter?
47192Is there nothing further; is there no existence beyond this vail of death which is so suddenly to be cast over all of us?
47192May not the Lord have designed in part this expedition of Zion''s Camp for their instruction, for their training?
47192Now if God should give no more revelations, where will we find Zion and this remnant?
47192Now, before proceeding any farther, I wish to ask one or two questions: Were the Apostles men of God, and did they preach the Gospel?
47192Now, what is like unto it?
47192Or do we believe that it is composed of an innumerable company of beings who are entirely beyond all law?
47192Remember, brethren, that He has called you unto holiness; and need we say, to be like Him in purity?
47192Second-- By what authority was a committee appointed and ordained to superintend the building of the House of the Lord?
47192Shall they pollute that kingdom, or shall they be cast out as material unfitted for the Master''s use, and of their own volition choose to remain so?
47192Some experiences may be sad, and accounted at the time as disastrous; but are they really so?
47192The following questions were frequently put and answered:"''My boy, where are you from?''
47192The question--"Was it, or was it not, the design of Christ to establish His Gospel by miracles?"
47192The servants said unto him, Wilt thou then that we go and gather them up?
47192Then answered Peter, Can any man forbid water, that these should not be baptized, which have received the Holy Ghost as well as we?
47192Then who is to be the judge in this matter?
47192They granted my request, and as we passed them they bawled out,"Do you get any revelations lately?"
47192Third-- By what authority was Jacob Whitmer ordained to the High Priesthood?
47192This, then, we conclude, was the purpose of God in giving His laws to us: if not, why, or for what were they given?
47192To whom did God testify of the gifts of Abel, was it to Paul?
47192Was it that God wanted to merely show that He could talk?
47192Was it that it might be obeyed, or disobeyed?
47192Was that without significance?
47192We all admit that the Gospel has ordinances, and if so, had it not always ordinances, and were not its ordinances always the same?
47192We would reply to this gentleman, Paul we know, and Christ{ 269} we know, but who are ye?
47192What course can sooner divide our union?
47192What nearer friend on earth, or in heaven, had Judas than the Savior?
47192What order is here?
47192What then?
47192What was the cause of this?
47192What, then, could have induced him to undergo all this toil?
47192What, we ask, was this law added to, if it was not added to the Gospel?
47192When or where has God suffered one of the witnesses or first Elders of this Church to fall?
47192When will man cease to war with man, and wrest from him his sacred rights of worshiping his God according as his conscience dictates?
47192Where is one like Christ?
47192Who can rightly estimate the value of the experiences of that movement for the redemption of Zion, called Zion''s Camp?
47192Who comprehends it now?
47192Who hath counted His buffaloes?
47192Who hath seen all His deer on a thousand prairies?
47192Who hath viewed His everlasting fields?
47192Who in the Christian world taught them?
47192Who is as holy as He was?
47192Who is as perfect?
47192Who is as pure?
47192Who understood even the first principles of the doctrines of Christ?
47192Who, among all the Saints in these last days, can consider himself as good as our Lord?
47192Who, at the time comprehended the full import of this incident?
47192Why is this so?
47192Why?
47192Will a hundred dollars do you any good?"
47192Will the mere admission, that this is the will of heaven ever benefit us if we do not comply with all his teachings?
47192Would harmony prevail?
47192Would it not be asserting that man had found out a secret beyond Deity?
47192Would not such ideas be a reproach to our Great Parent, and at variance with His glorious intelligence?
47192Would order be established, and could justice be executed in righteousness in all branches of its departments?
59808Did ye ever hear tell of such a''fool''business as this, Bill?
59808Did ye see me laugh, your Honor?
59808Did you see the shot fired?
59808Do you recollect,he said, when they met--"do you recollect giving your little''Barney''a penny when he left school thirty years ago?
59808Have you normal vision?
59808Historyasks:"What was it about Queen Victoria that was just celebrated?"
59808How about you?
59808How large does she look?
59808Is there any one here whose vision has been frequently tested, and about which there can be no doubt?
59808Looks so, do n''t it?
59808Macondai, where are you?
59808Mamma,I had inquired,"are we always going to live here?"
59808No beans? 59808 No_ beans_?"
59808Pebbles?
59808Well, that''s what I said, was n''t it?
59808What do you mean by shooing out the bears?
59808What is it?
59808What''s the good of wasting all that salt water? 59808 Where are you going to spend your vacation?"
59808Where does the tree stop?
59808Where is Makooga?
59808Where is he?
59808Which way is he going?
59808Whose boys be they?
59808Why do you keep in the background? 59808 You back again?"
59808*****"I wonder why they call that a lady- bug?"
59808*****"Well, Tommie, I suppose you are the smartest boy in your class?"
59808All been well?"
59808And then what do you suppose happened?
59808Ca n''t you see all those little gold grains, Milly Thacher, if you''ve got half an eye?
59808D''ye think Black Partridge would have said those words last night if there had been a ray of hope?
59808Do you who live in the cities have to pay anything for apples now?
59808Do you, Jack?"
59808Give it up?
59808Given up theelygy?"
59808Had Thanny bequeathed them to Milly''s scarecrow, for once and all?
59808How can one become an actor, and to whom should one apply?"
59808How many k''s are there in turkle?"
59808How many scalps would remain at the end of an hour if you put yourself in their hands?
59808Milly Thacher, there''s gold on this farm-- do you hear?
59808My goodness me!--would there be real miners round the place, perhaps wanting to board right in the family?
59808Seeing''s believing, and ca n''t you see?
59808Thanny, ai n''t he a beauty?"
59808The King looked at me with wonder, and spoke to Mienjai, saying,"Does the spirit mean what he says?"
59808Then the King shouted,"Where is Mbango?"
59808Well, crops, then, if crops it must be; but what?
59808What am I, who were my brothers, and why ca n''t I realize some of these thousands?
59808What would father say?
59808Where is Okili?"
59808You ai n''t going to slight that, Thanny?"
59808You will go with us, doctor?"
51932Ah well, come now, what''ll you take for it?
51932Are you steady, quite, quite steady?
51932D''ye think I mean to sell my crest? 51932 Is Mr.---- within?"
51932Is it a ring of the yellow gold, Or something more precious and bright? 51932 Some bread, waiter: what is your name?"
51932( By the by, does_ English_, the tongue, belong, in America, to the King or the President-- I wonder?
51932(_ to corpse._) Am I smothering you?
51932(_ to corpse._) Where''s your dagger?
51932***** Where are the poets of this land?
51932********** He said to me,"Is there not reason to be grateful to God, when we look at these fair things?"
51932********** I acted like a wretch, of course; how could I do otherwise?
51932--"What for?"
51932And how should not that spirit yearn for its accomplishment?
51932And where is the mother gone?
51932Are not these the things for which God has said he will avenge?
51932Are not these the things that make a nation rotten at core, and ripe for decay?
51932Are these the cares that should engross the faculties of immortal souls, and rational thinking creatures?
51932Can Italy have brighter heavens than these?
51932Did Pythagoras admit of men becoming towns as well as beasts?
51932Do actors generally exercise their profession to please themselves and gratify their own especial delight in self- exhibition?
51932Do audiences, on the other hand, use to come in crowds to play- houses to see indifferent performers?
51932England, oh England!--yet, after all, what is there in that name?
51932Have I not been for ever driven Back to the bitter past again?
51932Have I not flung them off, and striven To seek some dawning hope in vain?
51932Have these glorious scenes poured no inspirings into hearts worthy to behold and praise their beauty?
51932He told us that as he was coming out of the theatre, a Kentuckian accosted him with,"Well, what do you think of that''ere_ gal_?"
51932Horror took possession of us,--how were we ever to get back in time?
51932How are you?
51932How call ye this the season''s fall, That seems the pageant of the year, Richer and brighter far than all The pomp that spring and summer wear?
51932How can they live here?
51932How have you been?"
51932How much longer are our imaginations and feelings to be the only portions of our spiritual nature on which culture is bestowed?
51932How much longer are the physical evils under which our nature labours to be increased by effeminate, slothful, careless, unwholesome habits?
51932How then should we not look with unutterable yearning for that life where affection is unchangeable, eternal?
51932I ca n''t write prose;( query, can I any thing else?)
51932I can not tell; I did not mean to be so; I made them three courtesies, and what could woman do more?
51932I could not forbear asking him how long he had been away from England?
51932I was much surprised, and asked her if this was a piece of service she often performed for the ladies who visited the baths?
51932If we long to love-- ah, are not the creatures in whom we centre our affections frail, capable of change; perishable, born to decay?
51932Is inanimate nature, alone, here"telling the glories of God?"
51932Is it really and truly the yearning of the roots for the soil in which they grew?
51932Is the noble occupation of war incompatible with the still nobler possession of freedom?
51932It is distinct, and wholly different from the noble, rational, philosophic conviction,"And for my soul, what can it do to that?"
51932It reminded me of Combes''book: I wonder whether he is turning phrenologist at all?
51932Mr. H---- and his nephew called: the latter asked me if I was at all apprehensive?
51932Now, what on earth can I say to the worthy citizens, if they ask me what I thought of the Italian opera?
51932Oh, what must savages think an echo is?
51932Our second landing at New York was rather melancholy: shall I ever forget the first?
51932Shall I ever forget that woman in Medea?
51932The day was as bad as a party of pleasure could expect,( and when were their expectations of bad weather disappointed?)
51932This being the case, where lies the obligation, and where the gratitude?
51932Though if I had been, what would it have availed?
51932Though why do I ask it?
51932Was not such deep, deep love too strong, too passionate, too pervading, to be uttered with the light laughing voice of pleasure?
51932Was not that love, even in its fulness of joy, sad-- awful?
51932What a contrast to that exquisite thing of Shelley''s,"What is Love?"
51932What can it signify what is said?
51932What though a brighter sky bends o''er Scenes where no former image greets me?
51932What was to be done?
51932What was to be done?
51932When the gentlemen joined us, they were all more or less"how com''d you so indeed?"
51932Where are the poets of this land?
51932White lady, sitting on the sea, Tell to me, oh, tell to me, How long shall thy reigning be, White lady, sitting on the sea?
51932White lady, sitting on the sea, Tell to me, oh, tell to me, When shall thy downfalling be, White lady, sitting on the sea?
51932Why cling thy fibres to the earth?
51932Yet wherefore write I thus?
51932Yet why do I say that?--is not heaven brighter than even this flowery earth?
51932You''ve broken the phial, have n''t you?
51932_ Is_ New- York like London?
51932and when there, do they, out of pure charity and good- will, bestow their applause as well as their money upon tiresome performances?
51932de Sévigné who said, with such truth and bitter satire,"Mme de---- s''est jetée dans la dévotion, c''est- à- dire, elle a changé d''amant"?
51932does your eternity and your infinitude amount to this?
51932e._ the inferior portion,( for when was the mass not inferior?)
51932leave the farm?"
51932was her heart aching for home, and kindred left behind her?
51932was this the glorious hymn that Shakspeare hallowed to your praise?
51932what will he do to- night?"
51932what-- what are we, that are so curiously made?
51932where are my peculiar objects of pleasure and recreation?
51932who can describe that sight?
51932why should they not carry their guns on their shoulders instead of upright, if they please?
51932why should they not walk crooked, in the defence of their country, if they do n''t like to walk straight?
51932you ca n''t want it much, now-- do you?"
44621A CASE OF INSUBORDINATION?
44621A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?)
44621A RESEARCH PROBLEM: INERT(?)
44621A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE?
44621A TREE IS A TREE IS A TREE?
44621AGAIN?
44621ARE OUR SCHOOLS UP- TO- DATE?
44621ARE POETS PEOPLE?
44621ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY?
44621ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY?
44621ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO ASK THEM TO BUY?
44621ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS?
44621ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS?
44621ARE YOU EARNING THE RIGHT TO MANAGE OTHERS?
44621ARE YOU LISTENING?
44621ARE YOU LISTENING?
44621ARE YOU THE ONE?
44621ARE YOU THE ONE?
44621ART: WHAT IS IT?
44621ASSIGNMENT K. Mea Productions, Inc. WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED?
44621American Diabetes Assn., Inc. HOW SURE ARE YOU?
44621CAN YOU HEAR ME?
44621CAR 54, WHERE ARE YOU?
44621COMPANY OF COWARDS?
44621COMPANY OF COWARDS?
44621COMPANY OF COWARDS?
44621FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON?
44621FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON?
44621FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON?
44621FAMILIES AND HISTORY: WHY IS MY NAME ANDERSON?
44621FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR?
44621FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR?
44621FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR?
44621FAMILIES AND TRANSPORTATION: WHAT''S A POCKET FOR?
44621French, Warren G. ARE POETS PEOPLE?
44621Georgia Textile Manufacturers Assn., Inc. WHERE''S THE SAFETY CATCH?
44621Gibraltar Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT?
44621HALT, WHO GROWS THERE?
44621HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT?
44621HOOK LINE AND WHAT KNOT?
44621HOW BIG?
44621HOW DO I LOVE THEE?
44621HOW DO I LOVE THEE?
44621HOW DO I LOVE THEE?
44621HOW DOES A GARDEN GROW?
44621HOW DOES MY CHILD LEARN TO READ?
44621HOW GOOD IS A GOOD GUY?
44621HOW MANY 1/2''S IS 3/2?
44621HOW MUCH HOMEWORK IS ENOUGH?
44621HOW MUCH LOVING DOES A NORMAL COUPLE NEED?
44621HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD?
44621HOW SOFT IS A CLOUD?
44621HOW SOLID IS ROCK?
44621HOW SOLID IS ROCK?
44621HOW SURE ARE YOU?
44621HOW VAST IS SPACE?
44621HOW VAST IS SPACE?
44621HOW WAS THAT AGAIN?
44621HOW WAS THAT AGAIN?
44621IS PARIS BURNING?
44621IS PARIS BURNING?
44621IS PARIS BURNING?
44621IS PARIS BURNING?
44621IS SMOKING WORTH IT?
44621IS SMOKING WORTH IT?
44621IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE?
44621JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING?
44621JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING?
44621JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING?
44621JOBS FOR MEN: WHERE AM I GOING?
44621JUSTICE FOR ALL?
44621LONELY, OR A LONER?
44621LONELY, OR A LONER?
44621LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE?
44621LSD, THE TRIP TO WHERE?
44621Lance Productions, Inc. WHAT WILL THEY THINK OF NEXT?
44621Laurel Productions, Inc. MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT?
44621MAN''S FAVORITE SPORT?
44621MARRIAGE: WHAT KIND FOR YOU?
44621ME IN MEDIA?
44621ME IN MEDIA?
44621METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER?
44621METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER?
44621METROPOLIS-- CREATOR OR DESTROYER?
44621MY LIFE TO LIVE?
44621Marianne Productions, S.A. IS PARIS BURNING?
44621Menninger Foundation, Topeka, Kan. WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE?
44621NARCOTICS-- WHY NOT?
44621Nonnenmacher, Nicholas T. PEACE OR COMMUNISM?
44621OR?
44621OR?
44621PEACE OR COMMUNISM?
44621Peeler, Richard E. CERAMICS, WHAT, WHY, HOW?
44621Phillips, Roger M. HOW WAS YOUR EVENING?
44621REDWOODS-- SAVED?
44621REDWOODS-- SAVED?
44621REMEMBER EDDIE SIMPSON?
44621SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE?
44621SANTO DOMINGO, WHY ARE WE THERE?
44621SHOULD I KNOW MY CHILD''S IQ?
44621SILENT NIGHTS?
44621SILENT NIGHTS?
44621SMOKE, ANYONE?
44621SMOKE, ANYONE?
44621Sib Tower 12, Inc. IS THERE A DOCTOR IN THE MOUSE?
44621THE MAKING OF THE PRESIDENT, 1960. WHO IN''68?
44621Transcontinental Films, Inc. IS PARIS BURNING?
44621WATCHA WATCHIN''?
44621WATCHA WATCHIN''?
44621WHAT ABOUT SEX?
44621WHAT ABOUT SEX?
44621WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S?
44621WHAT ABOUT THE''61 CHEVY''S?
44621WHAT ARE FOSSILS?
44621WHAT ARE FOSSILS?
44621WHAT ARE STARS MADE OF?
44621WHAT ARE TEACHING MACHINES?
44621WHAT ARE THINGS MADE OF?
44621WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE?
44621WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE?
44621WHAT CAN I CONTRIBUTE?
44621WHAT COLOR ARE YOU?
44621WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY?
44621WHAT DID YOU DO IN THE WAR, DADDY?
44621WHAT DIRECTION?
44621WHAT DIRECTION?
44621WHAT DOES HUCKLEBERRY FINN SAY?
44621WHAT DOES OUR FLAG MEAN?
44621WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?
44621WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?
44621WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?
44621WHAT EVER HAPPENED TO BABY JANE?
44621WHAT FINER PURPOSE?
44621WHAT FINER PURPOSE?
44621WHAT FIRST?
44621WHAT FIRST?
44621WHAT HAPPENS NEXT?
44621WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT?
44621WHAT HOLDS SATELLITES IN ORBIT?
44621WHAT IS A BIRD?
44621WHAT IS A FISH?
44621WHAT IS A FORCE?
44621WHAT IS A GLACIER?
44621WHAT IS A GLACIER?
44621WHAT IS A MAMMAL?
44621WHAT IS A NEIGHBORHOOD?
44621WHAT IS A PAINTING?
44621WHAT IS A PAINTING?
44621WHAT IS A PAINTING?
44621WHAT IS A REPTILE?
44621WHAT IS A VOLCANO?
44621WHAT IS A VOLCANO?
44621WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS ACTIVE AND CREATIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS AN AMPHIBIAN?
44621WHAT IS AN ECLIPSE?
44621WHAT IS AUTOMATION?
44621WHAT IS ECOLOGY?
44621WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS EFFECTIVE READING?
44621WHAT IS ELECTRIC CURRENT?
44621WHAT IS EROSION?
44621WHAT IS EROSION?
44621WHAT IS MEANING?
44621WHAT IS POETRY?
44621WHAT IS RHYTHM?
44621WHAT IS SCIENCE?
44621WHAT IS SPACE?
44621WHAT IS UNIFORM MOTION?
44621WHAT KIND OF GOVERNMENT HAVE WE?
44621WHAT MAKES CLOUDS?
44621WHAT MAKES CLOUDS?
44621WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW?
44621WHAT MAKES THE WIND BLOW?
44621WHAT MAKES WEATHER?
44621WHAT ON EARTH?
44621WHAT''S IMPORTANT?
44621WHAT''S IMPORTANT?
44621WHAT''S IN A STORY?
44621WHAT''S IN SIGHT?
44621WHAT''S IN SIGHT?
44621WHAT''S INSIDE THE EARTH?
44621WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU?
44621WHAT''S IT GOING TO COST YOU?
44621WHAT''S LEFT?
44621WHAT''S LEFT?
44621WHAT''S MY LION?
44621WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT?
44621WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT?
44621WHAT''S NEW PUSSYCAT?
44621WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL?
44621WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL?
44621WHAT''S SO IMPORTANT ABOUT A WHEEL?
44621WHAT''S THE BIG ATTRACTION?
44621WHAT''S THE DIFFERENCE?
44621WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST?
44621WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST?
44621WHAT''S THE GOOD OF A TEST?
44621WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER?
44621WHAT''S UP DOWN UNDER?
44621WHERE DOES OUR MEAT COME FROM?
44621WHICH IS WITCH?
44621WHICH IS WITCH?
44621WHICH WAY IS NORTH?
44621WHICH WAY IS PARADISE?
44621WHICH WAY IS PARADISE?
44621WHICH WAY?
44621WHICH WAY?
44621WHO CARES ABOUT JAMIE?
44621WHO DO VOODOO?
44621WHO IN''68?
44621WHO IS DRIVING?
44621WHO IS DRIVING?
44621WHO KILLED ROY BROWN?
44621WHO KILLED ROY BROWN?
44621WHO SCENT YOU?
44621WHO SHALL LIVE?
44621WHO SHALL LIVE?
44621WHO WAS THAT LADY?
44621WHO WAS THAT LADY?
44621WHO WAS THAT LADY?
44621WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?
44621WHO''S AFRAID OF VIRGINIA WOOLF?
44621WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED?
44621WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED?
44621WHO''S BEEN SLEEPING IN MY BED?
44621WHO''S MINDING THE STORE?
44621WHO''S MINDING THE STORE?
44621WHO''S MINDING THE STORE?
44621WHO, WHAT, WHEN, WHERE, WHY?
44621WHOM SHALL WE FEAR?
44621WHY BRACEROS?
44621WHY BRACEROS?
44621WHY COMMUNICATION SATELLITES?
44621WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS?
44621WHY DO WE STILL HAVE MOUNTAINS?
44621WHY EAT OUR VEGETABLES?
44621WHY IS IT?
44621WILL WE HAVE YEAR''ROUND SCHOOLS?
44621Whirlpool Corp. HOW MANY MEALS TO THE MOON?
44621YOU CHALLENGE ME TO A WHAT?
44621YOU SAW A WHAT?
44621YOU WANNA KNOW WHAT REALLY GOES ON IN A HOSPITAL?
44621YOU''RE WHAT?
44621YUGOSLAVIA: BRIDGE OR TIGHTROPE?
6896By what authority?
6896What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn?
6896And if a ship should sail to the undermost part, how could it come back?
6896BATTLE OF BRANDYWINE.--What, meantime, had Howe been doing?
6896Brave Admiral, say but one good word; What shall we do when hope is gone?"
6896Brave Admiral, speak; what shall I say?"
6896But did it flow into the Gulf?
6896Could a ship sail up hill?
6896FOOTNOTES[ 1] A closely related question was, What shall be done for the negroes set free by the Emancipation Proclamation?
6896In February, 1793, the French Republic declared war on Great Britain, and so brought up the question, Which side shall the United States take?
6896Might not this, it was asked, be the long- sought northwest passage to the Indies?
6896THE DEBT AND THE CURRENCY.--The financial question to be settled included two parts: What shall be done with the bonds( p. 381)?
6896THE PUBLIC LANDS.--The rise of new Western states brought up the troublesome question, What shall be done with the public lands?
6896THE WAR IN THE NORTH.--What meantime had happened in the North?
6896The first was, What shall be done to destroy the institution of slavery?
6896The question of the hour thus became, Shall New Mexico and California be slave soil or free soil?
6896The question then became, Which of these duplicate sets shall Congress count?
6896The second was, What shall be done with the late Confederate states?
6896Then the question arose, Which was the better of two routes, that by Lake Nicaragua, or that across the isthmus of Panama?
6896Was it necessary to remove the Acadians?
6896What shall be done with the currency?
6896Why did John Dickinson oppose a declaration of independence?
6896Why did the commissioners fail?
6896[ 12] THE COAST OF FLORIDA EXPLORED.--What meantime had happened along the coast of North America?
6896[ 16] Why would not Great Britain make a trade treaty with us?
6896and What shall be done with the paper money?
54665Am I in the right path?
54665And Jesus answering said, Were there not ten cleansed? 54665 And the disciples came, and said unto him, Why speakest thou unto them in parables?
54665And when he was come in, he saith unto them, Why make ye this ado, and weep? 54665 How comes this?
54665Of whose thought could this be the reflection?
54665What do you want, sister?
54665Who is he?
54665Why is it that our belief has anything to do with the exercise of the healing power?
54665''Do you believe you are already helped?''
5466528, 29, 30:--"And when he was come into the house, the blind men came to him: and Jesus saith unto them, Believe ye that I am able to do this?
54665Are we to suppose that the souls of all these things are pressed into the service of the nocturnal visitant?
54665At a subsequent sitting the following questions and answers were given:--"_ Q._ Who are you that write?
54665At a subsequent séance the following dialogue occurred:"_ Q._ By what means are( unknown) secrets conveyed to wife''s brain?
54665But is his comparison pertinent?
54665But is it necessary in this case to invoke the aid of such an explanation?
54665But is it not haunted, nevertheless?
54665But the question is, Will that hypothesis apply to all the phenomena?
54665Can a segregated portion of the Divine essence, once individualized, ever perish or lose its identity?
54665Did it proceed from disembodied spirits?
54665Does it actually die, disintegrate, and return to its original elements?
54665Have we not a logical right to infer that when it is entirely freed from physical trammels, it will have reached a condition of independent existence?
54665Have you any deceased friend by that name?"
54665How about Number 2?
54665How is evidence to be obtained, and what is its value when obtained?
54665If not, why not?
54665If so, who?
54665In what consisted the power of primitive man to assert and maintain his God- given dominion over the monsters of his day and generation?
54665In what does identity consist, or, more properly speaking, how is it retained?
54665Is it because the former possesses more knowledge than the latter?
54665Is it not a fact, nevertheless, that the passes are principally useful as a means of controlling the minds both of the subject and the operator?
54665Is it probable, or even possible, that he could have taught that_ belief_ alone was a sufficient atonement for the sins of the wicked?
54665Is it this idea, so deeply rooted in her brain, which neutralizes our efforts and her own wish to be cured?
54665Is not the primary effect-- hypnotic or mesmeric-- produced, not directly upon the animal, but upon the man himself?
54665Is that an evidence of a trinity of mind?"
54665It may be asked, What becomes of the soul when deprived of a conscious existence?
54665Now, has the medium actually seen a spirit, or has he merely read the sitter''s subjective mind?
54665Now, it may be asked, how do we connect the clairaudient warning of the old man with the wreck which did not occur to his train?
54665Now, the question arises, What is the effect thus produced on the animal?
54665Now, what is an auto- suggestion?
54665On seeing Z, a few days afterwards, I inquired,''Did anything happen at your rooms on Saturday night?''
54665Said one of them, in my hearing:"I have often been asked the question,''What is an adept?''
54665Some of them say, however,"If this is evidence of duality of mind, what shall we say of those who exhibit a triple personality?
54665The first question in order is, What are the inherent probabilities?
54665The first question, then, is, What do we know of the attributes of the soul?
54665The first question, therefore, is, What did Jesus declare to be the one essential condition necessary to the attainment of immortal life?
54665The following are fair samples:--"_ Q._ Is it the operator''s brain, or some external force, that moves the planchette?
54665The great question,"If a man die, shall he live again?"
54665The healer triumphantly asks,"What do you think of my theory now?"
54665The next question is, What are the conditions?
54665The question arises, What part does the subjective mind play in the normal operation of the human intellect?
54665The question now arises, What are the conditions necessary to give us assurance of infallible deductions from given premises?
54665The question now is, Did Jesus mean just what he said; or were these idle words, having no significance taken in their literal sense?
54665The question now is, What is to be considered the doctrine of future rewards and punishments to be gathered from the New Testament?
54665The question,"Whom did you desire to have appointed administrator of your estate?"
54665Thus, the first question,''Who are you that write?''
54665Was there any intellectual feat performed which rendered it impossible that he should have been its author?
54665We ask, of whose thought could this be the reflection?"
54665What do_ you_ call it?
54665What effects, if any, either in the condition of the subject or of the operator, or in both, are missing when the new methods are applied?
54665What greater punishment than the remorse of conscience arising from the ever- persistent memory of a life of wickedness and crime?
54665What greater reward could such a being ask or experience than would be found in the contemplation of a well- spent life?
54665What would he have answered?
54665When did the higher phenomena show the first signs of decadence?
54665Who has not dreamed of being dead?
54665Why?
54665Would he not, assuredly, have the right to remind his interrogator of the rules of good breeding?
54665Would that conception have proved that an outside universe is possible or existent?
54665_ A._ Why do you try to make me say what I wo n''t?
54665_ Q._ But does no one tell wife what to write?
54665_ Q._ But how does wife''s brain know( certain) secrets?
54665_ Q._ By whom, or by what, is the electro- biologic force set in motion?
54665_ Q._ Can wife answer a question the reply to which I do not know?
54665_ Q._ Is it the will of a living person, or of an immaterial spirit distinct from that person?
54665_ Q._ What do you mean by''what you call''?
54665_ Q._ What is your own name?
54665_ Q._ Whose spirit?
54665_ Why_ will you not tell?
54665but where are the nine?
54665how long shall I suffer you?"
51959And whence comest thou, O beauteous vision, with the Aurora Borealis hair?
51959Can you tell me what to do? 51959 Didst I not tell thee,"said Geraldine,"that thou mustest not converse, but remain quiet?
51959Do you think I would laugh at the bones of the Pilgrim Fathers, where are they? 51959 First-- If one is asked to say grace at the table, and does not wish to do so, or is not familiar with the forms, what should he do?
51959I thereupon ask in all kandor for your valyable advise on these points?
51959In what respect?
51959Third-- Would you kindly add a few general rules of table etiquette, which would be useful to the many admirers of your classic style?
51959Where am I, and whence cometh this burning sensation in my liver?
51959Who will love me all the while?
51959Why are we left to mourn the loss of our wild horses and why are our own hillsides dotted with the locations and prospect holes of the pale face? 51959 Why do the wails of our people echo among the canyons and desolated villages?
51959You''re a fine- haired snoozer from Bitter Creek; ai n''t ye?
51959--Has it been of real benefit to the Territory?
51959--How does it affect education, morals, courts,& c.?
51959--If so, what has it accomplished?
51959--What proportion of the women vote?
51959And he said unto another, How much owest thou my lord?
51959And he took the hired girl by the ear and led her away, and asked her, Whence cometh this unseemly hilarity?
51959Answer-- What massacre?
51959Are we loving him as we should, or are we turning this task over to the hired girl?
51959Are you a victim to rum or other alcoholic stimulants, and if so, at what hour do you usually succumb to the potent enemy?
51959Are you single, and if so what is your excuse?
51959But he was exceedingly sorrowful and he said, What shall I do?
51959But what does she care for a$ 13.00 sunset, or the low, sad wail of the sage- hen far up the canon, as it calls to its mate?
51959But, did I forget myself and swear like a Guinea hen, the way you do?
51959Can he be deceiving me?
51959Dear reader, did you ever go through this thrilling experience?
51959Did I break forth into petulant remarks, and lower myself in the estimation of my neighbors?
51959Did it ever occur to you that he has ways like Charles Francis Adams?
51959Did you ever feel the utter insecurity and maddening uncertainty which it yields?
51959Did you ever have membranous croup, and what did you do for it?
51959Do these things ever occur to you as you throw him over the card table and mop the floor with his remains?
51959Do you eat onions?
51959Do you ever feel the twinges of remorse after you have put an octagonal head on him for not wiping the dishes drier?
51959Do you keep hens, or do you lavish your profanity on those of your neighbors?
51959Do you remember George Washington, and if so to what amount?
51959Do you wish to play the Most Sublime Overseer of the Universe and General Ticket Agent Plenipotentiary for a Chinaman?
51959Have any of your ancestors ever been troubled with ingrowing nails, or blind staggers?
51959Have you sheared your iron- clad rams yet, and if so, what will the clip average do you think?"
51959He came forward, and had a slight attack of delirium tremens, and said: uZe vooly voo a la boomerang?"
51959Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den?
51959How do you think you feel?"
51959I do not speak of it as remarkable at all, for wherever I am, whether at home or abroad, my first thought is, where will I find a sanctuary?
51959I do not think I am unreasonable to want to know who makes my Indian arrows, am I?
51959If it were the last statement I should make on earth I would still say?
51959If not, then these lines are not to you?
51959If yes, state to what extent and under what circumstances?
51959Is he dead?
51959Is it not he who bangeth his intellect ferninst the bock beer, even unto the eleventh hour?
51959Is n''t it scandalous?"
51959It''s none of my business, of course, but could n''t you get a brass band and call it together?
51959Kind reader, do you think the innocent little hog would openly violate a law of the land if he knew of its existence?
51959Never?
51959Now would you please look around and see if there is any cold pie in the house, my very ownest own?"
51959Perhaps when you went away to your work you did not leave him wood and coal and water; does he ever murmur or repine at your neglect?
51959Question by General Adams.--What is your name and occupation, and where do you reside?
51959Question-- Did the account of the White River massacre that you read in the_ Age_ mention the death of Mr. Meeker?
51959Question-- Did you ever hear anything of him after that?
51959Question-- Did you, or did you not hear of a massacre at White River agency, during the fall, and if so, to what extent?
51959Question-- Did you, or did you not, know a man named N. C. Meeker?
51959Question-- Never?
51959Question-- The one at White River?
51959Question-- Were Douglass, Colorow and other Ute chiefs with you at that meeting in Greeley?
51959Question-- Were you, or were you not, present at the massacres?
51959Question-- Where were you on the night that this massacre is said to have occurred?
51959Question-- You say that you were not present at the White River massacre; were you ever engaged in any massacre?
51959So he called unto himself one of his lord''s debtors, and he said, How much owest thou my lord?
51959Supposing then the above to be the correct theory, what can poor erring man do to forward the good work?
51959The great reading public seems to look to me, as much as to say:"What are your views on this great subject which is agitating the public mind?"
51959To lay aside the old hickory bow of the original red man and take up the improved breech- loader?
51959To live contentedly about the agencies, playing poker for the whiskies during the cold and cruel winter?
51959To take kindly to mixed drinks and Sabbath school picnics and temperance lectures and base- ball matches?
51959To what do you attribute the bad odor in which Limberger cheese is held by scientists?
51959Was it the fleeing vision of the absent lover, or had she eaten something that did n''t agree with her?
51959We come upon the earth, battle a little while with its joy?
51959What could any of them have done with the house full of children of the forest who were hankering for a fresh pail of gore for lunch?
51959What did he do it for anyway?
51959What does she care for the purple landscape and the mournful sigh of the new milch cow which is borne to her over the greet divide?
51959What is the chief end of man?
51959What is your fighting weight?
51959What is your opinion of rats?
51959What means has he of knowing that there is a city ordinance against his running about town?
51959What you make then for to bear as well?''
51959When he got to the door and went in, thirty- seven dogs ran between his legs?
51959When was Limberger cheese first discovered, and by whom?
51959Which side do you lie on during a political campaign?
51959Which side do you lie on while sleeping?
51959Who clamoreth with a loud voice and saith, verily, am not I a bad man?
51959Who ever heard of a codfish going back on his word?
51959Who ever heard of a codfish leaving the Reservation and spreading desolation over the land?
51959Who hath babbling?
51959Who hath redness of eyes?
51959Who hath sorrow?
51959Who hath woe?
51959Who is he that walketh unsteadily and singeth unto himself,"The bright angels are waiting for me?"
51959Who struck Billy Patterson?
51959Who will care for mother now?
51959Who wotteth not even a fractional wot, but setteth his chronometer with the wooden watch of the watchmaker, and by means of a tooth- brush?
51959Why did n''t he have some style about him, and get here on time?"
51959Would you have any scruples in asking the enumerator to join you in wrestling with man''s destroyer at that hour?
51959You are old, horny- handed sons of toil, and practical tillers of the soil; what shall I do?"
51959[ Illustration: 9124] Hono- Lee returned to consciousness, and murmured,"Where am I?"
51959_ Parley voo, e pluri- bus unam, sic semper go braugh!_ Do you understand that?"
51959or burst into wild hilarity over the grave of Noah and his family?
51959|Dear reader, shall I give you a few symptoms of the mining epidemic in Mountain towns?
56536How does your Satan get work to do,the latter would ask,"if God doeth all?"
56536So you like it, do you?
56536Tri- InsulaOriginally: of a new island republic of New York?
56536Who learns my lesson complete?
565366d._= Zimmern( Antonia).= WHAT DO WE KNOW CONCERNING ELECTRICITY?
56536And if there is a purpose, and if there is a God, what is it all for?
56536And what possible value has all her material development unless it be accompanied by a corresponding development of soul?
56536Are all nations communing?
56536Are they then to lose individual identity?
56536Are we to dismiss it as the shallow utterance of a callous- hearted, healthy- bodied, complacent American, deliberately blind to the world''s tragedy?
56536But if this woman loved him to the uttermost, why did he leave her?
56536But who emancipated him?
56536But, it may be asked, did he aim at"saving souls for Christ"?
56536Can I not know, identify thee?
56536Can there possibly be any connection between this style of composition and the larger consciousness of which he had experience?
56536Do they bring us material for some new law of rhythm or metre?
56536Do they give us a new art- form?
56536Do you see death, and the approach of death?
56536Do you see that lost character?--Do you see decay, consumption, rum- drinking, dropsy, fever, mortal cancer or inflammation?
56536Does_ Leaves of Grass_ awake some quality of the Soul which answers neither to the words of Tennyson nor Browning, Emerson nor Carlyle?
56536Except upon the field of politics, what single thing of moral value has she originated?
56536For who will willingly begin over again the task of self- discovery?
56536Had he caused a letter to be sent them since he got here in Washington?
56536Hast thou no soul?
56536He turned to Ingersoll, demanding,"Unless there is a definite object for it all, what, in God''s name, is it all for?"
56536How are we to sum up these pages, and figure out what it is they come to?
56536Is humanity forming en- masse?
56536Is not he himself the fellow and equal of the supreme Beings, of the Night, the Earth, and the Sea?
56536Is then America also a symbol?
56536Is there going to be but one heart to the globe?
56536Law''s, all Astronomy''s last refinement?
56536May not the former be the natural rhythm for wit and the latter for imagination?
56536May we not suppose it was a passionate and noble woman who opened the gates for him and showed him himself in the divine mirror of her love?
56536Must we nourish this giant, whose unruly strength is for ever threatening to tear in pieces the unity of the self?
56536Of what then was the Earth a symbol to Whitman''s sight?
56536On these things we are at one; but how are we most wisely and surely to direct others on the road to self- realisation?
56536Or shall we say he saw the Madonna in Venus, as Botticelli did?
56536Poetry is the utterance of an inspired emotion; but an emotion inspired by what?
56536The attack roused Whitman to snap out,"Is n''t he the damnedest simulacrum?"
56536The future shall be his proof: will his song remain at her heart?
56536The question obtrudes, was Walt becoming"respectable"?
56536Thought you, greatness was to ripen for you like a pear?
56536Traubel is a first draft for a novel(?)
56536What are we to say of these?
56536What party is there to- day, either in England or America, which dares to hold up for achievement any programme of heroism?
56536What record has he left of those women and their children, whose relation to himself must have bulked so largely in the world of his soul?
56536What then is this emotion which Whitman alone, or in special measure, evokes?
56536Where now was the old exaltation of spirit; where the eager longing for Divine adventure with which hitherto he had always contemplated death?
56536Who has not felt the liberating joy of the autumn gales?
56536Why did he allow the foulest of reproaches to blacken that whitest of all reputations, a Southern lady''s virtue?
56536Why had he not been here these months past, nursing and caring for one who had been dearer to him than his father?
56536Will it awaken, century after century, the divine unrest, and as it were, create new souls forever?
56536With grave emphasis he pronounced his text:"What is the chief end of man?"
56536[ 302] Is this another of those places where the moralist begs to take his leave of the mystic?
56536[ 416] Where others gave their lives, who was he to hold back anything of his?
56536[ said Whitman]...."I was informed in Camden that there were_ two_ Southern(?)
56536or of all Divine personality?
56536or, if you will, a new kind of poetry?
56536oy?"
6961But where are_ you_ going?
6961Who are you?
6961And where were Burnside''s men?
6961Does one need better evidence how much worse than useless was McClellan''s secret service?
6961Have we time for the sifting process?
6961Here, however, we have to meet the question What is military art as applied to the problem of winning battles or campaigns?
6961I said to the young man,"Did General Reno send you with any order to me?"
6961Is an advance of our army likely to prevent additional reinforcements being sent against General Grant by Bragg?
6961Is an immediate or early advance of our army advisable?
6961The President had coupled his earliest telegraphic congratulations with the question,"Ca n''t you beat them some more before they get off?"
6961To"hold at all hazards"might be understood, but what is the effect of the phrase"if possible"?
6961What d''ye think of that?"
6961What, then, was the plan of battle of which the first step was this movement of Hooker''s?
6961Where should Burnside have been, if not at Cincinnati?
6961Will any other hypothesis intelligibly account for McClellan''s dispositions and orders?
6961Will you neglect the chance?"
6767That done, I shall return with joy to that state of things when the only questions concerning a candidate shall be, Is he honest? 6767 Would you break your instructions?"
6767And if the French were excluded from North America, could the loyalty of the colonies be guaranteed?
6767Being our property, why should they be taxed more than sheep?"
6767Did not the Massachusetts, Connecticut, and Carolina grants run westward to the"South Sea"?
6767Did not the charter of 1609 give to Virginia the territory"up into the land, from sea to sea, west and northwest"?
6767How had this Constitution been adopted?
6767How was it in America?
6767Is he capable?
6767Is he faithful to the Constitution?"
6767Should the President declare that the United States stood neutral in this contest?
6767The voice of Roger Williams was raised in 1637 to ask whether, after"a due time of trayning to labour and restraint, they ought not to be set free?"
6767WAS THE CONSTITUTION A COMPACT?
6767Was the Constitution a compact?
6767Was the United States to consider itself bound to enter the war and to defend the French West Indies against Great Britain?
6767Was the new Constitution an agreement between eleven States, or was it an instrument of government for the whole people?
6767Were the new States essentially different from the colonies?
6767What is your answer?''
6767What was the purpose of each of these groups of measures?
6767What were the physical, social, and political conditions under which the new government was to be established?
6767Why should England tax the colonies?
6767Will you inquire how the goldsmiths put in their plugs?"
6767Would they remain together during peace?
6767[ Sidenote: Is the Union older than the States?]
6767[ Sidenote: Who was the enemy?]
51961And is there no way of removing these large lumps of paint, so as to give the picture an even appearance?
51961And is there no way that this early marriage may be evaded?
51961And that is all you do to preserve your teeth, is it?
51961And why did you not bring the party with you? 51961 And why is this?
51961And, sir,I asked,"what party do you represent?"
51961But do n''t you advertise to read the past, present and future for fifty cents?
51961But how did you come to git to be an youmorist?
51961But, fellow- citizens, how can we best preserve the blessing of freedom and fork it over unimpaired to our children? 51961 Do you ask me to answer that question personally?"
51961Do you know where he is? 51961 Do you mean my library?"
51961Do you mean to say that you do not feel facetious all the time, and that you get weary of being an youmorist?
51961Do you wish a verbal answer or would you rather have it in writing?
51961Does your horoscope tell a person what to do with raspberry jelly that will not jell?
51961Duke,said I, standing my umbrella up in the corner to show my childlike confidence in him,"how''s your conduct?"
51961Have you any idea, Mr. Ives, where those books are now?
51961He did n''t understand me, apparently, for a gurgling laugh welled up from below, and the party sings back:Hullo, Fatty, is that you?
51961How do you mean in a general way?
51961I ask if you turned over all such books on the date of your assignment?
51961I think I did, but I am not positive as to the date?
51961Mean? 51961 No sir; only in a general way?"
51961No, I do not,"Were they in your office prior to your assignment?
51961So you predict an early marriage, with threatening weather and strong prevailing easterly winds along the Gulf States?
51961Then you are Mr. Vox Populi himself, perhaps?
51961Then you would not advise me to go to Coney Island until the week after next?
51961Well, Mr. Ives, will you state then, in a general way, where those books are now?
51961Well, sir,said the urbane landlord, as he put out the fire at a. distance of twenty feet by emptying his salivary surplus on it,"I need the money?"
51961Well, to the best of your knowledge and belief, did you turn over those books at that time?
51961What do you mean by that?
51961What makes you think you did?
51961What''s the damage?
51961Where is The- Daughter- of- the- Tempest? 51961 Where is Victoria Regina Dei Gracia Sitting Bull?
51961Where is your boy to- night?
51961Who will love me all the while?
51961Why are our resources so great that they almost equal our liabilities? 51961 Would you have been apt to know of it if you had taken them away yourself?"
51961Would you have known about it if any one else had taken them away?
51961--Has it been of real benefit to the territory?
51961--If so, what has it accomplished?
51961--What proportion of the women vote?
51961--how does it affect education, morals, courts, etc.?
51961Ah, my benefactor, my noble deliverer from death, how shall I tell you of my never- ending gratitude?
51961Am I right?"
51961Dear reader, did you ever meet this man-- or his wife?
51961Did Burns soak his system with the flavor and the fragrance of the Scotch heather while riding on an elevated train?
51961Did any poet ever succeed in getting up close to Nature''s great North American heart by studying her habits at a twenty- five dollar german?
51961Did you ever have a large, angry, and abnormally protuberent boil somewhere on your person where it seemed to be in the way?
51961Did you ever have such a boil as a traveling companion, and then get introduced to people as an youmorist?
51961Do you know where they are?"
51961Does it make a permanent improvement on the minds and thoughts of the listener?
51961Have you a distinct idea of a certain position in life which you wish to attain?
51961He came forward, and had a slight attack of delirium tremens, and said:"Ze vooly voo a la boomerang?"
51961He lays that human life here is now so cheap?
51961He was one of the Yeoman of Stratford, and his early record was against him; but where do poets usually come from?
51961Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den?
51961How could I walk over a corpse until life was extinct?
51961How much was Galileo ahead in the long run for going out of his sphere?
51961I do n''t believe God had it in for''em bekuz they was like other boys, do you?
51961If he does not intend to kill some one, why does he carry a deadly weapon?
51961If so, would I appoint a trysting place where we could meet and tryst?
51961If we could write poetry like that, do you think we would plod along the dreary pathway of the journalist?
51961Is he at home under your watchful eye, or is he away somewhere jailing the handles on his first little joke?
51961Is this so?
51961Ives?"
51961La Foy?"
51961Must the one- legged minority continue thus to subserve the interests of the two- legged majority?
51961Oh, sir, can you help me?
51961S. Ives& Co. or not?"
51961Science may be all right in its place, but does it make the world better?
51961Shall we portray her as she appears on her return from the great slaughter- house benefit and moral aggregation of digestive mementos?
51961Shall we then rush in and with ruthless hand shatter this beautiful picture?
51961The health journals may mean well enough; but what are you going to do if you are editing a Democratic paper?
51961Then the poet comes to the close of the cowboy''s career in this style:"Do I repent?
51961What could any of them have done with the house full of children of the forest who were hankering for a fresh pail of gore for lunch?
51961What do you think of a man who would open a school with prayer and then converse freely about the alimentary canal?
51961What would you like to know?"
51961What''s your idea in charging me three dollars for a wad of hominy and a piece of parched pork?"
51961When a man is paid three dollars a week to play a Roman soldier, would you have him play the Greek slave?
51961When wealthy people die why do n''t they endow a cast- iron castle with a draw- bridge to it and call it the youmorists''retreat?
51961Where are Sway- Back Sue and Meek- Eyed Government Socks?
51961Where is Knock- Kneed Chemiloon?
51961Where is The- Wall- Eyed- Maiden- With- the- Peeled- Nose?
51961Why are we to- day a free people, with a surplus in the treasury that nobody can get at?
51961Why did they allow my chubby little feet to waddle down to the dangerous ground on which the sad- eyed youmorist must forever stand?
51961Why do n''t they do some good with their money instead of fooling it away on those who are comparatively happy?"
51961Why do you linger and fritter away the heyday of life, when you might skirmish around and win some laurels?
51961Why is everything done to make it pleasant for the rich man and every inducement held ont for the poor man to accumulate more and more poverty?
51961Why is it that so much is said about the tariff by men who do not support their families?
51961Will you rise to the proud pinnacle of fame as a pugilist, boys, or will you plug along as a sorrowing, overworked statesman?
51961Would I assist him in this great work?
51961Would you have me march around three times when my military pants were coming off, and I knew it?
51961You have not?
51961You hear the mellow trill of my bazoo?"
51961You know the little Swede that used to run extra for Old Hotbox on the emigrant awhile?
51961_ A Trip to Northern Wisconsin-- How Foreign Lumber Is manufactured-- Iron Dogs-- A Sad Accident--?
51961_ Parley voo, e pluribus unum, sic semper go braugh!_ Do you understand_ that?_"But he did n''t understand it, so I had to kill him.
51961``` Who taught thy simple heart```` Its pent- up, wildly- warring waste``` Of wanton woe to carol forth upon````` The silent air?
51961```` Who taught thee thus to warble``` In the noontide heat and wrestle with``` Thy deep, corroding grief and joyless woe?
51961|Dear reader, did you ever wrestle with a hen that had a wild, uncontrollable desire to incubate?
51961|What becomes of our bodies?"
51961|Young man, what are you living for?
7404''Is the master at home?'' 7404 _ Not see Sir Walter Scott_?"
7404''Pray, sir,''said the man of golden consequence,''is this a letter of business, or is it a mere letter of introduction?''
74041797(?)
7404And why should the would- be murderers use a knife when they had guns?
7404Did remote prairie cabins in those days have grindstones and carving knives?
7404Had not his wondrous pen penetrated my soul with the consciousness that here was a genius from God''s hand?
7404He retorted,''What the devil did I know about birds?''
7404With her was I not always rich?"
55099Conferences--in bureaucracy-- come high, do n''t they?
55099And do you like a gold basis buried so deep that you ca n''t even see, nor get, a stiver of it?
55099And upon whom did this Tragedy bear the hardest?
55099Are these strutting, preening, vociferating and vociferous Federal Reserve bankers measured-- or measurable-- by that standard?
55099Ask yourself, is a tax of$ 59,974,466, which costs$ 62,896,139 to collect a"painless tax?"
55099But ask yourself if, in a year of commercial disasters and of enforced economies, such leviathan expenses are n''t an outrage?
55099But did they stop there-- after commandeering over$ 100,000,000 of capital and after conscripting over$ 1,800,000,000 of deposits?
55099But it''s a pretty good example, is n''t it?
55099Can any sane or honest man-- outside the ranks of its lolling beneficiaries-- defend any such division of profits as fair or just or equitable?
55099Do they battle for their deposits and by those deposits and the volume of them win their spurs?
55099Do you favor it?
55099Do you know or do you know anybody who does know, or have you a friend who knows of anybody who knows of any such gigantic banking predacity on earth?
55099Do you suppose that officers of any bank not legally so buttressed could"get away"with any such proposition?
55099Do you want capital commandeered at 6 per cent by the use of which are wrung out profits as high as 160 per cent?
55099Do you want deposits-- over$ 1,800,000,000--conscripted at no per cent loaned out at interest charges as high as 87 per cent?
55099Do you want pawnbrokering interest rates charged and Shylockery practiced under the aegis of your flag?
55099Do you want such a Partiality of Pillage whereby parasitical speculation is coddled and the necessary production of real wealth is throttled?
55099Do you want such titanic expense accounts and such altitudinous salaries paid to favored bank officers?
55099Do you want the very height and apex of Special Privilege enthroned and sceptered governing your Republic?
55099Do you want to witness, or be victimized by, Debacles of Drastic Deflation with all the destructions, miseries and disasters in their wake?
55099Do you want unelected and politically appointed satraps parceling out and administering your Nation in twelve satrapies?
55099Do you want your Government to continue its abdication of finance and to continue to be but a mere puppet in the hands of an organized Money- Bund?
55099Gives you an attack of vertigo, does n''t it?
55099How do you like to have your money commandeered for capital and get for one year less than one dollar out of twenty- five dollars made?
55099If the Federal Reserve System could-- as it could-- commandeer capital, could n''t it commandeer and conscript deposits?
55099If the law-- cleverly lobbied through your Congress-- didn''t compel you to do it, would you do it?
55099If this is n''t strutting bureaucracy running amuck with public money, what is it?
55099Impossible, you say?
55099Is n''t one proposition as sane as the other?
55099Is that"democratizing"banking or is it bourbonizing banking?
55099Is that"emancipating credit"or is it shackling it with you wearing the shackles?
55099Is there any more painful tax levied on American industry?
55099Is this twenty- to- one shot"conserving the nation''s resources"or is it practicing the arts of thuggery upon the real production of real wealth?
55099Is this"binding up the nation''s wounds"of finance or is it blood- letting to the point of exhaustion?
55099Is this"credit emancipation"or is it the sandbagging of industry?
55099It makes some difference whose money is being spent, does n''t it?
55099Legal?
55099Not even organized Federal Reserve banditry, not even Amalgamated Shylockery, would have the supernal gall to so sandbag productive industry?
55099Not much competition for Federal Reserve bankers there, is there?
55099Ought n''t the Federal Reserve Bank at Atlanta to put the three ball sign of pawnbrokery over its portals?
55099Ought the real providers of the real capital, upon which stupendous profits were made, to be fobbed off with_ one- thirtieth_ of its real earnings?
55099Ought their money to be commandeered at 6 per cent, profiteered upon at 160 per cent and they be practically sandbagged out of 154 per cent?
55099Private business is one thing, and public business is another thing, when it comes to housing it, is n''t it?
55099Quite some money to suck from the teat of industry, is n''t it?
55099Really, do n''t you?
55099Some gall?
55099Some luscious salaries nesting and nestling there-- to which reference will hereafter be made-- aren''t there?
55099That is, do you know of any reason except your legal helplessness and the bottomless greed of Federal Reserve sandbaggery?
55099That''s plain, is n''t it?
55099Was that banking or was it putrid pawnbrokery?
55099Were Washington, Jefferson, Jackson and Lincoln all wrong when they warned you against special privileges and the encroachments of massed wealth?
55099What became of the lootage of the Federal Reserve System for the year 1921 and what proportion of it did your Government get?
55099What became of this huge lootage wrung from America''s brawn and brain for the year 1920?
55099What is the absolute, final and unquestionable test of a good banker, a real top notcher in his business?
55099What makes them responsible?
55099What price did Federal Reserve lootage pay for this commandeered capital?
55099What was the bludgeon which hit all these commodities on the head and drove them into the pit of loss?
55099When an arrogant creature overrides and oppresses its creators, ought n''t it to be sternly regulated or destroyed?
55099When the misbranded"emancipator of credit"becomes the destroyer of credit, ought n''t the destroyed to emancipate themselves?
55099When there was this drouth of credit and money where real wealth is made, how was the Federal Reserve System opening its irrigation gates of money?
55099When you were befooled into creating the Federal Reserve System, did you create a Frankenstein monster for your own industrial destruction?
55099Which are really the better and more necessary bankers-- the National and State bankers or the Federal Reserve System of parasitical camouflage?
55099Who are really entitled to the largest loans from the huge storage or reservoir of Federal Reserve money?
55099Why do n''t editors of"Fearless Magazines"--about as"fearless"as a galley slave at the oars-- ring the tocsin of alarm?
55099Why do n''t you find these facts elsewhere?
55099Why does n''t the"Independent Press"--about as"independent"as a shackled slave-- blazon them forth?
55099Why have they been hidden from you?
55099Why should they be restricted to a 6 per cent dividend when these Federal Reserve Banks"earned"160 per cent or over 25 times as much?
55099Why, the real producers of the real wealth, the agricultural interests in the U.S.A. Have they had it?
55099Why?
55099Would you of your own free will provide capital at 6 per cent and be gypped out of 154 per cent?
6665Shall we now withhold ourselves from her?
6665Why should not you lend to us?
6665CHAPTER I A UNION IN FORM ONLY When did the sovereign nation of the United States begin?
6665Did it include slaves?
6665Had Congress a right or the power to coerce her into the Union?
6665Had a Congress representing eleven States the right, even if it had the power, to legislate for thirteen sovereign States?
6665Have we not the power to shake off these firebrands?"
6665How had it been done?
6665How will it be when a member from New Hampshire is to make out a road for Georgia?"
6665If Europe was to become the champion of monarchy and legitimacy, why should not America become the guardian of freedom and republicanism?
6665Is it given to the departed to know such a mortal pleasure as vindication?
6665Justice Wilson, of Pennsylvania, thought the question involved even a higher point-- do the people of the United States form a nation?
6665Must it hesitate and temporise while the blood of its citizens was being shed?
6665Should all this good work be undone and the hands turned backward on the dial of liberty by conspiring European monarchs?
6665Should legitimacy cast its blight again on the New World as it had already done on the Old?
6665Should the Holy Alliance be allowed to extend its monarchical compulsion to the Spanish- American republics under the sacred garb of religion?
6665Should the dangerous authority now be given over to the Executive?
6665Should this menace be allowed to continue?
6665Suppose the"monarchists"should again come into national control and pass new Alien and Sedition laws?
6665What caused the change to be made?
6665What offices had these other candidates for the Presidency ever refused?
6665What territorial conquest in the history of the world has been entirely free from criticism?
6665What was meant by"population,"which had been substituted for wealth as a basis of apportioning delegates in the popular branch?
6665What was to become of a veteran who was disabled?
6665What will become of me?
6665Where could these inhabitants of a territory find a protector?
6665Why should the one gain more population and have more political strength than the other?
6665Would Protestant England join the Holy Alliance?
62495''Orilla?'' 62495 Ah, do n''t you know?"
62495At this moment my nose began to itch, but I knew it was sure death to lower my hand to scratch it, and what was I to do, for I could hardly stand it? 62495 Ca n''t you possibly awaken the Governor?"
62495How is it about the boot and shoe business? 62495 How is it,"asked one,"that so many of our kind of people get jobs here?"
62495I say,began the night chief,"when are you going to start in to copy?
62495I wonder how this discovery affected my friend, Frank Rogers?
62495Look yere, Chimmie, wot is dis?
62495So, you''d like me for a partner, would you?
62495Tell me about the hotels, please; are there any of the old land marks left?
62495Tell me,I asked,"what is the force and energy used in producing electricity?
62495The Rosenthals? 62495 This telegram should have been delivered ten hours ago, why was it not?"
62495What is my name, you ask?
62495What''s in it?
62495What''s the matter?
62495Where can I find a boarding house?
62495Who can sing a hymn in this here crowd?
62495Who is in the furniture business away off there in 1999?
62495Who is in the printing business off there on the outskirts of eternity, whose names were once familiar to me?
62495Who sent for you and what''s your name?
62495Who''s in the banking business that I know, away off there on the verge of time?
62495Wo n''t your business do in the morning?
62495Would you mind letting me see that lease?
62495You are the man that has several scalps already attached to your belt and you''d probably like to add mine to the collection, eh?
62495You noticed me just now scratching my nose, did n''t you?
62495''Orilla?''
62495+ Old Names Revived.+"Tell me, please, who are the proprietors of the department stores in 1999?"
62495Another libation was indulged in, and looking at the other window Slack shuddered, exclaiming,"Ah, there is the Dutchman after me; what does he want?
62495B. Cohen( Cowan), chief operator?"
62495Can anyone present tell me if it is really so that he could copy 50 words behind, all night?"
62495Do any of the old names appear?"
62495Do you understand me?
62495Do you wonder then that I call this a great age?"
62495Entering the machine room with a jaunty, nonchalant air, he began singing in a high pitched voice,"How did you like my oil?
62495He said he was up against it and he could not get out a paper unless he had some telegraph news, and what was he to do?
62495How did you like my oil?"
62495I addressed the robber:''I say, Mr. Highwayman, my nose itches me pretty badly, wo n''t you please allow me to lower my arm to scratch it?''"
62495I need$ 20 very badly today; may I draw the same?
62495Is n''t that lovely?"
62495On Page vi, Add question mark to the story Where Did You Get That Oil?
62495The darkey drove around several blocks finally stopping to ask,''Where did you say you wanted to go, boss?''
62495WHERE DID YOU GET THAT OIL?
62495What was he doing around here, do you suppose?"
62495Where will I find his remains?"
62495this to the tune of"Where did you get that hat?"
47929''What''s hand- grenades?'' 47929 --and George came up and heard them talking about it----""Heard who talking about it?"
47929--but his father came home and saw it the first thing, and----"Saw the hatchet?
47929And agin the Indians?
47929And that you had slept on the ground with only the sky for a kiver?
47929And that your feet bled in marching over the frozen ground?
47929And the-- the person?
47929Are you trying, sir, to show your contempt for the Court?
47929But why do you ask?
47929Did yer ever saw three balls hangin''over my do''?
47929Did yer say yer''d fought for the Union?
47929Does n''t yo''know my name hain''t Oppenheimer?
47929Flint- picker?
47929Gave who?
47929George did?
47929George who?
47929George''s apple tree?
47929Has n''t he any family in the town?
47929Has n''t the man any friends?
47929Has our landlord----?
47929He said----"His father said?
47929How does that wood burn?
47929How on earth could you ever think of doing such things?
47929How tasteful is your Dress,he cried, in well- feigned Ecstacy;"it can not surely be that your Musical Education has been neglected?
47929How would you like to be companion to a literary man?
47929I?
47929Is it the wife, ye mane?
47929Is n''t that logic? 47929 Is n''t there anybody to look after him?"
47929Is yo''satisfied?
47929Lives here?
47929Margaret Callaghan,_ is_ that thing your husband?
47929Nephew Frederick,said he,"after this treatment, can you ask me if I am going?"
47929No, no, no; said he''d rather lose a thousand apple trees than----"Said he''d rather George would?
47929No? 47929 Nothing?"
47929Oh, George would rather have his father lie?
47929Oh, George? 47929 On whad?"
47929Out there now?
47929Said he cut his father?
47929Said he''d rather have a thousand apple trees?
47929Say,said Stephen,"sweetest sigher; Say, shall Stephen spouseless stay?"
47929So George came up and heard them talking about it, and he----"What did he cut it down for?
47929Sure, mum, he has a family; was n''t he married this blessed mornin''?
47929Thirty years( with a weary sigh), And then he thoughtfully added,"Why?"
47929Vot you vantsh mit your schnapps und lager? 47929 Wal-- no-- I come dasignin''----""To see my Ma?
47929Well, do the goats bunt when you nishiate a fresh candidate?
47929Well, good gracious, Washington, why do n''t you come out and tell me what it is? 47929 Well, one day George''s father----""George who?"
47929Whad yer goin''ter do?
47929Whad yo''doin''dat for?
47929Whad yo''mean?
47929Whar''s de c''lateral?
47929Whar''s de fo''cents?
47929What Margaret?
47929What about-- those taxes?
47929What apple tree?
47929What apple tree?
47929What can you do?
47929What did he tell him?
47929What do you raise your leg for?
47929What do you want?
47929What does this mean?
47929What means all this?
47929What rods?
47929What think you of that?
47929What was they talking about?
47929What''s the price of wood?
47929What, have you raised on_ your_ wood, too? 47929 When?
47929Where did you get on?
47929Who did?
47929Who gave it to him?
47929Who''s he?
47929Who, I? 47929 Whose country?"
47929Whose little hatchet?
47929Why did n''t you get some man to come and attend to the dog?
47929Why do you ask?
47929Why, yes, of course I am; but what set you to thinking of that?
47929Would you rather,said she,"hear it altogether, when you come in, or have it in little bits, head and tail, all of a jumble?"
47929Yes, the wife; where is she?
47929Yes; must be careful with the hatchet----"What hatchet?
47929Yes; told him that he must be careful with the hatchet----"Who must be careful?
47929You are traveling, h''m?
47929You ca n''t mean it: Actually_ living_ out there?
47929You did n''t tell him that?
47929You shall be the gentleman?
47929You want to see my Pa, I s''pose?
47929_ Dat_ ring?
47929_ Nothing_, Washington? 47929 _ Our_ Margaret?
47929''Is n''t there any man at all about?''
47929''Then,''says he,''where''s your master?''
47929''What of it?''
47929( What would the Bonnie Charlie say, If he could see that crowd to- day?)
47929*****_ Minister_( at baptismal font):"Name, please?"
47929Ai n''t it cute to see a Yankee Take sech everlastin''pains, All to git the Devil''s thankee Helpin''on''em weld their chains?
47929Ai n''t there no way of stoppin''it?''
47929Ai n''t ye got no sinse at all?"
47929Am I my Aunt Kiziah, or am I your brother Paul?
47929An''says I,''How?''
47929And King Solomon was n''t feeling right good and he said:"Why could n''t the brat have been twins and stopped this bother?"
47929And everybody said they did n''t know anything about it, and----""Anything about what?"
47929And he said,''Who has cut down my favorite apple tree?''"
47929And his father told him----""Told who?"
47929And his father----""Whose father?"
47929And how is Dolly?
47929And, Nephew Frederick-- h''m!--can you lend me three dollars for the hackman?
47929Are we_ never_ to get to a cheaper country?
47929As a hardship, he ca n''t be beat; and what are the rogues sent to prison for but to suffer punishment?
47929At last he came to a splendid apple tree, his father''s favorite, and cut it down and----""Who cut it down?"
47929But then we would have to leave Rudder Grange for at least three weeks, and how could we do that?
47929But we saw the dog-- is he as savage yet?"
47929Ca n''t you let him in?
47929Can any man or beast be taught to be mechanically polite?
47929Can it be That all that arduous wooing not atones For Saturday shortness of trade dollars three?
47929Come, where have you disappeared to all these years, and are you from there now, or where are you from?"
47929Dear, dear, where have you dropped from?
47929Did I lave fur that?
47929Did n''t I tell ye, Larry, not to be afther ringin''at the owle gintleman''s knocker?
47929Do you have to attend all the sittings?"
47929Do you mean to say that OUR Margaret has married that-- that good- for- nothing, inebriated wretch?"
47929Does the Emperor of Russia attend the conclaves of the Governors of the provinces?
47929Faix an''did n''t he get me into trouble wid my missus, the haythin?
47929For this have we been kept here long, so carefully inurned?
47929GEORGE W. PECK PECK''S BAD BOY"Say, are you a Mason, or a Nodfellow, or anything?"
47929Had_ he_ been sold?
47929Hain''t they made your env''ys wiz?
47929Hain''t they sold your colored seamen?
47929Happy and prosperous in the Far West, was n''t I?
47929He called the gentleman back and said,"Friend, how long have you been we d?"
47929He just catches your eye, and when he says,"Do n''t you think so, sir?"
47929He of the nose nodded eagerly at that, and wrote,"Also you make to be washed my shirt?"
47929He ordered the goat hisself, and we filled the order, do n''t you see?
47929He recommenced more artfully:"Do you know Carrots?"
47929He told him----""George told him?"
47929He told him----""Who told him?"
47929He wrote at once,"How much you pay?"
47929He----""What for?"
47929His----""Who gave him the little hatchet?"
47929How can I come?
47929How could you mix our ashes in one vast, ancestral hash?"
47929How d''ye sell your wood_ this_ time?"
47929I did----''""His father did?"
47929I heard the bell and the pilot''s hail,"What''s_ your_ price for wood?"
47929I saw a light just ahead on the right-- shall we hail?"
47929I suppose you do n''t mind?"
47929I wrote:"You wish employment?"
47929I''ve done enough-- a saint I''ve been-- Wo n''t that atone?
47929I----''""Who could n''t tell a lie?"
47929Is it ate wid him?
47929Is it howld on, ye say?
47929Is it possible?
47929Is n''t that unanswerable?"
47929It was----''""His father could n''t?"
47929JOHN TOWNSEND TROWBRIDGE FRED TROVER''S LITTLE IRON- CLAD Did I never tell you the story?
47929Now, suppose they-- or he-- the man whose brains are out-- goes about with his coffin under his arm, like my worthy uncle?
47929One day George Washington''s father gave him a little hatchet for a----""Gave who a little hatchet?"
47929One day his father----""Whose father?"
47929One day, after he had delivered himself vigorously, Lincoln said to him:"Mr. Chase, are you an Episcopalian?"
47929One morning, meeting by the fence, the neighbor said,"How is it, Mr. Alcott, you are never troubled with bugs, while my vines are crowded with them?"
47929Pa is real fat, but he knew he got hit, and he grunted and said,''What you boys doin''?''
47929Said he"Wilt open the gate?"
47929Say, did you know they keep a goat in a livery stable so the horses wo n''t get sick?
47929Shall I send it?"
47929Smoke?
47929The matter with him?
47929The other pilot''s voice was again heard on deck--"How much_ have_ you?"
47929There now-- why, you look perfectly natural; ageing a little, just a little, but you''d have known him anywhere, would n''t you, Polly?"
47929This is what the cronies said to each other:"''What is them things, Ike?''
47929Want to be a postmaster?
47929Want to tackle_ me_ in, du ye?
47929We begin to think it''s natur To take sarse an''not be riled-- Who''d expect to see a tater All on eend at bein''biled?
47929We said:"And he told him that----""Who told him what?"
47929What do you want to be so reserved and distrustful with an old friend like me for?
47929What do you want?"
47929What does a young blade of twenty- two know?
47929What have you been doing with your ancestors''remains?
47929What is a peach?
47929What, indeed, could invest human flesh with such terrors-- what but this?
47929When do they come into your story?"
47929When she came back she said pityingly:"Why, Mamie, have you been here alone all the time?
47929Who could take care of our garden, our poultry, our horse, and cow, and all their complicated belongings?
47929Will you not oblige----?"
47929Wut''s the use o''meetin''-goin''Every Sabbath, wet or dry, Ef it''s right to go a- mowin''Feller- men like oats an''rye?
47929_ Book of Etiquette!_ What is conventionalism without the inborn sense?
47929_ Patient_( excitedly):"I will recover?"
47929_ When did they sleep?_ Wood taken in, the_ Caravan_ again took her place in the middle of the stream, paddling on as usual.
47929_ Wut''ll_ git your dander riz?
47929_ Wut''ll_ make ye act like freemen?
47929going?"
47929or"What is your opinion, sir?"
47929replied the Captain--(captains did swear a little in those days);"what''s the odd_ quarter_ for, I should like to know?
8154Horses,said he,"are not very good companions for a young man; and John, why do you want a horse?"
8154What can be your reasons?
8154What shall we do?
8154Why will you not?
8154Why?
8154And who was Fisher Ames, that his"Speeches"should be gathered and re- published sixty- three years after his death?
8154Britain is mighty, and what are we?
8154General Washington, who rode near the front of his column, asked a man who was chopping wood by the roadside:"Which way is the Hessian Picket?"
8154That was not so very difficult to answer; but there was another question:_ Can_ we?
8154Then there was another question: Will the people at home sustain us?
8154Upon this being reported to General Sullivan, he glanced around at Captain St. Clair and asked:"What is to be done?"
8154What would General Howe do next?
8154Who were these adroit and faithful Culpers?
8154_ Ought_ we to sever the tie which binds us to the mother country?
44879A little piece of bread?
44879Ai n''t you got no sense?
44879Ai n''t you got nothin''ter bind you down ter one place?
44879Ai nt I dun heatin''de skillet?
44879Air you one?
44879Air you perfeckly happy in this here world?
44879Alf, are you crazy?
44879All right, but ai n''t you going to take off your wedding clothes?
44879An''musn''t I grab holt of the calf''s tail when he shoves it through the fence?
44879And will he hurt me?
44879Ansy,said the captain,"this is a beautiful and romantic country; but do you not grow tired of living here all the time?"
44879Are the people throughout this neighborhood very peaceable?
44879Are they buried there?
44879Are you glad to see me, Flanders?
44879Are you not going to skin it?
44879Are you sure the medicine will not hurt me?
44879Are you the justice of the peace?
44879Are you troubled?
44879But do you suppose he knows how to use it?
44879But how''s I gwine ter preach?
44879But will it not take up too much of your time?
44879Ca n''t we pay our bill?
44879Can we do anything for her?
44879Daddy?
44879Daddy?
44879Dave-- Dave, wo n''t you forgib me?
44879De moon ai n''t shinin'', is it?
44879Did she? 44879 Did you hear whut I said?"
44879Did you see er tall rock stickin''up outen the groun''?
44879Did''n''I tell you it wuz bad luck ter bring er dog er feeshin''?
44879Didn''you tell me erbout de good man dat died? 44879 Do er muley steer like de sweet grass dat grows in de cornder o''de fence up ergin de bottom rail?"
44879Do er yaller dog like er fried chicken?
44879Do n''t live nowhere near here, I reckon?
44879Do you believe that the Lord always keeps his promises?
44879Do you drink?
44879Do you hear them, John?
44879Do you like to fish, Alf?
44879Do you like to hunt?
44879Do you not want to know the other letters?
44879Do you want work?
44879Doan you yere dem wolves? 44879 Does it concern your soul?"
44879Does you allus''spect ter lib in poverty?
44879Does you call it serious fur er man ter run outen de house ter keep frum bein''burnt up an''den git shot down like er deer? 44879 Does you know dat it is er han''?"
44879Eva, as you say, love could be the only result of our association; and now do you not know that there can be but one true result of our love?
44879Eva,said John,"are you happy?"
44879Fine- lookin''gal they''ve got over thar, ai n''t she? 44879 Flanders,"said I,"you know that I have to make my living by literary work?"
44879Fur pity sake,the woman continued,"is he er red shanghai ur old Satan''s whut not?
44879Grasshoppers, ai nt da?
44879Have you got any hope in the next world, Hendricks?
44879Have you?
44879Hickory switches grow putty plentiful long here, do n''t they?
44879How I know whar he is?
44879How a true estimate?
44879How about Patterson''s boy?
44879How air you goin''ter do? 44879 How air you goin''ter git it?"
44879How air you goin''ter pizen him? 44879 How air you, sir?
44879How are you going to cook him, then?
44879How do you know it?
44879How do you know whuther you like me ur not, when you do n''t know much erbout me?
44879How is it with you?
44879How long do you expect to remain in this part of the country?
44879How so?
44879How?
44879How?
44879If I am so sympathetic, then why should I disturb you so?
44879Is I troubled? 44879 Is de han''cold?"
44879Is it ez wa''m ez mine?
44879Is it possible that they are burning up?
44879Is she going to leave her?
44879Is that rain?
44879Is you sho dat''s er J?
44879Is you sho it is er S?
44879It would be ez good ez understandin''uv er book, would n''t it?
44879Jule, you ai n''t erfeerd ter stay by yo''se''f, air you?
44879Just now you spoke of your uncle,said Potter;"do you live with him?"
44879Mandy,said Mrs. Forest, addressing a colored woman who had come to assist in waiting on the guests,"do you know where Alf is?"
44879Matter? 44879 Merciful heavens, what is to become of me?
44879More than all the houses an''railroads an''steamboats put together?
44879Mr. Potter, did you ever kill a bear?
44879Never wuz cut in the face with one, I reckon?
44879No chance whuteber fur er mistake in dis yere matter?
44879No,he replied;"how can that be?"
44879Oh, Lawd, is you gwine ter let de elements kill yo''po''ole servant? 44879 Oh, wo n''t you forgib me?
44879Oh, you know what I mean? 44879 Out prospecting?"
44879Promised you that you would be perfectly happy in the next world?
44879Rather odd that a colored man, so fond of political life, should live out here away from the States, is n''t it, Alf?
44879Sah?
44879Say,said Juckels,"what made you go over thar ter the wider''s?"
44879Sho it''s fresh?
44879Suppose I refuse to take the medicine?
44879Thank you; but what business can you have with me at this time of night?
44879The fiddle is your favorite instrument, I suppose?
44879Then how do you know he would burn me?
44879Then what made you say that he would?
44879Then why do n''t you want ter go ter the next world at once? 44879 Throw po'', old, harmless Tildy out of the house?
44879Tuck it all right, did he?
44879Up thar in the bottle, but will that fix him?
44879Well, but do you know that you contribute largely to my failure?
44879Well, is not this a most befitting time? 44879 Well, my young friend, have you enjoyed your nap?"
44879Well, whut you reckon I went thar fur?
44879Whar do you live?
44879Whar is his saddlebags?
44879Whar''s any possum?
44879What are you racing around here like a mule for-- say? 44879 What did you come here for?"
44879What difference did it make? 44879 What do you suppose has become of him?"
44879What do you want here?
44879What do you want with me?
44879What does that mean?
44879What does this mean?
44879What for?
44879What has happened; ca n''t you speak?
44879What have you got?
44879What is it you would have me do?
44879What is it?
44879What is that?
44879What is the cause of that bright light over yonder?
44879What is the matter?
44879What is your name?
44879What is your name?
44879What is?
44879What makes you cry, mamma?
44879What makes you so bad?
44879What noise is that?
44879What sort of meat do you call that?
44879What will you do with them?
44879What''s miserable?
44879What''s the matter?
44879What''s the matter?
44879What''s unhappy?
44879What, do you mean that you really want to go with me?
44879What, you know that you are goin''ter die ter- day?
44879Where are you from?
44879Where are your women folks?
44879Where is Alf?
44879Where is that morphine?
44879Where shall we strike for?
44879Who is old Alf?
44879Who lives over that way?
44879Who made it?
44879Who''s there?
44879Whut b''ar?
44879Whut is yo''n?
44879Whut sort?
44879Why could n''t I?
44879Why did one of them bite?
44879Why do you say you hope; kain''t you tell me now?
44879Why, Shorty, how are you?
44879Why, then?
44879Why?
44879Why?
44879Will you please get our horse?
44879Wo n''t you walk on home wid us?
44879Yes, you are acquainted with the extremes,the friend rejoined,"but do you know much of the intermediate?
44879Yes,Potter replied;"but what new fact has caused you to speak of it again?
44879You are an excellent shot, I suppose?
44879You do n''t mean to say that you have had that licker for several days?
44879You doan feel so much wus, does you, honey?
44879You have n''t read all these here, have you?
44879You love me, do n''t you?
44879You scoundrel,exclaimed the captain, springing to his feet,"how dare you speak in such a manner to this young lady?"
44879You will be fixed up in style, wo n''t you?
44879You wo n''t feel too bad ef I tell you suthin'', will you?
44879You work with Mr. Patterson on shares, do n''t you?
44879You''ll be a good boy, wo n''t you?
44879''All done, Dave?''
44879''How can this be done?''
44879''Stop; do n''t you see you are about to shove me off?''
44879''Where can I find him?''
44879Ai n''t dat de sun shinin''dar ergin de wall?"
44879Ai n''t my fiddle''fused ter talk ter me, an''ai n''t er old song dun failed ter fetch de co''n- bread crumbs o''comfort?
44879Ai n''t this here John Lucas?"
44879Alf, what are you blubbering about?"
44879Alf?"
44879Are we not going to Kentucky?"
44879But what with?"
44879Caze why?
44879Come, whut do you say?"
44879Could he not pretend that he would marry her, and afterward make his escape?
44879Could he not rush upon her?
44879Did Martin cross old Tildy?
44879Did anybody yere you tole''em?"
44879Did old Patterson cross Tildy?
44879Did you come that er way?"
44879Do n''t you know you are wearing out the carpet?
44879Do n''t you think so, Eva?"
44879Does folks cross old Tildy?
44879Eva, ca n''t you say something?"
44879Eva, have you got any fresh water handy?"
44879Ever get bilious?"
44879Goin''ter kill you, eh?
44879Gwine read''em atter while, ai n''t you, John?"
44879Had anyone heard me?
44879Have n''t we, Moll?"
44879Hold it under his nose?"
44879How do it hit you?"
44879How does dem obserwations strike de''sembly?"
44879How you gittin''long ober dar, John?"
44879I heard one man say:"Wonder wut dat cuis- lookin''ole man is er pokin''''roun''yere fur?"
44879I reckon you''ve noticed me at church, hai''nt you?"
44879I tell you dis yere book couldn''git er long widout de J. Whut''s dis yere one?"
44879I-- whut de matter wid''em?"
44879Is you so blind dat you kaint see dat monst''us rattlesnake crossin''de road right up dar?"
44879Is you sufferin''much pain, little gal?"
44879John, is that yo''hoss hitched out thar?"
44879John, jes look at dat man, will you?
44879John, kain''t-- Oh, Hebenly Father----""Daddy?"
44879Jule, wouldn''you like ter know er bout de J?"
44879Just as they were entering the yard, a woman''s shrill voice cried out:"My stairs, John, who on the top uv the yeth have you picked up this time?
44879Look here, Mr. Potter, whar you frum, nohow?"
44879Mr. Potter, do you think I''m learnin''how to talk any better than I did?"
44879Must I call the jestice uv the peace, ur shoot you?"
44879Now, air you, in the bloom o''yo''youth and beauty, goin''to cross po'', old, harmless Tildy?"
44879Now, do n''t you think it is erbout time we was havin''er settlement?"
44879Now, how do he go?"
44879Now, whut''s de matter?
44879Oh, fur God''s sake, kain''t you he''p me?
44879Oh, my friends-- you-- you----""What is the matter?"
44879Openin''yo''eyes in''stonishment, is you?
44879Potter?"
44879Potter?"
44879Recollect that song old Patsy Bolivar used to sing--''When this old coat was new?''"
44879Remember the time we struck that old negro for a pint of peach brandy?
44879Ricolleck?"
44879Salary?
44879Say, can you sing Patsy''s song?"
44879Say, did you tell Lucas that I had axed you ter marry me?"
44879Say, ef you''ll go my way I''ll ride behind you?"
44879She nodded her head and smiled-- a snaggle- tooth grin-- and said:"How air yer, Brother Mayberry?"
44879Then there occurred a whispering of which Blake caught the following:"Think that''s ernuff?"
44879Think I bought this carpet to have it scuffed out this way?
44879Was it the justice of the peace whom the woman had under her control?
44879Well, is everything ready?"
44879Wen I had shuck han''s wid him, he said:"Is dis yo''daughter wid you?"
44879What can come with such slowness as a wished- for day- break?
44879What did old Tildy do?
44879What do you say, John?"
44879What do you think of it?"
44879What do you think of that young lady, John?"
44879What is the greatest business stimulant?
44879What sort of a time have you had since I saw you last?"
44879What sort of wedding- toggery have you got?"
44879What''s de matter?
44879What''s that noise?"
44879What''s yo''n?"
44879What, then, was the trouble?
44879Where is John?"
44879Where''s your room?"
44879Who is that coming?"
44879Whut did Tildy do?
44879Whut does yo''se''l think erbout it?"
44879Whut is dat suthin''?
44879Whut time is it?"
44879Whut you come talk dat way fur, say?"
44879Whut''s happened?
44879Why did I on er sudden lean ergin er tree?
44879Why do n''t you go somewhere and sit down and behave like a human being?
44879Why do n''t you pray fur death?"
44879Why not go to the Indian Territory, the Cherokee Nation, for instance, and amuse yourself by studying the habits of the Indian farmer?"
44879Why on earth, madam, do you care to see me?"
44879Wo n''t you come ter the house, an''take pot- luck with us?
44879Would morning never come?
44879Would n''t it be awful fur the people ter come here ter- morrer an''find Brother Mayberry with a hole through his beautiful head?
44879Would you try a little?"
44879You approve of the plan?"
44879You have killed a number of them, I suppose?"
44879You have made a study of the Indian in his wild state, but do you know anything of him as a citizen?
44879You''ve hearn uv fellers what b''l''eves that er pistol sometimes snaps, but er knife do n''t, hain''t you?"
30372''What''s the matter?'' 30372 A lesson to him?
30372A man in the village here?
30372A pound?
30372Ai n''t we all of us bringing you money every day? 30372 Ai n''t you hungry?"
30372All this for saving your hat? 30372 Although I may be compelled to stay here all night?"
30372And I''ll have it yet, Mrs. Trafton-- do you hear that?
30372And did n''t you find him?
30372And do you ever fish?
30372And he goes into the hermit''s cave?
30372And how much did the work come to?
30372And suppose I am going to the tavern,repeated the fisherman in a defiant tone,"have you got anything to say against it?"
30372And what am I to do, Mr. Jones? 30372 And what will you do with his murderer?"
30372And why would n''t she pay you?
30372And you deliberately left him there, when it would have been no trouble to give him a passage back?
30372And you saved me?
30372And you, Andrew Jackson, what can you take?
30372And you,said the old man abruptly,"what do you do?"
30372Andrew Jackson, did you strike Bill with a whip?
30372Are you afraid of him?
30372Are you crazy, wife?
30372Are you going to stand it?
30372Are you going to stay long in Boston?
30372Are you in a hurry?
30372Are you ready to give me that money?
30372Are you sure of that?
30372Are you the owner of this shop?
30372Are you traveling?
30372Bill Benton,said Mrs. Badger in an awful voice,"did you strike Andrew with a hoe?"
30372Bill knocked you down with a hoe?
30372Boy, where is that money?
30372But I thought you said you had met me at Cook''s Harbor?
30372But have you no friend who will lend you the money?
30372But how am I going to get along without you?
30372But how am I going to get ready your shirts and socks so soon?
30372But how could he get off?
30372But is there any ground for assumption that he is insane?
30372But my aunt?
30372But should I not call the doctor?
30372But what could possibly make him crazy?
30372But what shall I do, Robert, if Mr. Jones comes upon me to pay the mortgage when you arc gone?
30372But what''s to hinder his attacking me when I''m asleep?
30372But why do n''t he come home?
30372But why need you? 30372 But would carry it myself?"
30372But you do n''t expect to be a fisherman when you grow up?
30372But,objected Robert,"how can I build an addition to the house?
30372Ca n''t you tell us, John?
30372Ca n''t, hey? 30372 Can I see her?"
30372Can you give me a clew?
30372Can you tell what was your last name?
30372Carriage, sir?
30372Carry your bag, sir?
30372Could n''t you dig some yourself?
30372Did Mr. Badger send you for me?
30372Did he always drink?
30372Did he buy anything?
30372Did he give it to you, Jane?
30372Did he say where he was going?
30372Did my uncle send you?
30372Did n''t Robert find you here, standin''by the dead body of his uncle?
30372Did n''t feel it, did yer?
30372Did n''t he tell you where he was going to put it?
30372Did you do that, Bill?
30372Did you ever carry a valise for me?
30372Did you ever hear of a man named Charles Waldo?
30372Did you expect to get the boat for nothing?
30372Did you find it in any of my pockets?
30372Did you have a pleasant trip?
30372Did you have a whip in your hand, Andrew?
30372Did you have that money when I saw you coming out of the tavern yard?
30372Did you mean to leave him there all night?
30372Did you strike Bill with it?
30372Did you think I was going to stay on the island?
30372Do n''t his bankers know where he is?
30372Do n''t you think he deserved it?
30372Do n''t you think it''s your real name, then?
30372Do you believe this? 30372 Do you call it a pretty good article?"
30372Do you know him?
30372Do you know the way to the Astor House?
30372Do you know where he has hidden it?
30372Do you know where he is?
30372Do you know where it is?
30372Do you know, Aunt Jane, I sometimes think that brighter days are coming to both of us? 30372 Do you like Robert?"
30372Do you mean it?
30372Do you mean to say that you refused to take him off?
30372Do you mean to say, Mr. Fairfax, that when you had your hand in my pocket just now you were asleep?
30372Do you mind telling me about yourself?
30372Do you often steal in your sleep?
30372Do you own this cottage?
30372Do you refuse to take me in your boat then?
30372Do you see anything to laugh at in me?
30372Do you tarry there?
30372Do you think I am made of money? 30372 Do you think he keeps a good deal of money by him?"
30372Does he get his groceries here or in the city?
30372Does he have much silver in the house?
30372Does he say so?
30372Does he?
30372Does his wife wear diamonds?
30372Does n''t your boy do errands for the hermit?
30372Does the hermit always stay at home in the evening?
30372Does this Irving stay down here himself?
30372For me?
30372For what? 30372 Frank, folks say you''re thinkin''of gettin''married?"
30372George Randolph, do you want to know my opinion of you?
30372Had you any suspicion that your son was stolen?
30372Has Bob been in here?
30372Has anything happened to Robert?
30372Has he got many books?
30372Has my nephew been here?
30372Has n''t come here for his dram, has he?
30372Have n''t I given you three days to stay? 30372 Have n''t you any tea, aunt-- for yourself, I mean?"
30372Have you any money now?
30372Have you any remembrance of your real name?
30372Have you anything for me to do, aunt?
30372Have you been spending any more money?
30372Have you ever thought of life and its uses-- I mean of the uses of your own life? 30372 Have you ever wondered,"asked the hermit abruptly,"why I have left the haunts of men and retired to this out- of- the- way spot?"
30372Have you given Mrs. Trafton any warning?
30372Have you gone crazy?
30372Have you got money to pay your fare?
30372Have you had a difficulty with Bill?
30372Have you had anything to eat to- day?
30372Have you no hope of ever again seeing your son?
30372He is an angel, is he? 30372 Here, you, Bob,"he said,"Is your aunt at home?"
30372How am I impudent?
30372How am I known in the village?
30372How came he there?
30372How came you so far out at sea on a frail raft? 30372 How can I thank you?
30372How can I thank you?
30372How can you advise me to do that, aunt?
30372How can you ask such a thing, John?
30372How can you tell such a lie?
30372How d''ye do, Sands?
30372How dare you talk to me in that impertinent way? 30372 How dare you talk to me in that way, you young fisherman?"
30372How dare you treat my aunt so meanly?
30372How did it happen, sir?
30372How did you come here?
30372How did you find out?
30372How do people call me?
30372How do you feel?
30372How do you know it is the same one?
30372How do you like tacklin''him yourself, my dear? 30372 How does she know I''m young?"
30372How far is it?
30372How is his health?
30372How large is this mortgage?
30372How long ago?
30372How much did you pay me for doin''it? 30372 How much do you charge?"
30372How much does the estate amount to probably?
30372How much is she to pay for the work?
30372How much is the cheapest?
30372How much must I pay for a stateroom?
30372How old would your son be now?
30372How shall I direct you, sir? 30372 How soon will he be able to travel?"
30372How then does he expect to be your heir?
30372How was it?
30372How was that?
30372I believe this young gentleman is Master Herbert Irving? 30372 I could n''t help it, could I?"
30372I could n''t refuse to sell him what he asked for, could I? 30372 I got you off well, did n''t I?"
30372I have n''t said anything impudent to you to- day, have I?
30372I hope you came by the money honestly, Robert?
30372I hope you do n''t doubt it?
30372I suppose Dick is a boy?
30372I suppose you have a berth?
30372I suppose you know where my uncle''s money goes?
30372I suppose you pray for your cousin''s death, then?
30372I suppose you understand what it is?
30372I suppose you''d like to get me on shore so that you might run off with my boat?
30372I suppose your stateroom contains two berths?
30372I suppose your uncle does not find fishing very remunerative?
30372I want to know what business you had with my pocketbook in your hand?
30372I wonder how he found me out?
30372I wonder whether Bill''s asleep?
30372I''m glad you''ve come, pa. Are you goin''to flog Bill now?
30372In gold?
30372Is Robert at home?
30372Is anybody likely to hire it?
30372Is anything the matter?
30372Is he dead, mister?
30372Is he round about home?
30372Is it possible you believe that I would rob you, my kind benefactor?
30372Is it so very lucky to make two dollars?
30372Is n''t your uncle a fisherman?
30372Is she goin''to leave?
30372Is that necessary?
30372Is that the way you repay me for keeping you out of the poorhouse?
30372Is there no stage that goes to that part of the city?
30372Is this stage yours?
30372Is your aunt at home, young man?
30372Is your mother at home?
30372It is his being out of the way that makes you the heir, is it not?
30372Julian,said he,"do you know why I am traveling-- what brought me here?
30372Looks rather mysterious-- doesn''t it?
30372May I ask what is your errand in New York?
30372Mean? 30372 Meaning me?"
30372Mr. Badger, will you allow this young ruffian to accuse your own son of falsehood?
30372Mr. Fairfax,he said,"shall I tell you what I think of your story?"
30372Mrs. Jones did n''t pay you enough to buy all those, did she?
30372No doubt I shall, but surely you did not buy them all for twenty- five cents?
30372No, why should I? 30372 Now what''s to prevent my explorin''this here shanty and makin''off with any valuables I come across?"
30372Now, will you go?
30372Oh, Robert, what shall we do?
30372Oh, that''s it, is it?
30372Oh, you expect me to spend all my time working for my support, do you? 30372 Oh, you will, will you?"
30372Perhaps you''d like to try him yourself?
30372Please, mister,he said,"wo n''t you come quick?
30372Say, boss, shall I carry that v''lise?
30372Say, do you see that man in the doorway?
30372Shall I go for the constable?
30372Shall I speak to him before entering?
30372Shall I take care of it for you, Robert?
30372Shall we send it to you anywhere?
30372Shirking your work, are you?
30372So I am your good man?
30372So you are back?
30372So you sustain him in his impudence, do you?
30372So you turn against your lawful wife, do you?
30372So you want a place?
30372So you''re stubborn, are you? 30372 So you''re talking against me behind my back, are you?"
30372So you''ve got back young man?
30372So your uncle''s burdens have been laid on your young shoulders? 30372 So, my young friend, you arc quite recovered from your bath?"
30372Stop that, will you?
30372Suppose he does?
30372Suppose you find him?
30372Tell me,said Robert,"did you live with a man named Badger in the town of Dexter?"
30372That boy? 30372 Then I may call to see you, sir?"
30372Then suppose we go to sleep?
30372Then the only difference between us is five cents?
30372Then what have you done with it-- lost it, eh?
30372Then where is it?
30372Then why did you try to rob me?
30372Then why is he not here?
30372Then will you follow my advice?
30372Then you forgive me for hitting you with a hoe, Andrew?
30372To Boston? 30372 To find me?
30372To the tavern, I suppose?
30372Tom Scott, are you goin''to see your wife sassed by a boy?
30372Trafton,said he,"where is that dollar you promised to pay me this morning?"
30372Trafton,said the landlord,"do n''t you think you''ve had enough?"
30372Was that all that passed?
30372Was the money yours?
30372Was there any difficulty between Bob and his uncle?
30372Well, Robert,she said abruptly,"what''s wanted?"
30372Well, boy, what do you want?
30372Well, how do you like it?
30372Well, my good man,he said patronizingly,"how much do I owe you?"
30372Well, tell her I''ve come to have a talk with her, do you hear?
30372Were they going to murder me?
30372Were you afraid I would forget to pay you?
30372Were you mistaken about this?
30372What are you goin''to do?
30372What are you going for, Master Herbert?
30372What book have you got there, Bob?
30372What boy?
30372What business had you with my pocketbook, you thief?
30372What business is it of mine that he has to stay on the island all night? 30372 What can I do for ye, Robert?"
30372What can he do?
30372What can that man want of me?
30372What can you remember?
30372What could have brought him here?
30372What did Andrew say to you when you came home from work?
30372What did you do that for?
30372What did your uncle say?
30372What do I mean?
30372What do you call cheap?
30372What do you mean by that, John?
30372What do you mean by that? 30372 What do you mean, Cornelia?"
30372What do you mean, wife?
30372What do you mean? 30372 What do you mean?"
30372What do you mean?
30372What do you mean?
30372What do you mean?
30372What do you prefer?
30372What do you propose, wife?
30372What do you say to the Widder Trafton''s house?
30372What do you think he had the impudence to say to me, mother?
30372What do you want me to do? 30372 What does my uncle owe him for?"
30372What does this mean, Julian?
30372What does this mean?
30372What for?
30372What have I ever done, Aunt Jane, that you should think me a thief?
30372What have you done with Robert, John Trafton?
30372What have you done with him?
30372What have you got for breakfast?
30372What have you got to say, hey?
30372What if she did? 30372 What is a stateroom?"
30372What is it, Andrew?
30372What is it, Robert?
30372What is it? 30372 What is it?"
30372What is my father''s name?
30372What is that?
30372What is this I hear?
30372What is your name?
30372What kind of a suit would you like?
30372What made him attack you?
30372What made you do that?
30372What makes you look so sober, Robert?
30372What makes you so prejudiced against the poor man? 30372 What makes you so sober, my boy?"
30372What makes you think so, Ben?
30372What more do they say of me?
30372What mystery is here? 30372 What next?"
30372What of him?
30372What reason have you for saying that?
30372What shall I do, sir?
30372What shall I ever do without Robert?
30372What sort of business is it that''s going to take so long?
30372What time do you expect he will whip you-- the old brute?
30372What was your son''s name?
30372What will you do about it, I''d like to know?
30372What will your mother say to your taking all this?
30372What young fisherman?
30372What''s that?
30372What''s the matter here?
30372What''s the matter, my darling?
30372What''s the matter?
30372What''s this about John Trafton?
30372What''s wanted, uncle?
30372What''s wanted, uncle?
30372What''s your name?
30372What? 30372 When you got it, why did n''t you come and bring it to me?"
30372Where am I?
30372Where are you going, Bill?
30372Where are you going, Robert?
30372Where are you going? 30372 Where are you going?"
30372Where are you going?
30372Where are you going?
30372Where can he be?
30372Where did you get it then?
30372Where did you get the book?
30372Where did you get this money?
30372Where did you hide it?
30372Where do you want to go?
30372Where have you been living?
30372Where have you been, Robert?
30372Where is Andrew? 30372 Where is Mr. Waldo now living?"
30372Where is it then?
30372Where is my husband?
30372Where is that man staying?
30372Where shall I get a key to my stateroom?
30372Where''d he get the money?
30372Where''s Robert?
30372Where''s that money, you young rascal? 30372 Where?"
30372Where?
30372Whereabouts do you cal''late to live?
30372Whereabouts is his cave?
30372Which is the best berth?
30372Who brought it?
30372Who is that?
30372Who is this rich man you''re talkin''about, Trafton?
30372Who is your aunt?
30372Who says so?
30372Who says so?
30372Who told you so?
30372Who took you off?
30372Who''s taking his part?
30372Why are you glad that I am a boy?
30372Why are you glad?
30372Why did n''t you keep him? 30372 Why did n''t you knock him down?"
30372Why did you tell me this boy wanted a place?
30372Why do you ask that question?
30372Why do you go back at all?
30372Why do you not go out to where he lives and watch him?
30372Why have n''t you? 30372 Why not?
30372Why not?
30372Why not?
30372Why not?
30372Why should I? 30372 Why should he stay over there so long?"
30372Why should n''t I ask for it?
30372Why, ai n''t you goin''to pay me?
30372Why? 30372 Will Robert live with us?"
30372Will he be kind to me?
30372Will it always be so?
30372Will it wear well?
30372Will you answer my question?
30372Will you come to shore and take me into your boat?
30372Will you explain yourself, sir?
30372Will you go with me to my hotel?
30372Will you keep the boy?
30372Will you live here, father?
30372Will you take a stateroom also?
30372Without his breakfast?
30372Wo n''t move?
30372Wo n''t? 30372 You a poor boy, with them clo''es?"
30372You are going to New York, I suppose?
30372You are sure he did n''t give it to you to keep?
30372You do n''t mean it?
30372You do n''t mean it?
30372You do n''t mean to say Bob''s drowned?
30372You do n''t mean to say that I was meddling with your pocketbook?
30372You do n''t mean to say you ai n''t a match for a boy?
30372You do n''t mean to say you''re ready to pay for it cash down, do you?
30372You do n''t mind selling him drink, landlord?
30372You do n''t think my boy is lost?
30372You do n''t?
30372You have n''t come into a fortune, have you? 30372 You have seen me before?"
30372You mean the landlord''s wife?
30372You surely are not going to invite that common boy into the yard?
30372You will be content to live with me, will you not?
30372You wo n''t stand it?
30372You wo n''t take me back there?
30372You would n''t care to stay here, I suppose?
30372You''ll be prudent, Robert, for my sake?
30372You''re doin''well now, Robert, I take it?
30372You''re not going back to the tavern, John?
30372Your uncle-- John Trafton-- is not a temperate man?
30372A pound will last a long time, wo n''t it?"
30372A. L. BURT COMPANY, PUBLISHERS NEW YORK ROBERT COVERDALE''S STRUGGLE CHAPTER I A FISHERMAN''S CABIN"Robert, have you seen anything of your uncle?"
30372Accordingly he stepped up to the boys and demanded with kindling eyes:"Are you laughing at me?"
30372And now, my friends, what are your plans?
30372And so you tried to murder him, you young ruffian?"
30372Any other errands?"
30372Anything more?"
30372Are you in business?"
30372Are you sleepy?"
30372Are you willing to follow in his steps and grow up a fisherman, like your neighbors?"
30372As he was looking about him in rather a bewildered way a colored man employed on the boat inquired:"What are you looking for, young man?"
30372Aunt Jane,"he demanded indignantly,"that I will desert you and leave you to shift for yourself?"
30372Aunt Jane?"
30372Badger?"
30372Badger?"
30372Ben Bence quickly asked:"What do you mean?"
30372Bill opened his eyes and asked in a wondering tone:"Where am I?"
30372Bill, is that your only punishment?"
30372Bob?"
30372But have you formed any plans?"
30372But how came you on the island?
30372But how did he happen to find the fisherman there and what was the object of the latter?
30372But what''s the matter, Bill?
30372But will not your uncle seek to take them from you?"
30372By the way, Mr. Badger, where is the ball of twine?
30372CHAPTER II ROBERT AND MRS. JONES"Are you willing to go to the village for me, Robert?"
30372CHAPTER X ROBERT COMPLETES THE RAFT"What do you want of me?"
30372Ca n''t I buy them just as well as you?
30372Call at the cave?"
30372Can it be true?"
30372Can you recommend me a good hotel?"
30372Carlo?"
30372Could Robert be blamed for regarding his uncle with contempt?
30372Did he ever tell you that I was his enemy?"
30372Did n''t she like the work?"
30372Did n''t you know I wanted to see him?"
30372Did you ever hear of a somnambulist?"
30372Did you give him a floggin''?
30372Did you secure one?"
30372Did your uncle give it to you?"
30372Do n''t you know what he said-- that he wanted to pay a dollar to the tavern keeper?"
30372Do n''t you think that I ought to call and thank him?"
30372Do n''t you want to buy something else?"
30372Do you care for books?"
30372Do you hear that, you young rascal?"
30372Do you hear that?"
30372Do you hear?"
30372Do you know him?"
30372Do you know who it is that has saved you?"
30372Do you live in the village?"
30372Do you think he will flog you?"
30372Do you understand?"
30372Does he live in Boston?"
30372Does he make so light of the flogging which your father has promised him?"
30372For a brief time the hermit gazed at Robert in thoughtful silence and then said:"How old are you?"
30372George paused in his rowing and asked-- for he had not yet caught sight of Robert:"Who calls?"
30372Had he not devoted several hours to constructing the raft he was trying to navigate and should he allow this time to be thrown away?
30372Have n''t I given him the shelter of my roof?"
30372Have you ever formed plans for the future?"
30372Have you had dinner?"
30372Have you no aspirations?
30372He weighed out the tea and then asked:"Is there anything more?"
30372How are you going to help it?"
30372How can I ever repay you?
30372How can a boy like you find your way round in such a great city as Boston?"
30372How could he suppose that the boy before him, dressed as well as himself, was the poor fisher boy of Cook''s Harbor?
30372How dare you speak to me in that way?"
30372How did I know he had a pistol?
30372How did it happen that you allowed him to strike you?"
30372How did the unhappy man come to his death?"
30372How do you expect Robert is going to find the money in the dark?"
30372How do you expect me to buy coffee?"
30372How do you feel?"
30372How do you sell your sugar?"
30372How far is it?"
30372How much did you calculate to pay?"
30372How much did you say it was?"
30372How much will it cost?"
30372How should I?"
30372How soon do you wish me to start?"
30372How will you be able to maintain yourselves?"
30372I did n''t blame them so much, for who''d think of a gentleman cheatin''a poor boy?"
30372I say, have you any idea how the boy came to disappear?"
30372I suppose they are acting under orders from him?"
30372I wonder how that sort of work will suit the young gentleman?"
30372I wonder if they''ll be respectful to her in the poorhouse-- where it''s likely she''ll fetch up?"
30372Is there any water near by?"
30372Is there anybody you want to disappear?"
30372It cost you a dollar, did it not?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Jones?"
30372Julian, how would you like to have a father?"
30372Mr. Conway, will you wait on this young man?"
30372Now, what do you say?"
30372Now, what have you to say for yourself, sir?"
30372Now, when do you want to start for Boston?"
30372Perhaps, however, you have company?"
30372Robert began to understand now, and he replied proudly:"Do you generally ask your customers how much money they have?"
30372Robert thought that the boy''s mind might be wandering, but continued:"Have you no friends in Columbus?"
30372Sands?"
30372Sands?"
30372Shall I start first?"
30372Shall I use your name?"
30372Shall you go out in the boat this morning?"
30372She looked with surprise at the three bundles he brought in and asked:"What have you got there, Robert?"
30372Surely you did not swim there?"
30372The hermit turned to our hero, who stood a little in the background, and said quietly:"Robert, do you think I killed your uncle?"
30372The tavern keeper?"
30372Then, gazing at the strange apartment and the majestic face of the venerable stranger, he said hesitatingly:"Am I still living or was I drowned?"
30372These discoveries cleared the hermit, but the question arose:"Who was this other man?"
30372To whom do you intend to let it?"
30372Trafton?"
30372Was he mad?"
30372Was it possible that this common fisherman was laughing at him?
30372Well, what shall it be?"
30372What brings you here?"
30372What claim had he on me?"
30372What could his sudden unselfishness mean?
30372What difference does it make to you what I do with it?"
30372What do you charge?"
30372What do you mean by that, I want to know?"
30372What do you say to that?"
30372What do you say?"
30372What errand have you got for me to the village, aunt?"
30372What excuse or apology could he possibly offer?
30372What have you heard?"
30372What is your name?"
30372What makes you so pale?"
30372What right has he to look down upon honest people, I want to know?"
30372What will you do with me?"
30372What''ll my father say to that?"
30372What''s he been doin''?"
30372When will you be back?"
30372Where did you get it?"
30372Where did you get the money?"
30372Where did you see him?"
30372Where is Bill?"
30372Who can it be?"
30372Who could have had the heart to kill you?"
30372Who knows but he might have thousands of dollars in the cave?
30372Why, then, did not Mr. Jones foreclose the mortgage instantly and gratify his resentment?
30372Why?"
30372Will you take a seat?"
30372Will you take us aboard?
30372Wo n''t I do as well?"
30372Wo n''t that be a splendid joke?"
30372Wo n''t your cousin play?"
30372Would n''t he like me to travel for him?"
30372Would n''t it be jolly if I could find a keg of gold pieces hidden somewhere about the old wreck?
30372Would n''t you like to try it again?
30372Would you mind rowing over and bringing him back?"
30372You surely do not mean to deprive Robert and me of our home?"
30372You''ll hit me again, will you?"
30372ai n''t that jolly?
30372am I to be defied by a weak woman and a half- grown boy?
30372not the young fisherman?"
30372that''s it, is it?"
30372thought Herbert in great surprise,"and where does this dog come from?"
19348''Suffer''? 19348 Abolitionist?"
19348About his sick not having proper food?
19348Ah bah,_ les_ bloff'',murmured madame and repeated to Hugh:"Something say,''Don''do it''?
19348Ah!--well? 19348 Ai n''t it?"
19348Ai n''t you glad I did n''t mean the_ Quakeress_?
19348All of-- who? 19348 An''they a- doin''it fo''what?
19348An''whahfo''shot? 19348 An''what dat got to do wid de price o''beeswax?
19348And Basile?
19348And did he, too, marry a-- Dutch-- wife?
19348And did the_ Abbess_ beat the_ Admiral_?
19348And did the_ Shepherdess_ outrun the_ Charioteer_?
19348And he convinced you?
19348And may I tell the Gilmores that''s as much for Phyllis as for them?
19348And she''s always been----?
19348And that''s the private word you had for me?
19348And the cholera time to spread?
19348And the-- the bishop?
19348And then you''ll nurse your father, wo n''t you?
19348And then-- to beat the_ Admiral_--you built----?
19348And then?
19348And then?
19348And then?
19348And was he, too, born in England?--or in Holland?
19348And was she?
19348And what, now, is this?
19348And when Miss Ramsey''s asleep?
19348And will you change-- with-- with you?
19348And you say that at last, now, you can do it?
19348And you want the roof for it here, do n''t you? 19348 And you''ll never sell her?"
19348And you''ve never pressed it sence?
19348And-- if-- I-- have, sir?
19348Another?
19348Are you the man--?
19348Arkansas your State?
19348Armed with nothing but words? 19348 As if-- what?"
19348As much as that?
19348As perfectly,ventured the two young Napoleonites,"as John the Baptist knows the moral law, do n''t you?"
19348At the same time, what was it?
19348Average age? 19348 Bayou Crocodile,"said a Carthaginian descending the wheel- house stair,"that''s where one of the sons- in- law has his plantation, is n''t it?"
19348Bishop? 19348 Black--_what?_""You heard.
19348Both of them?
19348Boy, you heard me, did n''t you?
19348But Mr. Hugh ai n''t actually running this boat, is he?
19348But at length,said Hugh----"What length?"
19348But did you see,he asked Ramsey,"the swarms of birds down around Island Eighty- eight?"
19348But if in an outburst you should snatch up some weapon?
19348But if we five--Gilmores, Courteneys, and herself--"and some others-- help you with your meeting to- day will you help us with ours to- morrow?"
19348But she''s going back into yo''hands?
19348But what did mom- a_ want_ to borrow her for?
19348But with Uncle Dan, of course?
19348But you do n''t mean now,he qualified,"when so many things are happening?"
19348But you; you''ll still look after us passengers and help him, too, wo n''t you?
19348But, Mr. Hugh----"Yes?
19348But, look here, where-- where''s your own signature?
19348But,said Ramsey, still to Hugh,"for sick or well-- the right food-- who pays for it?"
19348But,said the querist,"meantime the mate had fired, hmm?
19348Ca n''t I pass them on to you if I find I must?
19348Can you call through Mr. Watson''s speaking- tube to mom- a-- and the commodore?
19348Captain''s son make it hard to do business?
19348Could n''t I guess one of them?
19348D''you ever suffer from bashfulness-- diffidence?
19348D''you know,retorted Ned,"what running a boat is?"
19348Did I say that, sir?
19348Did deckhands make all that row?
19348Did he-- have red curls?
19348Did you ever hear of a poker face?
19348Did you ever see Andrew Jackson?
19348Did you know anybody else besides Jackson? 19348 Did you say pair?"
19348Do n''t the Germans come from Germany?
19348Do n''t they think they do? 19348 Do n''t you know Gideon Hayle would put him ashore at the first wood- yard?"
19348Do n''t you like night better than day sometimes?
19348Do n''t you propose to collect?
19348Do n''t you think I might omit that to- night?
19348Do n''t you?
19348Do n''t you?
19348Do n''t? 19348 Do they ever put any freight on the boiler deck?"
19348Do you belong toe Gideon''s ban''?
19348Do you find a measuring- glass?
19348Do you mean that for a threat?--either of you?
19348Do you mean to say,broke in the general,"ththat we ca n''t sssee ththe captain of ththis boat unless we nurse the cholera?"
19348Do you want to kill him?
19348Do you want to tell mom- a something you do n''t want me to hear?
19348Do you want us to stay up here?
19348Do you?
19348Does n''t this make a handsomer boat,the lover asked,"seen either aboard or from the shore?"
19348Down on the lower deck as he----"Which is the lower deck?
19348Even if there''s resistance?
19348F''om who''is you gwine hear it? 19348 First city?"
19348For keeps?
19348For what? 19348 For where would be my garden, Dear love, from thee apart?
19348Fr''--from what? 19348 Fust tell us: Ef ye_ mowt_ sperit a niggeh off to Canady would ye aw would n''t ye?"
19348Good morning,he said, while Hayle was inquiring:"May I again ask of you a word in private?"
19348Got cholera?
19348Had n''t Phyllis ever heard from my-- from Walnut Hills?
19348Harriet''s free, is n''t she?
19348Has he got it?
19348Has my father gone to bed?
19348Has she?
19348Have n''t you told your father yet-- about-- Phyllis? 19348 Have we, mademoiselle?
19348He does n''t,tinkled Ramsey, and, as the bishop swung back to her--"Do you?"
19348He was superintending----"And fell? 19348 Heard all about what?"
19348Helena your town?
19348Her wages, ai n''t it, for eleven years?
19348How about his wife?
19348How air it innercent?
19348How are those sick downstairs going to get the right food?
19348How can that be?
19348How could the overseer be hard on Phyllis if Phyllis was mom- a''s maid?
19348How could--she insisted--"how could a-- a mulatto girl be your first cousin?"
19348How do you know that?
19348How do you know they do n''t?
19348How do you know you know?
19348How is he right?
19348How is it different?
19348How much wood,some one asked the mate,"will a boat like this use up in twenty- four hours?"
19348How much wood?
19348How were you bad?--steal jam?--eat green plums?
19348How''d he get it-- I mean get it broken?
19348How''d he get''em?
19348How''s Basile?
19348How''s Lucian?
19348How''s Lucian?
19348How''s mom- a? 19348 How''s mom- a?"
19348How''s my brother?
19348How''s the bishop?
19348How''s the captain?
19348How''s the captain?
19348Hugh, did n''t you once say I did n''t know what fear was?
19348Hugh, did you ever have a presentiment? 19348 Hugh,"he affably said,"will you see what these young gentlemen want?"
19348Hugh-- do something for me?... 19348 I know; to bring out John the Baptist and those other two men?"
19348I will,softly put in the senator--"by your leave, general?"
19348I''m glad you feel that way,murmured Ramsey and suddenly asked:"Why did you take my father to your room just now?"
19348I? 19348 If Germany--"whined Ramsey, but huddled down in her seat as the sawing and hammering came again----"What, my chile?"
19348Is Asia--?
19348Is Basile in hot water again? 19348 Is I said he did?
19348Is he coming this way?
19348Is it also in that paper?
19348Is my brother worse?
19348Is n''t it ridiculous,murmured Ramsey,"that he seems condemned to do everything in the tamest possible way?
19348Is n''t it?
19348Is n''t that so, brother?
19348Is n''t this God''s country?
19348Is n''t this Island Thirty- three,she asked,"right here on our starboard bow?"
19348Is she ill?
19348Is she ill?
19348Is she?
19348Is that Hugh Courteney?
19348Is that_ your_ proposition?
19348Is this really your cane?
19348Is your father a Whig, too?
19348It''s a shame to keep short dresses on a girl of that age and of her-- her----"Spontaneity?
19348Just a bit ago,she said to the bishop,"did n''t you say yes, we must all be as gay and happy as we can?"
19348Kentucky passenger?
19348Know Gideon Hayle?
19348Know I''m out? 19348 Knowin''she was a runaway?
19348Lawd, what could she do-- widout yo''pa?
19348Long?
19348Look here, my boy, is that why you''re aboard?
19348Looking for the commodore?
19348Make out yan bunch o''sycamores?
19348Mammy,said her mistress,"want to go somewhere with your baby, about sundown this evening?"
19348Me? 19348 Missie,"sighed the old woman,"y''ain''t neveh in yo''life stopped to think dat niggehs is got feelin''s, is you?"
19348Mr. Courteney,asked Ramsey,"what_ is_ a''crossing''?"
19348Mr. Gilmore, is that Commodore Hayle over there?... 19348 Mr. Hayle,"he said,"you do n''t want to be another''hopeless ass,''do you?"
19348Mr. Hayle,was Hugh''s word,"what will you have, sir?"
19348Mr. Hugh, is your father-- taken?
19348Mr. Hugh, you''ll be off watch now soon, wo n''t you?
19348Must n''t we all be as gay and happy as we can?
19348Must n''t you wait near your grandfather till you see who it is that''s coming aboard?
19348My sister''s?
19348No, I''ll ask him what a reach is-- and a towhead-- and a pirooter-- oh, do n''t you love this river?
19348No? 19348 No?"
19348Nor let either o''them press it?
19348Nor of strangers?
19348Nor to Gideon Hayle,prompted Ramsey, and while he ha- haed a cordial assent she asked:"Whereabouts below is he-- Captain Courteney?"
19348Not a Henry Clay Whig?
19348Not both at once?
19348Not this season?
19348Not with their pistols on them?
19348Now that you''ve tasted blood, eh?
19348Now,growled the younger, with his gaze down there on Ramsey,"do n''t that beat you?
19348Oh, Lord, man, what have I got to do with that?
19348Oh, did I stop you? 19348 Oh, well, are there many--?
19348Oh, what does that mean?
19348Oh, when did you learn to talk? 19348 Oh, where was mammy Joy?"
19348Oh, who was with him?
19348Oh, why not just think to yourself:''He_ will_ live''?
19348Oh, you want to sign, do n''t you?
19348Oh,she moaned,"he did n''t use_ that_ money?"
19348Oh,_ now_ what''s happened?
19348On this boat? 19348 One not so need''n''to be hanged?"
19348Ought his breathing,she said,"to sound like that?"
19348Partner''s share of the swag?
19348Phyllis too?
19348Phyllis? 19348 Phyllis?"
19348Please, good ladies an''gen''lemens,she said as she came,"will you please fo''to lem- me thoo, ef you please?
19348Pries''?
19348Protect her from-- from wha- at?
19348Put what?--down where?
19348Ramsey, did he-- over there-- just now-- that reptile-- say anything-- tender?
19348Remarkable, how it''s run on and on without their ever locking horns, eh?
19348See a small bottle-- dark liquid-- about twice the size-- of the glass?
19348See that clump o''big sycamores a mite to lab- board o''where we''re p''inted?
19348See those little houses up on that bank? 19348 See?"
19348Senator, have you never met Squire So- and- So?
19348Senator, you already know Bishop So- and- So?
19348Senator,said the judge,"what of that?
19348Shall I put that down, also?
19348Shell I spit it out? 19348 Sing, will you, please,"he said--"and will you all sing"''There is a land of pure delight--''Mrs. Gilmore, will you raise the tune?"
19348So help you God?
19348So that''s the way Hayles,jeered the lad,"stand by a cat''s- paw friend, is it?"
19348So you took her----?
19348So, then-- he-- he had it when he came aboard?
19348Some Courteney boats too, hmm?
19348Spanish- moss Ben''? 19348 Sundown?"
19348Tactfully, do you think?
19348Taking care of Henry Clay, too, sir?
19348Tell me first,said Hugh,"why his two brothers----""Are so wild?
19348That you''d be his wife?
19348That''s what?
19348The bishop; how is he now?
19348The bishop?
19348The boat''s command does n''t fall to him, does it?
19348The boat? 19348 The commodore-- wasn''t?--Nor the senator-- nor----?"
19348The commodore? 19348 The heirs, I dare say, have seen it?"
19348The new--?
19348The_ Votaress_ being slow?
19348Then how could the captain fall----Again she ceased and yet again pondered:"Are the boilers-- on the boiler deck?"
19348Then how do you know you wo n''t fight my brothers-- now?
19348Then it is n''t,Hugh asked the senator,"that your hundred signers of this thing are afraid madame will get the cholera?"
19348Then what will you-- shall you-- do?
19348Then where''s her captain?
19348Then why did n''t you tell him about Phyllis? 19348 Then why is he running the boat?"
19348Then why is your father there?
19348Then you have n''t changed?
19348Then you would advise us to do that also?
19348Then, why--?
19348There is something veree bad-- on the boat?
19348They could leave their maid, you think, with Madame Hayle?
19348They go together, do n''t they, diffidence and modesty?
19348They_ stay_--the twins-- stay_ aboard_?
19348Think Delta''s above water?
19348This afternoon, about----"Where''d it happen?
19348To be put aboard the_ Antelope_,pursued Hugh---- The head went higher:"Well, sir?"
19348To do what?
19348To keep house for you-- single gentleman?
19348To tell him what to do?
19348To turn''em loose?
19348To whom?
19348Tucked in, are they, both of them?
19348Uncle Dan did n''t hate you, did he?
19348Want to bet? 19348 Want to know why I''m here?
19348Want to take her only to Kentucky, or to California?
19348Was it the_ Quakeress_ that--?
19348Was n''t it my brothers changed your mind-- the twins?
19348Was n''t there trouble with the deck passengers?
19348Was n''t you saying something like that the evening we left New Orleans?
19348Was she?
19348Was this where you first used to see cypress woods?
19348We''ll wait here, eh?
19348Well, Miss Hayles-- you is Miss Hayles, ai n''t you? 19348 Well, ai n''t dis de story o''de_ Quak''ess_?
19348Well, captain?
19348Well, commodore?
19348Well, dear,she said, pressing her backward into the stateroom,"are you ready?"
19348Well, of all-- and he accepted?
19348Well, sir?
19348Well, then, father?
19348Well, well, what''s going to happen next?
19348Well, what then?
19348Well, what''ll you take, from the right bidder, for that girl''s free papers dated ahead to when you come of age, bidder takin''all the resks?
19348Well, you turned back?
19348Well, you''re glad I did n''t mean Phyllis, ai n''t you?
19348Well,she asked,"you can not submit-- to what?"
19348Well,softly inquired the actor''s wife,"how do we come on?"
19348Well-- are there many--? 19348 Well?"
19348Well?--about Phyllis? 19348 Were n''t you going to say it would seem more so if we should blow up?"
19348Were you ever in an explosion?
19348Were you in the battle of New Orleans?
19348Were you not deep in the spell of it when I found you here awhile ago?
19348What are you writing there, anyhow?
19348What can I do for you, sirs?
19348What d''you reckon this beautiful boat is saying to herself right now?
19348What did she do? 19348 What did the bridegroom want?"
19348What did you say that stuff is?
19348What did your father do?
19348What do I hear?
19348What do he say?
19348What do you think, old mammy?
19348What does he want to know about me?
19348What doing?
19348What have you done now?
19348What hour? 19348 What hour?--hour to name that boat?"
19348What is it we want, worthy daughter of Gideon Hayle?
19348What is it?
19348What is it?
19348What is she?
19348What is that high bank on the-- the stabboard shore?
19348What kind? 19348 What piece of river is this?"
19348What rises them?
19348What was it you told him?
19348What were you thinking,he asked,"when I joined you here to- night?"
19348What''ll her name be? 19348 What''s changed your mind?"
19348What''s he got?
19348What''s that light waving far away down yonder? 19348 What''s that?"
19348What''s that?
19348What''s the fraction? 19348 What''s the other thing?
19348What,asked the bishop, turning to the players,"is to- morrow''s meeting to be for?"
19348Whe''re you going?
19348When do you expect to come back?
19348When you--? 19348 Where am I?"
19348Where are you going?
19348Where are you going?
19348Where is he?
19348Where is he?
19348Where were you born?
19348Where''s Hugh?
19348Where''ve you been?
19348Where?
19348Who are_ you_?
19348Who holds it?
19348Who is it, then? 19348 Who is it?
19348Who pays the boat?
19348Who sent that here?
19348Who tells you,he drawled,"what I may or may not do?"
19348Who told you?
19348Who will vouch for your accuracy?
19348Who!--have done that?
19348Who''ll resist? 19348 Who, Phyllis?
19348Who, me? 19348 Who?
19348Who? 19348 Why are all those five put off together?"
19348Why are the senator and the general down there?
19348Why did mom- a borrow her?
19348Why did n''t he want her set free?
19348Why did n''t he want her set free?
19348Why did they bring her to New Orleans?
19348Why do they go?
19348Why do they keep themselves so apart from you?
19348Why do we go this way?
19348Why do you call him''that boy''?
19348Why have you never told me before?
19348Why must you?
19348Why should I? 19348 Why should he be so solemn?"
19348Why should n''t he?
19348Why should you regret to say it?
19348Why, abed and asleep long ago, is she not?
19348Why, den, what does you care----?
19348Why, my young friend,said the senator,"does that strike you as due courtesy to a delegation like this?"
19348Why, what can you expect,asked her friend;"not''Bounding Billow''?"
19348Why, what''s the matter? 19348 Why, yes, it''s making things spin so smooth you ca n''t see''em spin, ai n''t it?"
19348Why, yes,murmured the squire''s brother- in- law and sister, to the Gilmores,"suppose he has?"
19348Why-- what''s the matter? 19348 Why-- you say that-- to me?"
19348Why... was n''t she? 19348 Why?
19348Why?
19348Why?
19348Will she do it all?
19348Will you just make that a little clearer, general?
19348Will you keep it dark-- by the patient''s own request-- till the show''s over to- night?
19348Will you look at the river with me?
19348Will you please say what you want him for?
19348Will you send for him? 19348 Will you tell me about the_ Quakeress_?"
19348With no coaching? 19348 Wo n''t sink the boat to ask,"drawled Watson; but she remained silent till Hugh inquired:"Are you sure I ca n''t tell you?"
19348Wo n''t you go first?
19348Wood?
19348Words?
19348Would n''t that be poetic justice? 19348 Would n''t want to, would you?"
19348Would she tell you things she never told any one else?
19348Would you like to tell them so?
19348Would you really be willing to tell me about Phyllis?
19348Would you still like to have Hugh''s advice?
19348Ye- es?
19348Yes, Miss Ramsey?
19348Yes, how about the songs?
19348Yes, sir; where is it?
19348Yes, you; why not?
19348Yes; had fights, went in swimming-- in snake holes----"D''d you tease your sisters?--pull their hair?--let the sawdust out o''their dolls?
19348Yes?
19348Yet we can be friends,said Hugh,"ca n''t we?"
19348You do n''t mean just the pair, do you?
19348You do n''t mean they''re together now?
19348You do n''t mean to- night?
19348You do n''t object to such a meeting?
19348You do n''t reckon,said a voice in the throng,"that that''s her captain, do you?"
19348You do n''t see-- the plot? 19348 You h- asked?
19348You know about the commodore?
19348You mean I-- say so little?
19348You mean the actor?
19348You mean your father wo n''t consent?
19348You really do n''t want a peaceable explanation, at all, do you?
19348You saw at table, did you not, the positive contempt the commodore-- who is a foreigner himself-- showed for the direst needs of our country?
19348You say that''s your poem?
19348You say you think there''s going to be a war?
19348You see the_ Antelope_?
19348You was n''t willing-- before-- was you?--were you?
19348Your father?
19348Your mother?
19348_ Antelope_? 19348 _ Well, sir?_""He was wanted merely to get your letter off secretly."
19348--she made a wry face--"that was cause''by the wicked plotting of those Courteney''?
19348A sense of his suffering benumbed her, and for relief she asked:"Is that why you do n''t wish it were evening, when really you do?"
19348Ai n''t I done say she wuz a quadroom?"
19348Ai n''t she, Watsy?"
19348Ai n''t you going-- to laugh?
19348An''ef a country''s great fo''craps_ an''_ game, what mo''kin it be great faw what ai n''t pyo''Babylonian vanity an''Eu-_rope_-ian stinch?"
19348An''ef you please, good ladies an''gen''lemens, fo''to squeeze back a leetle mite----?"
19348An''fo''w''at?"
19348An''how many time''is you say,''Go on''?"
19348An''if we_ find_ one doctor, who''s goin''nurse us in that maladee?"
19348An''that diztrac''you so bad this morning that you''ave not notiz''even that change''face on yo''brotheh?--or that change''voice, eh?
19348An''w''at is thad something w''at tell uz that?"
19348An''you would know Phylliz''race-- ad sight-- by the color?"
19348And Ned-- you remember Ned, the pilot, do n''t you?
19348And ai n''t that the trouble?"
19348And even to Captain Courteney?"
19348And he wants to ask me?"
19348And how was the commodore?
19348And now?
19348And partly what else?
19348And she went on: she, Noah''s ark, and the_ Votaress_, all three, together:"Den come de buck- ram and de ewe----""What?
19348And so, you see?...
19348And the bishop asked,"A verbatim report to the captain?"
19348And then, as her disconcerted eyes widened, he asked:"Where did you come from just now?"
19348And there ain''t-- there is n''t, is there?"
19348And who was caring for the commodore?
19348And who''s sitting next him-- on his right?"
19348And yet, as for you----""Yes-- as for me----?"
19348And you-- must, must n''t you?"
19348And----""Is Germany in Asia?"
19348Another e- double- s, of course?"
19348Anything li- bell- ious about that?"
19348Anything''conclusive''in that?"
19348Are you not well?"
19348As softly as to an infant fallen asleep she sang, in her Creole accent, with eyes streaming:"Do you billong to Gideon''ban''?
19348As the picture dissolved, Mrs. Gilmore slyly pinched Ramsey''s finger while asking Watson:"Why do n''t our men sing?
19348As they led she softly inquired:"Does he want to know something about the twins?"
19348At least-- ain''t-- ain''t you?"
19348At length she responded and the moment she did so she thought she had spoken too promptly although all she said was,"Yes?"
19348Basile and I-- Ain''t you going on?
19348Be back this way, Hugh?"
19348Because if we leave the boat, where we''ll find one doctor for_ that_ maladee- e?
19348Being bad?"
19348Belong?
19348But Ramsey had spoken again:"What''s this, right here?"
19348But Ramsey insisted:"What''s changed it?"
19348But Ramsey would ask the old woman one more question:"Is it happening to him, too?"
19348But ai n''t this boat the splendidest thing in the wi- i- ide, wi- i- ide world?
19348But between stars there is no near- by, is there?"
19348But even if he should, do n''t you see how absolute the deadlock is?
19348But he say to me----""When was this?"
19348But his''n or not,_ can_ you suspicion they wuz flow- er- ladened?
19348But how could one come just then?
19348But how was the captain?
19348But how will you help me to- day, my young sister?"
19348But mirth upheld her, and leaning in over the table she shifted her question to the smiling bishop:"Who pays the boat?"
19348But neither the boy nor Ramsey nor the old nurse felt assured, and all three were glad when the mother asked:"You swear?"
19348But none of us, with whatever rights and wrongs, can have, or do, or be----""Oh, do n''t we know all that?"
19348But the captain----?
19348But the mate had turned away and she asked Hugh:"Where''s your father?
19348But what''s your question?
19348But who, at a single cast, ever netted the whole truth as to any one?
19348But wo n''t that be fi- i- ine?
19348But-- another small thing-- shall I mention it?"
19348Ca n''t somebody pray it?
19348Ca n''t you?"
19348Could Julian really be hiding such a thing behind such a mask?
19348Could n''t ever resist, any time; but now?
19348D''d you ask me that before?
19348D''dy''ever hear the answer?
19348D''you reckon they eveh, ev''m in they dreams o''heav''m, see sich"''Sweet fiel''s beyond the swellin''flood Stand deck''in livin''green''?
19348Did he-- hit?"
19348Did n''t she love you?"
19348Did n''t the_ Quakeress_ ever burn up, after all?"
19348Did n''t you know Mr. and Mrs. Gilmore made every line I''ve sung?
19348Did she turn Whig?"
19348Did you ever have any grandchildren?"
19348Did you ever smell vinegar in laudanum, or nutmeg?
19348Did you see how''t sort o''eased the old man''s mind?"
19348Do n''t you know that?"
19348Do n''t you re- collect my lending you my field- glass at the Devil''s Elbow?"
19348Do n''t you see, Jule?
19348Do n''t you see?
19348Do n''t you think so?"
19348Do n''t you think so?"
19348Do n''t you?"
19348Do you belong to Gideon''s Band?
19348Do you belong to Gideon''s Band?
19348Do you belong to Gideon''s band?
19348Do you belong to Gideon''s band?
19348Do you belong to Gideon''s band?
19348Do you belong toe Gideon''s ban''?
19348Do you belong----?"
19348Do you belong----?"
19348Do you belong----?"
19348Do you belong----?"
19348Do you belong----?"
19348Do you belong----?"
19348Do you know for what?"
19348Do you know what a cow- eat is?"
19348Do you know where their sister is?"
19348Do you know?"
19348Ef you please''m, will you please suh, fo''to lem- me pass, ef you please?"
19348Even now you will, wo n''t you?"
19348Ever fly a kite?
19348F''m who''--?
19348Flat lands?
19348Flat waters?
19348For down at the wharf- boat''s very edge, liveliest of all wavers and applauders, with a"Howdy, Cap''m Hugh?"
19348From what do I''suffer''?"
19348Gentlemen, will you please be seated?"
19348Gently her name was called, beneath her:"Ramsey?"
19348Gilmore?"
19348Gilmore?"
19348Gilmore?"
19348Gilmore?"
19348Going at-- what do I hear?"
19348Good, or bad?
19348Grundy?"
19348Had Phyllis seen any-- in another bottle, untouched?
19348Had it made him ill, they asked, going down by that dreadful rope?
19348Had she not heard the signal for the lead?
19348Half- way up the steps she halted:"You''re to be a captain on it yourself as soon as you''re fit, ai n''t you?"
19348Has anything happened to the boat?"
19348Have you fff- ound that young man?"
19348Have you told the family what happened?
19348Hayle''s twins have offered to fight Hugh Courteney-- any way open to gentlemen, as they say-- haven''t they?"
19348He made his eyes heavy:"Have you had any proper introduction to these-- gentlemen?"
19348He moaned in unbelief:"What do you know about it?
19348He now running it?
19348He say:''W''ad uze to you if I make my laz''will?
19348Henry Clay man?"
19348Her mouth fell open:"Who, me?
19348Her response came instantly:"How did that happen?"
19348Her, and not mere boats''plans?
19348His eyes reclosed and the mother drew back, but he whispered on with lids unlifted:"Sing-- a verse or two-- or just the chorus, wo n''t you?"
19348Hour of strongest right?
19348How can his daughter, here, be just like him for all the world and yet those twins be just like him for all the same identical world, too?"
19348How can we exhort sinners without alarming or distressing them?"
19348How could they be expected to view the matter unselfishly?
19348How could they help but belong?
19348How did it happen?"
19348How did you guess that?"
19348How do you know?"
19348How long, wide, and high will the cabin be?"
19348How was the patient?
19348How wide will she be?"
19348How''s the----?"
19348Hugh made no reply but to meet her steady gaze with his own till she asked in a subdued voice:"Cholera?"
19348Hugh started away so abruptly that his father asked:"Where are you bound?"
19348Hugh''s awkward laugh came again, and the pilot who had come down from beside his fellow at the wheel inquired:"What''s the fraction here?"
19348Hugh?"
19348I do n''t need to, do I?"
19348I think that''s right sweet of her, do n''t you?"
19348I wish-- I wonder if that Californian has----""Put up his shutters?
19348I''ll merely lie down beside him without-- What?...
19348I?"
19348If I''m on your stabboard-- how can you be-- on my lab''--?
19348If that is refused, when and where are we likely to overhaul the_ Antelope_?"
19348If there should be will you fight?"
19348If_ he_ saw those things why could n''t I see them?
19348In''twenty he built the_ Charioteer_----""Ai n''t we ever going to hear about the burning?"
19348Is I call''heh his niggeh?
19348Is anybody sick aboard the_ Westwood_?"
19348Is it a way of fighting?"
19348Is it-- Otto?"
19348Is my brother worse?"
19348Is my brother----?"
19348Is she all oveh bespattud?"
19348Is that absurd-- to you?"
19348Is that all he''s got?"
19348Is that other man the captain?"
19348Is that your wish, too?"
19348Is you got bofe?"
19348Is your brother really better?"
19348It do n''t quite suit me yet but-- what''s your hurry?
19348It will mean their"( the Gilmores'')"safety; while failure-- Think of it, Miss Ramsey.... Do n''t you see?"
19348It''s for-- can I tell you in confidence, strict, air- tight?"
19348Judge So- and- So-- Senator So- and- So-- you both know the general?"
19348Kossuth is a gentleman who-- well, general, how are you now?
19348Like to show-- hmm?
19348Madame Hayle grew more beautiful as with a play of indignation which wholly failed to disguise her pleasure she cried:"By what_ per_-mission?
19348Madame interrupted:"_ Mais_ do n''t do w''at?"
19348Mammy Joy says my uncle-- in the blazing pilot- house-- did you know my uncle Dan?"
19348May I----?"
19348Miss Ramsey, did you ever see, through a glass, the Golden Locks of Berenice?"
19348Monotonous?--when one felt oneself a year older to- day than yesterday and growing half a month''s growth every hour?
19348Mr. Courteney, you will admit that this steamboat is not your property?"
19348Mr. Gilmore, you know the general?
19348Mr. Hugh-- what is it he wants to know about the twins?"
19348Mr. Watson,"asked Hugh from the roof between the Gilmores and the pilot,"what''s the average age of a boat on this river?"
19348Musingly Hugh broke in:"Counting all the chances, is n''t there a touch of cruelty in this, to the lady at least?"
19348My mother?--back again?--and the doctor?"
19348Neveh hear o''Phyllis?
19348No''Polonius to the players''?"
19348No?
19348No?
19348Not the Gilmores?"
19348Not with yo''eyes shet, hey?
19348Not-- not from-- my brothers?"
19348Now abruptly they hushed and let her resume:"Do you belong toe Gideon''s ban''?
19348Now she looked away to the moon''s path on the river, and the question of change came back from her:"Have you?"
19348Now, did we?
19348Now, this ai n''t the question, either, but-- why does he allow it?
19348Now, what was his errand?
19348Now, what''ll you take for your said two shares, right here, cash down, gold; not dust but coin, New Orleans Branch Mint?
19348Odd how narrow- minded one''s friends can be, but when they are-- what can we do?"
19348Of which was he sole owner, Miss Hayle or the boat?
19348Oh, Mr. Hugh, what ca n''t genius do?"
19348Oh, it''s not-- are there-- are there many kangaroos on Kangaroo Point?"
19348Oh, my young silk- an''-satin sisteh, do n''t you want us to pray fo''you?"
19348Oh, why-- why----?"
19348On the roof he continued:"Seen Captain Hugh yet, commodore?
19348On the way to the pilot- house she leisurely inquired:"Do you think you''ll ever build a finer boat than this?"
19348On which side?"
19348On your father''s account-- and his father''s?"
19348Or is she in the chute?"
19348Or that John the Baptist and his two disciples must first be disposed of?
19348Or-- or can''t-- can''t you vote on it?"
19348Presently--"Where''s her captain?"
19348Ramsey flashed:"Does that mean better-- or worse?"
19348Ramsey flashed:"What are you telling me all this for?"
19348Ramsey gasped:"And you never told?
19348Ramsey gasped:"You declined, of course?"
19348Ramsey laughed, gave the deck a wilful scuff, and demanded of the captain:"Were you ever on a burning boat?"
19348Ramsey''s gaze was roaming every sky- line, but at that word it flashed back:"How, sold?
19348Reckon you see''''em do that, ai n''t you?
19348Said the amused Gilmore:"Humiliate me?
19348Said the pilot, Ned, to Ramsey, pulling the wheel down to head into the crimson west:"Four''n''four''s eight, ai n''t it?
19348Say, Wats''; on the b''iler deck-- did she have on this gownd she''s a- wearin''now?"
19348Senator, suppose we do that?"
19348Shall I?"
19348She all but danced:"How''d you know?"
19348She appealed to a white- jacket bringing coffee:"Was that for an alligator?"
19348She ceased, pondered, and spoke again:"Is there any deck lower than the lower deck?"
19348She faintly tossed, gazing out again:"Why''must''?"
19348She felt a stir of conscience, loitering thus, yet--"Mr. Hugh, do you think diffidence is the same as modesty?"
19348She flashed round accusingly upon Hugh:"What are we landing in the woods for?"
19348She glanced round at the players''backs and then again at him, asking with soft abruptness:"Where''s the bishop?
19348She instantly sat up:"Why do they call it the Asiatic cholera if--?"
19348She spoke again in her new tone:"You think your father will get well, do n''t you?"
19348She stared again and slowly remarked:"You have n''t got to.... You''re powerful queer, ai n''t you?"
19348She''ll soon be in the lead again?"
19348Should I be fit to live myself if I were not true to myself?"
19348Sick?"
19348Sick?"
19348Sing as softly as you please, just for us two while the world is in dreams and sleep, wo n''t you?"
19348So closely did the actor''s eyes follow them that Ramsey asked:"What are they going to do?"
19348So, why ai n''t he honor bound to take their place if I take Mr. Hugh''s?
19348Take that to the captain at once, will you?"
19348Tell me, honey, which you got?
19348Tell the--?"
19348That right?...
19348That was likewise part of that plot aggains''us?
19348That''s funny.... Why, mammy, how could he be my uncle if he-- was burnt up-- before I was born?"
19348That''s what it would mean, is n''t it?"
19348The Vicksburg merchant lightly spoke across the table:"Shooting alligators, bishop?"
19348The actor softly spoke:"Shall I tell you what Hugh told me?"
19348The bayous were-- what?"
19348The bishop blandly spoke:"Senator, will you allow me, for an instant--?
19348The bishop tightened his lips at Hugh and peered at the cabin- boy:"How was it too late?"
19348The boat''s people?
19348The captain was amused, yet he gravely began to ask:"Does your mother----?"
19348The captain was speaking to her mother:"Must you reach Loui''ville as quickly as you can?"
19348The captain?"
19348The commodore had turned to Watson:"Want to see me?"
19348The commodore joined you?"
19348The first word was Ramsey''s: How was the captain?
19348The girl rose, laughed, and flashed again:"Well, if Phyllis ai n''t white what is she?
19348The girl, as she backed away, turned to the grandfather:"Was Hugh on the boat-- when it burned?"
19348The modest adventurer waved assent, yet looked so disappointed that Mrs. Gilmore, moving to take his arm, asked:"Ca n''t Mr. So- and- so go with us?"
19348The nurse''s eyes filled:"Yass, an''what use it been?
19348The nurse''s mouth opened but another question was shot into it:"Has anybody told about the_ Quakeress_?"
19348The old man spoke:"Will Miss Ramsey do us all a favor; one that will help the play?"
19348The pair at Milliken''s Bend having failed him, what better hope was there of the Carthaginians or even of the Vicksburg couple?
19348The senator had his question:"What did the judge say?"
19348The senator spoke:"Who were that will''s executors?"
19348The senator stiffened high:"For what, sir?"
19348The two exchanged a look but the clerk was mute and the senator spoke on:"You''ve heard of Dan Hayle-- and the girl Phyllis, hmm?"
19348The youth turned with a smile that bettered every meaning in his too passive countenance:"Well, father?"
19348Then she prompted Hugh:"And so----?"
19348Then:"How long will that boat be?"
19348They paused in their"thort- ships"walk and with a slight choke in her voice Ramsey asked:"You know what I hope?"
19348Think he''ll talk to me?
19348This is a beautiful boat he''s going to have, eh?"
19348To prove it he offered Hugh a very blasé query:"What do women ever do with all the answers we men give''em, hey?"
19348W''at you pro- ose do with those pries''an''free pape''?"
19348Want to see him?"
19348Was ever anything such fun?
19348Was he making game of her?
19348Was he worth circumventing?
19348Was her mother awake, in the lower one?
19348Was his lady- love on the boat?"
19348Was n''t she on the_ Quakeress_ when----?"
19348Was no physician on the boat?
19348Was no step to be generally agreed upon?
19348Was that the end?
19348Was the_ Quakeress_ named for her?"
19348Watson-- but what could Watson matter then?
19348Watson?"
19348Watson?"
19348Watson?"
19348Watson?"
19348Well, and then?
19348Well, why should he not?
19348Wha''fo''you gwine?"
19348What are the golden--?"
19348What are you trying to talk white folks''English for?"
19348What better could a man do?
19348What did Phyllis do?"
19348What did he say?"
19348What did mom- a do?"
19348What did she whip you for?
19348What did that mean?
19348What did you get out of him at last?"
19348What do you think you see?"
19348What do you want on this boat, that you ai n''t already got?
19348What for?"
19348What is it?
19348What is it?"
19348What is your wish?"
19348What on earth had the_ Hayle blood_ to do with any right or wrong of selling Phyllis?
19348What right had he to bring that upon her?
19348What will you call it, sir?"
19348What will_ you_ have of_ me_, sir?"
19348What''s goin''to kyore him?"
19348What''s he doing?"
19348What''s_ it_ about?"
19348What?"
19348When it rises again-- what, sir?...
19348When was that?"
19348When''d he fall?"
19348Where was Madame Hayle?
19348Where''d you find it?
19348Where''s Jule?
19348Where''s your crony?"
19348Which were they?"
19348Who else?"
19348Who next of the well?
19348Who next on either of the decks below?
19348Who''ll it fall to next?
19348Who?
19348Who?"
19348Why did he come?
19348Why did he go?
19348Why should n''t I?"
19348Why?"
19348With a ripping oath Julian put in:"What''s that to you, you damned Gypsy?
19348With mom- a yet?"
19348Without a stir she asked:"Why do n''t_ you_ bring Basile?"
19348Without strict order of time, now on the bench, now on the roof, early and late, here is how it went:"You''re not afraid of my brothers, are you?
19348Wo n''t we?"
19348Wo n''t you, please?"
19348Would n''t they like to take a hand?
19348XXXI THE BURNING BOAT"Where was the commodore all that time?"
19348Yet her question was an earnest and eager one:"Is my brother better, or is he worse?"
19348Yet who would sing it?"
19348Yet why look there, so distantly, when here between, right here under the boat''s cut- water, was the Raccourci, barely four years old?
19348You ax me----?"
19348You can manage that somehow, Mr. manager, ca n''t you?
19348You cayn''t be goin''asho''whah Cap''m Hugh dess tell Phyllis yo''ma comin''aboa''d?"
19348You feel it, do n''t you?"
19348You hear them, do n''t you?"
19348You know that, do n''t you?"
19348You know?
19348You never told me----""Anybody else eveh tol''you?
19348You remember the word:''Darkness and light are both alike to thee''?"
19348You see that- ah house an''cedah grove on yan rise?
19348You still like figures, boats''figures, I hope?"
19348You think to accept him would condemn him to death?"
19348You were on the_ Quakeress_ when she burned, wa''n''t you?
19348You?"
19348_ Mais_ w''at it say don''do?"
19348_ Now_ what''s up?"
19348_ She_ did n''t do that, did she?"
19348ai n''t Miss Ramsey got the sa- a- ame o- o- ole la- a- afe, on''y sweeteh''n eveh?
19348and ai n''t I a poet?"
19348and who''from?"
19348asked Ramsey,"who was Phyllis?"
19348asked the player--"you and my wife and I-- and your-- this is your brother, is he not?"
19348before the lines were out, and a"How you do, Miss Ramsey?"
19348broke in the mother,"questions again?
19348by what_ per_-mission have you pud-- my-- clothes?"
19348d''you know?
19348do you really think so?"
19348do you want to start that bleeding again?"
19348general-- judge-- wet your whistle with us?"
19348honey,"interposed old Joy,"what you want to do fine things faw?
19348if any one is to go ashore, why should n''t it be_ they_--the foreigners?"
19348inquired the girl; but the wife, too, had a question:"Do you think there''s anything wrong?"
19348is that absurd to you?"
19348laughed Ramsey, then mused, and then asked:"Ai n''t you afraid for me?"
19348me?
19348miss, ai n''t I dess now see you down in de cabin a- playin''in de play, an''a hund''ed people sayin'':''_''tis_ her,''cose it is''?"
19348missie, how I gwine button you up ef you shif''an''wriggle like dat?
19348mother, is this the new Courteney boat?
19348my grandfather?"
19348oh, where_ was_ diffidence?
19348our Phyllis?
19348play- actoh?"
19348playfully retorted the mother,"an''you muz''go?--cannot wait?
19348she asked,"nor of sick folks?"
19348she demanded--"and the bishop-- and Marburg''s mother?
19348she laughed,"when you are so out and out black?"
19348she radiantly inquired,"you rather go ashore, you, eh?
19348she ventured,"the Asiatic cholera?"
19348strongest reason?"
19348that Ramsey set free?"
19348thought Ramsey, and,"Why do n''t they call again for''Gideon''s Band''?
19348was it at night?"
19348were you twins?"
19348what did she count, with him about to marry?"
19348what of that?
19348what pilot- house?
19348what would she ever do with it?
19348what''s that?"
19348whimpered Ramsey, while madame asked:"Of w''at race has Phylliz the conscien''?
19348who would n''t drutheh hunt than plough, ef he could hev his druthehs?
19348why ca n''t I get religion?"
19348would you presume to sit down in my presence?
19348yes?
19348yet something definite, visible, conciliatory, hunh?
19348you?"
60423A nautical maitre d''armes?
60423And do you know whom I refer to by our enemies at home?
60423And then?
60423And-- and-- I hardly like to say it, but, my dear sisters, do you notice how she-- well, how she thrusts out her feet?
60423Are you an officer of that brig?
60423But what is''all rights''?
60423But why wait? 60423 Did you ever see such luck?"
60423Did you never-- eh-- wash?
60423Do you know whom I mean when I speak of our foreign enemies?
60423Do you mean to say they''d cut off your limbs and send your body home?
60423Do you think they ought?
60423Fire? 60423 Friends?"
60423Have you come here for me to marry you to a woman sixteen miles off on the other side of the island?
60423How far off is she?
60423I suppose you fell, which caused your nose to bleed?
60423If you mean the boarding- school plan, Melissa;she said,"why do you not say so in plain words?
60423Is n''t that range rather handy for sheltering brigands?
60423Is there an officer down there?
60423My dear Theodora, what do you mean?
60423One of the Yankee pirates, eh?
60423Privateer, eh? 60423 Suppose I go with her to the place and see what they intend to do?"
60423Surely you did not climb the stone wall?
60423Theodora, what is it?
60423W- what''s all this for?
60423Well?
60423What did they do?
60423What for? 60423 What the dickens is he treating me like a baby for?"
60423What was?
60423What''s going on up there?
60423What''s your Captain''s name?
60423What, Aunt Joanna?
60423When shall I see him, sir?
60423Where am I?
60423Where did you learn your English?
60423Who''s that speaking?
60423Who?
60423Why do the boys talk so hexcited?
60423Why, you know what a funeral is, Aunt Adaline, do n''t you? 60423 Why?"
60423You do n''t mean portmanteaus?
60423And now may I go?
60423And why are we in the last carriage?"
60423And you are the good Smithsons of Constantinople, is it not so?"
60423As soon as land telegraphs were fairly started men said, why not lay wires under the sea?
60423Blood was streaming from her nose, tears from her eyes, and in her arms she carried-- was it?
60423But who do you suppose I found in the road?
60423Did you ever play that way, Aunt Tom?"
60423Do n''t you think I did right, Aunt Tom?"
60423Do you fancy that on the 1st of October you can begin an entirely new life, and make a good football- player of yourself by Thanksgiving day?
60423Do you want to give me a fit?"
60423Had not her aunts any boys''stories?
60423Have you been hurt?"
60423How could I help it?
60423How do you like that?''
60423Kill who?
60423Peter?"
60423So I stood up on my feet, and gazing up at the circle of light through which came the cable, I said, loudly,"What do you want of me?"
60423Suppose there was a man waiting in the station to stab or shoot you, would n''t you stop here till all the peoples had gone?"
60423They all sit round the floor, and I say,''Who is this?''
60423This continued for full ten minutes; then we heard the sound of laughter, and caught the words:"The signal of the day, eh?
60423To show that the boys are poetical(?
60423What does it all mean?"
60423What is the most critical time in a baseball match or a football game?
60423What is the name of that vessel you belonged to?"
60423What shall we do with her, and why did this come upon us?"
60423When does the oarsman''s great test come?
60423Why is n''t it just as wicked to kill a cat as to kill a bad boy, Aunt Adaline?"
60423Why not?
60423With a quick glance at my position the Captain made this statement:"An officer, eh?
60423Would your mother do such a thing?"
60423could it be?
60423said some one behind me with a laugh,"I guess you run against something, did n''t you, a short while ago?
7147Had not the French a right both of prior discovery and prior settlement?
7147Very much obliged?
7147When did La Salle settle?
7147And the future?
7147And the product?
7147Are there arts worthy freedom and a rich people?
7147Are there athletes?
7147Are there crops of fine youths and majestic old persons?
7147Are there perfect women to match the generous material luxuriance?
7147As to the proclamation, Parkman asks, what now remains of the sovereignty it so pompously announced?
7147But who are the people who are to control?
7147Is there a great moral and religious civilization-- the only justification of a great material one?
7147Is there a pervading atmosphere of beautiful manners?
7147Is this colorless, insipid"social consistency"the best wine that the valley can offer of its early vintages?
7147Is this what democracy, undefiled of aristocratic conditions and traditions, has produced?
7147Mistakes, disappointments, crudities, infidelities?
7147Only those who are living and of electoral age and other qualification?
7147Shall they be praised the more that they did not for a century venture beyond the sources of those streams?
7147The first question of that western valley is,"Who is he?"
7147Was its name indeed to be written only in the water which their canoes traversed?
7147What claim has the past as against the needs of industry in the present?
7147What shall I say of his wealth?
23664''Aisy is it?'' 23664 ''An''why not?''
23664''An''wot wud I be after makin''a job aisier for the likes of him?'' 23664 ''For a jail- bird?''
23664''What did you say, McCann?'' 23664 ''What if he is?''
23664A harp, belike?
23664A priest?
23664About her voice; you''ve never been willing, I understand, to have it cultivated?
23664Afraid of what?
23664Ah was been lee''l garçon-- lee''l bébé, no père; ma mère was been-- how you say?--gypsee à cheval, hein?
23664Ai n''t you well, Aileen?
23664Aileen, my daughter, what is it? 23664 Aileen, you do n''t sing as much as you did a while ago-- what''s the matter?"
23664Aileen-- Aileen-- where are you?
23664All alone, Aunt Meda?
23664All yourself?
23664An''did ye read her marriage in the papers, I guess''t was a year gone?
23664An''how could ye mane anything against me husband in a gineral or a purticular way? 23664 An''how did you know that?"
23664An''is it parfection ye''re after?
23664An''is it the shmall pox yer mane?
23664An''why not for you, I''d like to know? 23664 And Freckles?"
23664And I do n''t mean to-- does that satisfy you?
23664And he told you not to tell me?
23664And of course you''re going? 23664 And she will do nothing?"
23664And what then?
23664And what would you say of a man who, because he has been knocked out in the first round, does not dare to enter the ring again? 23664 And whatever have you had of mine I''d like to know that has kept seven years?
23664And yer goin''to keep it?
23664And you did n''t consider yourself at all?
23664And you do n''t believe it-- you_ know_ it is n''t true?
23664And you expect me to impoverish myself for the sake of Champney Googe?
23664And you mean what you say-- you never want to see him again?
23664And you really advise this?
23664And you think you can enter into such publicity without protection?
23664Ann said just now she heard Octavius telling you that my nephew, Champney Googe, is in town-- when did he come?
23664Any baggage?
23664Any news, Tave?
23664Any tools with you?
23664Any worked in the marble quarries of Vermont?
23664Anything unusual, Octavius?
23664Are there-- are there any clothes I could put on?
23664Are you aware that you are asking me to put a premium on crime?
23664Are you going in now?
23664Are you going to try to see_ him_?
23664Because, if I had, she would have been on the stage before now-- and where could I get another? 23664 Better''n the thayertre,"she repeated emphatically;"and the lords serenade the ladies-- Do yer know wot a serenade is?"
23664But I mean_ what_ has she done to live-- to provide for herself; she has kept the house?
23664But how can I climb? 23664 But what has she been doing?"
23664But what if she does n''t?
23664But why?
23664But you have never given her any love?
23664But, Aileen, wo n''t you stay to supper?
23664By the way, mother, you wrote me that you had invested most of that twenty thousand from the quarry lands in bank stock, did n''t you?
23664Can I do anything for you before I go?
23664Can I see the manager?
23664Can I tub anywhere?
23664Can you help me?
23664Can you tell me if Mrs. Louis Champney lives near here?
23664Can you tell me where the manager''s office is?
23664Certainly I will; shall we go up this forenoon?
23664Changed? 23664 Come in, Octavius; was there any mail?"
23664Come, say something, ca n''t you?
23664D''yer mane it?
23664Dear old Jo!--No!--Is that true? 23664 Did I hit hard?
23664Did Romanzo Caukins tell yer?
23664Did he say anything more?
23664Did he?
23664Did n''t you tell me in Tave''s presence only just now that you could n''t forget me? 23664 Did she ever love any one?
23664Did yer mane it?
23664Did you happen to notice the orphan asylum just opposite on----nd Street?
23664Did you happen to see a girl there?
23664Did you hear what Father Honoré said?
23664Did you hear, Aileen?
23664Did you learn her name, the girl''s?
23664Did you see her?
23664Did you see the junk man at The Corners to- day about those shingle nails?
23664Did you take him on?
23664Do n''t I know? 23664 Do you feel strong enough, Champney?"
23664Do you know any boys?
23664Do you know him well?
23664Do you know what you are saying?
23664Do you know why I have n''t been willing?
23664Do you really believe it?
23664Do you remember the B''y who danced with the Marchioness, and when they was through stood head downwards with his slippers kicking in the air?
23664Do you still hold a grudge, Tave?
23664Do you think she would object to having me nurse her for a while? 23664 Do-- you know?"
23664Do; and wo n''t you tell Ellen I will come down and see her this afternoon? 23664 Does Emlie know anything?"
23664Does Mrs. Champney know that you are going to leave her?
23664Does this car go to the sheds?
23664Father Honoré, I''ve come home-- don''t you know me, Champney?
23664Father Honoré, what is it? 23664 Father Honoré-- I do n''t want to butt in anywhere-- into what ai n''t my business, but I do want to know if you''re going to New York?"
23664Fine-- see?
23664For me?
23664For what, mother?
23664For whom?
23664Going?--You mean home-- to- night?
23664Guess you do n''t know these parts?
23664Has Romanzo heard direct from him to- day?
23664Has he? 23664 Has it become unbearable?"
23664Has she ever spoken to you about remaining with her?
23664Have I any?--I mean outside of you and my mother?
23664Have you any? 23664 Have you ever seen the lilies open, Aileen?"
23664Have you heard anything?
23664Have you seen him?
23664He did n''t love me-- not really--"Are you sure of this, Aileen?
23664Hello, Roman, how are you?
23664Here for a job?
23664Here? 23664 How about fidelity now, Miss Armagh?"
23664How about you?
23664How are you getting on with the napkins?
23664How could she?
23664How did yer know anything''bout her?
23664How did you ever hear of this Ben Falkenburg?
23664How did you happen to come down here just to- night, and after work hours too, Champney?
23664How do you know but what I have seen her? 23664 How do you know he was the boy?"
23664How do you mean, Tave?
23664How long have you been here, Father Honoré?
23664How long have you been working at it?
23664How many pounds are there?
23664How old are you?
23664How''d I hear? 23664 How?"
23664Hullo, Champ, when''d you come?
23664I ca n''t ask you if I''ve done right, because no man can decide that for me; but would n''t you do the same if you were in my place?
23664I come down to see you, too, on purpose--"To see me?
23664I got in your way, did n''t I, at the theatre one evening over a year ago?
23664I knew no one could hear me-- they all sleep on the other side, do n''t they?
23664I know-- I know; you speak as one who has suffered; but has not Champney suffered too? 23664 I really feel stronger and thought I might as well try it; there is always a first time-- and you were with Champney, were n''t you?"
23664I say, Mr. Champney Googe, are yer mad with me?
23664I shall be back within a half an hour; I telephoned Father Honoré I was coming up-- you''re sure you do n''t mind waiting here alone? 23664 I think you said you had met Mr. Van Ostend?"
23664I wish, Aileen, you''d get over your grudge against him--"What grudge?
23664I wonder now could it be_ the_ B''y-- I mane the man she married?
23664I''ll be back in a few minutes, Mrs. Champney, or will you go in now?
23664I''ll tell you later, Elvira; just at present I--"Was it anything about the quarries?
23664I''ve come to see Mrs. Champney, Aileen; is she in the library?
23664I? 23664 If it does n''t, I''ll tell you something-- but it''s a secret; you wo n''t tell?"
23664In what way?
23664Is Aileen all right?
23664Is he stopping at The Greenbush?
23664Is he?
23664Is it possible for me to shave here? 23664 Is n''t it rather unexpected?"
23664Is n''t this fun?
23664Is she a luny?
23664Is she black as the night with a star of white Above her bonny brow? 23664 Is she the little wrinkled one?"
23664Is there any one Aunt Meda ever did love, Tave? 23664 Is-- she going-- to marry-- him?"
23664It would n''t impoverish you-- you have your father''s property and more too; he is of your own blood-- why not?
23664Jest thinkin''of you, Aileen--"Me, Uncle Jo? 23664 Just look in and lend a hand in case Mrs. Caukins should be outnumbered, will you?
23664Le Père Honoré, hein? 23664 Learned your trade?"
23664Letter?
23664Lien''s keller, Champ?
23664Like her?
23664Mais oui, bruins-- bars; pour les faire dancer--"You mane your mother was a gypsy that went round the counthry showin''off dancin''bears?
23664May I ask if it was your own choice coming up here to us?
23664May I look too?
23664Mm--"_ What_ was it?
23664Montreal is it? 23664 Most ten;--you?"
23664Mr. Buzzby, is there any truth in the rumor I heard, as I came to the train, that Mrs. Champney has had a stroke?
23664My aunt is still living, then?
23664My daughter-- is it because of Champney''s prospective return within a year that you feel you can not remain longer with us?
23664My nephew told me he was going to row up to the sheds, too-- did you happen to meet him there?
23664My son must never know-- you will give me your word?
23664No I would n''t; what for? 23664 No, I could n''t give her that.--Do you blame me?"
23664No-- no; I do n''t need him; he could n''t do me any good-- nobody can.--Tave, did you hear her, what she said?
23664Now, look here, Octavius Buzzby, who knows best about a cow, you or I?
23664Nurrsed?
23664Of mine? 23664 Oh, Mrs. Champney, what''s the use of being a girl, if you ca n''t know what other girls mean?"
23664Oh, Tave, you''re always blowing the Champneys''horn--"And why should n''t I?
23664Oh, Uncle Jo, did they teach you how to flatter like that in the little old schoolhouse you showed me years ago at The Corners?
23664Oh, have n''t I? 23664 Oh, is that all?"
23664Oh, it''s you, is it, Mr. Buzzby? 23664 Oh, no, I''ve not forgotten Mr. Champney Googe; how could I?"
23664Oh, we''re all devils more or less, we men, Uncle Jo; now, honor bright, are n''t we?
23664Oh, wot''s she up ter now?
23664Perhaps some of you have worked in the limestone quarries on the Bay? 23664 Romanzo said there was some trouble in the sheds-- do you know what it is?"
23664See how what, mother? 23664 See what?"
23664She took all his love-- all-- all his love-- and he was my husband-- I loved my husband-- But you do n''t know--"What, Mrs. Champney? 23664 So I understood; does the marchioness live there too?"
23664So ye''ve j''ined the majority in this town, hev ye, Aileen? 23664 So you''ve found her out, have you, you young rogue?
23664Something''s up''twixt those two, eh, Tave?
23664Still with the Company?
23664Straight, is it? 23664 Supposing, then, you ride up with me in the automobile?"
23664Tell me, Champney, have you ever thought your aunt might remember you-- for the wrong she did you?
23664Tell me--he drew his breath short--"what has my mother done all these years-- how has she lived?"
23664That is the mother of Our Lord, is n''t it?
23664That live in New York?
23664That''s you, is it, Szchenetzy?
23664The Van Ostends?
23664The chance to save him from-- from imprisonment-- from a living death--"Has he been taken?
23664The crystal-- can any one see that-- find that in this interior?
23664The fight betwixt Jim an''Mr. Googe--"What do you mean, Maggie?
23664Then is this it?
23664To be sure, why not? 23664 Uncle Jo, old chap, how are you?
23664Union man?
23664Wan of the stone- cutters''wives, Mrs. MacLoughanchan, he works in the same section as Jim, told me about it--"About what?
23664We are blest in this turn of affairs, are n''t we, mother? 23664 Well, Flibbertigibbet, what is it now?"
23664Well, if the law is n''t a fundamental, what is?
23664Well, it''s best to be particular with strangers, is n''t it?
23664Well, where''s the harm? 23664 Were there any arrivals at The Greenbush to- night?"
23664What about Aileen?
23664What are you doing here, Aileen?
23664What are you laughing at?
23664What are you?
23664What d''ye think, Tave?--they goin''to make a match on''t, she an''Poggi? 23664 What devilry now, Champney?"
23664What do you call me?
23664What do you know about it?
23664What do you mean, Champney?
23664What do you mean, Champney?
23664What do you think of her?
23664What do you think of him?
23664What does Champney say?
23664What does he do with all his rhetorical trumpery at such times? 23664 What fight?"
23664What has changed you, Aileen? 23664 What has he done to you to make you hate him so?"
23664What if I have n''t?
23664What is hers?
23664What is it now, 208?
23664What is it now--208 again?
23664What is it, Colonel?
23664What is it, Dulcie-- can''t you tell me?
23664What is it, Hannah?
23664What is it? 23664 What is it?"
23664What is it?
23664What is the trouble with 205?
23664What is your idea of the reason for his succumbing to such a temptation?
23664What is your name?
23664What is_ she_ doing?
23664What lady?
23664What made him go then?
23664What matters were they? 23664 What plan?"
23664What put that into your mind? 23664 What should I be afraid of?
23664What the dev-- whoa, there Kitty, what you about?
23664What time is it? 23664 What time?"
23664What was he like?
23664What was your idea in asking me about her?
23664What were you saying?
23664What you got there, Aileen?
23664What''d I tell you two years ago, Aileen? 23664 What''s Champney Googe doing in the sheds?"
23664What''s that crowd up to, Uncle Jo?
23664What''s that?
23664What''s the matter here, Aileen?
23664What''s the matter?
23664What''s up, Tave?
23664What''s up?
23664What''s wanting now, 208?
23664What''s your letter?
23664What''s your name?
23664What?
23664When do you have to go to bed?
23664When was this road built?
23664Where are you going now?
23664Where did you make their acquaintance?
23664Where have you been all this time, Dulcie?
23664Where is he now?
23664Where the pain was?
23664Where you going, Aileen?
23664Where''d you pick him up?
23664Where''s Honoré?
23664Where''s Rag?
23664Where''s help to come from? 23664 Where?"
23664Where?
23664Which door shall I leave you at?
23664Which is your half?
23664Which one taught you?
23664Who are you?
23664Who designed this monogram?
23664Who else should I mean?
23664Who is with her, do you know?
23664Who puts you in?
23664Who''s we?
23664Who, the Marchioness?
23664Why did n''t my brother save his money for him then-- if he''s his son?
23664Why did n''t you call me to help you in, Mrs. Champney? 23664 Why do n''t you lave her, Aileen?
23664Why do we all sin at times?
23664Why must such a girl cross my path just as I was getting on my feet with Alice?
23664Why not? 23664 Why not?
23664Why not?
23664Why not?
23664Why not?
23664Why should I let you go? 23664 Why, Champney, you here?
23664Why, do n''t you know?
23664Why, that does n''t seem possible-- but it_ is_ so, is n''t it? 23664 Why,''Lias has been out in the barn for the last half hour-- what were you doing over there, I''d like to know?"
23664Why? 23664 Why?"
23664Why?
23664Why?
23664Why?
23664Wi''heart in mout'', in hope and doubt, My lovers come and go: My smiles receive, my smiles deceive; Shall they not serve you so? 23664 Will you be so good as to state what they are?
23664Will you be so kind as to come over with me to the coach house, Miss Armagh, and hand my property over to me? 23664 Will you go out on the terrace now?"
23664Will you-- oh, will you?
23664Wo n''t it make a lot of talk? 23664 Wonder if I''d better tell you, mother?
23664Wot does she mane?
23664Wot yer givin''us about his Riverince, eh?
23664Wot yer givin''us, Antwine? 23664 Wot yer giving me?"
23664Wot yer goin''to tell her now?
23664Wot yer going to do?
23664Wot''ll I do now? 23664 Wot''s she givin''us?"
23664Wot?
23664Would he come soon? 23664 Would you do me the favor to get this off as early as you can?"
23664Yah-- oui, gypsee à cheval, an''bars--"Bears?
23664Yah-- oui, nurrsed her, an''moi aussi-- lee''l bébé''--"D''yer mane his Riverince nursed you and yer mother through the shmall pox?
23664Yer no good;--but yer''ll come?
23664Yes, doing, do n''t you hear?
23664Yes, mother; may I come up?
23664Yes,--the girl''s lips trembled,--"shall I tell her you are here?"
23664Yes,he repeated,"his father, Warren Googe; who else should I mean?"
23664Yes; when did you come?
23664You did n''t say anything to him about your plans, did you?
23664You do n''t mean she''s gone?
23664You do n''t regret it, do you, Champney?
23664You do n''t think she has ever spoken to any one before-- not so, do you, Tave? 23664 You do n''t think we shall be interrupted, do you?"
23664You do; why?
23664You have good reason to know that you are telling a fact in asserting this?
23664You have n''t heard anything since yesterday morning, have you?
23664You know I love you-- why do you repel me so?
23664You know, of course, where Mr. Van Ostend lives?
23664You mane a gypsy that rides round the counthry?
23664You mean to say my mother--_my_ mother, Aurora Googe, has been keeping a quarrymen''s boarding- house all these years?
23664You permit, Madam?
23664You remember that night?
23664You see, Champney-- Mr. Googe--"Have I changed so much, Tave, that you ca n''t use the old name?
23664You think he''ll be found?
23664You wo n''t need me any longer?
23664You would n''t?
23664You''re going to put up on the Island?
23664You''re his friend, ai n''t you, Aileen?
23664You''re sure you really did n''t mind, Champney?
23664You''re sure''t was him?
23664You''re the man who has just taken on a job in Shed Number Two?
23664You''re''bout right-- them high rollers do n''t want to raise nothing but game cocks-- no prison birds, eh?
23664Young and fresh and-- hardened, was n''t it, mother?
23664--She turned to Octavius,"Have n''t you told her?"
23664--Term for exemplary conduct?"
23664--he laughed heartily as if at some amusing remembrance--"and that''s Aileen; by the way, where is she, Aunt Meda?"
23664--that''s what they say at the thayertre-- I''ll give yer somethin''else--""Wot?"
23664A child then?
23664After a moment''s silence she asked abruptly:"Have you ever said anything to her about this?"
23664After all, it takes America to forge ahead, for we''ve got the opportunities and the money to back them-- and what more is needed to make us great?"
23664After another eighth of a mile, she spoke with apparent interest:"What makes you think Mrs. Champney wants to see Father Honoré about her nephew?"
23664Ah been come to de quairries, pour l''amour de bon Père Honoré qui m''a safe, hein?
23664Ai n''t I got the style?"
23664Ai n''t you my guest as long as you''re in my home?"
23664Aileen, my Aileen, why should I ever let you go?"
23664Am I poaching on your preserve?"
23664An''arter a day or two ye come back an''look agin, an''where''s the rile?
23664An''did n''t the Sisters come askin''me the other day if I had your receipt for the milk- rice?
23664An''is n''t all the children an''the quarrymen just mad over yer teachin''an''singin''?
23664An''then come''long''bout the fust of July, an''ye go out an''stan''there and look for the silt-- an''what d''ye see?
23664An''was n''t Mrs. Caukins after praisin''yer cookin''an''sayin''you beat the whole Gore on yer doughnuts?
23664And I do n''t believe, Tave, there''s one of our own would volunteer, do you?"
23664And Luigi-- where was he-- what was he doing?
23664And as clever to clear The dykes as a deer?"
23664And did n''t you resolve at that time to''put aside''those things that were behind you once and forever?--clear your life of the clogging part?"
23664And the end?
23664And to- morrow evening, if the moon is out, we''ll have a serenade all by ourselves; what do you say to that?"
23664And what was this man to him that he should ask his opinion, appeal to him for advice in directing this step in his career?
23664And why excuse Rag on account of a six years''absence?"
23664And you remember a pretty girl, eh?"
23664And, moreover, what had not that avowal and its expression done to her?
23664Anyhow, we''ll wait a while till we see how the syndicate takes hold of this quarry business before we decide on anything, wo n''t we, mother?"
23664Anything you want from the village, mother?"
23664Are we in this case to coddle, to sympathize, to let ourselves be led into philanthropic drivel over''judge not that ye be not judged''?
23664Are we nothing to you, Aileen?
23664Are yer_ rale_ mad with me?"
23664Are you any the wiser now?"
23664Are you going to ask any of our own folks to volunteer, Milton?"
23664Are you going to lie down in the ditch like a craven, simply because you have failed to withstand the first assaults of the devil that is in you?
23664As well ask: Whence came he?
23664Ay, what more is needed to make us great?
23664Because she was only Aileen Armagh, and at service with his relation, did he think her less the true woman?
23664Ben sent them; was n''t he a dear?
23664But I mind the time when Luigi was the wan b''y for you-- I wonder, now, you could n''t like him, Aileen?
23664But he could n''t help sayin'':''What the divil are ye cryin''about, Maggie gell?
23664But his father was Almeda Champney''s only brother-- why then, should not his mother count on the estate being his in the end?
23664But how, when, where would he speak the releasing word-- the supreme word of love that alone could atone, that alone could set her free?
23664But, if that''s not sufficient, I can find another nearer at hand-- where''s my dog?"
23664Buzzby?"
23664Buzzby?"
23664By the way, where did he take his meals after he left you?"
23664Ca n''t you tell me?
23664Can you tell me if there is any truth in the report that Champney Googe has returned to- day?
23664Caukins''?"
23664Champney, I suppose, comes home next month?"
23664Champney, he wants to atone-- he has told me so--""Is-- is he married?"
23664Champney?"
23664Champney?"
23664Champney?"
23664Champney?"
23664Champney?"
23664Come in when you can, wo n''t you?"
23664Could any one?
23664Could it be--?
23664Croix went by a few minutes ago, and I told her to hurry them home.--What''s the good news, Champney?
23664Did Champney Googe''s mother know that she had seen that son in the quarry woods?
23664Did he not know with whom he had to deal?
23664Did he say anything specially to you before I came in?"
23664Did n''t I say you could n''t play with even a slow- match like Roman, if you did n''t want a fire later on?
23664Did you get their peppermints last night?"
23664Did you happen to hear who the priest is who came with the girl?"
23664Did you tell Luigi all this?"
23664Do n''t say anything more about it; only promise me, wo n''t you?"
23664Do n''t speak to me about Him now, will you?
23664Do you realize what this thing means to us-- to Flamsted-- to the family?"
23664Do you say your prayers to them too?"
23664Do you, in your supreme egotism, suppose that you, Champney Googe, are the only man in this world who has sinned, suffered, gone under for a time?
23664Does anybody know?"
23664Flibbertigibbet and her chum looked at each other; should it be nickname or real name?
23664Googe''s?--why I must not stay too long in Flamsted?"
23664Googe?"
23664Googe?"
23664Googe?"
23664Googe?"
23664Had she any feeling indeed, except that for self?
23664Has my mother any idea of this?"
23664Has the carriage come?"
23664Has''Lias harnessed yet, Elvira?"
23664Have I changed so much?"
23664Have they applied to you?"
23664Have you any news?"
23664Have you done it?
23664Have you done it?"
23664Have you heard anything?"
23664Have you met them?"
23664Have you noticed her voice in chapel lately?"
23664Have you said this?
23664He always had a mother, had n''t he?"
23664He did not ask himself what next?
23664He gave a convulsive start--"Where are the Eyes gone?"
23664He said he would n''t be gone long, for the Colonel was n''t to home.--I wonder what they''ve turned on all the lights for?"
23664He spoke feebly:"Where am I?"
23664He spoke first:"I want to know about my mother-- is she well?"
23664He was a man, the living representative of two families, and who had a better right than he to some of his Aunt Meda''s money?
23664He was roused by the sound of a gentle voice speaking in French:"Good- morning, Father Honoré; how is Mrs. Googe?
23664He wishes to''pay his respects,''so he says, to my wife and mother, if convenient for the ladies to- morrow-- how is it?"
23664He wondered what connection its coming might have with the unexpected arrival of this orphan child?
23664Hev you seen her, Champ?"
23664His rap was answered by Ellen, a quarryman''s daughter whom Mrs. Googe employed for general help; but she spoke behind the closed door:"Who is it?"
23664How are you, dear old chap?"
23664How could I live on twelve hundred a year?
23664How could this then that she had just been told be true?
23664How dared he do this thing?
23664How did she impress you?
23664How did you do it, mother?
23664How did you hear, Uncle Jo?"
23664How do they live?"
23664How do you like your job?"
23664How does Aunt Meda take this latest move?
23664How does he think a fellow is going to dress and live on that?
23664How find him?
23664How is that for fidelity?
23664How long are you going to stay?"
23664How long does the Staten Island boat run?"
23664How''s the quickest way to git up a war, eh?
23664Howe''er shall I face The farmer and his wife?"
23664I believe I began to love you through that knothole, you remember?"
23664I believe it''s one of the regulations that what a man takes in of his own, is saved for him to take out, is n''t it?"
23664I could n''t make him out, could you?"
23664I depended on my knowledge of this country to escape-- put them off the track-- they''re after me now-- aren''t they?"
23664I do n''t understand-- when did you come?"
23664I guess from all I hear Romanzo''s''bout give it up, ai n''t he?"
23664I heerd Aileen he d ben goin''up thar purty reg''lar lately for French an''sich; guess Mis''Champney''s done''bout the right thing by her, eh, Tave?"
23664I must tell you; but you''ll keep mum, Uncle Jo?"
23664I suppose she is there now-- why?"
23664I suppose you will be here a month or two?"
23664I think I know what that implies; you mean from the point of view of the priesthood?"
23664I want to see them; do you realize they are the largest in the country?
23664I wonder why she is n''t at church?"
23664I''d like to double it for you as Aunt Meda has doubled her inheritance from grandfather-- Who''s that?"
23664I''ll bet yer do n''t know wot that is?"
23664I''ve heerd tell, I''ve heerd tell-- chip of the old block, eh?"
23664I, of Almeda Champney?"
23664If I had n''t asked my own relation, Mr. Van Ostend would have every reason to say,''Why did n''t you try in your own family first?''"
23664In all this his wife is his helpmate, his mother his inspiration.--What more can I say?"
23664Is all this work to be done by the company?"
23664Is it''little''that I''m to have a home-- at last-- of my own?
23664Is it''little''that the husband I love is going out of it and coming home to it in his daily work, and my heart going out to him both ways at once?
23664Is n''t ivery wan sayin''ye''ve got the voice fit for the oppayra?
23664Is that the Colonel?"
23664Is there any new trouble preparing for you at The Bow?"
23664Is there anything so strange in that?
23664It seems that Mr. Van Ostend has a little girl--""I know, that''s the Alice I told you of, mother; did you see her when she was here last month?"
23664It sounded ominous, and, thereupon, the Vaudeville flocked to the dressing- room door to see-- what?
23664It''ll be like gettin''out of the jail yerself, for all you''ve made believe you''ve lived in a palace-- but ye''re niver goin''so early?"
23664It''s the first one she has written you, is n''t it?--Where is it?"
23664Just tell me if the curtains be up straight?
23664Just wait till I run up to the house to see the nurse myself, will you?"
23664Le Père Honoré m''a sauvé-- haf safe, hein?
23664Le''me see; Champ, what was we just talking''bout up the street, eh?"
23664Listen; you are safe with me, safe, do you understand?"
23664May I not tell them that you, too, wish them joy, Mrs. Champney?
23664May I suggest that when you leave her you still make your home with us here in Flamsted?
23664McCann called out to him:"I say, Antwine, where you''d be after gettin''that cap with the monkey ears?"
23664Meat- axey as usual?
23664Mr. Van Ostend evidently had confidence in him; why should n''t he?
23664Mrs. Champney echoed sarcastically;"well, what more do you need to convince you of facts I should like to know?"
23664Not that he had any realization of such a result-- what man has?
23664Now, honor bright, have you?"
23664Octavius recrossing the terrace called out to her:"You going up to Mrs. Caukins''later on this afternoon?"
23664Old Jo doing that?"
23664One of the two boats was already gone; doubtless she had taken it-- where could she be?
23664Out of a great love and pity he spoke:"What is it?
23664Own up, now, you did n''t think your''competing industrial thousands''might be increased by some half- Irish grandchildren, now did you?"
23664She ai n''t helped you any to it?"
23664She felt sure the future would show satisfactory results.--And after?
23664She had spoken but once of her nephew in a personal way to Aileen since she asked that question a year ago,"What do you think of him?"
23664She haf been seek-- malade-- how you say, petite vérole-- so like de Père Honoré?"
23664She hated herself for this confession.--Where was he now?
23664She laughed merrily;"they live where the Dagos live, in Italy, yer know, and--""Italy?
23664She looked about her-- a strip of her white skirt lay on the ground--_Could she--?_"No, Rag darling-- no, I ca n''t, I can''t--"she began to cry.
23664She reached it-- should she call aloud-- call his name?
23664She spoke with cutting sarcasm:"What amount, may I inquire, do you deem necessary for the present to insure prospective freedom for your son?"
23664She''s a stingy old screw, I know, and led Uncle Louis round by the nose, so everybody says; but why are you so down on her?"
23664Should he go?--Should he?
23664Should he seek her?
23664Should n''t I take every legitimate means to forge ahead?
23664Since when?
23664Straight, be they?"
23664Sure I know he''s got a temper; an''what man of anny sinse has n''t, I''d like to know?
23664Surely it is n''t the peppered rosebud?"
23664Take old Rome, now-- what was it started the decay, eh?"
23664Tell me-- can''t you trust me?"
23664The Colonel looked at the speaker in amazement;"did he give his first name?"
23664The fact is she had set heart on having for a daughter- in- law Aileen Armagh-- you remember little Aileen?"
23664The look in her eyes as she raised them to his, and said in a subdued voice,"Father Honoré, can you spare me a little time, all to myself?"
23664The manager spoke without looking at him:--"Well?"
23664The moment he saw Aileen, he recognized in her the child on the vaudeville stage to whom he had given the flowers-- You remember that incident?"
23664The old man made no definite answer, but cackled softly to himself:"Yachting cruise, eh?
23664Then she heard his voice in her ear:"Hev you seen him?"
23664Then with more interest and animation,"May I tell you something I have kept to myself all these years?
23664There ai n''t no trouble with her that''s bothering you?"
23664There is, however, one course always open to you--""What?"
23664These are the working plans for the new Episcopal cathedral at A.;"he named a well known city;"you''ve heard of it, I s''pose?"
23664They do n''t know their own minds from one six minutes to the next.--Why do n''t you want to go?"
23664This, too, belongs in the brotherhoods of labor, kin, and equality.--Do you find the crystal?"
23664To his mother''s laughing query:"What is it now, Champney?"
23664Was her son in his prejudice forgetting himself?
23664Was it a final answer to any expectations of her nephew, Champney Googe, her husband''s namesake and favorite?
23664Was it her shame at his dishonor?
23664Was it, could it be an act of spite against Aurora Googe?
23664Was n''t I holding it in my hand and thinking of you when I saw you coming over the meadows?"
23664Was she there?--should he seek her?
23664Was that all?"
23664Was the mistress of Champ- au- Haut going to adopt her?
23664Was this little alien waif to be made a catspaw for her revenge?
23664We set here him an''me, an''understan''one''nother even when we do n''t talk-- jest set an''smoke an''puff--""What pearl is it, Uncle Jo?"
23664Well, here goes then: I decided-- I was lying up under the pines, you know that day I did n''t want to accept his offer?"
23664Well, we do n''t care, do we?
23664Well, what do you think of her?"
23664What am I going to do over there, I''d like to know?"
23664What are they doing over there?"
23664What can she want of him?"
23664What could have possessed him to put himself in the place of a sneak thief-- he, born a gentleman, with Champney blood in his veins?"
23664What did Uncle Louis''amount to?"
23664What did it mean?
23664What did this mean-- this strange feeling of timidity?
23664What do you mean by''to- night''?"
23664What do you s''pose her son would say to that?"
23664What do you think of her?
23664What have I done?--Is it really anything so awful?"
23664What have you got in your team?"
23664What if she were to go to Father Honoré and tell him something of her trouble?
23664What is it?"
23664What more could you expect, inexperienced as you are?
23664What more do you want?"
23664What next?
23664What put me into your head?"
23664What time are yer coming for the serenade?"
23664What was behind these facts that occasioned such a tirade?
23664What was it produced that nervous shock when she learned the last truth from Dulcie Caukins?
23664What was it that paled the man''s flushed cheeks?
23664What was it?
23664What_ was_ Flibbertigibbet doing?
23664When I gave him that message it was final--_final_, do you hear?"
23664When and where could she see him again, and alone?"
23664When are they coming home?"
23664When did Romanzo send his last message?"
23664When did you go?"
23664When do you go?"
23664When, at last, he felt that she was shivering, he spoke:"Are you cold, Aurora?
23664When, oh, when would the word be spoken?
23664Where did you get anything of mine?
23664Where had he seen just such a child?
23664Where was that commerce now?
23664Where was the well earned applause?
23664Where''s my token?"
23664Which should it be?
23664Who are you?"
23664Who could tell?
23664Who, you gump?"
23664Why Tave here is threatened already with a quick decline-- sheer worry of mind, is n''t it Tave?"
23664Why did n''t you begin by telling me about Romanzo?
23664Why did n''t you let me go?
23664Why has any human being a right to say to another, whether young or old,''You shall live here and not there''?
23664Why no-- what made you think that?"
23664Why should n''t a man take his punishment?
23664Why should n''t his aunt be willing to help him?
23664Why, then, if it were dead, she asked herself now, had she spoken so vehemently to Luigi?
23664Why,"she demanded almost fiercely,"why ca n''t a child''s life be her own to do with what she chooses?
23664Will this hold two and all those bundles?"
23664Will you make better, truer ones among strangers?
23664Will you not be reconciled to him?"
23664With a girl like Aileen there could be no trifling-- what then?
23664Wo n''t it help, just as man to man-- as it has helped me?"
23664Wot yer going to do?"
23664Would he ever speak it?--could he, after that avowal of the unreasoning passion for her which had taken possession of him seven years ago?
23664Would it do any good, do you think, for me to see her?
23664Would it ease the intolerable pain at her heart, lessen the load on her mind?
23664Would it help?
23664You a stranger in these parts?"
23664You are a musician?"
23664You could take her up, could n''t you?"
23664You do n''t suppose a man walks three miles in a hot night to serenade a girl just to get an ounce of pepper in his nose by way of thanks, do you?"
23664You heard what the priest said about Mr. Van Ostend''s mentioning me to him?
23664You know the city agency has its men out there already?"
23664You know they''ve been on the old coach house for good thirty years, and the Judge used to say--""What will he give?"
23664You play?
23664You see I was young and, for all my four years in college, pretty green when it came to the real life of those people--""You mean the Van Ostends?"
23664You warn''t to home last summer?"
23664You were saying--?"
23664You''ll go with me-- you''ll tell her?"
23664_ Can_ you comprehend that?
23664came in a sobered voice from above;"are yer mad with me?"
23664for would I have ever seen Flamsted but for him?
23664laughin''roses are my lips, Forget- me- nots my ee, It''s many a lad they''re drivin''mad; Shall they not so wi''ye?
23664said Mrs. Caukins with withering scorn;"you''ve eaten a good supper if you were''scared''as you say.--What scared you?"
23664she exclaimed;"and is it''little''you call your love for me?
23664she repeated and laughed out again in her scorn;"why should I, answer me that?"
23664there''s the top of the bay windy and I can lean out-- why did n''t yer tell me yer could play the guitar?"
23664they hauled in their lookin''s when she turned them great eyes of her''n their ways.--What''s the figger for the hull piece?
23664why art thou silent, Aileen Mavoureen?"
23664why art thou silent, thou voice of my heart?
843''Who did this?''
843Ferguson?''
843How long was it yet to last?
843How was the war to be carried on?
843How was this to be done?
843I think you were also at Nelson''s Ferry, when Marion surprised our party at the house?
843Vanderhorst now asked Witherspoon,"at what distance he would prefer, as the most sure to strike with buckshot?"
843We quarrel not with the appropriation to Greene, but did Marion deserve less from Carolina?
843Were you not there also?"
843What could be more glorious for the General, commanding freemen, than thus to fight, and thus to save the lives of his fellow soldiers?
843What had they to apprehend, within sight of a walled town in the possession of their friends?
843What his feelings of equal gratitude and apprehension?
843What was the tax on tea, of which they drank little, and the duty on stamps, when they had but little need for legal papers?
843What was to be its limit?
843What were the terrors of Snipes in all this trial?
843Who could predict?
843Why should they dare the conflict with Great Britain?
843he exclaimed,''who ever heard of anything like this before?
9250What can be the reason?
9250What did John Adams think of Jefferson?--and Samuel Adams of Patrick Henry?
9250Will not care be taken to fortify the harbor, and thereby prevent the entrance of ships- of- war hereafter?"
9322We are one nation to- day,said Washington,"and thirteen to- morrow; who will treat with us on these terms?"
9322In the same way the old familiar question,"Who discovered America?"
9322Sydney Smith, were he now living, would find his question,"Who reads an American book?"
9322Where are they and their works?
38826A hill? 38826 Ah, and you think an actor''s soul is in especial need of nursing?"
38826All hands at home?
38826Also dictated?
38826And I walk about a good deal, and yet this is the first time--"Ca n''t you fasten it?
38826And after that?
38826And do n''t you think, Sir, that it would be well if you could say that you have had quite enough of the stage itself?
38826And if there comes a time when men are worth their salt and women are worth their pepper, humanity will be well seasoned, eh, Belford? 38826 And suppose he should object to our compact?"
38826And what did Estell say?
38826And what would they think if I should run away? 38826 And what?"
38826And will you be satisfied if you do n''t write the best?
38826And you did n''t hear any talk between the Senator and Estell?
38826Any ragged girl talk like a clodhopper until she is insulted and then talk like a princess? 38826 Are you really married?"
38826Bugg, how many of your thirty- day notes do you suppose I''ve got?
38826Buggy ready? 38826 But can she?"
38826But do n''t you think he''s a little too zealous?
38826But do n''t you think that the end of everything ought to be kept well in view?
38826But do you understand; that''s the question?
38826But is it to the law-- the sheriff?
38826But say that she is walking in her sleep?
38826But suppose her lawful place is beside another fire?
38826But what do you want?
38826But what if they should turn away with a cold word and a shudder?
38826But what must she think now?
38826But when will you pay for them?
38826But where am I? 38826 But who are you, your name, please?"
38826But who are you?
38826But who is it?
38826But you advocated the elevation of the stage, do n''t you remember?
38826But you do n''t care to have your name known in it, do you?
38826By going to church?
38826Confound you, ca n''t you see--"Sir,he said, standing over me with his arms folded,"do you know what you are saying?"
38826Consent about what?
38826Damn it, man, what do you mean?
38826Did I say that? 38826 Did any of the family go on further South?"
38826Did n''t hear about my speech out at Briar Flat last night, did you? 38826 Did n''t know old Bill, I take it?
38826Did n''t you? 38826 Did n''t you?"
38826Did she-- did she grieve?
38826Did you hear that, Mr. Belford? 38826 Did you see them meet?"
38826Do you really mean it?
38826Do you? 38826 Dollars melted like the mellow words of an ancient rhetorician, eh?"
38826For a picture? 38826 Fox- hunting?
38826From the original sheets? 38826 Get him?
38826Had the Senator returned?
38826Hah? 38826 Has no one told you?
38826Have I hurt you, old chap?
38826Have n''t you cut off one of my legs?
38826Have you a razor?
38826Have you begun work on your play?
38826Have you buckled the strap?
38826Her? 38826 How did our company fare?"
38826How did you get in?
38826How do you like our town?
38826How far is it to the railway station?
38826How far is it?
38826How long have I been here?
38826I did, eh? 38826 In Magnolia Land, by-- what''s this?
38826In livery?
38826Is he living?
38826It could n''t, eh? 38826 Just one?"
38826Know what I''d do?
38826Look here, Bugg,said the Senator, laughing,"why do n''t you move out of the bottoms?"
38826Look here, Vark, you do n''t believe I killed that man?
38826Match about you?
38826May I speak a word?
38826Mean it? 38826 Mr. Belford, have n''t you seen the papers?"
38826Nan''s? 38826 Not on account of your size, Sir?"
38826Now what do you reckon that fool fellow wanted? 38826 Now, what does he mean?
38826Now, when did you expect a man to get so rich as to fling away his property? 38826 Object?
38826Of course I want to be agreeable,_ but_--"But what?
38826Oh, do they? 38826 Oh, that''s it, eh?
38826Oh, who-- who is calling me?
38826Oh, yes, and I suppose Giles Talcom told you all about me, too; told you that I was his favorite sister, did n''t he? 38826 Oh, you do?
38826Out ridin''for your health, Senator?
38826Pointedly?
38826Provoke him into a fight?
38826Really? 38826 Senator, whose house is that over yonder, to the left?"
38826She is n''t ill, is she?
38826Sick? 38826 So you think of going into the show business?"
38826Stupid old place, is n''t it? 38826 Surrender yourself?
38826That so? 38826 That''s kind, but how do you know I was not able to keep it?"
38826The critics said so; who are they?
38826Then you do n''t write your sermons?
38826Then you stand alone with your eyes open?
38826There is something else I should like to ask, about the big negro who stays here at night?
38826Tom,cried the Senator,"what the devil-- I mean the deuce-- is the matter with you?"
38826Too zealous? 38826 Vark,"said I,"do you want to break up the performance?"
38826Washington, are you in league with the devil?
38826Well, but ai n''t that your business, hah?
38826Well, but is n''t he?
38826Well, ca n''t you do something? 38826 Well, do you shave left- handed or right- handed?"
38826Well, how are they coming?
38826Well, the end of your love story; how did it come out?
38826Well,she said, looking hard at me,"and you are the man that Giles has been telling me so much about?
38826Well?
38826Were many people killed?
38826What are you doing here?
38826What are you going to do with the sketch? 38826 What are you waiting for?"
38826What caused him to change his mind?
38826What do you intend shall be the outcome?
38826What do you read to your father?
38826What do you think of it?
38826What do you want with the money, Bugg?
38826What do you want, boys?
38826What does all this mean?
38826What does that bell mean?
38826What line of work do you intend to take up?
38826What''s that?
38826What''s that?
38826What''s wanted?
38826What, ai n''t proud, are you?
38826What, and go up in the hills and ketch some new- fangled disease that I do n''t know nothin''about? 38826 What, to blast her name?"
38826What_ are_ you doing?
38826When are you going to begin reading to me?
38826When, Mr. Belford; when will you begin to stay away?
38826Where are they-- she?
38826Where could he have gone?
38826Where do you live?
38826Where is_ she_?
38826Which, the milk station or the other one? 38826 Which, the other one?"
38826Who are you?
38826Who is that?
38826Who is?
38826Whom do you regard as the greatest?
38826Why did she marry him?
38826Why do n''t you give up the infernal office? 38826 Why do n''t you give up_ your_ infernal office?"
38826Why do you permit such fellows to rob you?
38826Why not now?
38826Why not? 38826 Why should I object?"
38826Why, what can you be thinking about to run away at a time like this? 38826 Why, what''s the matter, Joe?"
38826Will you pardon an impudence?
38826With me on his back?
38826Wo n''t you please sit down?
38826Wo n''t you sit down?
38826Would you mind my shaving with it?
38826Would you mind shaking hands with me?
38826Yes, I believe I would,she laughed,"and is n''t it mean?
38826Yes, Sir, we''ll coin money here; and do you know, Belford, I am beginning to believe that money is a pretty good thing after all? 38826 Yes, but does n''t that very fact make it a piece of legitimate news?"
38826Yes, it''s bad,Estell drawled,"but what are we going to do about it, heigho?"
38826Yes, would n''t you?
38826You did?
38826You do n''t mean_ old_ Dan Hilliard?
38826You mean the bell, Sir?
38826You say your people came from Connecticut?
38826You-- you going?
38826A cause to believe that you are in the young woman''s heart, and what more would he need to make him bitter toward you?
38826Ah, Belford, you going?
38826Ah, and who makes it weep now?
38826All but Uncle John, eh?
38826And after a while this little thing will grow up and leave me, wo n''t you, pet?
38826And did he not know that my entering the house again could easily be construed as a connivance on his part?
38826And do you realize that Petticord did n''t do us justice?
38826And does n''t that newspaper notice they sent along say that they are the finest representation of dramatic talent now on the road?
38826And for what end?
38826And have n''t I come to tell you that you can make a great man of yourself?
38826And now what do you suppose we found out?
38826And now why should he have pressed me to come again to his house, even though the wife were away?
38826And the editor?
38826And what did I do?
38826And what did they do with me?
38826And what do you think of the prospects?
38826And what had I hoped for?
38826And what must_ she_ think?"
38826And what was that for?
38826And when does your house open?"
38826And why not?
38826And you so sentimental?"
38826And, indeed, if he had settled upon me why had he waited so long?
38826Any fat woman in short skirts trying to be a girl?
38826Any female detective that does n''t know she loves a suspected thief until she has had him put in jail?
38826Any fighting in it?"
38826Any man in your drama pull a pistol that way, Belford?"
38826Any tramp with more ability than an ancient philosopher?
38826Anybody say''stronger?''
38826Apology for what?
38826Are you going to chase a fox?"
38826Are you hungry enough to help build a fence?"
38826Are you just from the house?"
38826Belford, do you know that I can see that fellow Petticord''s hand every time I go to a political meeting?
38826Belford?"
38826Belford?"
38826Belford?"
38826Boat blew up at the door of our city, and why should n''t we care for the unfortunates?"
38826But the Senator-- why did he break in as if impatient of my name?
38826But was I now on board another steamer?
38826But we must have witnesses, eh?
38826But what are you going to do?"
38826But what are you going to do?"
38826But what could I hope for at best?
38826But when we meet, what then?"
38826But why do you come here to hit me with the moral sandbag of a priest?
38826But, by the way, Mr. Belford, where are you from, Sir?
38826But, look here, Joe, you ai n''t in earnest about not bein''able to do nothin''with that boot?"
38826By The Elephant?
38826By the way, Mr. Maffet, are you related, Sir, to the Maffets of Virginia?"
38826By the way, do you think you could take hold of an opera house and manage it?"
38826By the way, is old man Talcom interested in it?"
38826Can he see it?"
38826Chasing a fox, when there''s so much to be done in this world?
38826Could it be that I had begun to question my ability as an actor?
38826Dang it, have n''t I always voted for you?
38826Did you ever know a man too busy to die?"
38826Did you ever notice how dear stupid people are?
38826Do n''t we, Belford?"
38826Do n''t you know I go to church every Sunday?"
38826Do n''t you know that any calling can be made offensive?"
38826Do n''t you remember it?''
38826Do n''t you see I have n''t brought a book?"
38826Do n''t you think they''re good?
38826Do you believe we ought to be held responsible for everything?"
38826Do you know what ought to be done with a man that would get up such a disgrace on the greatest of all sport?
38826Do you reckon you''ve got sense enough to drive a cab?"
38826Do you suppose I want to hear anyone speak ill of my friends?"
38826Do you understand?"
38826Do you understand?"
38826Do you understand?"
38826Do you want us to handcuff you?"
38826Does n''t the Scripture say,''Waste not, for to- morrow you may die?''
38826Done with me?
38826Eh?
38826Estell?"
38826Ever ride after the hounds?"
38826Fell?
38826Fine piece of work, eh, Florence?"
38826Florence, where did Giles go?"
38826Folks all well?
38826Getting tired of Bolanyo?"
38826Giles, did you bring my pipe?
38826Going to town?
38826Good man, is he?"
38826Got any of those things?"
38826Had he grown weary with hearing it?
38826Hah, do n''t you know yet?"
38826Hang it up for a scarecrow?
38826Have n''t got a cut of yourself, have you?"
38826Have n''t you signed a contract with Sanderson Hicks to give us the Lady of Lyons?
38826Have you an engagement in view?"
38826Have you any brothers or sisters?"
38826Have you decided as to who shall have it?"
38826Have you got a pretty good plot for your play?"
38826Have you heard anybody say that I ought to give it up?
38826Have you made any overtures?"
38826He''s a shrewd politician, is n''t he?"
38826He''s about the last of''em, ai n''t he?
38826Helloa, there, Estell, why do n''t you come out to meet a fellow?"
38826How are you and Talcom getting along?"
38826How are you, Uncle Gabe?"
38826How are you, anyway?
38826How are you, anyway?"
38826How can you compare a handsome woman with the flesh of the devil?"
38826How do you feel?"
38826How do you like my flowers?"
38826How does that hit you?"
38826How far is it?"
38826How is a State to get along without laws?
38826How many does that make?"
38826How much do you need?"
38826How old were you at the time you entered the university?"
38826How will that do?"
38826How''s that, old fellow?"
38826How?"
38826I knew that she was hungry; but if I could give her food, why should this monster dash it to the ground?
38826I wrote to Copeland Maffet and sent him a scenario--""A what?"
38826I''m not worth a cent, you understand, but I''m as proud as a peacock What of?
38826I--"was she laughing at me?
38826Is Estell at home?"
38826Is it possible that he keeps up that foolishness?
38826Is it true?"
38826Is n''t in chapters, though, is it?
38826Is n''t it a sleepy day?"
38826Is n''t it sweet?
38826Is n''t that a pretty little theatre?
38826It might have been the eye of prejudice that made him look so old, though why should there have been an eye of prejudice?
38826It would be a good thing for a fellow to snatch out his pistol and have it grabbed and turned against him, do n''t you see?
38826Let''s see; you''ll have to go North and book the attractions, wo n''t you?"
38826Manager, why did n''t you have them wake me?
38826Miss Rodney, what_ are_ you giggling about?"
38826Mister, how long are you goin''to be with us?"
38826Mr. Belford, why have n''t you told me more about yourself?"
38826No, you wo n''t, will you?
38826Now what could have put that fool notion into your head?
38826Now what did I do with that other pistol?"
38826Now what do you suppose he wanted to get well for?"
38826Now, do you understand?"
38826Now, what earthly harm could there have been in her going fox- hunting, and her father along, too?
38826Of course, if you are tired of our slow and dull city, Sir, you--""Tired?"
38826One of my friends?
38826Ought he to put her out and shut the door?"
38826Remember Mr. Belford, do n''t you?"
38826Representatives of the best families have called to show their faith, but what would they think if Estell should shoot you?"
38826Sampson?
38826Shall I light a lamp?"
38826Should he put her out?"
38826Start where?"
38826Suit you?"
38826Suppose you take it?"
38826The man--""The man what?"
38826The question is, will you come over with me to see old Jim?
38826There was no violation of a promise in that, was there, Florence?"
38826To hang me?"
38826Vark, you do n''t want to injure me, do you?"
38826Vark?"
38826Walkin''''cross de pasture thinkin'', an''de fust thing I knowed--""That you, Washington?"
38826Want me to shake on it?
38826Want to get on the train?"
38826Was it the custom in Bolanyo to dignify a torture with a stately introduction?
38826We want to start from here--""After the hounds?
38826Were they true?"
38826What are you going to do?"
38826What did you come to say?"
38826What do you mean by that?"
38826What do you mean by that?"
38826What do you say?"
38826What do you say?"
38826What do you say?"
38826What do you say?"
38826What do you want to halt along here for?
38826What do you want with a picture of me?
38826What do you want?"
38826What earthly harm can there be in her going fox- hunting?
38826What her do you mean?"
38826What of it?
38826What sort of light should now I find in the eyes of that old man?
38826What will you take for''em, Joe?"
38826What''s all that you''ve got spread out there?"
38826What''s the matter?
38826What''s the use?
38826When do you have to get it?"
38826When do you want the devilish thing?"
38826Where was the freedom, the outbreak of energy she had shown in the opera house; where was the look of frankness?
38826Where''s Florence?"
38826Which way are you traveling?"
38826Whose boots are them right there-- them old ones?
38826Whose son are you, anyway?"
38826Why did she, indeed?
38826Why do n''t you go into some other business-- why do n''t you go to work?"
38826Why do n''t you go off somewhere?"
38826Why do n''t you take the money that a bell would cost and give it to the poorer members of your congregation?"
38826Why do they have to be rung, too, so much?
38826Why does n''t he come out in his paper and give me a chance?
38826Why not stay here and do your writing?
38826Why not?"
38826Why should n''t I?
38826Why so sensitive and timorous now when I had been so bold a few days before?
38826Why, Sir, have n''t you secured the Lamptons to play here a whole week during our county fair?
38826Why, confound his hide, do you know there''s not a bigger liar in this State?
38826Why, what are you so astonished at, Mister?
38826Why, what''s the matter with the old one?"
38826Why?"
38826Will you promise to behave if I let you go back?"
38826Wo n''t that be fun?"
38826Wo n''t you join us in a drink of some sort, Sir?"
38826Would n''t you like to sit in the pilot house?"
38826Would n''t you rather have the good opinion of a few high- class men and women than the enthusiastic commendation of the rabble?"
38826Would the door ever be opened?
38826You are going to let me read it, I suppose?"
38826You have never told me about_ her_?"
38826You have no idea what a source of-- what shall I say?
38826You mean Brother Sampson, Sir?"
38826_ Did_ you hear that?"
54370Am I not to believe what I see with my own eyes, and hear with my own ears?
54370O, Sir,cried one of the islanders,"why can we not return to the old way and not have all these modern ideas?
54370Again, should a conqueror be classed among the great?
54370And do not all persons develop one or more faculties, and neglect others, without causing any change in the bones of the face?
54370And how do they do it?
54370And should they?
54370And that if she took any other drug, the effects would not be about the same as they are known to be in practically all cases?
54370And then what more can the gods require?
54370And what are we to do with this common enemy of mankind?
54370And, if so, would it take eight or ten years before this could be done?
54370Are not animals affected by disease as well as man?
54370Are our churches to encourage the vice at their fairs in order to make money to_ redeem_ the world?
54370Are we to allow gambling houses to exist in our midst, thus inviting our young men to become victims?
54370Are we to allow lotteries and petty gambling devices everywhere as we do now?
54370Are we to emulate the faults of the great, or their virtues?
54370Because some men will steal, should we license them and furnish them with ways and means to carry out their brutal instincts?
54370But hold,--other difficulties present themselves: Who would compel the organized industries( Trusts) to reduce the hours of work?
54370But what has Christian Science done?
54370But what were the forlorn islanders to do about it?
54370But, should we listen for a moment to those who seek to exterminate the Trust?
54370But, who may say?
54370Can a person be a gentleman part of the time and not all the time, or is he born one way or the other?
54370Can a person who was not born a gentleman acquire the title?
54370Can so immense a collection of bodies meet and combine with unanimity?
54370Can such an association or society be organized?
54370Do we not all know now what a gentleman is?
54370Do you wish to isolate yourself from your fellow men and separately make and raise everything you eat and wear?"
54370Do you wish to return to that?
54370Does it not require quite a stretch of a sacrilegious imagination to picture a clothing factory in the spiritual world?
54370For example, suppose the coal mines remained idle,--what if the operators refused to obey the national directory?
54370For that matter, who can?
54370Has not the burden of the world''s work been lightened and lessened by this combination and organization?
54370How can the phrenologist reconcile his philosophy to this stubborn fact?
54370How can there be when a gentleman is a_ perfect man_?
54370How can we conquer the giant without slaying him?
54370How do we know that a man is popular with the people?
54370How?
54370I have frequently been asked by believing friends,"How do you account for this?"
54370If God is able to prevent evil, and is not willing, where is His benevolence?
54370If God is both able and willing, whence then is evil?
54370If God is willing, but not able, where is His power?
54370If employment is all we seek, why not tear down the public buildings and then hire men to build them up again?
54370If not, how about Confucius who was yellow?
54370If so, who would say that their meager minds could cause it?
54370If the public is the majority, who is to say that they are wise or unwise, right or wrong, fools or philosophers?
54370Is a great hangman as great as a great divine, and is the greatest clown to be numbered among the greatest men of history?
54370Is a great shoemaker a great man?
54370Is it a matter of birth, a matter of character, a matter of conscience, a matter of dress, a matter of conduct, or a matter of education?
54370Is, then, the spirit world( heaven), no improvement on our own world?
54370It asks itself"What is right?"
54370It sometimes attaches to ignorance, for who is today more popular than our champion batter or prize fighter?
54370It sometimes attaches to immorality, for did it not adopt the infamous Pompadour and du Barry?
54370It sometimes attaches to trifles, for was there ever such a fuss made over anything as the Teddybear?
54370It sometimes attaches to tyrants, for were not Caligula and Nero more popular than Germanicus?
54370Must the constitution be amended in order that NATIONAL DIRECTION shall be put into effect?
54370Now, my friends, why do you keep these God- given advantages to yourselves?
54370On the other hand, versatility of genius is not uncommon, for was not Leonardo da Vinci master of all the arts?
54370Or a Lincoln, Grant or Lee?
54370Or, should we try to cure it of its faults by training it to do our bidding?
54370Shall Booker T. Washington''s name not go on the immortal list just because he is black?
54370Shall Jesus''name be written on the scroll and not Buddha''s or Mohammed''s?
54370Shall Theodore Roosevelt go on the list?
54370Shall we class Joan of Arc among the great?
54370Shall we give Socrates a niche?
54370Shall we nominate Diogenes?
54370Shall we put Martin Luther on, and not Voltaire?
54370Shall we stop all this and let man''s passions have full sway?
54370Somebody has said that the majority is usually wrong, but who is to decide whether the majority or that"somebody"is wrong?
54370Still here mean that Osteopaths have a certain magic touch which is so powerful and wonderful that it must be used with great caution?
54370Still says that Osteopaths adjust displaced muscles, does he not?
54370That this touch lets loose certain drugs or chemicals which the body needs to cure itself?
54370The question is asked: Will all of the milk dealers one day combine and form a Trust?
54370The question may be asked, What power can compel the Trusts to do that which they have been directed to do by the nation?
54370There is an old saw that runs--"What is a gentleman?
54370These are questions on every tongue, yet who may say the answer?
54370Was Caesar great?
54370Was there ever a more popular man than Dewey after the Manila victory?
54370What are the qualifications and requirements?
54370What can be done with this unmanageable monster to destroy its faults and yet not spoil its virtues?
54370What does all this show?
54370What is a gentleman?
54370What is a wedding, and a marriage, and why?
54370What is genius?
54370What is greatness?
54370What kind of a beard shall we wear?
54370What matter if all of that is true or false?
54370What object was sought, in the beginning, when custom demanded a marriage ceremony before cohabitation?
54370What people?
54370What then have bumps to do with his mind?
54370What would prevent them charging exorbitant prices?
54370Who are the great and the greatest men of the time?
54370Who or what is to be the court of last resort?
54370Who or what would prevent the captains of industry filling their own pockets and keeping the great profits to themselves?
54370Who or what would prevent the rich from growing richer, and the poor poorer?
54370Who were the greatest men of history?
54370Who would favor a"beardless youth"to Numa Pimpolius-- he of the magnificent flowing beard?
54370Who would know good horses if there were no heavy loads?"
54370Who would prefer a Shakespeare, a Longfellow, a Whitman, a Ruskin, a Charlemagne, shorn of their hirsute adornments?
54370Who would say that the Boston tea party_ caused_ the Revolutionary war, or that the firing on Fort Sumpter_ caused_ the"late unpleasantness"?
54370Why can we not go back to the old way?"
54370Why do n''t you exchange what you make or raise for the products of your neighbors?
54370Why do we cling to error so tenaciously?
54370Why does every new, occult fad soon attract a host of followers?
54370Why has that ancient custom followed man to every far corner of the globe, and why do all peoples resent any effort to destroy that custom?
54370Why is it that so many are willing to attribute occult powers to all magicians who perform inexplicable tricks?
54370Why so many different forms of ceremony, what do they mean, and why do they differ so?
54370Yes, who would not expect it?
54370Yet who would say, under those circumstances, that Mind has endowed those drugs with the powers to act on the system as they do?
54370You say that Julian argued arduously against the beard?
54370You say the ancient Egyptians wore no beards?
54370_ The Public_ Who or what are the public?
54370and was not our own Franklin equally famous for his several accomplishments?
54370did not Lord Brougham excel in everything, until they said of him"Science is his forte, omniscience his foible"?
54370exclaims Chamfort,"how many fools does it take to make the public?"
54370not"What will the public applaud?"
54370on all beards above a fortnight''s growth?
54370or, that of walking under a ladder, for how many times in a lifetime does a person have occasion to avoid doing so?
9104*** What could have impelled the Americans to invent such extraordinary implements of war but fear, down- right fear?"
9104And why did the British have such bad average crews as he makes out?
9104By the way, why is Tromp always called Van Tromp by English writers?
9104If a ship armed with long 12''s, meets one armed with 32-pound carronades, which is superior in force?
9104No one can help feeling regret that he was killed; but if he was to fall, what more glorious death could he meet?
9104No one pretends that either navy was invincible; the question is, which side averaged best?
9104Now what could persuade a writer to make such a foolish accusation?
9104Now, if a few of these schooners, mounting long 32''s, encountered a couple of man- of- war brigs, armed with carronades, which side was strongest?
9104The question is, did Chauncy use his force to the best advantage?
9104Then the question arises in any given case, was the water smooth?
8691Certainly, Sir,was the quick retort,"and may I beg your honor to take the wool out of your ears?
8691Are the courts to send such questions to a jury or shall the judges decide them?
8691But may not a power be judicial in its nature and yet not wholly so?
8691But out of what did this doctrine spring?
8691But what is a suit?
8691But what shall be the nature of this office, and who shall decide whether these conditions have been fulfilled and these papers filed?
8691Can anything less than that be considered as due process of law?
8691Can that be deemed a judicial sentence to imprisonment which is a sentence to imprisonment during the pleasure of certain administrative officials?
8691Could they sue and be sued in the courts of the United States?
8691How far can the courts, in dealing with these, govern their action by that of the executive?
8691If so, ought not the fate to be meted out to them by judicial authority?
8691Rufus Choate once said that the question at bottom was, Are you afraid to trust the people?
8691What is due process of law?
8691What is property?
8691What serves to establish one?
8691What, he asked, was this law of the land by which all things were to be tried and judged?
8691Who, he asked, were the present judges of their Supreme Court?
46327( Horticultural) 44 × 88?
463271885, as a synonym under_ Cerasus pseudocerasus_?
463271888?
463271893?
463271908?
463271909?
463271909?
46327= Adlington.= Species?
46327= Affane.= Species?
46327= Albertine Millet.= Species?
46327= Andrews.= Species?
46327= Baylor.= Species?
46327= Belle Bosc.= Species?
46327= Belle Defay.= Species?
46327= Belle Vezzouris.= Species?
46327= Belle de Boskoop.= Species?
46327= Belle de Rochelle.= Species?
46327= Bicolor Van Mons.= Species?
46327= Black American.= Species?
46327= Black Margaret.= Species?
46327= Black Prolific.= Species?
46327= Blasse Johanni Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Bocage.= Species?
46327= Bon Bon.= Species?
46327= Book.= Species?
46327= Bount Dantzic.= Species?
46327= Boyd Early Black.= Species?
46327= Byrnville.= Species?
46327= Cameleon.= Species?
46327= Catskill.= Species?
46327= Cerise Albanes.= Species?
46327= Cerise Bellon.= Species?
46327= Cerise Rouge Sanguine.= Species?
46327= Cerise Royale Ordinaire.= Species?
46327= Cerise d''Angleterre Précoce.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Mai Double.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Mai Simple.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Martigné.= Species?
46327= Cerise de Tiercé.= Species?
46327= Cerise de l''Ardèche.= Species?
46327= Cerise du Prince Maurice.= Species?
46327= Cerisier Royal Tardif à Fruit Noir.= Species?
46327= Cerisier de Varenne.= Species?
46327= Champagne.= Species?
46327= Coeur de Pigeon Noir.= Species?
46327= Como.= Species?
46327= Comtesse de Médicis Spada.= Species?
46327= Condé.= Species?
46327= Courte- queue de Gaiberg.= Species?
46327= Crawford.= Species?
46327= Crown Prince.= Species?
46327= Datge.= Species?
46327= De Belleu.= Species?
46327= De Jacap.= Species?
46327= De Ravaene.= Species?
46327= De Sibérie à gros fruit et à rameaux pendans.= Species?
46327= De Vaux.= Species?
46327= Denner Black.= Species?
46327= Des Cheneaux.= Species?
46327= Ditst.= Species?
46327= Dobbeete Moreller.= Species?
46327= Doctay.= Species?
46327= Dorotheenkirsche.= Species?
46327= Doty.= Species?
46327= Dougall.= Species?
46327= Dove Bank.= Species?
46327= Du Comte Egger.= Species?
46327= Dumas.= Species?
46327= Dure Noir Grosse.= Species?
46327= Délicieuse.= Species?
46327= Early Eugene.= Species?
46327= Ebenter Cherry.= Species?
46327= Edouard Seneclause.= Species?
46327= Elfner Kirsche.= Species?
46327= English Gaskin.= Species?
46327= Frogmore Early Crown.= Species?
46327= Früheste der Mark.= Species?
46327= Gamdale.= Species?
46327= Gaskins.= Species?
46327= Golden Knob.= Species?
46327= Gormley.= Species?
46327= Governor Luce.= Species?
46327= Grafenburger Frühkirsche.= Species?
46327= Grande Ronde.= Species?
46327= Great Leafed.= Species?
46327= Griotte Tardive d''Annecy.= Species?
46327= Griotte de Schaarbeck.= Species?
46327= Grosse Friedrichskirsche.= Species?
46327= Grosse Transparente.= Species?
46327= Gubens Ehre.= Species?
46327= Guindoux Noir de Faix.= Species?
46327= Halifax.= Species?
46327= Hamell Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Hamels Arissen.= Species?
46327= Hartlib.= Species?
46327= Hartlippe.= Species?
46327= Hartz Mountain.= Species?
46327= Headley.= Species?
46327= Hedwigs Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Heintzen( Heintze''s) Frühe Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Hensel Early.= Species?
46327= Herzkirsche Léona Quesnel.= Species?
46327= Herzkirsche Trauben.= Species?
46327= Herzkirsche Wils Frühe.= Species?
46327= Holstein.= Species?
46327= Hâtive de Balis.= Species?
46327= Hâtive de St. Jean.= Species?
46327= Hâtive ou Précoce.= Species?
46327= Incomparable en Beauté.= Species?
46327= Jean Arendsen.= Species?
46327= Jerusalem Kirsche von der Natte.= Species?
46327= Kazan Seedling.= Species?
46327= Kentish Preserve.= Species?
46327= Kesterter Früh Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Kleine Natte.= Species?
46327= Knapp.= Species?
46327= Koeper.= Species?
46327= Korkovanyer Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Kostelniti.= Species?
46327= Kriek van den Broek.= Species?
46327= Kritzendorfer Einsiedekirsche.= Species?
46327= La Nappe.= Species?
46327= Laeder Kirsebaer.= Species?
46327= Langsurer Prachtweichsel.= Species?
46327= Large Guindolle.= Species?
46327= Large Spanish.= Species?
46327= Latham.= Species?
46327= Little Phil.= Species?
46327= Long Finger.= Species?
46327= Lothaunner Erfurter.= Species?
46327= Léopold( II).= Species?
46327= Magnifique de Daval.= Species?
46327= Magog.= Species?
46327= Manger.= Species?
46327= Marells Royal.= Species?
46327= Mazarine.= Species?
46327= Meissener Weisse.= Species?
46327= Merise Grosse Rose Oblongue.= Species?
46327= Merise Petite Ronda.= Species?
46327= Merisier Fastigié.= Species?
46327= Miller.= Species?
46327= Monkirsche Rote.= Species?
46327= Monstrueuse Hennequine.= Species?
46327= Morisco.= Species?
46327= Morten Seedling.= Species?
46327= New Royal.= Species?
46327= Nonpareil.= Species?
46327= Norfolk.= Species?
46327= Oliver.= Species?
46327= Orléa Smith.= Species?
46327= Pandys Glaskirsche.= Species?
46327= Parent.= Species?
46327= Pauline de Vigny.= Species?
46327= Peach- Blossomed.= Species?
46327= Polsted.= Species?
46327= Portugal.= Species?
46327= Prince Englebert.= Species?
46327= Prince Royal.= Species?
46327= Prince.= Species?
46327= Prunus zappeyana?
46327= Précoce de Marest.= Species?
46327= Précoce de Sabaret.= Species?
46327= Rainier French.= Species?
46327= Red Canada.= Species?
46327= Red Russian.= Species?
46327= Reichart.= Species?
46327= Richardson Late Black.= Species?
46327= Richter Sämling.= Species?
46327= Rock.= Species?
46327= Rockland.= Species?
46327= Romaine.= Species?
46327= Ronald.= Species?
46327= Rose Charmeux.= Species?
46327= Rothe Glanzkirsche.= Species?
46327= Rouge Pâle Tardive.= Species?
46327= Royal American.= Species?
46327= Russie à Fruit Blanc.= Species?
46327= Sacramento.= Species?
46327= Saint- Laurent.= Species?
46327= Schneeberger Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Schwarze Oranienkirsche.= Species?
46327= Schöne von Brügge.= Species?
46327= Select Beauty.= Species?
46327= Short- stem May.= Species?
46327= Sleinhaus.= Species?
46327= Smidt Yellow.= Species?
46327= Soft- stone Cherry.= Species?
46327= Starr Prolific.= Species?
46327= Sweet Morello.= Species?
46327= Sächsische Frühe Maikirsche.= Species?
46327= Tardive Noire d''Espagne.= Species?
46327= Tardive de Brederode.= Species?
46327= Tardive de Peine.= Species?
46327= Thirty Day.= Species?
46327= Toctonne Précoce.= Species?
46327= Toronto.= Species?
46327= Transparente de Siebenfreund.= Species?
46327= Triomphe de Fausin.= Species?
46327= Turner Late.= Species?
46327= Twyford.= Species?
46327= Vanskike.= Species?
46327= Vaughn.= Species?
46327= Vistula.= Species?
46327= Warren Transparent.= Species?
46327= Washington Purple.= Species?
46327= Weis, Roth und Rosenfarbig Marmorirte Kramelkirsche.= Species?
46327= Weisse Mandelkirsche.= Species?
46327= White French.= Species?
46327= White Transparent.= Species?
46327= Winter Schwarze.= Species?
46327= Zweifarbige Kirsche.= Species?
46327= Zwitterkirsche.= Species?
46327?
46327?"
46327Armenia, Georgia, Himalaya?
46327Bigarreau( Golden)?
46327Himalaya?
46327How are the cherries described in the passage from Pliny related to those of modern culture?
46327In what respects is it easier to grow cherries on the Mahaleb in the nursery than on the Mazzard?
46327It is described as"being the blackest"but whether_ Prunus avium_ or_ Prunus cerasus_, sweet or sour, who can tell?
46327Received from Belgium without description; its value is questioned in_ Guide Pratique._= Alexandrine Béon.= Species?
46327Species?
46327What fruit better adapted to the uses of colonists than the cherry?
46327Why has the Mahaleb supplanted the Mazzard?
46327X.= Species?
46327_ Amber_?
46327_ Bigarreau rouge de Tilgener_?
46327_ Bigarreautier à fruit jaune?_= 7.= Noisette_ Man.
46327_ Cerise de Prusse noire?_= 6.=_ Ibid._= 11=:160.
46327_ Cerisier cuculle_?
46327_ Coeur de Boeuf nouveau_?
46327_ De Sibérie à fruit rond_?
46327_ Frühkirsche_?
46327_ Grosse Morelle double?_= 3.= Mas_ Pom.
46327_ Grosse Spanische Weichsel_?
46327_ Guigne à courte queue_?
46327_ Guignier à gros fruit noir_?
46327_ Impératrice Downton_?
46327_ Late Black Bigarreau_?
46327_ Late Honey_?
46327_ Petit Bigarreau Hâtif_?
46327_ Prunus tomentosa_,(?)
46327_ Summer''s Honey_?
46327_ Türkine_?
46327cerasus?_= 1.=_ Lond.
46327cerasus_), 24 44 × 48?
46327neglecta_), 17_ Prunus zappeyana_, 20_ Prunus zappeyana?
46327pumila × P.?_= 1.=_ Can.
46327szechuanica_, var.?"
6808And hast thou forgotten, friend John, the ear of Indian corn which my father begged of thee for me? 6808 And what''s her name?"
6808Do you know how many brothers and sisters you had?
6808Have you any? 6808 Have you never been attacked by the Indians?"
6808How came you to lose your thumb- nail?
6808How,some of our readers will exclaim,"can a woman possess such iron nerves as to dare and do such a deed as this?"
6808Is she killed? 6808 No, Pete,"was the reply,"them''s angels; did n''t you hear''em sing to us a spell ago?"
6808Then go,said she,"and look for him in the American army;"adding,"how dare you disturb a family under the protection of both armies?"
6808Was it Frances?
6808What do you remember?
6808What shall I first save?
6808What''s your talk, stranger?
6808Who be those, Jim, walking round that fire; not women?
6808Would you know your name if you should hear it repeated?
6808And shall the servant be greater than his Master?"
6808And who but woman could best display those qualities?
6808But how could a woman be there in the heart of the mountains in the wintry weather, with only the storm to speak to her?
6808But pray,''said he,''how came you here?''
6808But what God- sent messenger is this coming through the drifts to meet them?
6808But what is that strange light which far to the north gleams on the blackened sky?
6808But what must it be in the rude cabin on the lonely border?
6808But where?
6808Can we doubt that the prayers of these noble patriot women were answered?
6808Did the mother indulge the grief of her spirit, and sit down in despair?
6808How had they existed?
6808How many fevered brows have they cooled, how many gloomy moods have they illumined, how many wavering hearts have they stayed and confirmed?
6808Hugging Frank Cogdell, the greatest reprobate in the army?''
6808If thou hast no light on the subject, wilt thou gather into the stillness and reverently listen to thy own inward revealings?
6808Inquiries were made as to who had been killed, and one, running up, cried,"Where is the woman that gave us the powder?
6808Relief, she said,_ must_ be before them, and not far away; for her sake, would he not try once more?
6808She questions the Canadian,"Who was this La Bonte who you say was such a brave mountaineer?"
6808Should we have ever established our Independence but for the countless brave, kind, and self- sacrificing acts of woman?
6808The annals of colonial history teem with her deeds of love and heroism, and what are those recorded instances to those which had no chronicler?
6808The following colloquy, conducted through the interpreter, ensued:"What was your name when a child?"
6808There was a keg in a house ten or twelve rods from the gate of the fort, and the question arose, who shall attempt to seize this prize?
6808They have youth, hope, health, occupation, and amusement, and when you have added"meat, clothes, and fire,"what more has England''s queen?
6808They were surrounded by the same malarial influences that had made such havoc among their neighbors, and why should they escape?
6808Was it American cavalry or was it a band of Mexican guerrillas that was galloping so fiercely over that arid plain?
6808Was it friend or foe?
6808Was there no escape?
6808Well, all will be over in a moment; but how will my poor mother feel when she learns my awful fate?"
6808What could he mean?
6808What do I hear?"
6808What do you say, old hos?"
6808What does he want with the great old- fashioned rocking chair?
6808When winter came, and the gleaming snow spread its unbroken silence over hill and plain, was it not dreary then?
6808Which is the stronger, who shall say?
6808Whither should they fly?
6808Who can calculate the sum total of such an influence as this?
6808Why, then, should I hold back, and feel so reluctant to enter the path His wisdom points out?
6808Would you linger here when our Master calls us away, to labor somewhere else in His vineyard?
6808and when your presence, your converse and hands can only beguile the few remaining hours of his existence?"
6808but how?"
6808can it be you, Mary?"
6808could that wretched shelter be a home for the hapless mother and her child?
6808he exclaimed,''what are you doing there?
6808whither shall I go?"
6158And what is that?
6158But will you allow me to attend you, so that the people will not withdraw their confidence?
6158Can not you give me a plain answer to this plain question-- Did it rain yesterday?
6158Did it rain yesterday?
6158Do you ever wonder why poets talk so much about flowers? 6158 Have I time to catch the Hudson River train?"
6158Have you heard nothing to- day?
6158I have promised to be there--_promised_, do you hear? 6158 Is it yesterday you mean?"
6158My good friend, I do n''t know what you mean about the bog; I only asked you whether it rained yesterday?
6158Of what use?
6158Please your honor, I was n''t at the bog at all yesterday,--wasn''t I after setting my potatoes?
6158Pray, sir,continued Smith,"do you believe in a cook?"
6158True enough,was the prompt reply,"but did I not blacken them well?"
6158Well,said the commissary,"do n''t you know why we have given the contract to you?
6158What can be more palpably absurd and ridiculous than the prospect held out of locomotives traveling twice as fast as horses?
6158What do you like, my little girl?
6158What is the secret of success in business?
6158What makes you work so hard?
6158What now was the cause of this heart- rending event? 6158 Why do n''t you send in a bid?"
6158Yes, sir; what do you want?
6158''Charley,''he cried,''what are you doing there?''
6158A few years since, a manly boy about nine years old stepped up to a gentleman in the Grand Central Depot, New York, and asked,"Shine, sir?"
6158After all, would it not appear that the true theory is that of a golden mean between these two extremes?
6158An Irishman, who had neglected to thatch his cottage, was one day asked by a gentleman with whom he was conversing,"Did it rain yesterday?"
6158And why should we not look for full mental development, and for the most perfect moral maturity?
6158And you, little boy, with dirty hands and low forehead,"What do you like?"
6158At the close of dinner one day my father turned everybody out of the cabin, locked the door, and said to me:''David, what do you mean to be?''
6158Bishop Vincent, writing about boyhood, says,"If I were a boy?
6158But always, What is my duty?
6158But where does he eat his lunch at noon?
6158But who says there are no joys in life?
6158Could anything be more beautiful or noble in public life, where jealousy, and selfishness and double- dealing appear to rule the hour?
6158Did he conclude that he had made a mistake in his calling, and dabble in something else?
6158Did he slink out of sight?
6158Did you ever hear of a poet who did not talk about them?
6158Did you ever read the fable of the magician and the mouse?
6158For example: Have you a hot, passionate temper?
6158He did not ask, Will this course win fame?
6158Hearing a young lady highly praised for her beauty, Gotthold asked,"What kind of beauty do you mean?
6158How can he answer for it to his country?
6158How many of us would be alive to- day, if in our earliest years we had not been provided for and watched over with tender care?
6158I said to myself,''Lincoln, when is a thing proved?''
6158If it is not so, how can it so control them as to develop a pure and noble character?
6158If what is imperfect constitutes the exception in the physical world, why should it be otherwise in the world of mind and of morals?
6158Is it a thing to be preferred, to be stunted, and little, and dwarfish, in our intellectual and moral stature?
6158Is not this a queer city?
6158Leave a little baby to take care of itself, and how long do you suppose it would live?
6158Merely that of the body, or that also of the mind?
6158One of the gentlemen then said to him,"What if one of the lights should chance to go out?"
6158Or do we prefer a state of childhood to that of a perfect man?
6158Or was he up and at it again with a determination that knows no defeat?
6158President Lincoln was asked,"How does Grant impress you as a leading general?"
6158Shall I?"
6158Should he be less particular in selecting his companions?
6158Suppose you go out into the street and ask the first person you meet what he likes?
6158The boy remembered the gentleman, and asked him,"Did n''t I shine your shoes once in the Grand Central Depot?"
6158The general, without returning his salute, asked, roughly:"Have you got the powder?"
6158The mere fact of his failure has interest; but how did he take his defeat?
6158The question might be asked,"Why do some forms and colors please, and others displease?"
6158The question to be settled by most of us is, Shall I steer or drift?
6158Then I thought,''What use is it for me to be in a law office if I ca n''t tell when a thing is proved?''
6158Then in the spring, when I had got through with it, I said to myself one day,''Ah, do you know now when a thing is proved?''
6158There may be evidence enough, but wherein consists the proof?
6158To his mind, the first, last, and closest trial question to any living creature is, What do you like?
6158WHAT CONSTITUTES GOOD CITIZENSHIP?
6158Was he discouraged?
6158Was it stress of weather, or a contrary wind, or unavoidable accident?
6158Was there a man dismay''d?
6158Washington broke out at first with terrible severity of speech, and then said:"Why did you come back, sir, without it?"
6158What are hardships, ridicule, persecution, toil, or sickness, to a soul throbbing with an overmastering purpose?
6158What constitutes proof?
6158What did he do next?
6158What does he do after supper?
6158What other creature in the world is so helpless as the human infant?
6158What then was the character of these homes?
6158What would become of the world if we could not trust each other''s word?
6158What would now be thought of the greatest chemist or geologist of 1776?
6158What?"
6158When can their glory fade?
6158Where does he go when he leaves his boarding- house at night?
6158Where does he spend his Sundays and holidays?
6158Who does not see that if these men had lost their grip upon themselves, the world would have been deprived of many of its rarest literary treasures?
6158Who ever contemplates stunted growth, or any kind of visible deformity, with complacency and satisfaction?
6158Who ever heard of excuses in football- playing?
6158Why?
6158Will this battle add to my earthly glory?
6158Yankee fashion, it might be answered by the question,"Why do we like sugar and dislike wormwood?"
6158You can take a pretty good measure of his character from that answer, can you not?
6158You young rebel, what are you doing there?
6158he asked, seeing that the youth was apparently thunderstruck,"is it you?"
42308Again threatening a visit? 42308 And could not you have done it''just for once''as well?"
42308And did you live at her house?--have you neither father nor mother living?
42308And forgive me now?
42308And how old are you?
42308And is the land we are passing over all one ranch?
42308And may I ask from where this fabulous wealth springs so suddenly?
42308And not for you? 42308 And the other grave-- that with the bones and rocks piled on it?"
42308And the woman?
42308And these flowers, so beautiful,he continued,"will you love them, too?
42308And was there any one in the stage whom you knew?
42308And where is his grave?
42308And who''s to bear me away?
42308And you are going, too?
42308And you came those nine miles all alone, gal?
42308Are you at peace with yourself now, Christine, and satisfied to be mine-- satisfied and happy? 42308 Are you sick, Eva, my child?"
42308Are you speaking of the gentleman from Siskiyou?
42308But, Paul, I ca n''t read in the dark, can I? 42308 But, Si"--the quivering lips could hardly frame the words--"have you been to her cottage?
42308But,said I, impatiently,"where is the settlement you speak of?
42308Can you suggest any post- office in Indiana beginning with M, ending with L, with about four letters between?
42308Can you tolerate me no longer, Nora?
42308Charles Somervale?
42308Charlie?
42308Corporal,said I,"have you Mohrman''s book?"
42308Coyotes, brother Frank; the ghosts do n''t come round this early, do they?
42308Did he pity me when I came home broken- hearted-- repentant?
42308Did it not seem an age since I had parted with the last lady, at Fort Selden?
42308Do n''t let us go farther-- who knows but what we may encounter another bear?
42308Do you really read Heine in the original?
42308Excuse me,he said, with unmistakable Spanish pronunciation;"but you do not live in our Valley-- do you?"
42308Father, why do n''t you correct the boy? 42308 Got any money?
42308Happened?
42308Has the stage come in?
42308Have a cigar, Henry?
42308Here?
42308Hetty,he cried,"are you then so anxious to go-- so unwilling to stay, even for a day, after the school closes?
42308How came she to lose it, then, if it was so precious?
42308How dare you come here? 42308 How did it come to their ears?"
42308How do you, child? 42308 How much do you want for it?"
42308How old are you, Lady Clare?
42308I suppose it is a popular air among the Mexicans?
42308If I obtain your father''s consent to our union at Christmas, will you become mine on New- Year''s day? 42308 Is Master Willie troublesome?"
42308Is Mr. Brodie sick?
42308Is it not beautiful?
42308Is it right that it should be so: that we should be robbed of all that makes life sweet and desirable, by the wicked acts of others? 42308 Is n''t it pretty?"
42308Is she pretty?
42308It is beautiful, is it not?
42308It is not on this ranch, then?
42308Johnny,said Hetty, next morning, on their way to school,"I think-- I''ll go home when vacation begins, and--""Why, what d''you mean?"
42308Laura,_ will_ you stop crying just for two seconds, and listen to what I have to say?
42308May I come in?
42308May I go with you?
42308Meaning me or the ranch?
42308My dear child, did I stay out late? 42308 My fur sack?"
42308Nonsense, child,said Mrs. Wardor;"what would the young gentleman coming with your father think, to see a school- girl loaded down with diamonds?
42308Not even if that mythical uncle in the Indies had come home?
42308Now what do you say?
42308Phil,said I, interrupting him,"you told me the mules would not get a drop of water to- day: what is that lake before us, then?"
42308Shall we walk up toward the garden?
42308She has n''t come?
42308Sure, ma''am, and is it his prayer- book the poor b''y wants? 42308 That air?
42308That song? 42308 That''s your notion of what''s right, is it?
42308The boy, children-- have you all forgotten about the boy? 42308 The wretched man I followed?
42308Then Crabtree is in command of the company; or has Captain Howell been relieved? 42308 Then none of my letters have ever reached you?
42308Then why not send for him?
42308Then you have brought a man?
42308Then you know it, Phrony?
42308Then your life has been made a wreck, as well as my own, Eva?
42308There are more men to be sent out to- night?
42308To look for the Hidden Mine of the Padres? 42308 To the city?"
42308Tobacconist? 42308 Well, well, was n''t that the best I could do for them?"
42308Well?
42308What do you want to be quarrelling to- day for, Tom?
42308What does she want?
42308What if they should try to take my little girl away before I come back-- would she go off and leave me?
42308What is it?
42308What is it?
42308What kind of a man is Captain Arnold?
42308What makes you so sad, Christine? 42308 What poor fellow-- and where is he?"
42308What pretty speeches,Lola tossed her head mockingly;"did you learn them from Miss Angelina Stubbs?"
42308What will you do about it?
42308What''s that?
42308What-- Tucson?
42308What? 42308 Where did you learn it?
42308Where is Lola?
42308Where? 42308 Where?"
42308Where_ did_ you get it?
42308Who did that?
42308Who knows but I shall be a rich man yet before I claim you? 42308 Why did Brother Ray let you come out here alone?"
42308Why did you do it?
42308Why do n''t somebody claim this delightful country?--why do n''t people in the army resign, and own mines, and settle down here to live?
42308Why do you keep the light burning till twelve in the night, then?
42308Why not accept my offer, Jim? 42308 Why, Lola darling, what has happened?
42308Why, how''s that?
42308Why, then, did you go from me? 42308 Why?"
42308Wie sagten Sie, Fräulein? 42308 With you into the bargain?"
42308Wonder if the boy thinks Lolita is coming through the storm to watch the old year out with him?
42308Wonder what Angelina Stubbs will wear?
42308Would she be kind enough just for once to help with the cake? 42308 Would you want me to keep the windows and shutters open, so as to let the mosquitoes come in and devour us?"
42308Yes, dear; did n''t you see how he kept his eyes fixed on Mrs. Clayton, before he turned away when he saw us laughing?
42308Yes?
42308Yes?
42308You have a sister?
42308You learned that song in New Mexico?
42308You like our Valley?
42308You miserable man,she cried, beside herself,"is it not enough that you blasted my life''s happiness?
42308You wanted to know who taught me the song? 42308 You went out with the major this morning, did you not, Tarleton?"
42308You will stay here till I return, Leonora?
42308A deep scarlet overspread his sallow face, while Mrs. Clayton said,"Oh, will you carry the bottle for me?
42308A little scream, and Miss Myrick-- for it was she-- asked of Lola, who stood white and ghostly in the doorway,"Is that your mother, Lola?
42308After you told Miss Angelina about your vow?"
42308All I have wanted and prayed for is a home and an honored name; it is within my reach now; why should I let an idle dream stand in my way?"
42308Alone?
42308And have you not wanted often to go back to the city?"
42308And how?
42308And is n''t my word good for a fur sack?"
42308And should some other woman be happier than she?
42308And the red- headed one will go next month?"
42308And was this he, offering the flowers with all the courtliness and easy self- possession of the gentleman?
42308And, was it not Abby with whom you were seen riding?"
42308Annie, do you not know me?"
42308Are you in love, my dear boy?--or what hath wrought this change?"
42308Are you sure?
42308Are you the new school- marm?
42308Are you thinking of his displeasure at not finding his Barbara an Arabella Goddard?"
42308Before retiring for the night, we debated the question: Should we remain the next day at Fort----, or proceed on our journey?
42308Ben, did n''t I tell yer to stay in the house, and I''d fetch yer the water?"
42308Bending low over her white fingers one day, he asked,"And how long was Mr. Rutherford blessed with the possession of this most sweet hand?"
42308But Frank, with quickly altered tone, asked softly,"Do you like it so well, Hetty-- really and truly?
42308But could the pale, quiet woman ever have known the deep, intense feeling, or the heartfelt, open joyousness that spoke from her daughter''s eyes?
42308But how came the red berries on this one?
42308But what have I to do with that boy?
42308But what was he?
42308But where are the girls?
42308But who can blame Charlie for declining to go?
42308But why should that make you look so serious?
42308Can I do anything for you?"
42308Clayton?"
42308Could he have struck one of his sisters?"
42308Could her heart be growing envious of the girl?
42308Could n''t you hold out as long as your master?
42308Could she recall him?
42308Did you come down this way to live on a ranch?"
42308Did you see all the passengers?"
42308Did you sit up to wait for me?"
42308Do n''t you like to stand in it?"
42308Do n''t you think so?"
42308Do you accept it?"
42308Do you already doubt your love for me, or the strength to assert it?"
42308Do you know him, uncle?"
42308Do you like it?"
42308Does your heart fail?
42308From the tone of the letter, it is plainly to be seen that he lives where the letter was mailed-- but where was it mailed?
42308Going to the governor''s house, probably; but who can they be?"
42308Golly, ai n''t it nice here?"
42308Good gracious, madam, are you sick?
42308Had ever the foot of devout Catholic pressed this rocky, thorny ground?
42308Had his ear caught the sound?
42308Had not the stage- driver just such a long, tawny moustache?
42308Had she not bartered away her peace when she ruthlessly deserted the man she loved?
42308Had she not looked into these eyes before?
42308Had she only dreamed of the white, well- shaped hand?
42308Had she then betrayed her heart''s secret to these two foolish, giggling things?
42308Had you so little faith in me, so little love for me, that you could make no effort to see me?
42308Has he refused to enjoy his long pipe, or has he regaled you with a longer account than usual of his son-- Hans, I think, you said his name was?"
42308Have you been at Mohawk Station, and do you know how the house is built?"
42308Have you come to stay, vagabond and rover?
42308He was silent a moment, busying himself with his cigar; then he continued;"Where is Celeste?
42308He''ll be good to her; and what''s the harm to anybody?
42308Here, Johnny, how d''ye like your teacher?"
42308His lips worked spasmodically for an instant; then he asked resolutely, but in an almost inaudible tone,"Did not_ she_ come back, Si?
42308How could I let the little thing go?
42308How had it come there?
42308How in the world did you get here, and where is your mother?"
42308How lonely he looks; is he waiting for any one, I wonder?"
42308How long do you want me to tolerate you, then?"
42308How will Tom receive the information, when he gets up this morning, that you have not paid him the attention to remain home for one day, at least?"
42308How_ could_ any one live here and be happy?
42308I asked him why he stopped the ambulance, and allowed the mules to rest at so unusual an hour in the day?
42308I asked, with pain and anger struggling in my heart;"which of you little brutes killed the poor, harmless thing?"
42308I had not asked you to look, you know; but will you go to her room now, and see if she has not come back?"
42308I wonder if we shall be afraid?"
42308Is Mr. Muldweber really sinking as fast as Mrs. Wardor thinks?"
42308Is n''t this dress pretty?"
42308Is there anything in music, in painting, in poetry, that can bring before eyes that have never beheld it, the passing beauty of such a scene?
42308Is there nothing-- is there no one here you regret to leave behind you?"
42308It_ was_ fun, was n''t it, though?
42308Looking up with shy eagerness, she almost said below her breath,"And Lolita?"
42308Must I be dragged down to the very lowest degradation with you?
42308Must we submit?
42308Now came the difficulty; for the refractory mules would not listen to the"Ho, there, Kate; be still-- will you?"
42308Now, is n''t this sunshine delightful for December?"
42308Now, what mought be about the price of one like that, Mr.--what did you say the gentleman''s name was?"
42308Of what mission was it a gift of love and remembrance?
42308Oh, Charlie,"she added, in changed, softened tones,"what would your mother say to all this?"
42308Oh, Nora, how can any one be unhappy with flowers to tend, and a home to keep?"
42308Oh, is he dead?"
42308Oh, saints of heaven, protect us?"
42308Oh, wo n''t it be jolly, though?"
42308Old Bingham--""Old Bingham,"interrupted Mr. Wheaton, purple in the face;"and the name of the mine?"
42308On this occasion he had Lola called into the room, and demanded sternly of her why she had refused the hand and fortune of Hiram Watson?
42308Or had it come from one of those California Missions, where the priests to this day read masses to the descendants of the Mission Indians?
42308Poor Charlie?
42308Presently, a hoarse, unsteady voice reached her ear:"Where did you learn that air?
42308See?"
42308She did all she could to make the days pass pleasantly; but what can you do in a small town when you have neither carriage nor horses?
42308She drew back, hurt and abashed, and when George asked--"But, Dora, do n''t you like your finery?
42308She pointed to my trunk, and said her husband was crazy to know whether there was a waterfall in it?
42308She shall die-- and he?
42308She shrank from him; had any one seen them?
42308Sprechen Sie Deutsch?"
42308Such a night as this, too, when--""What''s that?"
42308That is not so, however-- or do you too blame me for being a stage- driver?"
42308The clang of those cavalry trumpets is horrible, is n''t it; cuts right through your head, do n''t it?"
42308The stepfather and aunt had spoken of pulling up stakes soon, but what wonder that Dora was averse to going?
42308Then Lola ventured to ask,"Are you speaking of Mr. Watson the tobacconist?"
42308Then why are those tears in your eyes?"
42308Then why make myself wretched over it?"
42308Then, warming up suddenly, he went on, in a tone of bitter reproach:"And you have married one of these poor girls?
42308Then, with a touch of sarcasm in his voice, he asked,"And yours?"
42308To San Francisco?"
42308Was Don Pedro near?
42308Was it a spirit conjured up by the flood of memories surging through her breast that stood before her?
42308Was it not better with her than with us-- with me-- who must still wander forth again, out into the snow, and the cold, and the night?
42308Was it not the peace of Juanita''s soul she was seeking to restore?
42308Was it not well with the soul just gone to rest?
42308Was n''t there something stirring in the tree there?"
42308Was there another being among these all as lonely as she?
42308Was there nothing left of the old material of the dashing, death- daring Rifles?
42308Was this really a Medusa on which he looked?
42308Was_ that_ what had made the house look so dark and changed?
42308Well, was it not romantic, after all, to marry the dark- eyed Don, with the haughty bearing and the enormous wealth?
42308What became of her?"
42308What cared she?
42308What d''ye say?"
42308What do you wish for?"
42308What is it the Bible, or some other good book says--''let not your angry passions rise?''
42308What is the price you ask?"
42308What need to make many words?
42308What should I have done without you two?
42308What was it that turned his little beating heart and his puny white face to stone all at once?
42308What was life to her with the light and warmth gone out of it?
42308What was to be done?
42308What would life be without you, Graciosa?"
42308When he had reached the door the sick man said,"You are not mad, Si, are you?
42308Where did you have your eyes this morning?"
42308Where?
42308Who can tell how rumor travels?
42308Who could tell?
42308Who taught you the song?"
42308Who taught you?"
42308Who''s been vexing you?"
42308Whom had they belonging to them?
42308Why should we ever part?
42308Why should_ you_ have luck?"
42308Why?"
42308Will he never stop dreaming and chasing after shadows?"
42308Will you assist me in carrying out this romantic idea?"
42308Wonder if papa will ever give me the solitaire he promised me?"
42308Would it not be more fitting to visit our quarters, if he felt constrained to comply with the etiquette of the garrison?"
42308Would you go and leave me here alone, when you know how lonesome I should be without you?"
42308Would you kill him?
42308_ HETTY''S HEROISM._"But, father, you do n''t really mean to watch the old year out, do you?
42308and will you marry me?"
42308and"How would I like living here-- the only lady in this wilderness-- without quarters, without comforts of any kind?"
42308asked Clara, innocently;"or does he not know where to find him?"
42308asked Clara;"is your aged_ protégé_ more depressed than usual this morning?
42308asked the major;"or do you see anything that frightens you?"
42308did he refuse that valuable information in regard to the resources of California?"
42308have you come at last?"
42308he laughed;"I could n''t make you see that owl this morning, could I?"
42308how many weeks ago?
42308she asked;"have I been asleep?
42308she continued, full of sympathy;"is he so beastly drunk?
42308she has much sorrow in her heart,"and aloud he said:"You are homesick, Leonora?"
42308that black- faced Spaniard?"
42308upon which she had turned sharply and said, snappishly,"Would I be away up here all alone if I had a husband?"
42308what has happened?"
42308what have you done?
42308what made you take my chile away from me?"
42308where would a woman come from this time o''night, and not a house within miles of us?"
42308why did n''t you let me go with my chile?"
42308why should stern reality be so bitter?
8543And is this all?
8543But has all this been right?
8543Davis?]
8543Have the people forgotten Mr. Vallandigham''s record?
8543Have they forgotten Vallandigham''s visit to Fulton county, Illinois, during the autumn of 1864, and its consequences?
8543Have they forgotten that through their instrumentality the McClellan Escorts, then organized in every ward, were officered by Sons of Liberty?
8543Have we had no responsibility?
8543Have we not been apologists for infamy under the name of different political opinions?
8543Have we not been tolerant of the treason which has wrought this crime?
8543Have we not spared when we should have punished-- been merciful when mercy was but cruelty?
8543How has our enemy failed to appreciate this?
8543Is no guilt ours?
8543May not-- does not-- a measure of responsibility rest upon us for this last sad event?
8543Rose, Alderman Barrett, S. Remington and others, and where also, large numbers of muskets and smaller arms were exhibited?
8543Rynders of New York, whom they hissed from the platform for his bold and fearless expression of loyal sentiments?
8543What shall we do with him?
8543What to him would be the pleadings of old men and unarmed citizens?
8543What to him would be the wail of women and little ones?
8543Who was the assassin of the President?
8543Who, we ask, is S. Corning Judd?
8543that one of the delegates from Missouri stated his belief that the order in that State was in favor of"giving aid and comfort to the Confederates"?
6811Did you know, Mr. Speaker, I am a military hero? 6811 Does this pay for the book,"the borrower asked,"or only for the damage to the book?"
6811How tedious and tasteless the hours,"There is a fountain filled with blood,and"Alas, and did my Saviour bleed?"
6811McClellan was retired,says the Honorable Hugh McCulloch,"and what happened to the Army of the Potomac?
6811What does the clergyman know of military matters?
6811Why?
6811''But,''said I,''does Mr. Buchanan know for what purpose you are going to North Carolina?''
6811''Where is your room?''
6811''Will you take us and our trunks out to the steamer?''
6811A succeeding question was no less important: Who shall take his place?
6811According to Noah Brooks he said to some friends:"I suppose you have seen this letter or a copy of it?"
6811After adjournment the judge asked him,"What was that story of Lincoln''s?"
6811After another pause:"Does n''t it appear strange that men can ignore the moral aspects of this contest?
6811And if I do my duty and do right, you will sustain me, will you not?"
6811And yet people ask, where did Lincoln get the majesty, the classic simplicity and elegance of his Gettysburg address?
6811As the end came in sight an awkward question arose, What shall we do with Jeff Davis-- if we catch him?
6811At Indianapolis he asked pregnant questions:"What, then, is''coercion''?
6811At Washington that night some one asked,"Who is this man Lincoln, anyhow?"
6811At the conclusion of the ceremony, the President- elect demanded:"What''s your height?"
6811But a far more important question is, What use does he make of his ability to read?
6811But what next?
6811C''est moi!_""The state?
6811Can we not come together for the future?
6811Can you do it?"
6811Concerning the clause above italicised there was a general questioning,--Does he mean what he says?
6811Did Lincoln really think the rebellion could be put down in three months?
6811Did it give him nothing?
6811Does he read"books that are books?"
6811H. W. Beecher: Who shall recount our martyr''s sufferings for this people?
6811Had the question been asked early in 1861, Who will be the real force of the republican administration?
6811He sat with his face in his hands and groaned:"Happy?
6811How does_ demonstration_ differ from any other proof?
6811I said to myself, What do I do when I_ demonstrate_ more than when I_ reason_ or_ prove_?
6811If Abraham Lincoln got his remarkable character from parents or grandparents, from whom did he get his physical stature?
6811Lincoln shouted"Who''s there?"
6811Lincoln?"
6811People have asked, in a puzzled manner, why did he leave the beautiful Shenandoah valley?
6811Somehow, we know not how, the poem"Oh, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?"
6811That raised the inquiry, What was their understanding of the question?
6811The conversation embraced plans of living-- in Chicago?
6811The laconic conversation which took place between the President and the general has been reported about as follows:--"What do you want me to do?"
6811The question will naturally be raised, Why should there be another Life of Lincoln?
6811The question with his opponents then was, Who is most likely to carry these states?
6811This being the case, gentlemen, how would it do for us to agree to a change like this?
6811This comparison with Pericles is certainly high praise, but is it not true?
6811This may be met by a counter question, Will there ever be a time in the near future when there will_ not_ be another Life of Lincoln?
6811Those which are mentioned are,"Am I a soldier of the cross?"
6811To appoint Mr. Chase Secretary of the Treasury, and offer the State department to Mr. Dayton of New Jersey?
6811Undoubtedly; but what of the sixth and seventh generations?
6811Very true; but are there no more Darwins?
6811Was there ever a more thorough student?
6811What is''invasion''?...
6811What mysterious right to play tyrant is conferred on a district of country, with its people, by merely calling it a state?
6811What was going on in congress?
6811What were the defects of this remarkable man?
6811What were the reasons for his apparent carelessness?
6811When one becomes interested in a boy, one is almost certain to ask, Whose son is he?
6811When they reached the street the question arose, Where shall we take him?
6811Where did Mozart get his music?
6811Where did Shakespeare get his genius?
6811Where did he come from?
6811Where did he get his grasp upon affairs and his knowledge of men?
6811Where did he get his style?
6811Whose hand smote the lyre of the Scottish plowman, and stayed the life of the German priest?
6811Why did he not save infinite trouble by calling for five- year enlistments at the beginning?
6811Will you not, for me, take that place?"
6811what will the country say?"
6811where did they come from?
6811who exclaimed,"_ L''etat?
6811who were his parents?
9949Here is his dinner pailone says,"let''s look in it"and what did they see but a piece of Indian bread and some butter?
9949As I gazed I thought, can it be possible that this country appears so much rougher, to me, than it used to, and yet be the same?
9949Brave fellows, where were they?
9949But where were the twelve Americans?
9949Could it be possible that they would never return, that they would never meet any more?
9949Could it be the voice of a wild animal?
9949Father asked the Indian the way home, he said,"My house, my wigwam, which way my home?"
9949Have you any relatives living in the West?
9949He said,"Who is he?
9949I pointed over the river toward Detroit, and asked him, saying,"What place is that yonder?"
9949Is it any wonder that I claim some companionship to trees, since I passed so many years of my youth among them?
9949O, why should the spirit of mortal be proud?
9949Then he would pour out a glass, hand it to the neighbor, who would usually say,"What is it?"
9949Then they pointed toward Mr. Pardee''s and said,"Neighbor got whisky?"
9949What does he know?"
9949What must have been their feelings, as the noble ship disappeared?
9949What on earth could it be?
9949that came on her with us?
9949what in the world are you doing with the metheglin barrel?"
7134But what more was done? 7134 How will it be with New England?
7134What else was done at the very same session? 7134 Why was not this taken and accepted?
7134''Must a Government of necessity be too strong for the liberties of its own people, or too weak to maintain its own existence?''
7134*** Who did it?
7134And if such is the case, what are we to hope in the future?
7134And to this more than fair proposition to the Southerners-- to this touching appeal in behalf of Peace-- what was the response?
7134And what was the response of the South to this generous and conciliatory message?
7134And whose the sacrilegious hand that dared be first raised against his Country and his Country''s flag?
7134Another, Mr. Charles E. Lex( a Republican), speaking of the Southern People, said:"What, then, can we say to them?
7134Benjamin, why do you not vote?
7134But the matter regarded by him of larger moment-- the safety of the Union-- how about that?
7134But what would be the effect upon South Carolina?
7134Can aliens make treaties, easier than friends can make laws?
7134Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens, than laws can among friends?
7134Can we account for it to ourselves, gentlemen?
7134Do not its principles and theories become daily more fixed in our practice?
7134Do you mean that I am to concede the benefits of the political struggle through which we have passed, considered politically, only?
7134Do you mean that I am to give up my convictions of right?
7134Do you mean that we are to deny the great principle upon which our political action has been based?
7134Do you suppose we shall do nothing, even upon the sea?
7134Do you visit the North in the Summer?
7134From your Custom- houses?
7134How does it happen that we have not had unanimity enough to agree on any measure of that kind?
7134How many letters of marque and reprisal would it take to put the whole of your ships up at your wharves to rot?
7134How?
7134If Rebellion and bloodshed and murder have followed, to whose skirts does the responsibility attach?
7134In that event, could you stand the reaction feeling which the suffering commerce of Charleston would probably manifest?
7134Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before?
7134It forces us to ask:''Is there in all republics, this inherent and fatal weakness?''
7134Not that he feared the North-- but the South; how would the wayward, wilful, passionate South, receive his proffered olive- branch?
7134Now, what do we find?
7134One party to a contract may violate it-- break it, so to speak; but does it not require all, to lawfully rescind it?
7134Sir, is not this a remarkable spectacle?
7134The immediate Secessionists, or those who are opposed to separate State action at this time?
7134Was it Mr. Clark?
7134What better Compromise could have been made?
7134What more?
7134When the navigation laws cease to operate, what will become of your shipping interest?
7134When this Tariff ceases to operate in your favor, and you have to pay for coming into our markets, what will you export?
7134When your machinery ceases to move, and your operatives are turned out, will you tax your broken capitalist or your starving operative?
7134Which party will prevail?
7134Who is responsible for it?
7134Who, then, has brought these evils on the Country?
7134Whose fault was it?
7134Why not save this Proposition, and see if we can not bring the Country to it?''
7134Would we not be in the wrong?"
7134Would you not lose that in which your strength consists, the union of your people?
7134what do you export?
7134what more than we have expressed in the resolutions we have offered?
7134where will their revenue come from?
6316Hath he let vultures climb his eagle''s seat To make Jove''s bolts purveyors of their maw? 6316 Is the doom sealed for Hesper?
6316Is there no hope?
6316Now who will buy my apples?
6316Tell us, tell us why you look so?
6316What make we, murmur''st thou? 6316 ( we could hardly speak, we shook so),--Are they beaten?
6316ARE they beaten?"
6316And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather;--"Please to tell us what his name was?"
6316And where is the band who so vauntingly swore,''Mid the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country they''d leave us no more?
6316Are they palsied or asleep?
6316Are they panic- struck and helpless?
6316Because the tongues of Garrison And Phillips now are cold in death, Think you their work can be undone?
6316But the treasures-- how to get them?
6316But where were his lieutenants?
6316Can he strike?
6316Cruel, haughty, and cold, He ever was strong and bold-- Shall he shrink from a wooden stem?
6316Death?
6316Earth''s mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?"
6316Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait and sue their heirs?
6316Fear ye foes who kill for hire?
6316Fear?
6316For what avail the plough or sail Or land or life, if freedom fail?
6316For what avail the plough or sail, Or land or life, if freedom fail?
6316Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file For him, life''s morn yet golden in his hair?"
6316Had they in terror fled?
6316Hath he the Many''s plaudits found more sweet Than Wisdom?
6316Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed?
6316Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?"
6316Hope ye mercy still?
6316How do you think the man was dressed?
6316It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside?
6316Italy?
6316JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG BRET HARTE[ Sidenote: July 1, 2, 3, 1863] Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg?--No?
6316Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?"
6316O''er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn?
6316O, who can tell what deeds were done, When Britain''s cross, on yonder wave, Sunk''neath Columbia''s dazzling sun, And met in Erie''s flood its grave?
6316One only doubt was ours, One only dread we knew-- Could the day that dawned so well Go down for the Darker Powers?
6316Or do you think those precious drops From Lincoln''s heart were shed in vain?
6316Or quenched the fires lit by their breath?
6316Shall it be love, or hate, John?
6316So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red;"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?"
6316Stand back of new- come foreign hordes, And fear our heritage to claim?
6316Tell me, ye who scanned The stars, Earth''s elders, still must noblest aims Be traced upon oblivious ocean- sands?
6316That Lovejoy was but idly slain?
6316The South says,"_ Poor folks down!_"John, An,"_ All men up!_"say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee?
6316The day you march away-- cannot I guess?
6316The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops, What was done?
6316Then all was silent, till there smote my ear A movement in the stream that checked my breath: Was it the slow plash of a wading deer?
6316Then should we speak but servile words, Or shall we hang our heads in shame?
6316They come from South, they come from North, They come from East and West; And who can say, when all go forth, That any of these are best?
6316Think you that John Brown''s spirit stops?
6316Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine?
6316Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing?
6316What cares he?
6316What cares he?
6316What cares he?
6316What cares he?
6316What matters now the cause?
6316What sounds awake my slumbering ear, What echoes o''er the waters come?
6316What to him are all our wars, What but death bemocking folly?
6316What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon, or set of sun, Hand of man, or kiss of woman?
6316What''s the mercy despots feel?
6316When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud, The time- old web of the implacable Three: Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud?
6316Where breathes the foe but falls before us?
6316Who causes thus the thunder The doom of men to speak?
6316Who is dead?
6316Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win,--ditto tails?_"J.
6316Will ye give it up to slaves?
6316Will ye look for greener graves?
6316Will ye to your homes retire?
6316With the lessening smoke and thunder, Our glasses around we aim-- What is that burning yonder?
6316You wonder why we''re hot, John?
6316_ Are_ they beaten?
6316_ Would_ the fleet get through?
6316and what are we?
6316and who could blame If_ Indians_ seized the tea, And, chest by chest, let down the same Into the laughing sea?
6316and,"What will his mother do?"
6316do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the River- Wars?
6316hast thou seen In all thy travel round the earth Ever a morn of calmer birth?
6316he shouted, long and loud; And"Who wants my potatoes?"
6316held Opinion''s wind for Law?
6316the Sea- Queen''s isle?
6316was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves?
6316what to do?
59976''But,''I said to him,''how do you know but what the money was found years ago?'' 59976 And now,"said tall Ethel,"wo n''t you please tell us all about the evening of the musical, and what we shall wear, and how to write the invitations?"
59976And what are all those little spots for, Elsie?
59976Are you hurt, Ted?
59976Are you hurt? 59976 Bright happens to be my son, and in spite of their fat I think our two boys wo n''t disgrace us this day-- eh?"
59976But how would you show it?
59976But what about Billy Snyder?
59976Dash, do you know that vessel, my man?
59976Do you mean to tell me,the pater demanded, hotly,"that I ca n''t see my own son?"
59976Do you think any of us can do solos, Aunt Martha?
59976Got''em loaded?
59976Has he been raising it?
59976Have you any scheme to suggest?
59976He was in a fix, was n''t he? 59976 Help me?
59976How many tableaux do you think would be nice?
59976How would you get a stork?
59976Hung up, hey? 59976 I to wear?"
59976I''d love to, mother,and very rapidly her little hands were clasped together while she added,"May I?"
59976Is it from Tim?
59976Is that you hanging up there?
59976Is that you, Ted?
59976It''s-- it''s pretty dark, is n''t it, Ted?
59976On the contrary, nothing could be easier;and with a good- natured smile rippling over her face, Blanche continued,"Why not let me help you?"
59976See that big chap?
59976Sissy, why do n''t_ you_ do something?
59976Then you would n''t use a curtain?
59976This is your first game, is n''t it?
59976Too fat, eh? 59976 Too fat, eh?"
59976Want it dark, do n''t we?
59976Was I dreaming? 59976 Was that you I heard coming?
59976Wear?
59976Well, but what about the rest of the party?
59976Well, how do you think Penelope would enjoy a Delft party?
59976Well, what you so scared at?
59976What about signs, then?
59976What ails you, child, and where did you get that money?
59976What brig is that?
59976What would you do with it?
59976What''s all this?
59976What''s the matter, Marty?
59976What''s the matter, Ted?
59976Where hev you been?
59976Where is this man?
59976Whose?
59976Why, do n''t you see, mamma?
59976Why-- those, mamma?
59976Will you come on deck, sir, and take a look at the glass on the way up?
59976Would you like me to give you some idea of the programme, musically and spiritually considered, as well as from its purely material stand- point?
59976Yes, I know all about it; and why should n''t I? 59976 You do n''t mean to say it got you your position here as a bell- boy, do you?"
59976You do n''t think you could get a big store sign down, do you?
59976You''ll be my friend-- won''t you, Dot?
59976*****"Pray, Dr. Smith, what is a good cure for the gout?"
59976--must one then be so very particular?"
59976A few hours''rest upon their arms, Then-- who could tell what wild alarms?
59976Ai n''t he a corker?"
59976And drawing his hand across his forehead in a dazed sort of way, he inquired:"Am I dreaming, child?
59976But now is it not easy to understand why, of the experiences of my life, this is the one that is the jewel of my memory?
59976Can I help you?"
59976Can I learn to draw and paint well enough to be able to open a studio of my own after graduating?
59976Can any readers supply us with morsels containing such information?
59976Come, will you go with us, one and all, To the games and romps in the country hall, Where the rafters ring with our shout and call?
59976Come, will you help me harness the bay?
59976Come, will you help me hitch up the gray?
59976Did n''t my father catch him?
59976For Uncle Ben lived in Shelbyville, miles away, and how would little Tim get along without her?
59976Had I been chasing a rainbow?
59976Had I spent hard- earned savings and wasted several months''time on a wild- goose errand?
59976Had disappointment turned my brain, or had I really heard the clink of metal?
59976Have n''t you been all over the world nearly?
59976How are you going to get up?"
59976How many classes are there, and about how long must one stay in each class?
59976How would you like that when you consider some of their beliefs?
59976If not from his song in the dreary night, Whence came the courage to win the fight?
59976Mrs. Thayer looked pleased, and then a pink flush suffused her face, while she replied,"I can not frighten you, can I?"
59976One day he said,"Want to earn some money, Marty?"
59976Seen anything of Billy?"
59976She drew pictures in all her spare time, and often teased mamma with the question,"What shall I draw next, mamma?"
59976Signor Arditi thought for a few moments, and presently said,"Do you ever attend the opera, young man?"
59976Teddy''s heart was thumping pretty hard as he thrust his chin over the edge of the sign and whispered,"You fellows down there?"
59976Turn to the person at your right, and ask,''Will you come to breakfast?''
59976We used to say,"Will you not ask your friends to join with you and save one Russian life?"
59976What are you thinking about?
59976What did the moose do?"
59976What is the age of the average pupil?
59976What shall we do?"
59976What should I know about children''s entertainments?"
59976What''s the matter with Teddie Larned?"
59976When does the school open, and when must one apply for admission?
59976When that question and answer have gone around the room, the first one must ask,''What would you like for breakfast?''
59976When the leader asked him, angrily,''What in the world did you play that dreadful wrong note for?''
59976Where had his boy learned the daring, the coolness, and the self- reliance that characterize him that day?
59976Where shall we send it?"
59976Why do n''t_ we_ do something?"
59976Will they permit me to tell them that episode in my life which gives me, when I recall it, the greatest pleasure?
59976Will you help yourself to the cargo also?
59976Wonder how they got it down?"
59976[ Illustration]"Him?"
59976[ Illustration]"Suppose that you can not get the tulips?"
59976[ Illustration]"What upon earth does this mean?"
59976muss man denn_ so genau_ sein?''
59976said the servant of the King, lifting his eyebrows,"and here we are, eh?
14153''Do you think it fordable?'' 14153 A ball"--said John--"in the stable?"
14153A woman''s minute or a man''s minute?
14153About the election, you mean?
14153About the mills?
14153After all, what does it matter?
14153Ah, Mrs. Penhallow, there must be in the North and South many families divided in opinion; what do you suppose they do? 14153 Ah,"returned Cushing,"but will they be asked to talk today?"
14153All well at Grey Pine?
14153Am I to be allowed to write to her?
14153Am I? 14153 Am I?
14153Am I? 14153 An operation?"
14153And Kansas?
14153And do n''t they pay slaves?
14153And do you not?
14153And he is in this county?
14153And here is mine,said Leila, and laughing asked with both hands behind her back,"Which hand, John?"
14153And how am I to keep young, Miss Grey?
14153And how is Pole, aunt; and the doctor and Crocker and his fat wife-- oh, and everybody?
14153And may I ask where do I come in?
14153And not otherwise?
14153And ours?
14153And so it was Grey?
14153And so, when that failed, you went to bank and drew out the poor fellow''s savings?
14153And still you advise it?
14153And the general election?
14153And then?
14153And they mean to take him back?
14153And what did he say?
14153And what did he say?
14153And what do you think about, John?
14153And what else should I be?
14153And what else?
14153And what of Leila? 14153 And what, John-- men eating?"
14153And where did you get all this about a prig?
14153And where do I come in?
14153And where, my dear, did you get all this gossip?
14153And who will cast the first stone?
14153And why?
14153And you are glad to go?
14153And you are going on with the business?
14153And you got on again?
14153And you let all these suns go down upon your wrath?
14153And you really mean that?
14153And you will write to me, Leila?
14153And you would like that best?
14153And you write to him, of course?
14153And you, John Penhallow, my brother''s son, were afraid?
14153And you, dear lady?
14153And your own?
14153Ann,he said,"have you seen the papers to- day?"
14153Any bad news, Leila?
14153Any barber in this town?
14153Any letters from my boy?
14153Any messages for aunt or uncle?
14153Any other stable slang, Leila?
14153Anything I can do for you?
14153Anything else?
14153Anything new at Westways?
14153Are n''t you ashamed?
14153Are n''t you getting wet, John?
14153Are they so bad?
14153Are you afraid, John? 14153 Are you asleep?
14153Are you aware, Penhallow, that this wicked business about Josiah has beaten Buchanan in Westways? 14153 Are you badly hurt?"
14153Are you fully resolved on this, Penhallow?
14153Are you glad to be free?
14153Are you hit?
14153Are you not well?
14153Are you really able?
14153Are you through, with this nonsense, Leila?
14153Are you tired?
14153Are you?
14153Busted?
14153But Aunt Ann?
14153But after all,said Mrs. Ann,"is it so very comic?"
14153But how will I ever get it?
14153But if he is so good a soldier, why did he make what you call a frontal attack on entrenched troops at Malvern?
14153But what do you mean, Leila? 14153 But what examination remains?"
14153But what is an abolitionist, aunt?
14153But what is it-- trust me a little-- what is it?
14153But what would you do, uncle?
14153But why did you run away?
14153But why do you do it?
14153But why,she urged,"why do you go?"
14153But why?
14153But why?
14153But why?
14153But will it, James?
14153But, James, what shall we do with him? 14153 But, Mr. Rivers, may it not work also for good and suggest possibilities-- let you into seeing what other men may do?"
14153But, aunt, do you not understand how serious this one was?
14153But, is it safe? 14153 But, is n''t it very limited?"
14153But, why?
14153But,said John,"how can he?"
14153But,she said,"is there not work enough here?
14153Ca n''t you?
14153Can I do anything for you?
14153Can I in any way help you?
14153Can he coast? 14153 Can you account for it, Tom?"
14153Can you bear a little frank talk?
14153Can you bear-- I said it yesterday to Mrs. Penhallow-- a frank opinion?
14153Can you get my horse up?
14153Can you make out their flags?
14153Come to get those scalp- locks trimmed, John? 14153 Come to see Grace, sir?"
14153Could I not go there for a while?
14153DEAR LEILA: I am just now with the Second Corps, but where you will know in a week; now I must not say.--"What''s the date?
14153Did I? 14153 Did he say anything?"
14153Did he? 14153 Did it end there?"
14153Did many die, uncle?
14153Did she send back the tea?
14153Did she tell you that, Mark, or has it improved in your hands?
14153Did you chance to go by the old cabin?
14153Did you ever kiss a woman, John-- just for practice?
14153Did you ever read Hebrews, John? 14153 Did you find where he lives?"
14153Did you never read a poem called''The Talking Oak''? 14153 Did you notice his face?"
14153Did you?
14153Did you?
14153Did you?
14153Did_ he_ draw it-- I mean in person?
14153Do n''t you hear, Leila? 14153 Do n''t you notice, Leila, how she has kind of softened?
14153Do not hurry, John; have another cup?
14153Do with him? 14153 Do you enjoy it?"
14153Do you know that he is on the verge of complete financial ruin?
14153Do you know this General?
14153Do you really like the life here, John?
14153Do you recall, Squire, what Thucydides said of the Greeks at the time of the Peloponnesian War?
14153Do you remember how, when we were small, we used to fight violets?
14153Do you think me unreasonable, James?
14153Do you think so?
14153Do you think you convinced him?
14153Does Leila like it?
14153Does Tom McGregor swim there?
14153Does he never ride, Leila?
14153Does he require anything?
14153Does n''t the rector dine here, to- day, Leila?
14153Does she ask for me?
14153Does she like it at school?
14153Does the Emancipation Proclamation please you?
14153Dr. McGregor has, I trust, told you of our difficulties with my aunt?
14153Excuse me, sir, could I talk to you? 14153 For sale-- how much?"
14153For what?
14153From town?
14153God help me!--where can I go? 14153 Good- morning, Ellen,"he said,"what brings you here over the snow this frosty day?
14153Got hit, John? 14153 Got through, John?
14153Got what?
14153Had n''t you boys better shake hands?
14153Hancock will suffer long-- but now, about you-- did no one think you could be relieved by an operation? 14153 Has Mr. Rivers got back?"
14153Has Uncle Jim gone back to his pipe?
14153Has any one heard of Josiah?
14153Has he never been here before?
14153Has n''t it something to do with slavery? 14153 Has the town wickedness accumulated in your absence, Mark?"
14153Have I greatly troubled you?
14153Have I said a word?
14153Have n''t you any other name?
14153Have you any letters for me?
14153Have you had a fall, John? 14153 Have you seen yesterday''s papers?"
14153Have you written that letter? 14153 He is in Washington?"
14153He said:''Did they sting?'' 14153 He would get it; but what made you ask about sense of the humorous?
14153He''ll do,he murmured,"but what the deuce was my young dandy doing on the roof?"
14153Head back a bit-- that''s right comfortable now, is n''t it?
14153Heard from Mrs. Penhallow lately?
14153His lips? 14153 Hoops-- what for?"
14153How about the first polka as absolution?
14153How are my chickens?
14153How are politics, Billy?
14153How are you? 14153 How can I?"
14153How can a man venture to speak, John, like Mr. Jefferson Davis? 14153 How can he?
14153How can you say that?
14153How could you think I would kiss you twice-- I was so ashamed--"Well, Leila?
14153How did he use it, Leila?
14153How did you know all this?
14153How do I find her? 14153 How do you know he is afraid, my dear James?"
14153How do you know that?
14153How far have you travelled on that rocker, Rivers?
14153How far must I consider her, or be guided by the effect my decision will have on her? 14153 How far was he accountable, Tom?"
14153How goes the swimming, John?
14153How is Aunt Ann?
14153How is Leila?
14153How is it interesting?
14153How many rows can I knit until I hear? 14153 How many will be left?"
14153How old are you?
14153How you feeling, Master John?
14153How''s your arm, Captain? 14153 How?"
14153I did, Leila, but how did you know?
14153I do really need help-- how can I make Aunt Ann see this famous surgeon? 14153 I have myself a few words to say-- but, is that all?"
14153I suppose he recognized Josiah readily?
14153I suppose so-- what next?
14153I suppose you still swim here, every morning, Leila? 14153 I suppose, Squire, you''ll get Joe Boynton, the carpenter, to put on the roof?
14153I will not,he returned, and then--"What else is there?"
14153I wonder what Grant is doing?
14153I wonder what I would fetch, Leila?
14153I-- how the deuce should I?--what did he say?
14153I-- no-- Do you suppose I know every runaway nigger?
14153I? 14153 If by mishap he were captured while trying to escape, what then?
14153In trouble, Josiah? 14153 Indeed-- but what else?
14153Indeed?
14153Interesting, my dear? 14153 Is Hoodoo in good order?"
14153Is John ill?
14153Is he dead?
14153Is he dead?
14153Is it because the hideous business called war attracts you?
14153Is it too late?
14153Is n''t Mrs. Penhallow rather on the other side?
14153Is n''t it like a big chess- board?
14153Is n''t it queer,he said,"how people think about the same things?
14153Is n''t it, Squire? 14153 Is n''t that Leila with Rivers, Ann?"
14153Is n''t that absurd, John, as if--"Well, what more?
14153Is n''t that delightful, Uncle Jim? 14153 Is n''t there a walk down through the woods?"
14153Is obsession the word you want?
14153Is she dead?
14153Is that a charade, John? 14153 Is that all of it?"
14153Is that all, sir?
14153Is that all? 14153 Is that so?"
14153Is that wise, aunt? 14153 Is that your own wisdom, Miss Grey?
14153Is that your poetry or your folly, James Penhallow?
14153Is the Squire alive?
14153Is there any message you want me to carry?
14153Is this an ingenious little game set up between you and John?
14153Is this certain?
14153Is your letter from John, Leila?
14153It is chilly, Mark; would you like a fire?
14153It is half- past two,said General Hunt;"what next?
14153It makes one feel uncomfortable,said Penhallow, and turning to John,"Who was first there after you came?"
14153It was about her dead husband--"Am I to hear it or not?
14153It was at the bank, James?
14153It will be of use, but could n''t I persuade you to speak at the meeting next week at the mills?
14153John,said his uncle in his usual direct way,"have you ever been on the back of a horse?"
14153Know him? 14153 Look here,"said Tom McGregor turning to John,"did you tell the Squire we fellows set it up?"
14153Mark,said Mrs. Ann,"if George Grey comes-- James, did you leave the wine- closet key?"
14153May I ask why?
14153May I come?
14153May I ride today with you, uncle?
14153May I smoke?
14153Message-- who would I send messages to?
14153Mine, my dear? 14153 Must you go?"
14153My God, was that all? 14153 No one knows where you are-- you''ll go to- night?"
14153No pipe, Mark?
14153No, I am serious; but it leads up to this: Am I free to say you will vote the Republican ticket?
14153No, sir-- never no more-- and the captain and Miss Leila-- it''s awful-- where can I go?
14153No, why should I?
14153No,cried John,"and what does it matter?"
14153No-- hit in both arms-- why the deuce ca n''t I walk?
14153None for me, Uncle?
14153Now, John, what terrible task shall I put upon you? 14153 Of course not; but why my aunt, Mr. Josiah?
14153Of me? 14153 Oh, I just wondered if you''d like to change with me-- guess you would n''t for all the pain?"
14153Oh, James, must I be put in a corner?
14153Oh, John, and did n''t you know my eyes were blue?
14153Oh, Leila, is n''t it wonderful?
14153Oh, Leila, is that the best you can do?
14153Oh, do you think so? 14153 Oh, do you think so?"
14153Oh, is she? 14153 Oh, the tragedy of Arnold,--the pathos of Washington''s despair,--his words,''Who is there now I can trust?''"
14153Oh, why?
14153On what terms will you take me in? 14153 On your honour?"
14153One moment, James--"Oh, what is the matter?
14153Or a lawyer, or a doctor like Tom McGregor?
14153Or your son, Tom? 14153 Pansy-- pansy-- why is she like a pansy, Josiah?"
14153Penhallow, may I take the liberty to bother you with a bit of unasked advice?
14153Perhaps-- perhaps,he returned humbly; and then with a quite gentle retort,"Do n''t you sometimes preach too much from the head, Brother Rivers?"
14153Quiet, is n''t it? 14153 Quite too interesting, but will he try it on the Squire and your aunt?
14153Receptive?
14153See John too, Leila? 14153 Seen yesterday''s_ Press_?"
14153Shall I write it down?
14153Shall we go home?
14153Shall you ride with your uncle tomorrow, Leila?
14153She said that?
14153So Billy upset you; and John, where is he?
14153So, he will never ask me again?
14153So, then, my dear, John went and gave the man a warning?
14153Thank me, what for? 14153 Thank you and her,"he returned, and then added abruptly,"How are you meaning to vote, Squire?"
14153Thank you-- but what of the army? 14153 That fellow said nothing of Mrs. Penhallow, you are sure?"
14153The face? 14153 The right,"said Penhallow,"Miss Politician?"
14153The trouble would be, sir, who''s to shave the Colonel?
14153Then I would know--"Know what, John? 14153 Then since the world began there never was another me or Leila?"
14153Then why not to Aunt Ann?
14153Then you think I was unreasonably angry?
14153Then, James, there will be no income from the mills-- from-- from that contract?
14153There''s no news of John?
14153They are going to attack,said Haskell,"and can they mean our whole line-- or where?"
14153Think a little-- a little?
14153To whom, John?
14153Told what? 14153 Trout or baby?"
14153Uncle Jim!--what-- when?
14153Want me to steal? 14153 Was I so loved as this-- so honoured?"
14153Was Josiah really here, sir? 14153 Was Peter Lamb at the fire?"
14153Was n''t his mother a Virginia mare, James?
14153Was n''t your hero Cromwell just magnificent, stately blank verse?
14153Was the boy amused or-- or scared?
14153Well, Ann?
14153Well, James,she said,"did you ever see a better mannered lad, and so intelligent?"
14153Well, John,said the doctor,"what''s up now?
14153Well, Penhallow,he said,"what can I do for you?"
14153Well, Pole,said Rivers,"how are you and Mrs. Crocker?
14153Well, Uncle Jim-- to talk prose-- the elections please you?
14153Well, and what did Mrs. Penhallow do?
14153Well, and what of it? 14153 Well, and where, please?"
14153Well, any more news, Leila?
14153Well, are you done?
14153Well, that is exasperating? 14153 Well, was that all?"
14153Well, well, is that so? 14153 Well, what conclusion did you come to?"
14153Well, what did Pole do?
14153Well, what is it?
14153Well, what is it?
14153Well, what is it?
14153Well, what was it?
14153Well, what''s the matter? 14153 Well,"he said, with some impatience,"what is it?"
14153Well,he said,"what''s your opinion, Miss Grey?"
14153Well,said Haskell,"it would be madness-- can Lee remember Malvern Hill?"
14153Well,said Penhallow,"is this all?"
14153Well,said the little lady, Ann Penhallow,"how did the game go, John?"
14153Well,said the rector,"left anything?"
14153Well,she said,"did you see Josiah?"
14153Well?
14153Well?
14153Were guinea pigs really pigs? 14153 Were we?
14153Were you at school in Europe?
14153Were you never here before, John?
14153What about her? 14153 What about that contract for ambulances?"
14153What amuses you, James?
14153What amuses you, John?
14153What are you about?
14153What are you grinning at, you young scamp?
14153What are you thinking about?
14153What are you thinking of, Jack?
14153What better society?
14153What came, Leila?
14153What can I do for you?
14153What did he mean? 14153 What did he see?"
14153What did he want?
14153What do you know?
14153What do you mean, Ann?
14153What do you mean?
14153What do you mean?
14153What do you propose to do?
14153What do you want me to say, John Penhallow?
14153What does he say, Josiah?
14153What does he want now?
14153What does that matter? 14153 What else is there to talk about nowadays?
14153What fool did that?
14153What gets the matter with men? 14153 What happened, James?"
14153What is a meliorist, sir?
14153What is his name? 14153 What is it, Billy?"
14153What is it, James?
14153What is it, John? 14153 What is it, John?"
14153What is it, John?
14153What is it?
14153What is it?
14153What is it?
14153What is it?
14153What is swinging on a gate?
14153What is that?
14153What is the matter, my dear child?
14153What is the matter?
14153What is there, my dear Mr. Rivers, you can not get? 14153 What is your letter, Ann?"
14153What is your name?
14153What kind of questions, John?
14153What limitations?
14153What must be rather awkward?
14153What next?
14153What put Grey on the track of Josiah as a runaway? 14153 What put that into your head-- it does not seem suitable?"
14153What road is that?
14153What the deuce is the matter?
14153What then, sir?
14153What time is it, Penhallow?
14153What was it?
14153What was the matter, sir? 14153 What will they do with him?"
14153What would you give?
14153What you done to Hoodoo, Master John? 14153 What''s a rummage- sale?"
14153What''s all this row about, Ann? 14153 What''s that, Ann?"
14153What''s that, sir?
14153What''s that?
14153What''s that?
14153What''s the matter, John?
14153What''s the matter-- who is he?
14153What''s the matter? 14153 What''s wrong now, Penhallow?"
14153What''s wrong, Uncle Jim? 14153 What, about kissing?
14153What, not smoking, Grace?
14153What, you wo n''t do it?
14153What,he said,"would our children have been without you?
14153What-- already, Tom?
14153What-- what?
14153When do you go?
14153When does Mark Rivers go back?
14153When does he return?
14153When were you not at everybody''s service?
14153Where did you get this, Josiah?
14153Where did you suppose I would be? 14153 Where is Lee?"
14153Where is he? 14153 Where is your aunt?"
14153Where is your present, James?
14153Where was it?
14153Where-- Jack?
14153Which dare was it, Leila?
14153Who cares for him?
14153Who could help laughing?
14153Who drew it?
14153Who is that with Uncle James?
14153Who owns that horse?
14153Who said he was a scamp?
14153Who says I lied? 14153 Who was Prince Fine Ear?"
14153Who was it? 14153 Who''ll bid?"
14153Who''s your General?
14153Who, Lonesome Man or the spring? 14153 Who-- what flag?"
14153Who? 14153 Why did n''t you swim?"
14153Why did n''t you tell me, aunt?
14153Why did you not get up and help?
14153Why did you?
14153Why do n''t you put such reflections into verse, John? 14153 Why do n''t you smoke, John?"
14153Why do n''t you talk, John?
14153Why do they call it Indian summer?
14153Why do you do that, Uncle Jim?
14153Why do you say that?
14153Why mention that, James?
14153Why not have rocking- chairs in church, Mark? 14153 Why not, my friend?"
14153Why not?
14153Why not?
14153Why not?
14153Why not?
14153Why should n''t he be alive?
14153Why so? 14153 Why, Mr. Rivers, I know I drink, and then I''m not responsible, but how could I say to that poor old darkey what I do n''t mind I said yesterday?"
14153Why, did you never hear the rhyme about it?
14153Why, what''s the matter, sir?
14153Why? 14153 Why?
14153Why? 14153 Will I?"
14153Will aunt go to church to- morrow?
14153Wo n''t you come?
14153Wo n''t you think a little of how I feel-- and-- and shall feel?
14153Worried, Squire?
14153Would I like?
14153Would he have won, uncle?
14153Would it? 14153 Would n''t Uncle Sam make a row?"
14153Would n''t the other way be more wholesome on the whole?
14153Would you keep him here longer, if you could?
14153Would you like to be a clergyman?
14153Would you like to be bought and sold?
14153Would you like to have been there, Jack?
14153Yes, I said to George that we would buy Josiah''s freedom-- what amuses you, James?
14153Yes, I want to introduce you to-- Dixy-- yes--"And may I ride with you?
14153Yes, but shall you vote for him? 14153 Yes, sir-- what''s that?"
14153Yes, yes-- and everything-- those years of war and what it has brought us-- and my dear Uncle Jim-- and how is it to end? 14153 Yes-- but--""But what?"
14153Yes-- probably-- but who can say? 14153 Yes-- what next?"
14153Yes-- who told you to tell me?
14153Yes-- why not?
14153You ai n''t him--?? 14153 You ai n''t him--??
14153You cannot-- you really cannot-- where could you be more useful than here?
14153You did not think it impertinent, Jack?
14153You mean to preach politics, Grace?
14153You want my advice? 14153 You will do, James, whatever Dr. Askew wishes?"
14153You will help me? 14153 You wo n''t be too hard on him, James?"
14153You wo n''t telegraph?
14153--"Is that explanatory?"
14153--Isn''t it funny?"
14153A moment later Penhallow opened his eyes, sat up, and said,"Where am I?
14153A week later she spoke again,"What conclusion have you reached?"
14153All well?"
14153Am I clear?"
14153Am I clear?"
14153And John-- where is he?"
14153And Leila?
14153And do tell me how old must a girl be before she has a right to think?"
14153And is n''t it a nice, good- natured day?
14153And now, how is your beautiful Grey Pine and its mistress and Leila?
14153And now, let me know what is our lesser and more material debt?"
14153And who was Lonesome Man?"
14153And why did he himself not altogether like it?
14153And why did he not write more about himself?
14153Ann Penhallow said,"Where did you leave off, Leila?
14153Ann says,''What''s the difference?
14153Ann, how about that?"
14153Another and younger man with his arm in a sling asked,"Are they only cavalry?"
14153Any errands, my dear?"
14153Any letters for us?"
14153Any news of our John?
14153Any news?"
14153Anything I can do for him?"
14153Anything else, my dear?"
14153Anything wrong with the horses?"
14153Are n''t these flowers beautiful?
14153Are the men gone?"
14153Are there any others in the house-- servants-- any one?"
14153Are things better at the mills?"
14153Are we-- am I to lose also your friendship-- or is even that at an end?"
14153Are you cross enough for that now?"
14153Are you in pain, John?"
14153As Billy drove away, Mrs. Penhallow called back,"You will come to dinner to- day?"
14153As I came back I saw Captain Penhallow ride away-- and why not with you, Miss Grey?
14153As Rivers rose to his feet, Lamb said,"Could n''t I have just a little whisky?
14153As he bade them good- morning, his uncle said,"How goes the examination?"
14153As he stood he asked,"How did those men get in, Josiah?"
14153As the train stopped, he said as he got out,"There is no carriage-- you telegraphed, McGregor?"
14153As they faced the snow, he asked,"How tall are you, Leila?"
14153As they walked down the avenue Grace said,"What are you doing about Lamb?
14153As they walked homeward, Rivers said,"What do you want to do, John?
14153As they walked over the crackling ice- cover of the snow, he said,"Why do you want to sled, Leila?
14153As they were leaving, Penhallow said,"But there will be our workmen-- what will become of them?"
14153As to your naughty ending, I do not care who the man was-- why should I?
14153Askew?"
14153At dinner, the Squire asked kindly:"Are you all right, my boy?"
14153At last she rose and excused herself, saying,"Another cup?
14153Been here long?"
14153Between half- hysterical laughter and ready tears, she gasped,"Where did you get that prettiness?"
14153Bugs gone?"
14153But are you satisfied?"
14153But did what interested you interest Leila?"
14153But how the deuce does it concern you?
14153But how-- how?
14153But if the gentleman did not own Josiah''s years of lost labour, some one else did, and who was it?
14153But now-- the rest-- the rest-- what am I to do?"
14153But tell me are you really in earnest about it?"
14153But what about Lamb?"
14153But what could this man know?
14153But what else could he do?
14153But what had been their errand?
14153But what of you?"
14153But what you tell me-- is it very bad?
14153But who could have warned the black?
14153But why not, Cousin Ann?"
14153By the bye, how will the county vote?"
14153By the way, do you ever read the papers?"
14153Ca n''t you believe a fellow?"
14153Can I never get away from it-- never-- never?"
14153Can you keep a secret?"
14153Can you run?"
14153Can you take that fence?"
14153Can you think of any one with malice enough to make him want to bum a house and risk the possibility of murder?"
14153Can you walk to the river?"
14153Can you walk?"
14153Come to look for you-- can you ride?
14153Could he answer all of them and abide too by the silence he meant to preserve until the war was over?
14153Could not you pay for a new roof?"
14153Could she and James live for years afraid to speak of what was going on?
14153Crocker?"
14153Crocker?"
14153Crocker?"
14153Dear Aunt Ann, how can one keep on not talking about politics and things that are next to one''s religion-- and concerning our country-- my country?"
14153Did Leila too consider him a boy?
14153Did he do it?"
14153Did he have dreams of airy freedom?
14153Did he know it or care?
14153Did he really mean to discuss, to criticize her relations to James Penhallow?
14153Did he talk much?"
14153Did n''t he write about him at-- where was it?
14153Did she write you anything about Josiah?"
14153Did the man see you-- I mean, recognize you?"
14153Did they kill any Indians?"
14153Did they show you the horses?"
14153Did you believe him even for a moment?"
14153Did you ever feel that, sir?"
14153Did you ever notice how its leaves differ in shape?"
14153Did you ever think that an honest love may be to a man like a second-- an angelic-- conscience?
14153Did you see what Seward said,''An irrepressible conflict,''and that man Lincoln,''The house divided against itself can not stand''?
14153Did you suppose a middle- aged ostrich could not use her eyes?
14153Did you think, Grey, that to save your life or my own I would permit you to escape with your work?
14153Do n''t these big pines talk to you sometimes, and the wind in the pines-- the winds--?"
14153Do n''t you feel how still it is?
14153Do n''t you know Aunt Ann?"
14153Do n''t you love it?"
14153Do n''t you miss her?"
14153Do n''t you see things before you fall asleep?
14153Do you go to mother''s room--""What for?"
14153Do you hear?
14153Do you know the Cornish rhyme?
14153Do you know why I sent for you?"
14153Do you know-- do you realize what it means to us?"
14153Do you mean to slide down to that brook?"
14153Do you talk to him about it?"
14153Do you think she would send word to some one-- to take you back?
14153Do you think so?"
14153Do you want to read John''s letters?
14153Does he know of this man''s fate?"
14153Does he say that?"
14153Does he think me a child?
14153Does the North suppose we will endure a sectional President?
14153Ever feel that way, Ann?"
14153Ever try it, Squire?"
14153Five cents-- do I hear ten?
14153Good idea-- how do you play it?"
14153Grey?"
14153Grey?"
14153Had Mr. Grey been imprudent?
14153Had he been wise to commit himself to a reversal of his sentence?
14153Had he deserved a fate so sad?
14153Had her aunt''s recent look of ill- health represented nothing but the depressing influence of a year of anxiety?
14153Half- way up the avenue Penhallow said,"Before we go in, a word or two--""What is it, Jim?"
14153Has Mr. Grey gone to bed?"
14153Has the_ Tribune_ come?
14153Have I-- ever kissed a woman?
14153Have you been to- day in the graveyards you call trenches?"
14153Have you heard from John lately?"
14153Have you heard the news?"
14153Have you no adventures?
14153Have you read any of the speeches of a man named Lincoln in Illinois?
14153Have you read his speech?"
14153He asked one evening,"What was the Missouri Compromise?"
14153He had hoped to find an ally in his cousin''s husband, and now what should he do?
14153He had loved her once; did he now?
14153He has quite lost his foreign boyish ways, and do n''t you think he is like my husband?"
14153He heard Blake ask,"Are you at home, Penhallow?"
14153He looks-- Don''t you think he looks worried, aunt?
14153He reads my papers, and how can I stop him?
14153He rose flushed and troubled, and said,"Are you vexed, Leila?"
14153He said,"How long ago was the last sale?
14153He shall not do it-- do you hear me?
14153He turned to his wife,"Any news of Leila, Ann?"
14153He was as cool as a cucumber--""Why are cucumbers cool?"
14153He was bobbin''for eels-- and-- he saw you go by--""Well, what else?"
14153He was here to- day in the utmost distress about you--""About me?"
14153He was more surprised that Mrs. Ann asked,"What did you say, Leila?"
14153He was silent, however, while Grey exclaimed,"Fear, sir-- fear?
14153He was sorry-- but it was too late-- oh, James!--you will not-- oh, you will not--""Will not what, dear?"
14153He will get well, Doctor, I suppose?"
14153Heard the good news?
14153Her aunt said quickly,"But James Penhallow-- he is in Washington?"
14153Her curiosity got the better of her dislike of being praised for what to her was a simple duty, and she added,"Well, what did he say?"
14153Horses all right?"
14153How about the moral, Ann?"
14153How are the people here going to vote?
14153How are they all?"
14153How are you, old fellow?"
14153How could he be of use to her and these dear people to whom he owed so much?
14153How could he sleep without a pillow?
14153How could she amuse them?"
14153How did he end?"
14153How did you come to grief?"
14153How did you get out of the mills, uncle?"
14153How did you happen to die?"
14153How did you know that?"
14153How do you fellows like that?"
14153How does it look to you, or have you thought of what you mean or want to do?
14153How does it strike you, Mark?"
14153How does, or how did, Leila take Mrs. Ann''s teachings?"
14153How far is a man accountable who inherits a family tendency to insanity?
14153How is John?
14153How is he?
14153How is my sister, and your beauty, Leila?"
14153How is that?"
14153How long is it?"
14153How long will it be before you begin to turn out cannon?"
14153How many Indians were there?"
14153How old are you?"
14153How will the Squire vote?"
14153How''s the Colonel?"
14153I can understand his alarm, and how can I reassure him?
14153I do n''t like it any better than you do-- but--"Bill Baynton, the youngest boy, broke in,"Who told the Squire what fellows was in it?"
14153I have no direct evidence of his guilt, and what am I to do?
14153I mean, is he-- are the mills-- likely to fail?"
14153I said this abominable business was to be closed out--""And is it not?"
14153I shook hands with him and said,''Where did you come from?
14153I sometimes wish Josiah was twins and I had one of him.--""What''s that?"
14153I suppose that under Leila''s care and a good out- of- door life he will drop his girl- ways-- but--""But what, James?"
14153I think that''s silly,"said the young philosopher,"do n''t you, John?"
14153I was thinkin''how Pole, the butcher, sold the Squire a horse that''s spavined-- got it sent back-- funny, was n''t it?"
14153I wonder what I did say to Josiah?"
14153I wonder where that little coin is to- day?
14153I''m going to the mills to see my girl-- want you to shave me-- got over my joke; funny, was n''t it?"
14153If he falls in love, what ought he to do or not do?
14153If the man were reclaimed, he, Swallow, would be heard of all through the State; but would that help him before the people in a canvass for the House?
14153If there is to be war, have I no interest?
14153If you do not prefer better society, may I ask to ride with you to- morrow?"
14153If you undertake to offer advice at your tender years, what will you do when you are older?"
14153In a few minutes the man returning said,"Want me with you?
14153Is he not a relation of the handsome Miss Grey we met on the avenue?"
14153Is he well up in mathematics?"
14153Is he well?"
14153Is his pet scamp any better?"
14153Is it possible you know Josiah?"
14153Is it really wise to talk to him?"
14153Is it the mills and-- the men out of work?
14153Is it the mills?"
14153Is it true?
14153Is n''t it Captain Penhallow of the engineers?"
14153Is n''t it dreadful, Leila?"
14153Is n''t it interesting, Uncle John?"
14153Is n''t it odd how one is brought to realize what a small place our world is?
14153Is n''t that Josiah I hear?"
14153Is n''t that like what aunt was before the war?"
14153Is n''t that slave law wicked?
14153Is n''t the rector on the porch?
14153Is n''t this outlook beautiful?
14153Is she"--and he hesitated--"is she herself?"
14153Is that courage?
14153Is the news confirmed?"
14153Is there anything you are afraid of?"
14153Is there evil news?"
14153Isaac Grace,"What about the trout- brook this afternoon?"
14153It rained yesterday-- will it be wet in the woods?"
14153It ran thus:"MY DEAR SIR: Will you not reconsider the offer of the colonelcy of a regiment?
14153It was-- wasn''t it in May?
14153John hesitated before he asked,"Could not I have, sir, a few days with Aunt Ann at the Cape?"
14153John looked the uneasiness he felt, as he said,"Do you think it is safe?"
14153John looked up, hesitated a moment, and said,"What horse, sir?"
14153John said at last,"If I write a cheque for you, can you sign your name to it?"
14153John?"
14153Josiah asked one of the men who had brought about the arrest,"Who is that man?"
14153Josiah said,"Would n''t you just let me have a minute with the Captain?"
14153Josiah stopped her horse and got badly hurt--"Then with quick insight, she added,"What interest have you in our barber, George?
14153Josiah?"
14153Josiah?"
14153Leila called out,"Any letters, Mrs. Crocker?
14153Leila could only say,"Why not, aunt?"
14153Let me think-- what was it scared Josiah?"
14153Like it?
14153Like to have them, Leila?
14153Like to see it?"
14153Listen, sir-- what''s that?"
14153Makes old fellows look younger-- ever notice that?"
14153May I ask of you one thing?
14153May I ask what you propose to do about this present case?"
14153May I ask your name?''
14153May I have another cigar?
14153May I make use of another room?"
14153May I ride Dixy, Uncle Jim?"
14153May I talk to you a little about your husband?"
14153McGregor?"
14153McGregor?"
14153Meanwhile Rivers, walking with McGregor, said,"Did the figure of that doomed wretch haunt you as we talked to John?"
14153Might I ask your name, sir?"
14153Miss Leila having exhausted all the possible explanations, said with sweet simplicity,"Did you ever find out the origin of that name?
14153Morally better, John?"
14153Mr. Rivers?
14153Much surprised, he said,"These attacks-- has he had them before?"
14153Must you go?
14153No, she was unprepared to commit herself for life, for would he too be of the same mind?
14153Not for a moment would he have gone back-- but why had he run away?
14153Not particularly-- why?"
14153Nothing serious?"
14153Now as he walked with his friend to the door, he said,"Does Mrs. Penhallow know of your change of duty?
14153Now he said,"Were all these women, Squire, who had the gift of bewitchment, good?"
14153Now how are you going to find him?
14153Now what would you advise?
14153Now why do you suppose James Penhallow wants to plunge into this chaotic war?"
14153Now, Aunt Ann, what would you have done or said?"
14153Now, be sure, is that the man?
14153Now, can you dine with me?"
14153Now, gentlemen, will you leave at once or in an hour or less?"
14153Now, how can it be managed?"
14153Now, is n''t that real jolly?"
14153Now, she''s kind of gentled-- noticed that?"
14153Now, what have you to say?"
14153Now, who betrayed the man-- who told Grey?"
14153Now, you will, sir, wo n''t you?"
14153Oddly enough she had the thought,"Who will now shave James?"
14153Oh, my!--are you hurt bad?"
14153Once I saw you pat a big pine and say''how are you, old fellow?''
14153One day when I was breakin''a colt, Mr. Woodburn says to me-- I was leanin''against a stump-- how will that colt turn out?
14153One of the maids?
14153Penhallow, groping in the confusion of remote memories, returned,"I seem to recall-- yes-- it was talked of--""But not done?
14153Penhallow?"
14153Penhallow?"
14153Penhallow?"
14153Penhallow?"
14153Pole joined in their merriment, and the carpenter punched the butcher in the ribs for emphasis, as he said,"How''s that, Pole?"
14153Presently she asked,"Why, Uncle Jim, are you suddenly in such haste to go?"
14153Putting aside angry comment, he fell back upon his one constant resource, What would Christ have said to this sinful man?
14153Shall you go to church?"
14153Shall your free black vote?
14153She asked,"How was the Captain wounded?
14153She faltered,"How are you feeling, James-- any better?"
14153She has-- what do you call it--?"
14153She leaned over, laid a hand on his arm and said,"Is not one dear life enough?"
14153She said only,"Why?--I ask-- you-- why indeed?"
14153She said, with a laugh in which there was no mirth,"I presume one of you will, of course, run my sewing- class?"
14153She went upstairs thinking how hard it would be to keep off of the forbidden ground, and after all was her aunt entirely wise?
14153Should he marry?
14153Suppose Leila had been told such a thing, how would she feel, and Aunt Ann?
14153Swallow ventured to connect me or any of my family with this matter?"
14153Swallow, that if a master reclaimed a slave in this county that there would be any trouble in carrying out the law?"
14153Swallow?"
14153That is clear-- is it not?"
14153The Squire much amused asked,"Well, Leila, did you run away?"
14153The Squire shut the door on all outward show of mirth, and said gravely,"Is n''t it pronounced irrelevant, my dear Miss Malaprop?"
14153The aunt cast a look of anxiety at the expressionless face of James Penhallow, as he rose to his feet, saying,"Why was n''t I told?"
14153The captain said,"Where is the surgeon?"
14153The fear-- would he have been afraid?
14153The general, white and grave, said to Haskell,"How has it gone here?"
14153The house is as melancholy as-- I feel as if I were in a mousetrap--""Why mouse- trap, my dear?"
14153The long lost terror returned-- but what could he know?
14153The music ceased, and as they moved on Penhallow asked,"What about Gresham, your friend?"
14153The older man was silent until John asked,"Is it worth while to talk to Aunt Ann about it-- advise against it?"
14153The tearful face looked up,"And you do forgive me?"
14153The young cashier was asked about his sick sister, and then rather surprised as he took the cheque inquired,"How will you have it, ma''am?
14153The young fellow replied smiling,"Do you think Aunt Ann would hurt anybody?
14153Then I said,''Would you not, James?''
14153Then Josiah, of a sudden wisely cautious, said,"You wo n''t tell Mrs. Penhallow, nor no one, about me, what I said?"
14153Then he asked anxiously,"Did Billy get as far as the house?"
14153Then he had talked with Rivers and straightened up, and now did the Squire''s offer imply any pledge on his own part?
14153Then he laughed,"Did you ever get that cane?"
14153Then he remounted, and said to the scared captive,"What have you got to say?"
14153Then he said to the aide,"We have a few minutes-- how are things going?
14153Then he said, in an absent way,"Are we men of the North all cowards like Josiah?
14153Then he took himself to task, reflecting that he should have been more gently kind, and was there not some better mode of approaching this man?
14153Then he ventured,"And Aunt Ann, was she here?"
14153Then she said quickly,"Have you taken any steps in this matter?"
14153Then she said suddenly,"You are pale-- are you in pain?"
14153Then why does any one buy?"
14153Then with renewed strength, she said,"You wo n''t have them go after him?"
14153Then, becoming grave, he asked,"What effect will my proclamation of emancipation have in the South?
14153Then, of course, Uncle Jim gives her more money-- and Peter gets it--""Where is he?"
14153There is firing over beyond the cemetery?"
14153There were, it seemed, others; how many?--what had they done?
14153They was in and out all day-- and he went to shops and carried things away--""What kind of shops?"
14153Things at the mills are in confusion-- what is to be done?
14153Think I''m safe here?
14153This crime or craze will make mischief?"
14153To cut my tale short, after we passed our outlying pickets and I had answered a dozen questions, he said,''Can you see their pickets?''
14153Tom grinned,"Got a handle to your name?"
14153Two army commanders who do n''t swear?
14153Uncle Jim is pleased, and as for war, Mr. Rivers, if that is what you dislike, what chance of war is there?"
14153Want to get in, Colonel?"
14153Was I wrong-- was I foolish, James?"
14153Was Tom McGregor badly hurt?"
14153Was he not a spirit in prison, as St. Peter said?
14153Was it a mere accidental encounter?"
14153Was it better for boys to abuse one another or to settle things by a fight?
14153Was it her fault?
14153Was it hopeless?
14153Was it right for the Jew to pay the tax which sustained this Government?
14153Was n''t it last year?"
14153Was there any one missing me?"
14153Was you wanting a saddle of lamb to- day?
14153We never knew-- is it so bad?"
14153We played tag in the water--"The Squire had at once a divergent interest,"Tag-- tag-- swimming?
14153Well, John has passed in the first half dozen-- he does not yet know just where--""And are you not entirely contented?
14153Well, John, any more?"
14153Well, what else, Leila?"
14153Well, what is it?"
14153Well, what more?"
14153Well, what then?"
14153What about yourself, Grace?"
14153What amuses you?"
14153What are these things which are at need to be rendered to Him?
14153What are you two talking over-- you were laughing?"
14153What day is this?"
14153What did he say?"
14153What did you think of me?"
14153What do I care for the war or-- or anything but to have you as you were?
14153What do you make of him?"
14153What do you mean?"
14153What do you propose?
14153What do you see?"
14153What do you think of it, Squire?"
14153What do you want, my dear?
14153What does a boy want with a bag?
14153What does it matter?"
14153What else does Leila say?"
14153What else is there?
14153What else?
14153What had a girl to do with it?
14153What happened?"
14153What has that got to do with the matter?"
14153What is his name?"
14153What is it now, James?"
14153What is it?
14153What is it?"
14153What is it?"
14153What is it?"
14153What is it?"
14153What is rather satisfactory?
14153What is that boy of yours going to do?"
14153What is the Cornish rhyme?
14153What is the other letter?"
14153What larger tax?
14153What made you start him?
14153What must I pay?"
14153What of Caesar, John?"
14153What of the platform?"
14153What right had he with his beliefs to despair of any human soul?
14153What shall it be?
14153What the deuce made you speak to me?
14153What time is it?
14153What was he doing?
14153What was it?"
14153What was that?"
14153What was the hematite iron- ore his uncle used at the works?"
14153What will Uncle Jim say?"
14153What woman can define that defensive instinct?
14153What would Leila fetch in the marriage market?"
14153What would he do-- must he do-- if he wakened?
14153What would life be worth or how could character be developed without temptation?
14153What would my uncle say?"
14153What would you do?"
14153What would you know?"
14153What''s all this about?"
14153What''s it called watch for if it do n''t watch?"
14153What''s the good?
14153What''s the matter now?"
14153What''s the matter?
14153What''s the use of praying in hell?
14153When after a night of deep sleep Ann woke to find Leila standing by her bed, she rose on an elbow saying,"What time is it?
14153When does he come?"
14153When is your nephew to be buried-- at the mills?"
14153When outside of the room he said,"We must trust Billy, I suppose?"
14153When they sat down beside the Indian graves, to his surprise she suddenly shifted the talk and said,"John, who would you vote for?
14153When was it I was hit?
14153When you marry, be sure to ask,''what are your politics, Jeremiah?''"
14153Where are the other fellows?"
14153Where are those Indian graves?"
14153Where are you bound, Peter?"
14153Where are you staying?"
14153Where did he learn to skate?"
14153Where did you walk-- or did you walk?"
14153Where have you been all these uneasy days?"
14153Where is the man?"
14153Where shall I go?"
14153Where was he?
14153Where will it all end?
14153Where will it end?
14153Where will it end?"
14153Where would the man go?
14153Where you going, Master John?"
14153Who can be sure of that?"
14153Who cares now?"
14153Who could it have been?"
14153Who done it, I wonder?"
14153Who invented that game?
14153Who lives there?"
14153Who set them on me?
14153Who told?
14153Who was the_ lonesome man_?
14153Who were his companions and where were they?
14153Who will bid?"
14153Who would meet him?
14153Who''ll bid?
14153Who''ll buy silly Billy?"
14153Who''s dead now?"
14153Who''s that officer on the big horse?
14153Who?"
14153Why are you here?"
14153Why at a time so solemn as this do you lie to me?
14153Why did I not?
14153Why did he change?"
14153Why did he run away, John?"
14153Why did she say it?"
14153Why did they send_ you_?"
14153Why did you desert?
14153Why do I talk my despair out to a young life like yours?
14153Why do men keep their useless, shabby clothes?"
14153Why do you ask, John?"
14153Why do you ask?"
14153Why do you get up of a winter night to ride miles to see some poor woman who will never pay you a penny?"
14153Why do you speak of your wife?"
14153Why had he talked to her?
14153Why had she not known all this?
14153Why not have no day or night?
14153Why should his aunt and Leila interfere?
14153Why?"
14153Will that do?"
14153With a look of disgust at his condition, as he faced the laughing troopers he said, with his somewhat formal way,"To whom am I indebted?"
14153With abrupt change of expression, she added,"Wounded?
14153Wo n''t you help me?"
14153Wo n''t you pray for me?"
14153Wo n''t you sit down, sir?"
14153Would they ever see him again?
14153You are limping, John-- what''s wrong?
14153You do not like it?"
14153You do suffer?"
14153You go off duty, when?"
14153You have, I suppose?
14153You leave on Monday?"
14153You said eleven, sir?"
14153You said that you would not let the carpenter use him, but why not?
14153You said''once''--well?"
14153You saw his letter?"
14153You saw it first-- where did it begin?"
14153You see, sir?"
14153You set some one on me?
14153You think I was intemperate?"
14153You will be at the hop of course?
14153You will come and shoot with me at Grey Pine in the fall?
14153You will give me the first dance?"
14153You will like to stay here with me, John?"
14153You will not question his mother?"
14153You will stay to dine?"
14153You will watch over her?"
14153You would like to change his name?"
14153You''ll be mighty careful, Master John?"
14153Your aunt reads to you or with you, I believe?"
14153Your old master, Woodburn, is coming to catch you-- he will be here soon-- I know he wo n''t be here for a day or two--""Is that so, Master John?
14153Your son, I suppose?"
14153and for stealing chickens?
14153asked Gibbon,"or their numbers?"
14153cried Sibley,"what do you mean?
14153cried the black in alarm,"anything wrong at the house?"
14153did you?
14153do you want me to apologize?"
14153does he?
14153exclaimed Billy,"did n''t he howl?"
14153express?"
14153he cried,"what is the matter?"
14153he exclaimed,"what''s the worth while of it?"
14153he said as they came in,"what have you done with your young man?"
14153he said,"where did you come from?"
14153he will stop and pat it and say,''How are you?''
14153how wicked of you-- why did you keep so still?"
14153in four days?
14153is that so?
14153is that so?"
14153not really?
14153or as Dr. McGregor would say,''wholesome''?"
14153said Grey, of a sudden reflecting,"two fingers--""Know him?"
14153said Josiah,"and where must I go?
14153said Mrs. Ann,"at his chapel?"
14153said the traveller out of fairyland,"what put that in your head?"
14153she said coldly,"what next, George Grey?"
14153twice?"
14153what am I to do without you?"
14153what?
14153who did you say-- Like Polly, owner withdraws her-- Can''t you speak out?"
14153why did I?"
14153why was not James at home?
14153you hurt, sir?
14153you were there too, sir?"
60681''A querist?'' 60681 ''And what is that?''
60681''Author of what?'' 60681 ''But suppose they ask me of what?''
60681''But you have never published anything?'' 60681 ''But your occupation?''
60681''Confess?'' 60681 ''Do not authors frequently publish?''
60681''Then what are you-- a butcher?
60681''Well, you see,''said Gorgonzola, desperately,''as yet I am nothing, but I hope to be an author--''''And how soon do you hope to be an author?"
60681''Yet you have written something?'' 60681 A grab?"
60681Ah, Pierre,he said,"c''est donc vous?
60681And do you like them?
60681And now where are we?
60681And tell me, Mr. Mayor, how far has he got in these twenty years?
60681And was Gorgonzola''s novel published later?
60681And what were you going to do? 60681 And where did you come from?"
60681And wo n''t any of your friends give you anything?
60681Are you fond of your aunts, Polly?
60681As long ago as that, eh?
60681Did you see the lookout on the cliff as you came down?
60681Do yer-- do yer really mean ter give me all this?
60681Do you mean that?
60681Do you mean to say that you do n''t know that?
60681Do you suppose birds sing for nothing, because they know nobody''d ever pay their bill?
60681Dunkerque?
60681Eh?
60681Have I not travelled it every month for three years?
60681Have n''t you any relations?
60681Have you ever been in our parlor?
60681How will you get something to eat then?
60681Indeed, now, how interesting do you find it?
60681Indeed,said I, anxiously,"what is that?"
60681Is anybody in this room?
60681Is it so?
60681Is there anything I can do for you?
60681Is this the passenger or the pilot?
60681Oh, are you? 60681 Then why do you call him an author?"
60681Uncles ought always to have pockets full of nickels to give to their nephews-- don''t you think?
60681WHAT FOR?
60681We thank you for that,said the Queen;"but I pray you, what is the other?"
60681Well, Jacky,said Uncle George,"what are you going to be when you grow up?"
60681Well, Tommie, how far have you got in arithmetic?
60681Well, yer know when yer went out on the bike?
60681Well?
60681What are you going to do to- morrow?
60681What do you mean?
60681What for?
60681What have we here?
60681What is it?
60681What ship is that?
60681What was his first paragraph?
60681What was it?
60681What''s our latitude and longitude?
60681What''s the matter, Jimmieboy? 60681 What, Willie Robinson, will one of those pieces amount to?"
60681When I went for the doctor? 60681 Where''d you put him?"
60681Where, in the name of goodness, did you come from, lad?
60681Who are you and where do you come from?
60681Who in the name of Davy Jones are you?
60681Why should I forget my way, monsieur?
60681Why, how did you know that?
60681Why, what do you want here?
60681Why-- why, is it you?
60681Will yer promise not ter git me inter trouble?
60681Willst du nicht aufstehn, Wilhelm, zu schauen die Prozession?
60681Would n''t you like some money?
60681You mean you were going to_ steal_ something?
60681''Confess what?''
60681''What is your business?''
60681ARE YOU CLEVER?
60681Ai n''t yer''fraid I might steal''em, after all?"
60681And what was to be done with these paralyzed and speechless guests, when once they had partially come to themselves?
60681Are, you really a robber?"
60681Avez- vous un pilote?"
60681But what was I doing at this very moment?
60681Do yer believe me?"
60681Do yer know how I got in here ter- night?"
60681Do yer really mean yer''d give me some money?"
60681How is Madame Burron, and the little ones?"
60681How many of us know what a"corridor express"is?
60681I asked, very much interested;"or do n''t you know?"
60681Is Captain St. Croix here?"
60681Is everything ready?
60681Really?
60681Shall I describe a sugar plantation for you?
60681Should she go and call somebody?
60681So you would ship with us?"
60681The others were wresting these enormous bars from their soldered sockets; why should not he also be furnished with an implement of destruction?
60681Was ever so glorious a vision before?
60681Was it a robber who had hidden there?
60681Was it about being kind to animals?"
60681Were you going to stay there all night?"
60681What has he written?"
60681What have you come for, and why did you come in such a queer way in the middle of the night?"
60681What say you I send for some of it, and we will pledge a successful passage to the_ Hirondelle_, eh?"
60681What trade do you feel most interested in?
60681What, then, are you?''
60681Where were the police?
60681Who lives there?"
60681Why do n''t you like it here?"
60681Why, how did it happen?"
60681Will you really be kind to animals after this?
60681Wo n''t you have something more?
60681Would yer please tell me what yer name is?"
60681You know we have a Directory here in our city-- a great, thick, heavy book--""Which he wrote?"
60681all?
60681and to how many of us, indeed, is the word"coach"a natural expression for car?
60681exclaimed Andy Morse, in a sharp whisper;"ai n''t yer''fraid ter leave me here with all them things?
60681or who can guess the meaning of the term"bogie coach"?
9868Who cares if the McGill men do n''t like it? 9868 Ah, but what is that I see on the far horizon''s edge, with tongue of lambent flame and eye of forked fire, serpent- headed and griffin- clawed? 9868 Could it abridge freedom of speech, and permit cruel and unusual punishments, or establish slavery? 9868 Did the people of the United States after 1898 take a constant and informed interest in world politics and international relations? 9868 Did the prohibition against every contract or combination mean precisely_ every_ contract, whether important or not? 9868 Did this mean that Congress might govern the new acquisitions independently of the Constitution? 9868 Did those of the citizen of the United States differ from those of the citizen of a state? 9868 Furthermore, assuming that both gold and silver should be coined, what amount of each would constitute the most desirable combination? 9868 How could the costs of production at home or abroad be determined? 9868 If paper currency was to supplement the precious metals, what amount of it should be in circulation? 9868 If the United States has no exclusive rights over the seals, what steps ought to be taken to protect them? 9868 In the popular language of the day, did the Constitution follow the flag? 9868 In what day have Bryan and his followers failed to utter lies, libels and forgeries? 9868 Or did it refer merely to large and unreasonable restraints? 9868 Or did the people, after a slight excursion into the West Indies and the Philippines, return to the traditional attitude ofsplendid isolation"?
9868To what extent would the principle announced in the platform be carried?
9868Translation: If Returning Board can be procured absolutely, will you deposit 30,000 dollars?
9868Was Porto Rico a"foreign"country?
9868Was a corporation a person?
9868Was the extent to which the United States became a world power sufficient to make probable its entry into a European war?
9868Were the state courts to be superseded, in relation to these vital subjects, by the United States Supreme Court?
9868What are we up here for?"
9868What exclusive rights does the United States have in the Bering Sea?
9868What ought to be the weight of the coins?
9868What right of protection or property does the United States have in the seals frequenting the islands in the Sea?
9868What was due process of law?
9868What was liberty?
9868What were the privileges and immunities of the citizen?
9868shall we put out the lights?...
7135Dependenceupon whom, and with regard to what?
7135Descendants of the same people inhabit the country; yet what is the reason of this vast difference? 7135 Now, I ask any plain common- sense man what was the meaning of that?
7135Question.--And of course an abandonment of the purpose for which you were there? 7135 Question.--At that time General Patterson felt it was so important to attack Johnston that he had determined to do it?
7135Question.--Behind his intrenchments? 7135 Question.--Did not General Patterson issue orders at Bunker Hill, the night before you marched to Charlestown, for an attack on the Enemy?
7135Question.--Even if you had received a check there, it would have prevented his junction with the forces at Manassas? 7135 Question.--That order was not countermanded until late on Tuesday, the 16th, was it?
7135Question.--You understood General Patterson to be influenced to make that attempt because he felt there was a necessity for detaining Johnston? 7135 Question[ by the Chairman].--Did he[ Patterson] assign any reason for that movement?
7135What troops are those?
7135*** What cause is there for further alarm in the Southern States, so far as the Territories are concerned?
7135*** What is now the case?
7135***"''Question.--In what direction would Johnston have had to move to get by you?
7135***"You may ask, why does the South want us to do it by Constitutional Amendment, when we have just done it voluntarily by Law?
7135******"What more, then, is demanded?
7135********* Question[ by the Chairman].--Would there have been any difficulty in preventing Johnston from going to Manassas?
7135*********"Question.--While at Bunker Hill, the night before you left there, were any orders issued to march in the evening?
7135**********''Question[ by the Chairman].--And that left Johnston free?
7135--said Davies--"and can they get through that road?"
7135And how is it, that Johnston gets away from Patterson so neatly?
7135And what can that purpose be, but to throw his augmented right upon our left, at Blackburn''s Ford, and so, along the ridge- road, upon Centreville?
7135And what have we seen?
7135And what was the chief cause or pretext for discontent at that time?
7135And when does he do it?
7135Continuing, he said:"What more do the Southern States want?
7135Do we not know it to be so?
7135Do we not know that they have been anxious for a change of Government for years?
7135Do we not know this?"
7135Gooch].--Was it not the intention to move from Bunker Hill to Winchester?
7135Has he not stolen a march and sent re- enforcements toward Manassas Junction?
7135Have we not at the South, as well as the North, grown great, prosperous, and happy under its operations?
7135How long have we been at War?
7135I said to Mr. Pickens,''What next do you propose we shall do?
7135In answer to his compliments about the comfortable location I had made, I said:''Very comfortable, General, when shall we move on?''
7135Odell].--Had you any such understanding with Patterson?
7135Odell].--You covered his movement?
7135Our position for renewing the action the next morning was excellent; whence, then, our failure?
7135Simply that a Constitutional Amendment shall be adopted, affirming-- what?
7135Was it that they believed a Monarchical form of government was incompatible with civil liberty?
7135Was it that they were opposed to a Monarchical form of government?
7135Was it the firing on our flag at Sumter?
7135Was that the first adversary passage?
7135Were it his own, would he not have said in"making"it, instead of in"stating"it?
7135What American is not proud of the result?
7135What can it be?
7135What is War?
7135What more can any man demand?
7135What would our condition be in the event of the greatest calamity that could befall this Nation?"
7135Where is Rome, once the mistress of the World?
7135Why disguise this great truth?
7135Why is this so?
7135Why not?
7135Why this sad difference?
7135Will it be said the South required in addition to this, laws of Congress to protect Slavery in the Territories?
7135Will that success continue?
7135are we to tell the People that Republicanism is a failure?
7135why have not the People of that Heaven- favored clime, the spirit that animated their fathers?
4230''Scuse me, Mistah Swift, but what''s dat yo''said?
4230A journey? 4230 A tramp?
4230A visitor? 4230 Ah, it''s you, is it, Tom?"
4230Ah-- er-- um-- is-- Why, it''s you, is n''t it?
4230Albany? 4230 Albany?
4230Am I going by train?
4230Am I near Albany? 4230 Am dat so, Mistah Swift?"
4230And so you think they are up to some mischief, Tom?
4230Are we-- is it damaged any, Andy?
4230Are you Mr. Barton Swift?
4230Are you a tramp now, or in some other disguise?
4230Are you acquainted around here?
4230Are you going to leave him here like this?
4230Are you hurt? 4230 Are you hurt?"
4230Are you much hurt, Tom? 4230 Are you much hurt?"
4230Are you sure the man was one of those you saw in the restaurant?
4230Are you sure the model and papers are gone? 4230 Are you sure, Rad?"
4230Are youse goin''far on dat rig- a- ma- jig?
4230As far as that?
4230Ask him if he knows any one named Swift?
4230But ca n''t you fight them in the courts?
4230But how does it happen that you are trusting yourself in a car like this?
4230But what in the world is Rad up to?
4230But where am I? 4230 But why do n''t you use your brake?
4230But why is she up so early?
4230But, in the meanwhile, ca n''t you make another model and get a patent yourself?
4230Ca n''t you do anything to stop them, dad? 4230 Ca n''t you see?"
4230Can I do anything for you right away?
4230Can I give you a lift?
4230Can that be Munson or Dwight coming back?
4230Can you walk, or shall we carry you?
4230Dad,he exclaimed,"why could n''t I go on my motor- cycle?"
4230Did he get anything? 4230 Did he have a thick, brown beard?"
4230Did yo''done put a charm on mah bresh?
4230Did you come to do some work?
4230Did you get any trace of the thieves? 4230 Did you have any luck, dad?"
4230Did you say you''d seen him?
4230Did you see any one running away as you came up?
4230Do n''t you see that you nearly upset me?
4230Do you know him?
4230Do you know much about him? 4230 Do you know their names?"
4230Do you live near here?
4230Do you think they''ll do that, dad?
4230Do you think this man was one of the crowd of financiers?
4230Do you think those scoundrels are there yet?
4230Do you think you can repair it?
4230Do you want the receipt for the registered letter sent to you here or at Shopton?
4230Does he think he can climb that, or is he giving an exhibition by showing how close he can come and not hit it?
4230Does yo''t''ink I can?
4230Father,said Tom earnestly,"may I buy that machine off him?"
4230Go to Albany, dad?
4230Have you killed him?
4230Have you seen anything of the thieves?
4230He was?
4230He''s had experience that way, eh, Featherton?
4230How about the fellow you traded the cracked grindstone to, Rad?
4230How am I going to find it in all this dust and darkness?
4230How did he look?
4230How far is that from Centreford?
4230How long will it take to polish them?
4230How many men have you?
4230How many miles is it?
4230How-- why-- are you the young man I nearly ran down this morning?
4230Hurt?
4230I heard your gun, and I imagined--"Did you think you had been shot? 4230 I was, eh?"
4230I wonder if I''ll meet Andy Foger and his cronies again?
4230I wonder if Munson and Dwight are at the lake yet?
4230I wonder if he was some ordinary tramp, looking for what he could steal, or if he was one of the gang after dad''s invention?
4230I wonder if that can be the place?
4230I wonder if that was Happy Harry?
4230I wonder if that''s him again?
4230I wonder if this is ever going to stop?
4230I wonder if those are the thieves? 4230 I wonder if those men are coming back here?"
4230I wonder what he wants?
4230I wonder what they did to me? 4230 I wonder where I am?
4230I wonder where he came from, and where he''s going?
4230I wonder which one this is?
4230If you do n''t mind,he went on,"would you just as soon move that gun a little?
4230Invented anything new?
4230Is he acquainted around here?
4230Is it writ on it anywhere?
4230Is that all?
4230Is that so?
4230Is that what you call one of them two- wheeled lickity- split things that a man sits on the middle of an''goes like chain- lightning?
4230Is this the road to Centreford?
4230Just where is this old house, Rad?
4230Kin youse go far on it?
4230Mattah, Mistah Swift? 4230 Maybe I will some day, but, speaking of autos, did you see the one Andy Foger has?"
4230Me? 4230 Motor- boat?
4230Mr. Damon,said Tom quickly,"will you sell me that motor- cycle?"
4230My name? 4230 Near the lake, eh?"
4230Now I wonder if I''d better try to get to it from the water or the land side?
4230Oh, Mr. Damon,cried Tom,"will you help me capture a gang of thieves?
4230Oh, is that all?
4230Oh, you are, eh?
4230On business or pleasure?
4230Robbed you, did they? 4230 Say, Burke,"called the man at the door,"have you taken the motor- boat?"
4230Swindled? 4230 The inventor of the Swift safety lamp, and the turbine motor?"
4230The new turbine motor, dad?
4230Then may I go, dad?
4230Then what do you think is their object?
4230Then you admit I may be on the right track, dad?
4230Think this storm will hold off until I get home?
4230Want a ride?
4230Was that it? 4230 Was you in that automobile?"
4230We''ll go outside now, and look--"Is any one killed? 4230 Well, how goes it?"
4230What are you doing that for?
4230What can they be doing here?
4230What can you do, dad?
4230What did he tell them?
4230What did you tell him?
4230What do you mean by getting in the way like that?
4230What do you mean by nearly running me down? 4230 What do you mean to do?"
4230What do you think it was?
4230What do you think they are up to, dad?
4230What do you want?
4230What do you want?
4230What fo''I call him Boomerang? 4230 What for, dad?"
4230What good will that do?
4230What is it, Tom?
4230What seems to be the trouble, and how did you come to own this sawmill?
4230What was the man''s name?
4230What would you do?
4230What''s dat''bout mush?
4230What''s he up to?
4230What''s that?
4230What''s that?
4230What''s that?
4230What''s the matter with the new churn?
4230What''s the matter with you? 4230 What''s the matter, Rad?"
4230What''s the matter, Rad?
4230What''s the matter, Tom?
4230What''s the matter; getting nervous?
4230What''s the matter? 4230 What''s the matter?
4230What, that old grindstone that was broken in two, and that you fastened together with concrete?
4230What? 4230 Whatever are we coming to?
4230Whatever are you doing?
4230Whatever happened to you?
4230Where did you blow in from?
4230Where''s dad?
4230Where''s dad?
4230Which finger was the blue ring tattooed on?
4230Which house did you mean, Rad?
4230Which one?
4230Which way did he go, Rad, after he left you?
4230Who are you, anyhow? 4230 Who be you, anyhow, and what you doin''here?"
4230Who be you, anyhow?
4230Who do you suppose he could have been?
4230Who fired that shot?
4230Who is it?
4230Who is the telegram signed by?
4230Who would have thought he''d have a motor- boat waiting for him? 4230 Why did n''t I think of it before?"
4230Why do n''t you invent an automobile or an airship?
4230Why do you ask, Tom?
4230Why do you call him Boomerang?
4230Why not? 4230 Why not?"
4230Why set this boat adrift?
4230Why, Rad, what are you doing?
4230Why, Tom,she went on hurriedly as she saw how excited he was,"whatever has happened?"
4230Why, do n''t you like it?
4230Why, do you think he gave out information concerning your work?
4230Why?
4230Wonder if he bent any of my spokes?
4230Wonder if the owner can be near?
4230Yes; why not?
4230Yo''doan''t s''pose yo''kin fix dis yeah moah so''s I kin use it, does yo'', Mistah Swift?
4230You are sure you will not regret your bargain, Mr. Damon? 4230 You certainly seem to have,"agreed Tom"But why is Boomerang so obstinate?
4230You did n''t meet any more of those men, did you? 4230 You do n''t mean that old, broken one?"
4230Your motor- cycle?
4230A moment later, however, he heard some one approaching through the woods behind him, and a voice called out:"What are you doing?
4230Any of your plans or models, dad?"
4230Are you all right now?"
4230Are you both murdered?"
4230As they bent over him he opened his eyes and asked faintly:"Where am I?
4230Back so soon?"
4230Baggert?"
4230Bless my coat- tails, but is anything wrong?"
4230Bless my very existence, but has anything happened?"
4230But am yo''suah dat mah mule Boomerang ai n''t hurted?"
4230But are you hurt?"
4230But have you anything special to do, Tom?"
4230But say, is youse goin''to let me have dat quarter?
4230But the question is where to stay?"
4230But what about you?"
4230But what will I do with him after I get him?
4230But why ca n''t you turn around and look for yourself?"
4230But why do n''t you try to get up?"
4230Buy a broken motor- cycle?"
4230By the way, what''s your name?"
4230Can they be afraid of me?"
4230Can you?"
4230Crawford?"
4230Damon?"
4230Dat''s in Jersey, ai n''t it?"
4230Did I hurt you much?"
4230Did I upset my tea?"
4230Did he harm you?"
4230Did yo''eber see dem Australian black mans what go around wid a circus t''row dem crooked sticks dey calls boomerangs?"
4230Did yo''eber work fer a blacksmith?"
4230Did you see anything of a tramp around here while I was away?"
4230Did you wish to see me?"
4230Do you expect burglars, Master Tom?"
4230Do you feel well enough to go?
4230Do you know the man?"
4230Do you mean it?"
4230Do you think he imagined he could come here and get possession of some of your secrets?"
4230Does Mr. Crawford think he can?"
4230Does he keep many servants?
4230Does he live near his workshops?
4230File an injunction, or something like that?"
4230G''lang, now, wo n''t yo''?
4230Has your father any idea of giving the work he has been turning over to me to some other firm?"
4230Have you seen it?"
4230Help you?
4230How did it happen?
4230How did it happen?"
4230How else could you go?"
4230How far did those scoundrels carry me, and what has become of my motor- cycle?"
4230How is it some one was n''t killed?"
4230How long will you be away?"
4230How much would you want for it?"
4230How?"
4230I do n''t s''pose youse meant to upset me?"
4230I wonder if I''d better take chances and spring it on him that I''m on to his game?"
4230I wonder if he could come here?
4230I wonder if he tried to get my machine away from me?
4230I wonder if he''s after me yet?"
4230I wonder if they took off an arm or leg?
4230I wonder if this one succeeded?
4230I wonder if those are n''t the men who are after the patent model?
4230I wonder what I had better do?"
4230I wonder what has become of Jake Burke?
4230I wonder what he''s been doing all this while, that he has n''t gotten any farther than this?
4230I wonder what hospital I''m in?
4230I wonder where I can stay?"
4230I wonder where he and his crowd are going?"
4230I wonder where my motor- cycle is?
4230I wonder who he was?
4230I wonder who that man was, and what he wanted by asking so many personal questions about dad?"
4230I wonder who the men were?"
4230Is Mrs. Baggert murdered?
4230Is he dead?"
4230Is that the letter?"
4230Is the boat gone?"
4230Is the envelope open?"
4230Is the motor- cycle much damaged?"
4230Is your father going to use them in a new machine?"
4230It struck me as rather curious that a woman would trust herself all alone in one of them things; would n''t it you?"
4230Let''s see what can I do?"
4230Let''s see, you said your name was Quick, did n''t you?"
4230Let''s see-- what is the first thing to do?"
4230May I ask where you obtained your information concerning it?"
4230Now I axes yo''fair, Mistah Swift, ai n''t I got lots ob trouble?"
4230Now the question is, how can I get help to capture them?"
4230Now what had I better do?"
4230Now, how to get closer?"
4230OFF TO ALBANY"Did you catch him, Tom?"
4230Or any stables or fences t''whitewash?
4230SUSPICIOUS ACTIONS"Are you hurt?"
4230Say, youse could n''t lend me a quarter, could youse?"
4230Sell you that mass of junk?"
4230Shall I send for the doctor?"
4230Shall we look at it?"
4230Suddenly he uttered an exclamation,"Rad, have you been monkeying with this machinery?"
4230Swift was saying:"What do you want?
4230Swift, eh?
4230Swift?
4230Swift?"
4230The men who are trying to get my invention?"
4230Then the inventor asked:"Do you know that man?
4230Was n''t that right?"
4230We do need some white washing done, do n''t we, dad?"
4230Whar did yo''say, yo''had some whitewashin''t''do?"
4230What about him, Tom?
4230What are his habits?
4230What are you trying to do-- kill me?
4230What do you suppose they wanted?"
4230What do you want sneaking around here?"
4230What do you want?
4230What happened?"
4230What happened?"
4230What happened?"
4230What has happened?
4230What would his father say?
4230What''s wrong now?
4230What''s your name, anyhow, cully?"
4230Where am I?"
4230Where am dat work yo''was speakin''ob?"
4230Where?"
4230Who are the men working with you to defraud my father of his rights?"
4230Who be you, anyhow-- a tramp?"
4230Who is that person, Simpson?"
4230Who''s hurt?
4230Why did he leave so hurriedly?"
4230Why did n''t you sound your horn?
4230Why do n''t you ring a bell or blow a horn when you''re coming?"
4230Why is it so dark and cold?"
4230Why were you called that?"
4230Why, did yo''want t''see dat man, Mistah Swift?"
4230Why?"
4230Why?"
4230Will you let me go, dad?"
4230Will you let me take you in my car?
4230Will you ride with us, Tom Swift, or on that dangerous motor- cycle?"
4230Wonder how long he''ll keep me a prisoner?"
4230Would yo''mind tellin''me if dat ar''mule am still alive?"
4230Yesterday, you said it was, you saw Happy Harry?
4230Yet, if they have n''t, why are they staying in the old house?
4230Yo''ai n''t got no chicken coops yo''wants cleaned out, has yo''?
4230Yo''see dis yeah lawn- moah?"
4230You see, I was going quite slowly, and--""You call dat slow, when youse hit me an''knocked me down?"
4230You want to set the place afire?
4230but what has happened to me?"
4230he exclaimed pleasantly, Then, seeing a look of alarm on the lad''s face, he went on:"I hope I did n''t shoot in your direction, young man; did I?"
39778''You see this egg?'' 39778 A nalp?"
39778About that?
39778About what would a Knight gown cost me-- made out of paper muslin or something that''s a wee bit cheaper than solid gold and velvet?
39778Across the ocean?
39778Ah-- that''s it, eh?
39778Ai n''t any danger of its coming into the house and biting people, is there?
39778Ai n''t neither what-- smart?
39778American made, are they?
39778And Columbus proved it by making the egg stand up?
39778And chickens have n''t got anything but hind legs, have they?
39778And does the Post- man come and get them?
39778And how about Hingland?
39778And suppose yours are lost too, and there ai n''t any wind for the sails?
39778And then what does the lady say?
39778And there are 80,000,000 people in the country, ai n''t there?
39778And they did n''t arrest you?
39778And when the Doggies get the complaints they attend to''em, eh?
39778And who are the Doggies?
39778Are n''t you nearly stufficated to death?
39778Are you the jay?
39778Been having pretty cold weather?
39778Beg your pardon?
39778Bottles and rags?
39778Built on it?
39778Built on water?
39778Burr and sooker?
39778But how did you come to come?
39778But how do you call the waiter?
39778But how does that bottle keep you from being homesick?
39778But there are other things in the Museum, are n''t there?
39778But what becomes of them?
39778But what for? 39778 But_ how_--how are you going to get to London?"
39778Ca n''t you get salt air without going across the ocean? 39778 Ca n''t you tell whether a morning is good or not without tasting it?"
39778Clothes or jewels or something?
39778Come on, Mollie-- are you ready?
39778Cross letters?
39778Da weather''s mighta da fine, huh? 39778 Dead what?"
39778Dear me-- how interesting,said Mollie, as she read this remarkable legend,"but-- what does it mean?"
39778Did n''t you ever hear of him? 39778 Did n''t you know that, Mr. Me?
39778Did n''t you know that?
39778Did n''t you make any purchases abroad?
39778Do n''t hear anything, do you?
39778Do n''t they call him Edward Seventh?
39778Do n''t they know at the office?
39778Do n''t you?
39778Do you think they''d cable it across?
39778Do you walk there?
39778Do you want me to ask my Papa to buy you a ticket for London? 39778 Does n''t look as if I was walkin''off to sea again, does it?"
39778Does the history say all that?
39778Does- swales- like- woyms?
39778Edward what?
39778Ever see a chicken?
39778Fif- teen- hundred- pounds? 39778 Fromidge?
39778Germans?
39778Give us what?
39778Gondolas?
39778Has it been inspected?
39778Have you any money with you?
39778Have you any tackle?
39778Have you got a license?
39778Have you had breakfast?
39778Have you had your breakfast?
39778Have you seen horrizon yet?
39778He do n''t thorpe, does he?
39778Hingland?
39778How about other things?
39778How can you help yourself?
39778How did you find it out?
39778How do you taste a day to see if it''s all right?
39778How much is that in dollars?
39778How should I know where abroad is?
39778How you going to get across? 39778 How- dju- know- that?"
39778How- dy''u- know he was the King?
39778Howd- ulike- being- outer- sighter- land?
39778Howdit- go?
39778Huh?
39778I bought and paid for it with my own money, so why should n''t I walk off with it?
39778I do n''t believe there''s another collection like this anywhere in all the world, do you?
39778I do n''t believe your father knows about that, does he, Mollie?
39778I stopped one outside the door and asked him,''is your grandfather still alive?'' 39778 I was going to begin with:"''Shall you buy a horse?''
39778I was then going to say:continued the Unwiseman,"''Will you go out this afternoon?''
39778I will-- want to go with me Mollie?
39778If it do n''t melt here in summer time why should it melt anywhere else? 39778 If it''s a State- room why do n''t they call it New Jersey, or Kansas, or Mitchigan, or some other State?
39778Is it?
39778Is n''t it enough? 39778 Is n''t it fresh?"
39778Is that all you wrote?
39778Is that all?
39778Is that really Eye- talian?
39778Is that the law?
39778Is there any French for Beef?
39778It would n''t be very important, would it?
39778It''s my bag-- who''s got a better right?
39778It''s very much like it, is n''t it?
39778It''s what?
39778Just what sort of a rubber fish is a twale?
39778Just what_ is_ that? 39778 Kesserkersayker what''s going on out ici?"
39778Looking for more pollywogs?
39778Lost your appetite?
39778Million?
39778Nice?
39778No,said the Unwiseman much pleased,"I do n''t think I ever did-- it''s so delicate and-- er-- steamy, eh?
39778Nor no trolleys?
39778O I see-- rhymes with Hits- yer- land-- when the Alp he hits your land, then you think of Switzerland-- that it?
39778Oh Mr. Me-- you do n''t mean to say they actually put you out of The British Museum?
39778Oh-- that''s it eh?
39778Oh-- that''s it, eh?
39778Oh-- well-- that''s it, eh?
39778Oh-- you went, did you?
39778Oooffs?
39778Or Baron Brains-- eh?
39778Put it in the fire- place to warm it?
39778Put you out?
39778Really? 39778 Really?"
39778Really?
39778Roberts?
39778Saved up from the ship?
39778Screws?
39778See that?
39778See that?
39778See that?
39778See what?
39778See- zick?
39778Should I have it checked or take it with me in the train?
39778So that really my share comes to-- say four and a quarter thousandths of a cent-- that it?
39778So you''re what they call a shammy, eh?
39778Something easier?
39778Sooker? 39778 Swizz- what?"
39778Tasted it?
39778That Alp?
39778That was pretty fine I guess, was n''t it? 39778 That''s his name, is n''t it?"
39778The King''s, stupid,roared the Unwiseman,"Mr. Edward S. King''s-- didn''t you ever hear of him?"
39778The fact is, Mr. Unwiseman, we''re all going abroad----"Abroad?
39778Then you do n''t think much of the British Museum?
39778Then you have n''t got a State- room?
39778Then you wo n''t come with us out to Versailles?
39778Then you''ll never be a Duke?
39778There ai n''t more than sixty States, are there, Mollie?
39778They ai n''t very different from common people''s muffins are they? 39778 They did n''t break any of your poor old bones, did they?"
39778They do n''t have dogs instead of pleece over here, do they? 39778 Thirty- seven?"
39778Three and seven make thirty- seven-- don''t it?
39778To the Palace, sir?
39778To the President?
39778To the river?
39778Umpire Napoleon dead? 39778 Up the what?"
39778Vermicelli?
39778Versailles?
39778Waddeesay?
39778Was the kitchen- stove glad to see you back?
39778Wass- that?
39778Wass- that?
39778Watcher- goin''-t''do- with it?
39778Watcher- gone-''tdo- with- the- lassoo?
39778Watt- else- coodie- doo?
39778Wattonearth do- you- do with a- nold beevor- at?
39778Well say, Mr. Snip-- ain''t there anything else a chap can be made beside a Duke that ai n''t quite so dressy?
39778Well, what of it?
39778Well,he cried impatiently,"where is he?"
39778Well-- let''s see-- how long ago was that? 39778 Well?"
39778What Umpire are you talking about?
39778What about?
39778What are gondolas, trained ducks? 39778 What are you going to do, Mr. Me?
39778What are you scaring everybody to death for?
39778What business have you skipping out like that with a carpet- bag as big as a house under your arm?
39778What did you do? 39778 What did you do?"
39778What did you pay for it?
39778What did you say to them?
39778What do you do it for?
39778What do you suppose Mollie? 39778 What do you suppose he means?"
39778What do you think it''s worth?
39778What does that mean?
39778What does that mean?
39778What else coodie- do?
39778What good is it for fishing?
39778What have you been doing all these days?
39778What have you done about getting sea- sick?
39778What if it took a week?
39778What is it?
39778What is it?
39778What is the particular trouble?
39778What kind of sails are Versailles? 39778 What makes you thinkit- taint England?"
39778What me?
39778What of it?
39778What on earth are oooffs?
39778What on earth is a Hoople- fish?
39778What right have you to ask me such impident questions as, What have I got in this bag?
39778What the stove?
39778What was that he said about the Lion''s Mouth?
39778What was there in it?
39778What will you say?
39778What''s a follytone?
39778What''s a fray?
39778What''s a nalp?
39778What''s it good for?
39778What''s it? 39778 What''s sky- scraper in French?"
39778What''s sooker?
39778What''s that mean?
39778What''s that?
39778What''s that?
39778What''s that?
39778What''s that?
39778What''s that?
39778What''s that?
39778What''s the good of them?
39778What''s the idea of it?
39778What''s the matter here?
39778What''s the matter, dearie?
39778What''s the use of calling it sooker? 39778 What''s this piece of broken china on the table?"
39778What''s this?
39778What''s this?
39778What''s''catcha da nick''?
39778What, Christopher Columbus?
39778What, me?
39778What- did- he- say?
39778What?
39778What?
39778What?
39778What?
39778What?
39778What?
39778What_ are_ you talking about?
39778What_ do_ you take it for?
39778When do you think you can use that?
39778Where are you?
39778Where did you buy them?
39778Where do you suppose I''m going?
39778Where is it?
39778Where is it?
39778Where is what?
39778Where on earth did you come from?
39778Where to, sir?
39778Where''s that?
39778Where''s your State- room?
39778Where''s your bottle of native land?
39778Where_ have_ you been?
39778Who are you anyhow?
39778Who wants to pull''em aboard, Smarty?
39778Who, me?
39778Whose-- the Unwiseman''s?
39778Why do n''t he say what he means then?
39778Why do n''t you send a wireless message?
39778Why do you let children and rubber dolls in free?
39778Why not? 39778 Why not?"
39778Why should I be?
39778Why should it?
39778Why, dear?
39778Will you be good enough to ask the cook for a little salad oil?
39778Would n''t it all melt before he could get it over to America?
39778Would n''t it cost a lot to take it over?
39778Yes-- don''t you know what Vermicelli is? 39778 You an American?"
39778You are sure you did n''t buy any?
39778You ca n''t tax what ai n''t, can you?
39778You could n''t lend me two dollars now, could you?
39778You did n''t really expect him to be a whale, did you?
39778You did n''t really smash up that pretty little statue?
39778You did n''t take me for an Eye- talian, did you?
39778You do n''t mean the gentleman who discovered the United States, do you?
39778You do n''t really think he has stolen it do you?
39778You do n''t want to mix a salad now do you?
39778You do n''t?
39778You do n''t?
39778You have n''t any ready made Duke''s clothes on hand for less?
39778You learn to speak it, Whistlebinkie?
39778You never died, did you?
39778You never write cross letters to anybody do you?
39778You rented your house?
39778You say you''ve been abroad all summer and have n''t bought anything?
39778You''ll pardon my curiosity, but is this England?
39778You? 39778 ''Should you remain here if your mother were here?'' 39778 ''Tain''t much to look at, is it?
39778A new kind of pie?"
39778AT THE CUSTOM HOUSE"Hi there-- where are you going with that carpet- bag?"
39778About how much do you need to even it up?
39778About when do you think we''ll capture any Brigs?"
39778Ah-- then your nephew Jacques too has an ear?
39778Ai n''t he silly, Mollie?"
39778Ai n''t the ocean that wet place down around New Jersey somewhere?"
39778And the old man rattled off the following:"Avvy- voo kelker chose ah me dire?
39778And the police go around after them picking them up, eh?"
39778And what do you suppose happened?
39778Are n''t you feeling well?"
39778Are the Boys de Bologna dead too?"
39778Are you sure about that?"
39778Avvy- voo bien dormy la nooit dernyere?
39778British, eh?"
39778But I say, Mollie, we''re really in London are we?"
39778But what''s the use of talking about it?
39778By Jiminy, that would be fun, would n''t it?
39778Call for help?"
39778Can you change it?"
39778Did n''t you know that?"
39778Did you get my letter?"
39778Did your father say anything about this being England or not?"
39778Do you think he will?"
39778Does she practice on the phonograph or on her Aunt''s upright piano?
39778Ever sella da banann?"
39778For instance something like this:"Do you wish to go anywhere?
39778GENOA, GIBRALTAR, AND COLUMBUS"Whatta da namea dissa cit?"
39778He has n''t hid under this piazza, has he?"
39778He proved the earth was round when everybody else thought it was flat-- and how do you suppose he did it?"
39778Here it is, see?"
39778Hi there, Porpee-- you big black one over there-- where''s Elmira, New York?"
39778How did you get through the Custom House?"
39778How do they keep the water out of their cellars?"
39778How do you hold it all, Whistlebinkie?"
39778How much does he get anyhow?"
39778How much for a New York State Duke?"
39778I asked''em in French, like this:''Mounseer le Umpire, est il mort?''
39778I guess maybe you''d better pour it out into that vase up there on the mantel- piece-- it is n''t too thick to go in there, is it?"
39778I hope the kitchen- stove is well?"
39778I only know German by sight-- and even then I do n''t know what it means except Gesundheit,--which is German for''did you sneeze?''
39778If I''d said it was sweet she''d have thought I was as much of a niggeramus as old Fizz----""Do you always read your newspaper upside- down?"
39778If that kitchen- stove was only pretty do you suppose I''d love it the way I do?
39778In closing I think I ought to say that the Unwiseman''s umbrella turned up in good order the next morning, and where do you suppose?
39778Is he loose?"
39778Is not that rather strange?
39778Is one blanket sufficient for you?
39778Kerpensy- voo de cette comedie mon cher mounseer de Whistlebinkie?"
39778London Bridge ai n''t falling down again, is it?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778Me?"
39778More''n forty years, was n''t it?"
39778No hava da monk, Giuseppe?"
39778Not a da rain or da heava da wind, eh?
39778Now what are you going to do?"
39778Savvy- voo kieskersayker cetum la avec le nez rouge?
39778See that long line over there where the sky comes down and touches the water?"
39778So we''re on the ocean again eh?"
39778So what''s the good?"
39778So you see a letter addressed to Mr. Hoch----""Beg pardon, but Mr. Who sir?"
39778Some kind of a French cat- boat?
39778Speakin''about fish, what do you say to trollin''for a whale this afternoon?"
39778Suppose he comes?
39778Tararas and diamond rings kind of get in your way when you''re pulling weeds and planting beets, so why should I buy them?"
39778Tell you the truth I do n''t believe it''ll keep unless we get it in a bottle and cork it up good and tight-- do you?"
39778That an Alp?
39778That''s where Wigglethorpe----""Wigglethorpe?"
39778The Duke of Me-- how would that sound, Mollie?"
39778The back- door I charge for because it''s the entrance to my museum, do n''t you see?"
39778The book says the answer to that is''yes, and my grandmother also,''whereupon I should ask,''how many grandchildren has your grandfather?''
39778Then he cried from the depths of the carpet bag:"Hi there-- you people outside, what''s going on out there, an earthquake?"
39778Then what do you suppose?
39778There ai n''t any bridges over it, are there?"
39778They claim over here that Britannia rules the waves, do n''t they?"
39778This would be a great place for automobiles, would n''t it, Mollie?"
39778Unwiseman?"
39778Want to hear it?"
39778Wass- er- matter?"
39778What State- room are you in, Mollie?"
39778What business are you in anyhow?"
39778What do the cab- horses do here, swim?"
39778What do you think of my sign?"
39778What do you want me to call you, Wheezikid?"
39778What do you want, the whole Atlantic Ocean sitting on your front stoop?"
39778What does an A-1 Duke''s clothes cost?"
39778What have you in stock made by Special Appointment for the King?"
39778What is it anyhow?
39778What is your wife''s grandmother knitting?
39778What on earth am I going to do?
39778What will seven times eight bananas divided by three mince pies multiplied by eight cream cakes, subtracted from a Monkey with two tails leave?"
39778What you got in it?"
39778What''s the chief product of the lunch counter at Poughkeepsie?"
39778What''s the good word?"
39778What''s the matter, was n''t there land enough?"
39778What''s the use of having money?
39778What''s the use?
39778What''s the use?
39778When a man goes fishing for shad and lands nothing but a last year''s straw hat, why would n''t he be sorry?"
39778Where are we going to from here?"
39778Where''ll I put it?"
39778Where''s Miss Flaxilocks?"
39778Who is that singing in the drawing room?
39778Who is your Majesty''s Tailor?
39778Why do n''t you by virtue of your exhausted rank propagate the following rules to unbait the nuisance?
39778Why do n''t you speak to your Papa about it, Mollie?
39778Why do n''t you wish to go somewhere?
39778Why should the map say it''s four inches by an inch and a half, when anybody can see that this place is five miles by three just by looking at it?"
39778Why-- when did that happen?
39778Why?
39778Will you come and have lunch with us?"
39778Will you have another pillow?
39778You can see it ca n''t you Mollie?"
39778You do n''t have to pay duty on a request for information, do you?"
39778You do n''t put any coal or stove polish on that big Chinese vase you have in your parlor, do you?"
39778You grinda da org?"
39778You were not misbehaving yourself, were you?"
39778[ Illustration:"HAVE YOU SEEN THE ORMOLU CLOCK OF YOUR SISTER''S MUSIC TEACHER?"]
39778_ You_ Uncle Sam?
35247''And beautiful?'' 35247 ''And you did?''
35247''And you''re still sure,''I asked him after a while,''that no strangers went into the Lawrence house yesterday morning?'' 35247 ''But where has she been?''
35247''Can you flag this train for me, John?'' 35247 ''So,''I asked at last,''you''ve found her?''
35247''That impossible ideal?'' 35247 ''The woman you were looking for?''
35247''Well?'' 35247 A letter?"
35247A mistake? 35247 A note?"
35247A person, then, may be sane as regards some things, and insane as regards others?
35247Addressed to me?
35247Ah-- she did?
35247And Boyd Endicott''s cousins?
35247And Ruth?
35247And could they tell you anything?
35247And did he find her?
35247And found an answer to it?
35247And go to the Kingdon house?
35247And he is dead?
35247And her dressing- table was a very conspicuous place?
35247And how are they succeeding?
35247And no light as to the identity of the victim?
35247And no reason was ever given for this generosity on Mrs. Lawrence''s part?
35247And now that you understand the matter,he continued,"I suppose you see it in a different light?"
35247And searched for her?
35247And she did not return?
35247And she had on her wedding- gown when she went downstairs?
35247And she helped on the wedding- day?
35247And she''s the''ideal''Curtiss imagined he''d found?
35247And that was?
35247And that''s what we''re going after?
35247And the first affair is as deep a mystery as ever?
35247And the women?
35247And then?
35247And there was only one child of this marriage?
35247And they are Mrs. Endicott''s nieces?
35247And they were present at the church, were n''t they?
35247And what are you doing here?
35247And what did she say?
35247And what did she tell you?
35247And what, in law, is considered insanity-- what is the test for it?
35247And who is she?
35247And why do you come here?
35247And yet she concealed this?
35247And you believe Marcia Lawrence met him here?
35247And you came at once to New York?
35247And you came straight here?
35247And you did n''t see this note?
35247And you expect to make them so?
35247And you had no warning?
35247And you say she seemed quite as usual?
35247And you say that you expected to stay there again to- night?
35247And you think she went of her own free will?
35247And you will let it wreck two lives?
35247And you''ll be back soon?
35247And you''ll tell me?
35247And you''ve always found her perfectly trustworthy?
35247And your exits and entrances are, I suppose, usually by the window?
35247And your family history?
35247Anything else?
35247Are those my trousers?
35247Are you Mrs. Lawrence''s maid?
35247Are you a reporter?
35247Are you going to make it public?
35247At least, you''ll hardly advise now that I keep silent?
35247At the last moment?
35247At the last moment?
35247Best? 35247 Born there?"
35247Both she and her daughter are members of your church?
35247But how do you know all this?
35247But how?
35247But if the marriage be really impossible?
35247But she was there?
35247But the boy,I asked;"where was he?"
35247But the maid?
35247But to find her-- how can I do that? 35247 But what good will it do?"
35247But what was the motive of it all?
35247But who''s t''e murderer?
35247But whose grave?
35247But why did she do it?
35247But why?
35247But wo n''t it disturb Miss Kingdon?
35247But you did n''t search the house nor the grounds?
35247But you suspect?
35247But you''ve cleared up the mystery of the murder?
35247But you''ve heard from her?
35247But,and he glanced again at my card apprehensively,"you are not a-- reporter?"
35247Can I be of any help?
35247Can you give me any description of the person who sent this message?
35247Can you tell me what these characters mean?
35247Cease? 35247 Clearer?"
35247Concealed?
35247Connected with this affair?
35247Did he see him come out again?
35247Did she paint anything else?
35247Did she really paint it?
35247Did you call, ma''am?
35247Did you ever hear any explanation of Harriet Kingdon''s madness?
35247Did you notice anything peculiar in her behaviour?
35247Did you see?
35247Do I understand you to say Miss Lawrence is n''t your daughter?
35247Do n''t you remember her mother''s last words to me? 35247 Do n''t you see it?
35247Do n''t you? 35247 Do you believe Lucy Kingdon knew anything about it?"
35247Do you believe that theory now?
35247Do you believe that?
35247Do you remember what time it was when you called Miss Lawrence down to have a last look at the decorations?
35247Do you think I''m such a coward as that-- to stand back, not offering to help?
35247Does it remind you of any one?
35247Favoured it?
35247For Elizabeth?
35247Guilty of what?
35247Has Mrs. Lawrence favoured your suit for her daughter''s hand?
35247Hass she fainted?
35247Have you an enemy in New York who might try to do you an injury? 35247 Have you got a revolver?"
35247Have you money enough?
35247He was to have performed the ceremony?
35247Her children?
35247Here on business?
35247Home?
35247Hoped?
35247Hopes?
35247How are you going about it?
35247How could it be? 35247 How did you get so dirty?"
35247How did you happen to be passing the house at that time?
35247How did you happen to find it?
35247How do I know this is really your name?
35247How do you know she never saw him? 35247 How do you know that?"
35247How is Miss Kingdon?
35247How long has Mrs. Lawrence been a widow?
35247How long will it take?
35247How many deliveries do you make a day out here?
35247How was Miss Lawrence dressed when you saw her?
35247How was she affected?
35247How? 35247 I admit that; but whether this was one of them----""Does n''t it look as if it was?"
35247I came home about half an hour ago,she began,"or perhaps it''s longer than that----""Was your sister expecting you?"
35247I suppose you helped Miss Lawrence to dress?
35247I was passing the house and saw a light----"Where?
35247I-- I do n''t think I quite understand,he faltered,"You-- you''re speaking of Marcia?"
35247In a different light?
35247In the West?
35247In the cellar?
35247In what way?
35247Incredible? 35247 Is it necessary?"
35247Is it so important as all that?
35247Is not that enough?
35247Is that any of your business?
35247Is the maid an old servant?
35247Is this where the inquest will be held?
35247It seems incredible, does n''t it?
35247It was about that time this morning?
35247It was here you found the letter?
35247It was lying in plain sight?
35247It was on her dressing- table, I believe?
35247Kind to them?
35247May I see the record, doctor? 35247 May I speak to your operator?"
35247Meet her?
35247Miss Lawrence is n''t here?
35247Miss Lawrence probably left it where she thought it would be most quickly seen, do n''t you think so?
35247Miss Lawrence was not here then?
35247More devoted than you?
35247Moving back and forth?
35247Mrs. Lawrence does n''t object, then, to your leaving it open?
35247Mrs. Lawrence knew it, then?
35247Mrs. Lawrence,I asked,"what reason have you to believe that your daughter left the house?"
35247Mrs. Lawrence,I began,"has any possible explanation of your daughter''s flight occurred to you?"
35247My sister?
35247No question of a mistake, I hope?
35247No trace of the watch?
35247Nor closet nor chest into which she could have accidentally locked herself?
35247Nor suspected that there was anything amiss?
35247Not a very savoury locality, is it, doctor?
35247Not a woman to be carried away by a moment''s passion?
35247Not a woman who would jump at a conclusion?
35247Not bad news, I hope?
35247Not concealed in any way-- nothing lying over it?
35247Not connected with the deplorable affair of to- day, I hope?
35247Nothing in his clothes-- no letter, or anything of that sort?
35247Oh, is it you, Godfrey?
35247Oh-- you tried to get in, did you?
35247Or is it merely a fairy tale?
35247Peculiar? 35247 Really?"
35247See it? 35247 She did not seem sad nor depressed?"
35247She discovered you in the cellar?
35247She has lived here ever since?
35247She is not in this house?
35247She left no message for you?
35247She was deeply devoted to Miss Lawrence, was n''t she?
35247She was in the habit of coming to you with her troubles?
35247She''s a widow?
35247Since there_ was_ something amiss, why did your daughter not confide in you?
35247So you convinced Mrs. Lawrence that you and your sister were not guilty?
35247Somet''ing else to show me?
35247Something else? 35247 Suppose we say sudden insanity?"
35247The message was filed at the Christopher Street office,I said,"Christopher and West streets----""West Street?"
35247The side door was unlocked?
35247The story, whatever it is, is bound to be public property in a few days, I suppose?
35247The story?
35247The''other fellows,''I suppose, are your esteemed contemporaries?
35247Then how do you explain the presence of the letter on the dresser?
35247Then it was n''t she who told you the cause of her disappearance?
35247Then it''s not_ impossible_ that she should be his wife?
35247Then she_ is_ here?
35247Then what is Miss Kingdon doing in the cellar?
35247Then what possible reason could she have for deserting him? 35247 Then you did n''t find her?"
35247Then you do n''t mind? 35247 Then you know why your daughter left so suddenly?"
35247Then you know?
35247Then you think she really sailed?
35247Then, in your opinion, she could n''t have had anything to do with this disappearance-- advised it, perhaps assisted in it?
35247There are others,she had said,"who have waived their rights and torn their hearts and withered in silence----"What had she meant by that?
35247There has been no cloud?
35247There''s no doubt that Miss Lawrence wrote this?
35247There''s no pit or hole or trap or anything of that sort into which she could have fallen?
35247They lived in New York?
35247This is Miss Kingdon?
35247This is Mr. Lester, is n''t it?
35247This is the dressing- table, is n''t it?
35247This record was shown to the husband, I suppose?
35247To find out?
35247Walk into the lion''s jaws? 35247 Warning?"
35247Was Mr. Lawrence living at the time?
35247Was it made accidentally?
35247Was it so bad as that?
35247Was it something else?
35247Was n''t she in the yard?
35247Was there any one else in the hall?
35247Was your sister here at the time?
35247Well, and after that?
35247Well, and who was she?
35247Well, what is n''t it, then?
35247Well?
35247Well?
35247Well?
35247Well?
35247Were he and Miss Jarvis already married? 35247 Were you able to help him out?"
35247Were you in time?
35247What did Mrs. Lawrence do?
35247What did he want?
35247What did she say? 35247 What do you know of her?"
35247What has happened?
35247What is it, Lester?
35247What is it? 35247 What is this mystery?"
35247What on earth was she doing there?
35247What significance did they have?
35247What time did the_ Umbria_ sail?
35247What time in the morning?
35247What time was that?
35247What was he doing in the West?
35247What was it, then?
35247What was it?
35247What was that?
35247What was the colour of the gown?
35247What were you doing there?
35247What will you do for clothes?
35247What would we better do? 35247 What''s t''at on your hand?"
35247What''s the matter, old fellow?
35247What''s up? 35247 When did you learn that something was wrong?"
35247When did you meet Miss Lawrence?
35247When did you see your mistress last?
35247When she left you, did she return upstairs?
35247When''s the next train to New York?
35247Where are you going?
35247Where could I search? 35247 Where does she live?"
35247Where is she?
35247Where was it from?
35247Where will you go?
35247Where''s my jailer?
35247Where''s t''e guilty party?
35247Whether she did or not, who would kill her, and why?
35247Which letter?
35247Who did you think it was?
35247Who lives in that cottage back yonder?
35247Who painted it?
35247Who sent the message?
35247Who took the mail?
35247Who was it?
35247Who was t''at feller who told me to come here?
35247Who was that?
35247Who''s there?
35247Whose is it? 35247 Whose is it?"
35247Whose revolver is it?
35247Why did you do that?
35247Why should I have done that when Mrs. Lawrence had already done it thoroughly?
35247Why should she get up in the middle of the night, like that, and hang herself? 35247 Why,"she said at last,"what else could she have done?
35247Why?
35247Will you tell me just what happened?
35247With a train?
35247With an invited list of guests?
35247Wo n''t you tell me about it?
35247Yes,I agreed;"yes-- and yet, how explain his presence here?
35247Yes,I encouraged him, for he seemed to have come to a full stop;"and then?"
35247Yes-- what then?
35247Yes; what was this recess for, Miss Kingdon?
35247You believed, then, that Miss Lawrence was really concerned in this murder?
35247You could see nothing?
35247You do n''t know Miss Lawrence?
35247You have no brothers or sisters?
35247You knew Mr. Lawrence, of course?
35247You know why she left me?
35247You mean the wedding that did n''t come off?
35247You mean these things had been removed?
35247You persist in that farce?
35247You really do n''t know?
35247You remained behind in the room?
35247You think it best to go?
35247You think so?
35247You think the photograph would have made the mystery clearer?
35247You thought it worth while to return?
35247You were at the church,I asked,"when you heard that Miss Lawrence had disappeared?"
35247You were given a place on the road at once?
35247You''ve had no word from her?
35247You''ve news for him?
35247You''ve not been down here for some days, I take it, Miss Kingdon?
35247Your daughter was mistaken?
35247Your room is near hers?
35247''How does it happen she was left for you?''
35247''Why is n''t she a queen, then; or a duchess, at least?''
35247Above all, why had Mrs. Lawrence permitted the courtship to go on?
35247And how had it been possible for the other inmates of the house to sleep on undisturbed through all that commotion?
35247And now,"he added,"what shall I do?
35247And she-- was it the same with her?
35247And what other line lay open?
35247And yet, what possible connection could she have with the mystery which I had started to investigate?
35247And you?"
35247Are the papers in the Griffin case ready?"
35247Are you sure it was n''t a letter?"
35247As soon as you have any news you''ll wire me?"
35247Besides, in that case, why should Miss Lawrence flee?
35247Besides, what could even the most unscrupulous enemy have written?
35247But I loved the child-- I had none of my own-- I wanted to protect my husband''s memory-- Where was the sin in----""Where is she?"
35247But Miss Lawrence was n''t an emotional woman?"
35247But how came it here, crushed into a corner of this chair?
35247But if they, indeed, had so avenged themselves, would she have fled to them for refuge?
35247But on what grounds?"
35247But what were they doing?
35247But what_ could_ they be?
35247But where was the bride?
35247But who had written the letter?
35247But who was Ruth Endicott?"
35247But why had he needed aid, when he himself was so clear- sighted, so ready- witted, so fertile of resource?
35247But why should it be impossible?
35247But why should that pictured face seem so familiar?
35247But why was it impossible?
35247But why?"
35247But you''ll not refuse me?"
35247By lurking around the house like a thief, and following women?"
35247By the way, who''s this fellow Godfrey, who sent you that message?"
35247Cases that stay here that length of time are n''t very common, are they?"
35247Could I be wrong in my estimate of her, after all?
35247Could any good come of reviving it?
35247Could it be, I asked myself again, that this thing had been deliberately arranged?
35247Could she refuse such an offer as that?
35247Could you hear anything?"
35247Curtiss?"
35247Curtiss?"
35247Curtiss?"
35247Did Miss Kingdon mention it when she saw you this morning?"
35247Did n''t you hear the shot?"
35247Did she already see the fatal error of that step?
35247Did she die?"
35247Did she hit you?"
35247Did she regret that she had fled?
35247Did she take you for burglars?"
35247Did you know her, sir?"
35247Did you notice the eyes, how they glared at us?"
35247Did you recognise it?"
35247Do n''t you see it, man?"
35247Do you know where she is?"
35247Do you often go back and forth at night?"
35247Do you remember what a perfect one he built up in the Holladay case, and how it fell to pieces?
35247Do you suppose she''d have dragged him by his legs?"
35247Does that answer the question?"
35247Fear at my knock at that hour of the night?
35247Fear of what?
35247Godfrey, what is this secret?"
35247Godfrey?"
35247Had I been right in my conjecture, then?
35247Had I not been thinking too much of Miss Lawrence, and too little of our client?
35247Had Marcia Lawrence really come home again?
35247Had Miss Kingdon answered the imperative summons sent her?
35247Had she been false to Marcia Lawrence, and her sister true, and was this the result of that treachery?
35247Had she confessed that it was indeed she who revealed the secret?
35247Had she fled from the house of her own volition?
35247Had the gifts been in vain?
35247Had the secret been exposed?
35247Had there already been an explanation, a revelation of the mystery?
35247Had they waited till the last moment to make it more complete, more crushing?
35247Had we really found the solution, after all?
35247Had your daughter ever had any attachment previous to this one?"
35247Has Miss Lawrence returned?"
35247Has any explanation of it occurred to you?"
35247Has any other possible explanation occurred to you?"
35247Have you any news?"
35247Have you ever seen Miss Lawrence?"
35247Have you worked out the rest of the story?"
35247Her sister, Miss Lucy Kingdon-- why, was n''t that the name you were looking for?"
35247How could he have hurt me?
35247How could she meet him, how look him in the eyes, with that secret weighing upon her?
35247How could we drive her to suicide?"
35247How did you do it?"
35247How did you get in?"
35247How explain her calmness, her lack of interest?
35247How had she done it?
35247How had she succeeded in blinding her mistress so completely?
35247How had she summoned courage to tell him?
35247How would she bear the shock of that meeting?
35247How would she face him when she found him awaiting her at Liverpool?
35247How would the story end?
35247How would the story end?
35247How would they regard each other, I wondered?
35247How, except on the theory that she knew where her daughter was, had assisted in her disappearance and approved of it?
35247I do n''t suppose you remember anything about her?"
35247I understand you''re staying at the Sheridan?"
35247I wonder how they bore it?"
35247I wonder where that light has gone?"
35247I wonder, Lester, if you realise just how desperate it was?"
35247I''d only to recall this photograph----""Why did n''t you show it to me before?"
35247If Lucy Kingdon did n''t aid her, who did?"
35247If Miss Lawrence were really there, would she not have heard me?
35247If the note was written here, why did she use a writing- paper different from her own?
35247In the first place, how did this fellow know about the Kingdons?
35247Is it wrong to write that now, I wonder?
35247Is it?"
35247Is n''t there a window to the cellar?"
35247Is the portrait a good one?"
35247Is there any news?"
35247It opens at ten o''clock, does n''t it?"
35247It seemed to me that they were made by some person alternately rising and stooping, but why should any one do that for hours at a time?
35247It was Dr. Schuyler, was n''t it?"
35247It was a handkerchief of dainty lace and it was damp-- with tears?
35247It was to have been a church wedding, was n''t it?"
35247Lawrence?"
35247Lawrence?"
35247Lawrence?"
35247Lester-- what was it drove her to it?"
35247Lester?"
35247Lester?"
35247Lester?"
35247Lester?"
35247Not till I was half- way up the walk, did it occur to me that the boy had probably come out of the gate-- that he had brought a message-- from whom?
35247Of course I''ve read the papers-- there''s no connection between this affair and that other one, is there, Lester?"
35247Of the maid''s complicity, I had not the shadow of a doubt-- but was Mrs. Lawrence a party to it, too?
35247Or did they expect to be married afterwards?"
35247Or was there, after all, another man?
35247Queer affair, was n''t it?"
35247Quite like the Studio, is n''t it?"
35247Schuyler?"
35247See what, Lester?"
35247Shall I tell you where she went?
35247Shall we write out the story and mail it to Curtiss?
35247She has disappeared----""You''re sure she is n''t concealed somewhere about the place?"
35247She may have done all that before she came back here----""Came back here?"
35247Since you did n''t hear the shot, will you kindly tell us what it was awakened you?
35247Suppose I burst in upon her, what could I say?
35247That contour of the face-- that poise of the head-- where had I seen them?
35247That seems inconceivable, does n''t it?"
35247That''s good advice, is n''t it, Lester?"
35247The Lawrences are pretty prominent, are n''t they?"
35247The first shock when she read the letter----""The letter?"
35247The house before me answered all of these conditions; but how could I make certain that Miss Lawrence was really there?
35247There can be no doubt about this body, I suppose?"
35247There were only a few lines upon it:--"Dearest: I can not be your wife-- how shall I tell you?
35247There''s nothing else I can do?"
35247Thirty years dead-- how could any fact connected with her drive Marcia Lawrence forth into hiding at the hour of her wedding?
35247This is it-- whose do you think it is?"
35247Was Mrs. Lawrence right in thinking the letter from New York had no connection with it?
35247Was her self- control giving way under the strain, or had there been some new shock, some more poignant blow which she had been unable to withstand?
35247Was it anger?
35247Was it best to tell him?
35247Was it fear?
35247Was it her fault?
35247Was it here that Miss Lawrence had found refuge?
35247Was it not possible that Marcia Lawrence had been lured to the Kingdon cottage or taken there against her will?
35247Was it not possible that Marcia Lawrence was in their hands?
35247Was it not possible that my dream possessed a basis of reality?
35247Was it only three days?
35247Was it the letter?
35247Was it they who had whispered in Marcia Lawrence''s ear the story which had broken the marriage, caused her flight, ruined her future?
35247Was it----?
35247Was not that too strong a term?
35247Was she alone last night?"
35247Was some such explanation to be sought here?
35247Was that their revenge for some old injury?
35247Was there any possible explanation of such a flight?
35247Was there in his past some unnamable stain which had lain hidden till this last moment; which this stainless woman had shrunk from, horrified?
35247Was there really any connection, I wondered, between that old tragedy in Mrs. Lawrence''s life and this in the life of her daughter?
35247Was there some depth which we had not yet touched, some turn to the tragedy which we did not suspect?
35247Was this the explanation of her flight?
35247Was this the key to the mystery?
35247Well, he described him about as I described him to you----""Even to his being a musician?"
35247Were the words merely a meaningless outburst, an incoherent cry, the result of a mind disordered?
35247Were these long- continued risings and stoopings a series of genuflexions before some shrine-- a penance, perhaps, imposed for some transgression?
35247Were you with Mrs. Lawrence last night?"
35247What are the developments?"
35247What became of Mrs. Endicott and her daughter-- I think you said there was a daughter?"
35247What connection could she have?
35247What connection had she with Miss Lawrence''s disappearance?
35247What could make it impossible?
35247What do you suppose she''s doing in the cellar?"
35247What dreadful thing was about to be revealed?
35247What else have n''t you told me?"
35247What good will it do that the world should know it?"
35247What had Harriet Kingdon meant by that wild outburst of hers?
35247What had been Lucy Kingdon''s connection with the mystery?
35247What had happened?
35247What had she meant by that?
35247What had she said?
35247What has he to offer in exchange for such perfection?"
35247What have I left?
35247What infamy was she proposing?
35247What is it you propose?"
35247What power was it drew my eyes to the tapestry at the inner door?
35247What secret was it had torn her heart?
35247What was going on, I wondered, in that big house among the trees?
35247What was happening within this house?
35247What was it had so shaken her?
35247What was it he would have to tell me?
35247What was she saying?
35247What was the meaning of that light in the cellar?
35247What was the task that was going forward there?
35247What was the trouble-- a lady on board?
35247What was this woman doing in the cellar?
35247What work had been going forward there, hour after hour?
35247What''s her name?"
35247What, then, had detained him?
35247What_ was_ buried here?
35247When did you graduate from college?"
35247When do you go back?"
35247When is the inquest?"
35247Where is she?"
35247Where will it be held?"
35247Which is her room?"
35247Which of the women had he meant?
35247Which woman?
35247Who could say how that old injury done the Endicotts would flower and fruit?
35247Who could say what hatred, what desire for vengeance, rankled in the hearts of the Kingdons?
35247Who has been digging here?
35247Who has the right to tell?"
35247Who was it was insane?
35247Who was this person and what was this work which must be done at such an hour?
35247Whose was it?
35247Whose was that shrill and violent voice which had threatened me through the door?
35247Why did she shoot at you?
35247Why do n''t that fellow whip up?"
35247Why need Dr. Schuyler interfere at all?
35247Why not merely dismiss him?
35247Why put her on her guard and urge the fugitive to farther flight?
35247Why should I show her that I suspected Miss Lawrence''s place of refuge?
35247Why should Miss Lawrence have chosen such a woman to attend her?
35247Why should she incur such a risk as that?"
35247Why, then, had she fled?
35247Why?
35247Will you come to see me this evening?"
35247Will you try to follow her, even though she expressly forbids it?"
35247Wo n''t you come along?"
35247Would n''t that stir the public?
35247Would she not rather have fled from them with loathing?
35247Would the mere fact of revealed relationship alter their old feeling, or would love survive to torture them?
35247You cling to the husband then, do you?"
35247You had been, you say, at the Lawrence house?"
35247You have n''t happened to form a theory about it, have you?"
35247You intend to stay here?"
35247You were in your daughter''s room, I suppose, after she disappeared?"
35247You''re at the Sheridan?"
35247You''ve heard about it?"
35247You''ve heard me speak of Burr Curtiss?"
35247You''ve no objection to the company of an officer?"
35247You?"
35247for whom?
59645And if we lose, you will charge it to some adverse fate, wo n''t you, Larry?
59645And why, I should like to know?
59645And, by the way, is n''t there danger of their getting what you call''a goose- egg''in this game, Alice?
59645Are you going to throw off on us in that way?
59645But what evil purpose could he have?
59645But you are not afraid of our losing, are you, Larry? 59645 Dictionary?"
59645Did n''t I say that the Catalpas would win?
59645Did n''t I tell you so?
59645Did n''t I tell you, Larry Boyne, to beware of that young man?
59645Does he love him so?
59645Going to be beaten?
59645How was that?
59645How''s that, Rough?
59645I did n''t tell you, did I, doctor, that I dreamed, last night, that we had won the game? 59645 I tell you that''s a lie?"
59645I wonder ef it will be safe to tackle her for news from Galena?
59645If our nine were all like that Larry Boyne; why, is n''t he just splendid? 59645 It is an excellent choice, Alice, my child, do n''t you think so?"
59645It looks as it did in the war, when the news from Shiloh and Vicksburg was coming in; does n''t it, doctor?
59645It''s real mean of them, is n''t it, papa?
59645It''s the championship of the Northern District, is it not, my child?
59645My papa knows that I am so much interested in the new nine scheme, why should n''t I tell him that this is what I think about the re- organization?
59645Smart boy, Bill; but why should he go to the next block below the grounds when there is an office in the building? 59645 These men are visitors; ca n''t you behave yourselves?"
59645They do n''t know us, do they, Larry? 59645 Think?"
59645To say nothing of Miss Alice?
59645What do you know about the game? 59645 What do you mean by that, Hi Porter?"
59645What do you think of that for an opinion, Larry?
59645What do you think of the woman in the corner who said that the Calumets were only encouraging us on to our defeat?
59645What does Tom Selby know about the game, and how could I sell the game in Catalpa? 59645 What does it signify, anyhow?"
59645What would you think if our nine were to play the Calumets, papa?
59645What''s the use of your getting into a debate, every day or two, about some mysterious young lady that you two fellows are thinking about? 59645 Where are you two fellows going to dinner?"
59645Where did you get this?
59645Where did you send Hiram''s despatch to?
59645Where now, Larry?
59645Who is she? 59645 Why does the numbskull tell us to hurrah for our nine when both sides have a zero?"
59645Why should Ben want to eat Larry up?
59645Why, every town north of Bloomington, as far as I know, has got a champion base ball nine, and why should Catalpa be behind the rest? 59645 Why, have n''t they just given the Jonesvilles a whitewash, as I think you call it, and the score is 15 to 8, with your favorites going to the bat?"
59645Why, what is the matter with Al? 59645 Why,"said the girl,"do n''t you hope for the championship?
59645You are a kind of overseeing providence, Anstress?
59645You are not going to print anything about this disgraceful business in_ The Leaf_, are you?
59645You do n''t imagine that Mr. Boyne heard that, do you, in all this noise?
59645''The play''s the thing,''as Hamlet says; is n''t it Hamlet, papa?"
59645And how could his telegram to his confederate, if he has one, get back here in Tom Selby''s message?"
59645And if salaries were paid to the men, it was a professional club, was n''t it?
59645Are we always going to be beaten by every scrubby nine that comes here, I''d like to know?"
59645Boyne?"
59645Boyne?"
59645But I do n''t believe that; do you, doctor?"
59645But I wonder what I put that young Irishman''s name at the head of the list for?"
59645But how could we make a stand against one of our own number, merely on so vague a hint as that which we had?"
59645Did Larry Boyne make a particularly fine running, one- hand catch in the practice of a winter''s afternoon?
59645Did anybody ever hear of the like?
59645Did he recommend any other players in the vicinity?
59645Do n''t you remember he stole out after we had got through practicing, this noon, and was gone half an hour, or so?
59645Do n''t you think Larry Boyne is the handsomest young fellow in the Nine, Alice?"
59645Do n''t you think he is handsome enough to make a good player?"
59645Do n''t you think it''s crooked?"
59645Do you mind me?"
59645Do you suppose that the Catalpas will keep this up all through the game?"
59645Do you, Ally?"
59645Does anybody over in town know anything about it?"
59645Does that strike you favorably?"
59645Fifth inning-- Catalpas, 0; Galenas, 0._"What in thunder does that mean?"
59645Gals-- gallery; see?"
59645He restrained himself, however, and said,"Why do you continually harp on the Judge''s daughter, Ben?
59645Heaton?"
59645Hev you heerd that any of your folks got a despatch from Galena givin''any account of how the ball opens?"
59645Hey, Larry?"
59645How do you think he would do?"
59645How''s that, think ye?"
59645Hunt up despatch to Hiram, sent to lodgings._''""What''s that despatch you''ve got there Hi?
59645I do n''t pretend to know much about the game; not so much as my little daughter does, for example, but is n''t that about the way it strikes you?"
59645I hope your men do n''t think of letting out Charlie?"
59645I wonder if either will score a run in this game?
59645I''m sure it''s bad news, is n''t it, Neddie?"
59645If Larry Boyne was paid a salary, why were not others?
59645If they do n''t, I shall feel as if my time was wasted, sha n''t you, Alice?"
59645Is it Tom''s?"
59645Is n''t he handsome, Aunt Anstress?"
59645Is n''t he perfectly horrid?"
59645Is n''t that perfectly splendid?
59645Is n''t that so, fellows?"
59645Is not that what you are going out to get?"
59645Know anything about it,''Squire?"
59645Larry replied that that was precisely what Ben Burton thought, and Hiram ejaculated,"Oh, he does, does he?
59645Larry''s cheeks flushed even deeper red as he replied,"There is no disgrace in hiring players to help out, I suppose,''Squire?
59645Look out for fun.__ ALBERT HEATON._"What does he mean by looking out for fun; and who cares what Larry Boyne thinks?"
59645Now is n''t it?"
59645Now, why do you think that the Calumets are going to get away with us, to- morrow?"
59645Oh, why did Tom do such a foolish thing as to send the message here?"
59645Oh, you wanted to know about the prospects of the Catalpa Nine?
59645Presently his thoughts took shape and he said:"Do n''t you think you are too smart a chap, Larry, to waste your time playing base ball?"
59645Suppose we call a ball sent up there where Marm Deyo used to spread out her wonderful bed- quilts a foul ball?
59645Ten feet did I say?
59645Ten to one, did you say?
59645They have made a glorious beginning, have n''t they, Albert?"
59645Well, it does beat all natur'', do n''t it?
59645What had family to do with base ball, anyway?
59645Where was he?
59645Who knows how he may turn out?
59645Why ca n''t he play any more?"
59645Why did n''t we see her?"
59645Would Larry join the new nine?
59645Would Van Orman serve at all?
59645hey, Lew?
5392And did you think I would care, dear?
5392And how do you know?
5392And mother?
5392And not a shot fired?
5392And not a shot fired?
5392And what did you bring, my girl?
5392And why should he be made to, Captain Lyon? 5392 And you would n''t tell me, Lige?
5392And-- and do you think the city is safe?
5392Anything happened?
5392Are n''t you the young man who made the Union speech in Mercantile Library Hall?
5392Are you sure that you know him?
5392But Jack? 5392 But you?
5392By glory, but he''s even better than I thought him, Did you see a black powder mark on his face?
5392Ca n''t you tell me something bad about him? 5392 Can-- can I do anything?"
5392Did he tell you?
5392Did n''t they tell you?
5392Do you care?
5392Do you intend to go sir?
5392Do you know if Clarence Colfax has gone home?
5392Do you love him? 5392 Do you mean that he has deserted us?"
5392Do you think I can stay here while my people are shot down by a lot of damned Dutchman?
5392Do you think so, Jinny?
5392Do you want to go, Ned?
5392Do you want to go, Ned?
5392Does he think that the-- the Rebellion can be put down?
5392Does that mean Camp Jackson?
5392Find it pretty hard?
5392Go, my dear?
5392Has he gone down to see Clarence?
5392He has gone to Jefferson City, to see the Governor.."And you came alone?
5392Heard what?
5392How car, you expect them to do it right the first day, and in this wind?
5392I thought it was the Dutch coming to murder us all, What have they done to Clarence?
5392In the rain?
5392Is Captain Colfax here?
5392Is it not for the Union?
5392Is my bag packed?
5392Is n''t Clarence enough of a fire- eater to suit you?
5392Is n''t there a Davis Avenue?
5392Is that why you were working over that map of the city last night?
5392Is the Major going back into the army?
5392Is there danger?
5392Jinny, would you like to blow the whistle?
5392Jinny,cried that lady, frantically,"are you to go or stay?
5392Jinny,he said slowly,"Jinny, do you mean to marry Clarence?"
5392Jinny,said the Captain,"did you ever know why cabins are called staterooms?"
5392Lige, did n''t I raise you? 5392 Lige, is that you?
5392Lige,she said,--are you sure that this is not-- a kindness?"
5392Max, you are going to stay here?
5392Miss Jinny, you ai n''t gwineter leave yo''ol mammy?
5392My God, Colonel,exclaimed the other, passionately,"how could I?
5392O Jinny,murmured that lady, who had revived,"ca n''t you do something?
5392Oh Miss Jinny, ai n''t you gwineter Glencoe? 5392 Oh, are you sure it''s Captain Brent?"
5392Oh, what have you heard?
5392Pa, are you ill?
5392Pa, will you forbid him to come here-- now?
5392Pa,said Virginia,"did you volunteer?"
5392So the Cap''n be still harpin''on that?
5392That he has left us here defenceless,--at the mercy of the Dutch, that they may wreak their vengeance upon us women? 5392 Then the Germans are not moving on the city?"
5392Then what?
5392Then why not go to the Barracks? 5392 There is something I can do for you, my dear?"
5392To Camp Jackson?
5392Virginia, where are we going?
5392Well, Whipple,he said,"this nation is going to the devil; eh?"
5392What I gwineter answer? 5392 What do you mean by coming out of the yard?
5392What do you mean by that?
5392What is it, mother?
5392Where are you going, Jinny?
5392Where are you going?
5392Where is Comyn?
5392Where is the Captain?
5392Who''s afraid of the Dutch?
5392Who''s man enough in Washington to shake his fist in a rebel''s face? 5392 Why are n''t women made generals and governors?"
5392Why did Uncle Comyn not come?
5392Why not, Colonel Carvel?
5392Why not?
5392Why not?
5392Why, Stephen?
5392Will you come into my quarters and have a bottle of beer with Tiefel?
5392Will, are the flannels in your knapsack? 5392 William,"said the young lady, roguishly,"how is the eye, location, and memory?"
5392Wo n''t you let me go?
5392You ai n''t goin''in, Brent?
5392You-- you can not go? 5392 Ai n''t you gwineter flee away? 5392 And why?
5392And yet-- was not that smile in derision of herself-- of her friends who were running away?
5392Are you North or South?"
5392Brice?"
5392But what of the long nights when husband and wife have lain side by side?
5392But where to go?
5392But who is this officer breaking his sword to bits against the fence, rather than surrender it to a Yankee?
5392But-- alas, that she should carry it out to a remorseless end-- would Clarence have been equal to keeping silence when Mr. Brinsmade came to him?
5392Can you?"
5392Comyn says they may release him, does he?
5392Could she ever live with her aunt after what she had said?
5392Did you see him at Camp Jackson-- was he hurt?"
5392Do you see that they are above the state flag?
5392Doan''t you hear de carridges a- rattlin''off to de country?"
5392Doan''t you hear''em, Miss Jinny?
5392Had she any right to treat such a man with contempt?
5392Has Mr. Brinsmade come?
5392Have n''t I taught you that my house was your home?
5392Have n''t you done anything?
5392Hopper?"
5392Hopper?"
5392How can we guess that our teachers laugh at our pranks after they have caned us for them?
5392How can you sit still, Virginia?
5392How was he to confess to Richter, of all men?
5392If you and she are taken away, what have I left in life?
5392In what way has he opposed the United States troops?"
5392Is he turning Yankee, too?"
5392Is war a thing to stir the blood?
5392Like to see Bill Jenks?"
5392My Marsa he say:''Whaffor you leave ma house to be ramsacked by de Dutch?''
5392Nevertheless he said kindly:"Are n''t you going in, Grant?"
5392Not dignified, eh, Whipple?
5392Or was it thunder?
5392Ought not he, Stephen Brice, to ask this man with the cigar what he knew, and tell Judge Whipple?
5392Perhaps he thought-- but how can we tell what he thought?
5392Rebellion?
5392Sack it?
5392Seeing Stephen standing there, he exclaimed:"Mistah Brice, if de Dutch take Camp Jackson, is we niggers gwinter be free?"
5392Shall we follow him?
5392So that when a fellow came aboard he''d say:''What state am I in, Cap?''
5392Stephen did not answer, for the piano had started again,"If ever I consent to be married, And who could refuse a good mate?
5392The Colonel faced quickly about, and held out his gloved hand cordially,"Captain Ulysses Grant,"said he;"of the old army?"
5392The girl clung to her bonnet Will you like her any the less when you know that it was a shovel bonnet, with long red ribbons that tied under her chin?
5392The thought came to her-- was it that which sustained him now?
5392They ca n''t hold him a day-- can they, Lige?"
5392To Glencoe?
5392To Kirkwood or Webster?
5392Was it he who started the old rumor which made such havoc that afternoon?
5392Was it not an assumption of Northern superiority, to be resented?
5392Was she a traitor to that flag for which her people had fought in three wars?
5392Was that the beat of the drums?
5392Was the flag still there?
5392Was this disloyal?
5392What are they waiting for?
5392What courage sublime is that which lets her wave at him?
5392What did Jack do?"
5392What did he say?
5392What does the newspaper say?"
5392What if the South should win?
5392What might not its Barbarians do when roused?
5392What might they not do to the defenceless city under their victorious hand, whose citizens were nobly loyal to the South?
5392What of the children who ask piteously where their father is going, and who are gathered by a sobbing mother to her breast?
5392What right had he to pull down that flag, to die on the pavement before that house?
5392What would he think,--this man who had fought and suffered and renounced his native land for his convictions?
5392What would it bring forth?
5392What''s this I hear about Clarence?"
5392Where are you living now?"
5392Where is the picture of that last breakfast at home?
5392Who in this nobler allegiance was ready to die for them?
5392Who was this stranger?
5392Whose will be the Arsenal now?
5392Why could not the Captain see her?
5392Why do n''t they move?
5392Why does God mock her with sunlight and with friends?
5392Why had he not been born, like Clarence Colfax, the owner of a large plantation, the believer in the divine right of his race to rule?
5392Why had they not thanked God on their knees for peace while they had it?
5392Why should she be happy, and other mothers miserable?
5392Why?"
5392Will he ever come back to her?
5392Will she ever see it again?
5392Will the Yankees murder him for treason, or send him North to languish the rest of his life?
5392Would he be duped by the Governor''s ruse of establishing a State Camp at this time?
5392Would there be wisdom in flight?
5392Would you like to go down with me?"
5392You did n''t let the Yankees frighten you-- But where is Jackson?"
5392You do n''t, hate me?"
5392You have not forgotten that medicine for your cough?"
5392You wo n''t obey me?"
5392You-- you heard?"
5392he cried,"what have I done that my son should be a traitor, in arms against his own brother fighting for his people?
6456Who ever knew Truth put to the worse, in a free and open encounter?
64561916(?)
64563 But how is it that a vague idea so often has the power to unite deeply felt opinions?
64564 If the comparatively simple conditions of a laboratory can so readily flatten out discrimination, what must be the effect of city life?
6456And Professor Giddings''consciousness of kind, but a process of believing that we recognize among the multitude certain ones marked as our kind?
6456And how much was he permitted to see?
6456And if they were able to talk with one another, would they not suppose that they were naming what was actually before them?
6456And of the objects which are being carried in like manner they would see only the shadows?
6456Are they not qualified to speak for the Far East?
6456Are we really fighting for what they say?
6456Are you entitled to believe that all of them are staunch supporters of the League?
6456But how do men come to conceive their interest in one way rather than another?
6456But if his children are attacked, may he kill to stop a killing?
6456But in daily living how does a man know whether his predicament is the one the law- giver had in mind?
6456But what is a provocation?
6456But what is propaganda, if not the effort to alter the picture to which men respond, to substitute one social pattern for another?
6456But what shall we consider posterity?
6456But where did that model come from?
6456But which 816 people should they approach?
6456But why speak of the wrong done by_ Prussia_ in_ 1871_?
6456Can anything be heard in the hubbub that does not shriek, or be seen in the general glare that does not flash like an electric sign?
6456Did he see the Germans of 1919, or the German type as he had learned to see it since 1871?
6456Do the politicians know what they are doing?
6456Does Judge Gary think they are all well paid?
6456Does Mr. Foster think they are all exploited?
6456Does Smith''s opinion arise from his problems as a landlord, an importer, an owner of railway shares, or an employer?
6456Does the guidance of man''s conscience explain?
6456Exhort him to render more social service, and how is he to be certain what service is social?
6456For what happens where it is supposed to exist?
6456He is a Greenwich Villager: what do n''t we know about him then, and about her?
6456How are those things known as the Will of the People, or the National Purpose, or Public Opinion crystallized out of such fleeting and casual imagery?
6456How can he demonstrate the truth as he sees it?
6456How could they reconcile the wish and the fact?
6456How do these preferences correspond with the space given by newspapers to various subjects?
6456How does a simple and constant idea emerge from this complex of variables?
6456How does it measure efficiency, productivity, service, for which we are always clamoring?
6456How does it secure such information to- day?
6456How does one recognize these distinct essential groups?
6456How in the language of democratic theory, do great numbers of people feeling each so privately about so abstract a picture, develop any common will?
6456How many women''s views on the"servant question"are little more than the reflection of their own treatment of their servants?
6456How shall I account for him?
6456How then does he happen to have the particular conscience which he has?
6456How was he able to watch it?
6456How, then, is any practical relationship established between what is in people''s heads and what is out there beyond their ken in the environment?
6456If free men and slaves looked alike, what basis was there for treating them so differently?
6456If the trouble is Big Business, that is, the Steel Trust, Standard Oil and the like, why not urge everybody to read I. W. W. or Socialist papers?
6456Is it a vague horde of slant- eyed yellow men, surrounded by Yellow Perils, picture brides, fans, Samurai, banzais, art, and cherry blossoms?
6456Is it possible, perhaps, to secure it without fighting?
6456It would seem to say:''How do you suppose we can resist?''
6456Like ourselves, I replied; and they see only their own shadows, or the shadows of one another, which the fire throws on the opposite wall of the cave?
6456National consciousness but another way?
6456Now if it required such extreme measures to reach everybody in time of crisis, how open are the more normal channels to men''s minds?
6456Now what does the Secretary expect of the Division?
6456On what are these decisions based?
6456Or one freed from suppressions and conventions?
6456Or the word"alien"?
6456Or what can you expect of the Americanism of the man whose breath always reeks of garlic?"
6456Our grandchildren?
6456Our great grandchildren?
6456The desire for security, or prestige, or domination, or what is vaguely called self- realization?
6456The theory of economic self- interest?
6456The very men who most loudly proclaim their"materialism"and their contempt for"ideologues,"the Marxian communists, place their entire hope on what?
6456The wrong done should be righted; why not say that Alsace- Lorraine should be restored?
6456They are risking everything, then why not the others?
6456True, he said: how could they see anything but the shadows if they were never allowed to move their heads?
6456Was it the man who told you, or the man who told him, or someone still further removed?
6456Were the Republicans more unanimous?
6456What Frenchmen was he permitted to talk to, what newspapers did he read, and where did they learn what they say?
6456What better criterion does the man at the breakfast table possess than that the newspaper version checks up with his own opinion?
6456What can be hoped for the Americanism of a man who insists on employing a London tailor?
6456What can he actually claim for it, in the light of his own conscience?
6456What does he mean by exploited?
6456What does the word"Japan"evoke?
6456What for a sociologist is a normal social career?
6456What is class consciousness but a way of realizing the world?
6456What is it all for?
6456What is it for?
6456What is the measure of evil?
6456What is the test, what is the measure?
6456What keeps it running as a non- coercive society?
6456What kind of American consciousness can grow in the atmosphere of sauerkraut and Limburger cheese?
6456What other standards of measurement does our civilization normally provide?
6456What then did they see?
6456What view of the facts, and why that one?
6456What would be some of the conditions of effectiveness?
6456When he informs you that France thinks this and that, what part of France did he watch?
6456When we use the word"Mexico"what picture does it evoke in a resident of New York?
6456Where was he when he watched it?
6456Who actually saw, heard, felt, counted, named the thing, about which you have an opinion?
6456Why did he go wrong?
6456Why did his greatest disciple, Lenin, go wrong?
6456Why not, they asked?
6456Why not?
6456Why should the Jesuit order in particular have set out to destroy a fiction so important to the fighting morale of Germany?
6456Why speak of peace unsettled for"fifty years,"and why the use of"1871"?
6456Why then argue?
6456Why, one asks, does not the economic situation produce consciousness of class in everybody?
6456Would Marie and Spencer have admitted that they were in favor of entangling alliances or the surrender of American independence?
6456Would Mr. Hughes adopt his remedy, intervention?
61313A third candidate?
61313And that nest of singing- birds with whom I saw you dining,said Jebb,"how did they entertain you?"
61313But,I pursued,"are we not in danger of thinking too much of the social matter?
61313Female writers as well as male?
61313Five successive Nicodemuses,I said,"what do you think of that?"
61313Had they no ideas to exchange on that subject? 61313 I am very glad to have the pleasure of playing a game of billiards with you, Mr. Besant, but why should I consult you about my writings?
61313Only in so far,he went on,"as is strictly consistent with the interests of literature and scholarship-- of course?
61313Outsiders, then,said Mr. Spencer,"a few possible and a multitude of impossible candidates?"
61313Quite a social triumph,the_ Morning Post_ remarks;"a bloodless victory in the campaign of letters"--rather happy, is it not?
61313Seen_ Polyanthus_?
61313Tennyson? 61313 We shall be very old, I am afraid, before we reach letter B,"I remarked,"shall we not?"
61313What else could one have anticipated? 61313 What then,"said the novelist,"is to be the practical service of the English Academy to life and literature?"
61313Whom, then, do you propose,continued Lecky to Besant,"to summon to your consultations?"
61313You are not aware, then,I said,"that a third candidate is before us?"
61313You would fain be kinglier, say, than I am?
6131369 WHAT IS A GREAT POET?
6131391 MAKING A NAME IN LITERATURE 113 THE LIMITS OF REALISM IN FICTION 135 IS VERSE IN DANGER?
61313A garden of lilies, golden- headed, white- stalked, behind the trellis of red roses?
61313APPENDICES I TENNYSON-- AND AFTER?
61313After all, this is mere assertion, and what am I that I should pretend to lay down the law?
61313Are they the same to start with?
61313Bryant, Holmes, and Emerson exist, and were never more prominent than to- day; but where are Halleck, Willis, and Dana?
61313But Naiads plunging?
61313But how could it have been more instructive?"
61313But how much of that is literary?
61313But in the meantime why show a front less courageous than that of the history- defying Zadkiel?
61313But the second question was,"Who is your favourite English author?"
61313But what evidence is there to show that an attention to real things does frighten away the novel reader?
61313But when all this is said, what does it amount to?
61313But,"O my Brothers, ye the Workers,"is it not still a little difficult?
61313By whom is it written?"
61313By- the- by, I hope you wear yours on official occasions in Samoa?
61313Contents PAGE THE TYRANNY OF THE NOVEL 1 THE INFLUENCE OF DEMOCRACY ON LITERATURE 33 HAS AMERICA PRODUCED A POET?
61313Could so much have been said in 1592, or in 1692, or in 1792?
61313Did they not dwell on the social advantages it gives to literature?
61313Do you recollect that when the papers discussed us, before our foundation, one thing they said was that there never would be a decent attendance?
61313Hardy, Gardiner-- who could be more unexceptionable?
61313Has America Produced a Poet?
61313Has poetry, in forty years, risen at this ratio in the public estimation?
61313Has the struggle for existence a charm only in its reproductive aspects?
61313Have the stress and turmoil of a successful political career no charm?
61313How do they hear of them in the first instance?
61313How is he to freshen up his oft- repeated course of lectures to suit our jaded appetites?
61313How is the public appetite for this insipidity to be reconciled with the partiality of the same readers for stories by writers of real excellence?
61313How long, then, will the many permit themselves to be brow- beaten by the few?
61313I know you think me rather a Philistine-- but can an Academician be a Philistine?
61313I took for granted it was all right, and when we parted, as he left the Club, he said,"We meet later on this evening, I suppose?"
61313If our sentiment is no longer so rhapsodical, shall we blame the poet?
61313In the first place, what are we to say of Longfellow?
61313In the same way, the only quite obvious answer to the query, How should a literary reputation be formed?
61313In this great throng of resuscitated souls, all of whom have forfeited their copyright, how is the modern poet to exist?
61313Is Tennyson, great as he is, a thousand times greater than Wordsworth?
61313Is Verse in Danger?
61313Is it merely a question of taking pains, of a happy accident-- of luck, in short?
61313Is it to be the Archbishop of Canterbury?"
61313Is there not perhaps in him something of Pagett, M.P., turned inside out?
61313Meredith?"
61313Mr. Stedman has mapped out the heavens with a telescope; what can an observer detect with the naked eye?
61313Novelty, freshness, and excitement are to be sought for at all hazards, and where can they be found?
61313Now, for instance, why do n''t you paint a pretty girl, crossing a rustic bridge, and met by a sportsman?"
61313One hopes that, whoever may be added to our number to- night, the social----eh?"
61313Or is the memory he seems to retain nothing but the shadow of a vision, no more substantial than the"arid rain"of notes from his own flute?
61313Or will some secularist mayor, of strong purpose and an enemy to sentiment, order them to be deserted altogether?
61313Probably Miss Amélie Rives?
61313Satirist after satirist has chirped like a wren from the head of Pope; where are they now?
61313The answer to the question,"Has America produced a Poet?"
61313The man moved uneasily, and added at once:''What do you think about this long- distance ride?''
61313This is the secret of his abrupt familiar appeal, his"Dare I trust the same to you?"
61313To what use will they put the unprecedented opportunity thrown in their way?
61313Was he the fortunate recipient of an actual visit from nymphs, white and golden goddesses, divinely tender and indulgent?
61313We are not here occupied with the old threadbare question,"What is a poet"?
61313Were they, are they, swans?
61313What are really the characteristics of this amazing and unparalleled poetry of Lanier?
61313What are these novelists going to do?
61313What but an acknowledgment of the crudity of a strong and rapidly developing young nature?
61313What could be more respectable?
61313What destroys the fame of an accepted author?
61313What has become of Mrs. Gore and Mrs. March?
61313What if it should be the prestige of verse that we left behind us in the Abbey?
61313What is a Great Poet?
61313What is the use of this tyranny which they wield, if it does not enable them to treat life broadly and to treat it whole?
61313What of the multitude in higher spheres?
61313What plays are these?
61313What would he, what would I, give for that exquisite ardour, by the light of which all other poetry than Shelley''s seemed dim?
61313What, then, is the form which we may reasonably expect it to take next?
61313When the delights of the eye are removed from the sum of pleasure, what is left?
61313When you enter the gates of Johns Hopkins, the question that is asked is,"What think you of Lanier"?
61313Where are the deliquescents of yesteryear?
61313Where in the France of to- day are the_ Méditations_ and_ Harmonies_ of Lamartine?
61313Where is the great, the terrific, the cloud- compelling Churchill?
61313Where is the once celebrated scene in the"boudoir oblong aux cycloïdes bigarrures"which enlivened_ Le Thé chez Miranda_ of M. Jean Moréas?
61313Where will the people who attended there go now?
61313Who can tell what inheritors of unfulfilled renown may not now be staining their divine lips with the latest of this season''s blackberries?
61313Who shall say that Mr. Freeman was not a better historian than Robertson was?
61313Who should meet me in the vestibule but Seeley?
61313Who wrote_ Emilia Wyndham_, and to what elegant pen did the girls who are now grandmothers owe_ Ellen Middleton_?
61313Who?"
61313Why do the American novelists inveigh against plots?
61313Why do those who have once pleased the public continue to please it, whatever lapses into carelessness and levity they permit themselves?
61313Why does one vapid and lady- like novel speed on its way, while eleven others, apparently just like unto it, sink and disappear?
61313Why is this?
61313Why should there not be novels written for middle- aged persons?
61313Why, then, should not Mr. Stedman''s admirable volume be taken as a complete and satisfactory answer to our editor''s query?
61313Will any one who has anything of importance to communicate be likely in the future to express it through the medium of metrical language?
61313Will they now be better filled?
61313Yet surely there was, surely there is, an animal whiteness among the brown reeds of the lake that shines out yonder?
61313Yet who shall say that these were not great poets in every possible sense of the word?
61313[ 1] What does it mean?
61313_ 1889._ WHAT IS A GREAT POET?
61313_ 1890._ IS VERSE IN DANGER?
61313_ 1891._ HAS AMERICA PRODUCED A POET?
61313_ What likeness may define, and stray not__ From truth''s exactest way,__ A baby''s beauty?
61313her neighbour replied,"do n''t you know he has written so and so, and so and so?"
61313who could more eminently combine the qualities we seek?"
61313yet did he make £ 4,500 by his_ History of Sicily_?
61313you mean for your own Academy,"some one said;"as chaplain in the room of the poor Archbishop of York?"
8458And for how much?
8458And the heroine?
8458But,cried he as he came off the stage,"that was not a hit, was it?
8458Ca n''t you send me to headquarters with a guard?
8458Colonel Walton,said I,"did the whipping hurt you much?"
8458Did n''t you ever put up any money on a margin?
8458Did n''t you know that I have what they call second sight?
8458Did you ever meet this present peer and possible usurper?
8458How about fifteen thousand?
8458How did you get this?
8458McClure,said I with the cool and quiet resolution of despair, drawing him aside,"what in the---- do you want anyhow?"
8458Twenty- five thousand?
8458Well, what does Frank say?
8458What do you mean?
8458What does he want, Colonel Forney?
8458What is the matter with it-- is it not liberal enough?
8458What majority will you have?
8458What? 8458 Who the hell is Franklin Pierce?"
8458Why,he said,"do you buy long, or short?
8458Why?
8458Will you leave this open for an hour or two?
8458You like this wine?
8458You old reprobate,said Tyler,"what office on earth do you think you are fit to fill?"
8458You think you can deliver the goods?
8458And-- and-- what about the Bolsheviki?
8458Are its issues irreconcilable?
8458Are we traveling the same road?
8458Are you lucky or unlucky?"
8458As we were about taking our leave my father said:"Well, my son, you have seen General Cass; what do you think of him?"
8458But how?
8458But would despotism be so demurrable under a wise unselfish despot?
8458Can you not pass me in without a pass?"
8458Can you take me in?"
8458Do they advance the world in grace?
8458For was it not Emerson who exclaimed,"We will walk on our own feet; we will work with our own hands; we will speak our own minds?"
8458Gould?"
8458Have you money enough to carry you through?
8458He said to me,"How are you in stocks?"
8458How did you leave my friend Forrest?"
8458I was in luck, was I not?
8458If Barnum did not know, why might not a doubt be raised?
8458Is self- government a failure?
8458Is the world on the way to organic revolution?
8458Is there any remedy for all this?
8458Must the alternative of the future lie between Socialism and Civil War, or both?
8458Replying to the apprehension of a collision of force between the parties Mr. Tilden thought it exaggerated, but said:"Why surrender now?
8458Shall it prove another irrepressible conflict?
8458Shall there be no stability in either actualities or principles?
8458Suppose that picket on the outpost reported to the provost marshal general that he had passed a relative of Mrs. Dana?
8458The eternal verities-- where shall we seek them?
8458The miracles of electricity the last word of science, what is left for man to do?
8458The pessimist answers what easier than the demolition of a sexless world gone entirely mad?
8458Then he said:"Where did you get your press power?"
8458To what end?
8458What business had the professional politicians with a great reform movement?
8458What cared the perennial candidate so he got votes enough?
8458What cared the professional agitator so his appeals to passion brought him his audience?
8458What do you think would it be your duty to do?"
8458What had I to say?
8458What have such people to do with such things?"
8458What is it that the woman suffragette expects to get?
8458What is the matter with it now?"
8458What is your instrument?"
8458What more natural than that he should believe it real instead of the empty pageant of a vision?
8458What then?
8458What was Stonewall Jackson but a Puritan?
8458What were Custer, Stoneman and Kearny but Cavaliers?
8458When the glasses were filled Dade pompously said:"With whom have I the honor of drinking?"
8458When we reached headquarters the lad said,"Do you gentlemen want me any more?"
8458Whither is it leading us?
8458Who shall say that, let loose in the crowded centers of population, it may not one day engulf us all?
8458Why not?
8458Why surrender before the battle for fear you may have to surrender after the battle?"
8458Will the Democrats go into Prohibition and paternalism?
8458With those cranks?
8458With what I took for a sneer he said:"I suppose you are a good Union man?"
8458With wireless telegraphy, the airplane and the automobile annihilating time and space, what else?
8458You are teaching everybody to read, nobody to think; and do you know where you will end, sir?
10733( That is, was there any officer higher in rank than he?)
1073310. Who may punish a pirate?
107332?
10733A certain southern state imposed a tax upon commercial travelers not residents of that state; was the act constitutional?
10733A check?
10733A citizen of a state without being a citizen of the United States?
10733A consul?
10733A county?
10733A grand jury?
10733A judge of the state supreme court?
10733A judicial officer?
10733A law?
10733A man has some non- negotiable notes; if he dies can his heir collect them?
10733A minister?
10733A minor may have two guardians, one of its person and the other of its property?
10733A note being a contract, what things are necessary to make it binding?
10733A note payable"to order"is indorsed in blank; to whom is it payable?
10733A passport?
10733A port of entry?
10733A portion of a man''s farm is taken for a highway, and he is paid damages; to whom does said land belong?
10733A preamble?
10733A presentment?
10733A sight draft?
10733A standard bushel?
10733A time draft?
10733A time note?
10733A watch left at a jeweler''s store for repairs is injured by the workman; who is responsible to the owner?
10733Against domestic violence?
10733An Indian?
10733An agent transacts business after his principal''s death but before he has received notice thereof, is the transaction binding upon the heirs?
10733An alien living in this country has children born here; are they citizens or aliens?
10733An indictment?
10733An infamous crime?
10733Are all chosen at once?
10733Are any banks organized under state authority?
10733Are any of them from this state?
10733Are arbitrary arrests, searches and seizures permitted in any civilized countries today?
10733Are checks negotiable?
10733Are drafts negotiable before acceptance?
10733Are foreign coins"legal tender"at the rate fixed by congress?
10733Are lawyers officers of the court?
10733Are school affairs managed by the city council?
10733Are there any people in this state who are not counted in making up the representative population?
10733Are they binding upon the other departments?
10733Are we as a people indifferent to religion?
10733Are women eligible to school offices?
10733Are you a citizen of the United States?
10733Are you a citizen?
10733Are you eligible to the legislature?
10733As agent?
10733As between them, must there be consideration to make it binding?
10733At the last election did you preserve any of the tickets?
10733At what different places has congress met since the adoption of the constitution?
10733At what"stated times"is the salary of the president paid?
10733Basis.--Will anything be found already done to facilitate matters?
10733Bribery?
10733But if this particular dime were of a rare kind and desired by A, a wealthy coin collector, to complete a set, would the consideration be sufficient?
10733But, it may properly be asked, why not have them organized by the state directly?
10733By orally saying that a debt of another will be paid?
10733By the census of 1880, Alabama had a population of 1,262,505; how many representatives should it have?
10733By the fifteenth?
10733By the fourteenth?
10733By what authority does congress organize courts in the territories?
10733By what authority has congress established it?
10733By whom are they tried?
10733By whom is it organized?
10733By whom is the teacher chosen?
10733By whom, how, and on what terms?
10733By whose authority were these appointed?
10733By"civil service reform?"
10733Can a Chinaman become a citizen?
10733Can a United States official be sued for acts performed in the discharge of his duties?
10733Can a citizen of Wyoming bring a suit in a United States court?
10733Can a citizen of any state claim in another state any privileges peculiar to the state from which he removed?
10733Can a city repudiate?
10733Can a convicted and sentenced person ask for a new trial?
10733Can a copyright be sold?
10733Can a member be appointed_ after his term is out_ to an office created during his term?
10733Can a member be punished for an offense committed before he was elected?
10733Can a member of congress resign to accept an office already in existence, and whose emoluments have not been increased during his term?
10733Can a person be a citizen of the United States without being a citizen of any state?
10733Can a person living in a village build a sidewalk to suit his own fancy?
10733Can a person say what he pleases?
10733Can a person vote by proxy?
10733Can a pirate claim the protection of the American flag?
10733Can a state nullify an act of congress?
10733Can a state withdraw its ratification of an amendment?
10733Can a_ civil_ suit proceed in the absence of the defendant?
10733Can an atheist give evidence in court?
10733Can an executive officer be sued?
10733Can any state?
10733Can anything be proved which is not alleged in the plea?
10733Can congress compel a territory to become a state?
10733Can congress punish counterfeiting of these coins?
10733Can either house temporarily set aside all of its rules?
10733Can he publish whatever opinions he pleases?
10733Can it compel a state to remain a state?
10733Can men dissolve their debts by dissolving their partnership?
10733Can persons who have ceased to be officers be impeached?
10733Can slavery exist in Alaska?
10733Can soldiers in the regular army petition?
10733Can the president pardon before trial?
10733Can the state?
10733Can this state pass a bankrupt law?
10733Can you account for this?
10733Can you buy lands from the Indians?
10733Can you commit treason against this state?
10733Can you see how it came about that we have no state church, that we enjoy religious freedom?
10733Can you see the relation of these facts to the generalization?
10733Can you tell where the people of the two sections of the state came from?
10733Could a Mormon practice polygamy in this state, it being part of his religious creed?
10733Could a bank buy a piece of ground"on speculation?"
10733Could a county lend money if it had a surplus?
10733Could a legislature pass a law doing away with imprisonment for debt?
10733Could a member of congress be appointed to a_ military_ office created during his term?
10733Could a member of the legislature be elected governor or United States senator?
10733Could a person who had taken religious vows imposing seclusion from the world, be released by means of this writ?
10733Could a summons be served upon him during that time?
10733Could congress establish more than_ one_ Supreme Court?
10733Could he be a citizen of a state and not be a citizen of the United States?
10733Could he obtain a legal opinion as to a private matter on the same terms?
10733Could he pardon convicts at that time?
10733Could he pardon prisoners confined for breach of state law?
10733Could it lend money if it had any to spare?
10733Could one who is not a voter be elected to the house?
10733Could the district buy land for other than school purposes?
10733Could the governor appoint himself?
10733Could the president and vice- president be chosen from the same state?
10733Could the president convene one house without the other?
10733Could the state impose other qualifications than those mentioned in the constitution?
10733Could the thing forbidden in a_ bill_ of attainder be done by a court?
10733Could you be a spectator at a committee meeting?
10733Could you receive a present from a foreign government?
10733Could you secure any of the ballots that were actually used in voting?
10733County taxes?
10733Delaware?
10733Did President Grant get the increase?
10733Did it take three- fourths of_ all_ the states or only three- fourths of the loyal states to ratify the thirteenth amendment?
10733Did the articles of confederation provide for the admission of new states into the union?
10733Did you ever attend the annual meeting?
10733Did you ever buy a pound of nails?
10733Did you ever know of school lands being sold in your county?
10733Did you ever see a United States bond or note?
10733Did you ever see a copy of the Congressional Record?
10733Did you ever see a state"greenback?"
10733Did you preserve the newspaper report of their proceedings?
10733Do any local officers belong to the state legislative department?
10733Do they restrict the general government or the state governments, or both?
10733Do you remember the"stamps"that used to be on match boxes?
10733Do you think it wise, as a rule, for the state to grant such aid?]
10733Does a decision of the supreme court of New York have any weight in Minnesota?
10733Does a prisoner charged with murder or other high crime remain in handcuffs during his trial?
10733Does a resolution merely expressing an_ opinion_ of either or both houses need the president''s signature?
10733Does a resolution proposing an amendment to the constitution?
10733Does certifying a check release the drawer of it?
10733Does congress exercise any control over railroads lying wholly within one state?
10733Does congress meet too often?
10733Does it apply when a territory becomes a state?
10733Does n''t it seem that there must have been a Planner wiser than any man who was working out His own designs?
10733Does the accused continue to perform his official duties during the trial?
10733Does the amendment protect tenants?
10733Does the constitution define a_ republican_ government?
10733Does the expression two- thirds refer to the entire number in a house, or to the number voting?
10733Does the government owe you any money?
10733Does the power to establish post roads, authorize congress to make internal improvements?
10733Does the president act with congress in declaring war, as in case of a law?
10733Does the town system or the district system prevail in this state?
10733Does the township system or the district system prevail in this state?
10733Does the vice- president take an"oath of office?"
10733Does there seem to be any sectional law as to these things; that is, is there anything peculiar to New England, or to the south, or to the northwest?
10733Does this section give women the right to vote?
10733Does your school receive copies of the pamphlets issued by the state board of health?
10733During what time has the president the equivalent of an absolute veto?
10733Equity?
10733FREE TRADE.--Articles in Cyclopedias; Grosvenor''s Does Protection Protect?
10733For how long could he do it?
10733For how many terms may a person be elected president?
10733For what purposes should taxes be levied?
10733From what country did we obtain the notions that the rights here preserved belong to freemen?
10733From whom does he get this book?
10733Has a member ever been expelled from either house?
10733Has a vice- president ever been chosen by the senate?
10733Has a warrant always been needed as authority for arrest?
10733Has any state ever tried to do so?
10733Has anyone ever been refused admission, after being duly elected, on account of shortness of citizenship?
10733Has congress ever passed such a law?
10733Has congress imposed a tariff to be paid in going from one state to another?
10733Has congress power to_ prohibit_ commerce with one or more foreign nations?
10733Has it power to regulate commerce carried on wholly within a state?
10733Has the United States ever formally declared war?
10733Has the penalty mentioned in the second clause ever been inflicted?
10733Has the president ever had to adjourn congress?
10733Has the salary of congressmen ever been more than$ 5000 a year?
10733Has the vice- president''s vote ever helped to carry any measures of great importance?
10733Has the"right of petition"ever been denied in this country?
10733Has there ever been a"contested"election from this state?
10733Has this state such a law?
10733Have any emancipated slaves been paid for by the government?
10733Have any states been admitted into the Union more than once?
10733Have we any with Canada?
10733Have we ever been threatened with a case of this kind?
10733Have we ever had more than one vice- president at the same time?
10733Have you ever known of its being done?
10733Have you ever paid a U.S. tax?
10733Have you ever read a message of the governor?
10733Have you ever seen a legislature in session?
10733Have you knowledge of any case in which one state sued another?
10733Have you read the president''s last annual message?
10733Have you seen them drilling?
10733Here again may arise the question, why not send the state taxes directly to the capital and make election returns directly also?
10733High crimes?
10733How about business property in a city?
10733How are United States senators elected?
10733How are appointments to the institution made?
10733How are coins made?
10733How are national banks organized?
10733How are road overseers elected, and in what part of the day?
10733How are territories represented in congress?
10733How are the expenses of the state government met?
10733How are these facts ascertained, and when must the"return"be made?
10733How are these officers appointed?
10733How are these"rules"made known?
10733How are they chosen?
10733How are they paid?
10733How are"letters patent"secured?
10733How came it to be so large?
10733How came they there?
10733How came this to be?
10733How can a patent be sold?
10733How can a person who has paid his tax prove that he has paid it?
10733How can an alien become naturalized?
10733How can persons living in a city find out what ordinances the council passes?
10733How can the United States be a party to a suit?
10733How can the first indorser be distinguished from the second?
10733How could a person have voted for one of the republican candidates without voting for the other?
10733How could the president get hold of any United States money other than that received in payment of his salary?
10733How could you see congress in session?
10733How could you witness an"executive session"of the Senate?
10733How could you witness the proceedings at such a session?
10733How did citizens of Texas at the time of its admission become citizens of the United States?
10733How did members of congress vote under the confederation?
10733How do senators vote in cases of impeachment?
10733How do the people know how much money will be needed for the coming year''s improvements?
10733How do the proceedings of a grand jury compare with those of a petit jury?
10733How do they learn the nature and expense of last year''s improvements?
10733How do they now vote?
10733How do they"qualify?"
10733How do you account for this?
10733How do you suppose that this came about?
10733How does a citizen of the United States become a citizen of a certain state?
10733How does a presidential term compare with that of senator?
10733How does a territory become a state?
10733How does our House of Representatives compare with the British House of Commons in the number of members?
10733How does the acceptance of a draft affect the responsibility of the drawer?
10733How does the buyer''s receiving part of the goods affect the matter?
10733How does the expiration of a patent affect the price of an invention?
10733How does the navy of the United States compare with the navies of other great powers?
10733How does the number of senators compare with the number in the lower house?
10733How does the overseer indicate that a person''s tax is paid?
10733How does the proper officer become acquainted with the facts necessary to the raising of the money?
10733How does the school district treasurer get the school district money?
10733How does the tax collector know how much to take from each person?
10733How does the treasurer get it into his possession?
10733How else could the contract be made binding?
10733How else may it be paid?
10733How far are the ordinances of any city operative?
10733How if it is an order note?
10733How in Congress?
10733How is Utah represented in congress?
10733How is a copyright secured?
10733How is a criminal secured if he escapes into another country?
10733How is a vacancy in the office of vice- president filled?
10733How is a"fugitive from justice"secured when he has escaped into another state?
10733How is a"well- regulated militia"a check upon usurpation of authority?
10733How is an impeachment trial conducted?
10733How is an impeachment trial conducted?
10733How is an oath administered in court?
10733How is delinquent road tax collected?
10733How is he prevented from misappropriating the money belonging to the people?
10733How is it carried into practical effect?
10733How is it in a village?
10733How is it known at the county seat who the justices and constables in each town are?
10733How is it that the government can borrow at so low a rate?
10733How is judgment pronounced?
10733How is the British parliament prorogued?
10733How is the English constitution amended?
10733How is the former fact ascertained?
10733How is the ratification and consequent validity of any proposed amendment made known?
10733How is the road tax usually paid?
10733How is voting usually done in a deliberative assembly?
10733How large a vote is necessary to confirm a nomination of the president?
10733How large is the United States army at the present time?
10733How long a lease of agricultural lands may be given in this state?
10733How long at least must an alien live in the United States before being eligible to the Senate?
10733How long do copyrights continue in force?
10733How long do they last?
10733How long do they serve?
10733How long do they serve?
10733How long must an alien live in the United States to be eligible to the house?
10733How long would he so act?
10733How long would the appointee serve?
10733How long would the person thus succeeding to the position of acting president serve?
10733How long, then, would you expect the respective terms to be in states having annual sessions?
10733How long?
10733How many acts of congress have been declared unconstitutional by the Supreme Court?
10733How many after the president''s veto?
10733How many and what officers have charge of the schools?
10733How many and what"inferior courts"has congress established?
10733How many are there altogether?
10733How many are there?
10733How many copies of it are made?
10733How many counties in the largest?
10733How many did each candidate receive?
10733How many did the congress under the confederation have?
10733How many electoral votes were necessary to a choice last time?
10733How many have more than one judge?
10733How many have since been taken?
10733How many houses do most legislative bodies have?
10733How many in each class?
10733How many in each town?
10733How many in this town?
10733How many judges or justices constitute the Supreme Court?
10733How many justices of the peace are there in each town?
10733How many members in each house does it take for the first passage of a bill?
10733How many members in the present House of Representatives?
10733How many members in the present Senate?
10733How many more senators has New York that Rhode Island?
10733How many of the disloyal states finally ratified it?
10733How many of the reasons assigned in the preamble for establishing this government are general and how many are special?
10733How many other states in this circuit?
10733How many parties may there be to a note?
10733How many persons, at least, must there be to an accepted draft?
10733How many presidential electors is this state entitled to?
10733How many regiments of organized militia in this state?
10733How many representatives has this state in the U.S. congress?
10733How many senators and representatives would it take to pass a bill over the governor''s veto?
10733How many terms does this court hold annually?
10733How many times has each been elected?
10733How many times has the vice- president succeeded to the presidency?
10733How many"considerations"are there in a valid contract?
10733How many, at least, must there be?
10733How may an alien become a citizen?
10733How may an inventor secure time to perfect his invention?
10733How may female aliens become citizens?
10733How may they be renewed?
10733How much debt has been paid?
10733How much does it cost to send a letter to England?
10733How much does the United States government owe, and in what form is the debt?
10733How much has been paid this fiscal year?
10733How much is a confederate bond for$ 1000 worth?
10733How much money was expended in suppressing the rebellion?
10733How much of the money paid at this time goes to the United States?
10733How much of the money paid to the local treasurer goes to the United States?
10733How much remains unpaid?
10733How much state money did your district receive last year?
10733How much value does the stamp of the government add to a piece of gold?
10733How much would Alaska have to pay?
10733How much would he have to pay for the advice?
10733How often does the"counting"take place?
10733How often is the army mentioned in the Declaration of Independence, and what is said?
10733How reported to the computing officer?
10733How shall the executive be chosen?
10733How shall this branch be held responsible, without crippling its efficiency?
10733How was it raised?
10733How was ownership obtained?
10733How was slavery abolished in each of the states?
10733How was the message delivered to congress?
10733How were congressmen paid under the confederation?
10733How were they removed?
10733How will the class of each be decided?
10733How would it affect the case if the work were the removing of goods from a building in imminent danger of falling?
10733How would the contest be carried on?
10733How would the vacancy be filled?
10733How would this state raise the money?
10733How would you get your pay if you had a bill against a village?
10733How?
10733How?
10733How?
10733If A buys a farm from B and does not file his deed, who owns the farm?
10733If England should become a republic would this rule apply?
10733If a United States officer be elected to congress, how long can he retain his office?
10733If a car were refused what could he do?
10733If a criminal should make confession of the crime to his lawyer, could the lawyer be subpoenaed as a witness on the trial?
10733If a farmer wished to ship a carload of wheat without putting it into a warehouse, how could he get a car?
10733If a murder be committed in the District of Columbia, in what court is the trial had?
10733If a new school- house is needed in a city, and there is not money enough in the treasury to build it, what can be done?
10733If a person invents an article which proves helpful to millions of people, is it unfair that he should make a fortune out of it?
10733If a person is dissatisfied with the decision of the supreme court, what can he do about it?
10733If a person should rob the mail, in what court would he be tried?
10733If a person twenty- four years and ten months old at the time of election should be chosen representative, would he be eligible?
10733If a ruler should wish to subvert the liberties of a people used to these guarantees, where would he begin?
10733If a sailor should steal from a passenger, when out on the ocean, where would the case be tried and in what court?
10733If a sane person were confined in an asylum, how could he be got out?
10733If a state other than the one in which you live should sue you where could the case be tried?
10733If an American owed money to an ambassador from a foreign country, and declined to pay it, how could the ambassador get his pay?
10733If any one should be caught making cigars without a license, before what court would he be tried?
10733If committed in Minnesota?
10733If every senator be"present,"what number of senators would it take to convict?
10733If he is impeached?
10733If he leaves the country?
10733If he owed you$ 250?
10733If he succeeds to the presidency must he take the oath prescribed in the constitution?
10733If it is indorsed, to make the indorsers responsible?
10733If it seemed best to erect a new schoolhouse in some other part of the district, what could be done with the present buildings and grounds?
10733If not, what legal qualifications do you lack?
10733If one of our senators should resign today, to whom would the resignation be addressed?
10733If payment were refused what could you do?
10733If some one owed the district and refused to pay, what could it do?
10733If some one owed you$ 40 and refused to pay, in what court could you sue?
10733If the acceptor fails to pay when the paper becomes due?
10733If the ambassador owed an American, how could the American get his pay?
10733If the district had not money enough to erect its buildings, what could it do?
10733If the district refused or neglected to pay you, what could you do?
10733If the draft is not accepted, to whom shall the holder look for pay?
10733If the government is unable or unwilling to pay a creditor, what can he do?
10733If the governor should go to Washington on business of the state or on private business, who would act as governor?
10733If the polls are open seven hours, and it takes one minute to vote, how many persons can vote at one polling place?
10733If the president leaves Washington, is a vacancy created?
10733If the president should become insane, who would decide that such is the fact?
10733If the price charged is exorbitant, is he bound to pay it or only a fair market price?
10733If the price is excessive, how much must he pay?
10733If the property of a traitor is taken by the government, must it be restored to his heirs at his death?
10733If the road should be abandoned or lifted, to whom would the use of the land go?
10733If the state superintendent of public instruction wants information on some point of school law, to whom should he appeal?
10733If the suit involved$ 1,000,000?
10733If the witnesses die before the testator, how can the will be proved?
10733If there be two wills of different dates, which will stand?
10733If this state desired higher qualifications in electors for United States representatives, how could she require them?
10733If those two states had persisted in their refusal to ratify the constitution, what would have been their relations to the United States?
10733If two persons claim the same seat in the senate, who will decide between them?
10733If two persons should claim the same seat in the House of Representatives, who would decide between them?
10733If two persons should claim the same seat in the city council, who would decide the matter?
10733If you are a third indorser of a note, whom can you hold responsible in case the paper is dishonored, and how?
10733If you had a bill against the county how would you get your pay?
10733If you had a bill against the district, how would you proceed to get your money?
10733If you had a bill against the state, how would you get your pay?
10733If you had a claim against the United States how would you get your money?
10733If you have a bearer note and you wish to transfer it without assuming responsibility?
10733If you have a certified check, to make the bank responsible?
10733If you have a note without indorsees, to render the maker responsible?
10733If you hold a note having indorsers, to render the indorsers responsible?
10733If you hold an accepted draft?
10733If you hold an unaccepted draft?
10733If you hold an uncertified check, in order to render the drawer responsible?
10733If you lived in Montana, how could you recover money owed you in Minnesota?
10733If you should lose a note?
10733If you wanted a change in a county road, to whom would you apply?
10733If you wanted to trade with the Indians, to whom would you make application for permission?
10733If you were taking a note payable to bearer, would you require the person from whom you were getting it to indorse it?
10733If your representative should move to another state, would he lose his seat?
10733If"two- thirds of the senators"are present, are two- thirds of the states necessarily represented?
10733If$ 13,000,000 were to be raised for the use of the United States by direct taxation, how much would this state have to pay?
10733Illinois?
10733In European countries?
10733In Washington''s administration the question was raised, can the president remove officers without the consent of congress?
10733In Wyoming?
10733In a bank?
10733In a church?
10733In a city?
10733In a city?
10733In a civil court?
10733In a college?
10733In a county?
10733In a county?
10733In a district court?
10733In a mining company?
10733In a railroad?
10733In a town?
10733In a village?
10733In a village?
10733In case acceptance is refused?
10733In case of election by the house of representatives, what is the smallest possible number that could elect?
10733In case of the non- election of either president or vice- president, who would serve?
10733In case the house should fail to choose a president before the fourth of March, who would be president?
10733In states having biennial sessions?
10733In the United States?
10733In the age required for eligibility?
10733In the length of their terms?
10733In the lower house?
10733In the navy?
10733In the smallest?
10733In the state?
10733In what case_ must_ congress call a convention to propose amendments?
10733In what four ways may money be sent by mail?
10733In what section of the country are the terms the shortest?
10733In what sense are all men created equal?
10733In what two ways may the first part of the first clause be interpreted?
10733In what ways does the government levy taxes?
10733In which district do you live?
10733In which is the term the longest?
10733In which states is a majority vote required?
10733In which the shortest?
10733Is Delaware Bay?
10733Is Hudson''s Bay?
10733Is a bank bill money?
10733Is a child of American parents, born during a temporary absence from this country, a citizen or an alien?
10733Is a governor obliged to surrender an escaped criminal upon demand of the authorities of the state from which he escaped?
10733Is a marriage ceremony performed in Illinois binding in Kansas?
10733Is a member of congress an officer of the United States?
10733Is a member of congress liable for the publication of his speech in the Congressional Record?
10733Is a person released from responsibility by sickness?
10733Is a person who receives a percentage of his sales by way of salary a partner?
10733Is a sheriff an executive or a judicial officer?
10733Is a woman eligible?
10733Is any part of our constitution unwritten?
10733Is any particular department charged with the duty of guaranteeing to each state a republican form of government?
10733Is any property exempt from taxation?
10733Is congress bound to admit new states?
10733Is congress now in session?
10733Is congress now in session?
10733Is it designed as an elementary treatise on law?
10733Is it necessary that the witnesses know the contents of the will?
10733Is that the best place?
10733Is the bank under any obligation to the holder of an uncertified check?
10733Is the form of a will essential?
10733Is the government paying it up?
10733Is the mouth of the Amazon part of the"high seas?"
10733Is the present plan better or not as good?
10733Is the president bound to enforce a law passed over his veto?
10733Is the requirement to take the"oath of office"a religious test?
10733Is the result of the election known before the meeting of the electors?
10733Is there a United States superintendent?
10733Is there a dollar''s worth of silver in a silver dollar?
10733Is there a standard pound in this state?
10733Is there any United States bankrupt law?
10733Is there any appeal from the Senate''s verdict?
10733Is there any exception?
10733Is there any law against_ passing_ counterfeits?
10733Is there any liability of a conflict of jurisdiction between these courts?
10733Is there any"company"near you?
10733Is there any"established"or state church in the United States?
10733Is there anything in good blood?
10733Is there probably such a board as this in the eastern states?
10733Is there such a thing in our system as_ a state out of the Union?_ What does a citizen of the United States lose by moving into a territory?
10733Is there such a thing in our system as_ a state out of the Union?_ What does a citizen of the United States lose by moving into a territory?
10733Is this always secured?
10733Is this book copyrighted?
10733Is this book intended to be an office- holders''manual?
10733Is this saying strictly true?
10733Is this true of the navy?
10733Just how is the value of the real estate in the town ascertained for the purpose of taxation?
10733Just how was that number determined?
10733Libel?
10733May a clerk in a store take goods at regular marked prices?
10733May a law be passed legalizing an act which was performed as a matter of necessity but without authority?
10733May a minor act as principal?
10733May a note payable"to bearer"be made payable only"to order?"
10733May a person be a citizen of the United States without being a citizen of any state?
10733May a person lawfully carry a revolver in his pocket?
10733May a person''s acts be inquired into by the grand jury without his knowing anything about it?
10733May a person, not the patentee, make a patented article for his own use?
10733May a state impose taxes to defray its own expenses?
10733May an agent having authority to fix prices sell to himself?
10733May either be witness to the will?
10733May either house punish for disorder persons who are not members?
10733May grand jurors reveal the proceedings of the jury?
10733May one person invest money while another invests skill?
10733May one who is not a citizen of the United States vote for a member of congress?
10733May the firm''s property be taken to satisfy the debt of one of its members?
10733May the sale of bread be regulated?
10733May the_ private_ property of a partner be taken to satisfy the debts of his firm?
10733May they vote?
10733May war begin without a formal declaration?
10733Misdemeanors?
10733Much progress has been made, but entirely satisfactory answers have not yet been wrought out to the questions: What are the proper things to tax?
10733Must a representative reside in the_ district_ from which he is chosen?
10733Must a titled foreigner renounce his title on becoming an American citizen?
10733Must it be in the handwriting of the testator?
10733Must new editions be copyrighted?
10733Must the convention thus called propose any amendments?
10733Must the words"for value received"appear on the note?
10733Nevada had only 62,261 inhabitants, but has a representative; how do you account for the fact?
10733New York?
10733Of a check?
10733Of a district court?
10733Of a probate court?
10733Of an accepted draft?
10733Of an unaccepted draft?
10733Of an unwritten over a written one?
10733Of fines?
10733Of representative?
10733Of senators?
10733Of the supreme court?
10733Of the supreme court?
10733On account of a road overseer''s neglect a horse is injured by stepping through a hole in a bridge; to whom shall the owner look for damages?
10733On what basis may a mob be dispersed?
10733On what grounds could this interference by a public officer be justified?
10733One of them is this: May a state pass insolvent or bankrupt laws?
10733Over what portions of this state has congress this"exclusive jurisdiction?"
10733Petition whom?
10733Postal cards?
10733Preliminary.--What report does each road overseer make to the supervisors?
10733QUERIES.--Would government be necessary if man were morally perfect?
10733Shall the United States of right freely navigate the St. Lawrence to its mouth, and the British the Yukon?
10733Should all the county officers be elected at the same time?
10733Should not the United States designate the qualifications of voters for members of congress?
10733Should the judges of the circuit court be elected or appointed?
10733Should there be one, or more than one?
10733Slander?
10733Stamped envelopes?
10733State taxes?
10733Statute law?
10733Suppose that day comes on Sunday?
10733Suppose that owing to a defective sidewalk you should break your leg, what responsibility would lie on the village?
10733That of maintaining an army?
10733That of the person drawn upon?
10733The District of Columbia?
10733The amount of state expenses last year?
10733The constable?
10733The county auditor?
10733The executive in each?
10733The first indorser?
10733The highest salary?
10733The judicial?
10733The least number of representatives that could possibly pass a bill?
10733The least number of senators?
10733The length of their terms?
10733The lieutenant governor?
10733The lowest?
10733The lowest?
10733The mayor of a city?
10733The names of the state officers?
10733The officers not mentioned in the text, and their duties?
10733The other officers?
10733The others are not; Why?
10733The second?
10733The shortest?
10733The smallest?
10733The value of the personal property?
10733This matter being settled, the next question was: How shall the electors be chosen?
10733To Australia?
10733To Prussia?
10733To any other?
10733To build its banking- house on?
10733To carry it in your pocket?
10733To how many persons is the maker of a note responsible?
10733To the powers of the United States government?
10733To those of a State government?
10733To whom are school taxes paid?
10733To whom does he report?
10733To whom is the second indorser not responsible?
10733To whom must he report the amount of tax voted?
10733To whom must he report the amount of tax voted?
10733To whom would a member of congress send his resignation if he desired to be relieved?
10733To whom, then, does the assessor report when he has concluded his labors?
10733Town taxes?
10733Under these two main divisions of the problem, arose such questions as: How many persons shall constitute the executive?
10733Under what circumstances may a person have to pay a note which he has already paid?
10733Under what constitutional provision does congress exercise this power?
10733Under what other circumstances can persons be tried again?
10733Under what provision of the constitution does congress impose restrictions upon the railroads?
10733Under which of the three great purposes of government mentioned in the preliminary chapter does the making of roads come?
10733Upon the several states?
10733Upon what did he base his opinion?
10733Upon what principle of international law did the decision hinge?
10733VACANCY--_ Pertinent Questions._ What is a constitution?
10733Was Jefferson Davis ever tried for treason?
10733Was President Johnson impeached?
10733Was President Johnson impeached?
10733Was that a direct or an indirect tax?
10733Was the eighth amendment necessary?
10733Were the debts of the confederation paid?
10733Were they elected to fill a vacancy or for a full term?
10733What advantages are gained by becoming a state?
10733What appeal from decision is there?
10733What are crimes?
10733What are some of the advantages possessed by a written constitution over an unwritten one?
10733What are some of the dangers of city government?
10733What are some of the"privileges and immunities"of a citizen of the United States?
10733What are such officers called?
10733What are such officers called?
10733What are the corporate powers of a district?
10733What are the differences between a grand jury and a petit jury?
10733What are the objections to"quartering"soldiers in a private house?
10733What are the present rates of postage in the United States?
10733What are the returns, and where are they kept?
10733What are the sources of the school fund, of this state?
10733What are they for?
10733What are"greenbacks?"
10733What are"special"school meetings?
10733What argument did Daniel Webster make in the famous Dartmouth College Case?
10733What business is transacted?
10733What cases can he not pardon?
10733What cases of petition have you known?
10733What caused the vacancies?
10733What change is made?
10733What circumstances favor us in adopting the militia system?
10733What clause could be omitted from the constitution without affecting it?
10733What conditions determine the just amount of bail?
10733What constitutes libel?
10733What constitutional provision for the salary of the vice president?
10733What could you do if pay were refused?
10733What country in Europe is most like us in this respect?
10733What cruel punishments have you heard or read of as being administered by public authority?
10733What department of the government makes treaties?
10733What did he mean?
10733What difference does it make whether a person having property makes a will or not?
10733What do the supervisors require this information for?
10733What do you know about the John Brown case?
10733What does it_ mean?_ 3.
10733What does it_ say?_ 2.
10733What does the emancipation proclamation say about slavery?
10733What does"without recourse"mean?
10733What exceptions?
10733What expenses must be met in having a school?
10733What experience in law making did the colonists have?
10733What famous case of treason was tried in 1807?
10733What famous speech have you read in reply to one in which a certain member of the House of Commons had been alluded to contemptuously as"a young man?"
10733What five have now?
10733What five states had the largest representation in the first congress?
10733What for?
10733What force would the opinion have?
10733What gold coins have you ever seen?
10733What has requiring the engineer of a steamboat to secure a government license to do with"regulating commerce?"
10733What is a capital crime?
10733What is a codicil?
10733What is a contract?
10733What is a custom house?
10733What is a general warrant?
10733What is a law?
10733What is a military"draft?"
10733What is a patent?
10733What is a"bond- call,"and how is it made?
10733What is a"greenback?"
10733What is an ambassador?
10733What is an insolvent law?
10733What is done if at any time during the proceedings it is found that there is"no quorum present?"
10733What is done with the money?
10733What is government?
10733What is his name?
10733What is it called?
10733What is its purpose?
10733What is meant by a case in_ equity?_ When an appeal is taken what is subject to re- examination?
10733What is meant by a case in_ equity?_ When an appeal is taken what is subject to re- examination?
10733What is meant by a_ civil_ suit as distinguished from a_ criminal_ suit?
10733What is meant by an_ ex post facto_ law?
10733What is meant by common law?
10733What is meant by entering the objections"at large?"
10733What is meant by feudal tenure?
10733What is meant by saying that the governor executes the law?
10733What is meant by the House resolving itself into a_ committee of the whole?_ When does the freedom from arrest of a member of congress begin?
10733What is meant by the House resolving itself into a_ committee of the whole?_ When does the freedom from arrest of a member of congress begin?
10733What is meant by the executive session of the senate?
10733What is meant by the franking privilege?
10733What is meant by the military being subordinate to the civil power?
10733What is meant by"change of venue?"
10733What is meant by"entering"and"clearing"a port?
10733What is meant by"inferior"officers?
10733What is meant by"legal tender?"
10733What is meant by"noting an exception,"and why is it done?
10733What is meant by"presidential offices"in speaking of postoffices?
10733What is meant by"star route?"
10733What is meant, in speaking of the colonies, by_ royal province?__ Charter_ government?
10733What is meant, in speaking of the colonies, by_ royal province?__ Charter_ government?
10733What is money?
10733What is not?
10733What is secured to negroes by the thirteenth amendment?
10733What is slander?
10733What is such an officer called?
10733What is the Civil Rights bill, and why was it passed?
10733What is the current rate for private borrowers?
10733What is the dead letter office?
10733What is the difference between a_ township_ and a_ town?_[ Footnote: In some states the terms"congressional township"and"civil township"are used.]
10733What is the difference between an heir and a legatee?
10733What is the difference between military law and martial law?
10733What is the extent of sentence?
10733What is the extent of their jurisdiction?
10733What is the maximum rate per mile that can be charged by railroads for the transportation of passengers in this state?
10733What is the name of the one in this town?
10733What is the necessity of the clause commencing,"The congress shall have power?"
10733What is the number of the present congress?
10733What is the officer called?
10733What is the present income of the United States from all kinds of taxation?
10733What is the purpose of bail?
10733What is the purpose of the government in granting patents?
10733What is the recording officer in this town called?
10733What is the relation between the terms of the respective houses?
10733What is the relation of the plea to the action?
10733What is the smallest number of senators that could confirm or reject a treaty?
10733What is the smallest number of senators that could elect a vice- president?
10733What is the source of authority in a military court?
10733What is the use of the writ of habeas corpus?
10733What is the value of the notes and bonds of the"Confederate States of America"?
10733What is the"credit"of the United States?
10733What is the"most numerous branch"of this state''s legislature called?
10733What is to hinder a guardian from abusing his trust?
10733What is to hinder an enemy of yours from having you arrested and cast into prison and kept there a long time?
10733What is to keep a member of the legislature from slandering people?
10733What is to prevent a person from voting more than once?
10733What is to prevent his misusing it?
10733What is treason?
10733What is_ slander?__ Libel?_ Why should these last two questions be asked here?
10733What is_ slander?__ Libel?_ Why should these last two questions be asked here?
10733What is_ slander?__ Libel?_ Why should these last two questions be asked here?
10733What laws would apply to the case?
10733What legal provision is there in regard to retiring United States judges?
10733What limit is there to things which"The People"may do?
10733What may be done in case there are more than that number of voters in the town?
10733What mention of quartering soldiers in the Declaration of Independence?
10733What number of representatives is the least that could transact business?
10733What oath does each take on admission to the bar?
10733What ones have you read about in books?
10733What other business is transacted at town meeting?
10733What other coins have you seen or heard of?
10733What others have you heard of?
10733What others have you heard of?
10733What persons have been impeached?
10733What persons may not serve as witnesses?
10733What petitions did you learn about at the beginning of this study?
10733What political party is in the majority in the present House?
10733What position does a person assume by endorsing a note?
10733What powers, other than those which are purely executive, shall be vested in this branch?
10733What presidents have been elected for a second term?
10733What principle do you discover?
10733What principle seems to be involved in these answers?
10733What proportion of U.S. officers are elected?
10733What protection is afforded by letters of marque and reprisal?
10733What provision of the constitution is amended by the second clause of the fourteenth amendment?
10733What provision of the original constitution is affected by the last sentence of this clause, and how is it modified?
10733What punishments are inflicted by courts martial?
10733What punishments follow conviction on impeachment in other countries?
10733What qualifications must electors to that house have?
10733What rate of interest has the government to pay?
10733What reason did each assign for doing so?
10733What relation do you see between the frequency of sessions and the term of members?
10733What report does the board of supervisors make to the people at the town meeting?
10733What responsibility does an indorser assume in case of a note?
10733What seems to be the general law of succession to the governorship?
10733What seems to govern in the matter?
10733What shall the term be?
10733What silver coins have you ever seen?
10733What state has the largest house?
10733What statement in the twelfth amendment was unnecessary in the original provision?
10733What states have done so?
10733What territories are now seeking admission into the sisterhood of states?
10733What things besides books are copyrighted?
10733What three limitations to the power of amendment does the constitution contain?
10733What was meant by the"divine right"of kings to rule?
10733What was the amount of the debt of the United States at the time of the adoption of the constitution?
10733What was the iron- clad oath?
10733What were the provisions of the fugitive slave law?
10733What"extra sessions"of congress do you remember?
10733What"information"did he give to congress?
10733What"recommendations"did he make?
10733What''s the good of petitioning?
10733What_ permanent_ prohibition?
10733What_ temporary_ limitation was placed upon the power to amend the constitution?
10733When a married women buys goods on credit, is she acting as the principal or as her husband''s agent?
10733When an amendment is proposed by two- thirds of both houses of congress, is it necessary to secure the approval of the president?
10733When and by whom was slavery abolished therein?
10733When and how is this done?
10733When and how ratified?
10733When and how were these amendments proposed?
10733When and where were such punishments not"unusual"?
10733When are the officers chosen, and how long do they serve?
10733When did congress under this clause prohibit American merchant ships from leaving port?
10733When did it begin?
10733When did the United States protect a state against invasion?
10733When do you expect to see one?
10733When does a note cease to be negotiable?
10733When does it end?
10733When does the president''s term begin?
10733When does the responsibility of the drawer begin?
10733When does the town treasurer make his report to the persons appointed to examine his accounts?
10733When does this examination take place?
10733When is a demand note due?
10733When is an amendment, once proposed, dead?
10733When is it held?
10733When is it prepared?
10733When is the report due?
10733When is this determined?
10733When the next state is admitted, in what classes will its senators be placed?
10733When was flogging abolished in the army?
10733When was our postoffice department established?
10733When was the first United States census taken?
10733When was the last taken?
10733When was your representative elected?
10733When were postage stamps introduced?
10733When were the different extra sessions called?
10733When were they elected?
10733When will the next be taken?
10733When will the next one occur?
10733When you make a partial payment on a note?
10733When you pay a note?
10733When, within your recollection, was there an"extra session"of congress?
10733When?
10733When?
10733When?
10733When?
10733When?
10733When?
10733Where and when did the first representative assembly in America convene?
10733Where are most of the naval officers educated?
10733Where are most of the officers of the U.S. army educated?
10733Where are the United States senators from this state elected?
10733Where are the branch mints?
10733Where are they held?
10733Where did the electors of this state meet?
10733Where do impeachments originate?
10733Where does congress now meet?
10733Where does the general government confine its prisoners?
10733Where does the money come from?
10733Where else are there any provisions which teach the same thing?
10733Where is the United States mint located?
10733Wherein is a standing army dangerous to liberty?
10733Which demands the highest qualifications?
10733Which give the longest term?
10733Which has the smallest?
10733Which have no lieutenant governor?
10733Which imposes the less responsibility if transferred?
10733Which is safer to carry in the pocket?
10733Which is sovereign, the nation or the individual states?
10733Which is the better of the two ways of proposing amendments?
10733Which is the longest session of congress on record?
10733Which officer would naturally be the custodian of public papers?
10733Which outranks, the secretary of war or the general of the army?
10733Which presidents have been elected by the house?
10733Which state in the Union has the largest supreme court?
10733Which states limit the number of terms?
10733Which states rank highest in the value attached to the decisions of their supreme courts?
10733Which states require the highest qualifications in members?
10733Which states require the highest qualifications in the governor?
10733Which three have just the same number?
10733Which two have fewer members now than in the first congress?
10733Which was the most important change?
10733Who are citizens of the United States?
10733Who are not responsible to the holder of a negotiable paper unless notified?
10733Who are responsible without notice?
10733Who besides the judges of the supreme court can issue the writ of_ habeas corpus?_ Name the justices of the supreme court of this state.
10733Who determines how much money is to be raised for county purposes?
10733Who determines how much money is to be raised in the town for bridges, etc.?
10733Who determines how much money shall be raised for state purposes?
10733Who determines how much money shall be raised in a district for school purposes during any year?
10733Who gives notice of the town meeting?
10733Who has charge of this department of the government?
10733Who has power to locate the capital of the United States?
10733Who is commander- in- chief of the United States army today?
10733Who is now vice- president of the United States?
10733Who is now vice- president?
10733Who is our present minister to England?
10733Who is president_ pro tempore_ of the Senate?
10733Who is secretary of the meeting?
10733Who is the highest purely military officer, and what is his rank?
10733Who is the postmaster general?
10733Who is the recording officer of a justice court?
10733Who keep them, and why?
10733Who keeps a record of the testimony in a justice court?
10733Who may be impeached?
10733Who occupies that position in this town?
10733Who owns the school buildings and grounds?
10733Who prepares these outlines for the press?
10733Who prescribed the"tactics?"
10733Who records the proceedings of the meeting?
10733Who records the proceedings of the meeting?
10733Who reports to the computing officer?
10733Who take part?
10733Who vote the taxes in a city?
10733Who vote the taxes in a village?
10733Who was placed at the head of it?
10733Who were the electors of this state in the last presidential election?
10733Who would be keeper of the jail if the sheriff should be a prisoner?
10733Whom else can such persons therefore vote for?
10733Why Limited in Powers.--The question suggests itself, Why can a corporation do only certain things?
10733Why are so many provisions made in his behalf?
10733Why are the petition and other papers of incorporation recorded?
10733Why are the witnesses essential?
10733Why are there two justices in each town?
10733Why are they thus published?
10733Why are_ state_ officers bound to support the constitution of the_ United States_?
10733Why can not a partner sell his interest without consulting the other members of the firm?
10733Why did France help the Americans in the Revolutionary War?
10733Why do territories in this country desire to become states?
10733Why do we have such a thing?
10733Why do we have such divisions of a township?
10733Why does the death of a member end the firm-- that is, why not let his heir succeed to his right in the firm as he succeeds to his real estate?
10733Why forbidden?
10733Why has congress two houses?
10733Why held then?
10733Why is each so named?
10733Why is it necessary?
10733Why is it not correct under any circumstances to speak of the president_ pro tempore_ as vice- president?
10733Why is such a court necessary?
10733Why is the choice of oath or affirmation given?
10733Why is the contract in writing?
10733Why is the term_ senate_ so common?
10733Why is there no committee of ways and means in the Senate?
10733Why is there such a thing as a peremptory challenge of a juror?
10733Why is this organization of society called_ government?_ PART I.
10733Why is this possible in that country?
10733Why is this time of year so uniformly chosen?
10733Why may the fraudulent act of a partner dissolve the firm?
10733Why must it be in writing?
10733Why not elect the teacher at the annual meeting?
10733Why not have senators chosen for life?
10733Why not let each county constitute a judicial district?
10733Why not one of the deputy sheriffs?
10733Why not the people?
10733Why regarded as an important element of liberty?
10733Why should a grand jury have to indict a person who has been examined and held for trial by a justice of the peace?
10733Why should the sale of meats be regulated any more than the sale of flour or of clothing?
10733Why should the statement be made about quartering soldiers, in view of the preceding statement?
10733Why should they desire to do so?
10733Why should this be spoken of as"the sweeping clause?"
10733Why so many given to a person accused of crime?
10733Why so many preliminaries?
10733Why that number?
10733Why the differences?
10733Why the exception in the amendment?
10733Why the exception in the first clause of the amendment?
10733Why then?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Why?
10733Will residence during_ any_ fourteen years satisfy the requirement?
10733Will the next session be the long or the short one?
10733Wisconsin?
10733With what other power is that of_ raising an army_ intimately connected?
10733Would a son of his born in England today be eligible in due time to the presidency?
10733Would he be responsible if he should have it published in any other than the official way?
10733Would the ratification of the constitution by nine states have made it binding upon the other four?
10733Would you, if the United States government asked you to represent it in a foreign country, like to be tried by a court of that country?
10733_ How_ does the government"borrow?"
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ Are the justices and constables town, county or state officers?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ By what authority was the Supreme Court established?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ How are the laws-- legislative enactments and decisions of the Supreme Court-- made public?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ Two of the following are valid notes; which two?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ Was there any president under the confederation?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ What is a"bill?"
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ What is meant by a state"repudiating"a debt?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ What is the general purpose of the first ten amendments?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ When was slavery introduced into the United States?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ When, near the close of the late war, General Grant commanded all the armies of the Union, had he any superior officer?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ Who constitute the legislative department in a town?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ Who constitute the managing body in a school district?
10733_ Pertinent Questions._ Why are partnerships formed?
10733_ Proprietary_ government?
10733_ Some Pertinent Questions._ What are the qualifications required in the governor of this state?
10733_ Some Pertinent Questions._ What is a will?
10733_ Some Pertinent Questions._ What is the difference between a town road and a county road?
10733_ Some Pertinent Questions_ How many judicial districts in this state?
10733_ Why_ was the provision inserted?
10733authorize you to keep a revolver?
10733constitutionally adopted?
14068A dear fellow, Norman?
14068A gentleman owes that to his wife.--Do you think she will be willing to live elsewhere?
14068A pretty girl, with blue eyes and brown hair?
14068A spy?
14068A woman does not have to give up all her friends when she marries?
14068A woman, perhaps?
14068A woman? 14068 Abandon her children?"
14068About me? 14068 About me?"
14068About the Norman- Wentworths getting a divorce? 14068 About what matter?"
14068About what?
14068Ah, how do you do? 14068 Ah, not me, then?
14068Ah, you have won her? 14068 Ah, you have, have you?
14068Ai n''t I right?
14068Alice Lancaster--?
14068All your men do something, I believe?
14068Am not I rich and you noble?
14068And I guess he has no collateral to offer?
14068And do you know what you are?
14068And he said the man who did that was a''gentleman''?
14068And many women?
14068And suppose I do not please to accept your statement?
14068And that is--?
14068And that young man is such a nice fellow? 14068 And to carry the stock for me till it reacts and lets me out?"
14068And why should n''t she be? 14068 And you do n''t like him?
14068And you men let him go?
14068And you really think I will do that? 14068 And, pray, what do you know of disreputable women?
14068And, pray, why not?
14068Are n''t you going to see here?
14068Are you a Methodist preacher?
14068Are you married?
14068Are you really going away?
14068As whom, for instance?
14068But I mean, why do n''t they lend him money without collateral, if necessary, to tide him over his trouble? 14068 But Norman is said to be wonderfully clever, and has gone in with his father into the bank?"
14068But he had others with him? 14068 But if they should?"
14068But she''s at some relative''s?
14068But this may be treason partly against yourself?
14068But what is the matter? 14068 But you do not want to be a man?"
14068By the way,she said,"you know the report is that Mr. Keith has at last really surrendered?"
14068By what others?
14068Ca n''t you get word to him?
14068Can I see her?
14068Can you forgive me? 14068 Can you forgive me?"
14068Can you help put my daughter into the carriage?
14068Can you take a note for me?
14068Can you tell me what time it is?
14068Come back, has he?
14068Could I get Dennison?
14068Could n''t you lend me a small sum, Mr. Keith,asked Plume, wheedlingly,"just for old times''sake?
14068Could they expect a man to take particular notice of how another looked under such circumstances? 14068 Did I catch your name correctly?
14068Did he marry you? 14068 Did he say that?
14068Did he say that?
14068Did it ever occur to you that you might make it too pleasant for them-- for a time?
14068Did n''t you hear? 14068 Did she ever marry, Doctor?"
14068Did she send you?
14068Did they tell you to wait for an answer?
14068Did ye give him the left upper- cut?
14068Did you ever have to ask pardon of one who had fought you?
14068Did you get him?
14068Did you have a pleasant time? 14068 Did you hear what I said to you?"
14068Did you know her?
14068Did you say you had made a fortune in mining deals?
14068Did you see him?
14068Did you?
14068Do n''t I? 14068 Do n''t you know that when a lady invites you to come to see her, you have to do it?"
14068Do n''t you marry a fool, you hear?
14068Do n''t you see my patents are older than yours?
14068Do n''t you think Ferdy has changed since he was a boy?
14068Do n''t you think I am competent to attend to my own affairs, even if Louise Caldwell is the soft and unsophisticated creature you would make her? 14068 Do n''t you think she is the handsomest woman in the room?"
14068Do n''t you think you had better put your pistol back?
14068Do n''t you think, if I am, I had better inform her first?
14068Do n''t you want to know what he said?
14068Do n''t you? 14068 Do n''t you?"
14068Do not you think you might go about it in a less uncompromising spirit? 14068 Do they?"
14068Do you call that charming? 14068 Do you intend to marry her?"
14068Do you know his handwriting?
14068Do you know that man with the two policemen? 14068 Do you know the names of any of the owners?"
14068Do you know who I am, young man?
14068Do you know who I thought you were?
14068Do you know whom he is in love with now?
14068Do you know your place?
14068Do you know,he said presently,"I think you have exerted more influence on my life than any one else I ever knew after I grew up?"
14068Do you mean because she is from the North and I am from the South?
14068Do you mean that you think my family is not good enough for your daughter?
14068Do you mean you are going to lie to him?
14068Do you remember once, when you were a tot over in England, giving your doll to a little dancing- girl?--When your governess was in such a temper?
14068Do you suppose, my dear, that Mrs. Creamer would ask you to receive with her if we lived two or three squares off Fifth Avenue? 14068 Do you think I am like you, perambulating streets trying to make conquests?"
14068Do you think I am the sort that likes flattery? 14068 Do you think I went there to see her?
14068Do you think Norman is happy?
14068Do you think her handsome?
14068Doctor, if I win her will you make our house your home?
14068Doctor, will you drive me down to the station?
14068Doctor, you say you are going away to- night?
14068Does n''t he?
14068Does you call dem''gent''mens?''
14068Ever notice, when a man is huntin'', if he gits what he aims at, it''s himself; but if he misses, it''s the blamed old gun?
14068Fine young man, Rhodes? 14068 For what?"
14068Friend of yours?
14068From the South, you say?
14068Go on? 14068 Gone where?"
14068Grofton? 14068 Has he begun to go there again?"
14068Has he made you another offer for it?
14068Has he? 14068 Has she fulfilled the promise of beauty that she gave as a school- girl?
14068Have n''t you any brains at all?
14068Have n''t you seen the papers lately?
14068Have you been to New York often?
14068Have you been to him?
14068Have you seen Louise this morning?
14068Have you seen the Yorkes lately?
14068Have you seen the Yorkes lately?
14068He has? 14068 He married Miss Caldwell, did n''t he?
14068He said you were the sweetest and prettiest girl there, and that all the beauty of New York was there, even the beautiful Mrs.--what is her name? 14068 He says he owns it all; that he''ll have us suin''for pardon?"
14068He seems to be hangin''around Phrony pretty considerable?
14068He thought I had changed, did he?
14068He, perhaps, thought that, as Brookford is growing so fashionable now, he might find a mutual friend of ours here?
14068Here comes one now?
14068How about Ferdy Wickersham?
14068How about that accident in our mine? 14068 How are cattle?"
14068How are you? 14068 How are you?"
14068How can we do it?
14068How did you find her?
14068How did you hear that-- I mean, that I am not coming back again?
14068How did you hear?
14068How did you know?
14068How did you like him?
14068How did you remember us?
14068How did you say''twas to be done?
14068How do you do, Gordon Keith?
14068How do you do, Lois Huntington?
14068How do you do? 14068 How do you do?"
14068How do you do?
14068How do you know he needs it, or would accept it if he did?
14068How do you know it?
14068How do you know she will not be here? 14068 How do you manage it?"
14068How do you mean?
14068How has he invested it?
14068How is Norman?
14068How is my dear old Doctor? 14068 How is she, Doctor?
14068How is your uncle''s health?
14068How long are you going to stay?
14068How long have I to live, Doctor?
14068How long would it take you to do it?
14068How mad?
14068How much do you want for it?
14068How much does a sack of salt weigh?
14068How much is it?
14068How much more? 14068 How much would it cost to fix up the place as you think it ought to be fixed up?"
14068How old are you now?
14068How old was I then?
14068How old was he-- I mean, when he fell in love with you?
14068How would he appear in New York? 14068 How would to- morrow suit you?
14068How''d you come out?
14068How? 14068 However--""Well, what is it?
14068I can not define that either, but you know what I mean?
14068I do n''t believe I should have known you? 14068 I do n''t believe you know me?"
14068I do n''t know-- if he ever got a show at you-- Why do n''t you let me perform the ceremony?
14068I do n''t know-- why, he was-- he was just what he is now-- you could have trusted him--"Why did n''t you marry him?
14068I do n''t think a girl ought to keep a dance- house or a bank?
14068I do not know how I can compensate you; but if you will come to the hotel sometime to- morrow-- any time-- perhaps, there is something--? 14068 I hear you''re a- goin''away and ai n''t comin''back no more?"
14068I hope she said kind things about me? 14068 I mean, what does he do?
14068I say how long would it take you to run those lines?
14068I shall see you again?
14068I should certainly render you the best service I could,he said;"but you would not expect me to say anything to Squire Rawson that I did not believe?
14068I suppose that is the woman you are referring to?
14068I thought I invited you to come and see me?
14068I thought you and him was thick as thieves?
14068I thought you objected to my thinking of her?
14068I thought you were going back to New York?
14068I thought you were in love with Ferdy then?
14068I thought you were stretched at Mrs. Wentworth''s feet in the-- Where has she been this summer?
14068I thought your father had offered you five thousand dollars if you would stick it out through, the whole trip?
14068I will help you,--I shall be glad to do so,--but whom am I to bring back? 14068 I will pretend that you are a charming dryad, and I-- what shall I be?"
14068I wonder if he will come in here? 14068 I wonder what he means by that?"
14068I wonder why he has not been to see me?
14068I? 14068 If I go out there with you and let you have two rounds, will you make up and agree never to refer to the subject again?"
14068If I let you go will you promise not to fight?
14068If I thought he would forgive me?
14068Injure any one? 14068 Is everybody out?"
14068Is he married?
14068Is n''t it dreadful?
14068Is n''t there?
14068Is n''t this Gordon Keith?
14068Is she alive? 14068 Is she as pretty as she was as a child?"
14068Is she married happily?''
14068Is she still abroad?
14068Is that her husband?
14068Is there anything you would suggest further than has already been done?
14068Is there nothing I can do for you? 14068 Is this the truth?"
14068It is so beautiful to find it? 14068 It was Ferdy Wickersham, I know,"said Keith, his eyes contracting;"but what on earth could he have said?
14068It was where my father stayed for a while?
14068It''s what?
14068Jake Dennison? 14068 Keith--?"
14068Know anybody can work him? 14068 Know who that is?"
14068Last time I saw you, you vowed you had eyes for none but me, you may remember?
14068Lois, can you doubt what I mean?
14068May I help you up?'' 14068 May I shake hands with you, sir?"
14068May I trouble you for the Worcestershire?
14068Me?
14068Mining? 14068 Miss Huntington?"
14068Mr. Creamer, how much money will you give me on this draft? 14068 Mr. Creamer,"he said suddenly,"why do n''t Norman Wentworth''s friends come to his rescue and help him out of his difficulties?"
14068Mr. Keith knows the Wentworths-- I believe you know the Wentworths very well?
14068Mr. Keith, did you ever know Alice Lancaster?
14068Mr. Keith, you quoted that to me once; where does it come from? 14068 Mr.--ah--?"
14068Mrs. Lancaster, is n''t it?
14068Mrs. Wentworth,said Keith,"will you please tell me what you are talking about?"
14068My patient not married yet, I suppose? 14068 New York?
14068No one has come yet?
14068No; but from whom?
14068Norman Wentworth?
14068Not so? 14068 Now, you will come?
14068Of course, I do n''t believe those rumors; I mean in health?
14068Of course, our interest will be your first consideration?
14068Of course, you know he has always been in love with her?
14068Of course, you know her?
14068Of course, you know that Mr. Lancaster is a good deal older than Alice?
14068Of whom?
14068Oh!--What is he?
14068Oh!--You have known him a long time?
14068Oh, Miss Alice Yorke? 14068 Oh, could n''t I?
14068Oh, do n''t I?
14068Oh, do n''t you?
14068Oh, is he? 14068 Oh, it''s you?"
14068Oh, sha''n''t you? 14068 Oh, she''s rich?
14068Oh, you came down on business? 14068 Oh, you come from Wentworth, do you?"
14068Perhaps you can help him?
14068Perhaps, she might like to come down and see the place?
14068Perhaps, you will let me go with you sometime?
14068Possibly she has had some strain on her emotions?
14068Quite one of our rising young men? 14068 Reckon they''ll want to know why they ai n''t been a realizin''of their dreams?"
14068Regularly?
14068Romance is almost dying out?
14068Run who in?
14068Salvation?
14068Serious? 14068 Sha''n''t you ever come South again?"
14068Shall we find a seat?
14068She did? 14068 She does, eh?"
14068She looks as if she came out of a country garden, does n''t she?
14068She would, eh?
14068So my young man Keith found you and brought you down the Ridge?
14068So you have heard that old story-- and believe it?
14068So you''re Mr. Keith, are you?
14068Suppose they should try to hold you up now, what would you do?
14068Tell me, what was he like when-- you first knew him?
14068Terpsichore? 14068 That Lois Huntington gave it to?"
14068That amounts to about the same thing here, does n''t it?
14068That stock? 14068 That you held for me?
14068That? 14068 The girl over there is to marry him-- if her mother can arrange it?
14068The lands you have, I suppose?
14068The servant told me?
14068The wedding is to take place in a few weeks, I believe?
14068The young schoolmaster-- he is a schoolmaster in whom your daughter is interested, is n''t he? 14068 Their name?
14068Then I have seen some one so like it--? 14068 Then why do n''t you answer me?"
14068Then why in the name of heaven did you treat her so?
14068Then why?
14068Then you refuse to give me any information whatever?
14068Then you will do what I ask? 14068 There must be some one in this big town,"suggested Plume,"who will do such a job privately and keep it quiet?
14068There''s Norman Wentworth? 14068 They are giving up their privileges to be-- what?
14068They are very kind to you?
14068They say you have come here to see Miss Huntington?
14068Through what?
14068To what do I owe the honor of this unexpected visit?
14068Was he hurt?
14068We are all right, Penwell?
14068Well, I suppose there is no objection to doing so? 14068 Well, Richard, what do you think of the gentlemen?"
14068Well, beauty and sweetness,she said;"what else?
14068Well, of course, Phrony she''s lookin''higher than Dave-- but you know how women air?
14068Well, perhaps, you may have been misinformed?
14068Well, that of both of them?
14068Well, then you went abroad, and your husband left you over there?
14068Well, this poor creature I used to know in the South when I was a boy-- when I first went down there, you know? 14068 Well, what did he say?"
14068Well, what did you think of your friend''s friend?
14068Well, what do you do here?
14068Well, what do you think of brass and credulity now?
14068Well, what''s the news?
14068Well, who was it, then? 14068 Well, why not?
14068Well, will you do me a further favor? 14068 Well, wo n''t you come to see us?
14068Well, you see, little Dave Dennison-- you remember Dave? 14068 Well,"he said,"what is it?"
14068Well? 14068 Well?"
14068What are you doing here?
14068What are you doing, Dave Dennison, confound you?
14068What are you doing? 14068 What are you doing?"
14068What are you puzzling over so?
14068What are you so huffy about, Keith?
14068What are you so peppery about? 14068 What are your virtues, Ferdy?"
14068What did he look like? 14068 What did he say of me?
14068What did he say?
14068What did the squire come for?
14068What did you say to him, Aunt Abby? 14068 What did you say?"
14068What do you do when strangers offer to take your bags?
14068What do you know about here?
14068What do you know about this man''s knowledge of such things?
14068What do you mean, sir?
14068What do you mean, sir?
14068What do you mean? 14068 What do you mean?"
14068What do you mean?
14068What do you think he says? 14068 What do you think of him?"
14068What do you think of the story about old Lancaster?
14068What do you want of me?
14068What do you want?
14068What do you want?
14068What do you wish me to do?
14068What does he know about fashion?
14068What does he want?
14068What gent''mens?
14068What has come?
14068What has happened? 14068 What have I to do with that?
14068What have you against him?
14068What have you heard? 14068 What if he should get drunk and come into town?"
14068What is it?
14068What is that, Dennison?
14068What is that?
14068What is the matter with you this evening? 14068 What is the matter with you?"
14068What is the matter? 14068 What is the matter?"
14068What is their name?
14068What is there between you and Ferdy?
14068What is your name? 14068 What is your name?"
14068What is your name?
14068What lady? 14068 What man?"
14068What news?
14068What proof have I of that?
14068What relation to me?--Where is your wife?
14068What shall I do?
14068What shall I write?
14068What th''devil''rre ye doin''?
14068What the world says? 14068 What was it about?"
14068What was more natural?
14068What were you doing a little while ago in the conservatory-- with--?
14068What wife?
14068What will Mr. Keith think?
14068What will Mr. Lancaster say?
14068What will you have, Alice?
14068What would you do?
14068What would you say if I should tell you that my frequent visits to Mrs. Wentworth''s house were not to see her-- entirely?
14068What young man?
14068What''s that?
14068What''s that?
14068What''s the matter, Terpy?
14068What''ve you got against him?
14068What, in the name of Heaven, are you driving at, Keith? 14068 What?
14068What? 14068 What?"
14068What?
14068What?
14068When are you going away?
14068When are you going away?
14068When did you become such an advocate of Truth? 14068 When did you come?"
14068When did you take to writing backhand?
14068When-- what do you mean?
14068When? 14068 Where am I?
14068Where are their husbands?
14068Where are you from?
14068Where are you living?
14068Where are you staying?
14068Where did she drop it?
14068Where did you get that picture, Mrs. Wickersham? 14068 Where did you hear this?"
14068Where do these people get their wealth?
14068Where do you expect to find this paragon?
14068Where does he give the dinner? 14068 Where does that come from?"
14068Where is Jacques, the man who usually waits on me?
14068Where is Lois-- Miss Lois Huntington? 14068 Where is he staying?"
14068Where is he?
14068Where is he?
14068Where is her husband?
14068Where is my husband?
14068Where to?
14068Where was it? 14068 Where was your home?"
14068Where? 14068 Where?"
14068Where?
14068Which is she going to-- I mean, which do people say she prefers?
14068Which of my victims are you attempting to rescue?
14068Which side are you on? 14068 Who do you suppose has come between my husband and me?"
14068Who does? 14068 Who has been slandering me?"
14068Who is Keith? 14068 Who is Keith?"
14068Who is a young man named Keith-- a school- boy, who lives about here?
14068Who is he, Alice? 14068 Who is he?"
14068Who is here with you to- night?
14068Who is my friend?
14068Who is she?
14068Who is she?
14068Who is that woman inside?
14068Who is that? 14068 Who is that?"
14068Who is the happy man?
14068Who is the lady?
14068Who is the other one?
14068Who is your father, son?
14068Who is your friend?
14068Who says I done it?
14068Who says so?
14068Who told you?
14068Who was the lady? 14068 Who went with him?"
14068Whom are you here with?
14068Whom else do you know here?
14068Whom?
14068Whose?
14068Why are you here? 14068 Why are you so hard on me?"
14068Why are you so pensive? 14068 Why did n''t Wickersham make money down there?"
14068Why did n''t you let him in, Hucless?
14068Why did n''t you marry him?
14068Why did you come down here if you feel that way about it?
14068Why did you walk in a secluded part of the Park with him?
14068Why do n''t those young women have partners?
14068Why do n''t you go down there and get that girl?
14068Why do not you ask Norman to invest it?
14068Why do you ask me?
14068Why does n''t she shake Ferdy then?
14068Why have n''t you been to see me?
14068Why in the---- do n''t you come up and do what I tell you? 14068 Why not?"
14068Why not?
14068Why should I?
14068Why, General?
14068Why, he said he was a clergyman?
14068Why, how did she get down? 14068 Why, what is this?"
14068Why, where did you two know each other?
14068Why, you are not going to have a rebel for a sweetheart?
14068Why, you dear boy, where did you come from?
14068Why-- yes; do n''t you think so? 14068 Why?"
14068Why?
14068Why?
14068Will that do?
14068Will this do?
14068Will you ask Mrs. Gates to send me a kettle of hot water as soon as possible?
14068Will you cash this draft for me?
14068Will you do me a favor?
14068Will you forgive me?
14068With Mr. Keith? 14068 With a married woman, I suppose?
14068With a silly woman for a mother, who is always talking about her heart and pats you on the back?
14068With the lady?
14068Wo n''t you give me more than justice, Alice?
14068Wo n''t you give me the pleasure of seeing you home?
14068Wo n''t you present me after dinner?
14068Wo n''t you tell me who told you?
14068Would n''t Jake give a lot to have such a bosom as that? 14068 Would the gentleman wait?"
14068Would you mind jest comin''down this a- way a little piece?
14068Would you mind letting me see that certificate?
14068Write what--?
14068Yes; and he was always her_ grande passion_? 14068 Yes; do n''t you think we have been here long enough?
14068Yes; how do you know?
14068Yes; what?
14068Yes? 14068 Yes?
14068Yes?
14068Yes?
14068Yes?
14068You Phrony?
14068You are coming to dine with us soon, I believe? 14068 You are going to the Creamers''ball, of course?"
14068You are not going to answer it, of course?
14068You are the first person I have met!--Did you have any idea who I was the other evening?
14068You are very much interested in her?
14068You being so old as to have experienced it?
14068You can not know how people are talking about it?
14068You do n''t know me?
14068You do n''t mind now what I said to you that time?
14068You do n''t suppose he could be hankerin''after Phrony for her property, do you?
14068You do not care for Ferdy Wickersham? 14068 You do?"
14068You had the plat before?
14068You have heard the news?
14068You have known the Wentworths for some time?
14068You have such a gift for knowing people?
14068You have such opportunities for seeing interesting people- like Mr. Keith, here?
14068You have? 14068 You have?
14068You have?
14068You knew him at the same time that you first knew Norman, did you not?
14068You knew--?
14068You know Alice is a great belle? 14068 You know of him, of course?
14068You know she has quarrelled with her friend, Mrs. Lancaster? 14068 You know that is not true?"
14068You know, Alice Lancaster has been talking of coming here? 14068 You know, Ferdy always was in love with her?"
14068You know, she is staying with Louise Wentworth? 14068 You know?"
14068You mean money?
14068You mean you wish me to go?
14068You mean you would stop there and let him take your place?
14068You must have worked all night?'' 14068 You must like your Winter in New York?"
14068You promise not to use it unless you have to?
14068You refer to the story that he had married that poor girl and abandoned her?
14068You remember Gordon Keith, the boy whose boat I sank over in England--''Keith the rebel''?
14068You remember that an offer was made you of your input and interest, and you declined?
14068You remember, he once wrote you-- a long time ago?
14068You say it occurred up on the Ridge?
14068You say she has balked? 14068 You think all that?
14068You think so too, Keith, I suppose?
14068You think so?
14068You used to be very romantic? 14068 You will administer on my effects?
14068You will admit that gentlemen were much rarer on that train than ruffians or those who looked like ruffians?
14068You will help me? 14068 You will never do what?"
14068You wonder if I really know him? 14068 You''ll let me go?"
14068You''re a- goin''to try the Ridge College, are you?
14068Your father was a pre-- a-- a-- clergyman?
14068Your father-?
14068Your friends will meet you there, I suppose?
14068Your friends? 14068 Your mother is very interested in schools?
14068_ Votre ami? 14068 --And you used to say I was your sw--"Did I?
14068--Or this new man, Keith, who is undertaking to teach New York finance?"
14068A little later she asked the General:"Did you ever hear of any one in New Leeds who was named Terpsichore?"
14068After a brief discussion of recent events, he pushed a card across to his visitor and asked casually:"What do you know about that man?"
14068And at what age do you let men off?"
14068And had not Norman treated him badly of late without the least cause-- met his advances with a rebuff?
14068And how about others?"
14068And if he failed, would this be all it meant to these men who had known him always?
14068And possibly he might have some explanations?"
14068And so pretty, only she knows it too well; but what pretty girl does not?
14068And the squire turned back to Rhodes:"What are you goin''to do, my son, when you''ve done all you say you''re goin''to do for us?
14068And what--?"
14068And why should n''t he help her in?
14068And you congratulated yourself on your escape?
14068Any one could see that all along?"
14068Are you after money or a row?"
14068Are you deaf?"
14068Are you going to marry the dance- hall keeper, simply because she has white teeth?"
14068Are you going to the Wentworths''this evening?"
14068Are you in with him?
14068As Mrs. Yorke drifted again into reflection, Alice was compelled to ask:"What about, mamma?"
14068At what hour?"
14068Bank busted?"
14068Been very successful?"
14068Brush, the picture- dealer, says it is one of the finest''old masters''in New York, quite in the best style of Sir Peter-- What''s his name?"
14068But did he marry you afterwards?
14068But he will, wo n''t he?"
14068But how?
14068But if I was drunk is that any reason for you to let a thief rob me?
14068But suppose Miss Abigail took this view of the matter?
14068But was it not too late?
14068But was this love?
14068But when he met that lady--""When he did what?"
14068But why should he do it?
14068But, perhaps, after all, he did not make his fortune?"
14068Ca n''t you allow anything to friendship?"
14068Can you come to the hotel to- morrow?"
14068Can you get her into a comfortable place for-- for a thousand dollars?"
14068Can you walk at all?"
14068Can you--?"
14068Come over and have a cocktail?
14068Completely shattered?"
14068Could Mrs. Lancaster have treated him badly?
14068Could Norman have this opinion of him?
14068Could he be offended, or afraid-- of himself?
14068Could he save him?
14068Could it be possible that Norman was going to fail?
14068Could it be the fact that he had lost nearly everything-- that he had spent Mrs. Wentworth''s money?
14068Could it be true, as Stirling had said, laughing, that now he had the key and would find all doors open to him?
14068Could it bring it?
14068Could love be for him again?
14068Could the girl be jealous of his attentions to Mrs. Wentworth?
14068Could this be the cause?
14068Could this be the reason for Norman''s curtness?
14068Could this be the wrong man?
14068Could you catch my horse for me?"
14068Did I?
14068Did n''t it look so to- day?"
14068Did n''t you marry us, sir?
14068Did n''t you notice that?
14068Did not many married women love other men than their husbands?
14068Did you do it on purpose?"
14068Did you ever have a row with him?"
14068Did you ever meet a girl named Yorke-- Alice Yorke?
14068Did you know a young man named Rhodes?
14068Did you not speak to him?"
14068Did you not tell the waiter just now a gentleman was here?
14068Did you or did you not marry Ferdy Wickersham to a young girl about three years ago?"
14068Do I not know that if you loved me you would have convinced me of it in a moment?
14068Do n''t you know I am the boss of this town, and that when I tell you to do a thing you have to obey me?"
14068Do n''t you know me?"
14068Do n''t you know what Mrs. Wentworth''s cousin said when she heard that the Wickershams had a coat- of- arms?
14068Do n''t you remember those effects she used to produce with black and just a dash of red?
14068Do n''t you remember what that lady told you?"
14068Do n''t you remember?
14068Do n''t you remember?
14068Do n''t you see he''s hurt?"
14068Do n''t you think so?"
14068Do n''t you understand?"
14068Do you agree?"
14068Do you believe a woman ever forgets entirely a man she has really loved?"
14068Do you call him old now?
14068Do you give me no credit for having eyes-- for knowing the prettiest, sweetest, dearest little girl in New York?
14068Do you happen to have a dollar about your old clothes?
14068Do you know how to mount me?"
14068Do you know what you are doing?"
14068Do you know who it was?"
14068Do you know, he and I have carried on quite a correspondence this year?"
14068Do you mean to say Tam not a lady?"
14068Do you propose to marry her?
14068Do you remember me?"
14068Do you remember what you said to me once about your ideal?"
14068Do you remember?"
14068Do you see that policeman?
14068Do you suppose I am so ignorant as not to know anything?
14068Do you think I care for a bonnet when the best man in Gumbolt may be dying down in them woods?"
14068Do you think I will keep anything I have when you are in trouble-- when your good name is at stake?
14068Do you think this is real?"
14068Does that appear so long to you?"
14068Dreadful, is n''t it?
14068Ever heard what became of him?"
14068Ferdy Wickersham?
14068Ferdy Wickersham?"
14068Found Phrony, have you?
14068From the Bible?"
14068Go with me?"
14068Gold- mining?"
14068Grinnell Rhodes?
14068Had he not been intended for other things than this exile?
14068Had not her husband gone after another?
14068Has anything happened?"
14068Has he a good school?
14068Has his father''s turn?
14068Has some one been prejudicing you against me?
14068Have I ever seen it before?"
14068Have you a card?"
14068Have you answered the letter?"
14068Have you any witnesses?"
14068Have you been carrying any sacks of salt lately?"
14068Have you children?"
14068He appears so well- read?
14068He brought your daughter down the mountain the day her horse ran off with her?
14068He did not go alone?"
14068He gave a few directions, and presently said:"My little girl?
14068He had a twinkle in his eye as he said:"Did n''t expect to see me here?"
14068He had large interests in the mountains, and could she doubt that if he was within a thousand miles he would come by to see her?
14068He had not been very well, and they had decided to take a yacht- cruise in Southern waters, and would he not come along?
14068He said casually to Lois, as he shook hands,"How did you hear the piece of news you mentioned?"
14068He was easy, then, as to the point Mrs. Nailor had raised; but had he the right to subject Lois to gossip?
14068He was one of your ushers, was n''t he?"
14068He will be down directly; will the gentleman wait?"
14068He''s been to see her twicet and is always a-- writin''to her?"
14068Hope you had a pleasant time?"
14068How can I help you?"
14068How can I?
14068How can you know about this boy?
14068How could I?
14068How could she know him?
14068How could she?
14068How could you?
14068How do you find this here place?"
14068How does she propose to help Him out?"
14068How is he?
14068How long are you going to be in town?"
14068How long before--?"
14068How long shall you be here?"
14068How long shall you be here?"
14068How many have there been?"
14068How much do you want for it?"
14068How much do you want-- I mean, how little can you git along with?"
14068How much was it?
14068How often have you said that?
14068How old do I look?"
14068How old do you think I am?
14068How old were you, did you say?"
14068How was I to know you were in the city?"
14068How was his school coming on?
14068I am glad you did not feel it necessary to caution me about her husband?"
14068I am sure he cared for me, and he did not mean to treat me so; but she was rich and so beautiful, and-- what was I?"
14068I am sure you would never encourage such an intimacy unless he were?"
14068I hear she is very much improved?"
14068I hear you were there?
14068I heard you were going to be married?"
14068I hope you have been successful?"
14068I see that Wickersham has returned?"
14068I suppose it has changed a good deal in that time?"
14068I suppose it was by my orders that the cutting ran so near to the creek that that work had to be done to keep the mine from being flooded?"
14068I suppose it was by my orders that the men were set on to strike?"
14068I suppose they are very much in love with each other?"
14068I suppose they would not look into your plan?"
14068I suppose you are also going to be administrator,_ de bonis non_, of the lady in whose behalf you have exhibited such sudden interest?"
14068I suppose you have come to tell me how long it will take you to finish the job that I gave you, or that the price I named is not high enough?"
14068I suppose you liked that young Wickersham better?"
14068I think I look just as well as some of''em?"
14068I think that is nice in her?
14068I wonder who she can be?"
14068I wonder why that is?"
14068If Norman had helped him in the past, had he not already paid him back?
14068If he had addressed her, might not others do so?
14068If he were in love with Mrs. Lancaster, would she marry him?
14068In the West Country?"
14068Is he a capitalist like-- like our host?
14068Is he still living?"
14068Is it Keith?"
14068Is it really you?
14068Is it that man Keith?"
14068Is it this man?"
14068Is n''t he always sending you books and things?
14068Is n''t it dreadful?"
14068Is n''t she his wife?
14068Is n''t your affair my affair?"
14068Is papa ill?
14068Is papa not well?"
14068Is she--?"
14068Is that any one?"
14068Is that the reason others are-- what they are?
14068Is the limb broken?"
14068It can not hurt me?"
14068It is delightful to find it?"
14068It was Tripper, was n''t it?"
14068It would have been quite romantic, would it not?
14068It''s an old grudge, I guess?"
14068J. Quincy made him think''twas against Wickersham, and he was that drunk he did n''t know what a fool they was makin''of him.--You are going away?"
14068Just then a cheery voice was heard calling outside:"Cousin?--cousin?--Matildy Carroll, where are you?"
14068Keith paused a moment in reflection, and then said casually:"When are you going?"
14068Keith turned quickly:"What is that?"
14068Keith, do you remember what old Rawson said to us once about marrying?"
14068Keith?"
14068Keith?"
14068Keith?"
14068Keith?"
14068Keith?"
14068Keith?"
14068Kestrel,--?"
14068Lancaster?"
14068Lancaster?"
14068Lancaster?"
14068Let me see if there is any one here very young and innocent?"
14068May I introduce myself?
14068Might there be a haven yonder in that rosy distance?
14068Mr. Plume lost the paper, but you will give me another, wo n''t you?"
14068Mrs. Yorke only glanced up and said,"So you are back?
14068Mrs. Yorke was so fond of you?"
14068No, not to- morrow-- Saturday?
14068No?
14068No?
14068Norman''s, I suppose?"
14068Not failing financially?"
14068Not of the hostess?"
14068Now I want to ask you why, in the name of Heaven, should I want anything to do with Mrs. Wentworth''s money?"
14068Now do you understand?"
14068Now, will you listen?"
14068Of course, you know he was desperately in love with Alice Lancaster?"
14068Oh!--where am I staying?
14068Oh, then you know her name?
14068Oh, you are engaged?"
14068One of these sophisticated, fashionable, strong- minded women-- a woman''s- rights woman?
14068Or I could perform it myself?
14068Or is he just getting to be a capitalist?"
14068Or were those still the billows of the wide and trackless sea?
14068Perhaps, Dr. Balsam knew her?
14068Perhaps, I can help you-- I may have been sent here for the purpose-- who knows?
14068Possibly she could guess the reason?
14068Quite brazen, is n''t it?
14068Quite uncommon, is n''t he?"
14068Rhodes-- you remember Rhodes?
14068Scotchman?"
14068Shall I name them?"
14068She can walk on it?"
14068She had not even cared for her husband, so people said; would she be cruel to Keith?
14068She has to have some one to do the proprieties, you know?"
14068She is a very proud woman, you know?"
14068She looks all right-- but--?"
14068She saved his life, you know?"
14068She was in love with Ferdy Wickersham, you know?
14068So few persons appreciate education?"
14068So romantic to make an acquaintance that way-- I quite envy you?
14068Some one was with him, but would Mr. Keith walk in?
14068Suppose I tell you I think of her all the time?"
14068That he had written anonymous letters?
14068That kind?"
14068That will satisfy her scruples, and then, if you ever had to make it known--?
14068The castle needs a new roof?
14068The other lady was in-- would the gentleman come in?
14068The others laughed; and one of them asked:"Been trying yourself, Stirling?"
14068The reply was sung through the keyhole:"''Ole Molly hyah, what you doin''dyah?
14068The teller was so much astonished that he simply ejaculated:"Sir--?"
14068Then he asked quietly:"Where did you get that story?"
14068Then, if he failed?
14068This afternoon he was talking of love and of himself; for what young man who talks of love talks not of himself?
14068To break the silence, she asked, a little tone of politeness coming into her voice:"May I inquire what your name is?
14068Turley?"
14068Waiting for me?"
14068Was Mr. Keith agreeable?
14068Was he a doctor?
14068Was he in love with Mrs. Lancaster?
14068Was he not now forgetting Norman''s kindness?
14068Was it Ferdy Wickersham who made you believe I had deceived you?"
14068Was it that it was Nature''s season for mating; the season for Youth to burst its restraining bonds and blossom into love?
14068Was it the sight before him?
14068Was n''t it him that gave the description of you that night when you stopped the stage?"
14068Was this the Alice Yorke he had worshipped, revered?
14068Was this the woman whom he had canonized throughout these years?
14068Was this the"worship with out end"?
14068We might give him a place?"
14068We must get you an invitation, must n''t we, Alice?"
14068Well, what are you going to do?"
14068Well, what difference did that make?
14068Well, you might possibly take those properties along with others?"
14068Well?
14068Went--?"
14068Wentworth?"
14068What Keith?
14068What a nice young man he is?
14068What about me?"
14068What are the names of the contracting parties?
14068What are you after?
14068What are you doin''?"
14068What are you doin''to me?"
14068What are you doing here?
14068What are you getting so mad about?"
14068What are you going to do?"
14068What are you talking about?
14068What can I do for you?"
14068What could he have dared to say to wound you so?"
14068What did I ever do to you that you should have hounded me so?"
14068What did I tell you?
14068What did he mean by those last words at the carriage?
14068What did it matter that he was considerably older than Alice?
14068What did you think of the dinner?"
14068What do you know about it?"
14068What do you mean anyhow?"
14068What do you mean?
14068What do you mean?"
14068What do you mean?"
14068What do you say?
14068What do you say?
14068What do you think of her?"
14068What do you want?
14068What do you want?
14068What does he know about surgery?"
14068What does he say of him?"
14068What engagements have you?"
14068What had they told her?
14068What in the world brought you here to this out- of- the- way place?"
14068What is he?"
14068What is his name?"
14068What is it?"
14068What is the exchange on this, Penwell?"
14068What is this?
14068What is your name?
14068What is your name?"
14068What might have happened had he gone back?
14068What on earth could have brought the boy out at that time of the night?
14068What should he say to her?
14068What sort of a man is he?"
14068What swept before his mental vision who shall know?
14068What was Newton making his calculations from which to deduce his fundamental laws, or Galileo watching the stars from his Florentine tower?
14068What was he thinking of?
14068What was his name?"
14068What will you give her in return?"
14068What would David have done had there not been a stony brook between him and Goliath that day?
14068What would Mr. Lancaster say?"
14068What''s he up to?"
14068When Keith reached the window, the white- faced teller said immediately:"Your balance, Mr. Keith, is so much; you have a check?"
14068When do you begin flattering?
14068When is it to be?
14068When?
14068When?
14068Where are you from?"
14068Where are you going?"
14068Where are you staying?
14068Where is Miss Huntington?"
14068Where is he now?"
14068Where is he now?"
14068Where is she?
14068Where is that preacher you were talking about once that took flyers with you on the quiet?
14068Where should he turn?
14068Where was it?
14068Where was it?"
14068Which commandment have you been caught violating?"
14068Which licked?"
14068Who are you, girl?
14068Who are you?
14068Who can it be?"
14068Who could tell?
14068Who is Uncle Tim?"
14068Who is he?"
14068Who is he?"
14068Who is he?"
14068Who is it?"
14068Who married you?
14068Who married you?
14068Who said it?"
14068Who said that?"
14068Who says I am waiting for a lady?"
14068Who says she will not?"
14068Who says--?"
14068Who told you?"
14068Who was it?"
14068Who was present?
14068Who was present?"
14068Who was there in New York who could know him?
14068Who''s your leddy friend?"
14068Whom did you hear it from?"
14068Whom does every one say you are-- all in pursuit of?"
14068Why ca n''t people think for themselves?"
14068Why ca n''t we start all over again?
14068Why ca n''t you let me know to- day what it will cost?
14068Why did you not bring me a milk- bottle and a rattle?
14068Why do n''t men have ideals now?"
14068Why do n''t you go and ask him?"
14068Why do n''t you go?"
14068Why do n''t you let her alone?"
14068Why does n''t Ferdy like him?"
14068Why had he ceased speaking of it of late?
14068Why has n''t she been sent to a hospital, I wonder?"
14068Why have you made up your mind so suddenly?
14068Why should I wish to withhold him from the joys for which he is so ripe?"
14068Why should he not avail himself of it?
14068Why should he not seek release by this way?
14068Why should he not try his fortune there, and be happy?
14068Why should he write again?
14068Why should not he?
14068Why should she not take the gift thus held out to her?
14068Why should she throw it away?
14068Why should they not always be together?
14068Why was she carrying on an affair with Ferdy Wickersham?
14068Why was she surprised to see him?
14068Why wo n''t you be serious?"
14068Why, you silly creature, do you suppose that Ferdy meant anything by what he did?"
14068Why--?"
14068Wickersham gave a grunt, then he asked Keith suddenly:"Do you know a man named Plume over there at Gumbolt?"
14068Wickersham''s?"
14068Wickershaw and Euphronia Trimmer?"
14068Will it be in time for next season?"
14068Will she get well?"
14068Will she live?"
14068Will you do me the favor to repeat it?
14068Will you mention that to Mrs. Nailor?
14068Wo n''t he be glad to see it when he comes?
14068Wo n''t you accept it without an explanation?"
14068Wo n''t you be seated?"
14068Wo n''t you bring him?"
14068Wo n''t you come along?
14068Wo n''t you hold my horse?
14068Wo n''t you let me get you a chair?"
14068Would Mr. Keats please be good enough to walk into the drawing- room?
14068Would he be good enough to walk in?
14068Would he not simply be throwing away his money to offer it to him?
14068Would not life bring the old dream yet?
14068Would the visitor leave his name?
14068Would you be willing to give up all you have striven for and won-- your life-- the honors you have won and hope to win?"
14068Yes, mamma?"
14068Yes-- you know, Ferdy is like some other men?
14068Yes?
14068Yes?
14068Yes?
14068Yes?
14068Yes?"
14068Yes?"
14068Yes?"
14068Yet could it be possible?
14068You are going to stay with me?"
14068You are going, of course?
14068You are interested in schools, too?"
14068You are n''t too good to drink with me, are you?
14068You are the-------- that comes here insultin''a lady?"
14068You consider even my entrance to ask you, a minister of the Gospel, a question that any good man would have been glad to answer,''an intrusion''?
14068You did n''t notice it?
14068You did n''t think I''d come to this blanked old place for nothin'', did you?
14068You have been found out?
14068You have heard the news, of course?
14068You have not had more than one, have you?"
14068You here?"
14068You know he came from a shop?"
14068You know her mother?"
14068You know him?
14068You know how it is?"
14068You know how such poor creatures are?"
14068You know how that mine got flooded?"
14068You know they have fallen out?
14068You know what people say of you?"
14068You know, I belong to the cloth?"
14068You know, I think she and him like each other?
14068You love her still?
14068You mean in England?
14068You observe that it is one who knows what he is speaking of?"
14068You remember what one of them said not long ago?
14068You remember, our friendship began in the country?
14068You say you have not been to see her?
14068You supported her?
14068You understand?"
14068You were listening, were you?"
14068You were present?"
14068You will believe this?
14068You will bring him back to me?
14068You will find him and bring him back to me?"
14068You will forgive me?
14068You will help me, wo n''t you?
14068You will not trouble me about it?"
14068You wo n''t let me starve?"
14068You would not like to give up all you-- hope for-- and become like-- some we know?"
14068Your cousin, is n''t he?
14068[ Illustration:"Lois-- I have come"--he began]"My old Doctor--?"
14068ca n''t you keep out when a gentleman wants to see me on private business?"
14068she said to her,"and your daughter is so like you?"
14068you did not like him?
7170THE SNOW IMAGEThe question now was, what next?
7170''And what would they have you do?''
7170''Did you not pinch Elizabeth Hubbard this morning?''
7170''Do you go through the trees or over them?''
7170''How did you go?''
7170''What attendants hath Sarah Good?''
7170''What meat did she give it?''
7170''Why did you go to Thomas Putnam''s last night and hurt his child?''
7170''Why did you not tell your master?''
7170''Would you not have hurt others, if you could?''
7170And if he accused her of that only, why should he suffer perpetual remorse on account of her death?
7170But if the wings of the archangel are torn and soiled in his conflict with sin, does it not add to the honor of the victory?
7170Can you tell me, sir?"
7170Did it occur to him that the lightning might strike in his own house?
7170Do not the characters in"Don Quixote"and"Wilhelm Meister"spring up as it were out of the ground?
7170Do not we all feel at times that the search for abstract truth is like a diet of sawdust or Scotch mist,--a"chimera buzzing in a vacuum"?
7170Do not we all require it?
7170Does not romance come originally from Roma,--as well as Romulus?
7170He also adds Goethe and Swedenborg, and remarks of them:"Were ever two men of transcendent imagination more unlike?"
7170Horse, how are you to- day?''
7170How can we possess clear and definite ideas of the grand mystery of Creation?
7170How did it happen that Hawthorne was an exception?
7170How far shall we agree with him?
7170I am perfectly aware that he has taken a good deal of interest in you, but when did he ever do anything for you without a_ quid pro quo_?
7170If Franklin Pierce was desirous of preserving the Union, why did he give Jefferson Davis a place in his Cabinet, and take him for his chief adviser?
7170If there is sometimes a melancholy tinge in their writings, may we wonder at it?
7170In his account of"Sunday at Home"he says:"Time-- where a man lives not-- what is it but Eternity?"
7170Is it not much the same in America?
7170Is it not perfectly natural that Everybody should understand Everybody''s business as well as or better than his own?
7170Is it possible that this is connected in a way with the rarefied atmosphere of Lenox, in which distant objects appear so sharply defined?
7170Is this not an induction from or corollary to the preceding?
7170Is this the consummation of your experiment?"
7170It may also be asked, why should Small have disposed so readily of this manuscript to Symmes after preserving it sedulously for more than forty years?
7170Matthew Arnold spoke of his commentaries on England as the writing of a man chagrined; but what could have chagrined Hawthorne there?
7170Perhaps he might have accomplished as much for Hawthorne; but how was Hawthorne in his retired and uncommunicative life to know of him?
7170Raphael''s tomb has been opened, and why should not Shakespeare''s be also?
7170The latter often happens in American life, and although it commonly results in more or less family discord, are we to condemn it for that reason?
7170The magnitude of the evil of course makes a difference; but do we not all live in a continual state of sinning, and self- correction?
7170The scientists tell us that all these happen according to natural laws: perfectly true, but WHO was it that made those laws?
7170Then what shall we say of the sympathetic relation between a mother and her child?
7170There are Dombeys and Shylocks in plenty, but who has ever met a Hamlet or a Rosalind in real life?
7170WHO is it that keeps the universe running?
7170Was it President Jackson, or Senator Benton, who said that fighting a duel was very much like making one''s maiden speech?
7170Was it through a natural attraction for the primeval granite that they landed on the New England coast?
7170Was the sword- fish roused to anger when the ship came upon him sleeping in the water; or did he mistake it for a strange species of whale?
7170Was there nothing more than the trick she had attempted upon Priscilla?
7170What New England girl would behave in the manner that Hawthorne''s son represents this one to have done?
7170What could Bridge do, in the premises?
7170What do we know of the boyhood of Franklin, Webster, Seward and Longfellow?
7170What do we know of the religious belief of Michel Angelo, of Shakespeare, or of Beethoven?
7170What do you think of my becoming an author, and relying for support upon my pen?
7170What is there outside of the universe?
7170What shall we now do for bread?"
7170What should he do; whither should he turn?
7170What young gentleman would have listened to such a communication as he supposes, and especially the reserved and modest Hawthorne?
7170When will parents learn wisdom in regard to their children?
7170Which of Shakespeare''s male characters can be measured beside George Washington?
7170Who besides Homer has been able to describe a chariot- race, and who but Hawthorne could extract such poetry from a farmer''s garden?
7170Who but his uncle could have written that inscription?
7170Who can describe it-- that clairvoyant sensibility, intangible, too swift for words?
7170Who can tell?
7170Who has depicted it, except Hawthorne and Raphael?
7170Who knows what a heart there may have been in William Symmes?
7170Why did he go out of his way to see so little and to miss so much?
7170Why should he not?
7170Why, as he was true to the Northern character in all things else, did he swerve from his Northern principles in this final scene?"
7170Would it have made a difference in the warp and woof of Hawthorne''s life, if he had happened to ride that day in the same coach with Longfellow?
7170Would it not be so among the dead?"
7170Would not the Count of Monte Beni be a cousin Italian, as it were, to the Count of Monte Cristo?
7170_ Fate_ is the spoken word which can not be recalled, and who can tell the good and evil consequences that lie hidden in it?
7170reduced to private life?
38809How is it that you support Garfield when he is a Christian?
38809Well,said the fellow,"do n''t you think he could have put in another day here to devilish good advantage?"
38809Well,you would say,"why do n''t you do it?"
38809What things?
38809Why,he said,"Mr. Mulidore, what did you do with that coffin?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809A thousand theories were born of want; a thousand theories were born of the fertile brain of trouble; and these people said,"After all, what is money?
38809Ah, but, says this same gentleman, what gives our money-- our silver-- its value?
38809And I want you to think one moment, just one moment: What was this country when the first Republican President was elected?
38809And how did they fix the ratio?
38809And how much currency and specie would that leave for us in the United States?
38809And if the Government can create money, how much should it create, and if it should create it who will get it?
38809And is McKinley a tried man?
38809And the owner of the hat said,"What for?"
38809And the question is, which section in this country can you trust to collect and disburse that revenue?
38809And thereupon the poor debtor says,"How is that going to help me?"
38809And what did our President say?
38809And what did they say?
38809And what do we become?
38809And what do we owe?
38809And what does that mean?
38809And what else would happen?
38809And what else?
38809And what else?
38809And what else?
38809And what else?
38809And what else?
38809And what had these persons done?
38809And what has been the result?
38809And what has made us such a great and splendid and progressive and sensible people?
38809And what more did these men say?
38809And what more did they say?
38809And what more?
38809And what next did this convention do?
38809And what shall I say more of the regiment before me?
38809And what shall I say to you, survivors of the death- filled days?
38809And what was the next?
38809And who owns a great picture or a great statue?
38809And why did they do it?
38809And why did they do this?
38809And why do these gentlemen ask for the trade of the world?
38809And why not?
38809And why ought we to be in favor of silver?
38809And why should I hate the rich?
38809And why should it stop at exactly one dollar and twenty- nine cents?
38809And why should we array class against class?
38809And why should we depreciate one of our own products by saying that we will not take it as money?
38809And why should we hate the successful?
38809And why the greatest?
38809And why was that?
38809And why?
38809And why?
38809Any use of your talking about being a sovereign partner?
38809Are they in favor of being protected?
38809Are we not getting rich?
38809Are you a Democrat?
38809Are you not more than glad that in 1776 was announced the sublime principle that political power resides with the people?
38809Are you sorry that these assassins were defeated in 1868?
38809As a specimen of bluntness and clearness, take the following extracts: How shall the Government make these notes at all times as good as specie?
38809But let me ask, for my own information, if they corner gold what will prevent their cornering silver?
38809But now the question was, to whom did the newly acquired property belong?
38809But suppose the Governor will not call for assistance, what then?
38809But suppose the Legislature will not do it, what then?
38809But the question now, as we look back, is, was this country worth saving?
38809But to come back to my question, what have we done since 1860?
38809But what did you say a little while ago?
38809But what have we got to do?
38809But what of those who fell?
38809But, after all, do you know that money is the most social thing in this world?
38809By giving it to the South or North; to the Democracy or to the Republican party?
38809Can any human being think of any reason?
38809Can it be left in any way to the Supreme Court, or shall the Executive decide it himself?
38809Can our Government obtain information only through the official sources?
38809Can we forget everything except the heroic sacrifices of the men who saved this Government?
38809Can we say to the South,"Let us be brothers"?
38809Can we trust them?
38809Can we?
38809Can you trust it to Alabama or to New York?
38809Can you trust it to the South or can you trust it to the great and splendid North?
38809Can you trust it to the gentlemen of Mississippi or to the gentlemen of Massachusetts?
38809Can you trust the gentlemen who invented the tissue ballot?
38809Can you trust them?
38809Could we have safely trusted that party in 1868?
38809Could we have safely trusted the Democratic party in 1860?
38809Democrats, do n''t you wish we had treated you that way during the war?
38809Did General Hancock believe in State Sovereignty when he was at Gettysburg?
38809Did he leave them in a beautiful home, surrounded by civilization, in the repose of law, in the security of a great and powerful republic?
38809Did his heart beat quicker?
38809Did our forefathers ever interfere with religion?
38809Did the blood rush to his cheek?
38809Did they allow any of them to fight in the army?
38809Did they free any of the negroes?
38809Did they issue summons, and have a trial?
38809Did they let any of these negroes fight?
38809Did they make them citizens?
38809Did they permit any of them to vote?
38809Did you ever hear anybody talk about a War Republican?
38809Did you ever think about it?
38809Did you ever think of the deft and cunning hands, of the wonderfully accurate brains, that can make a thing like that?
38809Did you say we could resume?
38809Do n''t you wish you had lived then, my friend Democrat?
38809Do n''t you wish you had prosecuted the war as our fathers prosecuted the Revolution?
38809Do the men that fought at Gettysburg still believe in State Sovereignty?
38809Do they think the South loves him?
38809Do you believe that there was, on the average, any more drunkenness in this country before the tax was put on than there is now?
38809Do you know how much good we did?
38809Do you know that the words cheap money are a contradiction in terms?
38809Do you know, if they had wanted it we could not have given it to them?
38809Do you want to trust such men?
38809Do you wish to put the ballot- box in the keeping of the shot- gun, of the White- Liners, of the Ku Klux?
38809Does he want to be a failure?
38809Does it believe in sunrise, or does it keep its back to the sacred east of eternal progress?
38809Does it wish to make the world grander and better and freer?
38809Does that require patriotism?
38809Elect Bryan, come to the silver standard, and what would happen?
38809Every lot in this city that was worth five thousand and that is now worth two thousand-- do you know what is the matter with that lot?
38809Every man that had committed murder-- that had taken up arms against America, or voted the Democratic or Tory ticket?
38809Gold will go out of circulation, and what next would happen?
38809Has it a high ideal?
38809Has its value been changed?
38809Has the Senate alone the right to determine it?
38809Has the South changed?
38809Has the United States the right to protect commerce between the States?
38809Have we any excuse for being thieves?
38809Have we any excuse for failing to pay the debt?
38809Have we developed the mind?
38809Have we endeavored to civilize the heart?
38809Have we endeavored to develop the brain?
38809Have we in other directions kept pace with our physical development?
38809Have we kept up in other ways?
38809He was found guilty, and the judge asked him,"What have you to say that sentence of death shall not be pronounced on you?"
38809Honor bright-- honor bright, is there any freedom of speech in the South?
38809Honor bright?
38809How are we going to do it?
38809How can money be too good?
38809How did they come to say this?
38809How did they do it?
38809How do you get your money?
38809How does he stand upon the great questions affecting American prosperity?
38809How is this to be done?
38809How many Democrats wrote letters during the war declaring that the North never could conquer the South?
38809How many wrote letters to the soldiers in the army telling them to shed no more fraternal blood in that suicidal and unchristian war?
38809How much are they worth?
38809How much do you suppose the raw material lying in the earth was worth that was changed into that locomotive?
38809How much do you suppose this Nation is worth to- day?
38809How much is a ton of iron worth in the ground?
38809How much is the Republic worth?
38809How much?
38809How much?
38809How was this done?
38809How would you have it?
38809How, Mr. Bryanite, how do you account for that?
38809How?
38809I ask you to- night, is not every solitary man here in favor of free speech?
38809I do not care where he was born; I simply ask, Is he a man?
38809I met him one morning, and he looked very sad, and I said to him,"Uncle, what is the matter?"
38809I say, can you trust the ballot- box to the Democratic party?
38809I want the taxes taken from tobacco and whiskey; and why?
38809I want to preserve free speech, and, as an honest man, I look about me and I say,"How can I best preserve it?"
38809If everything is to be left to the blind and heartless working of the laws of supply and demand, why have governments?
38809If gold and silver are not the measure of value, what is?
38809If the Government can make money, what on earth does it collect taxes from you and me for?
38809If the laborer is better off in other countries, why does not the American laborer emigrate to Europe?
38809If we depend upon the foreign manufacturers will they not form trusts?
38809If you can make money by law, why should any nation be poor?
38809In which part of this country are the lips of thought free-- in the South or in the North?
38809In which part of this country can a man find justice in the courts; in the North or in the South?
38809In which part of this country do you find law supreme?
38809Is he willing to give to others what he claims for himself?
38809Is it a legal tender?
38809Is it possible for the mind to conceive anything more absurd than that the Government can create money?
38809Is it the non- producing thief, sitting on a throne, surrounded by vermin?
38809Is not this a vile abolition document?
38809Is not this perfectly splendid?
38809Is that not enough to make a Democrat sick?
38809Is that the doctrine and the idea of the Northern Democratic party?
38809Is that the spirit in which a nation like this should be governed?
38809Is there a man here who in his heart regrets that the Democrats failed in 1868?
38809Is there a solitary Democrat here who dares say he is not in favor of free speech?
38809Is there any Congress to pass the necessary act to pay them if there was?
38809Is there any sentiment here that would respond to a call for twenty, fifty, or a hundred thousand men?
38809Is there any sentiment in the North that would uphold the Executive in calling for volunteers?
38809Is there any use of talking about being equal partners any longer?
38809Is there no time when the soldiers of progress can rest?
38809Is there one man present who, to- day, regrets that the Vallandigham Democracy of 1864 was spurned and beaten by the American people?
38809Is there one man present who, to- day, regrets the utter defeat of that mixture of slavery, malice and meanness, called the Democratic party, in 1864?
38809It is a legal tender; now pound it into a cube, and how much is it worth?
38809It is not possible that our fathers ever interfered with the writ of_ habeas corpus_, is it?
38809It knocks at the door for admission, and what is the question asked by this administration?
38809It takes no more ink and no more paper-- why not make one thousand dollar bills?
38809Jackson was a Democrat?
38809Let me tell you?
38809Mr. Bryan says,"Vote for cheap money to pay your debts,"and thereupon the creditor says,"What is to become of me?"
38809Mr. Greenbacker, suppose the Government issued a billion dollars to- morrow, how would you get any of it?
38809Mulidore, are you a Christian?''
38809Must it be left to Congress?
38809Must it wait until the Legislature calls for assistance to help it stop robbing and plundering citizens of the United States?
38809Must our Government wait until the Government asks the proofs, while the State tramples upon the rights of the citizens?
38809Must we wage this war for the right forever?
38809Not"Have you the land, have you the wealth, have you the men and women?"
38809Now, honor bright, which section of this Union can you trust the ballot- box with?
38809Now, if the Government can make money itself, why should it collect taxes from the poor?
38809Now, my friends, what is there about this great Republican party?
38809Now, my friends, what was the Democratic party doing when the Republican party was doing these splendid things?
38809Now, some people say to me,"How long are you going to preach the doctrine of hate?"
38809Now, the question is: Can Congress make fifty cents''worth of silver worth one dollar?
38809Now, then, was there any necessity, during this war, to follow the example of our fathers?
38809Now, then, which section of this country will be the more apt to carry these ideas into execution?
38809Now, what did our fathers do?
38809Now, what do we want to do?
38809Now, what is a banker?
38809Now, why?
38809Now, will you let us be your friends?"
38809Of what use is it to allow the jury to bring in a verdict of"not guilty,"if the defendant is to be hung by a mob?
38809Oh, I forgot to ask the question,"If the Government can make money why should it collect taxes?"
38809One billion five hundred million dollars, and what is the condition of the country?
38809Or are you going to have it so poor that it will not be worth cornering?
38809Preacher, when I come to that day of judgment they will say,''What is your name?''
38809Seven long years of war-- fighting for what?
38809Shall I recount their sufferings?
38809Shall Mr. Bryan be the next President or shall McKinley occupy that chair?
38809Shall the men that said, This is not a Nation, have charge of the Nation?
38809Shall the men who saved the old flag hold it?
38809Shall the men who saved the ship of State sail it, or shall the rebels walk her quarter- deck, give the orders and sink it?
38809Shall the procession stop?
38809Shall we wait for the other fellows to catch up?
38809Some people have said,"How is it that you support Garfield, when he was a minister?"
38809Standing here amid the sacred memories of the first, on the golden threshold of the second, I ask, Will the second century be as grand as the first?
38809Suppose that the State does not do it; what then I say?
38809Suppose that we had done that during the last war?
38809Suppose the Governors and every man trample upon your rights, is the Nation then to let you be trampled upon?
38809Take all the men of wealth from Scotland-- who would know it?
38809That is not the worst of it, either; for after he got these negroes into the army he made a speech to them, and what did he say in that speech?
38809That is what it did, and what else?
38809That our fathers then made up their minds nevermore to be colonists and subjects, but that they would be free and independent citizens of America?
38809The fact that it is a legal tender?
38809The first is, Shall the people that saved this country rule it?
38809The man who bought it?
38809The moral side of this question?
38809The next question is, Shall we pay our debts?
38809The next question is, who shall have possession of this country-- the men that saved it,--or the men that sought to destroy it?
38809The next question is, will we protect the Union men in the South?
38809The next question is: Suppose the Government should issue a thousand millions of fiat money, how would it regulate the value thereof?
38809The present question is, whom shall we trust?
38809The question is, Shall that tramp and that dog gain possession of the White House?
38809The question is, Shall the men who endeavored to destroy this country rule it?
38809The question is, can you and I forget the past?
38809The question is,"How?"
38809The question was put to us in 1861:"Shall the majority rule?"
38809Then there is another question, and that is whether the Government has a right to protect itself?
38809Then who shall say what shall be done with what is produced except the producer?
38809There is another thing: Why is this city filled with palaces, covered with wealth?
38809There is another thing; do you want a Government of law or of brute force?
38809There they were, of every sort, and color and kind, and how was it that they came together?
38809They carried transparencies that said,"Is there money enough in the land to pay this nigger debt?
38809They did not interfere with the freedom of the press, did they?
38809They made the ratio 15 to 1, and who did it?
38809They said, why did we not appeal to law?
38809To a man who begs of you a breakfast you can not say,"Why do n''t you get a farm?"
38809To whom are we indebted for this wonderful change?
38809To whom shall we give the reins of power?
38809Upon whom would he rely?
38809Was he filled with enthusiasm?
38809Was it a Grand Jury?
38809Was it a Justice of the Peace?
38809Was it his sovereignty that made it valuable?
38809Was it not low- lived and contemptible?
38809Was that honest?
38809Was the blood shed in vain?
38809Was the country worth saving?
38809Well, can not we make dollars out of silver?
38809Well, if it is, what''s the use of wasting it making one dollar bills?
38809Well, we grew magnanimous, and let Dodds out of Fort Lafayette; and where do you suppose Dodds is now?
38809Well, what is a dollar?
38809Well, why do n''t you take it?
38809Were the lives given for naught?
38809What are the hopes, the emotions and the loves in its heart?
38809What are the ideas in its brain?
38809What are you now?
38809What became of the other sixty- six cents?
38809What can we do?
38809What class of people does the State have in its power?
38809What did our fathers do with them?
38809What did that mean?
38809What did the soldier leave when he went?
38809What did they do?
38809What did those wretches do?
38809What do the Democrats know on the subject of the tariff?
38809What do the Democrats want to do?
38809What do the people know about the wants of the nation?
38809What do they buy-- what does England sell?
38809What do they do?
38809What do they want in Mexico?
38809What do you propose to do?
38809What do you suppose Dodds is doing?
38809What do you want of their markets?
38809What does a simple soldier know about the wants of the city of New York?
38809What does he know about the wants of this great and splendid country?
38809What does he say to the Southern people, to the colored people?
38809What does that Government propose to give in exchange for that right?
38809What does the American purchase?
38809What does the General Government propose to give me in exchange for my allegiance?
38809What effect will that have?
38809What else do you want?
38809What else is in this platform?
38809What else were they fighting for?
38809What else were they fighting for?
38809What else would happen?
38809What else?
38809What else?
38809What else?
38809What for?
38809What for?
38809What gives it the value of a dollar?
38809What had they done?
38809What has it done?
38809What has it endeavored to do?
38809What has made this country?
38809What have the"enemies of silver"done since that time?
38809What is General Hancock for, besides the presidency?
38809What is a capitalist?
38809What is a dollar?
38809What is a reasonable price for labor?
38809What is he?
38809What is his plan?
38809What is it?
38809What is money?
38809What is the difference whether a man is in the penitentiary, or whether he is in the despotism of some European state?
38809What is the next question?
38809What is the next thing in this platform?
38809What is the use of stopping there?
38809What is the use of wasting all that silver?
38809What is this party?
38809What is to hinder?
38809What is your policy?
38809What kind of slavery?
38809What matters it where a man was born?
38809What more did they do?
38809What more did they do?
38809What more did they do?
38809What more did they do?
38809What more did they do?
38809What more had slavery done?
38809What more?
38809What more?
38809What more?
38809What more?
38809What next do they charge against us?
38809What next in this platform?
38809What next?
38809What next?
38809What part of this country believes in free speech-- the South or the North?
38809What party is most deserving of our confidence?
38809What party will best preserve the rights of the people?
38809What right has a newspaper in Indiana to talk against the cause for which your son is laying down his life on the field of battle?
38809What right has any man protected by the American flag to do all in his power to put it in the hands of the enemies of his country?
38809What right has any man to make it take thousands of men more to crush a rebellion?
38809What section of this country, what party, will give us honest money-- honor bright-- honor bright?
38809What shall we do?
38809What should the President do?
38809What then shall we say of the man that follows China, that follows India in the silver standard?
38809What to the followers of Sherman and Sheridan?
38809What was the Committee of Safety?
38809What was the first idea in its mind?
38809What was the next step?
38809What was the old idea?
38809What was to be done?
38809What will Congress do then?
38809What will you say of that Government if it says to him,"You must look to your State for protection"?
38809What would we be without labor?
38809What would we have been if we had remained colonists and subjects?
38809What would we have been to- day?
38809What would we have offered to the sailors under Farragut on condition that they would pass Forts St. Phillip and Jackson?
38809What would we have offered to the soldiers under Grant in the Wilderness?
38809What would we have said at the time?
38809What would you think of a man that wanted the date out of the note?
38809What, gentlemen, are your ideas?
38809What, if the North could have spoken, would it have said to the heroes of Gettysburg on the third day?
38809What, then, has labor added to the twelve thousand dollar locomotive?
38809When this great party came together in Chicago what was the first thing the convention did?
38809When we set out to put down the Rebellion the Democratic party started up all at once and said,"You are not going to interfere with slavery, are you?"
38809Where did this doctrine of a tariff for revenue only come from?
38809Where from?
38809Where is crime punished?
38809Where is innocence protected, in the North or in the South?
38809Where is there such a thing as a Republican mob to prevent the expression of an honest thought?
38809Where?
38809Which party can be trusted?
38809Which party said,"No, we must pay the promise made in war"?
38809Which party will be the more apt to achieve these grand and splendid things?
38809Which section can you trust?
38809Which section of our country can you trust the inestimable gem of free speech with?
38809Which section of this country will you trust?
38809Which will be the more apt to pay the debt?
38809Which will be the more apt to protect the colored and white loyalist at the South?
38809Who are the bondholders?
38809Who has a right to call for the protection of the United States?
38809Who has changed?
38809Who is Mr. Bryan?
38809Who is Samuel J. Tilden?
38809Who objects to a soldier going?
38809Who wants free trade?
38809Who were joyful when your brothers and your sons and your fathers lay dead on a field of battle that the country had lost?
38809Who, I say, will be injured by sending soldiers into the Southern States?
38809Whoever heard of a man playing poker that wanted to quit when he was a loser?
38809Whom for?
38809Whom were they to thus arrest and secure?
38809Whom will we trust to take care of free speech?
38809Whom would he call about him?
38809Why allow fiat money to fade out when a simple act of Congress can make it as good as gold?
38809Why did not this great statesman tell us of some"gradual and safe process"?
38809Why did we call them War Democrats?
38809Why do n''t you do it?
38809Why do n''t you make things and sell them in Central Africa, in China and Japan?
38809Why do not the Democrats and others want the Chinese to come here?
38809Why do they ask for free trade?
38809Why do you coin gold?
38809Why does a man invent?
38809Why does it not make what money it wants, take the taxes out, and give the balance to us?
38809Why envy a man that carries a hundred canes?
38809Why envy a man who has no earthly needs?
38809Why envy a man who has that which he can not use?
38809Why have you a right to take a rebel''s horse?
38809Why impose upon industry in that manner?
38809Why is it that New England, a rock- clad land, blossoms like a rose?
38809Why is it that New York is the Empire State of the great Union?
38809Why is it that the Democrats and others object to penitentiary labor?
38809Why is it that the Mexican dollar is worth only fifty cents?
38809Why is labor higher here than in Europe?
38809Why not buy the silver from him in the open market and let the Government make the million dollars?
38809Why not make a hundred million dollar bills and all be billionaires?
38809Why not make it 1 to 1?
38809Why not make it equal with gold and be done with it?
38809Why not pass a law that every man shall take every other man''s note?
38809Why should I make my heart a den of writhing, hissing snakes of envy?
38809Why should the sun borrow a candle?
38809Why should we envy the rich?
38809Why should we envy the rich?
38809Why should we envy the rich?
38809Why should we envy the rich?
38809Why should we envy the successful?
38809Why should we hate them?
38809Why should we put a million dollars in his pocket?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Why?
38809Will an honest man do it?
38809Will he rely on"a human intelligence at the helm,"or on"the central reservoir,"or on some"gradual and safe process"?
38809Will the Nation hear only the cry of the oppressor, or will it heed the cry of the oppressed?
38809Will the bugles of the great army of civilization never sound even a halt?
38809Wipe their names from the pages of history, and who would miss them?
38809Would he like to be rich?
38809Would he like to have a million?
38809Would n''t a Democrat have had a hard scramble for victuals if we had carried out that idea?
38809Would our fathers have been brutal enough, if he had not been killed, to put him back into slavery?
38809Would that farmer pay his debt with five hundred bushels and consider himself an honest man?
38809Yes, we have, and what are you Democrats going to do about it?
38809You might as well say,"Why do n''t you start a line of steamships?"
38809[ A Voice--"How about Longstreet?"]
38809[ A voice--"Who was the man?"]
38809[ A voice:"How about free schools?"]
38809[ A voice:"Who was that?"]
38809and also the balance of that question:"Shall the minority submit?"
38809but"Are you Democratic or Republican?"
38809i, p. 22, Do you hear that, Democrat?
8145''What, then, is incumbent upon us, his countrymen? 8145 For God''s sake, tell me,"said he, in a letter to Colonel Humphreys,"what is the cause of all these commotions?
8145What must have been the recollections that crowded on the mind of Washington during this triumphant progress? 8145 What was to be the future of that nation?
8145While we were fixed in silent grief, Mrs. Washington, who was sitting at the foot of the bed, asked, with a firm and collected voice,''Is he gone?'' 8145 A country willing to redress your wrongs, cherish your worth, and reward your services? 8145 And for what is all this? 8145 And for what is this done? 8145 And now much easier will it be to disperse the factions which are rushing to this catastrophe than to subdue them after they shall appear in arms? 8145 Are not their interests inseparably connected with those of their constituents? 8145 Bromfield called out,Who commands in this fort?"
8145But how are they to be promoted?
8145But is this sense of honor consistent with the spirit of plunder or the practice of murder?
8145But who are they to defend?
8145But why should I expect to be free from censure, the unfailing lot of an elevated station?
8145But would the superintendence of this work break in too much on the sweets of retirement and repose?
8145But, it was added, if so much power followed the assumption as the objection implies, is it not time to ask-- is it safe to forbear assuming?
8145By the rotation of appointment, must they not mingle frequently with the mass of citizens?
8145Can he be a friend to the army?
8145Can he be a friend to this country?
8145Can it be, that Providence has not connected the permanent felicity of a nation with its virtue?
8145Can it flow from mercenary motives?
8145Can it well be otherwise in a country so extensive, so diversified in its interests?
8145Can you then consent to be the only sufferers by this Revolution, and, retiring from the field, grow old in poverty, wretchedness, and contempt?
8145Could Congress exert them for the detriment of the people, without injuring themselves in an equal or greater proportion?
8145Do they proceed from licentiousness, British influence disseminated by the Tories, or real grievances which admit of redress?
8145For how were the debtor States to be compelled to pay the balances which should be found against them?
8145For what ties, let me ask, should we have upon those people?
8145Have you not more than once suggested your wishes and made known your wants to Congress?
8145He then looked at me again and said,''Do you understand me?''
8145He thus addressed them:"You have been taken by General Carleton, and he has used you with great humanity, would you be inclined to fight against him?"
8145How have you been answered?
8145I often asked myself, as our carriages separated, whether that was the last sight I ever should have of you?
8145If assuming tends to consolidation, is the reverse, tending to disunion, a less weighty objection?
8145If he answers in the affirmative, can you do this on these terms?"
8145If the former, why are not the powers of the government tried at once?
8145If the latter, why was redress delayed until the public mind had become so much agitated?
8145Is it not time to retract from error and benefit by experience?
8145Is there a doubt whether a common government can embrace so large a sphere?
8145Is this the case?
8145It has placed her in the chair of independency; and peace returns again to bless-- whom?
8145Nay, further, would there not even be some apparent foundation for the two former charges?
8145Or do we want further proof of the ruinous system we have pertinaciously adhered to?"
8145Or is it rather a country that tramples upon your rights, disdains your cries, and insults your distresses?
8145Or leave matters as they are if there is no power in the executive to alter the place legally?
8145Our wives, our children, our farms and other property, which we leave behind us?
8145Pray, would not the word curiosity answer as well?
8145Rather is he not an insidious foe?
8145Religion and morality enjoin this conduct, and can it be that good policy does not equally enjoin it?
8145Simply state facts and say that I will meet the members at the time and place just mentioned for ulterior arrangements?
8145Such a"Clarum et venerabile nomen gentibus?"
8145The terms, I think, were these:''I desire to know, sir, what is the reason, whence arises this disorder and confusion?''
8145To bring the object we seek nearer?
8145To his past services and to unquestionable?
8145Under such propitious circumstances what mortal could doubt of success?
8145Washington, on his coming up, asked,"Will you command on this ground or not?
8145What can this writer have in view, by recommending such measures?
8145What makes ambition virtue?
8145What must the world think of such conduct, and of the government of the United States in submitting to it?
8145What then is to be done?
8145What then is to become of the army this winter?
8145When, in July( 1796), Washington proposed to declare publicly his determination, Hamilton wrote to him,"If a storm gathers, how can you retreat?
8145Who that is a sincere friend to it can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?
8145Why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation?
8145Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground?
8145Will it not be their wisdom to rely for the preservation of these advantages on the Union by which they were procured?
8145Will they not henceforth be deaf to those advisers, if such there are, who would sever them from their brethren and connect them with aliens?
8145for all this to the rent of the house in its original state for the two years that I am to hold it?
8145is it rendered impossible by its vices?
8145or can it prompt to cruel deeds?"
8145to call into civilized alliance the wild and inhuman inhabitant of the woods?
8145to delegate to the merciless Indian the defense of disputed rights and to wage the horrors of his barbarous war against our brethren?
8145who besides a Tory could have foreseen, or a Briton have predicted them?
42863"celebrating a great festival?
42863a dunce?
42863found on the grass?
42863irritating?
42863named for a bird?
42863named for a month?
42863used for bedding cattle?
42863used for making ladies''dresses?
42863used in sewing?
42863How do I know so much, you ask? 42863 Novanglus"was the pen- name signed By what President of cultured mind?
42863Somehow-- anyway I want to hear the old band play Sich tunes as''John Brown''s body,''and''Sweet Alice,''do n''t you know? 42863 is melancholy?
42863should be respected for its age? 42863 ''K- kind sir, may I have M- Mary Jane?'' 42863 ( Abraham Lincoln) What is Li Hung Chang credited with being? 42863 ( Anchorage) What age is necessary to the clergyman? 42863 ( Astor) What is the chair- boy likely to do to the old lady he has to push on a hot day? 42863 ( Average) What is the age people are stuck on? 42863 ( Beecher) What does a ship do to a seasick man? 42863 ( Beverage) What is the most indigestible age? 42863 ( Bragg) What do the waves do to a vessel wrecked near shore? 42863 ( Buchanan) Tippecanoe? 42863 ( Coinage) What age is shared by the doctor and the thief? 42863 ( Connecticut) The Empire State? 42863 ( Connecticut) The Keystone State? 42863 ( Courage) What age is required on the high seas? 42863 ( Custer) What did Isaac watch while his father was forging a chain? 42863 ( Damage) At what age are vessels to ride safe? 42863 ( Delaware) The Bay State? 42863 ( Delaware) The Creole State? 42863 ( Dewey) What does Aguinaldo keep between himself and the Americans? 42863 ( Dolly Madison) What was Mrs. Lincoln''s name before marriage? 42863 ( Dotage) To what age do most women look forward with anxiety? 42863 ( Early) When Max O''Rell gets on a platform what does he do? 42863 ( Espionage) To what age will people arrive if they live long enough? 42863 ( Fillmore) In the settlement of disputes, do the European nations quarrel? 42863 ( Garfield) Northern Man with Southern Principles? 42863 ( Garrison) What did the Jews say when the mother of Samuel passed? 42863 ( General Lee) The towns taken by the British generally lacked the what? 42863 ( Homage) What age is slavery? 42863 ( Hostage) What age is most enjoyed at the morning meal? 42863 ( Illinois) The Lone Star State? 42863 ( Illinois) The Sucker State? 42863 ( Image) What age is not less or more? 42863 ( Indiana) The Nutmeg State? 42863 ( Iowa) The Green Mountain State? 42863 ( J. Q. Adams) Canal Boy? 42863 ( Jackson) Old Man Eloquent? 42863 ( Jackson) What early President besides Washington married a widow called Martha? 42863 ( Kentucky) The Blue Hen State? 42863 ( Kitchener) What do you do when you drive a slow horse? 42863 ( Lincoln) Hero of New Orleans? 42863 ( Lincoln) Rough and Ready? 42863 ( Longstreet) What does a Chinese lover say when he proposes? 42863 ( Louisa K. Johnson, of Maryland) What President had a troubled love affair and marriage? 42863 ( Louisiana) The Corn Cracker State? 42863 ( Maine) The Mother of States? 42863 ( Maine) The Prairie State? 42863 ( Maize[ maze]) What vegetables should see a great deal, and why? 42863 ( Mark Hanna) In Cairo purchases are made at a what? 42863 ( Marriage) What age has the soldier often to find? 42863 ( Mileage) What is the age now popular for charity? 42863 ( Miles) What happens when the wind blows in spiders''houses? 42863 ( Miss Mary Todd) Name three early Presidents who married widows? 42863 ( Monroe) Whom did John Q. Adams marry? 42863 ( Mr. Rhodes) What did the Emperor of China do when the Empress usurped the throne? 42863 ( Mucilage) What age is both profane and destructive? 42863 ( New York) The Diamond State? 42863 ( North Carolina) The Hawkeye State? 42863 ( Ohio) The Palmetto State? 42863 ( Parsonage) What age is one of communication? 42863 ( Pea[ p]) A boy, a letter, and a part of the body? 42863 ( Pennsylvania) The Buckeye State? 42863 ( Pillage) What age do we all wish for? 42863 ( Polk) When do you get up to see a sunrise? 42863 ( Postage) What age is most important to travelers by rail? 42863 ( Rockefeller) What did Uncle Sam do when he wanted to know whether England would let him mediate? 42863 ( Schley) The lane that has no turning is a what? 42863 ( South Carolina) The Pine Tree State? 42863 ( Speaker Reed) What does a waiter do after he has filled half of the glasses at a table? 42863 ( Texas) The Lumber State? 42863 ( Tomato[ Tom- a- toe]) Yielding water, and connections? 42863 ( Tonnage) What age are we forbidden to worship? 42863 ( Vermont) The Freestone State? 42863 ( Vermont) The Granite State? 42863 ( Virginia) The Mother of Presidents? 42863 ( Virginia) The Old Dominion? 42863 ( Virginia) The Old North State? 42863 ( W. H. Harrison) Honest Abe? 42863 ( Washington, Jefferson, and Madison) What early President married a New York girl? 42863 ( Webster) What did Buller unfortunately do? 42863 ( Wheeler) What is a novel military name for a cook? 42863 10. Who President again became Just four year after resigning the name? 42863 10. Who saidThe harvest is past, the summer is ended, and we are not saved"?
4286311. Who sang at the ceremony?
4286311. Who was the mother of Samuel?
4286312. Who commanded the gates of Jerusalem to be closed on the Sabbath?
4286314. Who, when his oath of office he took, Was known as"The Wizard of Kinderhook"?
4286315. Who waxed fat and kicked?
4286315. Who, after his inaugural vow, Turned round to kiss his mother''s brow?
4286317. Who in the Quaker City neat Their oaths of office did repeat?
4286320. Who only as President and Commander- in- Chief Has stood on the battle- field planning relief?
4286320. Who showed them the sights of Venice?
428633_ Heroes and heroines-- in what books do they figure?_ KEY 1.
428634. Who was called"a ready scribe in the law of Moses"?
428635. Who in his New York home did take The oath which doth a President make?
428636. Who to his inaugural hied His good and faithful horse astride?
428636. Who was the author of the expression,"What hath God wrought?"
428638. Who to his inaugural came disguised, For fear of mischief ill- advised?
428638. Who was Moses''brother?
428639. Who was wounded in Trenton town When Washington put the Hessians down?
428639. Who went down into a pit on a snowy day and slew a lion?
42863Again, the hostess may prepare a certain number of blank cards, with the heading on each one"Who and What?"
42863Also pinned to the pie was this verse: When this pie is opened The birds begin to sing?
42863Am I growing blind?
42863And the sad tree when schoolmasters hold?
42863And the tree like an Irish nurse?
42863And the tree neither up nor down hill?
42863And the tree that bears a curse?
42863And the tree that forbids you to die?
42863And the tree that guides ships to go forth?
42863And the tree that is nearest the sea?
42863And the tree that makes one sad?
42863And the tree that will never stand still?
42863And the tree that''s the warmest clad?
42863And the tree we may use as a quill?
42863And the tree where ships may be?
42863And the tree whose wood faces the north?
42863And what each must become ere he''s old?
42863And what round itself doth entwine?
42863At the wedding what Spanish girl was maid of honor?
42863At what sort of party did they meet?
42863At what time of day was it?
42863BEAN SOCIABLE_ Have you ever"bean"to a"bean"sociable?
42863Because March fourth on Sunday came, Who, for one day, deferred their claim?
42863Below is the list of questions and answers used in the contest, which may be lengthened or shortened at will: Which cake did the society woman buy?
42863By the death of Garfield?
42863Ca n''t some one speak up and explain this mystery, or at least tell us what to do to celebrate Christmas?"
42863Can you tell a harrowing tale?
42863Could I bear to find a hairpin Sticking in my shaving- mug?
42863Could I have my choice Havanas Bandied all about the place, Strewn around like cheap bananas, Looked upon as a disgrace?
42863Could I see my bachelor treasures Sniffed at by a scornful dame?
42863Decimal state?
42863Decorate the room with mottoes, such as:"Is there no balm in Israel, is there no physician there?"
42863Do you know your letters?
42863During the administration of what President did the Louisiana purchase and Burr''s treason occur?
42863During what administration did the annexation of Texas and the Mexican war take place?
42863Each pupil before being assigned a seat was interrogated by the teacher somewhat as follows: In what state and country were you born?
42863For actors?
42863For athletes?
42863For beggars?
42863For chauffeurs?
42863For crowds?
42863For greedy people?
42863For happy people?
42863For home lovers?
42863For hungry people?
42863For hypocrites?
42863For nations?
42863For odd people?
42863For office seekers?
42863For reporters?
42863For telegraph operators?
42863For truthful people?
42863For unhappy people?
42863For wild beasts?
42863For wise people?
42863Hall?
42863How do we dislike to grow?
42863How far can you count?
42863How long will Samuel Lover?
42863How many readers will be able to credit the following to the proper sources?
42863How old was Methuselah when he died?
42863I am content"?
42863I wonder what Tabby the---- to now?
42863If I ask you to accept me, And my lonely life to bless, Will you?
42863If a young man would win what should he do?
42863If a young man would win, what must he do?
42863In Northeast Italy what grand affair did they attend?
42863It ca n''t be that any of you children have been so naughty that he thinks we do n''t deserve a visit from him, can it?
42863It is very mysterious; I never heard of the like before-- no, never----"Well, what are we going to do about it, anyway?
42863Meat, what are you doing in the oven?
42863More than once I''ve been moved to propound the fond query,''Wo n''t you tell me you love me, my beautiful dearie?''
42863Not a state for the untidy?
42863Now tell me what was a poor maiden to do, Who could n''t, to save her, make choice''tween the two?
42863Number nine speaks as follows:"Could I give up all the pleasures That a single man may claim?
42863Oh, shall I call thee bird, Or but a wandering voice?
42863Or a pair of high- heeled slippers Lying on my Persian rug?
42863PRESIDENTIAL QUESTIONS What President had a son who became President?
42863SPINNING PARTY"Will you walk into my parlor?"
42863STATE NICKNAMES Which is the Hoosier State?
42863So if you wear a number 10 You owe us 20, see?
42863State of astonishment?
42863State of exclamation?
42863State to cure the sick?
42863That half- given to doctors when ill?
42863The Bryan man?
42863The artist?
42863The best state in time of flood?
42863The candidate for office?
42863The champion?
42863The dairyman?
42863The farmer?
42863The father of states?
42863The following were the questions: 1. Who were the bride and groom?
42863The fond mamma for her daughter?
42863The gossip?
42863The grocer?
42863The hostess then asked"What was the heroine called?"
42863The initials of what President''s name Stand for a phrase which made his fame?
42863The jockey?
42863The list of nicknames is as follows: Rail- splitter of the West?
42863The maiden aunt?
42863The mean man?
42863The milliner?
42863The minister?
42863The most Asiatic?
42863The most egotistical?
42863The most maidenly?
42863The most unhealthy state?
42863The most useful in haying time?
42863The name of what flower did Johnny''s mother use when she told him to rise?
42863The name of what flower is used every day in a slang expression?
42863The name of what flower means comfort?
42863The politician?
42863The pretty girls?
42863The schoolgirl?
42863The sculptor?
42863The shoemaker?
42863The small boys?
42863The story progressed thus: What was the hero''s name?
42863The tramp?
42863The tree that we offer to friends when we meet?
42863The young man for his sweetheart?
42863They can answer questions in a little, fine voice, or say,"How do you do?"
42863This is the list that the questioner reads, omitting, of course, the answers: Why did England so often lose her way in South Africa?
42863Under what President was the War of 1812 begun?
42863WHICH IS YOUR AGE What is the best age for a girl or boy?
42863Was I to be caught in the snare of a curl, And dangle through life in a dizzy whirl?
42863What Miss can destroy the peace of home, school and nation?
42863What Miss causes her mother sorrow?
42863What Miss causes in turn amusements and quarrels?
42863What Miss gives unreliable information?
42863What Miss is distinguished as uncivil and ill- bred?
42863What Miss is distrustful of human nature?
42863What Miss is not always honest?
42863What Miss is provoking and a blunderer?
42863What Miss is responsible for gross errors?
42863What Miss is unhappy?
42863What Miss is untruthful?
42863What Miss meets with ill- luck and delay?
42863What Miss proves an uncertain correspondent?
42863What Miss should the traveler shun?
42863What Miss undervalues her opportunities?
42863What Miss wastes times and money?
42863What President fought the last battle of the War of 1812?
42863What President outlined a famous foreign policy?
42863What President served but thirty days Ere death dissolved his term of praise?
42863What President, renowned for spleen, Joined the Continentals when fourteen?
42863What President, son of a President, Was known as"The Old Man Eloquent"?
42863What Presidents served as generals in the Mexican war?
42863What Vice- President became President by the death of Taylor?
42863What ailed Harriet Beecher Stowe?
42863What ant hires his home?
42863What ant is a beggar?
42863What ant is an officer?
42863What ant is angry?
42863What ant is joyful?
42863What ant is learned?
42863What ant is obstinate?
42863What ant is prayerful?
42863What ant is proud?
42863What ant is successful?
42863What ant is trustworthy?
42863What ant is well- informed?
42863What ant is youngest?
42863What ant lives in a house?
42863What ant points out things?
42863What ant sees things?
42863What ant tells things?
42863What berry is red when it''s green?
42863What by cockneys is turned into wine?
42863What city is for few people?
42863What city was saved from famine by lepers?
42863What did Charles Dudley Warner?
42863What did Eugene Fitch Ware?
42863What did Julia McNair Wright?
42863What did he say?
42863What did he then bid her?
42863What did she say?
42863What did the band play when he came home?
42863What did the band play?
42863What did the soldier say when he bade his sweetheart good- bye?
42863What dies only with life?
42863What dies only with life?
42863What does Anthony Hope?
42863What does a maid''s heart crave?
42863What does a maiden''s heart crave?
42863What does an angry person often raise?
42863What does an angry person often raise?
42863What does the---- to?
42863What field flower is something to eat and a dish we drink from?
42863What first lady of the land fled from Washington to escape the British?
42863What flower did Alice Cary?
42863What flower is most popular in April?
42863What four Germans were the ushers?
42863What gentleman of dark complexion rescued them?
42863What gives John Howard Payne?
42863What happens when John Kendrick Bangs?
42863What historical people entertained them in France?
42863What hotel in New York city bears the name of a flower?
42863What is James Warden Owen?
42863What is a good receipt for hoe cake?
42863What is a hoe used for?
42863What is a suitable adjective for the national library building?
42863What is it William Macy?
42863What is the favorite nut in Ohio?
42863What is the mason''s favorite nut?
42863What is the matter with my eyes?
42863What is the oldest ant?
42863What is the ruling ant?
42863What is the saddest flower?
42863What is the tree That makes each townsman flee?
42863What is the true mission of a harrow?
42863What is the wandering ant?
42863What mythological personage presided over the music?
42863What noted Swiss was best man?
42863What noted bells were rung in honor of the wedding?
42863What noted person from Japan was present?
42863What nut can not the farmer go to town without?
42863What nut grows nearest the sea?
42863What nut grows on the Amazon?
42863What nut grows the lowest?
42863What nut is good for naughty boys?
42863What nut is like a Chinaman''s eyes?
42863What nut is like a good Jersey cow?
42863What nut is like a naughty boy when sister has a beau?
42863What nut is like an oft told tale?
42863What nut is the color of a pretty girl''s eyes?
42863What ship did they take for their wedding trip?
42863What should all literary people do?
42863What should all literary people do?
42863What strange thing is this?
42863What three Presidents were assassinated?
42863What two Presidents died the same day?
42863What two ladies( friends of Donizetti''s) were bridesmaids?
42863What virtue sustained them in captivity?
42863What was he called?
42863What was she called?
42863What was the bride called-- from the circumstances of her wedding?
42863What was their motto?
42863What will turn John Locke?
42863What would this umbrella bring If we changed to hippetty- hop And our hostess called out''stop''?"
42863What would we consider the person who answers correctly all these questions?
42863What would we prefer to be?
42863What''s the tree that in death will benight you?
42863When death first made vacant a President''s chair, What Vice- President succeeded there?
42863When did Mary Mapes Dodge?
42863When did Thomas Buchanan Read?
42863When did he propose?
42863When is Marian Evans Cross?
42863When on the voyage who captured them?
42863When we leave here we go to our what?
42863When we leave here we go to seek our what?
42863Where did Henry Cabot Lodge?
42863Where did he go?
42863Where did he spend that night?
42863Where did they always remain?
42863Where did they make their home?
42863Where did they meet?
42863Where there is no such word as fail?
42863Where was he born?
42863Where was she born?
42863Where were they married?
42863Which Chief Magistrate was styled"The American Fabius"of the wild?
42863Which President, most grave and wary, Was called"Old Public Functionary"?
42863Which is the most religious state?
42863Who built the ark?
42863Who furnished the music?
42863Who furnished the wedding feast?
42863Who was the fifteenth President of the United States?
42863Who was the first man?
42863Who were the bridesmaids?
42863Whose flock was Moses tending when he saw the burning bush?
42863Whose phaeton, made from ship of state, Conveyed him to inaugural fête?
42863Whose three daughters were the fairest in all the land?
42863Why did Helen Hunt Jackson?
42863Why is George Canning?
42863Why is Sarah Grand?
42863Why was Rider Haggard?
42863Will you?
42863Will you?"
42863With how many men did Gideon conquer the Midianites?
42863Would I want my meditations Broken up by cries of fright At a mouse or daddy- long- legs, Or some other fearful sight?
42863[_ Rubbing his eyes again._]"Do you see any?
42863supply?
45771''And why? 45771 ''Are you the father?''
45771''But must I-- must I die? 45771 ''But you did find help, somewhere?''
45771''But, tell me,''I continued,''how it fared with you? 45771 ''I am going to put him down for the three hundredth,''said Peleg;''do ye hear that, Bildad?
45771''My strength is made perfect in weakness''--''Is not that said?'' 45771 ''Shall I go?''
45771''Then will you try to make a friend of me? 45771 ''Then, you have heard his most unhappy history?''
45771''Who shall assure us of that? 45771 A house of charity, then?"
45771Ah Randal, Randal, is this the frankness of friendship? 45771 Am I among traitors or loyal soldiers?"
45771And do you know that, Miss Ella?
45771And how am I to got to America? 45771 And my own portion?
45771And she accepted the charity; she received the alms?
45771And that one-- that one-- that young creature, whose funeral-- Do you know her? 45771 And the Emperor consented?"
45771And what made me lose so important though so ineffectual an ally?
45771And you would marry Frank if the dower was secured?
45771Any one you would wish to be sent for?
45771Any thing more you would wish to have done?
45771Are you going to turn me out into the street?
45771Attempt my life? 45771 But do you not overrate the value of my aid?"
45771But grant that my heart shrunk from the task you imposed on me, would it not have been natural? 45771 But how can I aid this marriage?"
45771But how win that in despite of the father?
45771But is what you say quite true?
45771But still,she said coldly,"you enjoy one- half of those ample revenues-- why talk, then, of suicide and ruin?"
45771But who can stand against such wealth as Egerton''s-- no doubt backed, too, by the Treasury purse?
45771Can you doubt it?
45771Cards-- was it? 45771 Did I blush?"
45771Did she never mention me?
45771Did you observe,asked the police officer,"if one of the men was tall and strongly made and had red hair, and the other short and high- shouldered?"
45771Do I tire you with relating these things?
45771Do you hear the impudence of the black rascal? 45771 Do you remember, marquis, the day-- or rather the night-- on which we met for the first time?
45771For,as the apostle queries very wisely,"if he love not man, whom he hath seen, how can he love God, whom he hath not seen?"
45771Give you what? 45771 Go on,"cried Ella, impatiently;"what became of you?"
45771Good God, whom?
45771Here is help, madame,said I;"what is the matter-- tell me?"
45771How long did you stay there?
45771How?
45771How?
45771I enjoy them at the pleasure of the crown; and what if it be the pleasure of the crown to recall our cousin, and reinstate him in his possessions?
45771I feel that I shall die, my dear friend,said she to me one day,"and I have some few requests to make of you; you will not marry again-- will you?"
45771Is he poor, or is he extravagant?
45771Is he? 45771 Is it you, Eugenie?"
45771Is there any one you would wish to have sent for?
45771Julian Winstanley----"He who won the steeple- chase yesterday? 45771 Mademoiselle?"
45771Message!--what message?
45771Mine? 45771 My sister,"replied the Count,"do I look like a man who saved?
45771Now you upbraid me,said the Count, unruffled by her sudden passion,"because I gave you in marriage to a man young and noble?"
45771Of whom am I speaking? 45771 Of whom are you talking, man?"
45771Papa,she said,"promise me that you will never-- never-- never again----""Do what?"
45771Repent while my whole soul is writhing with agony? 45771 Shall I pass on to others?
45771She became your wife?
45771The father had, then, taken part in some political disaffections, and was proscribed?
45771Then I am alone in the world?
45771Then who is to maintain me? 45771 Then you prefer the other scheme?
45771Then your hip_ does_ hurt you?
45771Then, madame,said I,"your friend is, in fact, penniless?"
45771There is a_ probability_, then, of that pardon? 45771 There was at that time a young_ danseuse_ on those boards who attracted my attention: she was called, I believe, Zephirine; do you remember her?"
45771Was Jem drunk when he upset his coach the other night?
45771Well?
45771Were you not speaking of her?
45771What are you about? 45771 What matters?
45771What means this inaction at a moment of danger?
45771What on earth makes you think so?
45771What''s that you say, you Nigger?
45771What, then, is the meaning of this?
45771What_ are_ you talking about, Matty?
45771Where am I, and what is it?
45771Where is the lover,added M. de Marigny,"who, under like circumstances, does not redouble all the oaths his mistress seems to doubt?
45771Where now,it was asked,"are his magniloquent professions of philanthropy, his self- devotedness, and his zeal in the cause of India?"
45771Which is Emily''s room?
45771Which is her room?
45771Who cares how such as_ you_ serve their sisters?
45771Who is there?
45771Who is there?
45771Who was she? 45771 Who you call Nigger, eh?
45771Who-- who-- who?
45771Whom do you mean, sir?
45771Why should I have told you? 45771 Why,"said I to myself,"should I not be able to love this pretty girl whom they propose I should marry?
45771Why-- why did she come here?
45771Why? 45771 Yes, mademoiselle; where is she?"
45771You are her father?
45771You did?
45771You do-- you are sure you do?
45771You don''t?--you are sure you do n''t? 45771 You have?"
45771You saw the Emperor?
45771You then, of course,said I, interrupting his narrative for a moment,"demanded an explanation of her terrible confession?"
45771You will not have me die, then?
45771You will restore my fortune?
45771You will?
45771You wish, Ella, to preserve this worthless life? 45771 Your mistress?"
45771''Do you think the living God is a buzzard idol,''sternly asks Milton,''that you dare address Him in this manner?''
45771''Where is the mother?''
45771--she had lost all other terror before that of horrible suspicion which had seized her--"what are you about?
45771A charity girl?
45771A few days after our marriage she said to me,"My dear marquis, I used formerly to go sometimes to the theatre of Audinet-- did you?"
45771An idea struck me:"Do you know anything of the language of flowers?"
45771And again--"Would it be dangerous to recognize the soul of a chambermaid?
45771And have you not found the great, the only true reality, at the bottom?''
45771And how were these little children educated?
45771And that was--?"
45771And then turn your eyes in an opposite direction; look at the wealthy and the noble of mature age, enter their houses, and what will you see and hear?
45771And who, amongst all your adorers, can offer you a lot so really enviable as the one whom, I see by your blush, you already guess that I refer to?"
45771And why need such works irritate our entire public_ now_?
45771And why, pray-- and what, pray, am I saying so mighty bad, Mrs. Matty?
45771Are their hearts oppressed by misfortune?
45771Are you sure it was Stringer?"
45771At last he said,"Tell me where I am?"
45771Brother, brother-- what, indeed, do I owe to you?
45771But afterwards, how am I to live?
45771But can there be the remotest semblance of truth in them?
45771But what Cimon would not be refined by so fair an Iphigenia?
45771But what house is this?"
45771But where was that to be?
45771But whither would he have us fly?
45771But, in spite of the old adage,"What''s in a name?"
45771But, you foolish girl, what do you gain by closing one exit, when there are open ten thousand as good?"
45771Can any thing be done?"
45771Did I say I hated him?"
45771Did she never speak of either of us?"
45771Did you never hear that I had a father living?''
45771Did you not say so?"
45771Do not you know me?
45771Do you imagine it to be possible that there can be in the world two men so heartless-- so utterly devoid of honor?"
45771Do you know how this was done?"
45771Does an iceberg write in that strain, we should like to know?
45771Does the apparition of these outrages glare upon this grave-- outrages too ignoble to notice, too painful to recognize?
45771Ella turned away contemptuously, with a gesture that expressed"was that all?"
45771Every soul in the house is now buried in sleep; why should I not steal down to the library and gratify my indomitable curiosity?
45771Fatherless and motherless, whom had my childhood to love and obey but you?"
45771Had he never seen a funeral with white plumes before in his life?
45771Had not M. de Fosseux deserved his fate?
45771Had she meant to give me an awful warning of the fate which awaited me if I proved as faithless as M. de Fosseux?
45771Have you considered at what expense?"
45771Have you not sadly failed me in the task I imposed on your regard for my interests?
45771Her lips moved as she said,''Do I understand your silence rightly?''
45771How can I know it now?
45771How had my heart and mind been able to engender such frightful calumnies against the best of women?
45771How was it?''
45771How will it become him to live now?
45771How?"
45771I ask you, for you know well, be it pride or be it self- devotion, what have I ever required in return for my love?
45771I can not say to the man who woos me,''Will you pay the debts of the daughter of Franzini, and the widow of di Negra?''"
45771I hope it is n''t true that you feign sickness not to play with your sister?"
45771I will never abandon you--_never_----""And who is talking of_ you_, marquis?"
45771If it be a breach of hospitality, it is surely a venial one?
45771If not-- ah, he is of a character that perplexes me in all but his worldly ambition; and how can we foreigners influence him through_ that_?"
45771If so, from what source had my imagination drawn these bloody horrors?
45771In a word have you been in earnest-- or have you not had some womanly pleasure in amusing yourself and abusing my trust?"
45771Is he looking there?
45771Is it not some years since you first came to England on the mission of discovering these worthy relatives of ours?
45771Is that true?
45771Is there firm land, be it ever so distant?
45771Is there no hope?--no doubt?--no opening for pause or hesitation?"
45771Is there not some ancient poet who says that"Jove laughs at lovers''perjuries?"
45771Lionel!--is it possible?"
45771Matty, where''s Nurse?"
45771Meanwhile if it be not impertinent, pray, where is enlightenment marching to?"
45771Now, marquis, what did such perfidy deserve?
45771Of these he inquired which was the true religion?
45771Policeman, had n''t you best get a stretcher, and carry him to the workhouse or to the hospital?"
45771Shall I write?"
45771She put down her work and went up to Clementina, saying,"What ails you, Miss?
45771Short?"
45771Surely you know too well the nature of your kinsman?"
45771Surely, then, this is the auspicious moment to obtain the sanction of the Church to our union?"
45771That is to say, my note of hand; and how much do you think that is worth, my girl?
45771The little_ Bouquetière_ was becoming proud-- becoming a lady;--but how?
45771The next consideration was-- what was to be done?
45771Then how does he promise to welcome Macænas when he came to sup with him?
45771Then she died at last in the hospital?"
45771Thus Horace asks Bacchus whither he is about to transport him?
45771Too bad, eh?
45771Was it, then, a dream-- a frightful illusion, and the mere forerunner of my illness?
45771Wat you sink of dat, hey?"
45771Well?"
45771What can grow out of such a life, that is really wholesome and good?
45771What can the old gentleman expect, if he will thus tantalize his guests?"
45771What could be more base and dishonorable than to abandon so fond and devoted a woman?
45771What do you mean?"
45771What does the Roman teach?
45771What else could his majesty do?
45771What has been my advice to you for these several days past?
45771What hell dis?"
45771What is a bill of sale?"
45771What is five thousand a year, when a man spends six?
45771What is she to do?
45771What other man could be capable of a similar crime-- of such base perfidy?
45771What say you to him, Blake, with your considering face?
45771What should I attempt my life for?"
45771What was a woman to do who had asked nothing, exacted nothing, and to whom so much had been promised?
45771What was her state of mind as regarded her mother-- her father-- and her lover?"
45771What was to become of her?
45771What would become of Hamlet?
45771What would you?"
45771What you trike poor debil for?
45771What?
45771When I come to myself, where was I?"
45771Where is he who would hesitate to swear that he is the most truthful and constant of men?
45771Which is her room?"
45771Who could think of that?"
45771Who shall say?
45771Who would not vow_ eternal_ love to_ such_ a woman?"
45771Who''ll come and hear Harry Blake?
45771Who, in the name of goodness, is Julian Winstanley?
45771Why did he make a sudden pause?
45771Why did his heart quiver?
45771Why did you come in to interrupt me, girl?"
45771Why make it a point of duty to mix my ashes with theirs?
45771Why regard yourself as the cause of an unhappy event to which you yourself had so nearly fallen a victim?
45771Why should I go and die amidst ancestral tombs?
45771Why then should I suffer them to affect me in the least?
45771Why was virtue made so hard, and self- indulgence so enticing?
45771Why, who does not know it?
45771Why_ ca n''t_ you brighten up a little, and come and play?
45771Will you aid me then-- yes or no?
45771Will you believe that I said nothing of all this to Mademoiselle d''Ermay?
45771Will you have done?
45771You used to love us, papa----""Do you know what has happened?"
45771You?
45771and above all-- where?
45771and how am I to live there when I am there?
45771and what was to become of you?"
45771and when are their issues known?''
45771any thing about_ her_--?"
45771but who can command this faith?''
45771did they keep a shop?"
45771he called out, in such a passion,''would you beg money from the lady to spend in more gin?
45771he cried,--"Which is Emily''s room?"
45771he cried-- one short touch of nature had reached him at last--"what are you talking of?"
45771he must have more than that?''
45771he_ is_ charming, is not he?"
45771my dear young lady, have you drank so deep of the cup of sorrow?
45771of whom are you speaking?
45771or is the wild waste of waters, seething, warring round as far as eye can reach, our only hope?
45771said the Count with a visible impatience,"is there anything in the attainment of your object that should render you indifferent to mine?
45771the pilot- stars, shining fitfully through the parting of the storm- clouds, our only guidance?
45771till you give me--""What?"
45771was the remark she made;"but was she only an apothecary''s wife,"she went on;"and was her name Stringer?
45771what are you about?
45771what are you thinking about?"
45771what do you mean?
45771what do you mean?"
45771what is that?"
45771what is to be done?
45771what is to become of us all?"
45771what ladies?"
45771what must I do?"
45771what-- what shall we do?
45771who could she be?"
45771why should I have disturbed your dream of happiness, my dear Ella?
45771why?
45771will you let me alone?"
45771would''st thou know All the raptures that do flow From those sweet compulsive rules Of our ancient drinking schools?
45771you want to hear all about it, do you?
54451And do you ever go without him?
54451And for no longer? 54451 And has it kissed you back, my dear?"
54451And so, my dear Mrs. Lawrence, you have not been five miles from L----, since my journey to Boston last August?
54451And what is the name of this beautiful stream, that flows between us, and the highlands?
54451But the children?
54451But what can we do for them, my dear husband? 54451 Did you ever hear of any body that did not?"
54451Do they, Sir Fop?
54451I know it, Horace, yet how can I help it? 54451 Love those that love you"--is not that the rule?
54451My dear Horace,said the greatly agitated Mrs. Lawrence,"what will Alpheus and Anna do?--what_ can_ they do?"
54451Nurse Bevey has promised to come and take care of them during our absence?
54451O, my dear friend, how can I ever be sufficiently grateful for your kindness? 54451 On what account?"
54451Undoubtedly you can; but why not pay some attention to fashion and elegance, both about your house and dress? 54451 Whence is it that we so frequently see this pernicious physical treatment, and its natural fruits?
54451Why will you thus grieve, my dear Ellen?
54451Will you take the trouble, my dear friend,said Mr. North,"to look in occasionally upon nurse, and see that she neglects not her duty?"
54451''"Is this possible?
54451( A sort of man- woman,) and how did she look?
544511834. Who reads an American book?
54451And can it be?
54451And has not his_ own_ experience taught him the advantage which a questionable title, or the folly of a ruler may give his subjects?
54451And if I grant, also, that the slave is happier than the free laborer, does it follow that his master may lawfully hold him as such?
54451And if slavery, then, was unlawful in its origin, must it not be so now, and continue to be so forever?
54451And is there a feeling more desolate still?
54451And is there aught beneath the sun Can wean my constant heart from thee, Thou lovely and beloved one?
54451And must not that, then, which is against this law in one age, be equally against it in another, and in every succeeding age, to the end of time?
54451And was not this much?
54451And what are the great, the ultimate purposes to be achieved after reaching these higher schools-- the colleges and universities of the land?
54451And what matters it under what part of that vast tablet, every where emblazoned with his glory, his bones repose?
54451And what of that?
54451And, by the way, do you know that I go to Boston, with Alpheus, in a fortnight?
54451Anne, my foolish fancy''s o''er, And I can not love you more-- Nay, sweet girl, why knit your brow?
54451But can we, then, plead a defect of theirs which is the consequence of our own act, to justify that act, in this way?
54451But can_ any_ principles, I ask, do this?
54451But how shall I make known the persons of whom I wish to speak?
54451But say that it is not so; and grant, if you please, for the sake of argument, that it is all"a specious fallacy"indeed; what then?
54451But the little boy, my dear Anna!--Are you not anxious to see him?"
54451But what is the fact?
54451But what need had Hercules of Homer?
54451But who compose this working class?
54451But who reads it?
54451But why does it not even settle the question?
54451But"who ever thought of blaming La Fayette?"
54451By what other term can we characterize the usual school appliances, to the chief of which I beg leave to invite your special attention?
54451Can not something like this be done in Virginia?
54451Could the spirit which tumbled his son from the throne, have prepared itself for explosion during her vigilant and energetic reign?
54451D''ye take me for a fool?
54451Did she talk like a book?
54451Did you not expect it?"
54451Do they not know that the odious tyranny, the folly, the weakness, and the cowardice of John gave birth to_ magna charta_?
54451Do we ask why, in this temper, they gained so little from William?
54451Do you know that for a month past, I have been dreading the approach of this week?"
54451Do you not carry your scrupulosity too far?"
54451Does he believe that the revolution so"cheering and refreshing"to his spirit, would have taken place, had Henri IV occupied the throne of Louis XVI?
54451Does he mean, at page six, to intimate that the"boldness of truth"was ONLY"_ not_ WHOLLY_ uncongenial_"to the character of La Fayette?
54451Does he see no beauty, no merit, no poetry, in the"Song of the Seasons?"
54451Does he think the reform now going on in England would have commenced under Elizabeth or her grandfather Henry VII?
54451Does it follow that slavery_ as it exists in our state_, was just and lawful_ in its origin_?
54451Does the question of right depend simply, or at all, upon the degree of happiness which the laborer enjoys?
54451For want of gratitude?
54451For want of love?
54451Forget?
54451Forget?
54451Had not this been extorted from him, could it have been wrung from the stern grasp of the first or third Edward?
54451Has it one single attribute of true poetry?
54451Have these things been lost on Mr. Adams himself?
54451How many of those who witnessed it, went home with hearts oppressed by a consciousness of something wrong?
54451How should he?
54451I wonder what the_ wind_ did in the meantime?
54451If any doubt it, let them inquire as impartially as they can, what manner of men those are in general who constitute the educated class?
54451Is any monument to Washington so appropriate as that reared by his genius, his toils and his virtues,--HIS COUNTRY?
54451Is it for want of reverence for his memory?
54451Is it less interesting because the prompting impulse of the hero is virtuous, not criminal?
54451Is it true?
54451Is moral and religious acquirement ever made a pre- requisite?
54451Is moral and religious conduct always rendered indispensable?
54451Is not such silence the most expressive praise; the silence imposed by a common sentiment, which all are conscious is felt by all?
54451Is not the law of nature, like its author, immutable, and eternal?
54451Is not the_ capitol itself_ too small?
54451Is not the_ thing itself_ worthier than the symbol?
54451Is not this at once evading and altering, as it were, the counsel of the Creator of all?
54451Is the principle of both laws the same, or entirely different?
54451Is there any thing wonderful in that?
54451Is''nt this horrible?
54451Know what?
54451Lawrence?"
54451May I never forget the deep debt of gratitude I owe to my Father in heaven?"
54451More dreary and heart- breaking even than this?
54451North?"
54451Now this seems to me to be pretty good logic; and how then does the Annotator answer it?
54451Now this, too, I have heretofore taken for very sound logic; and why is it not perfectly so?
54451Or what right can your assignee have to hold the prisoner under your assignment, one moment after your right itself has run out?
54451Or, can the mere lapse of time make it lawful?
54451Pardon me,"said Mrs. North,"but can domestic concerns_ ever_ be interesting?"
54451Perhaps you''d laugh at me?
54451Say, wouldst thou build a lasting seat, Secure from Fortune''s rage; A quiet and a safe retreat, To rest thy weary age?
54451Says Hal,"This Miss A----''s a charming young_ belle_, But has she a_ beau_, my dear Will, can you tell?"
54451Speak out!--but what?
54451Stuart once asked a painter, who had met with a painter''s difficulties,"how he got on in the world?"
54451That mans his breast in danger''s fearful path?
54451That nerves his arm to grasp the gory steel, Despising toil and hardship, wounds and death?
54451The spirit of the departed is in_ high communion_[ does this mean_ high mass_?]
54451Was it not because our local situation removed us far from war, and the entanglements of foreign politics?
54451Was she grave as a judge?
54451We must afford them all the assistance and consolation in our power?"
54451What are they?
54451What can be expected from eulogy in such a case?
54451What could come of all this; what did come of it, but failure?
54451What could the breath of man add to his glory?
54451What do you think of her being passed fifty, and yet not appearing as old as twenty- five?
54451What intelligent Virginian is there who does not feel inclined to co- operate in the attainment of so much good?
54451What is the fair inference from such facts?
54451What is the matter?"
54451What is the thought that prompts his studious zeal?
54451What is to become of them?
54451What means the white rose in my hair?
54451What more do we?
54451What need has La Fayette that one should tell his fellow of him?
54451What security that they will be content with these?
54451What then?
54451When will the great of Virginia deign this magnanimous descent?
54451Where would you place the monument?
54451Who feels it necessary to answer it?
54451Who feels it necessary to utter his praise, even in this simple question?
54451Who has written more quaintly and obscurely than Ben Johnson or Cowley; or to come nearer to our own time, than Wordsworth or Coleridge?
54451Whom do we know like old Ormond and his wife?
54451Whom like his noble son and his charming countess?
54451Whom or what does man rebuke?
54451Why did our fathers hope that the experiment of free government might succeed with us, though it had failed every where else?
54451Why do we see so many over- fed, gormandizing, ill- humored, selfish and self- willed children?
54451Why is none erected?
54451Why proclaim to the world what all the world already knows?
54451Why tell posterity what posterity can never forget, until man has lost the records of the history of man?
54451Why then do we so rarely meet with any narrative of facts which engages our feelings so deeply as a well wrought fiction?
54451Why then should we doubt their success among ourselves?
54451Why, my friends, why let me most earnestly demand of you, should not we Virginians,"go and do likewise?"
54451Will it be,"_ live and let live_,"or"_ live for self alone_?"
54451Will this practice be guided by the social or the selfish principle?
54451With tremulous lips, Mrs. North returned the kiss, and emphatically whispered--"O dear friend, may I never forget the impressions of this hour?
54451Would the Annotator think it exactly right to have such a principle carried home to himself?
54451Yet how, let me ask, are these momentous duties generally fulfilled, even by the best scholars, unless they are also moral and religious men?
54451You will receive them here when they arrive?
54451You''re a foe to all slavery, Harriet, you say; Then why do you talk in so charming a way?
54451You''re vowed to CHLORIS-- a''nt it true?
54451_ In_ the capitol?
54451because our monarch is elective, not hereditary; a man and not a child?
54451mother, whither do they lead This wretched form, this drooping frame?
54451replied Ormond,"what could your lordship dream of me?"
54451where?"
54451why not?
54451|Swear to love those that love you!--a''nt it just?
8116''Then why will you, O why will you, yet fear to obey? 8116 All of a sudden they stopped, and the following questions and answers were uttered through their vocal organism:_ Question_--''What city is this?''
8116Are you not troubled sometimes with disagreeable members?
8116But are you not often imposed upon?
8116Can you into union flow, and have your will subdu''d? 8116 Can you part with all you''ve got, and give up all concern, And be faithful in your lot, the way of God to learn?
8116Dare you, in the sight of heaven, Show your foul and filthy pranks? 8116 Do you believe the celibate life to be healthful?"
8116Do you favor marriage?
8116Do you have no grumblers?
8116Do you have no scandal?
8116Do you like to take children?
8116Do you, then, claim to live sinless lives?
8116Does memory never roam To ties that, grown with years, ye idly sever, To the old haunts that ye have left forever-- Your early homes? 8116 How do you manage with the lazy people?"
8116Inebriation, we allow, First paved the way for am''rous deeds; Then why should poisonous spirits now Be ranked among our common needs? 8116 Is there any monument to Father Rapp?"
8116Is this, then, a constant occurrence?
8116Suppose a woman wanted, in your family, to be a blacksmith, would you consent?
8116Why did you partition the property?
8116Why do you separate men from women at table?
8116Why should we let our youth study? 8116 Why, then, should any soul insist On such pernicious, pois''nous stuff?
8116Yea, my heavenly Father hath se- ve''-ned to you That power which is holy and that faith which is true; O then, my beloved, why will ye delay? 8116 _ Question_--''What city is this?''
8116''Man owns its powers?''
8116A Shaker''s Answer to the oft- repeated Question"What would become of the World if all should become Shakers?"
8116All that must have sprung, And quicken''d into life, when ye were young?
8116And can you this pursue,''nor own your shame?''
8116And do n''t you see that if they are so headstrong and full of vanity they would not stay with us anyhow?
8116And what is now the greatest foe with which you mean to war?
8116And what is the use of pictures?"
8116And what of dignity or meaning could be said?
8116And what will not man own To gain his end-- to captivate-- dethrone?
8116And, brethren, may I with you live, And be the least of all?"
8116At times I was asked by the elders if I could not unite and take upon me an Indian, a Norwegian, or an Arabian spirit?
8116But could you find no other way, that would have done as well?
8116But did you not keep something back, or did you tell the whole?
8116But suppose such a warning as you speak of were not taken?
8116Can a place to you be given In the bright angelic ranks?
8116Can you sacrifice your ease, And take your share of toil and pain?
8116Can you swallow such a pill-- To count old Adam''s loss your gain?
8116Do ye not rue The drone- like course of life ye now pursue?
8116Do you expect to persevere, and ev''ry evil shun?
8116Dr. Keil replied,"Dear me!--in the beginning we had nothing, now we have a good deal: where did it all come from?
8116First Father Adam, where art thou?
8116Good ministry, can you forgive, And elders one and all?
8116Has sorrow scored your brows with demon hand, Or o''er your hopes passed treachery''s burning brand?
8116Have you none of its sly deceit now lurking in your breast?
8116How do you manage with such cases?
8116How must these''instruments''be constituted?
8116How were these''instruments''or messengers called?
8116I asked,"What, then, if you have divided all the property, will you do for the young people as they grow up?"
8116In one, called"Gospel- virtues illustrated,"an old man is made the speaker, in these words:"Now eighteen hundred seventeen-- Where am I now?
8116Is it not remarkable that they should have originated and found their chief adherents among peasants and poor weavers?
8116Is it therefore the Spirit or the witness of Jesus which speaks and bears witness through the truly inspired persons?
8116Is thine heart also prepared to be searched with the candles of him from whom no unclean thing is hidden?''
8116Is this your end and aim?
8116Let none be offended At what we here say; We candidly ask you, Is that the best way?
8116Let your time and talents go, to serve the gen''ral good?
8116Now can you think of this,''nor own your shame?''
8116Now, why these successes in the face of so many failures?
8116On what terms, if at all, could a carefully selected and homogeneous company of men and women hope to establish themselves as a commune?
8116Suppose a young man wanted to go to college?
8116Suppose one of your young men has the curiosity to see the world, as young men often have?
8116The only question the society asks and seeks to be satisfied upon is,"Are you sick of sin, and do you want salvation from it?"
8116The praise of mortals!--what can it avail, When all their boasted language has to fail?
8116Through or by whom are the divine ordinances carried out in the congregations?
8116Through whom is the Spirit thus poured out?
8116W. U._--Was Mrs. M. conscious of any precise moment when the pain left her in the night?
8116Was it before the Son of man you brought your deeds to light?
8116Wast thou in nature made upright-- Fashion''d and plac''d in open light?
8116Well, is it now your full intent all damage to restore?
8116Well, tell me how did you begin to purge away your dross?
8116What are the duties of the members of the Inspiration Congregations?
8116What are their duties?
8116What canst thou be after here?
8116What early blight Has withered your fond hopes, that ye thus stand, A group of sisters,''mong this monkish band?
8116What is the use?
8116What is the word of inspiration?
8116What now might the members of such a community expect to gain by their experiment?
8116What properties and marks of divine origin has this inspiration?
8116What were these principles?
8116What would you that your God would do in your presence, that you might fear his power rather than that of mortal man?''
8116When did the work of inspiration begin in the later times?
8116When they enter the apartment of their own sex, they may open the door and ask,''May I come in?''
8116Where the gift of God you see, Can you consent that it should reign?
8116Why are_ all_ communists remarkably cleanly?
8116Why did you choose this way you''re in, which all mankind despise?
8116Would they improve their lives and condition?
8116Would they, to answer the second question above, improve their lives and condition?
8116Your ancient creed, once faith''s sustaining lever, The loved who erst prayed with you-- now may never?
8116_ Question_--''Can we go in and see them?''
8116_ Question_--''What Indians?''
8116_ Question_--''What are they doing here?''
8116_ Question_--''What were the conditions?''
8116_ Question_--''What will be done with them?''
8116_ Question_--''Who are all these?''
8116_ Question_--''Who are those behind them?''
8116_ Question_--''Who are those in the corner?''
8116_ Question_--''Who live here?''
8116_ Question_--''Who lives here?''
8116_ Question_--''Why are they the first city we come to in the spirit- land, on the plane, and most accessible?''
8116where have I been?
925And if not now, when?
925And should anyone in any case be content that his oath shall go unkept on a merely unsubstantial controversy as to how it shall be kept?
925And what has been the effect?
925And what object or consideration more pleasing than this can be presented to the human mind?
925And, after all, why should n''t we believe that?
925Are their rights alone not to be guaranteed by the application of those great principles upon which all our constitutions are founded?
925Are there, indeed, citizens of any of our States who have dreamed of their subjects in the District of Columbia?
925Are we enthralled with material things, less appreciative of the nobility of work and sacrifice?
925Are we nearing the light-- a day of freedom and of peace for all mankind?
925But are we not made better for the effort and sacrifice, and are not those we serve lifted up and blessed?
925But have we changed as a nation even in our time?
925But if no one among us is capable of governing himself, then who among us has the capacity to govern someone else?
925But who can limit the extent to which the federative principle may operate effectively?
925Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
925Can anything essential, anything more than mere ornament and decoration, be added to this by robes and diamonds?
925Can he, then, be trusted with the government of others?
925Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
925Can we forge against these enemies a grand and global alliance, North and South, East and West, that can assure a more fruitful life for all mankind?
925Can we solve the problems confronting us?
925Do my countrymen need any assurance that such a catastrophe is not to overtake them while I possess the power to stay it?
925Does he expect to find among the ruins of this Union a happier abode for our swarming millions than they now have under it?
925Has the sword of despots proved to be a safer or surer instrument of reform in government than enlightened reason?
925Have we found our happy valley?
925How did we accomplish the Revolution?
925How long will those who rejoice that slavery no longer exists cherish or tolerate the incapacities it put upon their communities?
925How sustain and pass with glory through the late war?
925I have asked the Cabinet and my staff a question, and now I put the same question to all of you: If not us, who?
925In explaining my sentiments on this subject it may be asked, What raised us to the present happy state?
925In our own lives, let each of us ask-- not just what will government do for me, but what can I do for myself?
925In our present differences, is either party without faith of being in the right?
925In the challenges we face together, let each of us ask-- not just how can government help, but how can I help?
925Is a new world coming?
925Is it not possible for us now to make a truce with time by anticipating and accepting its inevitable verdict?
925Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before?
925Is it true, then, that any right plainly written in the Constitution has been denied?
925Is our world gone?
925Is there any better or equal hope in the world?
925Is there such perfect identity of interests among the States to compose a new union as to produce harmony only and prevent renewed secession?
925Let us ask again: Have we reached the goal of our vision of that fourth day of March 1933?
925May Congress prohibit slavery in the Territories?
925May we not cherish this sentiment without presumption when we reflect on the characters by which this war is distinguished?
925Must Congress protect slavery in the Territories?
925On whom has oppression fallen in any quarter of our Union?
925One party to a contract may violate it-- break it, so to speak-- but does it not require all to lawfully rescind it?
925Or are the shadows of another night closing in upon us?
925Or have we found angels in the forms of kings to govern him?
925Or that we stopped to ask if a sick child had gotten better, and stayed a moment there to trade a word of friendship?
925Or, shall we continue on our way?
925Shall fugitives from labor be surrendered by national or by State authority?
925Shall the prejudices and paralysis of slavery continue to hang upon the skirts of progress?
925Shall we call this the promised land?
925Shall we pause now and turn our back upon the road that lies ahead?
925That we were more driven to succeed than anyone around us?
925The central question before us is: How shall we use that peace?
925Timidity asks,"How difficult is the road ahead?"
925To how many thousands of our countrymen has it proved a benefit?
925To those, however, who really love the Union may I not speak?
925To what single individual has it ever proved an injury?
925We bring all our wit and all our will to meet the question: How far have we come in man''s long pilgrimage from darkness toward light?
925What are the dangers which menace us?
925What can be more gratifying than such a retrospect as this?
925What do we want the men and women who work with us to say when we are no longer there?
925What does the change mean?
925What has been the progress since that time?
925What other form of government, indeed, can so well deserve our esteem and love?
925Who dares fail to try?
925Who has been deprived of any right of person or property?
925Who restrained from offering his vows in the mode which he prefers to the Divine Author of his being?
925Who shall assign limits to the achievements of free minds and free hands under the protection of this glorious Union?
925Who shall live up to the great trust?
925Why should there not be a patient confidence in the ultimate justice of the people?
925Why, then, should we think that collectively, as a nation, we are not bound by that same limitation?
925Will their successors falter and plead organic impotency in the nation?
925Will you hazard so desperate a step while there is any possibility that any portion of the ills you fly from have no real existence?
925Will you join in that historic effort?
925Will you, while the certain ills you fly to are greater than all the real ones you fly from, will you risk the commission of so fearful a mistake?
925With which should we be most likely to live in harmony and friendly intercourse?
925Without it what are we individually or collectively?
41297A trick juggler or something?
41297A which?
41297About ready for luncheon?
41297Ai n''t he jest ez quick ez a flash?
41297Ai n''t that your quarter yonder?
41297Am I interested in-- well, say, ai n''t you interested?
41297Am I to blame because I write a part so human and so lifelike that nobody''s competent to do it?
41297And all this-- it will cost much money perhaps?
41297And by ample-- you mean what?
41297And let me roll''em myself?
41297And might it be proper for me to ask when you contemplate printing this article-- in what issue?
41297And of course for that-- that figure-- you play the leading part?
41297And this other girl-- your sister-- she''s been staying at home and doing the housekeeping, you said?
41297And to what, may I ask-- to what are we indebted for the pleasure of this unexpected but nevertheless happy meeting?
41297And where do you go from Anneburg?
41297And why not to- night?
41297And your son, Philip Bertram? 41297 Any previous record as shown by the finger prints and the card indexes?"
41297Are these shoes which I have on now the same shoes I''ve been wearing right along?
41297Back home to Brooklyn? 41297 Boy,"he said,"did you ever hear of Burton Bateman-- better known as Old Bird Bateman?"
41297Boys-- which boys?
41297But what are we going to do about-- him?
41297But where are you going to find anything to beat that thing of Abbey''s-- The Search for the Holy Grail?
41297But wo n''t there be a delegation from here waiting at Barstow to meet''em and ride in with''em?
41297Can he do it? 41297 Can he do it?"
41297Chester, might I ask what you were doing with that-- that young person?
41297Come on where?
41297D''yer ring, sir?
41297Dead? 41297 Did I?
41297Did you get those envelopes out of the morgue that I telephoned you about?
41297Do me a favour?
41297Do what, Gertrude?
41297Do you need the money that bad?
41297Do you want me to come back here then and write it for the next morning?
41297Does he-- this Mr. Derby-- does he get anything like what you are paid?
41297Does his what here?
41297Easy? 41297 For thirty days?
41297German descent, I mean?
41297Good morning, sir?
41297Gykeman, eh?
41297Has he got any money in his clothes that says he kin do that? 41297 Have a seat?"
41297Have you ever observed that the person to whom you refer has spoken to me?
41297Have you heard me complain?
41297He was in vaudeville, was n''t he?
41297Hello, what''s this?
41297Hemburg?
41297Hey, Gash, what air you doin''up so early in the mornin''?
41297Hold on; this description of the man who is wanted says he has a moustache?
41297How about that Miss What''s- her- name, the girl who was with you this morning?
41297How about the tickets? 41297 How are you going to cut her out?"
41297How are you? 41297 How do you mean-- I''m wrong?"
41297How does your copperosity seem to sagashuate this evenin''?
41297How is it bound to come out that way?
41297How long do you suppose he''d live in an asylum if we tore him up by the roots and dragged him away from this place? 41297 How many are there of you living here-- just you two?"
41297How much are you two gents goin''to bet one another? 41297 How much are you willin''to put up against my pardner here?"
41297How much''ll you risk that you kin do that, Fox?
41297How strong are you?
41297How''s his arm going to be this year?
41297How''s that, sir?
41297Huh?
41297I beg your par- r- don?
41297I beg your pardon, sir?
41297I believe you told me when you came in that at this moment you are in absolute control of the columns and the policy of_ The Clarion_?
41297I gather that your idea is to publish this-- this attack, in your paper?
41297I s''pose you do n''t know where we''re headin''? 41297 I was n''t in my stocking feet when I came aboard, was I?"
41297I wonder how in thunder it got itself hid there? 41297 I''m sure I''ve noticed your uncle-- tall, is n''t he, and distinguished and rather military looking?
41297Ill? 41297 Ill?"
41297Inspector, can you keep him where he is for just a minute or two? 41297 Is he there?
41297Is that so?
41297Is that the opera house right ahead?
41297Is that you, Hemburg?
41297It would seem, Mr. Foxman, that you do not trust me to deal fairly with you in this matter?
41297J. Henry, you would n''t tip''em off to the weak spots in the Anneburg team?
41297Just a minute, Verba-- did you ever hear of the Great Auk?
41297Just what do you mean by that?
41297Kind of played out, are n''t you?
41297Lawrence what?
41297Lawrence,said Bronston,"you''ve been giving our shoes to Boots and getting them back from him, have n''t you?"
41297Listen, Hemburg, this is very important: You remember that story I turned over to you last night? 41297 Lives round here somewhere, does n''t he?"
41297Making yourself comfortable, eh?
41297Me? 41297 Mercy?
41297Might n''t he have taken a little run down to Coney?
41297Moguls?
41297Mr. First Officer,said Bronston,"has n''t this farce gone far enough?
41297No, suh; but----"Have you any reason for believing, of your own knowledge, that she knows me?
41297No, suh; but----"Or ever molested me in any way?
41297Nothing else, sir? 41297 Noticed the yellow, did n''t you?"
41297Oh, Chester, how could you do it?
41297Oh, Sloan,he said,"send a boy upstairs for McManus, will you?"
41297Oh, no, suh; but, you see----"Have you ever observed that I spoke to her?
41297Oh, that bunch? 41297 Oh, we will, will we?
41297On what?
41297Part Pawnee, ai n''t he?
41297Playin''ignorant, huh? 41297 Rooms all ready?"
41297Say, J. Henry, where did they pick you up?
41297Say, listen,he said;"do you know what I think?
41297Shall we get our man aboard?
41297Singlebury come in yet?
41297Some place-- huh, mister?
41297Still, ever''little bit helps-- eh, boys?
41297Suppose, though, J. Henry, there just happens to be somebody else from Anneburg on the twelve- forty- five?
41297Tell me, what''s wrong with my clothes?
41297That tired business man? 41297 That would be fun, would n''t it?"
41297That you, Moreau?
41297That''s the Chief coming, of course?
41297That''s you, Mr. Foxman, is n''t it? 41297 The Island?"
41297The pipes?
41297Then these must be the only shoes I have or have had, must n''t they?
41297Then we''d all better take the hotel bus uptown, had n''t we?
41297Then who-- then who are these?
41297Then you know he''s there with the pipes?
41297These? 41297 They ca n''t nobody ever git ahead of you, kin they boy?"
41297They will not keep me there long? 41297 Thin why was you lookin''at me whin you said it?
41297Think it is? 41297 This is n''t McManus''night off, is it?"
41297Tickets?
41297To save me?
41297Want to shake for the next round, anybody?
41297We land at the other place first, do n''t we-- Fishhawk, or whatever its name is?
41297Well, Schwartzmann?
41297Well, did n''t I make the whole thing as easy for you as I could?
41297Well, suh, I----"Or that I am acquainted with her?
41297Well, then, did you ever hear of the Scudder Stock Company?
41297Well, what is her story?
41297Well, what of it?
41297Well, what''s the favour you want to ask of me?
41297Well,countered the irrepressible one,"what stations have you got?"
41297Well,he demanded boisterously,"how''s Little Chestnut makin''out?
41297Well,he said,"how''s everything going?"
41297Well,he said,"what do you think about Chicago''s chances?
41297Well,said Keller,"I guess we''d better be getting up on deck, had n''t we?"
41297What about your sister?
41297What are we going to do about him?
41297What business have you here?
41297What did I tell you last night about''em all being on?
41297What did you say, my dear?
41297What do you care?
41297What do you mean?
41297What do you think I am? 41297 What earthly difference would it make whether I gave you my promise or not?
41297What is your price for continuing to be-- ahem-- reasonable?
41297What kind of a trip did you have coming up?
41297What makes you think that?
41297What now, for instance, gives me away?
41297What the devil are you driving at?
41297What was the name?
41297What''s that you''ve got in your hand?
41297What''s the prospects for a crowd over in Anneburg?
41297What''s the use of going into all that all over again? 41297 What''s the use, your nursing that grouch?"
41297What''s this? 41297 What''s wrong with my being a private detective?"
41297What''s wrong with my moustache?
41297What''s your business?
41297What''s your name?
41297What? 41297 When you helped me pack my luggage to- day, did you notice any other shoes?"
41297Where do you live-- is it far from here?
41297Where goin''?
41297Where have you been?
41297Where is he?
41297Where to?
41297Where''d he raise the coin for carfare down to Coney? 41297 Which car are the boys on?"
41297Which is that?
41297Who else is there in this town that can talk their own language with those boys like I can? 41297 Who handed you your tip a few minutes ago for serving us during the voyage?"
41297Who in thunder do you think that gang is you''ve been associating with?
41297Who said anything about anybody investin''anything?
41297Who''s in charge here?
41297Whom did you put on in his place?
41297Whut does hit mean?
41297Whut you got in the gripsack-- hay samples or punkins?
41297Whut''ll it be, gents? 41297 Whut''ll they add up, tops and bottoms?"
41297Why else would I ask you?
41297Why should I do that?
41297Why, what''s this?
41297Will you go with me, m''sieur?
41297Will you go with me?
41297Wotcher waitin''fur?
41297Would you be so good as to send for the ship''s barber?
41297Yes; whut is the valise fur?
41297You and me will stay right here in this stateroom until we get to Liverpool; that''ll be some time to- morrow, wo n''t it?
41297You got our wire?
41297You kin tell beforehand whut the top and bottom spots''ll add up?
41297You play what for him?
41297You want me to go with you?
41297You wanted me, sir?
41297You''ll be careful about the chipmunks this summer, wo n''t you, Mr. Nutt-- for our sakes?
41297You''re German, are n''t you?
41297You''re a private detective, are n''t you?
41297You''re willing to take a woman into your home that you picked up for streetwalking?
41297You-- you will go with me?
41297Your Honour,he began, speaking in a sort of confidential undertone,"could I have a word with you?"
41297Your upper lip?
41297... How''s that, sir?
41297... No?
41297... She----""Tied, is she?"
41297... Sir?
41297A small fine, eh?
41297A week?
41297After all, did it pay?
41297And if I did n''t know human nature from the ground up, would I be where I am as a travelling salesman?
41297And kidders?
41297And now what do you say to turning in and getting a good night''s rest?
41297And then almost harshly:"Well, what do you want me to do about the woman in the pen yonder?"
41297And then if you ai n''t lyin''we''ll see----""Must I go so?"
41297And there was no patience in his uplifted, rumbling voice as he answered her:"Say, you do n''t want your sister to be a pauper patient, do you?
41297And was not that as it should be too?
41297And what guaranty have I that you will do your part?"
41297And what had being on the level brought him?
41297And what was that other line about there being a tide in the affairs of men, which, taken at the flood, leads on to fortune?
41297And why should n''t it?
41297And you thought all the time you were with the Moguls?
41297And, Hemburg, here''s another thing: You recall the other story that I told you was being held for release-- the one on the Mexican situation?
41297And, say, did you get a flash at the look on that steward''s face?
41297Anyhow, Offutt, I''ve found the only man to do the grandfather''s part in that show of yours, have n''t I?"
41297Anything I kin do fur you?"
41297Are you gents friends of his?
41297Are you still afraid of yourself?"
41297Are you-- are you interested in baseball?"
41297Besides, why risk all on the first wager, even though there was no real risk?
41297Blake?"
41297But did he do it?
41297But did it ever occur to you that such a step would n''t help your case in the least?
41297But of what value is the creative ability unless it be used to create?
41297But seriously, was n''t the sea just perfectly lovely?
41297But there should be other proof, do n''t you think-- papers or something?"
41297But what cared he?
41297But what matters misery if its victims mistake it for happiness?
41297Can he act?
41297Chester K(irkham) Pilkins; born?
41297Come a- w- n, McVey?
41297Come on, McVey?
41297D''ye know him, Flem?"
41297Did I say Finkelstein family?
41297Did it not possess a wonderful climate?
41297Did n''t I keep it all a secret when I was sending the wire on ahead to book the passage?"
41297Did n''t I steer clear of reporters all along the line?
41297Did n''t I tell you you''d have to read the grandfather''s part to- day?"
41297Did n''t know there was such a theatre as Scudder''s, did you?
41297Did n''t you put these things on me?
41297Did n''t you see the strength he had when he hoisted up that heavy curtain?"
41297Did you ever hear, since you came to this town, of the Pearl Street trolley line or the Pearl Street trolley loop?"
41297Did you listen?
41297Do n''t we have to show them first?"
41297Do n''t you think so, sir?
41297Do you get the point?"
41297Do you see this?"
41297Do you understand-- to the penitentiary?
41297Ever hear of him?"
41297For does it not stand written that----?
41297For had it not been written and repeatedly written that they were to be regaled, ABSOLUTELY WITHOUT EXPENSE, at Stanchheimer''s Chowder Pavilion?
41297Foxman?"
41297Foxman?"
41297Foxmaster, do you hear me?
41297Get me?"
41297Given a guarantee of winning, and who among us is not a born gamester?
41297Go on-- be a good fella and get this hair up out of my face, wo n''t you?
41297Got any cold lager on tap?"
41297Have n''t I worn them every minute since then, awake or asleep, except when I was dressing or undressing?"
41297Have you got a quiet room to yourself where nobody can break in on you?"
41297Have you got any money?"
41297He eats here?"
41297He had led his prisoner along for almost a block before he was moved to address her again:"And you thought you could make your getaway from me?
41297He was-- wasn''t he?
41297Her next question came slowly:"What is there then to do?"
41297His following!--do you get that?
41297How came the stage doorkeeper to admit you?
41297How long has this been going on-- this cough?"
41297How long would you say that it has been since I wore a moustache?"
41297How''s everything?"
41297I guess you do n''t know what the laws against criminal libel in this state are?
41297I guess you know about the no- hit game he pitched last year-- the last game he played?"
41297I presume you remember, do n''t you, what the biggest detective in America said not so very long ago in a signed article?
41297I s''pose you''re goin''to tell me now you ai n''t never been up in the night court before?"
41297I was goin''to treat you nice but you would n''t behave, would you?
41297I wonder why all detectives wear those broad- toed, heavy- soled shoes?"
41297I''ve acted that way from the beginning, ai n''t I?"
41297If it was n''t his, whose then was it?
41297If you please?"
41297Indeed when one came to ponder these matters, so much always did depend upon one''s point of view, did it not?
41297Instantly it sped back to them, above the clacking voice of the train:"That''s all you ever would give''em, ai n''t it?"
41297Into his voice he put exactly the right strain of hurried, sharp anxiety as he snapped:"Is that you, Singlebury?"
41297Is he daid?
41297Is it to the prison-- the station house?"
41297Is that quite plain?"
41297Is there any lingering doubt in your mind regarding our proper identities?"
41297It did make the situation a bit awkward, did n''t it?
41297Lose our honoured and esteemed reception committee now?
41297Manager?
41297My sister-- is she then so ill?"
41297Now, then, since we appear to be on the point of thoroughly understanding each other, may I ask you another question?"
41297Officer?"
41297Oh, look, please, suh, mister, and see ef he ai n''t dead?"
41297Oh, say, what''s the use?
41297Or is cooingly the right word?
41297Perhaps her new acquaintance had heard of her uncle, Major Slocum?
41297Please, will you listen?
41297Prospect Slope Pressing, Montauk Chess, Checkers and Whist, King''s County Civic Reform and Improvement; religion?
41297Remember, do n''t you, offering to attend to that while I was getting me a bathrobe, so as to save time?
41297Say, on the level now, ai n''t you never been pinched before?"
41297Say, the Big Fellow certainly can pitch, ca n''t he?"
41297Say, what do you know about a lot of stuck- up people passing up a man cold, just because they''ve found out some way that he''s a private detective?"
41297Say, what do you want to act that way for, makin''it harder for both of us?
41297See if he made any mistake in yours?"
41297See this?"
41297See?
41297See?
41297See?
41297See?
41297See?
41297See?"
41297See?"
41297See?"
41297See?"
41297See?"
41297See?"
41297She sought to peer past him and her tone sharpened down, fine and keen:"Is he daid?
41297Since he meant to make a burnt offering of Singlebury, why not cook him to a cinder and be done with it, and be done with Singlebury too?
41297Sing?
41297Somethin''you wanted, sir?"
41297Still hatin''to think of the place where you got to meet that there old paint pony of yourn to- mor''mornin''?"
41297Still saddle sore?
41297Suppose, as you put it, I did make a break?
41297Take to- morrow off too-- don''t report here until day after to- morrow; that''ll be Friday, wo n''t it?
41297That is all they will do to me, is it not so?"
41297That much at least he knew; so if that much were true, why was not the rest of it true too?
41297The first officer bowed to her:"Pardon me, miss, but would you mind telling us what you know?"
41297The plot thickens-- eh, Offutt?"
41297Then added, as an afterthought:"Well, what''s the next move?
41297Then as she seemed not to get his intent, he added:"Ca n''t you understand plain English?
41297Then he added:"You know of course that this brother was a French soldier?"
41297Then put your copy in a sealed envelope and bring it down here and deliver it to me, personally, here in this room-- understand?
41297Then there ca n''t be no kick comin''from nobody whatsoever, kin there?"
41297Then, struck by her silence, he asked a question:"A Frenchy, ai n''t you?"
41297They will permit me to go if I pay a fine, eh?
41297Think she''s going to give New York a run for her white alley this year?"
41297Think you''d like it?
41297Tuck it back up out of sight, will you?"
41297Understand me?
41297Understand, do n''t you?"
41297Understand?
41297Understand?"
41297Understand?"
41297Want to go?"
41297Was General Lignum so deserving of consideration?
41297Was I right?"
41297Was he indeed in the wrong street?
41297Was it altogether his fault that he should promptly fall out of the first crotch and painfully sprain and bruise himself in several places?
41297Was n''t Lignum lavishing wads of his easy- come, easy- go money on it now, because of his ambition to be a United States senator?
41297Was that right, sir?"
41297Was that why he felt so uncomfortable?
41297Was there anything else, sir?"
41297Was there in all this wide continent no room for true worth when habited in native modesty?
41297What did he care?
41297What did she die of?"
41297What did you do it for?"
41297What did you say your name was?"
41297What do you do for a living?"
41297What do you figure on doing-- sticking here in the room?"
41297What do you think we''d better do now?"
41297What does Peter say?
41297What does this mean, you hell spawn?"
41297What had General Lignum ever done in all his luxurious days to justify him to a place in the sun?
41297What is the moral of it all?
41297What is the trouble?"
41297What mattered it though this picture would purely look excessively unlike him?
41297What station?"
41297What was that line about Opportunity''s knocking once at every man''s door?
41297What with thousands of actors looking for engagements----""Say, Offutt, what''s the use of going over that again?"
41297What would make a suitable comparison?
41297What''s the programme from this point on regarding these decorations?"
41297What''s wanted?"
41297What-- what would you suggest?"
41297Where were they now, since they had grown old?
41297Where would I break for out in the middle of the Atlantic Ocean?
41297Where''s McVey?"
41297Where''s the elevator?
41297Where''s the rest of my mortgage money that yore gang beat me out of?"
41297Where-- where are you taking me, m''sieur?
41297Which of us two seemed to be in charge on the night you first saw us-- the night we came aboard-- this man or I?"
41297Who would it be but the Moguls?"
41297Why not?
41297Why should he question it?
41297Why should he talk?
41297Why then should we quibble?
41297Why, in dying, should he be doomed to point the moral of a living ghost tale?
41297Will there be any trunks for the stateroom?"
41297Will you kindly look at us both and tell me, in your opinion, which is which?"
41297Would not the portrait be suitably labelled?
41297Would you please bring him to me here?
41297You do n''t live here in this town, do you?"
41297You know how the thing goes in other lines of allied industries?
41297You mentioned an extinct species, did n''t you?
41297You realize that, do n''t you?
41297You''ll be there of course?"
41297You''re in the profesh, ai n''t you?
41297You''ve been workin''this street- fair game somewhere, ai n''t you?"
41297You''ve heard of him, I guess?"
41297better than it was during the panic but not so good as it might be; recreations?
41297certainly; parentage?
41297extensively so; business?
41297less than sub- average; hair?
41297one father and one mother; lives?
41297only in a way of speaking; married?
41297reading, writing, arithmetic and the comic supplements; clubs?
41297same as eyes; eyes?
41297same as hair; complexion?
41297she inquired, quivering with a grand, indignant politeness;"was you referrin''to me as an ould boid?"
41297sub- average; weight?
41297twice on Sunday, rarely on week- days; politics?
41297variable, but inclining to be fair, and warmer in moments of embarrassment; special distinguishing characteristics?
41297whatever is the rule; height?
43368''I was grieved to learn, through the public prints, that Mrs. Clay has been ill; may I hope that she is better?'' 43368 ''May I ask, my dear sir, what part of the twenty- four hours are you most comfortable?''
43368''What''s a_ sine qua non_?'' 43368 ''Why, do n''t you know?''
43368A little too boisterous-- like the sea? 43368 Am I an invalid, sir?
43368Am I such a mean miser as that? 43368 And do you always lock the babies up when you go out?"
43368And do you live alone here with these babies, Charley?
43368And do you often go out?
43368And have seen service?
43368And his address?
43368And how do you get on?
43368And how do you live, Charley? 43368 And what do you call these little fellows, ma''am?"
43368And when did mother die? 43368 Another requiem and a mass for a departed soul, at the church of St. Géneviève-- is it not so, captain?
43368Are there any more of you besides Charley?
43368Are we not, sir?
43368Are you a good shot, young man?
43368Are you speaking of the wife of a Hazeldean? 43368 Are you the boy I have read of in the papers?"
43368Are you the person,asked Sister Agatha, eagerly,"appointed to protect our flight from--?"
43368Are you trying to get our throats cut for us, you rascally aristocrat?
43368At what hour do you dine?
43368But suppose,said my Guardian, laughing,"he had meant the meat in the bill, instead of providing it?"
43368But the servants might have perished?
43368But where was the honor when he betrayed his friend? 43368 But why?"
43368But would it not be adding to his unhappiness, to marry without his knowledge or consent, my dear?
43368Did I?
43368Did he look like-- not like_ you_?
43368Did he take no legal proceedings?
43368Do I look weak, sir? 43368 Do n''t you think he was_ a little out of his head_ to talk in that way?"
43368Do you imagine, madame, that the man you are so much afraid of, is still waiting outside the shop?
43368Do you mean the tongs?
43368Do you think I am a fool, sir: do you think I am a liar?
43368Do you think he will die, captain?
43368Do you think then, father,murmured the stranger, deeply abashed,"that all indirect participations are visited with punishment?
43368Do you think you can make_ me_ the tool of a conspiracy? 43368 Do_ you_ not mean to accompany us?"
43368Does he teach?
43368Does his wife know of it?
43368Does it ever flash in the pan?
43368Easterly wind?
43368Foiled with Madame di Negra?
43368For the Chancellor,said the old man, with a chuckle,"not to be acquainted with a Jarndyce is queer, ai n''t it, Miss Flite?
43368Gentleman yonder? 43368 Has she been very ill?"
43368Have many people been kind to the children?
43368Have they any names?
43368Have you a good rifle, my friend?
43368Have you got enough, now? 43368 Have_ I_ ever''flashed,''"continued Mr. Clay,"except on the''Compensation bill?''"
43368He had no other calling?
43368Him as was dead?
43368How dare you ask me if I knew him?
43368How handsome our_ vis- a- vis_ is?
43368How old are you?
43368I do n''t know nothink about no-- where I was took by the beadle, do you mean?
43368Indeed?
43368Is Charley your brother?
43368Is it Gridley that''s wanted?
43368Is it blessed?
43368Is it blessed?
43368Is that all you have seen in the papers?
43368Is that all?
43368Is the wound mortal?
43368Is this place of abomination, consecrated ground?
43368It was he who was very gentlemanly, I think?
43368May I ask if you are both in the habit of reading the Latin language?
43368Mum,said he, one night( his usual way of addressing his wife),"Mum, who is that stepping so softly in the kitchen?"
43368My dear Marchesa,said he,"are we then likely to be near connections?
43368My dear,said Mr. Turveydrop benignly to his son,"do you know the hour?"
43368My dearest Ada,asked Richard, pausing,"why not?"
43368Nature forgot to shade him off, I think?
43368Neckett''s children?
43368Next Tuesday?
43368O yes, his family is all very fine, Miss Summerson,replied Miss Jellyby;"but what comfort is his family to him?
43368O yes?
43368Oh, do you?
43368Old Mr. Turveydrop''s wife, Miss Clare?
43368Probably you came from Niagara?
43368Shall I run''em over, Flite?
43368Shall you go to Lake George?
43368Sir,said Gridley, putting down the child, and going up to him as if he mean to strike him,"Do you know any thing of Courts of Equity?"
43368So you gave him notice?
43368So you kept him, after all?
43368To keep''em safe, sir, do n''t you see?
43368To your sorrow?
43368WHICH?
43368Was Neckett?
43368Was he-- I do n''t know how to shape the question,murmured my Guardian--"industrious?"
43368Was the boy''s name at the Inkwhich, Jo?
43368Well, sir-- well: what prevented the vane from turning?
43368Well, that being the case, would it not be the wisest course not to bring the matter before the House? 43368 Well, what did you do with it?
43368Well, will you throw_ me_ away?
43368Well,answered Randolph,"I do n''t know but I_ am_ mistaken; and suppose we drop the matter, shake hands, and become good friends again?"
43368Well,he said,"to what conclusion have you come?
43368Well?
43368Well?
43368Were you examined at an Inquest?
43368What are you doing here?
43368What are you waiting for, Mr. Robber, Thief, or whatever your Christian- name may be?
43368What are_ our_ lives-- the lives of two poor nuns-- in comparison with_ yours_; in comparison with the life of a priest?
43368What can the fools be about?
43368What does he wish?
43368What does the horrible creature mean?
43368What is it I have heard? 43368 What is that?"
43368What is the matter with you, citizen?
43368What is the matter yonder?
43368What is the matter? 43368 What is the matter?"
43368What of that?
43368What_ did_ you say?
43368Where have you placed the--?
43368Where is Charley now?
43368Where? 43368 Who did you want?"
43368Who do you suppose would teach you wrong?
43368Who has locked you up here alone?
43368Who is that standing upright in the cart?
43368Who lives here?
43368Who''s there?
43368Why a coxcomb?
43368Why not pity them?
43368Why say six months?
43368Why, good gracious me, Miss Summerson,she returned, justifying herself in a fretful but not angry manner,"how can it be otherwise?
43368Without their knowledge at home?
43368Would not the fellow waive his claim for a settled increase of his annuity?
43368Would you like to take any refreshment, madame?
43368Would you though?
43368Wrong?
43368Yet, would you believe that it''s_ his_ name on the door- plate?
43368You are not afraid, then,I remarked,"of taking a farm in these bad times?"
43368You are still in active service?
43368You have been long here?
43368You have n''t read the newspapers?
43368You mean about the man?
43368You will take another farm when one can be had on easier terms than now, I suppose?
43368''Well, sir,''says he,''I wish I had meant the lamb, as you mean the money?''
43368''Why did I eat spring lamb at eighteen pence a pound, my honest friend?''
43368***** Is not the following anecdote of the late King of the French not only somewhat characteristic, but indicative of a superior mind?
43368A little too vehement-- like a bull who has made up his mind to consider every color scarlet?
43368Ada remembers?"
43368After a silence, he is asked"In which room?"
43368And can you seriously contemplate marriage with my young nephew, Frank Hazeldean?
43368And how never confide it to me?"
43368And if he did, what would it be to see a woman going by?
43368And stay, William-- as to this foolish marriage with Madame di Negra, who told you Frank meant to take such a step?"
43368And that''s how I know how; do n''t you see, sir?"
43368And then what would be the feelings of the proud Egerton if his wife were excluded from that world, whose opinion he so prized?
43368And what did it matter?
43368And what does the man show me?
43368And what other opportunity can occur?
43368And what, Mr. Sharp, is the highest penalty for the crime of incendiarism?"
43368And, for consolation, learn that your friend has betrayed you?"
43368Are you ill?"
43368Are you not all the time in the midst of an Iliad?
43368Are_ you_ off now, father?"
43368As for myself, do you suppose that it is solely because I am reputed a great general that I rule France?
43368Assuming, however, all the little suavity at my command, I very politely touched my hat, and said:"My dear sir, is it not rather a hard case?
43368Ay?
43368BARON.--"Certainly, or how could you be induced to buy it up?
43368BARON.--"Ha, ha-- he is young, our friend, Randal; eh, sir?"
43368Blest?
43368Blest?"
43368But how could the_ power_ of Napoleon be increased?
43368But how was Napoleon to be rewarded?
43368But it''s great good fortune, is it not?
43368But the world will become better-- the world is becoming better, it may be said-- and why should not the stage share in the improvement?
43368But to whom was he to do justice?
43368But what is theory?
43368But what of Elizabeth-- the beauty?
43368But what turned out to be the case?
43368But where are those fierce warriors now?
43368But will France, which has consented to be governed by me, consent to be governed by Joseph or Lucien?
43368But you are busy--?"
43368But your age?"
43368But, boys, he continued,''what shall I do_ now_?''
43368Can it be possible?"
43368Can you show me all those places that were spoken of in the account I read?
43368Charley,"said my Guardian, turning his face away for a moment,"how do you live?"
43368Coavinses?"
43368Consequently, multitudes say, What shall we gain by the change?
43368Could Audley say this?
43368Could he ever forgive you?"
43368Dare you undertake such a task?
43368Did Nora already discover this?
43368Did not she know_ that_?"
43368Did you ever feel the want of a home?"
43368Do n''t they, Tom?"
43368Do n''t you, Tom?"
43368Do you imagine even that the bravest stands first in their esteem?
43368Do you imagine that I am solicitous to risk this power, this renown, in a desperate struggle?
43368Do you imagine that it is the tallest of their officers, and the most imposing by his stature, for whom they feel the highest regard?
43368Do you know the place where he was buried?"
43368Do you see those men?
43368Do you think I wished to hear it?
43368Does he wish to be king?
43368EDWARD.--"There, Dearest, do you feel refreshed?"
43368Energetically, he said:"Whom would you have me appoint my successor?
43368From whence do these papers come, you say?
43368GALOUPEAU(_ plaintiff_).--And what did I say?
43368Had she not exquisitely perfected my revenge?
43368Has he not brought his father to the verge of a work- house by low dissipation and extravagance?"
43368Has your son displeased you?
43368Have I the air of disease, I should like to know?"
43368Have you heard of her good fortune?"
43368Have you the face to tell me I have received justice, and therefore am dismissed?''
43368He asked me, first of all, whether I conferred a charm and a distinction on London by residing in it?
43368He continued:"A sailor?"
43368He has signed a post- obit?"
43368He re- collected himself, and added, more coldly,"You would ask my opinion?
43368How could that be?
43368How could you suffer him to entertain an idea so wild?
43368How did he fulfill the trust?"
43368How did he raise the money?"
43368How is it with us all to- day?"
43368How is this?
43368How should he, purposing as he did to be in London at the time?
43368How was this?
43368How would humility, forgiveness, poverty of spirit, meekness, temperance, long- suffering, charity, appear in a stage hero?
43368How, at his age, could he see the distinction between the Poetess and the Woman?
43368I asked,"Does he give lessons in Deportment, now?"
43368I exclaimed,"What is the matter?
43368I hope the young gentleman in question is not in the hands of the Jews?"
43368I must first be wholly ruined before she can want; and if I were so, do you think I should not be by her side?"
43368I must n''t go into Court, and say,''My Lord, I beg to know this from you-- is this right or wrong?
43368I shall either obtain a seat, be secure from a jail, have won field for my energies, or--""Or what?"
43368I suppose it will cost money?
43368I, who have made such sacrifices-- actually doubts whether I, Audley Egerton, an English gentleman, could have been base enough to--""What?"
43368If you had a blue- eyed daughter, you would n''t like_ me_ to come, uninvited, on_ her_ birthday?''
43368In those midnight recitals Herbert used often to stop, and say to me:"I wonder if you would like my sister?"
43368In what way may they be made to minister to the exciting, the sentimental, the melodramatic?
43368Is he a foreigner, too?"
43368Is it possible?"
43368Is man, in the hour of triumphant ambition, so moderate, that we can be willing that he should attain power which places us at his mercy?
43368Is mine less hard to bear, or is it harder to bear, when my whole living was in it, and has been thus shamefully sucked away?"
43368Is she such a woman as a plain country gentleman would like his only son to marry-- ay or no?"
43368Is the hand not always pointing there?
43368Is the soldier guilty of the death of Louis who obeyed the order to guard the scaffold?"
43368It was then resolved to submit a second question:"Shall the First Consul have the power of appointing his successor?"
43368JUDGE(_ to the defendant_).--So you refuse to take the mule?
43368Jarndyce?"
43368LEVY.--"Ay; will she not be in want of some pecuniary supplies?"
43368My brothers?
43368My nephew, Frank Hazeldean, proposes to marry Madame di Negra against his father''s consent?
43368Now, is not that reasonable?"
43368One of the senators went to Cambaceres, and said,"What would be gratifying to General Bonaparte?
43368Or pounds?
43368Or something of that sort?
43368POGUY.--"Don''t I?
43368Property-- property?
43368RANDAL.--"Are you going to Madame di Negra''s?
43368RANDAL.--"I trust I shall hear the result of your interview?
43368ROGUY.--"See that girl looking at me, Poguy?"
43368Randal and the gentleman exchanged a hasty whisper, and the former exclaimed,"What, Mr. Hazeldean, have you just left your brother''s house?
43368Randolph?"
43368SQUIRE( leaving Randal''s arm and seizing Levy''s).--"Were you speaking of Frank Hazeldean?"
43368SQUIRE.--"Can I see the deed with my own eyes?"
43368Says he,''Sir, why did you eat spring lamb at eighteen pence a pound?''
43368Shall I be ashamed to say that emotions uncontrollable overcame me, and I freely wept?
43368Shall I nominate you consul, Cambaceres?
43368Shall I not accompany you?
43368Shall I see him or her?
43368Shall I tell you what_ I_ think?
43368Shall history be blind to such fatality as this?
43368Shillings perhaps?
43368So well- timed, is it not?
43368So, I get a little practice with-- who do you think?
43368Some one, I am pretty sure, it must be,"he presently added,"that owes me a grudge-- with whom I have quarreled, eh?"
43368Some public matter-- some Parliamentary bill that may affect your property?"
43368The place he wrote for, the place he died at, the place where you were taken to, and the place where he was buried?
43368The work of an incendiary, is it not?
43368This child,"he added, after a few moments,"could she possibly continue this?"
43368Was all the iron of his mind worth one grain of the gold she had cast away in Harley''s love?
43368Was wealth to be conferred upon him?
43368We naturally asked how?
43368Well, we''ll manage that before our hair is gray, depend upon it, bad as the times may be-- won''t we, Nance?"
43368Were monuments to be reared to his honor, titles to be lavished upon his name?
43368Were there no Boswells in those days, whose spirits might be coaxed into communicative rappings about the king of the poets?
43368Were there touches by which conjecture grew certainty; and he recognized, through the lapse of years, the boy lover in his own generous benefactor?
43368What am I to do_ next_?"
43368What are you listening at my door for, Krook?"
43368What do they care for their white bell- crowns of ten years ago?
43368What do you require of me?"
43368What do you want, Krook, when I have company?"
43368What does property matter, when a man is struck down at his own hearth?
43368What ghost can the church- yard yield to us like the writing of the dead?
43368What has happened?"
43368What made his heart stand still, and the blood then rush so quickly through his veins?
43368What man ever had stronger claims to the national gratitude than General Bonaparte?
43368What might have been the end, who knows?
43368What on?
43368What woman can interfere in_ business_ matters without risk of censure?
43368What would it be to see a woman going by, even though she were going secretly?
43368What would the world say, if we were to allow a solemn treaty, signed with us, to be violated?
43368What would you have me do?"
43368What, besides, have you found in them?"
43368What, then, is it that causes doubt and mystery to attend the ways of men?
43368When Audley pressed her heart to his own, could he comprehend one finer throb of its beating?
43368When could the marriage be proclaimed?
43368When we repeated, with some surprise,"The sheep?"
43368Which of the two suffered the most?
43368Which of these motives can urge Madame di Negra to marry Mr. Frank Hazeldean?"
43368Who dare justify the spending night after night in such ceaseless pleasure- seeking?
43368Who has not had just this experience, or a similar one, at any Watering- Place?
43368Who the Devil is he?
43368Who the devil is he?"
43368Who would confide to a woman things in which she could do nothing, except to tease one the more?"
43368Who would not once have seen Helen, though he might never see her more?
43368Who would not welcome nowadays any_ bona fide_ contemporaneous account of the meals or dress of William Shakspeare, or of Francis Bacon?
43368Why did he seize upon those papers with so tremulous a hand-- then lay them down-- pause, as if to nerve himself-- and look so eagerly again?
43368Why did she smile?
43368Why do n''t I know him?
43368Why has n''t he thirty thousand a year?''
43368Why is play- acting radically vicious?
43368Why should Mr. Tulkinghorn, for such no reason, look out of window?
43368Why should he thrust his long nose into my family affairs?
43368Why should not I take him up, too, when his grandmother was a Hazeldean?
43368Why should not the_ President_?
43368Why the deuce should you think I came to Saratoga to drink the waters?"
43368Will you allow me to gather up for myself and my half famished friends, the fragments of your recent meal?"
43368Will you come?"
43368Will you have peace, or will you have war?
43368Will you or will you not execute the treaty of Amiens?
43368YOUNG LADY.--"Now then, what is it that you wish to say to me that so nearly concerns your happiness?"
43368You are sure he is a good lad-- and it will please you too, Audley?"
43368You could n''t really mean the lamb without sending it in, whereas I can, and do, really mean the money without paying it?''
43368You did n''t know him, did you?"
43368You did n''t throw it away, did you?"
43368You have not?
43368You know that good- looking, idle, and, I fear, irreclaimable young fellow, George Hamblin?"
43368You remember our friend Coavinses, Miss Summerson?"
43368You''re going back, Charley?
43368You''re not afraid of me, Tom; are you?"
43368You?
43368Your wife, then, does not know the exact state of your affairs?"
43368_ The Tuileries._--"Will Prince Louis Napoleon,"inquired a gentleman, of a French lady,"take up his residence in the Tuileries?"
43368and do you call them_ tongs_?
43368do you want money?
43368he cried with explosive quickness--"what about Annie?
43368interrupted Levy,"to deceive your friend L''Estrange?
43368is that the man who knows my son''s affairs?
43368or what, for marching and counter- marching the Boulevard, with a fat wife on one arm, and a fat daughter on the other?
43368out with it, will you?"
43368said Miss Flite.--"Who''s that at my door?
43368the young fellow we are talking of?
43368though he hath committed great faults, hath he not expiated them by great sufferings?
43368was not respected; is it likely that mine would be?
43368what do I care for either now?"
43368what, the debt he paid for that woman?
43368why, what can you want a hundred dollars so soon for?"
43368will you?"
55021Abram?
55021Alligator?
55021And as I did n''t suppose she would accept any other Indian--"You brought Coacoochee back with you?
55021And did you ever see such a change in so short a time? 55021 And do you trust the man whom you have just left?"
55021And me?
55021And who is the other, pray?
55021Are the warriors trained by Coacoochee to be told what they shall do, and what they shall not do, by a pack of Miccosouky dogs?
55021But I suppose you have come on business?
55021But supposing Coacoochee does not come? 55021 But what have white men got to do with this business?"
55021But who is the rascally beggar?
55021But why did n''t you bring him ashore? 55021 But,"said Talmus,"was it not one of the Iste- hatke who brought us these things?
55021Ca n''t I go too, colonel?
55021Ca n''t you guess, Anstice? 55021 Can it be true?
55021Can we trust him, Letty? 55021 Coacoochee, is it you?"
55021Danger?
55021Did n''t you say it must be a double wedding or none?
55021Did she recognize the white men?
55021Do n''t you count on me too, colonel? 55021 Do you believe that?
55021Do you promise for the sake of this maiden to strive with all your powers to attain the rank of a warrior? 55021 Do?
55021Does it take four of you to whip one Indian? 55021 Does my brother hear anything?"
55021Does my brother regard me so meanly as to think that to save my life alone, or to save a thousand lives such as mine, I would have signed?
55021Douglass captured and about to be killed? 55021 Douglass?
55021Have you brought Coacoochee back with you? 55021 He still lives?
55021How came you here? 55021 How can we?"
55021How do you know it was a ghost, and not a live man?
55021How is it possible for you to hear these things when I can hear nothing at all?
55021How is this? 55021 I say whar did you steal that dog, Injun?"
55021Is it true?
55021Is n''t it a pleasure to see her so happy?
55021Is there any way of finding out who these poor devils were?
55021Is thy man''s heart turned by thy captivity into that of Cho- fee[ the rabbit], and art thou become one who trembles at the sight of his own shadow? 55021 Must be niggers, then?"
55021No, we have n''t heard any news; what is it?
55021No?
55021Now, Mr. Injun, what have you got to say to that?
55021Sam Jones?
55021So you acknowledge that you hain''t got no pass, do you, Injun? 55021 WILEY THOMPSON, WHERE IS MY WIFE?"
55021Was n''t it, now? 55021 Was there no way for my brother to save his life but by signing the white man''s paper?"
55021Were you bound, blind- folded, or in any other way deprived of the use of your faculties?
55021What do you mean by the theatre?
55021What do you mean?
55021What do you mean?
55021What does it all mean?
55021What does this mean? 55021 What for?"
55021What has become of them, then?
55021What is awful? 55021 What is it, Coacoochee?
55021What was the cause of the firing I heard but a short while since? 55021 What were you doing there?"
55021What would you do in that case?
55021What''s your name?
55021Where are the other chiefs, and why have they not surrendered?
55021Where did you see it?
55021Who do you say is captured? 55021 Who owns him?"
55021Who was in command?
55021Who? 55021 Whose ghost do you think it was?"
55021Why have you not done this already? 55021 Will you, Coacoochee?
55021Would the white maiden take the hand of her who is of the Iste- lustee?
55021Yes, but may you not be mistaken? 55021 You do n''t mean Mr. Douglass, brother?"
55021You do n''t say so?
55021Ai n''t ye, now?"
55021And did n''t you know that poor Nita was wearing her heart out with suspense?"
55021And do n''t you suppose we know it, too, you confoundedly proud Seminole, you?"
55021And you''ll set up a nigger''s oath and an Injun''s oath agin that of a white man, will ye?
55021Are his warriors glad when they hear them?"
55021Are the white men so?
55021Are the words of Coacoochee good in the ears of the tribe?
55021Are the words of Coacoochee good in the ears of the white war- chief?"
55021Are we dogs that we should suffer this thing?
55021Are we to be attacked?
55021Are you not in equal, or even in greater, peril?
55021Are you really alive?
55021Are you willing to promise that from that time his lodge shall be thy lodge, his friends thy friends, and his enemies thy enemies?
55021Besides, it is too high for us to reach, and, even if we got outside, would we not fall again into the hands of the soldiers?"
55021Besides, was he not going into danger for her sake, and the sake of those most dear to her?
55021Boyd, I of course count on you to go with us?"
55021But are you certain that Coacoochee is dead?"
55021CHAPTER XIII"WILEY THOMPSON, WHERE IS MY WIFE?"
55021Ca n''t I go with you?"
55021Can all this be true?"
55021Canby?"
55021D''ye hear?"
55021Did Indian fight with Indian?
55021Did Nita find out the name of the other man?"
55021Did he continue to do this when he found that his weapons were no match for those of the white man?
55021Did n''t you suppose we wanted to see him?
55021Did you not hear me give my word to this youth that he should go in safety?
55021Do n''t you know the meaning of the word''gratitude''?
55021Do n''t you know?
55021Do you know what you are talking about?
55021Do you not realize your awful peril?
55021Do you promise, when that time comes, to take her to your lodge to be your squaw?
55021Does my brother now understand why I signed?"
55021Finally Osceola, apparently satisfied with what he saw, broke the silence, and said:"We are brothers?"
55021Had the savages been attacked by a party of whites?
55021Has he told us the truth?"
55021Has my brother won the heart of a pale- faced maiden?"
55021Have n''t you come for me?
55021Have you brought a token from her?"
55021He only asked:"Why should Coacoochee halt at the command of a white man?"
55021Here are two accounted for, but what has become of the other two?
55021How could such a thing be?
55021How dare you?
55021How dared you then even contemplate this outrage?
55021I am in time?"
55021I suppose you have heard the great news and are come out to verify it?"
55021I wonder if Osceola is among these Indians?"
55021I wonder, though, if that can be the secret of Irwin''s escape?"
55021If he could only obtain the position of guide to Major Dade''s little army, what would be easier than to deliver them into the hands of Coacoochee?
55021If it is a better land than this, as the white man tells us, why does he not go there himself and leave us alone?
55021If there is no peace, if the Seminole must fight, then who will fight harder or more bravely than Coacoochee?
55021If they do those things, why should not the Indian do them as well?
55021In the present instance how could Osceola have gained his liberty by any other means?
55021Is it a go?
55021Is it as a prisoner?
55021Is it not so?"
55021Is it well?"
55021Is it you?
55021Is n''t she?"
55021Is n''t that so, boy?"
55021Is that you?"
55021Is there nothing left but to fight and die?
55021Is this the way you continue a private quarrel and gratify your devilish instincts?
55021Might not the same fate overtake her most dear to him and hundreds of others with her?
55021Not going back?"
55021Now, Mr. Douglass, since you are so happily restored to us, please tell me what to expect in yonder den of swamp devils?
55021Of course you gained the victory, though?"
55021Or have you decided to join the winning side, and become an ally of the Americans?"
55021Or shall we meet them in battle and prove to them that our words were not empty boastings, when we said the Seminole would fight for his land?
55021Perhaps, sir, you can give us the desired information?"
55021Rather different from the idea prevailing in most white communities, is it not?"
55021Shall we allow them to pass by us and join their friends?
55021Should she still attempt to escape, or should she trust the youth who had just announced himself to be Coacoochee, the friend of her brother?
55021That we left so many of them alive?
55021The first of these struck like a blow:"Are you prepared to deliver up at once all negroes taken from citizens?
55021The white man puts a spy to death; why should not the Indian?
55021Then there came a rustle beside the motionless figure and a whispered:"Louis, my brother?"
55021They recognized it as the signal of Coacoochee; but where was he?
55021Under the circumstances, do n''t you think it will be just as well not to tell Anstice what we have seen?"
55021Was Salano''s hatred of the young Indian whom he had so cruelly wronged so bitter that he was determined to seize every opportunity for killing him?
55021Was her brother really wounded, and was she being taken to him, or were those only plausible tales to lure her away beyond chance of rescue?
55021Was not one white man equal to five Indians at any time?
55021What argument, though, was it you used at the last?
55021What could have put such a belief into your mind?"
55021What could it mean?
55021What do you think you hear?"
55021What does this mean?"
55021What force opposes us?
55021What has happened?"
55021What has happened?"
55021What have you done with her?
55021What is it, dear?"
55021What is the meaning of this ominous silence?"
55021What is to become of them?
55021What now shall be done?
55021What possible interest can your guest have in Coacoochee?"
55021What should she do?
55021What would a soldier''s life be without it?
55021What, then, is thy opinion concerning this tale of wrong and outrage?"
55021When they returned to the outer room, Douglass asked curiously:"What does it mean, Boyd?
55021Where can they go?
55021Where could she find a braver or more gallant protector than Coacoochee?
55021Where have you been?"
55021Where is my wife?
55021Where were the whites she had so confidently expected to see?
55021Which way should she turn?
55021Who are those yonder?"
55021Who can it be?"
55021Why are you here instead of safe in Augustine as we thought?
55021Why did I do it?"
55021Why do n''t you tell us?"
55021Why, the girl is as white as Anstice herself, and even if she were not, do you suppose that would make any difference?
55021Wiley Thompson, where is my wife?"
55021Will my sister keep its secret hidden deep in her own bosom, where no enemy of the Iste- chatte shall ever find it?"
55021Will my white brother go with me?"
55021Will you come with us, Boyd?"
55021Will you do this thing for me?"
55021Will you go with me and see him?
55021Will you go with me, and exert your influence to induce him to come in?"
55021With a feeble shout of joy at sight of his friend, the sufferer exclaimed tremulously:"Is she safe?
55021Wo n''t Anstice be pleased, though?
55021Wo n''t you please arrange it, like a dear man?"
55021Wo n''t you shake hands with me in token of friendship?"
55021Wo n''t you--?"
55021Would it not be better for them to incur the dangers and sufferings of war rather than those of slavery?
55021Would the brave girl succeed in saving the life of her lover?
55021Would you mind, sir, if I followed this new trail a few miles, not to exceed five?
55021You''re a nice, respectable, chummy sort of a chap, ai n''t you, now?
55021and maybe bring help to your brother?
55021and what has happened, dear, to frighten you?"
55021by your rascally intrusion into other folk''s privacy?"
55021exclaimed Boyd,"are you the sentry who disappeared last night?"
55021here is their camp now; but I say, Coacoochee, who is that white girl sitting among the Indian women?
55021if you have killed yourself, what will it all amount to?
55021one would say reproachfully,"yo wouldn''tink ob astin''a ole ooman to leab behine de onliest fedder bed she done got?"
55021or must he die like a dog, without ever again treading the soil of his native land?
55021to hunt game for her?
55021to love her and bear with her until the Great Spirit shall call you to dwell with him in the Happy Hunting- grounds?"
55021to protect her with your life from harm?
55021to see that she suffers not from hunger?
55021whar did you steal that dog?"
55021why are you here?
55021why did I do it?
55021you ai n''t going to start along so soon, be ye?"
8459''Garçon,''says he,''if I ask you a question will you tell me the truth?'' 8459 ''What are these fireworks for?''
8459''What do you want of me?'' 8459 ''_ Oui, monsieur; certainement._''"Well, how much was the largest tip you ever received?"
8459As they were coming away the great Mr. Lamar said to the poor landlady,''Madam, have you lived long in Washington?'' 8459 But,"says Bill,"did you see him?"
8459Did you ever hear The Frenchman tell that story about Sophonisba?
8459Did you see that?
8459Do you think that the committee have found you out?
8459How so?
8459How you expect an old sport like me to bet upon a certainty?
8459I understand,I said in an address to the assembled delegates,"that you are all for Grover Cleveland?"
8459If,I ended my sketch,"out of the mouths of babes and sucklings, why not out of the brain of this crazed old woman of the South?"
8459In what way do you consider it unfair, your Majesty?
8459Is it a free fight?
8459Is that all?
8459Lamar,he exclaimed,"do n''t you think you have heard the greatest speech to- night that was never delivered?"
8459My God,without a pause he continued,"is n''t that great?"
8459That is good, is n''t it? 8459 The first thing I want to ask,"said he,"is whether that old woman was a real person or a figment of your imagination?"
8459To whom are you referring?
8459What do you take me for-- confidence man?
8459What do you think of that?
8459What do you think of this vintage?
8459What was it?
8459What would you do,he once said,"if you owned the Herald?"
8459What would you suggest?
8459What-- at the d''Orient?
8459Where do I come in?
8459Why,I answered,"I would stay in New York and edit it;"and then I proceeded,"but you mean to ask me what I think you ought to do with it?"
8459''Ace high,''says the Jedge;''what you got?''
8459''Do you remember,''the statesman, soldier and orator continued,''a young and handsome Mississippian, a member of Congress, by the name of Lamar?''
8459''What you got?''
8459''Will you,''he abruptly interjected,''accept the chairmanship of the board of visitors to the academy this coming June?''
8459A little group of such men formed itself about Schurz-- then only forty- three years old-- to what end?
8459And how?"
8459And then life tenure after the manner of the Caesars and Cromwells of history, and especially the Latin- Americans-- Bolivar, Rosas and Diaz?
8459Are they willfully dense?
8459Are we on the way to another terrestrial collapse, and so on ad infinitum to the end of time?
8459But before her time what had he been, what had he done?
8459But what was he to do?
8459But which among us keeps or has ever kept the middle of the road?
8459But which page of the court calendar made you a plural?
8459Could mortal ask for more?
8459Could there be a stronger argument in favor of a world to come than may be found in the brevity and incertitude of the world that is?
8459Could you not substitute some other expression?"
8459Did Washington, when he was angry, swear like a trooper?
8459Do the people grow degenerate?
8459Does this make me a Baptist, I wonder?
8459He came down from the Castle on the hill to the marketplace in the town and says he:"What do you galoots want, anyhow?"
8459He stood quite at the head of our literature, giving the lie to the scornful query,"Who reads an American book?"
8459He was, for all his self- sufficiency and pride, short- sighted; and yet, until they arrived, how could he foresee the developments of artillery?
8459How could such a mà © nage last?
8459How much does old Sam Johnson owe of the fine figure he cuts to Boswell, and, minus Boswell, how much would be left of him?
8459I wonder if that can be justly said of the President?
8459I wonder shall we ever get any real truth out of what is called history?
8459I wonder where they got it?
8459In what was he a black sheep, for that he had been one seemed certain?
8459Mr. Barksdale said:"Would not the words''We have received with the deepest sensibility Mr. Tilden''s letter of withdrawal,''answer your purpose?"
8459Neither shall I make apology for this long quotation by myself from myself, for am I not inditing an autobiography, so called?
8459On one occasion I said to her:"Ellen, why do you pursue this man in this cruel way?
8459Once after a concert he suddenly exclaimed:"Do n''t you think Wagner was a---- fraud?"
8459Once out of the White House-- what else and what----?
8459Only names?
8459Pryor?"
8459Senator Gwin of California, the eighth of February, 1858?''
8459Ten minutes later,"Is it still a free fight?"
8459Ten thousand heads were chopped off during the Terror in France to make room for whom?
8459The challenge underlying prohibition is twofold: Does prohibition prohibit, and, if it does, may it not generate evils peculiarly its own?
8459Then he asked:"What do you want for Winchester?"
8459Then it appeared that the designated thesis read:"Which political party offers for the workingman the best solution of the tariff problem?"
8459To what end?
8459Was it for this that he had fought with tongue and pen and sword?
8459Was it for this that oceans of patriotism, of treasure and of blood had been poured out?
8459We owe a great debt to Washington, because if a third why not a fourth term?
8459We sat together at table and suddenly he turned and said:"How are you getting on with your bill?"
8459What are you hanging round Washington for anyhow?
8459What boots it?
8459What did the President know or care about foreign appointments?
8459What do they know or care about the origins of wealth; about Venice; about Cadiz; about what is said of Wall Street?
8459What do you want?"
8459What else and what next?
8459What had he done to be ashamed about or wish to conceal?
8459What is CÃ ¦ sar to us, or we to CÃ ¦ sar?
8459What is to be done about it?
8459What of that?"
8459What possible good can it do you?"
8459What was it I was saying about statues-- that they all look alike to me?
8459What was the matter with Nero?
8459What was there for Webster, what was there for Clay to quibble about?
8459When I had finished he said:"What are you doing about Winchester?"
8459When will the world learn to discriminate?
8459When, having failed to provoke a fight, he had taken himself off, an onlooker said:"Bill, I thought you were going to do him up?"
8459Where must an old- line Democrat go to find himself?
8459Where this side of heaven shall we look for the court of last resort?
8459Where will it end?
8459Who among us has the single right to claim for himself, and the likes of him, the divine title of a workingman?
8459Who shall tell us the truth, the whole truth, and nothing but the truth, about Hamilton; about Burr; about CÃ ¦ sar, Caligula and Cleopatra?
8459Who that heard them shall ever forget them?
8459Who this side of the grave shall be sure of anything?
8459Whom do you mean by"we"?''
8459Why did n''t you hold back your statement a bit?
8459Why might I not put a head and tail to this-- a foreword and a few words in conclusion-- and make it meet the purpose and serve the occasion?
8459Why not?"
8459Why should not you and I call him Master and kneel together in love and pity at his feet?"
8459Wo n''t you manage it for me?"
8459Yet have we the record of any moment when it was not so?
8459Yet how could I accept it with the work ahead of me?
8459Yet, to come again, d''ye mind?
41678''Not Proven''?
41678''That''s all,''eh? 41678 A letter from Dorn?
41678A week? 41678 Ah, you think so?
41678Ai n''t he arrested? 41678 Ai n''t we going home?"
41678All right? 41678 And have two of them looking blue?
41678And how do you come to be at my elbow when I thought you were far away at sea?
41678And if Dorn can not, as you say it is difficult to do, prove himself innocent, what will they do with him?
41678And interested in getting him back to work for you, as you deem him a good sailor?
41678And of course you know nothing of where he has been, and what he has been doing all that time?
41678And that is--?
41678And that is?
41678And the young man?
41678And what is it you have to tell me?
41678And when he comes you''ll get married?
41678And when you get them, you''ll leave?
41678And who is the girl?
41678And why one hundred golden pieces for this man? 41678 And you do not see God''s hand driving you here and giving you up to man''s justice?
41678And you felt just as sure of that when you did not hear from him for nearly two years?
41678And you never thought that while you were so long away I might learn to love somebody else?
41678And you still think that a lawyer could get you out?
41678And you tell me that Dorn Hackett is suspected of a thing like that?
41678And you''ve got the face to stand there and tell me that? 41678 Around New York, eh?
41678Arrest Dorn? 41678 At what hour that night did you last see the prisoner?"
41678Be you Mary Wallace?
41678But how did they come to be after me?
41678But if you could live in a nice place in the city?
41678But where is your proof?
41678Can you do what he claims for you?
41678Can you give me a description of the little gentleman on horseback? 41678 Can you imagine why I sent for you in such a deuce of a hurry?"
41678Can you regard that bureau with equanimity?
41678Congratulations upon what? 41678 Did he?"
41678Did you ever see a cat playing with a live mouse that she had caught?
41678Did you expect to meet a friend here?
41678Do you ever really get them eighty feet long?
41678Do you hear that?
41678Do you recognize that man among those here present?
41678Do you wish to see your mother?
41678Does it not recall your vanished youth-- the red horizon of your adolescence? 41678 Does-- do they know of it?"
41678Fishing? 41678 Free lunch?
41678From Boston? 41678 Have n''t you some other key about the house that will fit the lock?"
41678Have they got so much money?
41678Have you any notion of changing your mind?
41678Have you been working steadily in Boston, and behaving yourself as you promised me you would?
41678Have you ever seen these things before, Mr. Van Deust?
41678He has been gone a great while, has n''t he?
41678He was doing well, I suppose? 41678 Here?"
41678Him and I went up to Van Deust''s a week ago to- day--"Who do you mean by''him?'' 41678 How are you going?"
41678How could he have had it if he had n''t killed the old man?
41678How did you come over?
41678How do they know he did it?
41678How is that, Mary?
41678How long was he, then?
41678How much have you obtained from one whale?
41678How often must I tell you, darling,patting her cheek softly,"that you are the only woman I ever loved?"
41678How she lets it go a little way off, making it think it is going to escape, and then pounces on it again? 41678 I desire to know the object of the prosecution in calling this witness?"
41678I wonder if you were so impatient all the three long years you were away?
41678I''m delighted to hear you speak so highly of him,replied the stranger, with apparent heartiness,"How long is it since you sailed with him?"
41678In a small boat, sailing from the shore?
41678In jail?
41678Is that so? 41678 It manes, and shure and where''s the harm?"
41678Know what?
41678Lem?
41678Love you? 41678 Make yourself as comfortable as you can, and will you have a little something to take, to keep the cold out?"
41678Mary Wallace, I want to know where you''ve been all this night?
41678My deah boy,howls Vandeleur, shaking me by the arm vigorously,"will you cut short your soliloquy?
41678No; how should I? 41678 No?
41678Nothing? 41678 Now, Ruth, are you going to tell tales?"
41678Oh, you''d like a nice supper, would you?
41678One hundred golden pieces? 41678 Peter, you''d kick a boy for throwing stones at a wild bird, would n''t you?"
41678Ruth Lenox, eh? 41678 Shall I have to wait long?"
41678She expected it?
41678She met him that night, did she?
41678Smuggling, eh?
41678So you knew him well in Boston, did you?
41678So you''ve been eaves- dropping, have you, sir?
41678Squire, are you busy?
41678That handkerchief business will be likely to hang him, wo n''t it?
41678That ugly, good- for- nothing cub of his?
41678That was the night upon which Jacob Van Deust was murdered, was it not?
41678Through the window?
41678Was this considered a very large whale?
41678Was this one eighty feet long?
41678Well, Peter, if it were, what more good would it do us?
41678Well, friend Irar,he said, when he had led the young man to a dim room at the back of the house,"can I do aught for you to- day?"
41678Well, what business have you got to come here pestering me with questions, as if you was trying to catch me?
41678Well, what do you want to ask a feller so many questions for?
41678Well, what do you''guess''?
41678Well, what of it? 41678 Well?"
41678What could happen to him? 41678 What did it mean then?"
41678What do you call pretty fair- sized?
41678What do you know about what I''d do with it?
41678What do you mean, you impudent fellow?
41678What do you think?
41678What do you want?
41678What does he want you to do, anyway? 41678 What has he to say about whom you shall marry?
41678What have you to say in reply to the statement which you have just heard made by this gentleman, to the effect that you sold this seal to him?
41678What is it, Lem? 41678 What is that, father?"
41678What is the cargo that you speak of as''they''?
41678What is your business?
41678What is your name?
41678What kind of a looking person in this Hackett?
41678What shall I tell you?
41678What would Flossy say? 41678 What would a fellow be likely to be doing who has no trade, and no money, and no home, and no respectable friends, and nobody to see to him?"
41678What!--little Bella who used to caper around in such airy garments at the Alhambra?
41678What-- what can I get you?
41678What? 41678 What?--Dorn Hackett guilty of murder and robbery?"
41678When did you see him last?
41678Where away?
41678Where did the Van Deusts get their money?
41678Where did you get that seal?
41678Where do you come from?
41678Where do you live?
41678Where have you been? 41678 Where?
41678Where?
41678Who has come?
41678Who was he?
41678Who''s in jail?
41678Why did you leave there?
41678Why had he not come? 41678 Why, he''s my lawyer, the man who brought us the intelligence of-- But what do you want to know for?
41678Why,said he,"to think of your dying, Peter, gives me a-- a-- a--""An idea, eh?"
41678Why? 41678 Why?"
41678Why?
41678Working at ship- carpentering, I believe?
41678Would I be likely to throw away a chance to make a hundred dollars?
41678Yes, it is, and what of it?
41678Yes; and now, was the gem hard to swallow?
41678You hate them? 41678 You know Lem?"
41678You say that this young man has been away for three years?
41678You would? 41678 You young folks intend to get married, do n''t you?"
41678Your highness promised freedom and gold to the slave who should bring you the finest pearl on earth; will this one win the gift?
41678----?"
41678A man came running in, alarmed by his cry; and of him Irar demanded, in a voice choked and hoarse with emotion:"Your master, quick!--where is he?"
41678A smile of mingled scorn and contempt passed like a flash across the man''s face, and then he said:"What will it matter to me whether I can or no?"
41678A very few of them, at first, had curiosity enough to add"why?"
41678All I have--""Like the Van Deusts?"
41678Am I to understand that you are one of the said parties?"
41678And I?"
41678And did he know you were coming to see me?"
41678And do you know what he did?
41678And he was raised in the neighborhood?
41678And how could he dare to look forward to a time when one so beautiful should be his own?--aye, all and all his own?
41678And now do you know what would do more than anything else to keep him steady?"
41678And now what had he to look forward to?
41678And now, Jacob, what the mischief is that to you?
41678And some day you and that other person will be coming to me for a little business in my line, I reckon,--a sort of mutual life lease, eh?"
41678And they''ll hang him, wo n''t they?"
41678And three years really is a long time, is n''t it?"
41678And what complexion is the lady, light or dark?
41678And what did your friends,''the boys,''do?"
41678And what has it to do with his putting the ten- acre lot in corn on shares?"
41678And what would Silas think of you if he knew of your conduct?
41678And where is your friend now?"
41678And you would n''t see your son h-- h-- hanged, would you?"
41678And you''d like to knock me in the head and get possession of it, would n''t you?"
41678And''that''s all,''eh?
41678Are these the same price as the others?
41678Are you sure they are all- wool?
41678Are you?"
41678At Cleveland, in the campaign of 1880, he said:"Have you seen any trouble with the pillars of the government?
41678At the elbow?
41678At the end of a few minutes, a voice answered indistinctly from within:"Who''s there?
41678Baxter?"
41678Baxter?"
41678Besides that, if they are excepted, who is to define a"star"?
41678Brown?
41678But do you not understand, young man, that this may be a very serious matter?
41678But her aunt?
41678But now--?
41678But they''ve got the right man now, have n''t they?
41678But while joy was always a portion of these meetings, now and then a dark thought would give its stab; for was he not a slave?
41678But why, if you have anything to tell, did you not come up to the inquest?"
41678But will it ever come to America?
41678By gaslight, then?
41678Can either of you young ladies direct me definitely upon my way, and if able, will you be so kind as to do so?"
41678Can you look me in the face and tell me you have n''t?"
41678Candidly, love, do you like a skirt without any drapery at all?
41678Could he ask Mary to come into court and testify to their love- meeting in the woods?
41678Could he have imagined that such a construction would be put upon it?
41678Could it have been the echo of my voice that I heard?
41678Could those two loving ones have phrased the gratitude, to the Giver of all Good, that thrilled their souls?
41678Darker?
41678Did he let you know how much he got by killing old Jake Van Deust?"
41678Did n''t Dorn have the handkerchief?
41678Did n''t she-- It seems to me she said something or other about brown-- didn''t she?
41678Did n''t you hear what the judge said about his receiving an important communication that had a decided bearing, and all that?"
41678Did she say she wished a brown especially, dear?
41678Did you know there''s a schooner goes to Sag Harbor, Tuesdays and Fridays, starting at five o''clock in the evening from Coenties Slip?"
41678Did you notice at the time what kind of shoes he wore?"
41678Did you?
41678Do n''t they?
41678Do n''t they?
41678Do n''t you remember we were once the pride of the school because we robbed watermelon patches so skilfully?
41678Do n''t you?
41678Do they not compete quite as much with American talent as the humbler aspirants of the stage?
41678Do you not know that a woman weeps when her heart is full, just because it_ is_ full, whether it be filled with joy or sorrow?"
41678Do you really think she would like green?
41678Do you suppose my boy would ever look at a girl that get''s herself talked about as you will?
41678Do you think he brings money here?
41678Do you think so?
41678Do you think you''ll decide on the brown, madam?
41678Do you understand?
41678Do you wish to overhear their interview?"
41678Do you?
41678Does the gaslight change the shade much?
41678Dorn Hackett?
41678Dorn Hackett?
41678Dorn Hackett?"
41678Eh?
41678Fifteen dollars?
41678Five, seven-- let me see, it would take about-- how much do you usually sell for a costume?
41678For what?"
41678Generally they did not even ask"why?"
41678Gray, did you say, madam?
41678Green-- did you say green, ladies?
41678Has he?
41678Has that rascal Silas been making you any more trouble?"
41678Have you never been afraid that Dorn would?"
41678Have you, or have you had, sir, to your knowledge, an uncle named Dietrich Van Deust?"
41678He does, eh?
41678He looked rather sour at this doubtful compliment, and hitching up his baggy trousers, asked,"Well, what is the next misery?"
41678He was interrupted by a telegram direct from the White House, as follows:"How many slaves have you enlisted?"
41678High wages?
41678His father looked at him with a countenance full of disgust, and answered grimly:"Oh, it''s hush- money you''re after, is it?"
41678Holden?"
41678Holden?"
41678How are y-- I mean how is she going to have the waist?
41678How could he have fallen under suspicion?
41678How could it come to be known that he was in the neighborhood on that fatal night?
41678How could they do that?"
41678How did this seal come into your possession?"
41678How far is your place from the Van Deusts''?"
41678How she pretends she is n''t paying any attention to it, and has no notion of hurting it, and then suddenly tears it to pieces?"
41678How wide did you say?
41678How wide?
41678How would I look going around the country asking people,''who killed Jake Van Deust?''
41678I do n''t dare to take the responsibility; would you?
41678I have done all that lay in my power to make a decent man of you, and what are you?
41678I thought you said he was in a whaling vessel?"
41678I tried the first door on the landing, and was rewarded with"Is that you?"
41678I was passing through the neck of woods on the lower end of my place--""How far is your place from the Van Deusts''?"
41678I would n''t be seen in either of those horrid things; would you?
41678I''m so bad, am I?
41678In a little time he grew calm, and raising his head, he said:"Has your master returned?"
41678In sympathetic exuberance of joy the two girls embraced and kissed each other, Ruth exclaiming:"And we''ll get married on the same day, wo n''t we?
41678Indifferently he asked:"Of course you have no idea of who the old man in the boat was?"
41678Is blue the color that you are looking for, madam?
41678Is brown really so fashionable this season?
41678Is it for yourself, madam?
41678Is it for yourself, may I ask, madam?
41678Is n''t it?
41678Is n''t it?
41678Is n''t that perfect?
41678Is n''t that so, now?"
41678Is that a piece of claret- colored that I see up there?
41678Is that so?
41678Is that your idea?"
41678Is there any imperfection?
41678Is this a time for poetry, when we might get ten years if we were found burglarizing this house?"
41678Is this the same goods as the others?
41678Is you boys a qwa''lin''?"
41678It is n''t fair to play dreams on the rest of us that way, is it boys?"
41678It seems strange that any one who was raised near him, and knew him, could ever have had the heart to kill Jacob, do n''t it?"
41678It was Uncle Dietrich who went away to the Indies when we were boys, was n''t it, Peter?"
41678It was not hard for Irar to do this, for did he not know that love and freedom were both waiting for him?
41678It would n''t take much, would it?
41678Looking up from his work, he demanded of the young girl, in a tone of querulous surprise,"Where on earth have you been?
41678Mary gave him her hand, smilingly asking:"Did you wish to see me, sir?"
41678Merciful Allah-- did he see aright?
41678Now that lightest piece would be just too sweet, would n''t it, made up with that new Persian trimming?
41678Now, do you really sell as much claret color as you do green or brown this season?
41678Now, general, how do you suppose the farmers treat them?"
41678Of velvet?
41678Oh, halcyon days of happy holiday, mine no more, can a lifetime with a funded houri wholly fill your place?"
41678Oh, sir, how can I ever sufficiently thank you and him for what you have done?"
41678Plain full skirt?
41678Say, Maud, is n''t that green, up there, the top of that left- hand pile, is n''t it too lovely and chic for anything?
41678Shall I have food and shelter?"
41678She fear a common burglar?
41678She is just about my size, is n''t she, Maud?
41678Should he give the gem to the inspector of the fisheries?
41678Should you feel ashamed of being unfortunate?
41678So I''ve caught you in one story, have I?
41678That blue is lovely, is n''t it, Maud?
41678That''s reason enough for you, is it?
41678The first for over a year, is n''t it?"
41678The man from Boston seemed just a little embarrassed, but only for an instant, when he answered very reassuringly:"Steady?
41678The other lady had taken out her pocket- book, and now said to the other:"And you, Will, what shall I say for you?"
41678The superintendent received him brusquely, demanding as soon as he put his foot over the threshold of the office:--"Well, my man, what do you want?"
41678Then, after a short pause, he said:"Schenck, do you know what a_ galled prairie_ is?"
41678There was a supreme confidence in his tone, a foreshadowed success that inspired even himself, as he asked:"Will she be ready for me?"
41678They are lovely, though; are n''t they?
41678To employ a lawyer who shall shield you from the fate He has decreed?
41678To live and die an old maid, to please him?"
41678Uncle Thatcher raised his head and, looking fixedly at his son, asked slowly:"Why did you come here to- day?"
41678Upon being Peter and Jacob Van Deust?"
41678Was it Dorn or Silas?"
41678Was n''t it you that found the marks on the window, and tracked the murderer out to the lane?
41678We were in a hall, but what hall?
41678Well where are your friends Ruth and her lover?
41678Well, why not exclude"stars"?
41678Wha''dy''e wan''?"
41678What benefits can freedom give me?"
41678What can I do for you?"
41678What can I show you this morning, ladies?
41678What can you testify to?"
41678What d''ye want?"
41678What did you tell him?"
41678What do you suppose they are going to do now?"
41678What do you think of the case?"
41678What do you think, dear?
41678What does he say for himself?"
41678What had he to make headway with against that speech, before those five men and with that fatal marked handkerchief ever fluttering before his eyes?
41678What has happened to him?
41678What if I did have the seal?
41678What is it?
41678What is the good of calling on an Englishman to do on the stage what no Englishman can accomplish in private life?
41678What more d''ye want?"
41678What must be done in this case?"
41678What need can be to say the rest?
41678What right have you to come here asking me questions about my private affairs-- about my lawyer?
41678What shall I tell the people for you?"
41678What sort of trouble?"
41678What the deuce is the matter with you?
41678What words could have been so complete and eloquent an assurance as that chaste and tender caress?
41678What would Mary say when she learned of it, as she inevitably must?
41678What would you do, dear?
41678What''ll you take?"
41678What''s the matter with you?
41678What''s the use of telling you?"
41678What''the matter with you?"
41678When do you go away again?"
41678When does she want to wear it?
41678When the narration was concluded, Mr. Holden asked:"When is his trial to come off?"
41678Where was I?
41678Which do you like best, love?
41678Who accompanied you?"
41678Who bids?--who bids?"
41678Who can ever find out such things?
41678Who could tell the agony of mind she felt during that time as the leaden hours dragged slowly by?
41678Who knows but what he might marry somebody else while he was gone?
41678Who now believed his story of the little gentleman and the old man in the smack?
41678Who was he?"
41678Why are they so low?
41678Why could n''t you have let well enough alone?"
41678Why do n''t you answer me?"
41678Why not look at it by gaslight, love?
41678Why, then, are our diplomatic agents, so called, sent abroad as ministers?
41678Why?
41678Why?"
41678Why?"
41678Why?"
41678Will you not go to the vizier and make the excuse I need?"
41678Working and keeping steady?"
41678Would he take a check?
41678Would he, Richard Turner, have been so stupid?
41678Would n''t it be too lovely for anything?
41678Would n''t that be just perfect with that white muff and boa of mine, dearest?
41678Would you call her fair or dark, dear?
41678Yes, they are all- wool; French, did you say?
41678You have come here for money, have n''t you?"
41678You remember Bella Bracebridge, of the nimble toes, at whose shrine I worshipped so long and so idiotically?
41678You think to contend against His will?
41678You will, wo n''t you?
41678You''d raise your hand to the mother of Silas?"
41678You''d rather be back in the city, where you lived when you were a little girl, would n''t you?"
41678You''re going away again, Dorn?"
41678You, too?
41678exclaimed Mr. Lincoln;"you surely do not mean that we should take the slaves?"
41678how much?
41678or tell me anything about him that might lead to his identification?"
41678said the old man, with contempt,"did you think I meant red drops that human eyes could see?
41678what are you doing here?"
41678what have I said?
41678where?
41678who?"
41678you do n''t believe Dorn could be guilty, do you?"
6168After you have written three or four words, you can put them together, can you not?
6168All of them?
6168And is that what you call justice?
6168And is this the great, beautiful, happy world that I have been told about?
6168And then will you give me more?
6168And what can you do, Aesop?
6168And whose sheep are these?
6168Are you lately from Italy?
6168Are you the Bruce, and are you all alone?
6168Benjamin, how did thee learn to draw such a picture?
6168But what has the bomb to do with what I wish you to write? 6168 But what shall we do with it?"
6168But wo n''t it look rather funny for me to ride to Exeter on a sidesaddle?
6168Did he have reddish- brown hair, and did he ride a gray horse?
6168Did he say anything, father?
6168Did n''t you ever see your father behave so?
6168Do I look like the wisest of the wise? 6168 Do I owe you anything more?"
6168Do you know of any person who was once poor but who has lately and suddenly become well- to- do?
6168Do you mean that the one with his hat on will be the king?
6168Do you remember those birds?
6168Do you think there will be a battle?
6168Does the rain fall there?
6168Does the sun shine in your country?
6168Excuse me, sir,he said;"but may I ask where you live?"
6168Good friend,he said,"if you should find something that we have lost, what would you do with it?"
6168Have you a room here for me?
6168Have you been sick?
6168Henry Longfellow,said the teacher,"why have you not written?"
6168Here, my friend, what shall I pay you?
6168How did these clothes come on me?
6168How do you know that it is only one beast that does all this mischief?
6168How is this, my dear boy?
6168How much did you pay for it?
6168How much will you give?
6168How much will you take for the fish that you are drawing in?
6168How would you like to live with me, Giotto? 6168 Is she like our mother?"
6168Is this the condition to which I must come?
6168It looks just like her, does n''t it?
6168May a poor traveler find rest and shelter here for the night?
6168Mother, what makes the wind blow?
6168Mother,he said,"will you let me see that beautiful book again?"
6168My good men,he said,"how many fish do you expect to draw in this time?"
6168Nothing? 6168 Now tell us, father,"whispered Charlot,"where did you find him?"
6168Now which of you will hang this bell on the Cat''s neck?
6168Now, you charcoal man, where is that child?
6168O Gilbert, where have you been?
6168O my child, how did you learn to do that?
6168Oh, well,said the groom,"wo n''t six nails do?
6168Oh, what has happened? 6168 Poor men?
6168READ, AND YOU WILL KNOW"Mother, what are the clouds made of? 6168 Shall I wrap it up for you?"
6168Shall we take a walk this morning?
6168Then how am I to get it home?
6168Then to whom shall we take it?
6168Then what shall we understand by these children being able to speak a Phrygian word which they have never heard from other lips?
6168Then why did n''t you do it?
6168Then, I intend to travel the way I wish to go-- do you understand?
6168Therefore,said the king,"must we conclude that the Phrygians were the first and oldest of all the nations?"
6168They say that King Henry always has a number of men with him,said the boy;"how shall I know which is he?"
6168Was that the vice president? 6168 Well, boy, what have you got?"
6168Well, my boy,said King Henry,"which do you think is the king?"
6168Well, my boy,said the king,"are you looking for your father?"
6168Well, then,said the caliph,"why did you not return it to us at once?"
6168Well,said the teacher,"you can write words, can you not?"
6168What are they doing by the roadside?
6168What are you making, Robert?
6168What do you mean by that? 6168 What do you mean, you ungrateful little rascal?"
6168What does that mean?
6168What is it?
6168What is that word?
6168What is the matter here?
6168What is the matter? 6168 What is the matter?"
6168What is the matter?
6168What is the name of this island?
6168What is your father''s name?
6168What is your name, my boy?
6168What is your name, young rebel?
6168What news can you give me concerning my friend Arion, the sweetest of all musicians?
6168What shall I do when it comes my turn?
6168What shall I sing?
6168What shall we write about?
6168What sort of lesson?
6168What would you have done?
6168What''s the matter?
6168Where am I? 6168 Where do you carry your gold?"
6168Where have you been?
6168Where is Lincoln?
6168Where shall we find the wisest man?
6168Where? 6168 Which is the true?"
6168Which would you rather haveasked the caliph,"three hundred pieces of gold, or three wise sayings from my lips?"
6168Who are they?
6168Who are those men, and why do their faces look so joyless?
6168Who has done this?
6168Who is going to ride that nag?
6168Who is next?
6168Who is that child?
6168Who is that man?
6168Who is that polite old gentleman who carried my turkey for me?
6168Who lives on the other side of the world?
6168Who will sing us a song?
6168Why are they sick?
6168Why did he offer to carry my turkey?
6168Why did n''t you come to us before?
6168Why did n''t you give something to Sarcas?
6168Why did you tell us where to find it?
6168Why is that man lying there at this time of day?
6168Why is the sky so blue?
6168Why not?
6168Why should we bother?
6168Why, what has happened to you?
6168Yes, why should we?
6168You want your mother, do n''t you?
6168Aristomenes General Greece 685--?
6168At length the chief of the band called to Otanes and said,"Young fellow, have you anything worth taking?"
6168Before Mrs. Jacquot could open it, some one called out,"Is this the house of Jacquot, the charcoal man?"
6168Bruce, Robert King Sweden 1274--1329 Burritt, Elihu Philanthropist Connecticut 1811--1879 Caedmon Poet England 650--720(?)
6168But are there any gentle, harmless animals in your fields?"
6168Could it be possible that he would receive that thrashing?
6168Do not all persons live eighty years-- yes, many times eighty years?"
6168Do you expect to find any man in Corinth who deserves so rich a gift?"
6168Does thee suppose that it is very wrong for Benjamin to do such a thing?"
6168FIFTY FAMOUS PEOPLE Who they were, what they were, where they lived, Aesop Fabulist Greece 550--?
6168He called to him:--"My friend, which of these roads shall I travel to go to Lynchburg?"
6168He looked at the beast, and-- what do you think it was?
6168He looked at the bright, yellow pieces and said,"What shall I do with these coppers, mother?"
6168Here it is:-- Pray, how shall I, a little lad, In speaking make a figure?
6168How could he find out?
6168How had Sirrah managed to get the three scattered divisions together?
6168How had he managed to drive all the frightened little animals into this place of safety?
6168How is that?"
6168I have I paid you my bill?"
6168Is he also an old man?"
6168Is he some new kind of man?"
6168Is this true?"
6168Johnson?"
6168Not dressed in that way?"
6168Now I have a mind to give this book to one of you""Will you give it to me, mother?"
6168Now, how was Arion saved from drowning when he leaped overboard?
6168Now, tell me, O King, which is the true, and which is the false?"
6168Of what other story does this remind you?
6168Randolph?"
6168Shall I show it to you?"
6168Should he buy a pretty toy?
6168Should he buy candy?
6168Soon another came up and said,"My boy, do you happen to have any gold about you?"
6168THE BOMB Did you ever hear of King Charles the Twelfth, of Sweden?
6168THE HUNTED KING What boy or girl has not heard the story of King Robert Brace and the spider?
6168THE WHISPERERS"Boys, what did I tell you?"
6168The shah turned to the second man:"Have you a daughter?"
6168The woman answered,"All travelers are welcome for the sake of one; and you are welcome""Who is that one?"
6168Then he called his wisest men together and asked them,"Is it really true that the first people in the world were Egyptians?"
6168Then he said to the first man,"Have you a son?"
6168Then some one outside called loudly,"Have you seen King Robert the Bruce pass this way?"
6168They told him that there were beautiful things at home-- why go away to see other things less beautiful?
6168Toward what place was the eagle flying when you last saw it?"
6168WHICH WAS THE KING?
6168What does that mean?"
6168What good does it do?"
6168What is going to happen?"
6168What is the price?"
6168What say you?"
6168What shall I do?"
6168What should he do?
6168What will you do with them?"
6168When the caliph heard of this he sent for Al Farra and asked him,"Who is the most honored of men?"
6168Where am I?"
6168Where did you find him?"
6168Where does all the rain water go?
6168Which shall it be?"
6168Who do you think I am?
6168Who has not heard of George Washington?
6168Why do his legs tremble under him as he walks, leaning upon a stick?
6168Why does the rain fall?
6168Why should he not cool himself in the refreshing water?
6168Will you sell it?
6168Wo n''t you come?"
6168Would you like to read his speech?
6168You know where the fountain is?"
6168Your own mother, and no time to attend to her child?"
6168[ Illustration]"She goes ahead all right,"said Christopher,"but how shall we guide her?"
6168asked Gautama,"and why is his face so pinched and his hair so white?
6168said he,"do you eat gold in this country?"
6168what has thee been doing?"
6168where?"
7347''Good morning, king,"said the farmer;"where are you folks going?"
7347''Any theoretical experience? 7347 ''Do I look nice, now, mother?''
7347''Do n''t you see him, humped up about half- way up the tree?'' 7347 ''Have you conversed with any one who has read such a book?''
7347''Have you ever attended lectures on doorkeeping?'' 7347 ''How did you do it?''
7347''Rifle''s all right-- I know it is,''answered the boy;''but where''s your squirrel?'' 7347 ''Well, have you ever been a doorkeeper?
7347''Well, then, my friend, do n''t you see that you have n''t a single qualification for this important post?'' 7347 ''Well, what in the infernals are you passing for when people are shouting hello?''"
7347''Well, what in the infernals are you shouting''Hello''for when people are passing?'' 7347 ''Why did he call it a mistake?"
7347''Will you take us and our trunks out to the steamboat?'' 7347 ''You ai n''t mastered, are you?''
7347''You are from the West, are n''t you?'' 7347 But what would you have me do?"
7347But you will not abide the election of a Republican President? 7347 But, say, whatever did you do with that stone?
7347Did I ever tell you the joke the Chicago newsboys had on me? 7347 Did Stanton ever march in the first line, to be shot at like this man?"
7347Did you?
7347Do n''t terrapins have feelings?
7347Do you remember,continued the President,"his story about his going to Missouri to look up some Mormon lands belonging to his father?"
7347Do you think that they would like to have Hannibal Hamlin-- his first vice- president-- here any better than myself?
7347Do? 7347 Does the moon shine that night?"
7347Eh? 7347 Grant, do you know what this reminds me of?
7347Have you not seen Sheridan?
7347Holt, were you ever in battle?
7347How is it on your part?
7347I presume,quietly replied Mr. Lincoln,"that there is room enough in her soil for seventy- five thousand graves?"
7347I remember his saying over and over again,says the governor:"''What has God put me in this place for?''"
7347I suppose you had to make large concessions to him, as he returns from you entirely satisfied?
7347Is that all?
7347Kellogg,remarked Lincoln quickly,"is there not something in the Bible about the shedding of blood for the remission of sins?"
7347Relative of yours?
7347That will be the truth?
7347Then you will not go to war on account of slavery?
7347Well, now, you see this nag of mine? 7347 Well,"said he,"did you meet a man going out as you came in?
7347What I want to know is how are you going to pay_ my_ bill?
7347What are you going to tell her about getting hurt?
7347What in the world are you doing there?
7347What''s the matter?
7347Why did he not ask to be secretary of the treasury and have done with it?
7347Why do n''t you answer him?
7347Why, Dennis, what would you do were you President?
7347Will you engage not to repeat that rowdy( blackguard) talk in the store while I am the master, and leave instanter?
7347You do n''t say so? 7347 You know how that Illinois farmer managed the big log that lay in the middle of his field?
7347Your plan is feasible, sir; but how are you to get the boy out?
7347''"Have you read any text- book on the subject?''
7347''Did n''t the donkey do his duty?''
7347''How is that?''
7347***** A PUT- UP JOB-- OR CHANCE?
7347***** DID SHE TAKE THE WINK TO HERSELF?
7347***** HOW GET HIM OUT?
7347***** HOW MANY SHORT BREATHS?
7347***** PEGGED OR SEWED?
7347***** WHAT''S IN A NAME?
7347*****"HOW SLEEP THE BRAVE?"
7347*****"IS THE WORLD GOING TO FOLLOW THAT COMET OFF?"
7347Accordingly one of them asked, indicating the flatboat:"Who owns this?"
7347An enthusiastic friend of the President said to him:"There is not enough left of_ Hood_ to make a dish- rag, is there?"
7347Any instructions in the duties and ethics of doorkeeping?''
7347As the pleased writer folded up the paper for its envelope, he quickly inquired:"Why, what are you going to do with it now?"
7347At a reception, a gentleman addressed him, saying:"I presume, Mr. President, you have forgotten me?"
7347At last, one man whispered to the boy as he went by:"''Look here, boy, ai n''t that hoss got the splints?''
7347At the question''Can you build this bridge?''
7347Bounce, of Chicago?
7347But Lincoln repulsed him gently and whimsically without hurting his feelings, in this way:"''So you want to be doorkeeper to the House, eh?''
7347But do any of you know of any machine or invention for preventing the escape of_ gas_ from newspaper establishments?"
7347But the point is, what would you have me do for you?
7347But the two gentlemen were unable to answer the natural question:"Who is this little boy?"
7347But, affecting rage, he blurted out:"Oh, he tore my paper, did he?
7347Can you tell me where Abraham Lincoln lives?
7347Did you never hear it?"
7347Do n''t you know?"
7347Do you expect to find them under a sycamore- tree?"
7347Do you live in the city?"
7347Had she a premonition on the fatal eve?
7347Have you ever had any experience of doorkeeping?''
7347He paused in his occupation and pointed with his long arm to the long rifle, saying:"''Young man, do you see that gun?
7347He sent the"Dictionary of Congress"his autobiography in a single paragraph of fifty words-- as an example(?).
7347I wonder who he is?"
7347If we remain until November, can_ we_ vote?"
7347In an interval when the vociferator had to take breath, he asked quietly:"Excuse me, my friend, are you an Episcopalian?"
7347In case of disaster, would not a retreat be more difficult by your plan than mine?"
7347Is not this quite Lincolnian?
7347It may be supposed that the student of Shakespeare might quote"When shall we three meet again?"
7347It was as follows:''Why is John Tyler like an ass?''
7347It was truth that the Irishman uttered when he answered the speaker:''Is not one man as good as another?''
7347Lincoln said on the subject to Judge Beckwith, of Danville, on the eve:"You have seen two men about to fight?
7347Lincoln scanned him a moment, threw out his large hand, and said:"''You''re a pretty tall fellow, are n''t you?
7347Mr. Harlan, who followed the chief, touched the major key:"What shall we do with the rebels?"
7347Next day he said to this gentleman-- Noah Brooks:"I wonder if Miss Dickinson saw me wink at_ you?
7347Now,"finished the adviser,"if this was good for Mitchell, it was all right; but, if it was not, I have to countermand, eh?"
7347Only when the job was completed by this inner support, the new problem rose: how to get the boy out?
7347President?"
7347See_ Was Lincoln a Spiritualist?_ By Mrs. Nettie Colburn Maynard( 1891).]
7347So he hailed her:''Old lady, are them pies sewed or pegged?''"
7347Suppose( they were seeking a name) we call them, the Wide- awakes?"
7347The President said next day:"Did you notice the sun burst?
7347The Virginia( Illinois)_ Enquirer_, March 1, 1879, had the following:"John McNamer( Namara?)
7347The hearer thought this over for a moment, and then pertly said:"Why do n''t''Governor''Chase print some more?"
7347The neighbor said, innocentlike:''William, I guess that there is not much of that dog left to catch anybody''s fowls?''
7347The question is, Will it be wiser to take it as it is, and help to improve it, or to reject and disperse?...
7347The worthy agriculturist, greatly astonished, exclaimed:"Is that old Abe?
7347Then, what are you going to do?''
7347They were immediately dispelled, however, by his cheerily crying out:"Is that all?
7347This had not escaped the curious Lincoln; he asked him, as he singled him out:"What is your height?"
7347Through her cries, he reproached her, and concluded:"How could you disobey mother so?"
7347Weed, did you ever hear, in this connection, of the witness in court asked to state his age?
7347Well, judge, you see the papers crowded in there?
7347What impended, what had fallen?
7347What is yours?"
7347What is yours?''
7347What shall we do?
7347What will you lay on the thing?"
7347What would be done about it?"
7347What would you do with that?--keep your hogs safe with that?"
7347Whatever_ did_ you do?''
7347Who could help being so under such circumstances?"
7347Who doubts now that it was attempted Breckenridge in his room?"
7347Why ca n''t a committee of this kind occasionally exhibit a grain of common sense?
7347Why, how did they come to bury those_ two_ men in one grave?''"]
7347You and Uncle Jimmy ought to put up with each other as man and his steed put up with one another; see?"
7347_ lean a little more to the North!_ to the South?''
7347interrupted Bob,"did you not furnish a special for General- President Harrison?"
7347interrupted Lincoln, looking down at the man panting with excitement;"why do n''t you tell us how many short breaths_ you_ drew?"
7347my_ pen_?
7347off?"
7347said the corporal firmly,"but this here cow has a long tail!--ain''t it?"
7347the mayor?"
7347what do you want?"
8124Do the military men of Germany agree to withdraw all their armies from occupied territories? 8124 How the hell do I know whether he''ll make a good governor?"
8124If so, how do you propose to abolish it?
8124Was Colonel Harvey offended?
8124''Well, what is the answer?''
8124( Manuscript: Thank you, what''s his game?
8124A mixed commission for evacuation?
8124After Mr. Bryan and Mr. Daniels had left the telephone the President said:"Tumulty, are you there?
8124After discussing these embarrassments, consisting of plots against our industries, etc., could you not introduce a sentence like this?
8124And have I not tried, my dear Davies, in every possible way to show my warm and sincere appreciation and my loyal friendship both to you and to him?
8124Are they ready to fight Great Britain and France and Japan, who will have to stand together, in order to get this province back for China?
8124Are you going to institute a war against Japan and France and England to get Shantung back for China?
8124Are you going to put the burden on the bankrupt states of Europe?
8124As the people pored over the casualty lists, would they not say:''Why did Wilson move so fast in this matter?
8124At present what is the state of international law and understanding?
8124But could he have failed to defer to them on questions in which no vital principle was involved?
8124But has he ever quickened the nation''s pulse or stirred its heart by a single utterance?
8124But say,"continued Walter,"look at my hand please and see if it is all there, will you?
8124But,"he continued,"there is a certain elephant that''s tramping, too, and how much progress is it making?"
8124Can I use it in this way or can I at least furnish copies to Senator Hitchcock and Mr. Taft?
8124Can anything be done to straighten this out?
8124Can not something be done?
8124Can peace be based upon a restitution of its power or upon any word of honour it could pledge in a treaty of settlement and accommodation?
8124Can responsibility for delay be fixed by you in some way?
8124Could you not ask that Irish delegates be given a chance to present their case to the Conference?
8124Did not the publication of the famous Zimmerman note show that German intrigue was busy in Mexico?
8124Do n''t you know that you are coming more and more into the beauty of its radiance?
8124Do n''t you see how far up the hill we have come?
8124Do n''t you see the light starting and do n''t you see the light illuminating all nations?
8124Do n''t you see the rows of men come, not upon the lower level, but upon the upper, like the rays of the rising sun?
8124Do n''t you see what those low and damp miasmatic levels were from which we have slowly led the way?
8124Do the people know how much coal we have on hand and what the real shortage is?
8124Do these murmurs echo in the corridors of our universities?
8124Do you want them?
8124Does n''t Wilson, the historian, know that force and force alone can bring that grizzly old warrior Huerta to his senses?"
8124Have you any suggestions as to publicity or otherwise?
8124Have you made up your mind as to what you will discuss?
8124He finally stood up and said to me:"What do you want me to do?"
8124He said:"Is this convention going to surrender its leadership to the Tammany Tiger?"
8124He then asked me this question,"Do you think I am cold and unfeeling?"
8124How can I now with propriety offer him any post?
8124I am probably asking you to make a sacrifice at this time, but is not the sacrifice worth while because of the things involved?
8124I have given my promise and you would not have me break it, would you, Doctor?"
8124I said,"Why do you think that, Walter?"
8124If this were true then, how can we accept this offer now?
8124In God''s name, how could any nation calling itself civilized purpose so horrible a thing?"
8124In other words, has the groundwork been laid for this radical step?
8124In reply to Mr. Record''s question:"Will you join me in denouncing the Democratic''overlords''as parties to a political boss system?"
8124In your opinion is the support of_ Harper''s Weekly_ helping or hurting you?"
8124Is it a moral obligation?
8124Is it not true that I appointed him to the office he now holds?
8124Is not our own party disciplined and made ready for this great task?
8124Looking at me with a smile in his eye, he said:"Well, Tumulty, have I any friends left?"
8124McCombs?"
8124Mr. Record also inquired:"Do you admit that the boss system exists as I have described it?"
8124Reaching over to him, I took both of his hands and said:"What difference, my dear Governor, does it make what they say?
8124Removing his arm from about the President''s shoulder, the old man said,"Well, well, Woodrow, what shall I say to you?"
8124Said Senator Harding:"If there is nothing more than a moral obligation on the part of any member of the league, what avail articles X and XI?"
8124Shall peoples be ruled and dominated, even in their own internal affairs, by arbitrary and irresponsible force or by their own will and choice?
8124Shall strong nations be free to wrong weak nations and make them subject to their purpose and interest?
8124Shall the assertion of right be haphazard and by casual alliance or shall there be a common concert to oblige the observance of common rights?
8124Shall we not forget ourselves in making it the instrument of righteousness for the state and for the nation?"
8124Six children, eh?
8124So that I am in the position in my mind of trying to work out a purely scientific proposition:"What will stay put?"
8124That looks cold- blooded, does n''t it?
8124The friends of Ireland in this country have often asked me the question:"Would Woodrow Wilson have intervened in behalf of Ireland?"
8124The question was: What would be the attitude of the new Democratic leader, Woodrow Wilson, toward the preferential choice, Martine?
8124Then, turning to me, he said:"Have you had any new reaction on the note since I last talked with you?"
8124This reply greatly excited my curiosity and interest and I said:"With what nation do you think we will have a war?"
8124This will appeal to the people of the United States: Are you going to take advantage of this and not any of the burden?
8124Turning to me, he said,"Tumulty, have you read that article?
8124Turning to the members of the Cabinet, the President said,"Gentlemen, will you please excuse me for a few minutes?"
8124Very well, then, stay out of the Treaty, and how will that accomplish anything?
8124Was it a prophecy of the war that was to burst upon the world in August, 1914?
8124Was it not the case that the Republican Senators, now in the majority, spoke for America rather than the President?
8124Was not his attitude in this incident characteristic of his dealing with Germany?
8124Were the fruits of the hard- won fight of the Mexican masses against the arbitrary rule of the favoured few to be wasted?
8124What are the rumours?
8124What assurance have you that, having defeated you in this your first big fight, they will not turn on you and defeat your whole legislative programme?
8124What can I do for Colonel Harvey to attest in some public way my appreciation of what he did for me in the old days?"
8124What did you think of my message?"
8124What difference does it make if we ourselves do not reach the uplands?
8124What do you suppose she would have done if she had known that everybody else would have gone in?
8124What do you think of it?"
8124What his ideals?
8124What is at the bottom of that programme?
8124What is the picture that lies before me?
8124What is true valour?
8124What was the President seeking to do in proclaiming his policy of"watchful waiting"?
8124What were his purposes?
8124What were my own feelings as I saw the candidate quietly walk to the speakers''stand?
8124When the Governor said to McCombs,"So you think it is hopeless?"
8124Whereupon, the President said:"Will not you gentlemen take luncheon with me?
8124Whereupon, the following conversation took place in my presence:"So, McCombs, you feel it is hopeless to make further endeavours?"
8124Which would also win for him the unpleasant reputation of ingratitude?
8124Who could solve the riddle of this political Sphinx?
8124Who dares fail to try?
8124Who knows, gentlemen, but by to- morrow a situation will arise where it shall be found necessary for us to get into the midst of this bloody thing?
8124Who said that it was?
8124Who shall live up to the great trust?
8124Who was this man Wilson?
8124Why could he not have waited a little longer?
8124Why did n''t Wilson bring Ireland''s cause to the attention of the Peace Conference?
8124Why did n''t he try peaceably to settle this question with Germany?
8124Why not?
8124Why should they weep upon my hand and call down the blessings of God upon me?
8124Why should we wait until the moment of exhaustion before ever beginning a discussion?
8124Why were they expected to make every concession to American prejudice when the President would make none to European traditions?
8124Why, my fellow citizens, should they pray God to bless me?
8124Why?
8124Will they be welcome?
8124Will you be good enough to send the enclosed to the President?
8124Will you not please read it to Lansing over the phone and, if he has no objection to offer, give it out?
8124Will you, Grayson?"
8124Will your interests be served by the passions and hatreds that will flow from such an unhappy condition in the country?
8124Would not the old uniform lose something if its significance?
8124[ Illustration: In view of the unprecedented record or this Congress, does n''t the President wish to make some statement?
8124what can you expect from a dreamer of dreams, a mere doctrinaire?
61348''What shall I bring thee, mother mine? 61348 ''Who is that gentleman?''
61348''Why, do n''t you know him? 61348 And yet,"he said,"I meant it for the best; and what else could I do?
61348Did you see my Tom Tug?
61348Do you want me to take the part?
61348Has anything dreadful happened? 61348 Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course?
61348Have you ever heard me sing?
61348How have you invariably come off victor?
61348Is it a thousand leagues to Thrace?
61348Is that so?
61348Push- ma- ta- ha,said Forrest, in wondering admiration,"who were your grandparents?"
61348What Sambo?
61348What are you laughing at, my boy? 61348 When is it to be played?"
61348Who are Thallea and Melpomeen?
61348Who is that?
61348Who is that?
61348Why does not brother William write me oftener than he does? 61348 Why?"
61348Will you?
61348_ Dionysius._ What wonder is this? 61348 _ Lord._ You will not dare to hold us?
61348_ Your_ lands?
61348''What is the other?''
61348A fool, a Brutus?
61348All, Master and slave, spring from the self- same fount; And why should one drop in the ocean flood Be better than its brother?
61348Also, where is my dear brother Lorman, of whom I have heard nothing for some time?
61348Am I not always kind?
61348And have I not a weapon to requite thee?"
61348And in the latest year of her life he wrote,"Dearly beloved mother, is there not something I can send you which will give you pleasure?
61348And what is to prevent us from having such a Drama?
61348And when, in reply to the exclamation of Alonzo,"Rolla, my friend, my benefactor, how can our lives repay the obligations which we owe thee?"
61348And why should I not?
61348And why should you?
61348And, mortal limits once passed, what matters all this to the immortal soul?
61348Art cold?
61348As he shook hands first with one, then with another, he would say,"Are you married?"
61348As they met in the dressing- room, Kean said, excitedly,"In the name of God, boy, where did you get that?"
61348At that mischievous moment the driver of the cart came up, and, crying out,"What are you doing there, you damned little scoundrel?"
61348Bethink thee; hast not used thy place To tread the weak and poor to dust; to plant Shame on each cheek, and sorrow in each heart?
61348But I,--a thing of no account-- a slave,-- I to your forkéd lightnings bare my bosom In vain,--for what''s a slave-- a dastard slave?
61348But fair and softly: what are we to do with his friend Leggett?
61348But is it still in existence?
61348But what for the king, his father?
61348But, alas, his hapless and guilty Ramon,--where is he?
61348Can I, then, doubt that to the dramatist himself her greeting was most cordial?
61348Cut from his harp his own strings, and where is his music?
61348Dar''st thou take this hand?"
61348Did ever discord hear Sounds so well fitted to her untuned ear?''"
61348Did you ever know a play- actor to get rich?"
61348Did you receive the$ 100 I sent you?
61348Dogs of white men, do you lift your hands against a woman?"
61348Dost thou come here with a lie in thy heart to witness against me?
61348Dost thou not know me?
61348Dost thou think so?
61348Even of those called generous, how many in our day are capable of such a deed in answer to a silent claim of friendship?
61348Forrest accosted him with the inquiry,"Do you know who that man is yonder?"
61348Gazing with astonishment at the haggard wreck before him, the captain exclaimed,"Why, good God, my boy, is that you?"
61348Gosh- a- massy, who be you?
61348Has William gone to Petersburg?
61348Hast thou not plundered, tortured, hunted down Thy fellow- men like brutes?
61348Have I the outline of that caitiff Who to the outraged earth doth bend the head His God did rear for him to heaven?
61348He answered, in a negro voice,"Wha, Dinah, duzzent you know Sambo?"
61348He asked, with a look of fondness, suppressing his stern reserve,"Dost thou not love this little one, Nahmeokee?"
61348He asks,"Is not this Rome, the great city?"
61348He says, with a musing air first, then quickly passing through indignant scorn to mournful expostulation,--"Then Dionysius has o''erswayed it?
61348His bearing and the soul it revealed were such as corresponded with the descriptive comment wrung from the onlooking Gesler:"Can I believe my eyes?
61348His stripling son,-- Young Cade,--remember you Jack Cade?
61348His words have a tender yet ominous meaning in their inflection as he asks Nahmeokee,"Do you not fear the power of the white man?
61348How are my dear sisters?
61348How came they on me?"
61348How does he translate the wily craft, the pitilessness, the mocking tenderness, of the first of these?
61348Hurrying out, he calls to his freedman, Lucullus,"Where is my horse?"
61348I hope you never play The truant?
61348I suppose Col. Wetherill is grubbing away at his farm: or has he got tired of green fields and running brooks?
61348In another letter to her during this same absence, he says,"Mother, do you sometimes wish to see your wandering boy and take him to your arms again?
61348In what other land do so many heaven- pointing spires attest the devotional habits of the people?
61348In what other land is the altar more faithfully served, or its fires kept burning with a steadier lustre?
61348Inestimable precious scenes, Now faded and all past, Can you not fling one ray serene To cheer me on at last?
61348Is he thy brother?
61348Is it just to punish me for a fault of which I am innocent?"
61348Is it not funny?"
61348Is it not plainly best as far as possible to perfect ourselves on every level of our nature?
61348Is it not the office of the player, the very aim of his art, correctly to depict the truth of man and life?
61348Is not the blood Of white- haired Cade black on thy hand?
61348Is silence my opponent?
61348Is''t not, my lord, A merry jest?
61348Let me see him now; Why stands he hence aloof?
61348O blessed vision, how far away art thou?
61348Oh, my mother, where are you?
61348Page?
61348Patriotism itself is a blind preference of our own earth; and shall there be no patriotism in letters?
61348Shall I bring thee jewels that shine In the depths of the shadowy sea?''
61348She comes in, and sits upon his knee, saying,"Well, father, what is your will?"
61348So he himself said, and added,"The applause I had won before the foot- lights?
61348Tell me, slaves, Where is your tyrant?
61348The aged Orozembo, seized by the Spaniards and brought before their leader, is questioned,"Who is this Rolla joined with Alonzo in command?"
61348The question was often asked, how can this strange conjunction be explained?
61348They demanded of him,"Will you come?"
61348Think you, shall I not believe My own eyes before your tongue?
61348Thou couldst not harm an orphan?
61348Thou seest this hand?
61348To have no meaning For the proud names of liberty and virtue, But as some regal braggart sets it down In his vocabulary?
61348What do you expect?"
61348What dreadful fate awaits him?
61348What else would the demurrer have?
61348What is become of Dionysius?
61348What is the meaning of this?"
61348What shall I bring to thee?
61348What think you did the boy?
61348What think''st thou of it?"
61348When wert thou in thy life hailed with a peal Of hearts and hands like that one?
61348When you shall come to your home, they will ask you, Where is Push- ma- ta- ha?
61348Whence came this greatness but from the miseries of subjugated nations?
61348Where are Joe Shipley, Charley Scriver, and Blighden Van Bann?
61348Where are the foundations of private right more stable, or the limits of public order more inviolately observed?
61348Where does agriculture drive his team a- field with a more cheery spirit, in the certain assurance that the harvest is his own?
61348Where does he behold more diffused prosperity, more active industry, more social harmony, more abiding faith, hope, and charity?
61348Where does labor go to his toil with an alerter step, or an erecter brow, effulgent with the heart- reflected light of conscious independence?
61348Where does the sun, in all his compass, shed his beams on a country freer, better, happier than this?
61348Where is he?
61348Where is your master?
61348White men, can he speak words of truth who has been false to his nation and false to his friends?"
61348Who is you?"
61348Who must not feel his feebleness and insignificance when called to enter the list against such an antagonist?
61348Who that has stepped within the charmed circle traced by his wand would sell the memory of its delight?
61348Who, then, shall seize him?
61348Whose chile am you?"
61348Why do I ask such a question?
61348Why not Forrest?
61348Why should you not share in it?
61348Why was I Idle, and she in chains?
61348Why, what art thou?
61348Will she come, or not?
61348Will you not be advised?
61348Will you?"
61348With a quick articulation and an expostulating tone he said,"Why did you make him Decemvir, and first Decemvir, too?"
61348With one bound he bursts in upon them, levels his gun, and thunders,--"Which of you has lived too long?
61348Without money, without employment or prospects, what could they do?
61348Ye mighty gods, where are your thunders now?"
61348Yet, after a pause, he fancies he hears her answering; and he rapidly asks,--"Is it a voice, or nothing, answers me?
61348Your throats offend the quiet of the city; And thou, who standest foremost of these knaves, Stand back and answer me, a Senator, What have you done?"
61348_ Aylmere._ And wherefore not?
61348_ Brutus._ Seek you instruction?
61348_ Claudius._ She is mine, then: Do I not look at you?
61348_ Clifford._ Thou wilt not slay me, fellow?
61348_ Icilius._ Do I think Virginius owns that hand?
61348_ Lord._ Thou wilt not use us thus?
61348_ Pembroke._ Rebuked his lordship?
61348_ Pembroke._ Who were they?
61348_ Pembroke._ Yet must he feed, from this, his wife and children; What if they starve?
61348_ Straw._ But what of that?
61348_ Sutton._ He who, some ten years gone, Fled from the barony?
61348_ Titus._ Sayest thou?
61348_ Titus._ We are Romans-- Not slaves--_ Brutus._ Not slaves?
61348_ Valerius._ What can this mean?
61348_ Virginia._ You''ll be advised, dear father?
61348_ Virginius._ Do you tell me so?
61348and dost thou dare me to my face?
61348and, as much to his amazement as to his delight, received the answer,"Why, do you not know him?
61348august Athena, where, Where are thy men of might?
61348did not the Sibyl tell you A fool should set Rome free?
61348does it stagger thee?"
61348for who ever knew truth put to the worse in a free and open encounter?
61348hast thou, then, invoked Thy satellites already?
61348is this a sight to show a father?
61348must I call you father, Yet have no token of your tenderness?
61348shall the son of Junius we d a Tarquin?
61348the ashes Of her whom yesternight you gave the flames?
61348they exclaimed,"is it possible that this is you, changed so much and grown so tall?"
61348thy grand in soul?
61348to thee?--O Syracuse, Is this thy registered doom?
61348to whom?
61348what is that?
61348who am dis?
4770''Drownded?'' 4770 Ai n''t they becoming?"
4770All well at home?
4770Am I also expected to clean his boots?
4770Am I much changed since you first knew me?
4770Am I to understand that as your final answer, Miss Devon?
4770And if I asked you to come back to the home that has been desolate since you went, would you come?
4770And if I dared to say I loved you?
4770And if I had refused, you would have let me go and held fast to Letty?
4770And so you thought I cared for Kitty?
4770And there is no hope?
4770And these?
4770And this is how you came to be the cheerful, contented woman you are?
4770And what is to become of me?
4770And who is he?
4770And you found him?
4770And you?
4770Are you ready for the new experiment?
4770As he did me?
4770Bartlett''s dying, marm: could you come and see to him?
4770Bless and save us, what do you mean, child?
4770But do n''t you think a man who had only follies to regret might expect a good woman to lend him a hand and make him happy?
4770But how will it end? 4770 But where will she go if you send her away?
4770But you are not in earnest?
4770Can nothing save her?
4770Christie, what is it? 4770 Dance, of course?"
4770Dangerously you said?
4770David, did you see that I cared for you?
4770Did Letty tell you what she had done for me?
4770Did all your troubles go down with the pig?
4770Did n''t you see it? 4770 Did they follow your advice?"
4770Did you ever hear him, or read any of his writins?
4770Did you?
4770Do n''t you think you could be contented any way, Christie, ef I make the work lighter, and leave you more time for your books and things?
4770Do you care for flowers?
4770Do you ever regret it?
4770Do you see it at last?
4770Do you sing?
4770Ef you fall sick or die, what then?
4770Ever on before?
4770For the better or the worse?
4770Forgive me,--how could I know? 4770 Had n''t you any doubts about it, any fears of going wrong or being sorry afterwards?"
4770Had n''t you better rest a little before you begin any new task, my daughter? 4770 Had you rather have her here than me?"
4770How are you goin''to eddicate the little gal? 4770 How came he here?"
4770How can I sleep in such an Inferno as this?
4770How could I help it when she was so young and pretty and fond of you?
4770How did that get there?
4770How did you find me?
4770How do you know that?
4770How do you know?
4770How do you like him?
4770How is Helen to- day, Nurse?
4770How is he wounded?
4770How, Bella?
4770How?
4770How?
4770I do n''t think I can improve it, unless I add another sort of flower that seems appropriate: may I?
4770I do: can you be spared so soon?
4770I s''pose you thought of that when you come so quick?
4770I think it would comfort you if I washed your face: can you bear to have it done?
4770I want to go to your hospital: where is it?
4770I wonder if that means anything?
4770I wonder if you''d think me vain if I asked you something that I want to know?
4770I''m glad of that; and how do you mean to spend these long years of yours?
4770Is he here?
4770Is n''t forty elderly?
4770Is this the stage? 4770 Just take a turn across the stage, will you?
4770Lucy is happy, virtuous, and independent, why ca n''t I be so too if I have any talent? 4770 Lucy, did you hear that impertinent''my dear''?"
4770Mother wants eggs: will you come to the barn and get them? 4770 Mr. Power helped you: did n''t he?"
4770Mr. Power is waiting: are you ready, love?
4770Mr. Sterling is all right I hope?
4770Mrs. King, are you sure of this?
4770Mrs. Saltonstall is well, I hope?
4770My dear, my dear, what drove you to it? 4770 My dearest girl, did you ever know a man in love do, say, or think the right thing at the right time?
4770Next time, I shall come not as a stranger, but as a former-- may I say friend?
4770No bad news I hope, ma''am?
4770No bridal white, dear?
4770No one cares what I am, so why care myself? 4770 Not even though he has''heavenly eyes,''''distracting legs,''and''a melting voice?''"
4770Not wounded yet? 4770 Now you will come home?
4770Now, what are we to do next?
4770Now, what shall we play?
4770Now, will thee take that pitcher of water to David''s room? 4770 Nurse, who is that?
4770O David, what is it?
4770Oh, Christie, may I hope it? 4770 Oh, David, how?"
4770Oh, she''s goin''to marry for a livin''is she? 4770 Oh, there''s another lover, is there?"
4770Oh, you mean I''m to be strong- minded, to cry aloud and spare not, to denounce their iniquities, and demand their money or their lives?
4770Poor fellow, is he dead?
4770Sir?
4770Six young children is harder: ef I went fifin''and drummin''off, who''d take care of them I''d like to know?
4770Some one ill, I fancy? 4770 Thank you for my share of the compliment; but why say''only digs''?
4770That is a rash promise: I am a woman, and therefore curious; what shall you do if I take advantage of the privilege?
4770The old lady has to have some on''t, do n''t she?
4770Then I may love you, and not be afraid of offending?
4770Then I may really go?
4770Then the past, now that you know it all, does not change your heart to us?
4770Then what shall I do?
4770Then you are quite willing to try the third great experiment?
4770Then you think Jane was a fool to love and try to make a saint of him, I suppose?
4770Then you would n''t advise my friend to say yes?
4770Those are not for a wedding, then?
4770Tried your own way? 4770 Was I going to drown myself?"
4770Was she pretty?
4770Was she?
4770We will: what can I do for you, Davy?
4770Well, and how goes it? 4770 Well, how do you like her as an actress?"
4770Well, what is it? 4770 Were you afraid of him?"
4770What can I do for you? 4770 What can I do for you?"
4770What did Mr. Sharp say?
4770What did he mean?
4770What did you do then?
4770What do I look like?
4770What do you want, child?
4770What have you got? 4770 What have you there so interesting?"
4770What is it, David?
4770What is your name, dear?
4770What is your opinion of Rochester?
4770What made you ill? 4770 What more, David?"
4770What part does Mr. Power do?
4770What promise?
4770What shall we do?
4770What shall you have?
4770What took you there first?
4770What''s the joke?
4770What''s the matter, dear? 4770 What''s the matter?
4770What''s the matter?
4770Where is he?
4770Who are you making that for? 4770 Who is he?"
4770Who told you that?
4770Who''s that?
4770Whose fault is that, sir?
4770Why did n''t you choose Juliet: St. George would do Romeo so well?
4770Why did n''t you go back after the accident?
4770Why do n''t he offer to put up a swing for me, or get me a doll? 4770 Why not?
4770Why not?
4770Why not?
4770Why should I work and suffer any longer for myself alone?
4770Why, Hepsey, were you ever a slave?
4770Why, Kitty, what''s the matter now?
4770Why?
4770Why?
4770Will you show me the new picture? 4770 Will you wear this, my darling?
4770With you, Rachel?
4770Wo n''t you wear the pretty silvery silk we like so well?
4770Yes, sir; but is n''t it natural for a young man to have some personal aim or aspiration to live for? 4770 You a Quaker, and express such a worldly and dreadful wish?"
4770You are an American?
4770You know the people?
4770You mean it?
4770Your age?
4770Your mother, Bella? 4770 ''How so?'' 4770 A fine actress perhaps, but how good a woman?
4770A surgeon was bending over the low bed, and when a hoarse voice at his elbow asked:"How is he?"
4770Ai n''t it beautiful?"
4770All these things he can give me: all these things are valued, admired, and sought for: and who would appreciate them more than I?
4770And how does David wear?
4770And what compensation do you require?"
4770Are we still happy and contented here?"
4770Are you hurt?
4770Are you very tired, Aunty?"
4770As he handed Christie a book, he asked with a significant smile:"Have you found him yet?"
4770As she shut the door, Christie heard Kitty say softly:"Now we''ll be comfortable as we used to be: wo n''t we?"
4770As the girl paused, with a decided thump, the old lady exclaimed:"What crazy idee you got into your head now?"
4770As they rose from table, Mrs. Sterling said:"Davy, does thee want any help this afternoon?"
4770Aunt Letty, how''s that darlin''child?
4770Be these folks you tell of young?"
4770But tell me, Bella, what Harry means to do?
4770Can I help in any way?"
4770Can you bear it, love?"
4770Can you begin to- day?"
4770Could you sing when your heart was heavy with the knowledge of a sin about to be committed by those nearest to you?
4770Dear soul, when shall I see her again?"
4770Dear, ought I to let you do it?"
4770Did n''t you when you were a girl?"
4770Did you think it very rude?"
4770Do n''t I look a different creature from the ghost that came here three or four mouths ago?"
4770Do n''t send me away, Christie: I shall not be a trouble long; surely David will let you help me die?"
4770Do you feel inclined to try the place?
4770Do you know I think that old Fletcher was a sneak?"
4770Do you like pussy- pillars, and know how they do it?"
4770Do you think it''s right to ask it of me?"
4770Do you understand, Bella?"
4770Does she know I am the woman she once saved?
4770Does that make the matter any clearer?"
4770Does that suit you?"
4770Every thing else is used up; why not try this, and make the most of my last chance?
4770F.?"
4770Harry turned reckless; for what had he to look forward to?
4770Has Mrs. S. been scolding?
4770Have you been ill and wretched too?
4770Have you forgotten it?"
4770He always found her out, gave her the posy she best liked, said cheerfully,"How goes it, Christie?"
4770How be you, dear?"
4770How could she be his friend if she was Mr. Fletcher''s wife?
4770How could we live without her?"
4770How do you do?"
4770How do you mean?"
4770How much longer will this last?"
4770How shall I know God?
4770How will it end?"
4770How would you answer such a letter, Christie?"
4770I am sure you agree with me?"
4770I did not seek you, did I?
4770I do n''t believe he loves me: how can he?
4770I must love somebody, and''love them hard,''as children say; so why ca n''t you come and stay with me?
4770I never thought it degradation to do it for her, so why should I mind doing it for others if they pay for it?
4770I should like to know who''s got a harder family to leave than that?"
4770I tried to be cold and stiff; never asked for love, though starving for it, till you came to me, so kind, so generous, so dear,--how could I help it?
4770I wonder if he will come again?"
4770I wonder if they would n''t let me have this room, and help me to find some better work than sewing?
4770I''m in no hurry to be married; and you wo n''t make me: will you?"
4770If that is not true piety, what is?"
4770If three years of this life have made me this, what shall I be in ten?
4770If you do n''t mind tellin'', what have you got to live on?"
4770In that case you will find me a proud, impetuous, ambitious fellow, Christie, and how will that suit?"
4770Is Mr. Sterling an agreeable old man?"
4770Is it possible?
4770Is n''t it enough to know that''baby''s dead,''as the poor man said, to make one feel for them?"
4770Is n''t it fitter for a soldier''s wife than lace and silk at such a time as this?"
4770Is that enough?"
4770Is that to be his profession?"
4770Is there any thing I can do to make you comfortable?"
4770It is not interesting, mind you,--only a grim little history of one man''s fight with the world, the flesh, and the devil: will you have it?"
4770It was dark when she arrived at the appointed spot; but Elisha Wilkins was there to receive her, and to her first breathless question,"How is David?"
4770It would n''t be so pleasant to see the right one come along after she''d went and took the wrong one in a hurry: would it?
4770Johnson?"
4770Leaning in at the window, he asked abruptly, but with a look she never could forget:"Will nothing change your answer, Christie?"
4770May I come again, Miss Devon?"
4770May I do it now?"
4770May I do it?"
4770May I, Christie?"
4770May I, Christie?"
4770May not her jealousy make her unjust, or her zeal for you mislead her?"
4770Mrs. Stuart read, listened, and then demanded with queenly brevity:"Your name?"
4770Now it was like a dash of cold water on her enthusiasm, and her face fell as she asked quickly:"How do you mean, sir?"
4770Now will you ask me to sing and smile, and sit calmly by while this wrong goes on?
4770Oh, how could I help it then?"
4770Or have the children been too much for you?"
4770Perhaps you would like to see the children?
4770Rested well, I hope?
4770Shall I ever find Him?"
4770Shall I try now?"
4770She felt as if the springs of life were running down, and presently would stop; for, even when the old question,"What shall I do?"
4770She owed him all the truth, yet how could she tell it?
4770She sighed without knowing it, and Mrs. Sterling asked quickly:"Is thee tired, my dear?"
4770So Edward tore himself away, although it broke his heart, and I-- do you see that?"
4770Sterling?"
4770Sterling?"
4770Such a pretty child; such a gay, sweet girl; how could I help it, when she was so fond of me?
4770Tell me how you found her?
4770Tell me what some of them mean: will you?"
4770That is the truth, I believe: now, what shall we do about it?"
4770That ought to satisfy me; for what is nobler than to live for others?"
4770That''s not a common revenge, is it?"
4770The gentleman bowed, and as Christie sat down he got up, saying, as he sauntered away with a bored expression:"Will you have the paper, Charlotte?
4770The old lady obediently turned her spectacles that way; and Christie said in a tone half serious, half playful:"Do you see those two logs?
4770The question,"What curse?"
4770Then memory helped her; and she said, half incredulously, half joyfully:"Is it my Rachel?"
4770Then quite steadily she added:"Will you be kind enough to write, and ask Mrs. Sterling if she can spare me?
4770Then she asked,"What next?"
4770They are both a- burnin''where they are put, and both will be ashes to- morrow; so what difference doos it make?"
4770This way, ma''am; be we goin''too fast for you?"
4770WHICH?
4770WHICH?
4770Was it this that made you''a brother of girls,''as Mr. Power once called you?
4770Was n''t that a good sign?"
4770What are you thinking about?"
4770What can I do to thank you for it?"
4770What can you give me but money and position in return for the youth and freedom I should sacrifice in marrying you?
4770What else is there?"
4770What have I ever done to be so desolate and miserable, and never to find any happiness, however hard I try to do what seems my duty?"
4770What is it, Christie?"
4770What next, Christie?"
4770What shall I do to keep it still?"
4770What shall you choose, Davy?"
4770What stranger will believe in her if we, who have known her so long, fail to befriend her now?
4770What would he say if she went calmly to destruction by that road?
4770When can you come?"
4770When shall I go?"
4770Where can I put you?
4770Where have you been so long?
4770Where shall I live?"
4770Who did you hear?"
4770Who is the queen?"
4770Who will employ her if you inform against her?
4770Who will tell me where to find Him, and help me to love and lean upon Him as I ought?"
4770Why did n''t she stay?"
4770Why did you pay such a price for that girl''s liberty?"
4770Why not accept him, and enjoy a new life of luxury, novelty, and pleasure?
4770Why not go on and get as much fame as I can?
4770Why not try it, Kitty?
4770Why were you never so to me?"
4770Will you be my friend, and let me be yours?"
4770Will you come out now for an early drive?
4770Will you do this, and let me sew for less, if I can pay you for the kindness in no other way?"
4770Will you give it a touch?
4770Wo n''t you have a drop of something jest as a stand- by before you see him?"
4770Would you like to do it?"
4770Would you like to help a Quaker lady with her housework, just out of town?"
4770Would you mind telling me about it?
4770You do n''t know it, then?
4770You will believe this and love me still, though I go away and leave you for a little while?"
4770You will come, of course?"
4770You will let me come again?"
4770You''ve ben round among the charity folks lately accordin''to your tell, now what would you do if you had a tidy little sum to dispose on?"
4770Your running away when Kitty came confirmed my fear; then in came that-- would you mind if I said-- confounded Fletcher?"
4770ai n''t it fillin''?
4770ai n''t the creater old enough to know her own mind?
4770ai n''t you drownded?''
4770are you going away?"
4770can you remember what Hepsey told us, and call them poor, long- sufferin''creeters names?
4770do n''t it give you a kind of spirital h''ist, and make things wuth more somehow?"
4770do n''t you know me?"
4770do you expect me to give you low comedy and heavy tragedy all alone?
4770ejaculated Christie, so fervently that David looked suddenly enlightened and much amused, as he said quickly:"What becomes of Fletcher?"
4770for I s''pose she''s the one in the quanderry?"
4770has he, though?"
4770how dare you lay plots, and then exult over me when I ca n''t find words to thank you?
4770how is she, and where?"
4770it is hard to have to run away so much: is n''t it?"
4770said David, and then added persuasively:"But you will play for me some time: wo n''t you?
4770she thought;"why wear out my life struggling for the bread I have no heart to eat?
4770this experiment that needs so much, and yet which you think me capable of trying?"
4770was her first question;"How will he behave to me?"
4770what should we all do without him?"
4770what''s that?"
4770why do n''t they do or say something new and interesting, and not keep twaddling on about art, and music, and poetry, and cosmos?
43996A different story from what I have told, sir?
43996A hundred?
43996Ah, Julius, what was dat?
43996Ah, well-- yes-- but_ do_ you pray in secret?
43996And do you believe the story?
43996And how did you like him?
43996And how do you manage when the happy pair are negroes?
43996And that I am a valuable man?
43996And that I was a good soldier?
43996And to what effect?
43996And what do you expect will be your portion there?
43996And why not, sir?
43996And,continued the old man, in a voice husky with emotion,"are you in favour of a vigorous prosecution of the war?"
43996Any relations?
43996Are you sure of that, now?
43996Are you?
43996But I suppose you do n''t know what''nigger mathematics''is?
43996But how did you happen to know him?
43996But why do n''t you mend it when it does n''t rain?
43996But why on earth did you not take it? 43996 But, I thought, you said your name was Michael Flynn?"
43996Can I see him?
43996Could n''t I, though?
43996Day, what Day?
43996De same way as I come up, Mass Tom?
43996Did I understand you to say, Sir, that you had a wife and six children living in New York, and had never seen one of them?
43996Did he die?
43996Did he have a double- barrelled gun?
43996Did n''t I, though?
43996Did n''t you hear the general say it had come?
43996Did you marry a widow, Sir?
43996Did you see the Queen?
43996Do you know Captain Scott, of our State?
43996Do you know anybody from this neighbourhood who is in the army?
43996Do you mean to insinuate that I lie, sir?
43996Do you really think so?
43996Do? 43996 Does the razor take hold well?"
43996Dou you smoke, sir?
43996Drew too much?
43996Ellen, do n''t you know what that agrees with?
43996Engaged, is it?
43996Fifty?
43996Goin''to Heaven?
43996Hallo, landlord, can I get lodgings here to- night?
43996Hallo, what''s the matter now?
43996Have n''t you any brothers and sisters?
43996Here is the agreement in black and white,responded the counsel, pointing to the parties;"pray what does your honour want more than this?"
43996Ho, there Mr.----, have you taken out a warrant against Burt?
43996How d''ye do?
43996How do you keep yourself alive?
43996How do you know me?
43996How do you know they are your ducks?
43996How is that?
43996How long do you wear a shirt?
43996How long is it since you have seen your wife?
43996How much did your father tell you to give for him?
43996How much is this sugar a pound?
43996How much?
43996How so?
43996How the divil do you know but you axe the other Mike Sullivan?
43996How was that?
43996How?
43996I say, John, where did you get that loafer''s hat?
43996Is it how do I know your honour?
43996Is it possible?
43996Is it possible?
43996Is the doctor in?
43996Is there no one else?
43996John, my son,said a doting father, who was about taking him into business,"what shall be the style of the new firm?"
43996John, what do you do for a living?
43996Johnson, you say Snow was de man dat robbed you?
43996Lives in your place, I believe, do n''t he?
43996Looking for a berth?
43996Mrs. Green,said a tolerably dressed female, entering a grocery store, in which were several customers,"have you any fresh- corned pork?"
43996Mutton-- with sauce?
43996No?
43996Oh, I think I remember her; she ate a great deal, did she not?
43996Old Harry,said Biddle;"why, that is the name they give to the devil, is it not?"
43996One in twenty?
43996Papa,said Mr. Brown''s youngest son, the other day,"ca n''t I go to the circus?"
43996Pray, sir, can you tell me if he has many patients?
43996Race, what race?
43996Really,said the man,"where do you think you are going?"
43996Sam what?
43996Sam,said an interesting young mother to her youngest hopeful,"do you know what the difference is between the body and soul?
43996Sambo, you nigger, are you afraid of work?
43996Seen it?
43996Shall I read from the Bible?
43996Sir,said Lee,"what do you mean?
43996Sir,said a gentleman, present,"do you descend to salute a slave?"
43996Sir,said the man,"do you mistake me for a waiter?"
43996Surely you have not forgotten me,said he.--"What name, sir?"
43996That usually I-- I-- am neat and genteel?
43996The boundaries of our country, sir?
43996Then why is it New Englanders always answer a question by asking one in return?
43996Then, Miss L.,said the young tutor,"in six years you will cease to be Miss L.?"
43996Then,said calico,"why do n''t you stay there?"
43996To church, sir,was the prompt reply.--"What church, Sam?"
43996True, but do you know what office?
43996Ven you arrive at the dignity of sawin''wood, Lafayette, if you is elvevated to that perfesshun, mind and always saw de biggest fust; cause vy? 43996 Very sociable man, ai n''t he?"
43996Wa''al,says she,"if the airth is reound, and goes reound, what holds it_ up_?"
43996Wal, did yever see de bone fight?
43996Wal, mas''r,replied the contraband,"did yever see two dogs fightin''for a bone?"
43996Was it a_ near_ or distant relative?
43996Was it moonlight when it took place?
43996Was it starlight?
43996Was you ever in a real heavy gale of wind?
43996Well, Ellen, why do n''t you parse that word? 43996 Well, Sambo, how do you like your new place?"
43996Well, Uncle Sam,said he,"do you see any difference in Mr. P. since he joined the church?"
43996Well, here are grandpa''s spectacles-- won''t you take them to him?
43996Well, how do you like the looks of the varmint?
43996Well, that was unfortunate,remarked Holton,"but what in the world did you do with the house?
43996Well, was there any light shining from any house near by?
43996Well, what did you do then?
43996Well, what explanation can you make?
43996Well, what of that?
43996Well, what''s your father and mother''s name?
43996Well, where do you live?
43996Well, why?
43996Well,said the captain,"what did you do?"
43996Were you ever blind, Sir?
43996What did he do the first year?
43996What did they do with him?
43996What did you have for breakfast this morning?
43996What do you call them hot for, you black and blue swindler?
43996What do you charge for blacking boots?
43996What do you want with him?
43996What do you want?
43996What i''dat?
43996What is it?
43996What is the matter, my dear?
43996What is the use of living?
43996What is your name?
43996What kind of a preacher do you want?
43996What o''that?
43996What tongue is able to unfold The worth in woman we behold? 43996 What two characters in scripture remind us of a certain President in Washington and a certain Marshal in Baltimore?"
43996What''s my chances, doctor?
43996What''s the matter with you?
43996What''s the matter?
43996What''s this? 43996 What''s your master''s name?"
43996What''s your other name?
43996What_ rôle_ would you prefer, my friend?
43996Where am I to sleep?
43996Where are my pants? 43996 Where are you going, Emma?"
43996Where is the hoe, Sambo?
43996Where is your house?
43996Who are you?
43996Who was your father?
43996Who were Adam and Eve?
43996Who were your forefathers?
43996Who, you?
43996Why did you leave your connexion, Mr. Dickson, if I maybe permitted to ask?
43996Why do n''t you enlist, Ginger?
43996Why do n''t you get married?
43996Why do n''t you mend your roof, Cuff?
43996Why not?
43996Why so? 43996 Why the devil did n''t you stay at''ome?"
43996Why, General?
43996Why, now, what did you dream your mother said?
43996Why, what was the reason?
43996Why?
43996Will there be any butter on it, ma?
43996Will you have a story?
43996Will you have me, Sarah?
43996Will your horse eat oysters?
43996Wo n''t go, eh?
43996Wo n''t he?
43996Yes; but what of that?
43996You are in employ of the railroad?
43996You do not mean to say,remarked the sceptic,"that the spirit of your wife really embraced you and kissed you?"
43996You have considerable floating population in this village, havn''t you?
43996You receive your pay regularly?
43996You''re from down East, I guess?
43996_ Du they?_was Jonathan''s reply.
43996_ If I may be so bold, sir_,said he,"_ may I ask how long you have been in this country_?"
43996''And I?''
43996''Entirely forgotten, Madam?''
43996''Hello, Lincoln, are you not going to the court- house?
43996''Jack,''said she,''we are sorry to disturb you, but wo n''t you see me home?''
43996''Now Pompey, spose dere am tree pigeons sittin''on a rail- fence, and you fire a gun at''em and shoot one, how many''s left?''
43996''Shall I help you to a bit of Icthoyaturns?''
43996''Twould break the spell If I should tell-- Would n''t you like to know?
43996--"And is n''t that mighty poor pay?"
43996--"Are you travelling on business?"
43996--"But where are they both?"
43996--"Capital,"was the instant reply,"you are just the girl I have been looking for these five years-- will you marry me?"
43996--"Going West?"
43996--"Good sermon, my boy?"
43996--"Had a good sermon, Sam?"
43996--"Heard me preach?"
43996--"In the little old island?
43996--"It runs through the piece of wood in the lower part of the meadow,"said the judge.--"What, that little brook?
43996--"Preach, and do you get paid for it?"
43996--"Travelling alone?"
43996--"Was you raised down East?"
43996--"Well, governor,"said the youth,"I do n''t know-- but suppose we have it John H. Samplin and Father?"
43996--"Well, now, what are you travelling for?"
43996--"Well, where is the rake?"
43996--"What business do you follow?"
43996--Dentist( looking aghast):"Why, you do n''t mean to sell your own teeth?
43996--Dentist:"Well, I might want them; have you many?"
43996--Jersey man:"Why, look here, they''re no airthly use to Sal and me; for what''s the use of teeth when one''s nothing to eat?"
43996--Second question:''Where did they stone him?''
43996--The third question:''Why did they take him beyond the limits of the city?''
43996--_Philadelphia Gazette._ All of which goes to prove That grammar a farce is; For where is the plural Of rum and molasses?
43996A Milwaukee paper says that when a Wisconsin girl is kissed, she looks surprised, and says,"How could you do it?"
43996A Yankee pedlar with his cart, overtaking another of his class on the road, was thus addressed:"Hallo, what do you carry?"
43996A gentleman present, who had himself been a severe sufferer with the same complaint, said to her:"Did you ever try electricity, madam?
43996A gentleman, finding his servant intoxicated, said,"What, drunk again, Sam?
43996A pompous, well- dressed individual entered the bank, and, addressing the teller, who is something of a wag, inquired:''Is the cashier in?''
43996A rebel officer shouted to him to go back, but the sergeant was unmindful of the warning, and asked,"Wo n''t you exchange newspapers?"
43996A rebel sentinel discovered them, and hallooed out:"How are you, Yank?"
43996A young sprig of a lawyer stepped up one day and said to her,''You seem to have some fine apples; are they sweet or sour?''
43996After Joseph''s brotheren had beat him out ov hiz cut ov many cullars, what did tha dew nex?
43996After calling several times without effect, the reb vidette called out,"I say, Yank, what''s the matter on your side of the tree?"
43996After settling the merits of the weather, Miss said, looking slyly into his face,"I dreamed of you last night,""Did you?
43996An American clergyman, preaching a drowsy sermon, asked,"What is the price of earthly pleasure?"
43996An Ohio stumper, while making a speech, paused in the midst of it and exclaimed,"Now, gentlemen, what do you think?"
43996An aboriginal American was asked if he had known the Bishop of Quebec?
43996An exchange asks, very innocently, if it is any harm for young ladies to sit in the lapse of ages?
43996An impertinent editor in Alabama, says a paper, wants to know when we"intend to pay''the debt of Nature?''"
43996An old acquaintance stepped up to the prisoner, and said:"Jem, the danger is passed; and now, honour bright, did n''t you steal that horse?"
43996And where it goes Beneath the rose-- Would n''t you like to know?
43996Are you a widow?"
43996Are you mail or femail?
43996Are you subject to fits?
43996Are yu married or single, or are yu a bachelor?
43996At a railway station, an old lady said to a very pompous- looking gentleman, who was talking about steam communication:"Pray, sir, what is steam?"
43996Biddy, did you hear that?
43996Bogs.--The atmosphere?
43996But as the teacher said,"Very well, what does courting agree with?"
43996But the girl came at length, and her impatient master broke forth with--"For goodness''sake, Maggie, where have you been?"
43996But we''ve got the African, or ruther he''s got us, and how are we going to do about it?
43996But what can I do now?
43996But what woman''s heart could resist the pleadings of a mother then?
43996Can I do anything for you?"
43996Clogs.--What map did you travel by?
43996Coming to settle out West, I suppose?"
43996Dickson?"
43996Did Job ever try, when he was hungry, to eat shad with a frisky baby in his lap?
43996Did you ever have any ancestors?
43996Dis razor hurt you, sah?"
43996Do n''t you think he was an ignorant feller?"
43996Do you hear me?
43996Do you know that Napoleon lost about a hundred aides- de- camp in one campaign?"
43996Do you think I would come all the way from Ireland to belong to one State, when I had a right to belong to the whole of''em?"
43996Do you think you can dodge the balls?
43996Dogs.--Any fish in the ponds?
43996Du yu believe in a future stait?
43996Du yu have any night- mare?
43996Fogs.--What did you live on?
43996Franklin was once asked,"What is the use of your discovery of atmospheric electricity?"
43996Frogs.--What did you find the women?
43996Getting no reply from the dumb reflection before him, he again repeated--"I say, mister, when does this here boat start?"
43996Give it up, reader?
43996Had you a father or mother?
43996Hav yu ever committed suicide?
43996He could put his wife in his heart, and have room for other things besides; and what was she but precious, and what could she be but little?
43996He got his head above water for once, took off his hat, and said,''Ladies and gentlemen, will you please excuse me?''
43996His father hailed him with,"Well, Sam, been to the Second Methodist again to- day?"
43996His friends got around his bed, and one of them says:"John do you feel willing to die?"
43996Hogs.--What were your draught animals?
43996How are you, colonel?
43996How do you do?"
43996How do you do?"
43996How do you get your bread?"
43996How do you live?"
43996How do you make out that you are exempt, eh?"
43996How do you support yourself?"
43996I asked him:"How long were you in the hospital at----?"
43996I cried;''ca n''t you get a beau without hauling a fellow out of bed?
43996I dare say you think you are doing a great deal of good?"
43996I expect you ai n''t ashamed of either of''em, so now wo n''t you just obleedge me?"
43996I locked my door last night, and somebody has stolen them?"
43996I picked it up, and immediately wrote on it,''It is a very good one; what rent do you pay?''
43996I thought this was his office?"
43996I''ve jest called to see if yeou do n''t want to buy some real, genuine, sound teeth?"
43996In selling a Newfoundland dog do you know whether it is valued according to what it will fetch or what it will bring?
43996Is Death''s door opened with a skeleton key?
43996Is it the languisher, or the giraffe, or the_ élégante_?
43996Is there any truth in the report that the Arabs who live in the desert have sandy hair?
43996It is not in my power to give each of you the same thing; but such want of uniformity in my largesses, should that deprive them of all merit?''
43996Jeff., will you have this, our favourite dish, or haunch of mutton?"
43996Jenkins?"
43996Jersey man( entering a dentist''s store):"Air yeou a doctor, sir?"
43996Lincoln?"
43996Meeting a negro on the road, a traveller said:"You have lost some of your friends, I see?"
43996Meeting an American friend travelling in the United States, I enquired whither he was going?
43996Meeting the waiter an hour or two afterwards, he said--"Well, Sambo, did you bring my baggage down?"
43996Mr. Webster took the account, which he immediately recognized, and, scanning the wood- sawyer a moment, said:"How do you keep your books, sir?"
43996Now, master, what do_ you_ think about sich stuff?
43996On Sunday afternoon, Sam came in and went up stairs very heavy, when the judge put the question to him:"Sam, where have you been?"
43996On whom they beam With melting gleam-- Would n''t you like to know?
43996One day, in a social mood, Biddle said to the darkey,"Well, what is your name, my old friend?"
43996One of the deacons of a certain church in Virginia asked the Bishop if he usually kissed the bride at weddings?
43996One of the neatest and latest conundrums is as follows:--"Why is i the happiest of vowels?
43996Pray, what did he teach?"
43996Prentice says:"Would n''t it have been a still greater wonder if he had escaped without it?"
43996Said he,"And who are you?"
43996Said she,"John Stiles, it''s one o''clock; You''ll die of indigestion; I''m sick of all this popping corn, Why do n''t you Pop the Question?"
43996Sam was petrified with astonishment, but presently said--"Why did n''t de brine run out of the same hole?"
43996Says the minister,"What shall I call the child?"
43996Sez I,"Wall, Hetty, it''s me; wo n''t you say yes?"
43996She looked at the diminutive little beings a few moments, when, turning to her father, she inquired:"Pa, which one are you going to keep?"
43996She rose to her hands, and, looking back, asked:"_ Jeems, do they allus stop like that?_""ANY RELATIONS?"--423.
43996Snow was the man, and how did you see him?"
43996Speaking of wags-- what is more waggish than a dog''s tail when he is pleased?
43996Surely you never cured that chimney?"
43996T''other day he levelled at an old''un, in a high tree; the varmint looked at him a minute, and then bawled out,''Hallo, Cap''n Scott, is that you?''
43996Ten yards?
43996That kinder staggered me; but I was too cute to lose the opportunity, and so sez I again,"Suppose it was me?"
43996The fact that they did all this with one bullet led to the following cross question:--"How did you kill all these buffaloes with only one bullet?"
43996The first question was,''Who stoned Stephen?''
43996The following dialogue ensued:--"Does Dr. Channing live here?"
43996The following dialogue on"sharp shooting"is reported to have taken place between a Virginee and a Yankee picket:--"I say, can you fellows shoot?"
43996The husband ran a few rods, but soon returned, exclaiming:"My dear, where shall I find you when I get back?"
43996The interrogator again enquired--"How can it be, Sir, that you never saw one of them?"
43996The judge said,"Put the boy upon evidence,"upon hearing which young America exclaimed,"Who are you calling a boy?
43996The law is against_ entering_ a house, and can a man be said to_ enter_ a house when only_ one- half_ of his body is_ in_, and the other half_ out_?"
43996The lawyer who cross- examined her said,"You assert that your son has worked on a farm ever since he was born?"
43996The next morning they met, when Sam says--"Good mornin'', Julius, anything happen strange or mysterious down in your vicinity lately?"
43996The philosopher answered the question by another,"What is the_ use_ of a new- born infant?"
43996The secretary, when he could stand the nuisance no longer, said to the doorkeeper:"Do you know what that man comes after?"
43996Then Lib sings out,''Jack, are you in there?''
43996Then he offered a toast,''Guilty or Not Guilty?''
43996Then sez I,"Suppose it was Ned Willis?"
43996This is your body,"touching the little fellow''s shoulders and arms,"but there is something deeper in-- you can feel it now; what is that?"
43996Throughout all this have you been loyal?"
43996Traveller:"Ca n''t you give me a blanket and a bunch of shavings for a pillow in your bar- room?"
43996WOULDN''T YOU LIKE TO KNOW?
43996Well, you''re kinder glad to leave it, I guess?
43996Were you not well treated?"
43996What are your private sentiments about a rush of rats to the he d?
43996What do you follow?"
43996What do you think of it?"
43996What does it agree with?"
43996What is the land?
43996What is your business?"
43996What is your legal opinion of the constitushunality of the ten commandments?
43996What iz your precise fiting wate?
43996What lover sips Those dewy lips-- Would n''t you like to know?
43996What nonsense people talk about love, do n''t they?
43996What relation were said parties previous to their marriage?
43996What scripture name did he utter?
43996What scripture name did the old gentleman use to induce another son to accompany the guests?
43996What was it?
43996What was it?
43996What was it?
43996What was the last scripture name thus used?
43996What will he do?"
43996What''s the matter?
43996When I came into the town, says our captain to me,"Peabody, what in natur is that ere great yaller thing that''s a sticking out of your pocket?"
43996When I cut up an old fowl, and help the boarders, I always feel as if I ought to say,"Wo n''t you have a slice of widdah?"
43996When did you shave last?"
43996When he has waked up each morning, his reflection has been,"Now, is it to be a horsewhipping or a kicking to- day?"
43996When the young lady and four lovers were out again, she says to the captain,"What am I to do with them now, they are so wet?"
43996Where did he live?
43996Whereupon the officer, turning to the corporal in charge of the gun, said,''Corporal, do you see that light?''
43996Who bids?
43996Who build all our gaols?
43996Who build our railroads?
43996Who fill all our gaols?
43996Who made it less One little tress-- Would n''t you like to know?
43996Who rises betimes, and superintends the morning meal?
43996Who wants help?
43996Who was Scipio''s wife?
43996Who''s afraid of you?
43996Who''s the lucky man?"
43996Whose hand they press With fond caress-- Would n''t you like to know?
43996Why call them hot now?"
43996Why did''nt you give them the boots?"
43996Why, Susan, what''s the matter?"
43996Witness, has not an effort been made to induce you to tell a different story?"
43996Wo n''t he, mother?"
43996Wo n''t you catch it, though?
43996Would it not be the part of wisdom to attend to your soul''s concerns immediately?
43996Would you put a tuck in it?
43996Would you say a lady dressed loud who was covered all over with bugles?
43996You cast them aside, do you not?"
43996You do n''t call that a fine stream, do you?"
43996You''re not Mrs. Ellis, are you?"
43996and added,"Do you know Morrissey?"
43996and have you derived any benefit from the use of it?"
43996and if so, du yu have more than one at a time?
43996and if so, how did it affect yu?
43996and if so, how much?
43996and"Where are you from?"
43996asked Holton;"of course you could not live in such a house?"
43996can it be did successfully?
43996do n''t you raise bigger apples than these in America?"
43996he was, eh?"
43996howse I goin ter get down dis ladder?"
43996if so, which?
43996inquired Pat;"are we not friends?"
43996preparing your leader?"
43996queried the hopeful;"ca n''t you get him up?
43996replied the Englishman evidently not posted up in local historical matters,"did it hurt him much?"
43996said Holton, with interest,"did you ever see a smoky chimney cured?"
43996said he.--"Pretty well,"said I.--"What are you about?
43996said the boy;"feel grand, do you?
43996said the judge,"where is he gone?"
43996well, I must not tell-- Would n''t you like to know?
43996what on airth''s gev way on the keers?"
43996what this?"
43996where is he?"
43996where''s his baggage?"
43996who comes there?"
43996you here again?"
48100And lions?
48100Did David kill Goliath with a stone or with a sword?
48100Did they have bears?
48100Elephants?
48100Jane, what from the 24th verse?
48100Lily, what from verse 25?
48100Mary, what from the 23d verse?
48100Monkeys?
48100Was Goliath a wicked man?
48100What are you putting it on for?
48100What do you understand by faith and repentance?
48100What is the matter?
48100What kind of a man was David?
48100What kind of a man was Goliath?
48100What kind of a man was Moses?
48100What was done to Jesus?
48100When was Jesus led up to be tempted?
48100Where''s your nosegay?
48100Whither did the Spirit lead him?
48100Who led him up?
48100Will you tell me what is faith?
48100_ Do you so love it?_Solomon said,"Remember now thy Creator."
48100_ Do you?_David said,"Oh how love I thy law?"
48100_ Do you?_David said,"Oh how love I thy law?"
48100''And what was the building called that was open, at that time, to receive the worshippers?''
48100''And who may he be?''
48100''And you, Bather?''
48100''Are not some persons specially mentioned who came to the temple at that time?''
48100''At what time of day?''
48100''Bather,''says he,''when Mr. Homer has done with you, will you come up into my room?
48100''How many?''
48100''Jack,''said I,''how many stupid boys have we got in our second class?''
48100''What for?''
48100''What were their names?''
48100''Where did Peter and John go at the ninth hour?''
48100(_ A leper came to Jesus to be healed of his leprosy._) What does that teach you?
48100(_ Jesus assured the leper of his willingness._) What does that teach you?
48100(_ Jesus put forth his hand and only touched him._) What does that teach you?
48100(_ Multitudes followed Jesus when he came down from the mountain._) What does that teach you?
48100(_ The leper doubted the willingness of Christ to cure him._) What does that teach you?
48100(_ The leper expressed his faith in Christ''s ability to cure him._) What does that teach you?
48100(_ The leper worshipped Jesus._) What does that teach you?
48100(_ The leprosy was immediately cleansed._) What does that teach you?
4810012. Who are to elect the superintendent?
4810013. Who appoints the teachers?
48100A catechism lesson on the question,"What is sin?"
48100After a thorough canvass of your whole field, then inquire what are the great wants and difficulties in our present Sabbath- school operations?
48100After asking,"Since man is so miserable, what is to be done?"
48100And Palestine is... What sort of a country?
48100And finally Billy Jones, all eagerness,"Did they have a_ clown_?"
48100And how?
48100And then-- suppose the basin had been set behind the door, would that have done?
48100And what city is this?
48100And what does shedding their blood mean?
48100And what must be sprinkled on the door?
48100Another class of questions is very common, but well nigh useless, namely, leading questions, such as,"Was David a good man?"
48100As they were going past him, Harry said,"Oh, he will not hurt us; let us stop; I wonder what he is crying for?"
48100Ask the child simply,"With what did David kill Goliath?"
48100At the fourth and last meeting of the month inquire, Is there any special religious interest in your class?
48100At the next meeting inquire, Have you_ visited_ your scholars during the month, and what have you found of interest in your visits?
48100But can these persons be reached and gained by the Sabbath- school?
48100But how came the young lady to know of such a room?
48100By whom was the man''s leprosy cleansed?
48100Can any of you tell me how many Israelites or Jews there were in Egypt?
48100Can any of you tell me the name of the country?
48100Can you give them to me?
48100Can you tell me any other names given to the hart?
48100Can you tell me at what door Jesus knocks?
48100Charlie,"_ Do you love to remember your Creator?_"or"_ Why not?_"etc.
48100Charlie,"_ Do you love to remember your Creator?_"or"_ Why not?_"etc.
48100Children, do_ you so long for_, and_ pant after_ God, the living God?
48100Children, what do I hold in my hand?
48100Could we have held out our hands and stopped it?
48100Do our"lips teach knowledge?"
48100Do we_ liken_ Bible truth to something with which our scholars are familiar, and thus help them to understand it?
48100Do you approve of one uniform lesson for the whole school?
48100Do you think the hart had drank of a brook before?
48100Do you?
48100Eternal life, what is it?
48100For instance, all are requested to write upon the question, What is the great want of our Sabbath- schools?
48100For instance:"Moses was a good man, was he not?"
48100For what purpose do they seem to be met?
48100From what did Jesus come down?
48100From whom does God require true faith?
48100From whom does God require true repentance?
48100God''s people had been dwelling in Canaan; how did they come to be in Egypt, where we find them in our lesson?
48100Had the boy taken it away?
48100Had there been any death in those houses?
48100Has the hart ever bathed in water brooks before?
48100Have you come to it?
48100Have you ever seen a dog walking in a very hot and dusty day, after having run a long way?
48100Have you got it?
48100Have you kept the law?
48100He then directed the eyes of these scheming men to the coin, with this pointed question:"Whose is this image and superscription?
48100He will ask himself the following questions:"Does any child leave me to- day with a clear, simple view of_ one truth_ of the gospel of Jesus Christ?"
48100How can our great gatherings be made more_ useful_?
48100How can the youth escape so great and powerful an enemy?
48100How can we get the parents, pastors, etc., interested in the Sabbath- school?
48100How can we imitate him?
48100How can we obtain good teachers?
48100How can you restore order in a disorderly class?
48100How could that have happened?
48100How do you get the atonement?
48100How do you prove gratitude to God for it?
48100How do you think I got here?
48100How does he save from sin?
48100How does the sun shine?
48100How he got it?
48100How is he prepared for the contest?
48100How long ought a lesson to be?
48100How many children are there in all our Sabbath- schools?
48100How many circumstances are mentioned in this passage?
48100How many for a penny?
48100How many is that?
48100How many of God''s commandments are we to obey?
48100How many things are here stated with respect to faith?
48100How many things are here stated with respect to obedience?
48100How many things are here stated with respect to repentance?
48100How much money should be expended annually on a large mission- school?
48100How shall we retain young men and women?
48100How work?
48100I ask myself, What is in this passage?
48100If I am here asked,"Do you know of any such superintendents as are here described?"
48100If not, would it have panted and longed for it?
48100If perfectly convicted, why so confident?
48100If who would?
48100In the afternoon she came back smiling, and the superintendent asked her,"Mary, where did you go this morning?"
48100In the second place,_ How_ can our young men and women be reached?
48100In this sad condition, therefore-- heated and..._ thirsty_, and running about,..._ panting_--how would the hart feel?
48100In what state will the soil be?
48100Is it a slow or quick moving animal?
48100Is it anything inherent in these meetings?
48100Is it best to reprove scholars or teachers in presence of the class or classes?
48100Is it consistent for a Sabbath- school teacher to play at cards, dance, etc.?
48100Is the hart spoken of in the psalm supposed to live in a warm or cold country, think you?
48100Is there not danger that the Sabbath- school will induce a disrelish for the preaching service?
48100It feels uneasy._ Why uneasy?
48100Jesus shed his blood, That means the same as Jesus--_died_; yes; how?
48100L- i- n- t- e- l; what does that spell?
48100Make the most of an answer unless it is absolutely wrong, and if wrong, say,"Will some scholar tell me why that answer is wrong?"
48100Now, if she ever slaps you again, or if the boy takes away James''s marbles again, are you to hit them and call them hard names, or to forgive them?
48100Now, what does Jesus say to us?
48100Of course I replied yes; and then"if it was wrong to take money for doing good on Sundays?"
48100Of what had the hart drank before?
48100One day, with a bright face, he asked me"if it was not right to do good on Sundays?"
48100One plan is to raise the questions Who?
48100Or if the question should be,"How to prepare a Bible lesson?"
48100Pray, O----, do you know anything about astronomy?''
48100Question,"What shall I do?"
48100She would stand quietly at the desk and ask the children:"Children, will you please tell me what the gods of the heathen are like?"
48100Show me what panting is?
48100So here you are taught-- what?
48100Suppose we had had you to help us, could we then?
48100Talk candidly to the child somewhat as follows:"Mary, do you know that God knows all things?
48100Tell me, children, what you mean by panting?
48100The gardener had cut them a beautiful large nosegay, and when they left home in the morning for school they had it with them-- what had become of it?
48100The great practical question arises, What are the causes of failure?
48100The hart, heated and thirsty, therefore_ pants_--what is panting?
48100The indirect result of this simple visit accomplished-- what?
48100The question arises, When and how this can best be taught?
48100The question here arises, From whence shall Sunday- school teachers gather illustrations for use?
48100The questions were, therefore, forced upon us, What must be done?
48100The superintendent in a review pressed the question,"_ How_ are we to let our light shine, according to the lesson,''So shine?''"
48100Then he proceeded to ask whether he could get out of the ditch alone or whether he needed a helper, and who was that helper?
48100Then the door that had the blood upon it was passed over by the angel, was it?
48100This summer, where I live, at Tarrytown, a gentleman said to me,"Do n''t you want to go down on the track and see the express train go by to- night?"
48100To what does God require obedience?
48100To whom did the leper come?
48100To whose commandments are we to give obedience?
48100We want to know, How to use it?
48100Weary and thirsty from..._ the heat_; and a thirsty dog, that is weary and very..._ hot_, would-- what would it wish?
48100Well, that is one proof that they live in the mountains; but can they live in the plains?
48100Well, will it do if you cut your finger, and sprinkle the blood on your house?
48100What are we to do from love to God?
48100What can be done to improve the religious condition of our colored population?
48100What could Jesus do if he would?
48100What countries do harts chiefly live in?
48100What did God do to us?
48100What did Jesus do when he put forth his hand?
48100What did Jesus do?
48100What did Jesus put forth?
48100What did Jesus say?
48100What did the angel do?
48100What did the leper call Jesus?
48100What did the leper do when he came to Jesus?
48100What did the leper say Jesus could do?
48100What did the leper say?
48100What do you call it when there is nothing to eat?
48100What do you mean by"then took Mary?"
48100What do you mean by"then was Jesus?"
48100What do you mean by"then was Jesus?"
48100What does the Bible say about a leaf or leaves?
48100What does the present crisis of the cause demand?
48100What else was required?
48100What had died?
48100What happened when Jesus came down from the mountain?
48100What happened when Jesus said he was to be clean?
48100What has he done?
48100What have been these wrong plans?
48100What hour is the hand pointing to?
48100What is a brook?
48100What is a hart?
48100What is a leaf?
48100What is the best way of training teachers?
48100What is the best way to get rid of inefficient teachers?
48100What is the eighth circumstance mentioned in this passage?
48100What is the fifth circumstance mentioned in this passage?
48100What is the first?
48100What is the first?
48100What is the first?
48100What is the first?
48100What is the first?
48100What is the fourth circumstance here mentioned?
48100What is the ninth circumstance mentioned in this passage?
48100What is the pastor''s position in the Sabbath- school?
48100What is the second circumstance here mentioned?
48100What is the seventh circumstance mentioned in this passage?
48100What is the sixth circumstance mentioned in this passage?
48100What is the third circumstance mentioned in this passage?
48100What kind of questions, then, shall Sabbath- school teachers seek to use?
48100What makes him so bold?
48100What must we have on the door?
48100What part of the door?
48100What qualities do you want in a friend?
48100What should be cheerful and constant?
48100What should we hate and forsake?
48100What should you think this was?
48100What then are the objects of teachers''meetings, and how should they be conducted?
48100What was cleansed?
48100What was coming?
48100What was it he must see on the door?
48100What was the leper to be?
48100What was the name of the king of Egypt?
48100What wilt thou?
48100What would you expect the hart to do were it to reach a brook?
48100What, then, must be done?
48100What?
48100What?
48100When did God love us?
48100When did Jesus touch the leper?
48100When did the leper worship Jesus?
48100When was the man''s leprosy cleansed?
48100When?
48100Where can he look for help?
48100Where did he get his name?
48100Where ought Jesus to be?
48100Where?
48100Where?
48100Which is yours?
48100Who came down from the mountain?
48100Who came to Jesus?
48100Who could make him clean?
48100Who first went down to get corn?
48100Who followed him?
48100Who is Jesus Christ?
48100Who is able to stand against so mighty an enemy?
48100Who is it?
48100Who is the Son of God?
48100Who loved us?
48100Who put forth his hand?
48100Who said he was to be clean?
48100Who touched him?
48100Who will be what?
48100Who would?
48100Who, then, went first to buy corn?
48100Whom did God love?
48100Whom did Jesus touch?
48100Whom did the leper call Lord?
48100Whom did the leper worship?
48100Whom did the multitudes follow?
48100Whom should we seek to please in the performance of duty?
48100Whose Son is Jesus Christ?
48100Whose leprosy was cleansed?
48100Why not give it to her and have done with it?
48100Why should it not be the general rule in all our schools?
48100Why should this not oftener be the case?
48100Why was this name given?
48100Why?
48100Would he be satisfied to lie down?
48100Would you ever employ unconverted teachers?
48100Would you expel a bad boy?
48100Would you like me to give you these four words?
48100Would you recommend the grading of Sabbath- schools?
48100Yes; and how are you to get the blood on the door?
48100_ A leaf._ What can you tell an about it?
48100_ A warm country._ Why?
48100_ An engine._ Did you ever see an engine?
48100_ Application of the Lessons._ Of what should we beware?
48100_ Blood._ Why did our soldiers go off to the war?
48100_ Did_ Harry and Fred take their nosegay to school?
48100_ Did_ the boy deserve to have it?
48100_ Did_ the king give him a little longer time?
48100_ Do you_ think him beautiful?
48100_ Doctrines Separated._ How many doctrines are contained in this answer?
48100_ From what are we to obey Gods commandments?_ Whom are we to love?
48100_ From what are we to obey Gods commandments?_ Whom are we to love?
48100_ Had_ he any money to pay back with?
48100_ How_ did the crossing- sweeper behave to them?
48100_ How_ many pieces of money did the servant owe his lord?
48100_ How_ much did a man owe this servant?
48100_ How_ much did this man owe the servant?
48100_ How_ much money had the king just forgiven the servant?
48100_ Joseph._ And who followed him?
48100_ Mountainous countries._ Why do you think so?
48100_ No, sir!_ Well, suppose all the people in this house had caught hold of the cars?--what then?
48100_ No, sir, no, sir!_ What must the blood be on?
48100_ No, sir._ Suppose you kill a little lamb, and put the blood on your front door, will that save you?
48100_ No, sir; very anxious._ And what more?
48100_ Numerical Exercise._ How many things does God require from those who will be saved?
48100_ Of what are they to repent?_ Of how many of their sins must they repent?
48100_ Of what are they to repent?_ Of how many of their sins must they repent?
48100_ On the cars._ What drew the cars?
48100_ On the cross._ He hung there for you, did he?
48100_ Parched and dusty._ And in mountainous countries, where the sun is very hot, what happens to the streams or brooks?
48100_ Question._ What does God require of all those who will be saved?
48100_ Tell_ me how he treated the man?
48100_ Tell_ me the names of the boys I have spoken to you about?
48100_ The dust into its mouth._ And what does the dust do?
48100_ Twelve o''clock._ What time of night do you call that?
48100_ Verbal and General Exercise.__ What does God require from those who will be saved?_ Who requires true faith?
48100_ Verbal and General Exercise.__ What does God require from those who will be saved?_ Who requires true faith?
48100_ What does God require besides faith and repentance?_ From whom does God require new and sincere obedience?
48100_ What does God require besides faith and repentance?_ From whom does God require new and sincere obedience?
48100_ What does God require besides true faith?_ What kind of repentance does God require?
48100_ What does God require besides true faith?_ What kind of repentance does God require?
48100_ What kind of faith does God require?__ In whom are we to have true faith_?
48100_ What kind of faith does God require?__ In whom are we to have true faith_?
48100_ What kind of obedience does God require?_ What is it to be new and sincere?
48100_ What kind of obedience does God require?_ What is it to be new and sincere?
48100_ What_ did he_ do_ to him?
48100_ What_ did the king order to be done to him and his wife and children?
48100_ What_ did the king_ say_ to the servant?
48100_ What_ did the servant then say?
48100_ What_ did they do with it?
48100_ What_ ought he to have done?
48100_ What_ were they going to take to school one day?
48100_ Who_ was it prayed for those who treated him so cruelly?
48100_ Who_ went and told the king all about it?
48100_ Why_ did they give it to him then?
48100_ Why_?
48100_ Yes, sir._ And for me?
48100_ Yes, sir._ And what was done to the house where there was no blood?
48100_ Yes, sir; it opens its mouth._ Does it simply open its mouth, as this boy did?
48100_ Yes, sir_; and for us all?
48100_ Yes; else it would not have panted for it._ What makes the hart so very thirsty?
48100_ about the hills_, and panting for thirst, most likely induced him to use the... What metaphor or emblem did he use?
48100and Where?
48100and how can we best remove them and introduce all the_ real_ modern improvements?
48100and lastly, How can you_ apply_ the lesson so as best to make a saving impression?
48100and the answerer could not tell, instead of telling him, he properly asked the following simple question,"What would he do if he were in a ditch?"
48100he, perceiving their wickedness, said,"Why tempt ye me, ye hypocrites?
48100is your character, conduct, and manner such as will entitle you to respect?)
48100or is it in the wrong mode of conducting them?
48100or is there"no beauty in him that you should desire him?"
48100or, Why not?
48100said he,''did those things take place which are here set down?''
48100toot!_--what was that?
48100what think ye of Christ?_ XXV.
6423''And was your mistress unkind to you?'' 6423 ''Was he unkind to you?''
6423''Were you a slave?'' 6423 And who are you?''
6423Art thou from the snowy zone Of a mountain- summit blown, Or the blossom of a dream, Fashioned in the foamy stream?
6423Brer Rabbit say,''How come de fleas on you ai n''t skeer''d un you? 6423 Do you think me the child of circumstances?"
6423Dost thou love life?
6423Oh, what is abroad in the marsh and the terminal sea? 6423 Will you not tolerate,"he asks,"one or two solitary voices in the land, speaking for thoughts not marketable or perishable?"
6423''Where are you going, and what do you wish?''
6423( Begin with the line on p. 105,"A child said,_ What is the Grass?_"),_ Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking_, pp.
6423..."Why stand we here idle?
6423After hearing one of Emerson''s lectures, James Russell Lowell wrote,"Were we enthusiasts?
6423As Holmes stepped on the platform, they called,"Did he come in the One- Hoss Shay?"
6423Ask''d her what sum she would give me, if she should die first?"
6423Can you find any point of similarity between his work and_ The Legend of Sleepy Hollow_?
6423Compare his style with Addison''s and with Goldsmith''s in_ The Vicar of Wakefield._ Why does Cooper deserve to rank as an original American author?
6423Could this poem have been written by one reared in the middle West?
6423Did Pocahontas actually rescue Captain Smith?
6423Do these poets belong to the classic or the romantic school?
6423Do we to- day read them chiefly for this purpose or for other reasons?
6423Do you feel like reading any of his poems a second time or repeating parts of them?
6423Do you find a genuine romantic element in Drake''s_ Culprit Fay_?
6423Does Hayne or Timrod love nature more for herself alone?
6423Does he belong to the school of Poe or Hawthorne?
6423Does he employ humor in his serious criticism?
6423Does he reveal his characters in a plain, matter- of- fact manner, or by means of subtle touches and unexpected revelations?
6423Does he seem to you to be a romancer or a narrator of a plain unvarnished tale?
6423Her reply has become classic:"Why do n''t you speak for yourself, John?"
6423How could we sin that had not been, or how is his sin our, Without consent, which to prevent we never had the pow''r?''"
6423How does his account of the Indians( p. 18 of this text) compare with modern accounts?
6423How does his use of the romantic element differ from Irving''s?
6423How is the humorous effect secured?
6423How should you define"local color"in terms of the work of each of these writers?
6423In A Fable for Critics( 1848), Lowell asks:--"... O leather- clad Fox?
6423In Bryant''s_ The Poet_, what noteworthy poetical ideals do you find?
6423In Lowell''s critical essays, what unusual turns of thought do you find to challenge your attention?
6423In Whittier''s poem, what group of lines descriptive of(_ a_) nature, and(_ b_) of inmates of the household pleases you most?
6423In general, do you think that the romantic or the realistic school has the truer conception of the mission and art of fiction?
6423In order to hold the attention of an average audience, should you select for reading one of Irving''s, Hawthorne''s, or Poe''s short stories?
6423In the orations of Otis, Patrick Henry, and Samuel Adams, what do you find to account for their influence?
6423In the presentation of what scenes does Craddock excel?
6423In the selection from_ The Yemassee_( Mims and Payne) are there any qualities which Poe indicates for a short story?
6423In what does his special power consist?
6423In what does the humor of each consist?
6423In what part of this_ Act_ and under what circumstances does he mention"the still- vex''d Bermoothes"?
6423In what particulars does he remind you of Cooper?
6423In what parts of the South are the scenes of the stories of Cable, Page, Allen, and Craddock chiefly laid?
6423In what respects does this differ from the practice of the romantic school?
6423In what sense is he a historian?
6423In what ways are his writings still useful to humanity?
6423In_ Out of the Cradle Endlessly Rocking_, what lines best show his lyric gift?
6423In_ The Courtship of Miles Standish_, which incidents or pictures of the life of the Pilgrims appeal most strongly to you?
6423Is Irving a romantic writer?
6423Is Simms dramatic?
6423Is brevity or prolixity a quality of these early narrators?
6423Is he apparently a novice, or somewhat skilled in writing prose?
6423Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
6423Is the individuality of the characters strongly marked or are they more frequently general types?
6423Is the length of his poems in accordance with Poe''s dictum?
6423Loved the wood- rose, and left it on its stalk?"
6423Lowell remarks acutely:"Did they say he was disconnected?
6423My Captain!_ differ in form from the other poems indicated for reading?
6423Of all Bryant''s poems indicated for reading, which do you prefer?
6423Of what is he the interpreter?
6423On August 12, he asks:--"Is it a praiseworthy matter that I have spent five golden months in providing food for cows and horses?
6423POETRY.--In the selections read from Dwight, Barlow, and Trumbull, what general characteristics impress you?
6423PROSE.--Why is it said that Mrs. Stowe showed a knowledge of psychological values?
6423QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS Is Captain John Smith more remarkable for chronicling what passed before his senses or for explaining what he saw?
6423QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS What are some of the chief qualities in the poetry of"The Croakers"?
6423QUESTIONS AND SUGGESTIONS Why does Oxford University display on its walls_ The Gettysburg Address_ of Lincoln?
6423SOUTHERN AUTHORS ALSOP, GEORGE( 1638-?
6423Should he send the letter or forfeit human respect and his soul?
6423Should you use the same principle in selecting one of these stories for a friend to read quietly by himself?
6423So were the stars... And were_ they_ not knit together by a higher logic than our mere sense could master?"
6423The English critic''s query,"Who reads an American book?"
6423The boys divined the reason, and were cruel enough to call out,"Whose turn is it to wear the coat to- day?"
6423The first entry in his_ American Note- Books_ after this transforming event is:--"And what is there to write about?
6423The masters of the new eastern school of fiction took a different view, and asked,"Is our matter absolutely true to life?"
6423The question is raised, Can the soul be developed and strengthened by sin?
6423The question may well be asked,"How did Lincoln, who had less than one year''s schooling, learn the secret of such speech?"
6423The"united grace and pride of her movement was inspiring, but-- what shall we say?--feline?
6423This school did not ask,"Is the matter interesting or exciting?"
6423Thoreau merely replied,"Why are you_ not_ here?"
6423To what must an orator owe his power?
6423To what voices does he specially listen in his poem,_ I Hear America Singing_?
6423WALT WHITMAN.--How did his early life prepare him to be the poet of democracy?
6423Was he a classicist or a romanticist( p. 219)?
6423What English influences are manifest?
6423What English prose written before 1640 is superior to the work of these three men?
6423What advance in prose narrative do you find in Beverly and Byrd?
6423What are Webster''s chief characteristics?
6423What are its general qualities?
6423What are some of the Calvinistic tenets expounded in Wigglesworth''s_ Day of Doom?_ Choose the best two short selections of colonial poetry.
6423What are some of the characteristics of her mountain people?
6423What are some of the most useful suggestions and records of experience to be found in Franklin''s_ Autobiography_?
6423What are some of the qualifications of a good diarist?
6423What are some of the qualities of Franklin''s style?
6423What are some of the strong situations in_ The Choir Invisible_?
6423What are some special characteristics of his short stories?
6423What are the finest thoughts in_ A Forest Hymn_?
6423What are the most prominent qualities of Brer Rabbit?
6423What are the most striking points of dissimilarity?
6423What are the most striking qualities of his verse?
6423What blemishes have you actually noticed in Cooper?
6423What books helped mold his style?
6423What characteristic of a famous English prose writer of the nineteenth century is noticeable in Ward''s essay on fashions?
6423What characteristics of Virginia life do the stories of Page reveal?
6423What difference do you notice in the realistic method and in the style of Howells and of James?
6423What do these qualities indicate in the readers of contemporary New York?
6423What do these suggest in regard to Bryant''s early training and the cast of his mind?
6423What do you find most attractive in him as a story- teller?
6423What does he introduce to give an American color to his work?
6423What effect does the natural setting have on his scenes?
6423What especially satisfactory pages have you found?
6423What impression does Allen''s_ King Solomon of Kentucky_ make on you?
6423What in Cawein''s verse would indicate that he wrote his poems out of doors?
6423What individual objects stand out most strongly and poetically?
6423What is Hawthorne''s special aim in_ The Snow Image_ and_ The Gentle Boy_?
6423What is a farm but a mute gospel?
6423What is his chosen field?
6423What is his view of the freedom of the will?
6423What is it that gentlemen wish?
6423What is remarkable about Jefferson''s power of expression?
6423What is the chief source of your pleasure in reading him?
6423What is the final result of Brer Fox''s trick in_ The Wonderful Tar Baby Story_?
6423What is the realistic theory advanced by Howells?
6423What is the reason for such a steady increase in Thoreau''s popularity?
6423What is the secret of her success in so employing a little realistic incident as to hold the reader''s attention?
6423What is the secret of the attractiveness of the stories of Joel Chandler Harris?
6423What is the subject matter of most of his poems?
6423What is the subject of Lanier''s best verse?
6423What is the underlying motive to be worked out in_ The House of the Seven Gables_?
6423What lines in Bryant''s_ Thanatopsis_ are the keynote of the entire poem?
6423What lines please you most for their humor, references to rural life, optimism, kindly spirit, and pathos?
6423What might be omitted without great damage to the poem?
6423What parts of_ Hiawatha_ do you consider the best?
6423What passages in_ Walden_ please you most?
6423What passages show him to be a great moral teacher?
6423What period of our development do Bret Harte''s stories illustrate?
6423What phases of western development does he describe?
6423What qualities do you notice in his style?
6423What qualities give special charm to sketches like_ The Old Manse_ and the_ Introduction_ to_ The Scarlet Letter_?
6423What qualities in Freneau''s lyrics show a distinct advance in American poetry?
6423What qualities in his verse impress you most?
6423What remarkable feature do you notice about their local color?
6423What resemblances and differences can you find between the animal stories of Harris and Kipling?
6423What says it of stagnant pools, and reeds, and damp night fogs?
6423What special characteristics of Uncle Remus are revealed in these tales?
6423What special qualities characterize the work of Mary Wilkins Freeman?
6423What specially impresses you about Mark Twain''s style?
6423What specific references in Cawein''s nature poems please you most?
6423What transcendental qualities does Emerson''s prose show?
6423What was Thoreau''s object in going to Walden?
6423What was his mission?
6423What was the general type of American fiction preceding him?
6423What was the subject of each?
6423What was the underlying purpose in writing_ The Biglow Papers_ and_ One- Hoss Shay_?
6423What were the chief causes of the influence of_ Uncle Tom''s Cabin_?
6423What would they have?
6423When he asks,"Who shall stand godfather at the christening of the wild apples?"
6423When he was imprisoned because of non- payment, Emerson visited him and asked,"Why are you here, Henry?"
6423Where shall we turn for a more incisive statement of the Puritan''s attitude toward pleasure?
6423Which of Mark Twain''s works are most valuable to the student of American literature and history?
6423Which of Whitman''s references to nature do you consider the most poetic?
6423Which of his poems indicated for reading do you prefer?
6423Which of his references to nature do you like best?
6423Which of his short stories do you like best?
6423Which of these do you find in the_ Diary_ of Samuel Sewall?
6423Which one of our great short story writers has the most humor,--Irving, Hawthorne, Poe, or Harte?
6423Which one of them do you enjoy the most?
6423Who before him made use of the Indian in literature?
6423Who does not like Krinken?
6423Who does not wish to complete this story to find out what became of the children?
6423Who, for instance, will admit that he does not like the story of_ Wynken, Blynken, and Nod_?
6423Why are Brown''s romances called"Gothic"?
6423Why are Cable''s stories called romantic?
6423Why could fine poetry not be reasonably expected in early Virginia and New England?
6423Why does he retain his preeminence among American orators?
6423Why does it not make us dislike the Dutch?
6423Why does the negro select him for his hero?
6423Why have_ Rip Van Winkle_ and_ The Legend of Sleepy Hollow_ been such general favorites?
6423Why is Eugene Field called the poet- laureate of children?
6423Why is he said to belong to the school of Cervantes?
6423Why is he so widely popular?
6423Why is it desirable that each school should hold the other in check?
6423Why is it especially important for Americans to know something of their writings?
6423Why is it said that the Ten Commandments reign supreme in Hawthorne''s world of fiction?
6423Why is the_ Declaration of Independence_ likened to the old battle songs of the Anglo- Saxon race?
6423Why is this_ History_ an original work?
6423_ Can Such Things Be?
6423_ The Lady or the Tiger?__ The Late Mrs. Null_,_ The Casting away of Mrs. Leeks and Mrs. Aleshine_,_ The Hundredth Man_.
6423but,"Is it true to life?"
7851Is----- under any engagement?
7851To- morrow, did I say? 7851 Would it be agreeable to you that----- should make overtures?"
7851''But what did the rascal,''continued he,''state to be the purport of the letter?''
7851''s being out of the question, is there nothing in this line to be found in South Carolina?
7851A. or Joseph A.?
7851About two o''clock, as the public well know, he expired--"Incorrupta fides-- nudaque veritas Quando ullum invenient parem?
7851After you get through the book you are now reading, which I think is Anacharsis, or is it Gibbon?
7851Again, are they citizens of the United States, or can Congress make them such?
7851Ah, my husband, what can be pleasure to your Theo., unassisted by the charms of your presence and participation?
7851Ah, my husband, why are we separated?
7851And do you, indeed, miss your Theo.?
7851And is not Reubon in a way to be coquetted, with his eyes open?
7851And what does all this prove?
7851And what in particular were the contents of such letters or letter, or communication?
7851And what took you to Darien?
7851And whether a copy of it can be procured?
7851Are you a good girl?
7851Are you content?
7851But when or where, I pray, are we to meet?
7851But you bear it charmingly; do you think this courage will last, or is it only a spasm?
7851Can any thing place the charge in a more ridiculous point of view?
7851Can as much be said in favor of his great competitor on that occasion?
7851Can you imagine what are Miss C.''s occupations and arrangements?
7851Can you make little_ chose_ drink the water?
7851Did he not communicate to you that the said David A. Ogden had been requested to see the plaintiff for the purposes aforesaid?
7851Did he or any other person( and if so, who?)
7851Did not the said house ballot for the president several times before a choice was made?
7851Did the conduct of the said Aaron Burr correspond with the declarations contained in the said letter?
7851Did you ever communicate with the plaintiff, or he with you, on the subject?
7851Did you ever know them to countenance a man of talents and independence?
7851Did you receive any letters from the said Aaron Burr after the said equality of votes was known and before the final choice of a president?
7851Did_ he_, the said Aaron Burr, know thereof?
7851Do yon recollect the second daughter of Mr. Barclay, of Philadelphia, the sister of Nelly?
7851Do you drink the waters, and bathe, and ride, and walk?
7851Do you ever hear from Natalie?
7851Do you know Miss Joanna Livingston?
7851Do you know any matter, circumstance, or thing which can be material to the defendant in this cause?
7851Do you know any person who did communicate with him?
7851Do you know that any measures were suggested or pursued by any person or persons to secure the election of Aaron Burr to the presidency?
7851Do you know the parties, plaintiff and defendant, or either and which of them, and how long have you known them respectively?
7851Do you know the present boundaries of the French republic?
7851Do you know who such members were?
7851Do you know, or have you been informed( and if so, how?)
7851Do you not think we may safely enter the house then?
7851Do you or do you not know Aaron Burr, late vice- president of the United States?
7851Do you or do you not know Thomas Jefferson, president of the United States?
7851Do you really feel a vacuum in your pleasures?
7851Do you really find happiness indissolubly blended with her presence?
7851Do you think this trait ominous of a coward?
7851Do you, my husband, think as frequently of your Theo., and wish for her?
7851Does he yet know his letters?
7851Does our friend Doctor Blythe still reside at Georgetown?
7851God bless you; you have my prayers always; and who dare say they are not as good as a bishop''s, or any member of a Presbyterian synod?
7851Had I any thing so much at heart as to render him happy?
7851Has he not informed you, or have you not understood( and if so, how?)
7851Have our enjoyments for that period been worth the trouble of living?
7851Have you any commands to town, madam?
7851Have you any rice on hand yet?
7851Have you enough of_ gampy_ now?
7851Have you forgotten the mad project of going to England?
7851He added a fourth, to wit: What would be Mr. Jefferson''s conduct as to the public officers?
7851Heavy business, is it not?
7851How am I to judge of the degree intended?
7851How can Mr. Alston, consistently with his views of business, leave the state for five or six months, as you have proposed, for your Northern tour?
7851How could I omit Celeste and her sisters, whom I saw several times?
7851How could you be sure that even this opinion had exceeded the bounds which you would yourself deem admissible between political opponents?
7851How do you account for the apathy of the public on this subject?
7851How do you like this essay?
7851How does your election advance?
7851How else could he have been questioned with any propriety?
7851How far are you from Natalie?
7851How is General Vaughan?
7851How is it that I have not a line from_ Mari_, in answer to several letters which I wrote him from New- York?
7851How long are you to stay in Charleston?
7851How was this to be effected?
7851How, then, could I refuse him one day?
7851I asked Alston,''Would you wish to see my notes of what passed between Duane and me?''
7851I have not asked the price, but not exceeding_ eight hundred dollars!_ Did you take away"The man of Nature?"
7851I then thought so, as you will readily believe; because, why should I deceive my dear little Theodosia?
7851I went to a wedding supper at Mrs. Moore''s, whose daughter has married Willing-- could any one suppose she was_ unwilling_?
7851If I leave Richmond Hill, however, had I not better buy in town, that you may have a resting- place there?
7851If so, which state or states, and what was the reason or reasons of such belief?
7851If the cabals of the day be not speedily arrested, where shall our political bark be anchored?
7851If yea, what was the tenour of such letter?
7851If you have any, had you not better send it?
7851If you mean it for a residence, what avail its intrinsic value?
7851In Charleston, Sullivan''s Island, or Clifton?
7851In what case it was taken?
7851Is L. N. coming to live with you?
7851Is it, then, criminal that a person of mature age should converse on a subject most highly interesting with the friend most likely informed?
7851Is my wife, too, taken from me?
7851Is not that good Irish?
7851Is not that industry?
7851Is this right?
7851It is so long; how long is it?
7851May not the same be the case with noxious vapours?
7851Might I safely travel through your low country at this season?
7851Montesquieu says he writes to make people think; and why may not Theodosia?
7851Now, how much wiser or better are we than this time last year?
7851Now, ma Minerve, is not this a very ridiculous posture for so grave an affair?
7851Now, what are your plans?
7851One letter may contain the name, and another the comment--_"Car ou l''arreter?_"is rather too mystical.
7851Or how shall I annex any precise idea to language so indefinite?
7851Pray can it be true that she was engaged to a young man whom we knew and valued, and who lately died in your country?
7851Pray how do you advance?
7851Pray shake your little noddle, to give the brains, if any there be, a little action; but who can do two things at once?
7851Pray what have you been doing?
7851Pray, have you lived altogether on pepper?
7851Pray, madam, do you know of what consist the"Republic of the Seven Islands?"
7851Resume, I pray you, this confidence, so flattering to me, so consoling to yourself, may I add, so justly founded?
7851Shall I exchange?
7851Shall I or shall I not investigate this point?
7851Shall I write to her to- night, or omit it till to- morrow?
7851Taking lessons of Wisdom from your Minerva?
7851The mother I cherished with so much pride?
7851The next question was, Of whom shall the assembly ticket for the city be composed?
7851The question--_When shall we meet_?
7851There; is not that little incident related in the true heroic style?
7851This phenomenon( what shall I call it?)
7851To this junto you have twice sacrificed yourself, and what have you got by it?
7851Was you a member of the House of Representatives of the United States, at Washington, in the session of 1800 and 1801?
7851Were there any letter or letters written communicating such an intention?
7851What are L. N.''s?
7851What care you for all that?
7851What co- operation or aid the plaintiff could or would afford towards securing his own election to the presidency?
7851What conduct he would pursue in respect to certain cardinal points of federal policy?
7851What does Mr. Jefferson mean by the declaration that he had formed a cabinet, of which Mr. Burr was to be a member?
7851What have we left?
7851What in the name of love and matrimony can this mean?
7851What man under heaven ever before discovered an analogy between a moscheto and his mistress?
7851What more could she do?
7851What of that?
7851What would you bet that La G. is not in a kind of quandary just now?
7851What''s the matter I do n''t write to Natalie any more?
7851When the heat shall be intolerable here, shall I set my face towards the sun?
7851When were these communications made?
7851When, when will that month come?
7851When, when will the month of October come?
7851Where is Hampton all this while, that you say nothing of him?
7851Where now was the boy?
7851Where will you be from the 10th to 15th May?
7851Which_ Maria_ did your husband go for, the biped or the quadruped?
7851Who will be appointed?
7851Why have you not already done it?
7851Why may not Papa Alston be weaned as well as Papa Burr?
7851Why may not this be done again?
7851Why, then, expose my person?
7851Will not the same pertinacity and precipitation endanger the better-- the opposite cause?
7851Will the reader examine the deposition, especially what relates to Mr. McLean and Mr. Latimer?
7851Without enjoyment, without distinction?
7851Would Charles Lee accept the place of secretary of the Senate?
7851Would Mr. Alston be willing to go as secretary to Chancellor Livingston?
7851Would it be an intolerable labour, if, precisely at half past nine o''clock every evening, you should say,"I will now devote an hour to papa?"
7851Would you think it?
7851Yet wherefore?
7851Yet would not a permanent residence in town for some, for many, for all reasons, be better?
7851Yet, on second thought, would it not be better that he break his?
7851_ Interrogatory on the part of the plaintiff_.--Do you know of any matter or thing that may be beneficial to the plaintiff on the trial of this cause?
7851_ It leaves a chasm in my arrangements_ which can not be adequately filled up?"
7851and if so, what did he say?
7851for what am I reserved?
7851if so, how many times?
7851if so, were such letter or letters forwarded to him through the postoffice by any person, and who?
7851if so, what were their names?
7851if so, who were such person or persons?
7851is she to wear out her youth and beauty, dissipate her talents, and exhaust her spirits without an object in life or a place in society?
7851or flying after the Atalanta''s of Virginia, more swift than their celebrated racers?
7851that he was apprized that an attempt would be made to secure his election?
7851that the plaintiff declared, as to the first question, it would not be expedient to enter into explanations, or words to that effect?
7851the anxiety and misery it cost us for some days?
7851what sacrifices do you make, and to what end?
42925A King to check or hinder us in our rights? 42925 A King?"
42925A credit?
42925A fort at the Prairie?
42925A thousand people? 42925 Am I your wife?"
42925An interpreter?
42925An''now who be ye, an''whar are ye from?
42925And Vigo? 42925 And beyond?"
42925And can you go?
42925And did they open their ears?
42925And did you name a river for Sacajawea, too?
42925And do we not all swear by the King?
42925And does he yet live?
42925And have you any kine- pox? 42925 And have you never served in the field?"
42925And have_ you_ no word of yourself or of Kentucky?
42925And my Mandan?
42925And pray, when will that be?
42925And related to all those great people?
42925And so the Spaniards have come to terms?
42925And the Pawnees?
42925And the land?
42925And was Cresap guilty?
42925And was that when the Spanish lady was here?
42925And was your father a chief, and your father''s father?
42925And what are these bills for?
42925And what became of her finally?
42925And what has William been doing?
42925And what have you learned?
42925And what have you named the young soldier?
42925And what if England wins?
42925And what is the news from Virginia?
42925And what makes your hair so white?
42925And where?
42925And whom shall we call Father, the British at Malden or the Americans at St. Louis? 42925 And will the Americans not trade?"
42925And will you join them?
42925And will you march with the minute men?
42925And will you not come to my father''s house?
42925And you are no longer in the army?
42925And you call us lily flowers?
42925And your great brother, George Rogers Clark?
42925And, sir, may I lead that exploration?
42925Any more of ye?
42925Any settlers comin''? 42925 Are you an officer?"
42925Are you my husband?
42925Boone? 42925 Boundaries?"
42925But Colonel Clark said the weather was warm?
42925But whom can we send on such a monumental enterprise?
42925Can I be of any assistance?
42925Can not provision be made to better their condition? 42925 Can they have spanned the ravine in this brief time?"
42925Can we make one?
42925Can you refute the charge?
42925Captinne, you remember w''en we reach de rivers and you knew not which to follow? 42925 Clark, the invincible, where is he?"
42925Colonel Clark? 42925 Come you alone?"
42925Congress?
42925De country? 42925 Deed not de great Napoleon guarantee our leebertee?"
42925Departed? 42925 Did he intend to do it?"
42925Did he not in the late war deal severely with the hostile tribes? 42925 Did that prevent Governor Hamilton from sending an armed force of British and Indians to besiege Boonsboro?"
42925Did you get the powder?
42925Did you not say the conquerors of Vincennes waded through the drowned lands in February?
42925Did you sign?
42925Do you make gunpowder of them? 42925 Do you remember, Dan,"Phillips would say,"when we had you prisoner at Detroit?
42925Do you see that high, narrow, rocky island at the head of the rapids? 42925 Do you see those hunters?"
42925Do you stand for France, revolution and infidelity?
42925Do you take us for savages?
42925Do you think Americans would strip women and children and take the bread out of their mouths? 42925 Do you think I can take Detroit?"
42925Does he want you to lead an exploring party to the Pacific Ocean?
42925Does not the fame of your youthful achievements linger yet around the woods of Monticello? 42925 Done?
42925Done? 42925 For are not our messengers coming?"
42925For why? 42925 Franklin a great orator?
42925From the south? 42925 General Clark seized Spanish goods?"
42925Go back now? 42925 Go?
42925God knows we would help you if we could, but how do we even know that Kentucky will belong to us? 42925 Going?
42925Has he no recognition?
42925Have they wigwams and much buffalo?
42925Have you found us a tract?
42925Have you heard of John Jacob Astor?
42925Have you spoken thus to all the tribes?
42925Here, Sacajawea, does this belong to your people?
42925Hey and away, and what news?
42925His boats passed in safety, why not ours?
42925How could he do that?
42925How did it happen?
42925How did you dress this sausage so quick, Charboneau? 42925 How did you escape?"
42925How many chiefs will accompany us to Washington?
42925How many of the Clackamas nation?
42925How many of you can stay with me?
42925How much do I owe ye?
42925How much money do you think it would take?
42925How much will you pay for the whole province?
42925How old are you?
42925How? 42925 Hull surrendered?"
42925Hull?
42925I hope my son has been a credit to his country?
42925Is he a chief? 42925 Is it not dangerous to invade the Shawnee country?"
42925Is it, really, now? 42925 Is our fur trade to be cut off by these beggarly rebels and Spaniards?
42925Is there any hope there? 42925 Is this the young Virginian that is sending home all the western Governors?"
42925Jefferson-- bought New Orleans? 42925 Kenton?
42925Land, mother? 42925 Let me fight with you?"
42925Mackinac? 42925 Marie, Marie Antoinette,--did she not use her influence in behalf of Franklin''s mission to secure the acknowledgment of American independence?
42925May I have your portrait as a typical handsome American?
42925May I stay for the night?
42925Miss Judy?
42925Money? 42925 Move Boone and Kenton and Logan back?"
42925My boy- brother in the hands of those monsters?
42925My father,said Wabasha,"what is this I see on the floor before me?
42925My pretty cousin going to marry that ugly man?
42925Napoleon? 42925 Now what shall you do with me?"
42925Now who will go with me?
42925Now, in case we never reach the United States,said Lewis,"what then?"
42925Of what use are beaver?
42925Patterick Hennery? 42925 Peace?"
42925Prairie du Chien lost? 42925 Retreat?"
42925Rising Moose?
42925Science, did you say? 42925 See de colour?
42925Shall I become an Arnold and give up my country? 42925 Shall we accept the missionaries?
42925Shall we be butchered by the Sacs?
42925Shall we expel these American traders from the North Pacific?
42925Shall we listen to Tecumseh?
42925Shall we submit? 42925 Slavery in Missouri?"
42925So remote a frontier? 42925 Son of Boone, de great hunter?
42925Take it, man? 42925 Tecumseh?
42925The Americans taken San Loui''?
42925The Assembly adjourned? 42925 The Big Knives?"
42925The Cherokees sold Kentucky? 42925 The English?
42925The nature of the Insurrection?
42925The precious pier glass my dead mother brought over from France? 42925 The son of Governor Clark of the Lewis and Clark expedition, did you say?"
42925They are going to meet in Williamsburg, eh? 42925 Those Bostonians, are they undermining our trade in furs with China?"
42925To the disadvantage of the whites? 42925 Travel by night?
42925Traveller''s Rist, is it?
42925Uncle Clark, when did you first have this carriage? 42925 Virginia is straining every nerve to help Washington; how can she be expected to waste gunpowder on Kentucky?"
42925Wapato? 42925 War with England is inevitable; shall we be able to defend Louisiana?
42925Warm, did you say? 42925 We haf a stockade, you note it?
42925Well, Pompey, did you overtake Colonel Tarleton?
42925Well, sirrah, did you get the powder?
42925What Kaintucke?
42925What accident has happened to your hand?
42925What are you doing?
42925What can have become of Richard?
42925What can it be?
42925What did he say?
42925What did he use?
42925What did we find? 42925 What did we find?
42925What did we find? 42925 What did you find?"
42925What do they say?
42925What do they say?
42925What do you mean?
42925What does it matter to those people beyond the Alleghanies? 42925 What does it mean?"
42925What ees wanted?
42925What for?
42925What has become of my captured Governors?
42925What have we learned? 42925 What have you done?"
42925What is Tecumseh doing?
42925What is it?
42925What is it?
42925What is it?
42925What is that noise at the river?
42925What is the cause of your war?
42925What is the matter?
42925What is this I hear of those Bostonians?
42925What is your plan?
42925What luck?
42925What news of the winter?
42925What next, massa?
42925What now will you have?
42925What shall we give to you?
42925What was it that defeated us? 42925 What wicked design have they on our country?"
42925What will Congress do?
42925What will Kentucky do?
42925What will you pay for all Louisiana?
42925What wish you?
42925What would I have done with the Queen?
42925What, Edmund gone, too?
42925What, Hunt who kept an Indian shop here on the Rue?
42925What? 42925 What?
42925What? 42925 What?
42925What? 42925 What?
42925What? 42925 What?"
42925When did they shoot at your man?
42925When did they start?
42925Where are you going, now?
42925Where are you going?
42925Where do they hide themselves all winter? 42925 Where do you come from and what business have you here?"
42925Where from? 42925 Where is Captain Lewis?"
42925Where is Patrick Gass?
42925Where is my old friend, Daniel Boone?
42925Where is my powder? 42925 Where is our national honour?
42925Where is the garrison? 42925 Where is your master?
42925Where you come from?
42925Which is the true Missouri?
42925Which way did he go?
42925White men, did you say? 42925 Who are these traders?"
42925Who commands at Cahokia?
42925Who could have brought this letter?
42925Who gave you leave to hunt on Osage lands?
42925Who has suffered more for the King than we self- same Cavaliers, we who have given Virginia her most honourable name--''The Old Dominion''? 42925 Who is Black Hawk?"
42925Who owned the peltries the Osages took?
42925Who, then?
42925Why are we safe from Bonaparte?
42925Why did the Indians fall upon us while the Governor sat in the Shawnee towns?
42925Why did you go to war?
42925Why do n''t he go?
42925Why do you go into the wilderness?
42925Why do you live so isolated?
42925Why have you disobeyed my orders?
42925Why is my lord safe in the enemy''s country?
42925Why need we fear? 42925 Why not let us fight?"
42925Why should it not continue over the old Detroit trail to Montreal?
42925Why these fortifications, these bastions and stone towers?
42925Why, then, do you interrupt it?
42925Why, what is the matter?
42925Why?
42925Will anything short of the complete conquest of the Canadas enable us to prevent their influence on our Indians?
42925Will it dismember the Union for the Louisianians to break their fetter from Spain and thereby give us a market clear of duty? 42925 Will the gorge break?"
42925Will you command the army at Detroit?
42925Will you do that?
42925William, have you brought the mulberry cuttings?
42925William, have you the catalpa seeds?
42925You laugh?
42925You? 42925 _ Kah mesika Illahee?_--Where is your country?"
42925_ Katah mesika chaco?_inquired Captain Lewis.
42925_What river is this, Dorion?"
42925About eighteen?
42925Again Lewis put the question,"What stream, Dorion?"
42925An attack?
42925And Arnold?
42925And Fanny?
42925And Menard''s?
42925And again in the Autumn,--"What is it?"
42925And by means of a_ Clark_ at that?
42925And is this to be the end of all our fought- for liberty, that Napoleon should rule America?"
42925And that diaphanous cloud,--was it a dress?
42925And the beautiful Donna De Leyba?
42925And what do you say of the Osage lands?
42925And who can tell it?
42925And who is to pay the bills incurred in the Illinois conquest?
42925And who swore better by the King?
42925And why should he not?
42925And yet Wabasha, dignified and of superior understanding, when asked,"Wabasha?
42925Are not our relation wit de Indian friendly?
42925Are we not Americans?"
42925Are you going to build?"
42925As Washington went forty years before to inquire of the French,"Why are you building forts on the Ohio?"
42925Bones?
42925But Virginia, bankrupt, impoverished, prostrate, answered only,--"We have given you land warrants, what more can you ask?"
42925But from what old treasure stores did those girls bring garments, homespun and new and woolly and warm, prepared against this day of reunion?
42925But how could that be when Milly married while Meriwether was away soldiering on the Ohio?
42925But the Donna?
42925But the chief asked me,''Can ye run fast?''
42925But what could she do?
42925But when did George Rogers Clark ever stop to eat when there was fighting on hand?
42925But where was Dunmore?
42925By what right does he speak?"
42925Can genius surmount destitution?
42925Can we restore fortifications that are in ruins?
42925Can you fit me out in the name of Virginia?"
42925Can you help?"
42925Close the Mississippi for twenty- five years as a price of commercial advantage on the Atlantic coast?
42925Could I have done with less?
42925Could he dream what destruction lay in their course?
42925Could he hold the lawless West?
42925Could he then foresee that Judith would become his wife, or that the verdant Judith Basin would be the last retreat of the buffalo?
42925Could it be possible that the Governor meant all these fine phrases?
42925Could it have been a corrupted tradition of the crucifixion of Christ?
42925Could such a prize be foregone for any defect of eyesight?
42925De cannon at gates?
42925Did he cast regretful eyes this way?
42925Did he commit suicide in a moment of aberration, or was he foully murdered by an unknown hand on that 11th of October, 1809?
42925Did he hope yet to win consent to his marriage with Louisa?
42925Did not Patrick Henry''s father drink the King''s health at the head of his regiment?
42925Did some poor stranded mariner teach the savage this semi- civilised architecture, or was it evolved by his own genius?
42925Did the Spaniard still hope to stay?
42925Did you say the Virginians had come?"
42925Do they preserve you from sickness?
42925Do they serve you beyond the grave?"
42925Do you ask?
42925Do you recall his thoughtfulness in sending for our horses when we feared they might be stolen?
42925Had he not from childhood obeyed John Clark''s command,"Look after your young master"?
42925Had he not led rangers from Fairfax''s lodge to the farthest edge of Bottetourt?
42925Had not the Shawnees harried his border for years?
42925Had some Spanish sailor told of a shore"like his own green Arragon"?
42925Had they brought back gold then what might have been the effect upon the restless, heaving East?
42925Hamilton, with the blood of many a borderer on his head,--what had he to hope?
42925He had lately purchased a three- and- a- half arpent piece of land north of St. Louis for a home for his mother,--or was it for Maria?
42925He was locally regarded as a great literary man, for had not the journals of his expedition been given to the world?
42925His village?
42925How can that be?"
42925How could boats be made to go against the current?
42925How could they withstand the onslaught of Hamilton and his artillery?
42925How did you come?"
42925How long since they burned our boats and cargoes at Fort Bellevue?
42925How much more remained to conquer?
42925How old were you then?
42925How soon might the theatre of action come over the sea?
42925How would you like to lead such a party?
42925I dislike old John Clark?
42925II_ THE CLARK HOME_"What do you see, William?"
42925IX_ THE ROMANCE OF THE MANDANS_"What will they find?"
42925IX_ TRADE FOLLOWS THE FLAG_"_ Bon jour_, Ms''ieu, you want to know where dat Captinne?"
42925If she died who would unlock the Gates of the Mountains?
42925Is he to control us also?"
42925Is he well and enjoying the fruits of his valour?"
42925Is that the boom of distant cannon?
42925Is that true?"
42925Is that why people call our George the''Washington of the West''?"
42925Is this all you promised at the beginning of the war?
42925It was a dastardly deed, but what arm had yet compassed the lawless frontier?
42925Judith, did you say?
42925Kentucky, even Pittsburg, looked for an immediate savage inundation,--for was not all that misty West full of warriors?
42925Louis?"
42925May I inquire whence you come?"
42925Must Kentucky lie still and be scalped?"
42925Now what can be done?"
42925Of all men in the world why should Meriwether Lewis commit suicide?
42925Paint my pictur''?"
42925Patterick Hennery?
42925Pierre Cruzatte was near- sighted and one- eyed, but what of that?
42925Pittsburg?
42925See it boil and roll?"
42925Shall I, a private individual?"
42925Shall we hearken to their teaching?"
42925Should that dismay a trader?"
42925Starving did you say?
42925That same old yarn to frighten the people?
42925The Indian?
42925The Sioux?
42925The Virginians?
42925The battle of Point Pleasant?
42925The frontiersman?
42925The owl inquired,"Who?
42925The scintillating blue eyes burned with an inward light, emitting fire, as Patrick Henry leaned to inquire,"What would you do in case of a repulse?"
42925The young commandant read and bowed his head,--was it a moment of irresolution?
42925Then turning to his brother,"Do you remember Pierre Drouillard, the Frenchman that saved Kenton?
42925Then what bulwark will you have to shield you from the savages?
42925They were pleased to hear of your safe return...."As to Napoleon... the news of his having abdicated the throne--""Napoleon abdicated?"
42925To the sources of the Mississippi?
42925Twenty- five years must we be cut off when the Wilderness Road is thronged with packtrains, when the Ohio is black with flatboats?
42925Twenty- five years when our grain is rotting?
42925Two bobs and a flirt in the dirty Missouri?"
42925Very often the Captains caught themselves asking:"Charboneau, when will dinner be ready?"
42925Wabasha, the Sioux, and Matchekewis--""How do you know?"
42925Wapato?"
42925Was Jefferson thinking of those days when George Rogers Clark gave drafts on New Orleans for the conquest of Illinois?
42925Was he killed by the Indians, or was he drowned?
42925Was it a beginning of that strange new malady that by the next Spring had grown into a devouring plague,--the dreaded Asiatic cholera?
42925Was it because he bore the name of Clark?
42925Was not France our friend in the time of trouble?"
42925Was that the woodpecker?
42925Weeks before, when the land was ringing with his valour, the President had congratulated him and asked,"Do you remember me?"
42925Well, where have you been?
42925Were they not next- door neighbours, hobnobbing over the fence as it were?
42925What Governor before ever lost his head on such a charge?
42925What are your defences?"
42925What arrangement did you make with the Foxes about boundaries?"
42925What did the Governor do?
42925What did they trade at the Saskatchewan?
42925What does the Governor mean?
42925What does this mean?"
42925What had happened?
42925What has Congress?
42925What hope with a foreign nation at our gates?
42925What if he had won Rebecca?
42925What little bird whispered"Oregon"in Carver''s ear?
42925What news?"
42925What shall we have left?"
42925What was he saying?
42925What was he trying to do?
42925What?"
42925What?"
42925When before had Wabasha stood?
42925When was it new?"
42925Where are those promises you made?
42925Where are you going?"
42925Where do they think we are going to pen our people?
42925Where do they think we are going to ship our produce?
42925Where have you been?
42925Where is the Governor?"
42925Where lay that line?
42925Where was Joshua Grinder?
42925Where was Neely himself?
42925Where were those servants?
42925Which was preferable, the tyranny of kings or the Indian firestake?
42925Who better than Clark knew the border and the Indian?
42925Who but chiefs should visit there?
42925Who can tell?
42925Who could say at what hour the waters would resound with their whoops?
42925Who has told it?
42925Who is right and who is wrong?
42925Who is there to mourn for Logan?
42925Who knows what Clark would have called warm weather in February?
42925Who knows what fortune may do for you?"
42925Who shall refuse us?
42925Who shall relieve our distresses?"
42925Who then shall pay it but Congress?
42925Who?
42925Who?"
42925Why, instead of peaceably following the game and providing for your families, do you send out war parties to destroy each other?
42925Why, of all that army, had Wayne chosen the young lieutenant of the Fourth Sub- Legion for this errand?
42925Will Americans endure that?
42925Will Black Hawk apply that spark?
42925Will these presents pay for the men we lost?
42925Will you march with us on New Orleans?"
42925Will you not command of both side de river?
42925Will_ they_ find the Shining Mountains and the River of the West?
42925With an armed boat?"
42925Would Canada now be a peaceful sister of the States?
42925Would he be apt to let the United States get ahead of him?
42925Would he survive a winter among the Blackfeet?
42925Would they not act as a barrier to tribes more remote?
42925XI_ A PRISONER OF WAR_"A prisoner of war?
42925are ye going to run aff and leave me all to mesilf?"
42925bought the Mississippi?
42925bought the entire boundless West?"
42925going to war?"
42925he cried,"and be the divil, will yez try to make sport of mesilf?"
42925still hope to conquer America?
42925who cud tek cah o''Mars Clahk so well as old Yawk?"
7845And after that?
7845But they never did, Perhaps they threw your cabinet tools away?
7845How can it be,I hear them over and over,"There never shall be eyes for me again?"
7845Is it not true? 7845 Sir Galahad?
7845What mission fair and true, While I am sleeping, brings you? 7845 Where do I flow and to what end?
7845Where is the holy sepulchre?
7845Why do you keep, O spirit beautiful and swift, this guard About my slumber? 7845 ***** And yet is not the time gone by? 7845 ***** Do you remember that delightful Inn At Chester and the Roman wall, and how We walked from Avon clear to Kenilworth? 7845 ***** Faith, if it be, said Old King Cole, There is a word that''s more: Who is it goes to Spain and Troy? 7845 ***** How may I justify the hope that rises That I am giving you to a world of pain, And am a part of your love''s sacrifices? 7845 ***** Is it not written at the last day Heaven and earth shall roll away? 7845 ***** Then said Pantagruel: Heard you not? 7845 ***** What may not happen In this place of summer loneliness? 7845 ***** Whoever they be, said Pantagruel, Why stand at the window and drool? 7845 ***** Why do we thirst for urns beyond urns who know How sweet they are, yet bitter, not enough? 7845 ... CHRISTMAS AT INDIAN POINT Who is that calling through the night, A wail that dies when the wind roars? 7845 ... Do n''t you understand?
7845A crown for blood''s sake?
7845A portion of the royal blood of Europe?
7845Am I of Thee, or do I blend Hereafter with Thee?"
7845And Anne arose, began to keel the pot, But was she answered, Ben?
7845And did not Festus, Before whom Paul stood speaking for himself, Call Paul a mad man?
7845And do you wonder, Seeing what I am, what my fate has been?
7845And even geometries in some brain Before old Gutenberg?
7845And his spirit looks Over the land he loved, with what result?
7845And in that lonely cavern dark and chill I heard again,"Then what is life?"
7845And so his color fades, it well may be The crisis of a long neurosis, well What caused it?
7845And the springs march before me, say,"Behold Here are we, and what would you, can you use us?
7845And the train had gone Five miles or so when I said:"Where you going?"
7845And then the Emperor said:"What have I claimed?
7845And then you say: What is the difference?
7845And they hated you for it, hunted you all over Europe-- Why should they not hate you?
7845And what are Greek and Latin, The lore of Aristotle, Plato to this?
7845And what are we but streams and springs Through which He takes His wanderings?
7845And what cares he for Memphis town, Merneptah the bloody, or Books of the Dead, Pyramids, philosophies of madness or dread?
7845And what is time but an infinite whole Revealed by the breaks in thought, desire?
7845And what''s the hedgerow, what''s the pond?
7845And who to Elsinore?
7845And''tother day, poor Anne Looked long at me and said,"You say,''Tra- la''Sometimes when you''re asleep; why do you so?"
7845Another drink?
7845Are they an asset?
7845At fifty- two, or fifty- five or sixty The life is in the seed-- what''s spring to you?
7845But anyway the lamp is very bad, And every bone in me aches-- and why always Must one be either reading, knitting, talking?
7845But first what have we for the composition of these daughters?
7845But have you thought If you should find it it would only be A tomb like other tombs?
7845But tell me What to omit, and what to stress?
7845But tell me now, have you come together?
7845But the lion of Tennessee asks: Would you take from Spain The land she has lost but in name?
7845But these tears-- for whom Or what are tears?
7845But to resume his argument was this: God is or God is not, but if God is Why pestilence and war, earthquake and famine?
7845But who was England then?
7845But who was England?
7845But who was rested?
7845But you do n''t call this Hamilton an artist And Paine a mere logician and a wrangler?
7845But, fair friends, What strength in place of sex shall steady me?
7845Could he laugh As mother laughed?
7845Did France bar her door?
7845Did old Walt Whitman smoke or did he drink?
7845Did you give up three years of your life To wipe out the sentence that burned the wracked body of Calas?
7845Do n''t you understand?
7845England expended millions on her libels To poison Europe''s mind and make my purpose Obscure or bloody-- how have they availed?
7845FLORENCE And why not on this street?
7845FLORENCE Say, Jack, what is the matter?
7845FLORENCE What''s that?
7845For England of to- day is freer-- why?
7845For what can I do with strife, or what can I do with hate?
7845From time eternal was this earth?
7845God is or God is not, but then what God?
7845Has it not served you?"
7845He tried to find The mother''s laugh and secret for the laugh Which kept her to the end-- but did she laugh?
7845Her will, you say?
7845Here was I locked in And given dope to keep me still lest I Cry out and wake the copper- who''s the copper For such as I was?
7845His mother Lay in that corner there, what if she did?
7845His wife looked up and said,"That man is crazy, ai n''t he?
7845Hold me so bear- like, take my lips with yours, Bury your face in these my russet tresses, And yet not lose your vision?
7845How can you be so?
7845How did it come here?
7845How did the sculptor detain you, you ever so restless, You ever so driven by princes and priests?
7845How does it happen people Are born into the world to read these stories?
7845How shall I tell him Which is the actual and the larger theme, His hero or his hero''s enemies?
7845How should I believe Paul''s story, not my own?
7845I ached all through For my hard labor, why did muscles grow not To hardness and cure body, if''twere body, Or soul if it were soul?
7845I am not sure, but then Which will is better, mine or hers?
7845I could go on, but wherefore tell you more?
7845I desire her, her desire Is not toward me, which of these two desires Shall triumph?
7845I have died A thousand times, and with a valiant soul Have drunk the cup, but why?
7845I hopped from bed, and says,''Who is it?''
7845I know of one: Where is it that it says that"Jesus wept"?
7845I love this woman, but what is love to you?
7845I used to quote:''Who is my mother and who are my brothers?''
7845I warned her against you, but how could I tell her Why you were not for her?
7845I wonder why I did it?
7845I''ll ask you something-- As if I were a youth and you a girl-- How were you ruined first?
7845IV Widow La Rue has returned And is rocking on the porch-- What is about to happen?
7845If I die, Slip out of this with Bacchus for a guide, What soul would interdict the poppied way?
7845If he heard me cry How could he raid the magazine?
7845If he raided Where was the court to take me and the rest-- That''s it, where is the court?
7845Is it German, or Russian, or French?
7845Is it so little if I see you not again?
7845JACK No quarreling-- What is the time?
7845JACK What corresponds to marriage To take me from slavery?
7845JACK What time is it?
7845JACK Where are you going, Florence?
7845JACK Why not?
7845Just think for a minute, how the negroes excel, Can you beat them with a banjo or a broiling pan?
7845Look you at Europe, What were it in this day except for France, Napoleon''s France, the revolution''s France?
7845NEANDERTHAL"Then what is life?"
7845Nay, truthful with whom, to what end?
7845No meal has been prepared, where have you been?
7845No?
7845No?
7845Now what''s the good of seeing it?
7845Now what''s the motivating principle Of such a mind?
7845O fie, Ben Jonson, If I am nature''s child am I not all?
7845Once upon the ship, He thinks he''s bound for England, and why not?
7845One can not have them and live, but if one die It might be better than living-- who can say?
7845Or a bit of asafoetida hidden in your pie?
7845Or a little Paris green in your cheese for chard?
7845Or something in your coffee to make your stomach froth?
7845Or the city, or life, or fame, or love or fate?
7845Or the law that drives the weak from the temple''s door?
7845Or the struggle since time began of the rich and poor?
7845Or was it your husband you saw, As he lay by the gate so long ago?
7845Over all How comes it that a sudden feel of life, Its wonder, terror, beauty is like father''s?
7845Pleading,"How canst thou still aver, I love thee, being yet unkind?
7845Rather why is it You master me, even as I mastered him?
7845She had married him-- but why?
7845Shelley, from the deep Why do you come with veiled face, mighty bard, As that unearthly shape was veiled to you At Casa Magni?"
7845So I asked"Were you in Palestine?"
7845So the landscape changes, wills All the changes, did it try Its promises to justify?...
7845Sweet aches are in our breasts: Is it spring, or God, or music, is it you?
7845THE LETTER What does one gain by living?
7845Tell me your desire And what you are?"
7845That lantern on the wall''s the very one They came to see the child with from the inn-- What of it?
7845The bag falls to the floor, and lies there still-- Who now shall pick it up, re- fasten it?
7845The bishop asked:''You''ve brought some money, how much have you brought?''
7845The friendly clerk-- I knew him always-- said''What will you have?
7845The judgment in English condemns you, where is there a judgment To save you from this?
7845Then I said to my friend:"Suppose he''d up and stick A knife in your side for raggin''him so hard; Or how would you relish some spit in your broth?
7845Then it seemed That smile of hers not wilting me she clapped Hands over eyes and said:"I am afraid-- Oh no, it can not be-- what would they say?"
7845Then why marry him?
7845There are cool spaces of sky between white clouds-- But what are flames and spaces but eyes of blue?
7845This globe may last and breed The race of men till Time cries out"How long?"
7845WIDOW LA RUE I What will happen, Widow La Rue?
7845Was I ill or sick in mind?
7845Well, I must die sometime, And who will get it then?
7845Well, why did she descend And almost lose the money?
7845Were not brains before books?
7845What are these phantasies I have?
7845What by dying Is lost worth having?
7845What good is air if lungs are out, or springs When the mind''s flown so far away no spring, Nor loveliness of earth can call it back?
7845What good, Ben Jonson, if the world could see What face was mine, who wrote these plays and sonnets?
7845What have we seen?
7845What is a man to do whose work is done And does not feel so well, has cancer, say?
7845What is it to your laws or courts?
7845What is the matter?
7845What is the motive of this higher mount?
7845What is this room of mirrors?
7845What matter if your thought Outsoared the Phoenix?
7845What shall I do with it?
7845What should my care be when I have no power To save, guide, mould you?
7845What soul dissatisfaction, sense of wrong, Of being thwarted, stung you?
7845What the daily things Lived through together make them worth the while For their sakes or for life''s?
7845What was Camden like?
7845What was it?
7845What was there to oppose possession?
7845What were you at the start?
7845What will it be as time goes on but peoples Made free through France?
7845What''s on your mind?
7845What''s that?
7845What''s the matter?
7845What''s this?
7845Where do my labors end?
7845Where is my watch?
7845Where''s the denying Of souls through separation?
7845Which has rights above The other?
7845Which will Deserves achievement?
7845Who can say?
7845Who gives her these, The thought ran through me, for her joy alone And not for mine?
7845Who is Sir Galahad?"
7845Who is the Gardener then?
7845Who know a woman?
7845Who was England then?
7845Who was it here before me?
7845Who writes these stories?
7845Why did I do it, eh?
7845Why did I do it?
7845Why do n''t you see?
7845Why look at this: Here is the very manger where he lay-- What is it?
7845Why not sit quietly and think?
7845Why should you not follow your light?
7845Why tell you details And ways with which I maddened him, and whipped The energies of love?
7845Why that bulging brow And analytic keen if not for greatness?
7845Will?
7845With a breed such as lived In your day and your place?
7845Would they lay hands upon you?
7845Would you rise over death like a god?
7845Would you stop war?
7845Yet am I blind to you?
7845You do n''t care, you say, for all I''ve told you?
7845You know these too?
7845You stride about my rooms and open books, And say when did he give you this?
7845You wonder at war?
30480''For a sh- e- ow?'' 30480 ''Has, eh?
30480''Marm Smith,''sez I,''yeou hain''t got no ole stuff yeou deon''t want tew sell nor nuthin'', dew ye?'' 30480 ''Tain''t''Squire Smith, of Maoun- Peelier?"
30480''The an- shants?'' 30480 ''Wall, what on airth hev yeou got,_ any heow_?''
30480''Well, then what?'' 30480 ''What a''yeou got to sh- e- o- w?''
30480''What''s''t fur?'' 30480 ''Yeou deon''t_ say_ so?''
30480''Yeou deu?'' 30480 ''Yes,''says my friend, who was a resident in the country;''perhaps you would like to try a few?''
30480A case? 30480 A fireman?
30480A gentleman by the name of Collins stopping with you?
30480A gold service?
30480A letter for_ me_, sir?
30480A man dead behind your counter, sir?
30480A nuisance? 30480 A small wagon?"
30480A what?
30480A widow''s daughter, eh?
30480A''_nand_?
30480A_ writ_? 30480 Ah, Vanilla, girl, have you got your gloves on?"
30480Ah, gone to see a poor human being put out of the world, eh?
30480Ah, indeed?
30480Ah, umph, what business have you, ma''am, with three children?
30480Ah, you are here?
30480Ai n''t he, tho''?
30480Ai n''t they rather fierce?
30480Ai n''t you a- going to stir round there, and save the vessel?
30480Ai n''t you got a_ light_? 30480 Aiding Nat''ral History-- what do yer mean by that?"
30480All your folks are lively, eh?
30480All your folks are well, I believe you said?
30480And Bill Allen, of Ohio?
30480And did you see that-- Lot''s wife?
30480And how did Fanny_ do_ Juliet?
30480And how much may remain on bond and mortgage?
30480And she a--?
30480Angry, dear mother? 30480 Any business with me, sir?"
30480Any of the folks in with you?
30480Are you de man advertised for de dogs, sa- a- ay? 30480 Are you really willing to allow it?"
30480Are your appurtenances-- your household appointments-- from kitchen to parlor, from coal cellar to top scuttle, all they are cracked up to be?
30480Aye, and what their_ heft_ was?
30480Bad coast, I believe, at this time o''year?
30480Be hang''d to ye, what''r ye at now?
30480Been asleep, eh?
30480Believe, sir, you advertised for a dog?
30480Bill Allen? 30480 Blast yer hies, what want yer?"
30480Bob, what yer doing now?
30480Both missed?
30480Brandy?
30480Breed? 30480 But all I want to know, is-- am I to be robbed, killed off, or only initiated into the mysteries of your craft?"
30480But cook, and worry, and slave, and keep shut up for a----"For what?
30480But how about the dog, daddy? 30480 But to have the-- a-- the-- small- pox"----"What?"
30480But what will I do with them?
30480But what would it cost?
30480But, as I was saying, Mr. Mullony said-- says he-- who the divil you push''n, you black nager?
30480But, friend,said the drover,"as you have not yet informed me by what name I may call you--""_ Call_ me, stranger?
30480But, governor, will you please delay this--"Delay? 30480 Buy hinges?
30480By the way, Barclay says you have some of their_ paper_ on hand; is it true?
30480Ca n''t? 30480 Certainly I do,"says Smith;"here it''s invoiced on the catalogue, ai n''t it?"
30480Coffee or tea, sir?
30480Collins?
30480Come here last night?
30480Cool?
30480Crew? 30480 D''yeou ever see wooden hinges, mister?"
30480Dead?
30480Dear son, was the gentleman very angry?
30480Did I? 30480 Did he?
30480Did you ever hear tell of the_ Pigeon Express_?
30480Did you read my advertisement, ma''am?
30480Did you wish to examine any other sort of hinges, sir?
30480Did you? 30480 Disturb_ me!_ Why, I do n''t know how they would do that?"
30480Do it? 30480 Do it?"
30480Do n''t know where he''s gone to?
30480Do n''t you understand the English language, sir?
30480Do with''em?
30480Do you keep this store?
30480Do you live in these parts?
30480Do you promise to mind your own business and let others alone, Uncle Josh?
30480Do you sleep in this store-- live here?
30480Do you think it''s enough?
30480Do your chimneys draw? 30480 Doctor,"says Cauliflower,"that bill of yours is all- fired steep, is n''t it?"
30480Does it hurt much, Doctor?
30480Does the court understand you to say, Mr. Pipkins, that the plaintiff''s reputation is bad?
30480Does your domestic apparatus work well?
30480Done what? 30480 Done?
30480Dullest time of the year, I reckon, ai n''t it?
30480Eggs? 30480 Eh?
30480Eh? 30480 Eh?"
30480Engaged to any lady?
30480Et up?
30480Except when you fix them with the traps, eh?
30480Fierce? 30480 Fierce?
30480Fine boy, that; come here, sir-- eleven years of age, eh? 30480 Fine day, Sheriff?"
30480Fined? 30480 Flambang, who''d you think of puttin''up to- night for the_ Senate_, in our ward?"
30480Flammer, you going to go in for Smithers, to- night?
30480For my arrest?
30480From the country, are you?
30480Full blooded?
30480Gas? 30480 Get them all_ down_ distinct?"
30480Go away, women; what do you know about mineralogy, igniting anthracite? 30480 Go?--where?"
30480Got a big steore of goods layin''areound here, have n''t yeou?
30480Got your gloves on?
30480Hain''t I seen all yeou hev?
30480Has nothing but a valise and umbrella?
30480Have n''t any card cases, mum,--_got some elegant ivory small- tooth combs!_Have You Got Any Old Boots?
30480Have n''t you a horse, jackass, mule or a wheelbarrow-- any thing, so we can be carted in, right off, too?
30480Have n''t_ you_ said so?
30480Have they?
30480Have you ever tended bar?
30480He did, eh?
30480Here you are? 30480 Herr Shaubert,"said the girl, clasping the hand of the poet, and throwing herself at his feet,"am I unworthy your love?"
30480Hinges,says the Yankee, after a pause,"ai n''t considered, I guess, a very neuw invenshun?"
30480Hit, Dick?
30480Home? 30480 How are you?"
30480How do you do?
30480How do you do?
30480How far is it?
30480How is every thing, old boy-- paradise regained?
30480How many pieces were there?
30480How much do you ask for that dog?
30480How much does the feller owe you?
30480How old is she?
30480How old? 30480 How on airth,"groaned the horror- stricken mariner,"how on airth am I to help it?"
30480How soon?
30480How''d do?
30480How''s sleighing out your way-- good?
30480How''s them brass''uns work?
30480How''s trade?
30480Hurt, Wash.?
30480I did n''t say he was ever accused of being an honest man, did I?
30480I do n''t know-- is she?
30480I imagine,said I, interrupting his soliloquy,"that you are an old settler, and have noted vast, wonderful changes here in the Ohio Valley?"
30480I mean, friend, how shall I get them home?
30480I mean-- how do they_ go_?
30480I ordered hot steak, poached eggs-- hain''t you got''em?
30480I say, ai n''t the niggers got to be thick-- infernal thick, in your town lately?
30480I say, mister, where''s them made?
30480I thought so,said the Senator,"but what do you think it was?"
30480I wish to know if anybody is permitted to touch or handle any of my wardrobe, my linen, handkerchiefs, hose, gloves, laces, etc., in your house?
30480I''m canvassing this State,--_wouldn''t you like to subscribe for a first- rate map of Missouri_, OR A NEW EDITION OF JOSEPHUS?
30480I''spect there''s a good deal of humbug about the Californy goold mines, do n''t you?
30480Illinois must be a healthy place?
30480Is John in?
30480Is it possible?
30480Is n''t there some others beside yourself going out, sir?
30480Is your fadder in, ah?
30480Is your name Thomas Johns?
30480Is, eh? 30480 It ai n''t worth while, gentlemen, to toss up for positions, is it?"
30480It ai n''t, eh?
30480It is, eh? 30480 It''s ma, zur?"
30480It''s_ going!_"_ What?_says my friend.
30480Jenkins?
30480Jessamine, your gloves on, dear?
30480Johnson? 30480 Know about_ dogs?_""A''yes- s,"says_ Jakey_.
30480Landlord,says the Diddler,"do you know that gentleman with whom I''ve dined in 15?"
30480Lock the doors?
30480Look a here, mister,says one of the"business men,""got eny more uv that wine?"
30480Look here, Mister,says Phipps,"ai n''t all this street big enough for you without a crowdin''me?"
30480Look here, my virtuous friend,said he to his body- guard, who sat on an opposite barrel, with a heavy pistol in his hand,"what''s all this about?"
30480ME?
30480Married_ two_? 30480 Me rade it?
30480Me willing? 30480 Me?
30480Me? 30480 Me?
30480Me? 30480 Me?"
30480Mister_ Thomas_ did yez mane, zur?
30480Mornin'', stranger,said he;"rayther a wet day for game?"
30480Mr. Ferguson, did you know that your friend Benton was in town?
30480Mr. Jenks-- John Jenks, I believe, sir?
30480Mrs. Hall''s, I believe?
30480Mrs. Hall, I presume?
30480Never in a Pork- haouse?
30480Never was? 30480 Never, unless you may call this a Pork- house?"
30480No, I do n''t; but you''re to draw a grand panorama of Boston, ai n''t you?
30480No- o- o?
30480No; drive off-- where are you going to drive me?
30480Not? 30480 Nothing in the cellar?"
30480Nothing? 30480 Now Mrs. a-- what is your name?"
30480Now what''s up, I''d like to know?
30480Now, sir,said I,"you will please inform me, who the devil do you take me for?"
30480Now,said Mrs. Pompaliner,"now, Brown, look at those articles; do n''t you see that they have been touched?"
30480O, that all? 30480 O, you do n''t?
30480Of course you''ve been there before?
30480Oh, yes, yes-- I understand-- you''ve found me out, but keep dark-- mum''s the word-- you understand?
30480Olivia, Vanilla, where are you? 30480 Owe?
30480Oyster sauce and lobster salad?
30480Pass it? 30480 Pay myself?"
30480Perfectly; I understand; now, where can these birds be had?
30480Persimmons? 30480 Persimmons?"
30480Persimmons?
30480Pills? 30480 Pills?"
30480Pistils? 30480 Plug and file what?"
30480Plugged and_ fined_? 30480 Pooh?
30480Pooty stiff? 30480 Poppy, I expect you know what a good dog is?"
30480Pretty well; how is it with you?
30480Put''em on desks, and cubber- doors, and so on?
30480Quick work? 30480 Raise a great deal of wool-- fine sheep country?"
30480Rale wrought?
30480Roast ducks; what do you say, Buck?
30480Ruined''em?
30480Run of the till?
30480Scalded?
30480Shall I take the clothes back again, mother, and tell the gentleman you ca n''t dry them in time for him?
30480Smithers? 30480 Snappin''turtles, Mister?"
30480So you lost the$ 100--got whipped, eh?
30480So you wish to try your hand tending bar?
30480Solid gold?
30480Something kind of cool began to trickle down my legs into my boots--"Blood, eh? 30480 That caused you to leave, I suppose?"
30480That plate? 30480 That your dog, dad?"
30480The Pigeon Express?
30480The gong-- what''s that? 30480 The landlord, sur?"
30480The- is? 30480 Then what in faith do you imagine I have in embryo to upset or disturb the even tenor of my way, old boy?
30480Then you skelp''d( scalped) him immediately?
30480There, do you see that bundle of laths and stuff?
30480They be, eh?
30480Think not, eh?
30480Think so?
30480This?
30480Those fellows are plaguy awkward to handle, are they not, my son?
30480Three children?
30480Three, only three? 30480 Trade''s dull, eh?"
30480Turkey? 30480 Two and six?
30480Two bottles, sir?
30480Two girls and a boy?
30480Umph, eh?
30480Umph?
30480Use''em?
30480Vat sal I vant? 30480 Vel, vot you vont, ah?"
30480Vell, bine de great Jehosaphat, what for you''n make me deat?
30480Wall, yeou''ve hearn tell-- of Ohio, I reckon?
30480Waluable?
30480Was n''t it my family name, you brute?
30480Well, Charles, did you present that gentleman''s bill?
30480Well, I swan, I do n''t know; what do you think of Jenkins?
30480Well, ai n''t I square with the world? 30480 Well, and hain''t I stood by it, hung by it, fastened to it?"
30480Well, brother Temple, how is it-- what does Mr. Bulkley say?
30480Well, call me when you''ve got supper ready, do you hear?
30480Well, come up, poppy; what''ll you take?
30480Well, sir,said he,"what do you think of it, sir?
30480Well, so, so; how''s all the folks?
30480Well, then,says Flambang,"there''s Dr. Rhubarb; what do you think of him?
30480Well, there''s another of''em,inquiringly asked a fat, farmer- looking old codger:"Dr. Duncan, how''s he stand down there about Washington?"
30480Well, there''s old Bullion,continued one of the interrogators, a fine portly old gent,"you know him, of course?"
30480Well, well, Major,said an elderly person of the group;"go on; how about Saratoga?"
30480Well, what did he say?
30480Well, what do you ask for him?
30480Well, what is it?
30480Well, what the deuce of Tompkins-- hic-- what does he-- hic-- does he want? 30480 Well, what''s new in New York-- got hold of any thing rich?"
30480Well, who would have thought it?
30480Well, you may go-- but stop-- how soon''ll my supper be ready?
30480Well, you''re a pooty looking country jake, you are, to advertise for a_ dog_, and do n''t know Chiney terrier from a singed possum?
30480Well, you''ve moved, eh?
30480Well,continued the fat farmer- looking man,"I did n''t know Duncan_ gambled_?"
30480Well,said an old woodsman sitting at the table,"you took a tree of course?"
30480Well?
30480What are you going to drink, Sheriff?
30480What are you-- at?
30480What breed, daddy, do you call that dog of yours?
30480What can I_ do_ for you, sir?
30480What carriage is that?
30480What dat? 30480 What dat?
30480What do I want? 30480 What do you know about_ dogs?_"says a full- blown_ Jakey_, looking sharply at the old fellow.
30480What do you think of Mr. Jigger''s speech on the Clam trade? 30480 What do you want to leave it here for?
30480What for,_ solgers_?
30480What for?
30480What kind of a dog do you call that?
30480What on airth''s loose?
30480What on airth''s the matter, thar? 30480 What salary did you think of allowing?"
30480What sort of a fellow is Bill?
30480What the deuce,says one of Bunker''s friends,"does Joe want with persimmons?"
30480What things?
30480What time do the_ cars_ come along?
30480What was it, Ab?
30480What''ll it cost, Doctor?
30480What''ll you bet of that?
30480What''ll you drink, daddy?
30480What''r yer at now?
30480What''s eggs, this morning?
30480What''s that?
30480What''s the reason?
30480What''s to be done?
30480What, Bill Allen, too?
30480What, Doctor Duncan?
30480What, Tom Benton here?
30480What, Tom Benton? 30480 What,"says Jakey,"do n''t want''em?
30480What-- ah-- are you at? 30480 What-- is-- the-- price-- per-- dozen-- for-- your-- eggs?"
30480What? 30480 What?
30480What? 30480 What?
30480What? 30480 What?"
30480When did you come in town?
30480Where are the birds?
30480Where are you going to take me to-- up into the garret?
30480Where do you lodge and get your eating?
30480Where do you stop, sir?
30480Where shall we go?
30480Where the deuce is your land, eh?
30480Where the( hic) deuce are-- are you going down this( hic) cellar, eh?
30480Where the-- a-- where is our worthy host?
30480Where''s Flash?
30480Where''s your crew, you villain?
30480Who are you going in for to- night?
30480Who does?
30480Who pays this bill for the carriage, if your name ai n''t Johns?
30480Who said you wanted any? 30480 Who said_ I_ wanted any hinges?"
30480Who started this?
30480Who the deuce, old What''s- your- name, do you call gentlemen?
30480Who''ll be the parson?
30480Who? 30480 Why ca n''t we?"
30480Why do n''t you get them alive, deacon?
30480Why do n''t you run?
30480Why not?
30480Why who will, Major?
30480Why, Uncle Josh, you do n''t pretend to say that Miller''s wife has run off with Bob Tape, Yardstick''s clark, do you?
30480Why, William,says Ethan Rakestraw, as Bill went into the store,"what in grace ails thy face?
30480Why, confound it, you do n''t pretend to say you ca n''t send us into town to- night, do you?
30480Why, hain''t Miller''s wife gone?
30480Why, sir, when Mr. Smith-- you know Mr. Smith, sir, I suppose?
30480Why, that''s a queer dog, mister, ai n''t it? 30480 Why, we see''d you goin''in dar, dat pistol shop; want to lay in a stock of dirks and pistils, eh?"
30480Why, yes; the name strikes me as_ somewhat_ familiar; do you refer to_ John Smith_?
30480Why, you ai n''t going to dive right into it, in that way, are you?
30480Why, you''ve said it,said Pipkins,"what''s the use of my repeating it?"
30480Will the moderator please proceed?
30480Will you promise never to take or carry a story again?
30480Will, eh?
30480Ya- a- s."Fine country, I''m told?
30480Ye would n''t?
30480Ye- e- s; wall, as I was saying,''beout tradin'', none o''yeou ever been in the tradin''way? 30480 Yeou do n''t say so?"
30480Yeou do n''t say so?
30480Yes, sir; what do you wish to use them for?
30480Yes, sir; why should n''t I? 30480 Yes, that''s what I''d like to know-- why ca n''t_ we_?"
30480Yes; well?
30480Yes; what_ priced_ hinges did you require?
30480Yes? 30480 You are, eh?
30480You are, eh?
30480You begin to think so, eh?
30480You ca n''t?
30480You did n''t say that to him, did you?
30480You do n''t say I did, do you?
30480You do n''t say so?
30480You do n''t tell me all them fellows are here?
30480You do n''t tell me so?
30480You do n''t? 30480 You do n''t?"
30480You do?
30480You got a hoss, eh?
30480You have, eh?
30480You hev?
30480You laughed at his impudence, and kicked him out into the street?
30480You off?
30480You see yon pint thar, up the river?
30480You talked of going, I believe?
30480You understand training them?
30480You were never previously married, were you?
30480You wern''t never in Cincinnatty,_ I_ guess?
30480You-- you got any hand- cuffs in you''pocket?
30480Your folks are all stirring, eh?
30480Your name is Cynthia, eh? 30480 _ Agh!_"says he, putting down the demijohn in haste,"it''s rale bhrandy--_agh- h!_""Branthy?
30480_ Ah_, very well; go ahead; where''s the room?
30480_ Down the cellar?_gasped B----, quite tragically.
30480_ Just half a ton in heft!_"You do n''t tell us_ that_?
30480_ Me?_ Caucus? 30480 _ Me?_ Caucus?
30480_ Me?_ me on good terms with Matty? 30480 _ Me?_ me on good terms with Matty?
30480_ Run?_ I would as soon think of jumping over the moon, as running for office!
30480_ Vaw''s!_ you goin''thrun away and sheet me,_ ah_?
30480_ What?_ Me been in Washington before? 30480 _ What?_ Me been in Washington before?
30480_ What_ were they?
30480''Ab Slamm,''sez she,''what on airth possesses yeou to talk o''tradin''on the Sabbath?''
30480''Pears to me, I knew yeou somewhere?"
30480''Tain''t got no hair on it; why, where in blazes did you raise such a dog as that; been scalded, hain''t it?"
30480***** HUMORS OF FALCONBRIDGE*****[ Illustration:"Are you de man advertised for de dogs, sa- a- ay?
30480----a-- a--?"
30480A- a- a- in''t they Thick?
30480A.?"
30480Afraid of what?"
30480Ah, here you are, old feller; well, what''s the damages?"
30480Ai n''t you got no bells?"
30480An Irish woman came up to a turkey merchant, and says she--"What wud yees be after axin''for nor a chicken like that?"
30480Are you committing murder on one another?"
30480Are you satisfied, Doctor?"
30480Banvard?"
30480Bill Allen?
30480Brace?"
30480Brown?"
30480But he started again--"Ai n''t goin''to Californy, then, are you?"
30480But look down thar-- thar''s what makes this spot dear to me-- thar, do you see yon little hillock-- yon little mound?
30480But what did Phipps know or care about the Fugitive Slave bill?
30480But what will I do with my money?
30480But where was this fearful manuscript-- this dreaded scribbling of the God- forsaken, poor, forlorn author?
30480But you do n''t know me, I reckon, stranger?"
30480But, Carrie, did n''t I earnestly beg of you to keep those doors-- cellar doors-- shut?
30480But, how many heed such"notices?"
30480Ca n''t you ta- take me( hic) home with you, eh?
30480Charley got behind the counter to stow away some articles he had brought down, and began one of his usual harangues:"Theatre, last night, Jack?"
30480Could I leave this place?
30480Could you get the outline?"
30480Did n''t he skin me out of my watch last winter, playing poker, at Willard''s?"
30480Did you read Mr. Porkapog''s speech on the widening of Jenkins''s ditch?"
30480Do I look like a woman as would marry two?
30480Do n''t you believe in''em?
30480Do you comprehend, Olivia?"
30480Do you hark?"
30480Do you understand?"
30480Do you_ smell_, Mrs. a-- Brown, that horrid lavender or rose, or, or,--do you smell it, Brown?"
30480Does he-- ah----""Yes, what-- ah-- does old Jip say?"
30480Does your range or cooking stove do things up brown?
30480Eldest thirteen, eh?--boy eleven, and the youngest seven, eh?"
30480Enough laid up for a wet day-- don''t care twopence ha''penny for politics, or soldier fol- de- rols-- who wins or who loses in such hums?"
30480F.), and now what say you?
30480Flash in?"
30480Flash in?"
30480Flash in?"
30480Flash?
30480Flash?
30480Fussy,"take_ me_ up into the third story?"
30480Gamble?
30480Go tell the carriage----""To go to the divil, zur?"
30480Good gravy, but do n''t they?
30480Got home?"
30480Got the tooth- ache?
30480Great improvement on the old method, ai n''t it?
30480Had n''t I better go and take a look around, before I conclude to move?
30480Had you ever any means of satisfying yourself that there is, or was, a real service of gold in the President''s house?"
30480Hain''t I stood by the party?"
30480Haow many hogs deu yeou cal''late them fellers killed and scraped a day?"
30480Have n''t I married one of the best women in the world?
30480Have visitors?
30480Have you ever had the tooth- ache?
30480Have you got your Bettys?"
30480Have you read it?
30480He closed his door, opened his cask--"What in the name of everlasting sin and misery is this?"
30480He still breathed faintly--"''Benjamin, my son,''said she,''do you know me?''
30480He''s no breed, boys; look at him-- see his tushes; growl, Barney, growl!--Ain''t them tushes, boys?
30480Hez Perkins, is that yeou?"
30480How about the_ dog?_""Ah- h- h- h!
30480How are ye, Sheriff?"
30480How learned you this?
30480How many servants do I keep?
30480How will I invest it?
30480How''s all your folks?"
30480How''s your mother got?"
30480Humph, I ordered chocolate-- hain''t you got chocolate?"
30480I charge you, upon your sworn oath, do you or do you not say-- Blinkins stole things?"
30480I do n''t know about that; I do n''t think he''s the right kind of a man for mayor, any how; do you?"
30480I pulled trigger, and--""And killed_ him_?"
30480I put up, and sez I tew the landlord:"''Squire, what sort o''place is this for a sheow?''
30480I said_ that_ to_ myself_, but I met_ him_ with a smile, and with a''how d''ye do, Cutaway?''
30480I say you, Mister there, just hand along that saas; give us a chance, will ye, at that; notion on''t, what d''ye call that stuff?"
30480I went on and told her heow in course o''travel--"''In furrin pearts?''
30480I''m down on doctors, then, Twist; but what do you say to Blowpipes?
30480I''spect them cost somethin''?"
30480I''ve just moved in here, my name''s Flannigan, you never saw me before, and of course I never dealt with you!--don''t you see?"
30480If he has the money, we''ll make''a spec,''you understand?"
30480Is he in the house?"
30480Is thare robbers in yer house?
30480Is the divil_ mad_?"
30480Is there a reward out, sir, for this person?"
30480It was a momentous question, and to his wife''s proposal of a fresh detail of domestic expense, Triangle responded--"Why ca n''t we?"
30480Jipson, will you hear me?"
30480Jones did not; Mrs. Jones smiled and chatted, and did the honors of the table with rare good grace, but where was Jones?
30480Keep the cellar shut?
30480Landlord?"
30480Large, my dear fellow"--says the Don--"bless your soul, you do n''t call_ that_ large?
30480Make you dead?"
30480McConachy owned this dog; set up, Barney-- look at his ears, boys-- great, ai n''t they?
30480McConachy, one winter; he was a pizen mean man, but his wife-- wasn''t she mean?
30480McConachy, out here at the Risin''Sun Tavern?"
30480Me move her, sir?"
30480Mock heroically says we--"Afraid?
30480Mother tried to have him drink a cup of water from the river, but he war past nourishment-- and she asked him if he knew he war dyin''?
30480Mother, what''s the matter?"
30480Mr. Buck proposed--"What say you, Sheriff, to a dinner and a bottle of old Sherry, at----?
30480Mr. Buck,"says the Sheriff,"glad(?)
30480Mr. Mullony, our landlord, was saying till us--""Are you married, too?"
30480Mr. Whackstack, are you sick?
30480Mr.----,_ do n''t you want to buy some good fresh eggs_?"
30480Must they perish-- die with me alone-- struggling against our woes, poverty, wretchedness?
30480Never been_ in_ a Pork- haouse?"
30480Next day fifteen miles, and so forth; yeou see?"
30480Not so soon?"
30480Now what do you suppose my bill was, for one week, board, lodging, servants''_ bribes_ and sundries?
30480Now who''s got any thing against_ me_?"
30480Now, Mr. Hart, I am out of employment-- got my family to support; I always trusted I treated you like a man, did n''t I?"
30480Now, sir, your tooth is safe-- your life is safe--_you''re a sound man!_""Sound?"
30480Now, what do you suppose, boys, that feller''s first offer was?"
30480Now, what will you ask for the job?"
30480Now, who will become purchaser?
30480Of course the audience are not expected to be so unmannerly as to ask"What?"
30480Oh, in the tin business?"
30480One of them wire pullers we read about, eh?"
30480Owe you?"
30480Pigeons?"
30480Pork- haouse?"
30480Sa- a- a- y, yeou heold on--_yeou the guv''ner_?"
30480Say!--''Squire, gone?"
30480Says the clerk, whispering to Smith, whom he slightly knew:"Smith, do you know the price of this wine?"
30480Seventy- five dollars for that dog frame?"
30480She had a father-- could she leave him in bondage?
30480Sheriff, what is it, pray?"
30480Supposing, of course, that somebody was pegging away with a bunch of his_ wares_ at the door, Lapstone rushes out and cries--"Where?"
30480Tell me, Fred, are you hurt?"
30480That''s it, eh?"
30480The Doctor waits upon the visitor--"Dr. Pendleton St. Clair Smith, I presume?"
30480The Joneses and Pigwigginses and Macwackinses, and-- and-- everybody has gone out into the country, and we must go, too; why ca n''t we?"
30480The Yankee approached the hinges, two steps-- picks up a bundle of the article, looks knowingly at them two minutes--"Yeou do n''t say so?"
30480The deacon looked anxiously and innocently at the speaker, as much as to say--"you do n''t say so?"
30480The last exclamation the Nightingale heard from the screech owl, was--"Miss Jane Lind-- who was that poor wom- a- n?"
30480The quiet manner of his reply rather won upon the_ Court_, and says the_ judge_--"Who are you, and where are you from?"
30480The young man finally called out--"Dad, which bag shall I take it out of,_ the gold or silver_?"
30480The"pedlers"and--"_ Have you got any ole boots?_"Drove my respected-- middle- aged friend Mansfield-- clear out of town!
30480Thee hain''t been fighting, William?"
30480Then leaning cautiously forward towards that person, says A.--"Is this man here yet?
30480There''s the baste can do it!--d''ye see that?"
30480This was satisfactory, and the party went on finishing their wine, smoking,& c."S''pose we have some rale sham- paigne, boys?"
30480To me, sir?
30480Twist?
30480Understand?"
30480WHO SHALL BE HEIR?
30480Waiter, bring us a bottle of Sherry; you take Sherry, Buck?"
30480Walker cried out--"Who was that?
30480Walker?
30480Walker?
30480Wall; neow, yeou all sot?
30480Was it secreted?
30480Was it written?
30480We all grinned, which the"member"noticing, observed--"I hope, gentlemen, no man here will presume to think I''m exaggerating?"
30480We do n''t often meet(?
30480We listened one long hour by the clock of Rumford Hall, one night, to an outpouring of_ argumentum ad hominem_ of Mr. Emerson''s-- at what?
30480Well, now what do you suppose was the result of that interview with Cutaway?"
30480Well, what''s he done?''
30480What and where are_ my rooms_?
30480What are you doing along here, alone in a canoe?"
30480What church do I worship in?
30480What do I care for the number?
30480What do I want with_ firemen_?
30480What for?"
30480What for?"
30480What have you done?"
30480What have you got to say for yourself, anyhow?"
30480What have you started in Gotham?"
30480What in thunder does Joe Bunker want with_ persimmons_?"
30480What on airth ails the ole feller?"
30480What on airth is going on?"
30480What say you-- are you willing to remain spliced with the Doctor, or not?
30480What was to be done?
30480What you stir around?"
30480What''d yees ax for''un?"
30480What''s the matter?"
30480What''s the use of such a humbug expression as that?
30480What''s your name?"
30480What-- what''s out?"
30480Where is the Bridegroom?
30480Where was that man?
30480Where was the pirate?
30480Where?
30480Where?"
30480Who bought the concern?
30480Who could doubt the heart that beats beneath a cambric front?
30480Who does it belong to?
30480Who has not, that ever travelled over this remarkable country, had occasion to be down on dogs?
30480Who was that Poor Woman?
30480Who?
30480Why, I thought you were in raptures with it?"
30480Why, do n''t you want to buy hinges?"
30480Why, he looks like a singed possum?"
30480Why, look a''here, you do n''t go for to say dat you''spect I''m agoin''for to fetch d- dogs clean down here, for nuthin'', do you, sa- a- ay?
30480Wo n''t you look at''em?"
30480Yes, I do; been looking all around for some fresh eggs; how many have you?"
30480You black sarpint, come here; go to Jackplane, the carpenter, and tell him to come here and make my sashes tight, d''ye hear?"
30480You do n''t think I''m going to fly, jump or deliver orations from the cupola, do you?"
30480You do n''t think that, Hall, do you?"
30480You got him?"
30480You hain''t never been in Cincinnatty?"
30480You have some breakest?
30480You intend taking a full view, do n''t you, sir?"
30480You want to see der teeth?"
30480You want to see der teeth?"
30480You''ve seen those wretches, male and female, have n''t you, reader?
30480Your name''s Martin-- Martin Glenn, eh?
30480[ Illustration:"Three children?"
30480_ Me, sir?_"bullyingly echoed Blackstone.
30480_ Me_ on good terms with Matty?
30480_ dead_?"
30480_ wo n''t_ we have a time?
30480about laying around here, alone, in the dark, too?"
30480are you going to have that over again?"
30480but hain''t they got a lot of pork here?"
30480by Jove, what''s that?"
30480coming that are dodge, eh?
30480cries the old gentleman;"have n''t you common decency to see when a man''s engaged in a_ calculation_ he ought n''t to be disturbed, eh?"
30480did you ever see his panorama?"
30480do n''t call that a_ collar_, do you?"
30480do you say, upon your oath, that Blinkins is a dishonest_ man_?"
30480echoed the dog man, looking no ways amiable at the speaker,"why did n''t you never see a Chinese terrier, afore?"
30480echoes poor Bill,"sound?
30480echoes the rotund laundress;"why of course we''ve got to tetch''em, or how''d we get''em ironed and put in your baskets, ma''am?"
30480eh?
30480endanger my life, and the lives of all my family-- me?
30480exclaimed Jenks;"my arrest?
30480exclaimed Triangle--"me?
30480fastened?"
30480got de hand- cuffs in he pocket?"
30480got pistils in your pocket, eh?"
30480got pistils in your pocket, eh?"
30480gruffly responded the old gentleman;"ah, umph, what business have you, ma''am, with three children?"
30480harbor, eh?
30480he responds;"well, suppose we try it?"
30480here, what''s all this?
30480hi!--do you hear- r- r?"
30480hos- e- lair?
30480how?
30480is n''t he a coon?
30480is this Peter Houp, come from his grave?"
30480laughed his patient,"fun?--you call getting married_ fun_?"
30480lord- a- massy, ma''am, how''d you get''em ironed, folded and brought home, ma''am, without tetching''em?"
30480manuscripts?
30480my dog?"
30480or the ninepence hose_ all merino_?''
30480or who imagine that hand accustomed to dirty work which is enveloped in white kid?
30480s''pose he does?"
30480says B., squirming about in the grasp of the officers, and reaching over for the landlord and his wallet--"what the thunder are you about?
30480says old Firelock, the gunsmith, as Bill was going by his shop;"got a bag in your calabash, or got the tooth- ache?"
30480says one of the merry country gents,"do n''t snake your handsome countenance off so quick; do yer want us to fork rite up fur these drinks?"
30480says one of the party, a sly, winking, fat and rosy gentleman, whom we shall designate hereafter,"you''re bound to the capital, eh?"
30480says the customer, getting up his_ fury_,"what for eggs?"
30480says the gentleman, taking hold of the plate very gingerly;"pass it_ up_?"
30480says the interrogator,"you''re one of the caucus folks, eh?
30480says the lobster merchant;"well, I tell you, Saul can carry''em to the cars for you in this''ere bag, if you''re goin''out?"
30480says the man with the cane--"wasn''t that a_ snap_?
30480says the somewhat alarmed Diddler;"nothing serious, of course?"
30480sez he, lookin''alfired peart and smeart, as tho''he''d seen a flock o''l''fants;''quack doctor, I s''pose, eh?''
30480thee''s been to the dentist, eh?
30480thunder and saw mills, what''s all that racket about-- house a- fire?"
30480what are you going to do?"
30480what have you got there?"
30480what mean you?"
30480what''s that-- haven''t got_ incumbrances_, have you, ma''am?"
30480what''s that?"
30480what''s the trouble?"
30480what''s to be done for a feller?"
30480where are you?
30480where?"
30480where?"
30480where?"
30480which o''yeou be the guv''ner?"
30480who''s talkin''about pistils, mister?"
30480who?
30480why were you a state prisoner-- a_ secret_ prisoner in the----?"
30480why, do you want to rob me?
30480yes; you stir around, eh?
30480you rise up early, eh?--Well, it is goot for ze hels, eh?"
400774. Who gained when Hawaiian sugar( before annexation) was admitted free of duty, while other sugar was taxed?
400774. Who makes coins?
400775. Who has the greater political power, the president of the Pennsylvania Railroad, or the governor of that state?
400776 Is there a different term for land that is wealth and land that is not?
400776. Who runs the business in a large store owned by a large family?
400778. Who is the employer in a coöperative cooper- shop whose superintendent is elected by the workmen?
40077After a panic?
40077Again, how is to be measured the economic service of the tree and of the labor needed for gathering its fruits?
40077An industrial depression?
40077Are charity workers usually well paid?
40077Are countries?
40077Are fine products high in price because wages are high, or vice versa?
40077Are high wages and high interest seen to go together?
40077Are interest rates changing in America?
40077Are men less able to bargain for the loan of money than for other things?
40077Are men wealthy in proportion to the money they have?
40077Are merchants producers of wealth, or are their profits merely subtracted from the wealth already produced?
40077Are most positive laws intended to hinder competition or make it freer?
40077Are national bonds or promissory notes, wealth?
40077Are not prices determined by the personal whim of industrial despots who can bid defiance to the laws of price?
40077Are services, music, a theatrical performance, a gambler''s pack of cards, wealth?
40077Are the conditions of the competition fair?
40077Are the following wealth: food, tobacco, medicine, whisky, good looks, good health, a wooden leg?
40077Are the high wages of skilled labor deducted from the wages of unskilled?
40077Are the opportunities for workmen to rise to the rank of masters as great as formerly?
40077Are the other shares independent of wages?
40077Are the profits of the employer deducted from wages?
40077Are the wants of a savage more easily satisfied than those of civilized men?
40077Are there any things, not free goods, that could be indefinitely increased without increasing difficulty?
40077Are there different economic terms for hewn and unhewn blocks of stone?
40077Are they not all scarce and desirable goods yielding a limited supply of uses?
40077Are wages independent of the other kinds of income?
40077Are you willing to pay more for goods in order to have a choice of stores?
40077At what point will this movement stop?
40077At what rate can it exchange its products for the products of others( including other trusts)?
40077Before a financial crisis how are prices, high or low?
40077Between tariffs and factory legislation?
40077But how are they to get it?
40077But how is it in case the agent is used to gratify persons other than the owner?
40077But what kind of labor is to be taken, that of the lender or that of the borrower, or that of some one else?
40077But what of the high rewards of skilled service ministering to worthy ends?
40077But what shall be said of volunteer firemen that let an old house burn down to provide labor for carpenters and"to make business good"?
40077Can a bank that issues its own notes afford to lend cheaper than the ordinary capitalist?
40077Can a manufacturer pay the same to laborers if the product will be marketed next year, as he can if it is to be marketed to- morrow?
40077Can a person owning a lot on a residence street of a city erect a glue- factory on it?
40077Can brokers fix the price of grain on the market?
40077Can it be maintained that one tenth of the labor supply fixes the value of all?
40077Can it be of advantage to trade freely with one nation if general free trade is bad?
40077Can it safely be assumed that every trade with a foreigner is less advantageous than one with a fellow- citizen?
40077Can law fix the rate of interest at any point desired?
40077Can people live on the future, consuming in advance of production?
40077Can taxation be used to secure some of the profits of large corporations?
40077Can the large factory always outsell the small one?
40077Can the water rise higher than its source?
40077Can this be avoided?
40077Can wage- earners be shut out from all advantages in the land of the country?
40077Can we determine what luxury is, or give the notion definiteness?
40077Can you describe from your own experience any example of readjustment of labor due to introduction of new machinery?
40077Can you excuse the sense of injustice felt by the hungry man when he sees you wear patent- leather shoes and kid gloves?
40077Can you get a kind of money that will make the things that are sold, dearer, and the things that are bought, cheaper?
40077Can you see any clear distinction between the public nature of a railroad and of a horse and carriage?
40077Could a country better do without money, horses, or roads?
40077Did prices go up or down as a result?
40077Did the discovery of America make the study of political economy more important?
40077Ditto in agriculture, mining, commerce, or manufactures?
40077Do all banks issue notes?
40077Do improvements in agriculture increase or decrease the rent of land?
40077Do men work better under threat or when their pride is appealed to?
40077Do people actually expend their incomes so as to get the maximum utility judged by a standard they would admit to be morally sound?
40077Do people save more in good times or hard times?
40077Do savings- banks and insurance companies stimulate saving, or do they exist because of a disposition to save?
40077Do sons usually follow the father''s trade?
40077Do the same influences act in the case of men?
40077Do they ever stand in the way of progress?
40077Do you buy what you most desire?
40077Do you ever take account of a difference of five cents in deciding whether to purchase?
40077Do you expect to acquire wealth more easily as a result of the study of political economy?
40077Do you feel a sense of injustice when you read of a millionaire''s ball if you are not a millionaire?
40077Do you know any large cities that are more favorable shipping- points than neighboring towns?
40077Do you know any persons that work from a sense of duty alone?
40077Do you know from personal observation whether a Mexican, a German, or an American, is the best workman?
40077Do you know of any father who created more wealth because he could bequeath it to his son?
40077Do you think that store- keepers fix the price of the produce they buy of the farmers?
40077Do you think that the amount of work is reduced by new machinery?
40077Do you value it more than the things it buys?
40077Does a clearing- house enable the banks that belong to it to get along with a smaller cash reserve?
40077Does a greater expenditure on himself give him a larger sum of gratification in life than a moderate expenditure would give?
40077Does economic theory throw any light on the ethics of miserliness?
40077Does gold cost the day- laborer as much in California as in New York?
40077Does he devote his spare hours to the"Scientific American"or to the"Police Gazette"?
40077Does he enjoy music, the theater, or the cheaper attractions of Coney Island and the Bowery?
40077Does it change the utility of a load of powder to touch a match to it?
40077Does it differ from rent?
40077Does it wish the services of Cornelius Vanderbilt in organizing a great system of railroads, of Andrew Carnegie, of Pierpont Morgan?
40077Does luck have greater influence on business success in an old country or a new one?
40077Does taxation ever infringe on the right of private property?
40077Does the economic idea of production conflict with the physical principle that matter can not be created?
40077Does the existence of the land of California have any effect on rents in New York city?
40077Does the ownership of land give a monopoly?
40077Does the pain of toil repel more than its fruits attract?
40077Does the presence of a policeman increase or diminish competition among men?
40077Does the principle of the substitution of goods have any bearing on the value of metals under bimetallism?
40077Does the public consider the growth of trusts to be good or bad?
40077Does the rent of pianos, type- writers, or masquerade- suits depend on the value of the thing rented?
40077Does the son work as hard when he inherits his father''s wealth?
40077English farmers raise thirty- five bushels of wheat per acre, Americans perhaps fifteen; why this difference?
40077From an economic standpoint, can we say that robbery really reduces the wealth in existence?
40077Geology answers the question"What?"
40077Give other examples showing the difference between a gambling- house and an insurance company?
40077Has the isothermal line any relation to the number of millionaires?
40077Has the owner of a poor gold- mine a monopoly?
40077Has the owner of a rich mine a monopoly?
40077Has the principle of the survival of the fittest any influence on the population of America?
40077Has the rainfall any relation to the density of population?
40077Has"a good chance in life"much to do with success?
40077Have you observed the growth of any local industry from a small beginning to large proportions?
40077He has a dollar; will he go to the theater or buy ten dishes of ice- cream?
40077Henry van Dyke in one of his essays puts into the mouth of his boy the question,"Father, who owns the mountains?"
40077How can a net gain ever result from a smaller sale?
40077How can a yard of cloth be said to be distributed to the labor and capital producing it?
40077How can bricks be limited in number, being made as they are from one of the commonest materials on the earth''s surface?
40077How can the quantity theory hold in these conditions?
40077How can the use of a flock of sheep be of value to one who must return them all to the owner?
40077How can they ever be different?
40077How different from political freedom?
40077How do Englishmen invest in American railroads?
40077How do livery charges in a college town in commencement week illustrate the subject of rent?
40077How does a new railroad affect the value of the land it passes through?
40077How does the hire of a team of horses resemble the rent of land?
40077How effective is it?
40077How has this been done?
40077How is it with the nation in time of war?
40077How is society to grant it to them?
40077How is the blacksmith free to compete with the physician and how not?
40077How is this great political problem to be met except by an appreciation of its importance and by a growth of public integrity?
40077How many college students''budgets could pass the censorship of Hetty Green, reputed to be the richest woman in America?
40077How many motives led you to come to college?
40077How many of the men you know at the head of large businesses started life poor?
40077How many people do it?
40077How shall it be judged what he deserves?
40077How should the income of an inventor be classified, as wages or profits?
40077How successful were they?
40077How wide a knowledge would a complete understanding of industrial society require?
40077How would the effects on society be different if prices were reduced by better organization and the prevention of waste?
40077How would the rate of interest be affected if the amount of money were doubled at once?
40077How would the rent of a rocky island be affected if it became a summer resort?
40077How, and to what extent?
40077If a business is very successful and its dividends double, what will be the effect on the selling price of its stock?
40077If a man is not content with$ 2 a day, why does he not do work that is paid$ 5 a day?
40077If a$ 100 share of railroad stock sells at par when interest on loans is at 5%, what will be its price when interest rises to 6%?
40077If all day- laborers should agree to work with one hand tied behind them, would their wages go up or down?
40077If all the land on an island were equally fertile and equally convenient of access, would any of it pay a rent?
40077If all trade is exchange do not the members of a trust reduce their income when they raise the price of their products by artificial agreement?
40077If as much is produced in a general eight- hour day, who benefits?
40077If capital is needed in production why is the question of justice raised when its use is paid for?
40077If every piece of money should miraculously be doubled in a night, whose interests would be affected?
40077If four hours''work a day would enable him to live, will he work longer or will he stop?
40077If gold were to become as plentiful as iron, would it be worth more or less than iron?
40077If he would rather dance than eat, is it labor?
40077If it would pay us to admit goods free, may we be justified in taxing them to force concessions from the other country?
40077If large shipments of wheat are made to England, will bills of exchange on London be higher or lower in New York?
40077If manna fell from heaven daily in a climate where clothing and shelter were unnecessary, what effect on wealth would result?
40077If money is a tool, what does it make?
40077If money wages are higher and general prices are lower, how is the laborer affected?
40077If neither can be credited with the whole value, how is any distribution to be made between them?
40077If not, what will be the effect of a change?
40077If one company controlled all the petroleum in the world, what would it consider in fixing the selling price?
40077If one is more skilful or stronger, or owns the boat and the tackle, how would it affect the division?
40077If production is reduced one fourth by shorter hours, is"work made"to that degree for the unemployed?
40077If rewards were equal, what would determine the choice of work?
40077If so, how do you account for it?
40077If so, how is the value of the labor adjusted to its product?
40077If so, in what way?
40077If so, then why not at zero; if not, then why fix any maximum rate of interest?
40077If so, to what extent?
40077If so, would it be a wise measure?
40077If socialism reduced the total product, would it still be desirable because of the better distribution?
40077If the law permits certain classes to be fleeced without redress, is wealth thereby reduced?
40077If the supply of labor of any class were to be decreased 10% would wages rise in like proportion?
40077If the value of improvements on land is all counted, is there anything over?
40077If there were no legal bar to a tariff between the states, would a tariff probably be imposed?
40077If there were twice as much money in the world, would panics take place?
40077If they are to stop short of the extreme of socialism, where shall the line be drawn?
40077If they get more, others will get less; and with what result?
40077If to both, in what proportion?
40077If true, why?
40077If two men of equal skill go fishing together, how would they find a rule for dividing the catch?
40077If women are paid less than men for the same work, why are men employed at all?
40077If you can do more work in two hours than in one, can you do more continuously in sixteen consecutive hours than in eight?
40077If you could, would you do nothing always?
40077If you do not enjoy it?
40077If you ever worked for wages, or a salary, was that the only motive?
40077If you found$ 10 to- day on the street, what would you do with it?
40077If you never eat corn- bread, will the failure of the corn- crop affect your grocery bill?
40077If you owned the Golden Gate, or the harbor of New York, could you rent it?
40077If you were an officer of a trade- union, would you begin a strike when trade was good or when it was poor?
40077If you were starting a factory on credit, would you rent the machines or buy them with borrowed money?
40077If your neighbor rides on a pass and you pay your fare, are you helping to pay for his ride?
40077If, through greater efficiency of labor, wealth increases, which share benefits?
40077In a period of depression is there less money than usual in the country?
40077In a time of high excitement gold was sold for more at one side of the room than at the other side; how account for this?
40077In the banks?
40077In the wide range of subjects passed in review has been sought the answer to one question: What determines and affects the values of good?
40077In the world?
40077In these cases what affects the rate of interest?
40077In what sense have we assumed that competition exists?
40077In what sense is a street- railway a monopoly?
40077In what sense ought a cause of value be spoken of?
40077In what ways are retail stores wasteful in their expenditures?
40077In what ways can a lender collect a high rate of interest without appearing to do so?
40077In what ways can a piece of iron be consumed, economically speaking?
40077In what ways does competition reduce the total product?
40077In what ways does labor get paid for its share, and who pays it?
40077In what ways is the rate of interest affected by the rise or fall of the value of money?
40077In what ways may we understand the proposition that taxation should be proportioned to ability?
40077Is a book full of useful information, wealth?
40077Is a head full of useful knowledge, wealth?
40077Is a ship at the bottom of the ocean, or gold in the mine, wealth?
40077Is advertising of any social service or is its sole purpose to divert trade from one merchant to another?
40077Is all land useful?
40077Is all land wealth?
40077Is any other result thinkable?
40077Is barter more or less frequent now in America than formerly?
40077Is common, unskilled labor"scarce"( in any reasonable sense of the word) in China?
40077Is competition severe in the renting of land in your community?
40077Is custom a better regulator of economic action than competition?
40077Is dancing labor?
40077Is dynamite?
40077Is granting patents an interference with trade similar to tariffs?
40077Is his recreation permeated with a certain intellectual ambition?
40077Is hunger the cause of food?
40077Is it an evil?
40077Is it bad policy for California to buy New England manufactures?
40077Is it bad policy to let the people of Palo Alto spend money in San Francisco for things that could be produced at home?
40077Is it good public policy to allow a trust to undersell its smaller competitor in one district while it keeps up its prices elsewhere?
40077Is it money or things that the borrower wants?
40077Is it more or less common than formerly for them to do so?
40077Is it possible to compare the value of the portrait- painter''s service with that of the gardener?
40077Is it possible to do twice the amount of business in any store- room by doubling the stock and the force of clerks?
40077Is it possible to expand a university indefinitely by increasing the force of teachers and the equipment, without enlarging the buildings?
40077Is it production to buy fifty cents''worth of yarn and knit a pair of socks worth twenty- five cents if you enjoy doing it?
40077Is it right that an inventor should by patent laws be able to keep the profits of his business high?
40077Is it right that the lucky inventor of a popular toy should make$ 100 a day from it?
40077Is it surprising that in human affairs still less prediction is possible?
40077Is it therefore not subject to economic influences?
40077Is it well to be contented with your lot?
40077Is it well to be discontented?
40077Is luxury necessary to give employment to labor?
40077Is modern business competition a competition of men only?
40077Is more or less time needed in production with the best machinery and processes?
40077Is part of a stock of goods ever worth more than the whole?
40077Is political economy a study of things or of men?
40077Is political economy necessary to the understanding of the business world, or vice versa?
40077Is pride as powerful a motive as greed, in economic action?
40077Is smoking high- priced cigars economically justifiable, assuming that the smoker is wealthy and does not injure his health thereby?
40077Is the dancing of a dancing- master labor?
40077Is the fact of one man''s gain and another man''s loss by chance of any economic or political importance?
40077Is the immorality of betting based on economic grounds?
40077Is the last bait worth more when the fish are biting well?
40077Is the present condition a normal one-- is this prosperity likely to grow or to decline?
40077Is the process, on the whole, worth while?
40077Is the public school system an economic factor?
40077Is the railroad productive?
40077Is the rental a moderate return on the investment?
40077Is the spendthrift the best friend of labor?
40077Is the value of gold and silver due to the action of government?
40077Is the work of any kind fixed in quantity?
40077Is there a strong selfish motive for men to increase their efficiency in most industries?
40077Is there any causal relationship between commerce and manufactures?
40077Is there any likeness between trade- unions and tariffs?
40077Is there any relation between the taxes paid and the benefits secured from government?
40077Is there any rule for determining the limits of state interference?
40077Is there any similarity between the methods of trade- unions and the etiquette of the medical and the legal professions?
40077Is there anything in common between"cost, the onerous exertion necessary to get goods,"and cost as the money expenses of production?
40077Is there anything in the nature of mining that keeps the ratio of the supply of gold and silver nearly uniform?
40077Is there competition between the owner of good land and the owner of poor land?
40077Is this because they are the lucky possessors of a rare gift, or because they perform a social service deserving such reward?
40077Is this due to the appreciation of money?
40077Is this good worth more now or next week?
40077Is this like any tariff arguments you have heard?
40077Is this sound in an economic sense?
40077Is water useful?
40077Is well- being in proportion to wealth?
40077It may well be asked, What method shall be pursued to reform it?
40077Liking realism, does he read Howells or the blood- curdling serial entitled"Piping the Mystery"?
40077May a singer of songs or a mixer of drinks be called a productive laborer?
40077Men like to answer out of their ignorance the question, Whither are we tending?
40077Now when such a durable income is bought outright, what is the basis on which its value is estimated?
40077Of books?
40077Of tame pigeons?
40077Of what practical use do you think political economy is?
40077Often the question asked when one first sees a moving trolley car or automobile or bicycle is: What makes it go?
40077On agricultural rents in New York state?
40077One may ask, How, if the miller in the long run benefits, can the speculator gain?
40077One may well ask, How did they come into the important places they occupy?
40077Or should reduce rents for the less capable merchants and manufacturers?
40077Ought legislation attempt to prevent luxury, or can public opinion affect it?
40077Ought lotteries to be permitted by law?
40077Ought speculation in mines to be permitted by law?
40077Ought the law prohibit the sale of tickets by"scalpers"?
40077Ought the profits of the farmer from a sudden rise in the value of wheat be confiscated to the public?
40077Shall a piece of coal be studied in geology, botany, physics, chemistry, or economics?
40077Shall this apple be eaten now or next winter?
40077That of the lender, who may be rich, or that of the borrower, who may be poor?
40077The answer is in the form of a question, Could society have the service without the reward?
40077The economist first asks, What is the effect of utility on value?
40077The ethical and patriotic thought is not,"How will this affect my interests?"
40077The first question to ask in the part of the study of economic society here undertaken is: What is its motive force?
40077The individual asks,"Am I bound to sacrifice my comfort and happiness to the general good?"
40077The law determines the limits of property, but what determines the limits of the law?
40077The ownership of a horse?
40077The question arises: which is cause, which effect?
40077The question is raised in many minds, If private property is not an absolute right, what shall be its limits?
40077The question is: how and in what degree does this scarcity cause value to attach to labor?
40077The question now is, What is the effect of a seigniorage charge on the value of the coin as compared with the bullion that is in it?
40077The question of luxury leads back to the question of distribution: Has the man honestly gained his wealth?
40077The question the law asks and answers regarding wealth is not_ What_, but_ Who?_ Who is the owner, who should control, receive, enjoy the income?
40077The question the law asks and answers regarding wealth is not_ What_, but_ Who?_ Who is the owner, who should control, receive, enjoy the income?
40077The question was once asked in Parliament,"What is a pound?"
40077The rich in the abundance of labor?
40077This is past and present; what of the economic future?
40077Through what agency does the Western farmer borrow Eastern capital?
40077Through what historic stages has production passed?
40077Under private property, can men complain of the use made by others of their wealth on the ground merely that it was unwise?
40077WHAT IS A DOCTRINE OF POPULATION?
40077Was it really the stock, the old mine, or the new hole in the mountain- side that had increased in value?
40077Was the great Chicago fire, which led to the rebuilding of the city, a good thing economically?
40077Was the net result a gain or a loss of employment?
40077Was the rise in fortune due most often to chance, inheritance of wealth, or exceptional ability and power of work?
40077Was there an unearned increment in both cases, and of the same kind?
40077Were they, on the whole, good for the community?
40077What advantages are there to manufacturers in combination?
40077What and where are they?
40077What application do you think the principle of diminishing returns has to the question of population?
40077What are complementary goods?
40077What are municipal franchises?
40077What are the chief elements of business success?
40077What are the difficulties in determining tenants''improvements?
40077What are the main arguments for and against the city ownership and control of gas and waterworks?
40077What are the main reasons given for the ratio of 16 to 1?
40077What are the main social conditions necessary to saving?
40077What are the most obvious ways of increasing the productiveness of land?
40077What are the principal things besides money uses that cause a demand for gold and silver?
40077What are the sources of income to a bank?
40077What are vested rights?
40077What can it get them for?
40077What can the workman do to protect himself?
40077What cases have you seen where great skill came from practice?
40077What cases have you seen where the railways impose unjustly on the public?
40077What causes a demand for an additional supply of food?
40077What changes should be made in it?
40077What classes of thinkers are most inclined to take up socialism?
40077What concern have the poor in the abundance of capital?
40077What determines the amount of money needed by different persons, towns, states, and nations?
40077What determines the maximum study- time for the earnest student?
40077What determines whether a crop is poor or good: the ground, the weather, or the farmer?
40077What different ideas does the expression"distribution of wealth"suggest to you?
40077What different methods of obtaining an income have you noted among the men you know?
40077What do students of the question think of it?
40077What do you know about the methods of renting mines?
40077What does a bank do for a community?
40077What does this indicate regarding taxation?
40077What does this indicate?
40077What economic changes occurred in your own community in the panic of 1893- 4, or in the years 1903- 4?
40077What effect has republican government on the efficiency of labor?
40077What effect on exchange has the holding of American bonds abroad?
40077What effect on prices should be expected from an invention that makes possible the carrying of fresh meat from South America to England?
40077What effect on wages and interest does the bringing in of foreign capital have?
40077What effect on wealth would a change of climate have, whereby the consumption of coal would be decreased?
40077What effect would it have if the state should make laborers work for unsuccessful employers at lower wages than for successful ones?
40077What element of security is furnished by clearing- houses during panics?
40077What else?
40077What factors of production must be combined by a savage to produce a canoe?
40077What forms help the fittest to survive?
40077What forms of state activity favor survival of unfit men and bad traits of character?
40077What functions does money perform in society?
40077What gain is it for men to work together instead of singly?
40077What gives rise to the belief sometimes held that money is an invariable standard of value?
40077What harm can there be in the acceptance of passes by judges, legislators, and other public officials?
40077What have you noted as to the benefits or hardships of restricting child labor in factories?
40077What have you read this year about reciprocity?
40077What important personal traits are needed to make a man an efficient market- gardener?
40077What influence has commercial morality on saving?
40077What influence has the formation of joint- stock companies on saving?
40077What interests favor and what oppose the building of an isthmian canal?
40077What is a financial crisis?
40077What is discount and deposit?
40077What is economic freedom?
40077What is influencing the change?
40077What is it a citizen gets in return for his taxes?
40077What is it to be economical of money?
40077What is it to earn a living?
40077What is meant by fiat money?
40077What is meant by the standard of life?
40077What is production?
40077What is speculation?
40077What is stumpage?
40077What is the cost of a good you have made entirely with your own labor?
40077What is the difference between the consumption of wealth and its destruction?
40077What is the difference between these definitions: wages is the share of labor; wages is the payment by one man to another for his services?
40077What is the difference in utility between the water in a solid mountain reservoir and the same water when it is flooding the valley?
40077What is the difference to the employer between rent, interest, and wages as items of cost?
40077What is the difference to the workman whether he becomes more efficient or works with a better machine?
40077What is the difficulty in the definition: Rent is the payment for the original and indestructible powers of the soil?
40077What is the effect of free common schools on the comparative wages of skilled and of unskilled laborers?
40077What is the effect of private property on saving?
40077What is the effect on wages of differences in the danger, pleasurableness, social distinction, expense of preparation, of occupation?
40077What is the extent of the influence one nation can have on the ratio of the two precious metals?
40077What is the fact about this temptation in America?
40077What is the form of contract used in the renting of farms, business buildings, and residences, in the community where you live?
40077What is the function of a clearing- house?
40077What is the largest manufacturing establishment in your home town?
40077What is the market in which it is sold?
40077What is the meaning of the phrase,"a capitalistic age"?
40077What is the money market?
40077What is the public sentiment in your home community as to the ownership of industries by the town or city?
40077What is the relative importance of organization in sawing wood, building houses, running a small store, or a large factory?
40077What is the value of its franchise?
40077What keeps any of it there?
40077What kinds of labor found employment as a result of its invention?
40077What kinds of laborers were thrown out of employment by the invention of the type- writer?
40077What kinds of municipal industries have you seen in operation?
40077What large trusts have recently been formed?
40077What legal rights do the builders of a railroad have that are not enjoyed by all citizens?
40077What limits the number of wild rabbits?
40077What makes the difference?
40077What methods are adopted to keep up the efficiency of factories?
40077What moral agencies increase the efficiency of labor?
40077What other influences affect population?
40077What other than the rents it will afford?
40077What physical reasons account for the greatness of ancient Egypt, of Venice, of Holland, of England, of the United States?
40077What practical or social justification is there for passing and continuing such law?
40077What reasons are given in justification of laws closing barbershops on Sundays?
40077What reasons are there for and against this?
40077What relation has improved transportation and other means of communication to trusts?
40077What relation is there between population and mountains, temperature and water- supply?
40077What relation is there between the rate of interest and the price of land bearing a given rental?
40077What remedy has the foreman for an inefficient laborer working under the time- wage system?
40077What things beside land are rented?
40077What to the public?
40077What troubles arise from city politics?
40077What would be some of the first effects on production if interest on money loans fell to one half its present rate?
40077What would be the chief differences between your use of it now and at the age of five or the age of twelve?
40077What would be the effect of technical and industrial schools on the wages of artisans?
40077What would be the effect on interest, land rent, and wages of a great increase of national saving?
40077What would be the effect on wages, interest, and land rent of a sudden addition of rich land to the country?
40077What would be the effect upon the rate of interest in a new state if it passed a law preventing the collection of loans by outside lenders?
40077What would cause it to change?
40077What, then, as to the size and aggregate amount of the profits?
40077When a man says he has a certain capital invested in his business, does he mean to include the value of the land and buildings?
40077When did one ever see a basket of peaches that were all of the same size, ripeness, color, flavor, and perfection?
40077When does an industrious man stop working on his own farm, and why?
40077When gold comes out of the mine is the gain to the community greater or less than when the same value of grain is harvested?
40077When goods are exchanged for money or money for goods, what is the gain?
40077When he began to work at one thing, why did he ever stop to work at another?
40077When interest falls to 4%?
40077When is a man poor?
40077When prices fall, what determines which factories shall close, and which workmen shall be discharged?
40077Where among the four preceding heads would you classify it?
40077Where are they?
40077Where is the simplest aspect of the problem to be found?
40077Where land is plentiful, why do not men cultivate two acres instead of one?
40077Where two or more things are indispensable to a product, how much shall be credited to each?
40077Which is the base from which the other is derived by multiplying at the rate expressing their ratio?
40077Which is the more important for the rate of interest, the amount of money in the banks or the amount of goods in the country?
40077Which of them are most satisfactory in your judgment?
40077Which the least so?
40077Which wins the battle: the general, the soldiers, or the armament?
40077Which would you prefer, to clerk in a store at$ 1.50 a day, or to lay masonry at$ 2?
40077Who are the buyers and sellers, and what do they buy and sell?
40077Who can tell how far the exceptional money rewards have inspired to the highest cultivation of great genius and of many minor talents?
40077Who has the risk?
40077Whose sacrifice?
40077Why are trusts or selling agreements formed?
40077Why did Crusoe work at all?
40077Why did people go to Dakota and Iowa when there was still room in New England?
40077Why do men cultivate two acres instead of one?
40077Why do some businesses give increasing returns as they grow?
40077Why do the owners exact payment for the use of goods, and why are they allowed by their fellows to do so?
40077Why do you value money?
40077Why does a horse like hay and a man prefer meat?
40077Why does a merchant engage in one business rather than in another?
40077Why does nearly all the gold produced in California leave the state?
40077Why does the public consent to grant patents or public franchises?
40077Why does the question of the control of the railways in the interest of the public present especial difficulties in America?
40077Why has interest been about 10% in the West, 7% in the Central States, 5% in New York, 4% in Germany?
40077Why has machinery changed the relations of workman to master?
40077Why in the case of a waterfall and not in the case of the water- wheel?
40077Why in the case of the field and not in the case of the trees in the field?
40077Why is exchange profitable if it is fair?
40077Why is gold ever shipped from California to New York?
40077Why is the variety of occupations greater or less than formerly?
40077Why is transportation a greater problem in the United States than in Europe?
40077Why may the railway exercise the sovereign power of government and invade other private property rights?
40077Why not build a fifty- story one?
40077Why not raise seals in California and fruit in Alaska?
40077Why put up a twenty- story building?
40077Why should preachers get half- fare rates?
40077Why should the use of a machine that never can be a direct cause of gratification, have a value that men will pay for?
40077Why should we say that the principle applies to land and not to cases of other industrial agents?
40077Why this contradiction?
40077Why will railroads issue commutation tickets?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Why?
40077Will a day''s work of a common laborer buy more to- day than it would a half century ago?
40077Will additional hours of labor yield more gratification than idleness yields?
40077Will he read a book or play billiards?
40077Will he read a yellow journal or a pink or a white one?
40077Will you save more or less if the rate of interest falls?
40077With a given number of workers, what may be causes of differences in the labor- supply?
40077With increasing division of labor is there greater or less opportunity for the payment of laborers according to the piece- wage plan?
40077Would a nation be poorer if, like Sparta, it prohibited all money?
40077Would a number of smaller establishments of the same sort and with the same aggregate capacity succeed as well?
40077Would any rule be attainable?
40077Would doubling all commodities affect their exchange value?
40077Would it be a good thing if the boot- black got a dollar a shine?
40077Would it be good or bad for the whole class of laborers?
40077Would jewelers make better ones?
40077Would men work better if they ate more?
40077Would you prefer to begin your business career with a large company or with a small merchant?
40077Would you say that differences in ability at manual trades are due to practice or to native talent?
40077[ Sidenote: Need of social regulation] Why not leave such subjects to individuals?
40077[ Sidenote: Reward and enterprise] Are the rewards of the successful enterpriser greater than he deserves?
40077[ Sidenote: The ideal of social service] Does the world owe each man a living?
40077[ Sidenote: Value of labor derived from its products] But in what sense is even this part attributable?
40077[ Sidenote:"What is a dollar?"]
40077_ Some profits are the result of pure chance or luck._ What is luck?
40077and a good question to ask in beginning the study of money is,"What is a dollar?"
40077and, next, What is the relation of these goods to the personal incomes of the members of society?
40077but,"How will it affect the general interests?"
40077in the United States?
40077with surmises, and"When?"
5050Just satisfactionfor what?
5050Abdicated?
5050Ambitious aims?
5050Americans are asking, why do they hate us?
5050Americans are asking: How will we fight and win this war?
5050Americans are asking: What is expected of us?
5050Americans are asking: Who attacked our country?
5050And I thought,"Really?
5050And as it is to so go at all events, may we not agree that the sooner the better?
5050And for each of us the question then becomes, not"Will change cause me inconvenience?"
5050And how are we to get the ships if we wait for the trade to develop without them?
5050And if A and B should agree, how can they know but that the General Government here will reject their plan?
5050And if either extreme carry its point, what is that so far forth but dissolution of the Union?
5050And if they were so disposed would it be the duty of this Government to protect them in the attempt?
5050And if we do n''t do it now, when will we ever get around to it?
5050And in any event, can not the North decide for itself whether to receive them?
5050And is it supposed that the wandering savage has a stronger attachment to his home than the settled civilized Christian?
5050And is n''t that what we do best?
5050And let the final test of everything we do be a simple one: Is it good for the American people?
5050And now, ladies and gentlemen of the Congress, why do n''t we get to work?
5050And so, the question: If the fundamentals are in place, what now?
5050And unless they did would it not be the duty of the General Government to support them in resisting such a measure?
5050And what is it that it is suggested we should be prepared to do?
5050And why may we not continue that ratio far beyond that period?
5050And why should we expect it to be otherwise?
5050And why?
5050And without blinking an eye, she looked at 40 governors and she said, when my boy goes to school and they say"What does your mother do for a living?"
5050And, if we can make ready what we have, have we the means at hand to distribute it?
5050And, third, how do we meet these challenges together, as one America?
5050Are they not already in the land?
5050Are we at the end?
5050As a good neighbor, shall we not extend to her a helping hand to save her?
5050At what time and in what manner would a new negotiation terminate?
5050Between whom was the compact?
5050But admitting that these two classes of citizens are to be benefited by expansion, would it be honest to give it?
5050But all these necessities have now been served, and the question is, What is best for the railroads and for the public in the future?
5050But are we to presume in advance that he will thus violate his duty?
5050But by what authority are these denied?
5050But can Congress only act after the fact, after the mischief has been done?
5050But can they proclaim themselves entirely irresponsible for this condition?
5050But do they do right in ignoring the existence of violence and bloodshed in resistance to constituted authority?
5050But does not the present case fairly constitute an exception?
5050But how can they discharge these duties unless they be themselves protected?
5050But if it had moral authority over men''s consciences, to whom did this authority attach?
5050But if the gold reserve falls below$ 100,000,000, how will it be replenished except by selling more bonds?
5050But if we possessed this power, would it be wise to exercise it under existing circumstances?
5050But in what sense can it be asserted that the enactment in question was invested with perpetuity and entitled to the respect of a solemn Compact?
5050But is it beyond the power of a State, like an individual, to yield a portion of its sovereign rights to secure the remainder?
5050But it is worth while asking and answering the question, When shall we consider the war won?
5050But let this trade be reopened and what will be the effect?
5050But should n''t we feel more compassion for the victims of crime than for those who commit crime?
5050But should such a step be now taken, when it is apparent that a hopeful change has supervened in the policy of Spain toward Cuba?
5050But then would it not be better to do away with them entirely?
5050But unless and until it can be proven that an unborn child is not a living human being, can we justify assuming without proof that it is n''t?
5050But we should not be asking:"In what country were you born?"
5050But what happened?
5050But who shall tell us now what sort of navy to build?
5050But why any proclamation now upon this subject?
5050But why should emancipation South send the free people North?
5050But why tender the benefits of this provision only to a State government set up in this particular way?
5050But would it not be salutary to give also the means of preventing their commission?
5050Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
5050Can anything be done to relieve situation, now acute?
5050Can this be said in the face of the effect of the Northern Securities decree?
5050Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
5050Can we achieve these goals?
5050Can we, can they, by any other means so certainly or so speedily assure these vital objects?
5050Could not all the objects of graduation be accomplished in this way, and the objections which have hitherto been urged against it avoided?
5050Could the Indians establish a separate republic on each of their reservations in Ohio?
5050Could the one in any way greatly disturb the seven?
5050Did this mean we had to drop everything else and concentrate on armies and weapons?
5050Disunion for what?
5050Do they suggest any solution?
5050Do we desire to make such ruthless combinations and monopolies lawful?
5050Do we gain strength by withholding the remedy?
5050Do we need common sense and fairness in our regulations?
5050Do you believe we can become one nation?
5050Do you believe we can create more jobs over the long run by cleaning the environment up?
5050Do you believe we can expand the economy without hurting the environment?
5050Does Humanity weep at these painful separations from every thing animate and inanimate with which the young heart has become entwined?
5050Does it seem strange to you that this should be the conclusion of the argument I have just addressed to you?
5050Does not this speak volumes to the patriot?
5050Does the lapse of time reveal defects?
5050Does the spirit which has produced such results need to be stimulated or checked?
5050Doubtless it will be painful to leave the graves of their fathers; but what do they more than our ancestors did or than our children are now doing?
5050Easy to do?
5050Finally, what can we do to move from the present pause toward enduring peace?
5050First of all, how have we gone about meeting the requirement of providing for our security against this world- wide challenge?
5050First, how fares the grand alliance?
5050From whence do these pressures come?
5050Given their vast internal base of operations, and their agents in foreign lands, what are the communist rulers trying to do?
5050Has it more waste surface by mountains, rivers, lakes, deserts, or other causes?
5050Have they no power to confer upon the President the authority in advance to furnish instant redress should such a case afterwards occur?
5050How are we to carry our goods to the empty markets of which I have spoken if we have not the ships?
5050How can we help?
5050How can we not believe in the greatness of America?
5050How can we not do what is right and needed to preserve this last best hope of man on Earth?
5050How can we truly open the doors, and set free the full genius of our people?
5050How could we do less?
5050How far have we come during the last 10 years and how far can we go in the next 10?
5050How have we handled our national finances?
5050How many men who listen to me tonight have served their Nation in other wars?
5050How many other families have never had that same opportunity?
5050How many times have we seen it?
5050How shall we meet this challenge?
5050How shall we obtain the new revenue?
5050How should we accomplish this?
5050How very many are not here to listen?
5050How well prepared are we to enter the 21st century?
5050How will such officials be likely to serve an Administration which they know does not trust them?
5050How will we mark that passage?
5050How, then, can the result justify a revolution to destroy this very Constitution?
5050I hear the voices of dissent- who does not?
5050If asked, Are you ready to defend yourselves?
5050If it be a bad one why is it suffered to exist?
5050If people can get together on such projects, is it not possible that we could then go on to a full- scale cooperative program of Science for Peace?
5050If that were done to what consequences might it not lead?
5050If the States feel themselves competent to these objects why should this Government wish to assume the power?
5050If the charge be incapacity, what evidence will support it?
5050If the existing system be a good one why should it not be extended?
5050If the officer be accused of dishonesty, how shall it be made out?
5050If, then, for a common object this property is to be sacrificed, is it not just that it be done at a common charge?
5050If, then, we are at some time to be as populous as Europe, how soon?
5050In all this, if any aggression there were, any innovation upon preexisting rights, to which portion of the Union are they justly chargeable?
5050In the meantime may I make this suggestion?
5050In the meantime, who can foretell what would be the sufferings and privations of the people during its existence?
5050Institutions for promoting it grow up supported by the public purse; and to what object can it be dedicated with greater propriety?
5050Institutions for promoting it grow up, supported by the public purse; and to what object can it be dedicated with greater propriety?
5050Is it contemplated to open a new negotiation respecting any of the articles or conditions of the treaty?
5050Is it doubted that it would restore the national authority and national prosperity and perpetuate both indefinitely?
5050Is it doubted that we here-- Congress and Executive can secure its adoption?
5050Is it doubted, then, that the plan I propose, if adopted, would shorten the war, and thus lessen its expenditure of money and of blood?
5050Is it indeed true that we have heretofore refrained from doing so merely from the degrading motive of a conscious weakness?
5050Is it inferior to Europe in any natural advantage?
5050Is it less fertile?
5050Is it meant that we are not ready upon brief notice to put a nation in the field, a nation of men trained to arms?
5050Is it more afflicting to him to leave the graves of his fathers than it is to our brothers and children?
5050Is it not advisable to provide some measure of equitable retaliation in our relations with governments which discriminate against our own?
5050Is it not by bearing them in affectionate remembrance?
5050Is it not the better rule to leave all these works to private enterprise, regulated and, when expedient, aided by the cooperation of States?
5050Is it objected that it is proposed to authorize the agencies to deal in bills of exchange?
5050Is it paid for?
5050Is it possible that such a country as this can be given up to anarchy and ruin without an effort from any quarter for its rescue and its safety?
5050Is it to be conceived that such immense powers would have been left by the framers of the Constitution to mere inferences and doubtful constructions?
5050Is it true, then, that colored people can displace any more white labor by being free than by remaining slaves?
5050Is there any other way practicable under existing law?
5050Is there anyone in this Chamber tonight who doubts that the course of freedom was not changed for the better because of the courage of that stand?
5050Is there not a disposition on one side to magnify wrongs and outrages, and on the other side to belittle them or justify them?
5050It is not"Can any of us imagine better?"
5050It may be asked, then, Are the people of the States without redress against the tyranny and oppression of the Federal Government?
5050It shall lead us as we enter the third century of the search for a more perfect union?
5050Many people ask,"When will this war end?"
5050May I not say a special word about the needs of Belgium and northern France?
5050May I not urge its early and favorable consideration by the House of Representatives and its early enactment into law?
5050May he not be tempted to name his reward?
5050May not all reasonable desires upon this subject be satisfied without encountering any of these objections?
5050Must he forbear his complaint until the mischief is done and can not be prevented?
5050Must they wait until the mischief has been done, and can they apply the remedy only when it is too late?
5050My tests for our proposals will be: Will it create jobs and raise incomes?
5050Need I recall either the scene or the national circumstances attending the occasion?
5050Nevertheless, is it prudent or is it wise to involve ourselves in these foreign wars?
5050Not, is there abundance enough for all?--but, how can all share in our abundance?
5050Now go and hoe your own row?"
5050Now why should Americans be concerned about this?
5050Now, why?
5050Object whatsoever is possible, still the question recurs,"Can we do better?"
5050Or will it come about by negotiated and fair solutions, ensuring majority rule, minority rights, and economic advance?
5050Or will it continue to expand its military power far beyond its genuine security needs, and use that power for colonial conquest?
5050Or would we let it be submerged, wiped out, in post- war riots and reaction, as after World War I?
5050Ought our country to remain in such cases dependent on foreign supply precarious because liable to be interrupted?
5050Ought we not then to adopt every measure which may be necessary to perpetuate them?
5050Our second great goal is to build on America''s pioneer spirit-- I said something funny?
5050Second, how do we preserve our old and enduring values as we move into the future?
5050Shall he in the meantime risk the character and interest of the nation in the hands of men to whom he can not give his confidence?
5050Shall it lie unproductive in the public vaults?
5050Shall oppressed humanity find no asylum on this globe?
5050Shall the dissimilarity of the domestic institutions in the different States prevent us from providing for them suitable governments?
5050Shall the revenue be reduced?
5050Shall we abandon the reasonable support and regulation of banking?
5050Shall we act by taking the ceded territory and proceeding to execute the other conditions of the treaty before this minister arrives and is heard?
5050Shall we hold it as a province and govern it by despotic power?
5050Shall we refuse them?
5050Shall we restore the dollar to its former gold content?
5050Shall we say that values are restored and that the Congress will, therefore, repeal the laws under which we have been bringing them back?
5050Shall we say to the unemployed and the aged,"Social security lies not within the province of the Federal Government; you must seek relief elsewhere?"
5050Shall we suppress the impost and give that advantage to foreign over domestic manufactures?
5050Should other methods be adopted which will increase the revenues or diminish the expenses of the postal service?
5050Should the number of post routes be diminished?
5050Should the postal service be reduced by excluding from the mails matter which does not pay its way?
5050Should war break out in any of those countries who can foretell the extent to which it may be carried or the desolation which it may spread?
5050Should we cut the deficit more?
5050Since when have terrorists and tyrants announced their intentions, politely putting us on notice before they strike?
5050So who among us will set this example?
5050Suppose such a war should result in the conquest of a State; how are we to govern it afterwards?
5050Surprised you, did n''t I?
5050That is your affair?"
5050That was encouraging, you know?
5050The magic of opportunity-- unreserved, unfailing, unrestrained-- isn''t this the calling that unites us?
5050The only test of a plan is, It is sound and will it work?
5050The profound question is: Does this mean we will be 50 percent richer in a real sense, 50 percent better off, 50 percent happier?
5050The question is not what should we undo?
5050The title of a best- selling book asked:"America: What went wrong?"
5050Third, what comfort can we take from the increasing strains and tensions within the Communist bloc?
5050To defend ourselves against attack?
5050To what sources, then, shall we turn?
5050To what then do we owe these blessings?
5050Today, having come far in our own historical journey, we must decide: Will we turn back, or finish well?
5050Tonight, my fellow Americans, we are summoned to answer a question as old as the republic itself, what is the state of our union?
5050V. Second, what of the developing and non- aligned nations?
5050We ask now, not how can we achieve abundance?--but how shall we use our abundance?
5050We have the resources, but are we fully ready to use them?
5050Well, if this is true, why is the Constitution of the United States so exceptional?
5050Well, let us rather ask them: Who will they sacrifice?
5050Were those States afterwards expelled from the Union by the war?
5050Were we prepared, in peacetime, to keep on moving toward full realization of the democratic promise?
5050What are these tasks?
5050What are we to do about it?
5050What brought America back?
5050What does it mean?
5050What does that mean?
5050What faith can an Executive put in officials forced upon him, and those, too, whom he has suspended for reason?
5050What has all this money done?
5050What has been the consequence?
5050What have these steps been?
5050What interest of hers was affected by the treaty?
5050What is meant by being prepared?
5050What is the voice of history?
5050What kind of society, what kind of world are we building for them?
5050What principle of good faith, then, was violated?
5050What rule of political morals trampled under foot?
5050What shall we do, then, to push this great war of freedom and justice to its righteous conclusion?
5050What should we do with this projected surplus?
5050What then shall be done?
5050What we have to do in our day and generation to make sure that America truly becomes one nation, what do we have to do?
5050What were the terms of that new relationship?
5050What, in the meantime, is the responsibility and true position of the Executive?
5050What, then, of the future?
5050When and under what conditions is the black man to have a free ballot?
5050When did they cease to be so?
5050When is he in fact to have those full civil rights which have so long been his in law?
5050When is that equality of influence which our form of government was intended to secure to the electors to be restored?
5050When sectional agitators shall have succeeded in forcing on this issue, can their pretensions fail to be met by counter pretensions?
5050Where in any part of the globe can institutions be found so suited to their habits or so entitled to their love as their own free Constitution?
5050Where in past history does a parallel exist to the public happiness which is within the reach of the people of the United States?
5050Where will you begin and where end?
5050Which of our citizens will lead us in this next American century?
5050Who does not appreciate the incalculable benefits of the acquisition of Louisiana?
5050Who would rejoice to hail Texas as a lone star instead of one in the galaxy of States?
5050Who would say that this age of possibility is not for all Americans?
5050Who would say that, having come so far together, we will not go forward from here?
5050Who would wish to see Florida still a European colony?
5050Why are we there?
5050Why ca n''t we?
5050Why did men come to that once forbidding land?
5050Why do we want guaranteed private insurance?
5050Why is it that we can build a nation with our prayers, but we ca n''t use a schoolroom for voluntary prayer?
5050Why may not our country at some time average as many?
5050Why not try it?
5050Why should it be on this?
5050Why should we ignore it now?
5050Why, then, this restlessness?
5050Why?
5050Why?
5050Will a strong and united America still be a force for freedom and prosperity around the world?
5050Will change come about by warfare and chaos and foreign intervention?
5050Will it build the middle class and shrink the underclass?
5050Will it strengthen our families and support our children?
5050Will liberation make them any more numerous?
5050Will not different States be compelled, respectively, to meet extremes with extremes?
5050Will not the good people respond to a united and earnest appeal from us?
5050Will our children enjoy a better quality of life?
5050Will the commercial nations of the world, which have so many interests connected with it, remain wholly indifferent to such a result?
5050Will they sacrifice opportunity for the distressed, the beauty of our land, the hope of our poor?
5050Will we in this country adapt our thinking to these new prospects and patterns-- or will we wait until events have passed us by?
5050Will we ourselves be at peace?
5050Will you join me now, and we''ll walk this last mile together?
5050Within those other Nations-- those which today must bear the primary, definite responsibility for jeopardizing world peace-- what hope lies?
5050Would any single measure be so effective in removing all plausible grounds for these intrusions as the graduation of price already suggested?
5050Would it not be just as honest and prudent to authorize each debtor to issue his own legal- tenders to the extent of his liabilities?
5050Would not the general loss be too great to justify such relief?
5050Would such a trust and power be safe in such hands?
5050Would the American economy collapse, after the war?
5050Would the people of Maine permit the Penobscot tribe to erect an independent government within their State?
5050Would there be another depression here-- a repetition of 1921 or 1929?
5050Would they not be as reasonable and useful where the enterprise preparing is against the United States?
5050Would you four stand up for a moment?
5050but"Can we all do better?"
5050but"Will change bring progress for America?"
621( 118) Our great American revivalist Finney writes:I said to myself:''What is this?
621( 202) Well, what were its good fruits for Margaret Mary''s life? 621 Heavens, how can I speak of it?
621How are we to conceive,Principal Caird writes,"of the reality in which all intelligence rests?"
621How does it work when we thus anticipate God by going our own way? 621 I then closed my eyes for a few minutes, and seemed to be refreshed with sleep; and when I awoke, the first inquiry was, Where is my God?
621Is there, then,our author continues,"no solution of the contradiction between the ideal and the actual?
621It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do?--deeper than hell; what canst thou know?
621She burst out weeping, and said,''O Richard, what made you fight?'' 621 The spiritual life,"he writes,"justifies itself to those who live it; but what can we say to those who do not understand?
621What for?
621What is the answer which Jesus sends to John the Baptist?
621What shall I think of it?
621Wherefore?
621''And where shall I do that, Lord?''
621''But,''said I,''is that possible?''
621''Some one ought to do it, but why should I?''
621''Some one ought to do it, so why not I?''
621''What is it that is finished?''
621''Why,''I asked of myself,''does the author use these terms?
621( 328) Ought it to be assumed that in all men the mixture of religion with other elements should be identical?
621( 333) How indeed could it be otherwise?
621); H. L. HASTINGS: The Guiding Hand, or Providential Direction, illustrated by Authentic Instances, Boston, 1898(?).
621--"How did I come to be?
621------------------------------------- What shall we now say of the attributes called moral?
621------------------------------------- What, now, must we ourselves think of this question?
621--or shall we do so with enthusiastic assent?
621..."Why does man go out to look for a God?...
621; Brainerd''s, 212; Alline''s, 217; Oxford graduate''s, 221; Ratisbonne''s, 223; instantaneous, 227; is it a natural phenomenon?
621?_ A.
621After this distinct revelation had stood for some little time before my mind, the question seemed to be put,''Will you accept it now, to- day?''
621After this, with difficulty I got to sleep; and when I awoke in the morning my first thoughts were: What has become of my happiness?
621Again, are men the factors of some dream, the dream- like unsubstantiality of which they comprehend at such eventful moments?
621And how should I have cried, since I was swooning with happiness within?
621And if it be so, how can any possible judge or critic help being biased in favor of the religion by which his own needs are best met?
621And in what form should we conceive of that"union"with it of which religious geniuses are so convinced?
621And it being said to her in the going out,_ Where is thy faith?
621And second, What is its importance, meaning, or significance, now that it is once here?
621And second, ought we to consider the testimony true?
621And what could it matter, if all propositions were practically indifferent, which of them we should agree to call true or which false?
621And what had they exactly in their several individual minds, when they delivered their utterances?
621And what then?
621And why may not religion be a conception equally complex?
621Are the men of this world right, or are the saints in possession of the deeper range of truth?
621Are there not hereabouts some points of application for a renovated and revised ascetic discipline?
621Are you any more prepared for heaven, or fitter to appear before the impartial bar of God, than when you first began to seek?
621Are you any nearer to conversion now than when you first began?
621At once I replied,''Will you take the desire away?''
621But I can not keep myself from being either crazy or an idiot; and, as things are, from whom should I ask pity?
621But do you wish, Lord, that I should inclose in poor and barren words sentiments which the heart alone can understand?"
621But how came I, then, to this perception of it?
621But in all seriousness, can such bald animal talk as that be treated as a rational answer?
621But make a mother of her, and what have you?
621But now, I ask you, how can such an existential account of facts of mental history decide in one way or another upon their spiritual significance?
621But the idea of him, I said, how did I ever come by the idea?
621But verily, how stands it with her arguments?
621But what matters it in the end whether we call such a state of mind religious or not?
621But why in the name of common sense need we assume that only one such system of ideas can be true?
621Can modern idealism give faith a better warrant, or must she still rely on her poor self for witness?
621Can philosophy stamp a warrant of veracity upon the religious man''s sense of the divine?
621Can things whose end is always dust and disappointment be the real goods which our souls require?
621Can you believe it?
621Did I stop to ask a single question?
621Did he not love me?
621Do mystical states establish the truth of those theological affections in which the saintly life has its root?
621Do they deduce a new spiritual judgment from their new doctrine of existential conditions?
621Do they frankly forbid us to admire the productions of genius from now onwards?
621Do we accept it only in part and grudgingly, or heartily and altogether?
621Do you not blush with shame at wishing that a knife should be your master?
621Does God really exist?
621Does it act, as well as exist?
621Does it furnish any_ warrant for the truth_ of the twice- bornness and supernaturality and pantheism which it favors?
621Does this temperamental origin diminish the significance of the sudden conversion when it has occurred?
621Everything in me awoke and received a meaning.... Why do I look farther?
621Finney, what ails you?''
621First of all, then, I ask, What does the expression"mystical states of consciousness"mean?
621First, is there, under all the discrepancies of the creeds, a common nucleus to which they bear their testimony unanimously?
621First, what is the nature of it?
621For what seriousness can possibly remain in debating philosophic propositions that will never make an appreciable difference to us in action?
621Had I not found my God and my Father?
621Had he not called me?
621Has he made religion universal by coercive reasoning, transformed it from a private faith into a public certainty?
621Has he rescued its affirmations from obscurity and mystery?
621Has science made too wide a claim?
621Have I not said the state is utterly beyond words?"
621He came and, placing his hand upon my shoulder, said:''Do you not want to give your heart to God?''
621He then said,''Are you in pain?''
621How can I learn aught when naught I know?
621How can the devotee show his loyalty better than by sensitiveness in this regard?
621How do we part off mystical states from other states?
621How does he exist?
621How is success to be absolutely measured when there are so many environments and so many ways of looking at the adaptation?
621How should you know their true nature, since one knows only what one can comprehend?
621How, then, should we_ act_ on these facts?
621How_ can_ you measure their worth without considering whether the God really exists who is supposed to inspire them?
621I ask you, what is human life?
621I asked them what place that was?
621I feel the pressure of his hand, I feel something else which fills me with a serene joy; shall I dare to speak it out?
621I halted but a moment, and then, with a breaking heart, I said,''Dear Jesus, can you help me?''
621I now turn to my second question: What is the objective"truth"of their content?
621I say God, but why?
621If I, being a wretch and damned sinner, could be redeemed by any other price, what needed the Son of God to be given?
621If it did not, wherein would its superiority consist?
621If one with Omnipotence, how can weariness enter the consciousness, how illness assail that indomitable spark?
621If so, in what shape does it exist?
621If the inner dispositions are right, we ask, what need of all this torment, this violation of the outer nature?
621If the natural world is so double- faced and unhomelike, what world, what thing is real?
621If we are sick souls, we require a religion of deliverance; but why think so much of deliverance, if we are healthy- minded?
621If we can not explain physical light, how can we explain the light which is the truth itself?
621If we were to ask the question:"What is human life''s chief concern?"
621If, then, the entire work is finished, all the debt paid, what remains for me to do?''
621In other words, is the existence of so many religious types and sects and creeds regrettable?
621In our own attitude, not yet abandoned, of impartial onlookers, what are we to say of this quarrel?
621In the healthiest and most prosperous existence, how many links of illness, danger, and disaster are always interposed?
621In the mean time while thus exercised, a thought arose in my mind, what can it mean?
621In what facts does it result?
621Into what definite description can these words be translated, and for what definite facts do they stand?
621Is an instantaneous conversion a miracle in which God is present as he is present in no change of heart less strikingly abrupt?
621Is it necessary, some of you have asked, as one example after another came before us, to be quite so fantastically good as that?
621Is it not surprising that health exists at all?
621Is it possible that I, in that moment, felt what some of the saints have said they always felt, the undemonstrable but irrefragable certainty of God?
621Is not it a maimed happiness-- care and weariness, weariness and care, with the baseless expectation, the strange cozenage of a brighter to- morrow?
621Is not its blessedness a fragile fiction?
621Is not your joy in it a very vulgar glee, not much unlike the snicker of any rogue at his success?
621Is such a"more"merely our own notion, or does it really exist?
621Is the saint''s type or the strong- man''s type the more ideal?
621Is there in life any purpose which the inevitable death which awaits me does not undo and destroy?
621May not voluntarily accepted poverty be"the strenuous life,"without the need of crushing weaker peoples?
621Of what I shall do to- morrow?
621Oh, happy child, what should I do?
621Or how does it assist me to plan my behavior, to know that his happiness is anyhow absolutely complete?
621Or is dogmatic or scholastic theology less doubted in point of fact for claiming, as it does, to be in point of right undoubtable?
621Ought all men to have the same religion?
621Ought it, indeed, to be assumed that the lives of all men should show identical religious elements?
621Ought they to approve the same fruits and follow the same leadings?
621Ought we not, whether we dig or plough or eat, to sing this hymn to God?
621Pray, what specific act can I perform in order to adapt myself the better to God''s simplicity?
621Religion, whatever it is, is a man''s total reaction upon life, so why not say that any total reaction upon life is a religion?
621Severed like cobwebs, broken like bubbles in the sun--"Wo sind die Sorge nun und Noth Die mich noch gestern wollt''erschlaffen?
621She asked always earnestly,''When shall I be perfectly thine, O my God?''
621Should we not love it; should we not feel buoyed up by the Eternal Arms?"
621So what good will it do you to think all your lives,''Oh, I have done evil, I have made many mistakes''?
621The mere possibility of producing milk from grass, cheese from milk, and wool from skins; who formed and planned it?
621The poet says, Dear City of Cecrops; and wilt thou not say, Dear City of Zeus?
621The question, What are the religious propensities?
621The questions"Why?"
621The subject of Saintliness left us face to face with the question, Is the sense of divine presence a sense of anything objectively true?
621The whole feud revolves essentially upon two pivots: Shall the seen world or the unseen world be our chief sphere of adaptation?
621Then I flung myself on the ground, and at last awoke covered with blood, calling to the two surgeons( who were frightened),''Why did you not kill me?
621Then there crept in upon me so gently, so lovingly, so unmistakably, a way of escape, and what was it after all?
621Then what was to me an audible voice said:''Are you willing to give up everything to the Lord?''
621There was a sincerity about this man that carried conviction with it, and I found myself saying,''I wonder if God can save_ me_?''
621These questions"Why?"
621They drew the cord tight with all their strength and asked me,''Does it hurt you?''
621Thy cowl, thy shaven crown, thy chastity, thy obedience, thy poverty, thy works, thy merits?
621To the believer in moralism and works, with his anxious query,"What shall I do to be saved?"
621To what psychological order do they belong?
621Under just what biographic conditions did the sacred writers bring forth their various contributions to the holy volume?
621Under what form will this fear crush me?
621Was there not a Church into which I might enter?...
621We are It already; how to know It?"
621Well, how is it with these fruits?
621Well, what did I do?
621What are we to think of all this?
621What can be more base and unworthy than the pining, puling, mumping mood, no matter by what outward ills it may have been engendered?
621What could I do?
621What have I done to deserve this excess of severity?
621What is he?
621What is it, indeed, that keeps existence exfoliating?
621What is its cash- value in terms of particular experience?
621What is more injurious to others?
621What is the particular truth in question_ known as_?
621What less helpful as a way out of the difficulty?
621What may the practical fruits for life have been, of such movingly happy conversions as those we heard of?
621What more have we to say now than God said from the whirlwind over two thousand five hundred years ago?
621What must I do to please thee?
621What single- handed man was ever on the whole as successful as Luther?
621What then must the person do?
621What will be the outcome of all my life?
621What will be the outcome of what I do to- day?
621What would happen if the final stage of the trance were reached?
621When I came to him he burst into tears and said:''Richard, will you forgive me for striking you?''
621When I waked in the morning, the first thought would be, Oh, my wretched soul, what shall I do, where shall I go?
621When S. had finished his prayer and was turning to sleep, the brother said,''Do you still keep up that thing?''
621When could it be evil when thou wert near?
621When such a conquering optimist as Goethe can express himself in this wise, how must it be with less successful men?
621When we think certain states of mind superior to others, is it ever because of what we know concerning their organic antecedents?
621Whence am I?
621Wherefore did I come?
621Why are twice two four?
621Why can I not write down the inconceivable influences, consolations, and peace which I felt interiorly?
621Why do n''t you manage it somehow?"
621Why does he not say"the atoning work"?''
621Why not simply leave pathological questions out?
621Why regret a philosophy of evil, a mind- curer would ask us, if I can put you in possession of a life of good?
621Why should I do anything?
621Why should I live?
621Why then not call these reactions our religion, no matter what specific character they may have?
621Why would you not let me die?''
621Will you be the slave of a knife or the slave of Jesus Christ?
621Would martyrs have sung in the flames for a mere inference, however inevitable it might be?
621Yet he finds himself forced to write:--"What right have we to believe Nature under any obligation to do her work by means of complete minds only?
621Yet how believe as the common people believe, steeped as they are in grossest superstition?
621You have been seeking, praying, reforming, laboring, reading, hearing, and meditating, and what have you done by it towards your salvation?
621_ Have you had any experiences which appeared providential?_ A.
621_ Je m''en fiche_ is the vulgar French equivalent for our English ejaculation"Who cares?"
621_ Things are wrong with them_; and"What shall I do to be clear, right, sound, whole, well?"
621_ What does Religion mean to you?_ A.
621_ What is your notion of sin?_ A.
621_ What is your temperament?_ A.
621_ What things work most strongly on your emotions?_ A. Lively songs and music; Pinafore instead of an Oratorio.
621a common person says to himself about a vexed question; but in a"cranky"mind"What must I do about it?"
621and in what proportion may it need to be restrained by other elements, to give the proper balance?
621and must our means of adaptation in this seen world be aggressiveness or non- resistance?
621and say outright that no neuropath can ever be a revealer of new truth?
621and the question, What is their philosophic significance?
621and"What next?"
621how did it come about?
621in a penny?_ she threw it away, begging pardon of God for her fault, and saying,''No, Lord, my faith is not in a penny, but in thee alone.''
621until this came:''Why do you not accept it_ now_?''
621what is its constitution, origin, and history?
621what shall I do now?''
621what shall I do?''
621what shall all these do?
621what shall the law of Moses avail?
56154''Does William, Junior, chew tobacco?''
56154''Does William, Junior, chew tobacco?''
56154''Little boy''s class,''huh?
56154''Sleep?
56154Ai n''t she a beauty?
56154Ai n''t you turned in yet?
56154Am I loco?
56154Am I plain enough?
56154Am I to thank you for th''improvement?
56154An''as for them bandages, how did_ I_ know th''dog had been sleepin''on''em? 56154 An''if that itchin''_ trigger_-finger of_ yourn_ wants to get_ busy_ it has my permission,"he mimicked"Pop,"he said, sharply,"who_ is_ this buzzard?"
56154An''now yo''re all through with''em? 56154 An''what do you think?
56154Any news?
56154Are they_ all_ gone under?
56154But they make-- tracks, do n''t they?
56154But what-- made you think-- I might be prospectin''?
56154But why should he stalk_ me_?
56154Ca n''t you hold yore pow- wow somewhere else? 56154 Ca n''t you say nothin''else, One Ijut?"
56154Ca n''t you think of anything better''n that? 56154 Call th''dead back to life to lie for you?"
56154Can I do anything more for_ you_?
56154Changin''yore mind?
56154Dan''l Boone at it again?
56154Did I? 56154 Did n''t I say you was an old woman?"
56154Did n''t I tell you we was two ijuts? 56154 Did n''t he have that drunken Long Pete helpin''him?"
56154Did n''t see somethin''down by yore feet, an''shoot off yore toes, did you? 56154 Did n''t you ever try it before?"
56154Did n''t you say something about him before?
56154Did n''t you tell me that th''CL was a nice ranch to work for?
56154Did you ever see two calves, wobble- kneed, friskin''around lookin''saucy an''full of h-- l an''wisdom; but actin''plumb foolish?
56154Did you hear that? 56154 Did you hear what that ki- yote said about takin''our ranch?"
56154Did you say you was goin''near th''Circle S?
56154Did you see that whoppin''big feller I got? 56154 Did you see that?
56154Do n''t it beat all how some folks allus pick th''wrong time in their yearnin''for conversation? 56154 Do you need any more punchers?"
56154Does he drink?
56154Does he want me to go south, or does he mean that that feller is south of me?
56154Does that satisfy you, or shall I heave another?
56154Drunk?
56154Fair sir, how many guns do you think we pack?
56154Find anythin''?
56154Fleming knifed, huh? 56154 Foreman, or owner?"
56154Found two?
56154Friend of this hombre?
56154Get him, Purdy?
56154Get''em in th''river?
56154Gettin''so you can find work for my knife, huh?
56154Got a match? 56154 How can I be plumb an''loco at th''same time?"
56154How can a man sleep in such a blasted uproar?
56154How do_ I_ know that th''_ next_ one is goin''past?
56154How many are left?
56154How many cows they got?
56154How many cows you thieves sold so far?
56154How many of them skunks are around here?
56154How many of''em are out here?
56154How much longer have I got to keep th''peace? 56154 How you goin''to prove it?"
56154How''d they come to drive you up there?
56154How''d you get so wet?
56154How''d you know he did?
56154How''d you like to join us instead of fightin''us?
56154Huh?
56154I wonder if he''d''a''throwed in with us,''stead of rustlin''by hisself?
56154If I''m wrong, why did Number Two stick up his hat? 56154 If a body meet a body, reachin''for th''rye,"continued the vexed voice,"whose treat is it?"
56154Ijut Number Two,said Luke pleasantly,"where are you?"
56154Is_ this_ an opportunity?
56154Just what was you aimin''at in yore talk?
56154Lay on yore stummicks, fightin''mosquitoes, an''heavin''wood on that fire at long range, huh?
56154Matter?
56154Matter?
56154Mebby he did-- how do_ I_ know what he did when he was a boy?
56154Mebby that''s a job you''d like to tackle?
56154New notion?
56154Now who''s stabbed?
56154Now, then: What''s eatin''you?
56154Oh, you do n''t know nothin''about haulin'', huh?
56154Oh; was that it?
56154Or dissolve, like sugar?
56154Or give him some of that there strych- nine that we got for you?
56154Prospectin?
56154Reckon I''m scared to?
56154Regular prospectin''? 56154 Remember how you kicked me?
56154Ridin''?
56154Rust?
56154Scared you''ll shrink, Jim?
56154See them clothes? 56154 Seen th''others?"
56154Sheriff, or marshal?
56154Sick?
56154So all you could teach him was vile cuss words an''to like whiskey, huh?
56154So you did n''t chaw his finger, huh?
56154So you went an''got a job over there, huh?
56154Sugar?
56154Swaller yore cigarette? 56154 That so?
56154That so? 56154 That so?"
56154That''s fair,he replied;"but what''s th''high an''low figgers?
56154Then it was talked over?
56154Then why did n''t you cut in?
56154They? 56154 Think I''m a fool?"
56154Think I''m goin''to wait for it?
56154Uppish, huh?
56154Want any help with th''varmints?
56154Was it?
56154Was you trailin''Ackerman an''Long Pete?
56154Watch you?
56154We know yo''re grateful; but what happened?
56154Well,he said, smiling:"what did you find out about the rope?
56154What about some fishhooks?
56154What could I do, with them two fools herdin''with me?
56154What did you shoot at;''nother ki- yote?
56154What did you write?
56154What flies?
56154What is it?
56154What kind of a ranch is th''CL?
56154What makes you think that he''s mebby left th''country?
56154What river?
56154What sign?
56154What th''h-- l you doin''?
56154What th''h-- l''s up?
56154What th''h-- l_ you_ laughin''at?
56154What you been doin''to make Jim Ackerman pick a fight with you?
56154What you been doin''up here all this time; an''how many have you got?
56154What you belly- achin''about?
56154What you mean, hangin''back at th''ford? 56154 What you mean-- shootin''craps?"
56154What you mean?
56154What you think yo''re doin''?
56154What you think yo''re doin''?
56154What''s all this to me?
56154What''s th''cow business comin''to, anyhow?
56154What''s th''matter with_ you_? 56154 What''s th''matter?"
56154What''s th''matter?
56154What''s th''use of you two old friends mussin''each other up? 56154 What''s up?"
56154Where you hit?
56154Where''s Luke? 56154 Where''s the grub shack?"
56154Who cares whether you sleep or not? 56154 Who ever heard of a four- pound brook trout?
56154Who said you was, you old fool?
56154Who th''devil are you?
56154Who was that?
56154Who''s Red Shirt?
56154Who''s been puttin''loco weed in_ yore_ grub?
56154Why did n''t you make this play when I was in my valley, pannin''gold an''gettin''a little herd together?
56154Why do n''t you learn to speak th''truth sometimes? 56154 Why do n''t you put them birds in th''house nights, an''sleep in th''coop, yoreself?"
56154Why do n''t you shift''em around an''work six, five, four; an''five, six, four; an''four, six, five? 56154 Why does he paw around that gravel bed an''pertend that he''s found gold in it?
56154Why should n''t I laugh?
56154Why should n''t I?
56154With that fire showing up everything for rods?
56154With them six cows, an''Logan missin''hundreds?
56154Wonder how much grub that ki- yote''s got?
56154Wonder how much he''ll take, purty soon, to_ let_ Ol''Silver- tip leave th''country along with us?
56154Wonder if he''s tryin''to signal somebody? 56154 Wonder what yo''re doin''down here?
56154Yes; yes; we know,soothed Fleming;"but what happened?"
56154Yes? 56154 Yes?"
56154Yo''re shore you can see all right now?
56154You just catchin''on?
56154You know that draw runnin''east from th''Gap-- th''one with them two dead pines leanin''against each other?
56154You takin''th''north end tonight?
56154_ Both_ of''em?
56154_ Is_ there a prospector down here?
56154_ Nat!_ Was that you? 56154 ''Cause why? 56154 Ai n''t aimin''to go an''hitch up with no female, are you?
56154Ai n''t there no way to get it through yore heads that I do n''t believe he''s interested in anythin''but_ us_?
56154Ai n''t you got no sense a- tall?"
56154Ai n''t you got no sense, tellin''_ him_ where Nelson is?"
56154Ai n''t you heard about it yet?
56154Ai n''t you, Dan''l Boone?
56154An''I asks you, Ladies an''Gents, if a man layin''down behind a little ridge can raise his whole body stiff an''straight, plumb up an''down?
56154An''ai n''t he a persistent cuss?
56154An''now what do you think you see?
56154An''some night when I''m sneakin''back to it, suppose one of''em is in it, waitin''for me?
56154An''what are you all dressed up for?
56154An''what kept you so long?"
56154An''what you goin''to do with that four- laigged nuisance?"
56154An''what''s all th''hellaballo?"
56154An''what''s he doin''up_ here_?
56154An''where th''h-- l did you ever hear of th''deluge?
56154An''you say they ai n''t usin''Little Canyon?
56154Any chance for a close- mouthed man up yore way?
56154Any ranches in this country?"
56154Are you all right?"
56154Are you in?"
56154Been wonderin''where I was an''what I was doin''?"
56154But he can turn, ca n''t he?
56154But how did you find me so cussed quick?"
56154But if he did get th''worst of it in an even break an''a personal quarrel, would it hurt us up here?
56154But what about that feller Pete Wilson that Cassidy wants to get rid of?"
56154But, was it, though?
56154Ca n''t you see it?
56154Ca n''t you_ see_ it?
56154Can you use Pete Wilson?
56154Comin''down?"
56154Comin''down?"
56154D-- n it, why ca n''t a man keep his friends?"
56154Dead image?"
56154Dead shore it was n''t Columbus?"
56154Did he work on th''old Bar-20 with you?
56154Did her master think that she had to hear a whistle to know that he was about, when the wind was right and he was so close?
56154Did n''t I?"
56154Did n''t I_ tell_ you that yore looks would get you into trouble?
56154Did n''t he say he was done?
56154Did you ever have any?"
56154Did you ever hear anything like it: drunk or sober,_ did_ you?"
56154Did you gimme plenty of grub?
56154Did you make that noise?"
56154Did you_ ever_ see so many of''em?"
56154Do n''t you know an opportunity when you see one?"
56154Do n''t you know that th''slug you can hear is past you?"
56154Do they smoke cigarettes?"
56154Do you reckon you could cut that bank with Colonel Bowie an''throw a little dam across th''ditch?
56154Do you think he suspects he''s bein''watched?"
56154Do you think we''re playin''some kid''s game, where th''feller that keeps still longest gets th''apple?
56154Does William, Junior, chew tobacco?
56154Ever try to argue with a bunch of wimmin?
56154Figger we''d have''em all cleaned before you arrove?
56154For G-- d''s sake, is that all you know, Andrew Jackson?"
56154Goin''to say somethin''?"
56154Goin''to try to come up?"
56154Got a cayuse?"
56154Had he unsaddled the horse when he had ridden back from the upper end of his little valley?
56154Had they gone on another raid and had he missed the opportunity of trailing them?
56154He determined to keep this a secret, for if he let it be known that he had found"color,"what excuse could he offer for leaving that field?
56154He looked closely at Quigley and suddenly demanded:"What makes you so set ag''in us shootin''him?"
56154How about it?"
56154How can I sleep with all that racket goin''on?
56154How could he snuk when he''s hog- tied, which is appropriate?
56154How did you come to pick us out to land on?
56154How long do you reckon you can hold out?"
56154How many cows they got?"
56154How many rivers do you reckon we got out here?"
56154How soon''ll it be daylight?
56154How th''devil do you suppose_ I_ knowed it was a ki- yote?
56154How''d_ I_ know you was sprawled out, takin''up all th''room?
56154How''d_ you_ like to listen to one_ now_?"
56154I got to wait till that fire dies out-- an''suppose they do n''t let it die?
56154I know they ai n''t usin''it now; but was they?"
56154I told you that I found traces of lead over near Twin Buttes?
56154I was_ that_ Johnny Nelson: know what I mean?
56154I wonder how many times I was goin''to file it sharp?"
56154I''m to leave you tomorrow, with hard words?"
56154I''ve seen him before; who th''devil_ is_ he?"
56154If you ai n''t seen no flies, how did all of them get squashed on yore face?"
56154Is_ that_ it?"
56154It was a horse; that was certain; but could it be Pepper?
56154Jim, look at that twenty- seven hand an''tell that fool what it counts, will you?"
56154Meanin''who?"
56154Mebby it would be reckless to let him disappear up here; but suppose I go on a spree in town when he''s there?
56154Mebby one of you fellers would like to sneak up here an''drag yore friend down?"
56154Need any blastin''powder?"
56154Nelson?"
56154Now what d-- d fool thing are you goin''to do?"
56154Now what?"
56154Now where you goin''?"
56154Now you say to him that I do n''t want no remarks made about what I was doin''up there-- you savvy that?
56154Now you see that little trickle of water flowin''under th''houses?
56154Now, what am I goin''to get for my outfit?
56154Now, you know this layout; where we goin''now?
56154Of course he had; why should he have neglected to do such a thing as that?
56154Oh,_ that''s_ it, huh?
56154One that does as he''s told, asks no questions, an''ai n''t particular what kind of a job it is?
56154Pop grinned a welcome:"Have any luck?"
56154Pop recommend us to you?"
56154Prospectin''?"
56154Quigley?"
56154Savvy my drift?"
56154See him, up there?"
56154See that dirt bank, on th''bend?
56154Some Old Timer tell you about it?"
56154Th''question is: Are you primed to wrastle this thing out, just me an''you, or shall I watch''em while you go back to th''CL for help?
56154That fair?"
56154Them fellers wo n''t do no rustlin''now, so how can we trail''em?
56154Then we''ve settled it, huh?
56154Think I''m one of them mejums an''has second sight?"
56154Think anybody got past me to go down there for_ you_ to shoot at?
56154Think yo''re th''only people on this ranch that has any troubles?"
56154This finishes this side, do n''t it?"
56154Twinkle, twinkle, little star-- wonder where Mr. Two- gun Nelson is located at this short, brief, an''interestin''second?"
56154Want him to heave rocks all night?
56154Want yore coffee now?"
56154Was n''t it awful?"
56154Was you askin''about Benjamin, th''catcher of lightning?
56154Was you tryin''to keep it a secret?"
56154We did n''t bring no cows with us, nor buy any afterward-- but what''s th''use?
56154Well, Frank; now what do you think of th''grand opportunity?"
56154What about''em?"
56154What are you fellers willin''to pay me if I let you leave th''country with a cayuse apiece an''all yore personal belongin''s?"
56154What business have they got to watch_ this_ end?"
56154What did you see when you was n''t killin''flies?"
56154What do I care about killin''another man''s cows?
56154What else?
56154What good will it do''em to know a man if they never see him?
56154What have you found out?"
56154What in blazes is Ben doin''?"
56154What is this young man''s name?
56154What th''devil do you think_ I_ was doin''out here all night?
56154What th''h-- l is this I hears about puttin''blankets on my cows an''shovin''''em into th''river every night?
56154What you been doin''besides courtin''Pop an''Andy Jackson, washin''gravel an''ketchin''fish?"
56154What you been doin''to get him so friendly?
56154What you find?"
56154What you got in that line, Charley?"
56154What you say?
56154What you say?"
56154What''ll you give me if I let you all clear out now?"
56154What''ll you have?"
56154What''s th''idea of this jack- in- th''-box proceedin''of yourn?
56154What''s th''matter with yore mouth?
56154What''s th''matter, Tom?
56154What''s wrong about''em?"
56154What''s wrong, Jim?"
56154What, already?
56154What?
56154When did you leave th''ranch?"
56154Where are you from, an''what have you been doin''with yore sweet young life?"
56154Where was you goin''?"
56154Where''d I get you?"
56154Where''d he say he was goin''?"
56154Where''s Art an''Frank?"
56154Where''s Fleming?
56154Where''s th''ranch?"
56154Where''s that cussed water bucket?"
56154Where''s yore cayuse?"
56154Which way was th''fool headin''?"
56154Who is that fool?"
56154Who put that sign on my door?"
56154Who th''devil ever heard a cayuse called any such a name as that?"
56154Who th''devil is_ this_ feller?
56154Why ai n''t he got back?"
56154Why are we two ijuts?"
56154Why could n''t he''a''headed for one of th''others?
56154Why do n''t you throw it away an''get a_ good_ gun?"
56154Why do n''t you_ say_ something?
56154Why should I get a new one?
56154Why should I give you fellers any share in it?
56154Why th''devil ca n''t he stay where he belongs?"
56154Why would innercent strangers wear moccasins in this kind of country?
56154Why?"
56154Will some sugar square it?
56154Will you stay for th''dance?"
56154Wonder how long he''s been up there?"
56154Would you_ lissen_ to him?
56154Yo''re near as bad as these singin''blood- suckers; an''who was it that kicked me in th''ribs just now?"
56154Yore name''s Jim Ackerman, ai n''t it?"
56154You burned-- oh, what''s th''use?
56154You comin''in or am I comin''out?"
56154You comin''peaceful, or must I drag you around?"
56154You comin''with me?"
56154You got any fishhooks?"
56154You lookin''for work?"
56154You work for Quigley?"
56154_ Ca n''t_ you?
56154_ Listen!_ Put away yore marbles, an''_ think!_""Why do n''t you fellers listen?"
56154_ Quien sabe?_""Sometimes you do have a spark of common sense,"said Pop.
56154_ Why?_ Because it''s his_ business_ to come!
56154retorted Gates at the top of his voice,"Did n''t you ever hear a slug before?
28976A candle?
28976A truce? 28976 After all you have suffered, do you not want to return to your family?"
28976Ai n''t but one way out of that mine, is there?
28976Am I still a prisoner?
28976And Iron Knife?
28976And then do you know what would happen? 28976 And this?"
28976And when you rode into the forest on the north side of Old Man''s Creek, did you see any Indians?
28976And why do you trust me?
28976And why were you going to shoot Auguste, when he came to you with a white flag at Old Man''s Creek?
28976And will you dance for the braves and warriors you did not bring back?
28976And you killed an Indian baby on the road going through town about three weeks ago, did n''t you?
28976And you shot Auguste?
28976And_ this_?
28976Animals?
28976Any of our men talking that way?
28976Any of the rest of you able to talk?
28976Any of you folks see anything wrong with us doing this?
28976Anything to eat?
28976Are we fighting the pale eyes so we can steal their women?
28976Are you all right?
28976Are you hungry?
28976Are you truly alive or do you come back from the Trail of Souls?
28976Aside from not killing him, Doctor, what have you done for him?
28976Auguste, do you know where it says in the Bible,''Adam knew Eve, his wife''? 28976 Auguste, is it?
28976But what will you do then?
28976But why do you not prophesy?
28976But, Frank, what''s happened to the rest of them-- Marchette, Clarissa-- are they all dead?
28976Came looking for lead, did they?
28976Can I come, Mr. de Marion?
28976Can I forgive you for bringing this savage here to cheat me?
28976Can I get away from here?
28976Can I get dressed first?
28976Can I heal him?
28976Can the land of the pale eyes hold me, when Redbird is not in it? 28976 Can the land of the pale eyes, altogether without spirits, hold me, when the spirits themselves could not?"
28976Can we fight them?
28976Can you not let me go back to my people, Father? 28976 Cheat you?
28976Could n''t you do anything for me?
28976Did I not come back to you from the sacred cave with the very words of the Turtle?
28976Did anyone get away?
28976Did my mother do that to you?
28976Did n''t your whole battalion run all the way from Old Man''s Creek to Dixon''s Ferry, from forty Injun bucks?
28976Did no news reach you in New York?
28976Did we have to speak?
28976Did you eat today, Father?
28976Did you follow them?
28976Did you not see the lightning, my daughter, and hear the thunder? 28976 Did you talk to Black Hawk?"
28976Do n''t I know when I''ve put a man under?
28976Do n''t you want him to inherit your land?
28976Do not the spirits tell you to smoke the calumet?
28976Do we fight?
28976Do you have any news about the rest of my people?
28976Do you have anything to give a person who has been very cold for a long time?
28976Do you have news of our people who were trying to cross the Great River?
28976Do you know how to fire a cannon?
28976Do you know these?
28976Do you know this long knife?
28976Do you know who I am?
28976Do you need those things to help you find herbs?
28976Do you say such things to hurt me?
28976Do you think I feel no pain?
28976Do you think I''d let him drown my sister?
28976Do you understand now, goddamn it? 28976 Do you want to help him fight the long knives?"
28976Do you want to say again the words you will speak to Sharp Knife?
28976Does Wolf Paw still imagine that thousands of long knives are going to surrender to our few hundred Sauk and Fox warriors? 28976 Does n''t the idea of going back to your people make you happy?"
28976Does she have a husband?
28976Does she not see that the braves would kill you if you tried to set her free?
28976Educate him so he can take over here?
28976Educated as a white man and educated in the way of the spirits, too, eh? 28976 Even the son of Black Hawk?"
28976For_ him_?
28976Forgive me?
28976Frank,he said,"why has n''t Nancy come to see me?"
28976Gathering herbs when the snow is up to your knees?
28976Go back? 28976 Has Auguste committed murder?
28976Has something happened to my people?
28976Have you forgotten, young man, that you had a real, white, Christian father and mother? 28976 He''s down-- You know about what''s going on in the Rock River country, do n''t you?"
28976He''s not going to let me go, is he?
28976Hold them off? 28976 How can White Bear tell the British Band what to do when he can not make his wife behave as a woman should?"
28976How can he live in this blizzard?
28976How can we talk and smile so?
28976How can you ask me to stay where they killed Floating Lily? 28976 How can you take from me the only way I have of fighting for this land?"
28976How come you did n''t shut her up, Judge?
28976How come you speak good English?
28976How could you consider it honorable to make Indians part of our family after what they did to us?
28976How did this happen to you?
28976How did you escape?
28976How did you find us?
28976How did you know I was out here?
28976How did you learn about this? 28976 How do you know that?"
28976How does the general know where the Sauk are?
28976How in hell am I going to get them away from Cooper? 28976 How is Papa?"
28976How is my grandfather?
28976How is my mother?
28976How long have I been asleep?
28976How many long knives?
28976How many more do you think there will be for you and Frank?
28976How many people live on your land, Father?
28976How may we escape this evil, Father Turtle?
28976How sick is my father?
28976How will you find them?
28976How will you get back here?
28976How will you get back to your people?
28976I gone many days?
28976I have to resign myself to staying with your people, do n''t I?
28976I wonder why he did n''t bring them to the funeral?
28976If Earthmaker wants this for me, how is it that_ I_ do not know it?
28976If I''m not guilty, why must I run away?
28976If the Winnebago find us here, will they kill us?
28976If the band is dividing, where will_ we_ go?
28976If they are in such danger, how can I stay away? 28976 Is Auguste a traitor to his country?
28976Is Floating Lily dead? 28976 Is it really you, Redbird?
28976Is it special to you?
28976Is my father with you?
28976Is n''t this my home as much as Pierre''s?
28976Is that Injun threatening you, ma''am?
28976Is that all?
28976Is that what Black Hawk plans?
28976Is there nothing else I can do?
28976Is this how you show your strength and courage, by torturing a helpless woman?
28976Is your prattling tongue never still, woman?
28976Is_ he_ in there?
28976Is_ that_ all?
28976Just because Pierre soiled himself with a squaw,Raoul demanded,"do we have to live with what came of it?"
28976Killing more innocent men and women and children?
28976Lie to them? 28976 Light a candle, will you?"
28976Mean to tell me it does n''t spoil your dinner to see that savage puking in our great hall? 28976 Mr. Cooper, could I have a look out there?"
28976Mr. President, when you force the red people to give up land west of the Great River, how will they live? 28976 My papa?"
28976Noncombatants like you, Frank? 28976 Now shall I speak to him in his tongue?"
28976Oh, Auguste, remember how I begged you to marry me? 28976 Oh?
28976Oh?
28976On the way here, did Wolf Paw... hurt you, Nancy?
28976Owl Carver and Black Hawk have sent me to ask, should the British Band go back to Saukenuk?
28976Please,Wave pleaded,"is there not a man here wise and strong enough to smoke the calumet and save the lives of his people?
28976Raoul and Clarissa''s children?
28976Really? 28976 Safe with you?
28976So what do we do?
28976So you did n''t see any sign yourself that the Indians were trying to lead you into some kind of trap?
28976So, this is the little mongrel?
28976So, you are now a finished graduate of St. George''s School?
28976Spoiling your dinner?
28976That being so, and since I have done you what you might think a favor, will you grant me a life for a life?
28976That so? 28976 That used to be your home, that mansion on the hill, did n''t it?"
28976The squaws and little ones too?
28976Then the British Band should not go back to Saukenuk?
28976Then you will come with me?
28976They treated you badly? 28976 To keep the peace in our family?"
28976Visiting the members of your flock, are you, Reverend?
28976Want to fight with knives?
28976Want us to dig a hole for him?
28976Was she your woman?
28976Was this to avenge your friend too? 28976 Waterloo, hah?
28976We have to take your word for it that you spoke for peace in the councils of the Sauk and Fox Indians, do n''t we? 28976 Well then,"said Auguste, exasperated,"why would n''t these Regulators support me if I kill Raoul?"
28976Well, White Bear, what were you doing on this trail? 28976 Well, but what about Auguste de Marion himself?
28976Well, then, how can you make it out that this half- Indian and his squaw were such fine people? 28976 Well, what about these things of yours that Marchette brought here?
28976Well, why did n''t you tell us they were out there?
28976Were you subjected to anything of a shameful nature while you were a prisoner of the Sauk?
28976What about Iron Knife?
28976What about Mother and Floating Lily and me? 28976 What about justice for me?"
28976What are you going to do?
28976What are you saying?
28976What are you standing there for? 28976 What are you, a renegade white man?"
28976What call do you have to ask her that?
28976What can I do, then?
28976What choice do we have?
28976What could we do with gold, out there in Ioway? 28976 What difference would that make after last night?
28976What do the talking papers say to you, White Bear?
28976What do you know about my God, with your paint and your feathers and your magic wand?
28976What do you mean-- your own family?
28976What do you mean?
28976What does it say in the newspaper?
28976What does that mean?
28976What else?
28976What happened to him?
28976What happened to my knife?
28976What happened to that other Injun that ran away?
28976What happened?
28976What happened?
28976What has happened?
28976What have you done?
28976What have you shown me?
28976What if Raoul de Marion''s men come looking for you?
28976What if that Indian is lurking around here?
28976What if you find that the land of the pale eyes holds you fast? 28976 What in Heaven''s name is wrong with calling a spade a spade?"
28976What is it, Josiah?
28976What is it?
28976What is it?
28976What is it?
28976What is it?
28976What is my grandfather''s name?
28976What is my pale eyes''name to be, Father?
28976What is that?
28976What is the real danger?
28976What is the use of more killing?
28976What is wrong, Mother? 28976 What is_ this_?"
28976What of the Sauk?
28976What other choice do you have?
28976What the devil is it? 28976 What the hell do you mean?"
28976What the hell is that bunch doing down by the river?
28976What things?
28976What troubles you?
28976What were they?
28976What will White Bear''s guardian do to his uncle?
28976What will it do to him?
28976What will you call her?
28976What will you do, Sauk shaman?
28976What will_ we_ do, mon colonel?
28976What would she see that she did not know about already?
28976What would you ask me, White Bear?
28976What would you have me do?
28976What you figger they''re doing now?
28976What''s that?
28976What''s the matter?
28976What, Eli?
28976When did you first meet up with Indians?
28976When is it right for a brave to go to war? 28976 Where are you going, Father?"
28976Where are you going?
28976Where are you going?
28976Where are you going?
28976Where did you get them scars?
28976Where have you been?
28976Where is Owl Carver?
28976Where is Sun Woman, my mother?
28976Where is your wickiup?
28976Where the hell are all the redskins? 28976 Where was God when this happened?"
28976Where were Raoul and Greenglove when you took my trunk and things in the carriage?
28976Where you going, ma''am?
28976Where''d that black- faced redskin learn to speak English so good?
28976Which of you is the one that can speak English?
28976White Bear? 28976 Who are you?"
28976Who are you?
28976Who is in the lean- to?
28976Who is it?
28976Who is this?
28976Who knows how to mold bullets?
28976Who''s minding the furs now?
28976Who''s there?
28976Why are we going east?
28976Why are you staying?
28976Why could n''t you will the estate to Nicole? 28976 Why did he keep them in your home instead of in the village hall?"
28976Why did they kill my little sister?
28976Why did you choose not to kill Auguste? 28976 Why did you leave our wickiup?"
28976Why did you stay here?
28976Why do n''t you get rid of those damned spectacles?
28976Why do they do it?
28976Why do they keep harping on this?
28976Why do you do that?
28976Why do you say that, sir?
28976Why do you say that?
28976Why do you think I went looking for you when you went on your vision quest? 28976 Why do_ you_ wait?"
28976Why does He Who Moves Alertly say we should not go back to Saukenuk?
28976Why let them surrender?
28976Why must I wear the clothing of my enemies?
28976Why not, Auguste?
28976Why not?
28976Why promise that?
28976Why should White Bear do that?
28976Why the hell did you volunteer for the militia, if you do n''t like killing Indians?
28976Why would n''t I come to my own brother''s funeral?
28976Why write about it?
28976Why? 28976 Why?"
28976Will all Earthmaker''s red children die?
28976Will he be surprised to hear me speak to him in his own language?
28976Will no one find her and tell her that I am here?
28976Will you bring Redbird and Eagle Feather here?
28976Will you bring our white flag?
28976Will you shoot an unarmed man now, Raoul? 28976 Will you stay the night, Marchette?"
28976Will you take me back there instead of to the Sauk in Ioway?
28976Win?
28976Would you consider not bringing this woman and this boy here?
28976You and your father grow all this corn?
28976You boys ever see Indians up close before?
28976You expect me to believe that?
28976You look so strange, dressed like a-- like a--"Like a real Indian?
28976You love White Bear?
28976You mean for the tribe to come back and live on the estate?
28976You not want baby? 28976 You really want an Indian nephew?
28976You still believe in such things-- bear spirits and all that?
28976You still live with Miss Nancy, Woodrow?
28976You sure you ai n''t a white man in paint?
28976You wanna see our officers? 28976 You want me teach?"
28976You want me to go back and get the_ Victory_ ready?
28976You want to come and live with us again, Star Arrow?
28976You would let me go?
28976You''re still studying medicine?
28976You''re training him to talk, eh? 28976 You''ve had it before?"
28976Your trunk, Monsieur Auguste?
28976Your wife?
28976_ What''n hell happened?_Raoul picked up the letter in a shaking hand and read aloud-- horrible words, written in a flowing black script.
28976_ Why did you do that?_Wolf Paw shouted.
28976_ Why?_Again Redbird wrestled with the English words.
28976_ Why?_cried White Bear in anguish.
28976*****"Do Nicole and Grandpapa know about us?"
28976A bear in coldest winter, when all of that people withdrew to their dens and slept?
28976A meeting with Jackson?
28976A squaw in the bed where Pierre slept with good Marie- Blanche!_ How could Pierre do such a thing, after what the Indians had done to Helene?
28976A talk later?
28976A treaty?
28976A woman?
28976Accursed?
28976After Raoul had spent two years beaten and enslaved by Black Salmon?
28976After a moment, her voice full of pain and uncertainty, Redbird asked, did White Bear_ want_ to see her?
28976After all the evil he had endured, how could he_ know_ that he would not unleash his greatest powers if that were the only way he could destroy Raoul?
28976After all, that was what they were trying to force him to do, was it not?
28976After all, where could a Sauk go in this country?
28976After all, who''d want to find a man not guilty and then see him taken out and hanged?"
28976After the Winnebago Prophet had misled Black Hawk so badly, how could he still rely on him?
28976Alive?"
28976Ambush him?
28976An attack?
28976An unfamiliar voice said,"Is this really how you settle land disputes in Smith County?"
28976And after seeing the slaughter at the Bad Axe, could Auguste doubt that killing all red people was what all pale eyes most wanted to do?
28976And did White Bear truly mean to go with the pale eyes?
28976And how would he explain_ that_ to Redbird?
28976And how would his efforts to protect Nancy and win her trust make Redbird feel?
28976And if this woman had Pierre''s glasses now, could she be the Sauk woman Pierre had lived with, the mother of his bastard son?
28976And in what state would he find the British Band?
28976And never returned, only sent messages through the priest, never tried to see them?
28976And so, what harm could there be in getting to know this white young lady a little better?
28976And something about a shock Raoul would get-- what had Eli meant by that?
28976And suppose Redbird_ had_ waited for him?
28976And then, when I found out-- why do you think I left Sun Woman and Gray Cloud?
28976And was he not lying to himself to think he could do anything for the Sauk here?
28976And we have to take your word that you went to the camp of Colonel de Marion''s spy battalion on an errand of peace, do n''t we?"
28976And what about Woodrow?
28976And what about the horrid things they''d done to her?
28976And what if he did wake on his own, but was too frozen to climb out of the cave and walk back to the camp by himself?
28976And what if this bag of bones beat him?
28976And what of Redbird?
28976And what of this land that we have loved together, the land that Sun Woman''s people have cherished for generations?
28976And what would he be, then, if he lived?
28976And what would she make of his right ear, torn in two by Eli Greenglove''s rifle ball?
28976And what would the Father''s sentence be if Pierre de Marion turned his back on a wife and a son?
28976And why did I say I would go with you across the Great River?
28976And why was Redbird frightened?
28976And with all that learning you could n''t warn Black Hawk away from this disaster?"
28976And-- she asked herself-- was it not partly because of the mystery of Gray Cloud''s father that she found herself drawn to him?
28976Are n''t you going to say anything?
28976Are they going to kill us?"
28976Are we going to cross the Great River now?"
28976Are you all right?"
28976Auguste glanced at Raoul and then said,"Have I the right to hear what has been said against me?"
28976Auguste wondered, had their testimony saved him?
28976Auguste wondered, was any time safe?
28976Back to Victor?
28976Before the verdict?"
28976But could he allow himself to feel so much for Nancy, when he hoped to bring Redbird here?
28976But could he turn his back on Black Hawk, who had just spoken for him at his marriage, on Owl Carver, the father of his wife?
28976But did she see a flicker in his eyes?
28976But his son-- how could he give up his son?
28976But how can she live here with you?
28976But how could he be_ sure_ Auguste was unprepared?
28976But how could he drive away some twenty armed men?
28976But how could he prevent it?
28976But how could he prove that what Flying Cloud said was untrue?
28976But how did the sounds of White Bear and Redbird together make Yellow Hair feel?
28976But how does your wife feel about me?"
28976But how to fight for the land?
28976But how, in one afternoon, batter down a wall that had been building over the past dozen years?
28976But if White Bear really loved her, could he not have broken that rule-- even if he had smoked the calumet with Star Arrow-- at least once?
28976But if she saw that Gray Cloud would surely die anyway, of freezing, would it not then be best to take the risk of waking him?
28976But it has not been kind to him._"Looking back, Grandpapa, do you think you would have done better to have stayed in France?"
28976But then what would her children do?
28976But then why not a round hole?
28976But what about the uncle who nearly killed him?
28976But what do you mean by saying it tells us the time?
28976But what if Yellow Hair went to bed with White Bear and he came to love Yellow Hair more than he did Redbird?
28976But what kind of a death?
28976But what makes you so sure he will come here?"
28976But what might refusal mean?
28976But what of Redbird?
28976But what of that man in the mine?_"Give White Bear the tea of elm bark now.
28976But what was the fear trying to tell him?
28976But where''s Father?"
28976But why was Sun Woman so unhappy?
28976But why, Raoul wondered, had this young buck thrown his life away attacking him near the entrance to the mine?
28976But why?_ That had to mean something.
28976But would Papa try to fight his only surviving son?
28976But would a spirit bear attack people in the night and kill them?
28976But would they understand?
28976But, go back to the Sauk?
28976Can you bear to tell me?"
28976Can you set his mind at rest?"
28976Chasing the white woman and the boy we just picked up?"
28976Come to lay your hatchets to rest?
28976Coming up beside him Redbird asked quietly,"Do you know this woman?"
28976Cooper said,"Does the defense have any more witnesses?"
28976Cooper?
28976Could Armand have heard, and told Raoul?
28976Could Auguste, even in death, get at him?
28976Could Eli and his daughter have planned this?
28976Could Wolf Paw be holding Nicole''s hair, or Frank''s?
28976Could eye color be passed in the blood from grandfather to grandson?
28976Could he cover all that distance without being seen and shot?
28976Could he cow dozens of men if they were determined not to obey him?
28976Could he himself live here?
28976Could he live among the people who had done that?
28976Could he not forget his years among the pale eyes and become entirely a Sauk?
28976Could he really mistakenly think he hit White Bear square in the head?
28976Could it be Grandpapa''s?
28976Could n''t Raoul understand that not all red people were like the ones he had encountered?
28976Could you not keep him off for a few moons?"
28976Could you use a drop of brandy, Auguste?"
28976Curse him, would she?
28976Death?
28976Did Armand know yet?
28976Did Eli know that Clarissa was in here?
28976Did Sharp Knife have in mind some treachery against Black Hawk?
28976Did he ever approach you with lewd intent?"
28976Did he know about Clarissa?
28976Did he know yet?
28976Did he love her?
28976Did he think she was angry at him, or that she was going to tease him, the way Water Flows Fast might?
28976Did he want to go back to his people?
28976Did it not hurt too much?
28976Did n''t you live in one of their huts with him?
28976Did not the enemy have eyes and ears for the night?
28976Did she not dismiss the way of the Sauk as"hunting and living in a wigwam"?
28976Did spirit bears breathe?
28976Did that mean Scott was n''t going to hang Black Hawk and the rest of them?
28976Did they do_ that_ to Nancy?
28976Did they kill her?"
28976Did those years of captivity with the Indians fully explain Raoul, or was he a throwback to some robber- baron ancestor whose only law was the sword?
28976Did you think it would be murder?"
28976Do I still love him in a way?
28976Do n''t you know that I feel as bad as you do?"
28976Do n''t you realize what_ your people_, your brave Indians, have been doing all over the frontier?
28976Do we not_ know_ the time?"
28976Do you know that this Indian boy you feel so sorry for is n''t even a Christian?
28976Do you know you''ve got blood all over you?"
28976Do you think he''ll get better?"
28976Do you think my father''s spirit will be sad if I do not stay and fight for the land until I die?"
28976Do you think that merely betokens a young man freezing to death?
28976Do you think the soldiers would ever be willing to talk peace with Black Hawk now?"
28976Do you think whites have never tortured and killed Indian women?"
28976Do you understand?"
28976Do you want them?"
28976Does Black Hawk know about this?"
28976Does Black Hawk really think he can make a truce?
28976Does he have a secret camp for his squaws and papooses?
28976Does it make you hate her to know she wanted that of me?"
28976Does n''t that mean anything?"
28976Eagle Feather, sitting beside Redbird, said,"Grandfather?
28976Eli said,"You figger the Prophet''s Town Injuns have joined up with Black Hawk''s bunch?"
28976Elysée asked,"How old would this-- Gray Cloud-- be?"
28976Elysée said quietly,"Why did you do that, Raoul?"
28976Elysée said,"President Jackson, what sort of man is he?"
28976Elysée said,"You can pull teeth, I hope, like any proper surgeon?"
28976Elysée, buried in his books?
28976For one panic- stricken moment she thought,_ Did he throw himself into the river?_ Then, downriver, she saw a canoe gliding over the glistening water.
28976Ford asked,"Do you agree, Mrs. Hopkins, with your brother''s charge that Auguste is a renegade and murderer?"
28976Ford asked,"Your Honor, may I read these documents to the court?"
28976Ford said,"Mrs. Russell, did your late husband entrust any papers to you concerning Auguste de Marion?"
28976God wanted my woman and my kids murdered by Indians?_"Oh, Christ Jesus,"Eli said.
28976Going to put him in a medicine show?"
28976Grandpapa!_"Can you tell me-- my family-- were any of them hurt?"
28976Had Raoul approached her?
28976Had any friends been shot by white snipers during the siege of Saukenuk?
28976Had he missed her?
28976Had he really finished Auguste?
28976Had his wife gone mad?
28976Had n''t anyone tried to wake them?
28976Had n''t he had some hand in bringing death and destruction upon his home?
28976Had not Yellow Hair been in the birthing wickiup with Redbird?
28976Had she been wrong not to stay with White Bear, as he had begged her to?
28976Had she not been present for every instant of Floating Lily''s early life?
28976Have you forgot what Indians did to your sister?"
28976Have you forgotten what the Indians did to them?"
28976Have you lost your senses, man?
28976Have you spoken to anyone who had news of my grandchildren?"
28976He asked,"What is his name, Redbird?"
28976He bestows evil as well as good on his children._ Redbird said wearily,"What did the council decide?"
28976He choked as he asked,"Did they burn Victor down too?"
28976He wanted to say,_ If we do n''t fight it will save your lives as well as ours._ But how could he talk to these men, maddened by whiskey and war?
28976He wondered, were Raoul and his men out there somewhere, looking for him?
28976He''s already got a few words of English?"
28976Help pick up Pierre''s coffin and carry it, when he was about to dispossess Pierre''s son?
28976Here?"
28976Him?
28976His own voice or the Bear spirit''s?
28976How can I learn to be a shaman if I live among pale eyes?
28976How can you be still alive?
28976How can you refuse the son of the mighty Black Hawk and think of marrying that boy who has no father?
28976How can_ you_ stay here?"
28976How come you''re both Indian and white man?"
28976How could Black Hawk bear the responsibility for bringing so much anguish down on his people?
28976How could I do that to my father, a minister?"
28976How could I want one?
28976How could Papa permit it?
28976How could Redbird part from White Bear and he from her?
28976How could Sun Woman send her own son away from the tribe?
28976How could White Bear tear himself away from the Sauk?
28976How could a bridge be made of nothing but light?
28976How could a man hate all tribes because of what the men of one tribe had done to him?
28976How could a man stand on it?
28976How could any man forget something he had just so clearly heard?
28976How could he blame Raoul because Maman died giving birth to him?
28976How could he deny the old man?
28976How could he ever hope to know all that they knew?
28976How could he let someone slip up on him like that?
28976How could he let the man who murdered her walk free?
28976How could he make her truly understand what was between him and Nancy-- and what was not?
28976How could he possibly get a fair trial here?
28976How could he stand the cold this long?
28976How could he, White Bear, demand or permit that his wife and son endure the sufferings and the danger those who followed Black Hawk would face?
28976How could people tear a baby girl from her mother''s arms and beat her to death?
28976How could she have forgotten that when he walked out of the camp yesterday he had worn a black bear''s skin draped over his arms and shoulders?
28976How could she keep this tender new life safe in the midst of flight and fighting?
28976How could the boy not fear a man like Raoul?
28976How could the leaves not be clean, Redbird wondered, when they came from the woods, outside any dwelling?
28976How could this Indian woman have gotten them?
28976How could this be happening?
28976How could this father reproach_ him_, after what Raoul had just said?
28976How did they come to be lying down?
28976How had he gotten over there?
28976How had it happened?
28976How have you divined that?"
28976How in hell could she defend this mongrel?
28976How is Grandpapa?"
28976How long before the_ Victory_ got back?
28976How long?
28976How many Indians did you see?"
28976How many, weakened by hunger, might be ill or dead?
28976How much corn could the de Marions eat?
28976How much more can he stand?_ Nicole was sitting beside Elysée''s bed, just as she had been last night when Auguste arrived.
28976How strong was he, how fast, how skilled in fighting hand to hand?
28976How would his father greet the move he was going to make?
28976How would they receive him?
28976How, he wondered, could their deaths give such pleasure to these men?
28976How, then, could he have learned about Pierre''s plans for Sun Woman and Gray Cloud?
28976How, then, could he keep her safe?
28976How, then, could one speak to these spirits of the tribe unless he, too, had faced death?
28976How, without hurting Redbird, who stood next to him watching as he stared down at Nancy, could he explain what this white woman meant to him?
28976I am not on the Trail of Souls?"
28976I even prayed for it, would you have imagined that?
28976If he shot Frank, would Elysée shoot him?
28976If he was n''t tired, what in God''s name had he been doing?
28976If he would choose one of his cherished dogs to be sacrificed, what would he do to the people of Victor?
28976If the Indians were planning to ambush you, what did they gain by sending three men into your camp claiming they wanted to talk surrender?"
28976If you take all the fighting men away, who''s going to defend Victor and Victoire?"
28976Imprisonment?
28976In a strange voice Eagle Feather said,"Mother?"
28976In taking up that burden, might he not forget his other tie, to the Sauk, so far away?
28976In the flesh?
28976In the name of the great Jehovah, what for?"
28976Indians living at Victoire?
28976Instead she said sadly,"Is she the reason you would not do what I wanted the night you left Victor?
28976Is he lying in ambush farther up the trail?
28976Is it not your duty?"
28976Is it right to use a sacred thing just to make the baby smile?"
28976Is that why I keep his spectacles?_ Unwilling suddenly to consign the silver case to his desk, he dropped it into his jacket pocket.
28976It warns you of danger.__ But what about when I must face the danger and not be warned from it?_ he asked.
28976Leave the tribe?
28976Like a parrot?
28976Made a slave of you?"
28976May I come in?"
28976Me?
28976Mean to tell me_ he''s_ civilized?"
28976More Indians?
28976Mr. Bennett, do you wish to cross- examine?"
28976Must he bring his people a message of suffering and sorrow?
28976Must more of his brothers die tonight?
28976Must she go back to the place where they killed her baby?
28976Must the shaman suffer wounds that can never be healed?__ Yes, if she has dealt such wounds._"You would not want me anymore, White Bear,"she said.
28976Nancy said,"If Redbird does come to live with you, what will become of you and me?"
28976Nancy said,"Would you still want to live at Victoire if Redbird said she would not come with you?"
28976Nancy''s full lips quivered as she said,"You''ll go to the château and let them shoot you?"
28976Never to have a word from his mother or from Redbird-- how could he bear it?
28976Nicole said,"If Auguste is leaving as Raoul wants him to, why would n''t Raoul just let him go?"
28976Nicole, her eyes round and dark with suffering, asked,"What can we do for him?"
28976Not that I''m ready to go along with this, but could you manage to make it to Victor from there?"
28976Now that the Indians are waving theirs around?"
28976On Sun Woman, who he was sure would stay with the British Band?
28976On the people who had been part of his life as far back as he could remember?
28976Only it did n''t turn out exactly the way I hoped, did it?"
28976Or had the mongrel somehow gotten his father''s spectacles, taken them with him when he fled from Victor?
28976Or just that you do n''t want the fact known?"
28976Or would an evil spirit come and kill him?
28976Or would he use its power as he used his fists and pistol and knife, to destroy others?
28976Or would that just endanger the lives of Iron Knife and the others?
28976Pierre and Papa might have thought it foolish expense and effort, but where had they been when he needed them?
28976Pierre said,"You did a Sauk ritual for me just now, did you not?"
28976Pierre, with his oh- so- tender conscience, who had lived with the damned Sauk and Fox for years and slept with one of their dirty squaws?
28976Pope?"
28976President?"
28976Puzzled, Auguste said,"There''s nothing wrong with loyalty, is there?"
28976Raoul put his finger to his lips and called out,"Who''s there?"
28976Raoul said,"Do n''t you like the way we do things here, Cooper?"
28976Raoul said,"Where has Black Hawk gone?
28976Redbird living with Sun Woman?
28976Redbird said,"Have you asked the spirits what has become of the rest of our people?"
28976Redbird said,"Now, with so many dead, can we have peace?
28976Redbird said,"What is this woman to you?"
28976Rifle, knife, bow, tomahawk?
28976Russell?"
28976Savage?
28976Shall it fall to Raoul?"
28976She said,"But you''re still that fine young gentleman who charmed me so, back at Victor, are n''t you?"
28976She said,"You know about woman and man?
28976Should I have stayed?"
28976Should he light a candle?
28976Should he light one now?
28976Should he tell Raoul that other braves had followed them here, to see how they were treated?
28976Should not one Sauk get some of it back?
28976Since when did David Cooper get to be so high and mighty?_"I need some of that coffee,"Raoul said.
28976Snow in the Moon of Buds?
28976So Wegner would like to shoot a few Indians, would he?
28976Stolen from Victoire, when the Sauk burned it?
28976That mean you have n''t killed anybody?
28976That must have been what happened to them._ Pierre said,"What is it?"
28976That squaw use you up?"
28976The man standing on the barrel was saying,"You know what the Injuns call that country up there?
28976The_ Victory_, eh?
28976Then how could Pierre expect him to be reconciled to what must be done now?
28976Then what was all this weeping for?
28976Then why, after such a shining night, did he have_ that_ dream?
28976They had told the truth about what happened at Old Man''s Creek, but since when had truth meant anything to the pale eyes?
28976Think you''re still a count or something?
28976Thirty thousand acres of the best land in western Illinois go to a mongrel Indian, and you say his mind was sound?
28976Thomas Ford called,"Master Woodrow Prewitt, will you take the stand, please?"
28976Thought you could kill me, huh?"
28976To depend on government agents for the very food they put into their mouths?
28976Today he thought,_ Paradise lost?
28976Trickery?
28976Trying to cross the Mississippi?"
28976Trying to keep his voice steady, he asked,"Where is my mother''s wickiup?"
28976Two, is Auguste de Marion guilty of the murder of any citizens of the United States or the state of Illinois?
28976Was he dreaming about Auguste coming after him?
28976Was he going to be merciful?
28976Was he taking the Sauk leaders to meet the President?
28976Was he wrong in thinking that he must refuse?
28976Was it necessary to go on and incite men to kill him?"
28976Was n''t it bad enough?
28976Was she not also White Bear''s wife?
28976Was she still longing for him somewhere across the Great River?
28976Was that possible?
28976Was the place haunted now?
28976Was the spirit of hatred kindled in Raoul at Fort Dearborn now passing to him?
28976Was there some way Auguste could hurt him?
28976Was there_ nothing_ he could do for his own loved ones?
28976Was this another pale eyes custom?
28976Was this what killing Pierre''s squaw had brought on him?
28976Was this what the way of the shaman came to, then?
28976Were the Indians fighting back, defending their women and children?
28976Were they just waiting for orders, or were they accusing him?
28976Were they well or sick?
28976Were you married to her even then?"
28976Were you not subjected to two years of captivity and slavery?"
28976What about her?
28976What about you-- how is your head?"
28976What am I doing?"
28976What am I thinking?
28976What are you talking about?"
28976What choice did he have?
28976What could he do if Wolf Paw and his men captured Wegner?
28976What could he gain by keeping Auguste alive?
28976What curse had she laid on him before he killed her?
28976What did Jackson have in mind for him?
28976What did he know of the pale eyes?
28976What did she mean,_ A man like your uncle_?
28976What difference?
28976What do I need you for?"
28976What do we got to follow him for?"
28976What do you have to say for yourself?"
28976What else can happen to me?_ Auguste heard Raoul''s voice from somewhere behind him, among the spectators.
28976What good is it, two of us dead?
28976What had happened to the clouds and the snow?
28976What had happened to the white flag?
28976What happened to you?"
28976What happened to you?"
28976What horrors would he have to face now?
28976What if everyone missed him and he somehow got in and others followed?
28976What if he tried to get out of bed, and tore the wound open?
28976What if the idea of sharing White Bear made Yellow Hair angry?
28976What if the secret had gotten out?
28976What if these people recognized him?
28976What is he planning?
28976What kind of a man am I?
28976What must it be like for Gray Cloud?
28976What pale eyes of nearly seventy years could personally lead a cavalry charge against an enemy outnumbering him by ten to one and rout them?
28976What right did the skinny captain have to demand that he spare Little Foot?
28976What right had he to go on a spirit journey leaving his body to haunt her wickiup?
28976What the hell did Armand expect him to do?
28976What the hell had Burke Russell done with Auguste''s adoption records and Pierre''s will?
28976What the hell was it Greenglove had said?
28976What they do?"
28976What was glass, and how did the pale eyes make things from it?
28976What was happening to their home at this moment?
28976What was wrong?
28976What was your conduct during the war?"
28976What were the men, Levi and Armand and the others, thinking?
28976What were you doing, spying on us?"
28976What will he do to you when you come back?"
28976What would Sun Woman and Owl Carver do for a man this sick?
28976What would a pale eyes be doing here in the lodge of the Turtle?
28976What would become of Nicole, Grandpapa, Frank and all the people of Victoire and Victor who had been his friends?
28976What would he and Sharp Knife have to say to each other?
28976What would he do with Nancy then?
28976What would she do when she caught up with him?
28976What would she think, Raoul wondered, when he played his hand today?
28976What would they feed him?
28976What''s happened to me?_"Damn it, it_ is_ plain stupid to talk about fighting the Regulators, Armand.
28976What''s this got to do with the mongrel?"
28976When he had struck his breast before, had he reopened the hole Raoul''s bullet made?
28976When he is suffering all this, how can you say that_ I_ am a danger to him?"
28976When it was Ford''s turn to question Armand he said,"You pulled the trigger on one of Black Hawk''s peace messengers, did n''t you?"
28976When the three Indians, including Auguste, came into your camp with the peace flag, how''d you know it was treachery?"
28976When you are well enough, will you not come back to your people?"
28976Where are the people who were living in this town?"
28976Where are the rest of the Sauk?
28976Where can we find him?"
28976Where did he think she was?
28976Where the hell else would you stay?"
28976Where was he when you abandoned me to the Indians?
28976Where was the White Bear?
28976Where were you?"
28976Where?
28976Which of you, having had so much taken from him so cruelly, would not go mad with grief?
28976Who else?_ White Bear said,"Nancy, I do n''t ask you to forgive me for what my people did to you.
28976Who is this man?"
28976Who says their lives are over because they live among the Sauk?
28976Who the hell are you?"
28976Who was this man, and why was he here?
28976Who would be up so long after midnight?
28976Who, after all, had Black Hawk''s war parties been killing?
28976Why did n''t you speak up then?"
28976Why did the priest have to dishonor his mother and father so?
28976Why did you refuse every man who asked for you?"
28976Why do you ask me to stay here and fight for something I do not want?"
28976Why do you keep them?
28976Why do you think I followed you from the village today?
28976Why does this man come now to tear me away from the only tribe I have known?"
28976Why face a mob of rifle- toting bullies led by Raoul?
28976Why had he alone been spared?
28976Why had his mother not spoken of him?
28976Why had n''t Clarissa gotten away?
28976Why in hell would he dream about a creature like that?
28976Why must Raoul stir up such turmoil with his hatred?
28976Why must he and Nancy hide their love from these hate- filled people?
28976Why must he live among his people''s enemies?
28976Why not just lie here and wait for the long knives to come back and kill him?
28976Why provoke so much strife now by trying to change that?
28976Why put up with my sister and her husband?
28976Why should he be sacrificed to make Star Arrow happy?
28976Why should he_ have_ to wait, when a woman who desired him was right there in his wickiup?
28976Why should we?"
28976Why should you share our fate?
28976Why the hell was Greenglove grinning like that?
28976Why would Redbird not come out and speak to him?_ A dozen cawing crows flew over the camp.
28976Why would a young white woman go into the filthy, disease- ridden tents of these Indians?
28976Why would anyone want to return?"
28976Why, then, go through the agony of a flight from the long knives?
28976Why?
28976Why?
28976Why?"
28976Why?_ One day, White Bear hoped, he would meet Greenglove and find out why he had spared him.
28976Will my heart never be at peace?_ Nancy had wanted him so desperately before they parted; Redbird would not even let him see her.
28976Will you consent?"
28976Will you not go now and bring him down?"
28976Will you smoke the pipe with these two men?"
28976Without it, what did they have to show that they had come in peace?
28976Would Gray Cloud die?
28976Would any of them fight to see that Pierre''s will was done?
28976Would he destroy it in one of his rages as he had this beautiful object that had been part of the family treasure?
28976Would he freeze and starve here in this cave, his dead body remaining until Owl Carver came and found it?
28976Would he have to fight this fight alone?
28976Would he live to see another nightfall?
28976Would his mother be alive?
28976Would his vision show them a way back?
28976Would it not hurt you less if you had me with you?"
28976Would n''t it have been better to attack the Indians barehanded and be killed than to let that happen?_ But neither could he forgive Papa and Pierre.
28976Would she believe him?
28976Would she ever again, back in the world of flesh, hold him like this?
28976Would she understand?
28976Would the ancestors reject him?
28976Would the spirits take Gray Cloud?
28976Would there be anything, he wondered, he could do for his father?
28976Would there never be a moment of thoughtful silence?
28976Would they despise him?
28976Would they listen?
28976Would they shoot Yellow Hair if she did n''t leave?
28976Would things ever stop reminding her of White Bear?
28976Would this man send those long knives or their enemy into battle?
28976Would you have me leave her the next day to seek a vision?"
28976Would you let Auguste be killed?"
28976Would you like us to keep your things here for you?
28976Yellow Hair''s lips quivered as she asked, would Redbird not come back to be with White Bear?
28976You been drinking this early in the day?"
28976You hear anything?"
28976You know what the word mongrel means, redskin?"
28976You own a Mississippi steamboat, do n''t you?"
28976You want him?"
28976You want that on your conscience?"
28976Your family come through all right?"
28976Your paw?"
28976_ And I feared that if I let myself love Nancy I would never return to my people, and to you._"You did not even lie with her?"
28976_ And all for what?
28976_ And because of that, I must lose him._ Then when would Redbird see White Bear again?
28976_ And fighting for it will make it more truly my property than any government grant could._ But that Indian in there-- what was he armed with?
28976_ And what the hell were you doing?_ Raoul thought, furious at Bennett.
28976_ Bear spirit, walk with me on the Trail of Souls._ Little Crow said,"What do they say, White Bear?
28976_ Bless me?
28976_ But he is dying!_"Do you want to save his life?"
28976_ But when I am gone from here, who will heal me?
28976_ But where is Father?_ Auguste shook hands with Guichard, who had climbed down stiffly from the driver''s seat.
28976_ Could it tell me when White Bear will come back?_ The old shaman dangled the time teller by its gold chain over Floating Lily''s tiny head.
28976_ Could my luck be any worse?_ All hope vanished as light faded from the sky.
28976_ Do n''t you think I know that?_ he wanted to scream at the minister.
28976_ Does my mother want me to string beads while Gray Cloud freezes to death?_"The snow was heavy on the horses''backs,"Redbird said.
28976_ Does she want me to say I wo n''t?
28976_ Grandfather Oak, will you shelter me?_ Just before he jumped for a branch he noticed that a hollow had rotted out in the base of the tree.
28976_ Had they?_ He opened the case.
28976_ Has Earthmaker abandoned his people?
28976_ Have I hurt White Bear so badly that he will get sick again?_ Sudden fear rippled through her.
28976_ Have n''t I done enough for Wegner?
28976_ He''ll see that he just hit my ear, and that will be the end._ Should he jump up and run for it?
28976_ How could I think that way about my own kids?
28976_ How could she turn away from me and take up again with that redskin bastard?_"Come on out, mongrel,"he said to Auguste.
28976_ How do I feel about Pierre?
28976_ If I live to do that._"Will you join the other Sauk in Ioway after you find your family?"
28976_ Is it only a year since I drove him from Victoire?
28976_ Is someone in our household spying on me?_ Pierre turned to Raoul.
28976_ Is that how I''d be if Frank were killed?_ Nicole wondered.
28976_ Is this man, then, a danger to me?_"Is there no escape, Father Turtle?"
28976_ Is this man, then, a danger to me?_"Is there no escape, Father Turtle?"
28976_ Just an instant?_ Every time Redbird went on a shaman''s journey she learned something new.
28976_ Kill him how?
28976_ Like your people from Prophet''s Town, who''ve been deserting us?_ White Bear thought.
28976_ No doubt while he talks about making my people suffer he thinks of himself as quite a civilized man._"Revenge, Colonel?"
28976_ Or he does n''t want to kill me._ Had n''t he tried to talk Raoul out of shooting the three of them?
28976_ Real Indians?_ Anger pulsed in his head.
28976_ So utterly vengeful?_ Cooper said,"Sure you can do it?"
28976_ So utterly vengeful?_ Cooper said,"Sure you can do it?"
28976_ What have I learned that my people can really use?_ White Bear wondered ruefully.
28976_ What is Black Hawk planning now?_ White Bear did not like the sound of the news, but there would be time to think about it later.
28976_ What the hell does she mean,"All happens as God ordains?"
28976_ Where are you tonight, my father?_ The clouds seemed close enough to touch.
28976_ Where were those frogs today when we were looking for food?
28976_ Why did I never see it before?_ Wolf Paw wore the markings of the Bird she was named after, the Bird that was her spirit guide.
28976_ Why did n''t we all fight and die?
28976_ Why do they sit up high and raise their food up so high?_ Auguste wondered.
28976_ Why does Jackson want to talk to me?_ Auguste did not like the sound of it.
28976_ Will I truly have to stand trial for murder?
28976_ Will he live?_ she wanted to ask.
28976_ Will this never end?_ Raoul stood with his head bowed.
50406All predicated upon the fact that a footpad belted me and swiped my wallet?
50406All reasoning based upon the''what would I do?'' 50406 And I am the White Knight?"
50406And I suppose when I''m found there will be all sorts of records and data and frantic experimentation to show that I tried and failed?
50406And from there where?
50406And how many others?
50406And how was this correlation located?
50406And if I should succeed?
50406And if you fail?
50406And in the meantime?
50406And spill before the boss tells his tale?
50406And what is Grayson''s Principle, and why is this called a''principle''?
50406And why is n''t that a case for the cops?
50406And you?
50406And you?
50406And you?
50406Any more?
50406Are there any more questions?
50406Are those unfavorable traits?
50406Been here long?
50406Bennington?
50406Big?
50406But have you gotten any evidence?
50406But how did you get out?
50406But how do I know you''ll be true to me?
50406But how--?
50406But is n''t this disposing evidence?
50406But look,said Stacey suddenly,"just what kind of mess have you gotten yourself into?"
50406But the Relay-- The Network?
50406But the deceased?
50406But this has been tried?
50406But what can we do?
50406But what else?
50406But what would it accomplish?
50406But why Proxima? 50406 But why not go back to Harrigan''s Horror and pick up the radio beacon when it gets there?
50406But why so many?
50406But why was this done?
50406But why, for the Love of Heaven?
50406But why?
50406But why?
50406But--?
50406Ca n''t you take it?
50406Can this be true?
50406Can you get in touch with the Latham Alpha IV Station direct?
50406Can you identify this man?
50406Can you think of any reason why any man would want to put a monkey wrench into our plans to survey the galaxy?
50406Can your own personal ambition be great enough to block and forestall the linking of Sol and Neosol by Z- wave?
50406Cigarette?
50406Could n''t you call one of them?
50406Dammit man-- Oh God, it''s four or six months flight time there, is n''t it?
50406Dead?
50406Did it work?
50406Did n''t she come out?
50406Did you know there was a dead man aboard your spacecraft?
50406Do n''t you believe either?
50406Do n''t you know anything about it?
50406Do we go back?
50406Do you know that or is it just what he said?
50406Do you mean to state that the Z- wave has never been known to operate between points not previously linked by radio?
50406Do you want to wait three months for the radio beams to cross Latham''s Triplets?
50406Doctor Haddon, could this message have passed through the Z- wave Central?
50406Doctor Thorndyke, may I have the stage for a moment?
50406Everything go all right?
50406Fast man, no?
50406Fighting?
50406Friend of yours?
50406From here?
50406Get her address?
50406Grayson? 50406 Grayson?"
50406Has the Z- wave ever been tried in the depths of interstellar space?
50406Have any ideas about this?
50406Have n''t you anything to show?
50406Hell''s Eternal Bells, should I grovel in fear? 50406 Her apartment?"
50406Hold the flight?
50406How about Miss Phillips''boy friend?
50406How about her job?
50406How about spacecraft?
50406How about the car in the garage?
50406How did I know you were that anxious?
50406How did you get that?
50406How do you account for this message?
50406How do you know?
50406How in hell did you get out?
50406How long can you prevent it?
50406How long did you watch?
50406How safe?
50406How solid is any theory about anything?
50406How was the deceased rendered that way?
50406How''s for my course this evening?
50406How?
50406How?
50406How?
50406How?
50406Huh?
50406Huh?
50406I call it the capture of a Rook as well as the White Knight for-- did you say_ two_ pawns?
50406I know-- you do n''t mind if I know?
50406I suppose that was the main idea behind that flanged- up conversation I caught on Proxima I?
50406I-- You mean, was I successful?
50406If the Z- wave Central and the beacon were turned off,he stormed bitterly,"then how did I receive this on my Z- wave Receiver?"
50406If the other guy was Paul Grayson, would he have run from cops?
50406If-- for some reason-- I am in your way because of the Z- wave, why was a man impersonating me, who could only impersonate me for a limited time?
50406In what way?
50406In?
50406Is he there?
50406Is n''t it?
50406Is that what the shooting was all about?
50406John, how much will it cost me to have a matter looked into?
50406John, how would you go about stealing a ship?
50406Just what are you driving at?
50406Just what do you want with me?
50406Just what happened?
50406Just what would you recommend?
50406Just why do you assume that this is some sort of plot? 50406 Like another busted head?"
50406May I ask you a direct question?
50406Maybe I should visit my family psychiatrist?
50406Meaning what?
50406Missing?
50406No footpads to raise lumps on the skull, no taxicabs to dodge, no--"No women to kiss?
50406No marks?
50406No?
50406Nora Phillips has been very helpful, has n''t she?
50406Nora, will you wait a week?
50406Nora-- tell me-- why did you make that false recording?
50406Now what?
50406Now?
50406Okay?
50406On the Z- wave?
50406On what?
50406Or have you never met her?
50406Paul, as a student, how did your history compare with your math?
50406Personal gift--"What kind?
50406Possibly,said Haedaecker scathingly,"but by what method?"
50406Pretty soon, Paul?
50406Professional?
50406Proof?
50406Proxima?
50406Remember what Sergeant Hollowell said: That a stolen wallet and a witness were fine dovetails towards the establishment of a false identity?
50406She did sort of rub your skull, did n''t she?
50406Should I have met her?
50406So she brought you out of the unconscious, painful dark in time to intercept the criminal at his business?
50406So someone tried to swipe your ship?
50406So what would you have me do?
50406So what--?
50406So what? 50406 So what?"
50406So you do n''t think so?
50406So you erased him? 50406 So,"he said,"what better way to divert Paul Grayson than to bait him with a gorgeous dame?"
50406So--?
50406So?
50406So?
50406So?
50406So?
50406So?
50406Stacey was killed?
50406Stacey?
50406Stolen--?
50406Such as a good book?
50406Sure you want to go?
50406That''s 7111 Bridge Street?
50406That''s all you know?
50406The live one, huh?
50406Then if you succeed?
50406Then other than that there is no way of proving that this recording might have been made on terra a month before you left?
50406Then suppose you tell me where Stacey and Nora Phillips are?
50406Then what else?
50406Then what''s this mad game all about?
50406Then what?
50406Then which is right?
50406Then why did n''t they pursue it?
50406Then why this stuff? 50406 Then why was this farce perpetrated?"
50406Then, just how solid is your knowledge of science-- any science?
50406Then--?
50406They did?
50406This recording of the Z- wave was made from Z- wave Central?
50406To divert you long enough to clip you, to steal your papers, to enter your ship-- for what purpose?
50406Upon whose side was he aligned?
50406Want to bet?
50406Was it the man who passed himself off as me?
50406Week?
50406Were you guarding the jail too?
50406Wha-- what--?
50406What are we going to do about him?
50406What are we waiting for?
50406What are you doing here?
50406What did he catch?
50406What did they use for corpus delectable?
50406What do you know?
50406What do you mean?
50406What do you mean?
50406What do you need a telephone for?
50406What gives?
50406What gives?
50406What goes on?
50406What happened?
50406What happened?
50406What happened?
50406What has that idea got to do with my getting a lump on the head?
50406What have we to lose?
50406What have you to say for yourself, young man?
50406What is this all about?
50406What is this, a Stanley Steamer?
50406What''s going on here?
50406What''s his name?
50406What''s it all about?
50406What''s new?
50406What''s next?
50406What''s the trouble out there?
50406What''s the trouble?
50406What''s up, Phil?
50406What, Paul?
50406What, for instance?
50406What--?
50406What--?
50406What?
50406What?
50406What?
50406What?
50406What?
50406When did you take off?
50406When do I start?
50406When you find out, will you let me know?
50406Where did she go?
50406Where did this recording come from?
50406Where did you get that recording?
50406Where in the name of--?
50406Which one?
50406Who says I am?
50406Who was the guy on Proxima?
50406Who''s calling, please?
50406Who''s that speaking?
50406Who-- me? 50406 Who?"
50406Who?
50406Why am I being arrested?
50406Why am I being detained, held, or otherwise prevented from enjoying my rights of freedom?
50406Why did n''t you speak up before?
50406Why did n''t you wait?
50406Why did the Puritans leave England in the first place?
50406Why do n''t you fire me?
50406Why does this have to happen to me?
50406Why not aim at it and run?
50406Why not bump him first?
50406Why not let me try?
50406Why not let one of them take it, then?
50406Why not now?
50406Why not sponsor this idea?
50406Why not? 50406 Why the cloud- up- and- rain?"
50406Why, for the Love of Heaven?
50406Why?
50406Why?
50406Why?
50406Why?
50406Why?
50406Why?
50406Will it?
50406Will you marry me-- now?
50406Y''wanna hear the record before you take off?
50406Yeah--?
50406Yeah? 50406 Yes-- and which is which?"
50406Yes--?
50406Yes?
50406Yes?
50406Yes?
50406You ca n''t help?
50406You claim a man came through here a few minutes ago, resembling me?
50406You do n''t?
50406You have n''t kept a man watching the place for all this time?
50406You received a Z- wave message on Proxima?
50406You recognized her voice?
50406You saw it?
50406You would n''t go so far as to suggest that God is on your side?
50406You''re Paul Grayson?
50406You''re all right?
50406You''re certain of that?
50406You''re certain that you presented your idea correctly?
50406You''re certain you can fly with that bump on the head?
50406You''re going to jug me?
50406You''re not making uranium out of broken pop bottles are you?
50406You''re not mixed up in anything, are you?
50406You''re not very bright, are you?
50406You''re sure?
50406You''re with Astrogation?
50406You''ve had quite a time, have n''t you?
50406You''ve investigated everything?
50406You''ve-- what--?
50406Young woman,stormed Haedaecker angrily,"Are you used to bustling into closed conferences?"
50406_ Should I?_"_ You should, Paul._"_ Where?_"_ You would n''t_ extend back earlier than the history of Mankind. 50406 _ Should I?_""_ You should, Paul._""_ Where?_""_ You would n''t_ extend back earlier than the history of Mankind.
50406_ With you?_"_ With me? 50406 _ With you?_""_ With me?
50406***** Back below them, Westlake said:"You''re sure you missed?"
50406A howl of''Why?''
50406And in either case, what were they going to do with him, after they had taken him-- where?
50406And the ship?"
50406And then?"
50406And--""Now suppose that you were unable to make the Z- wave contact again?"
50406Are you there?"
50406Are you-- are you?"
50406But Migawd, Paul, what brings you to the employment of a detective?"
50406But Paul, what would have happened if you had gotten away with it?"
50406But about you?"
50406But can you tell me: Did the guy who used my identification last night have any scratches on his face?"
50406But how?
50406But if he does n''t?"
50406But now take the next step and where are we?"
50406But what could he accomplish?
50406But who is the Queen in this mad game, Nora Phillips?"
50406But why?
50406But why?"
50406But wo n''t we have to go to Neoterra?"
50406But--"Paul spoke up,"Can you get the Elecalc free for a course for tomorrow night?"
50406CHAPTER 8 Stacey''s voice was as dry as ever,"Busy, Paul?"
50406Can I bring you the rest?_"will be discovered.
50406Can you hear me?
50406Can you hear me?"
50406Can you hear me?"
50406Can you tell me whether the man who clipped me turned up with scratches on his face?"
50406Could it--?
50406Could they foul the junk so bad that Paul would n''t be able to make repair?
50406Evans said that the Z- wave would n''t work; how bad could they foul Z- wave equipment?
50406For what other reason?"
50406Friends-- or enemies?
50406Gone without a trace?"
50406Grayson, can we--?"
50406Grayson, what happened?"
50406Had Nora Phillips been on Proxima?
50406Had Nora forestalled them--_them_?
50406Had she turned up to stall Haedaecker?
50406Had the criminal hoped to lay Paul low enough to keep him quiet until the criminal could take off in Paul''s place?
50406Had they helped him or had they captured him for themselves?
50406Have I given you something to think about?"
50406He recalled the lissome warmth of her body pressed eagerly against him; could a woman offer herself falsely with that much ardor?
50406He snapped the toggle and said:"Huston?
50406Hearing things--?
50406His compressor could have been made to work and Paul could have made it to the station, but for what?
50406His first words were:"Did anybody have the brains to try calling''em back?"
50406Hoagland nodded again, and then said:"Westlake, how good a gambler are you?"
50406How could they justify their claims in the face of the emptiness of their prophecies?
50406How do you like them apples?"
50406How do you make that?"
50406How else would I be knowing you?"
50406How long ago?"
50406How long before the beacon beam arrives?"
50406How many men are competent space pilots at that age?"
50406How-_ believe me_?"
50406In a month, you say?...
50406In a month, you say?...
50406Is that you?"
50406It returned again,"... Terry said so.... How do I know?...
50406It''s a long time ago, Paul but do you remember when I called you just before you went to lecture?"
50406Jason?
50406Jones?
50406Just how solid are your theories about the Z- wave?"
50406Just why would a person intent upon delaying you go so far towards helping you?"
50406Know what that means?"
50406Maybe she did go there?"
50406Nora now--?"
50406Or to die along the route in a leaky suit?
50406Or-- would you, Grayson?"
50406Paul missed most of it, but then asked another question:"Did you see him?"
50406Please go on-- please?"
50406She smiled at him and asked:"What is this intrigue business, or is it a top secret?"
50406She with you now?"
50406Since it takes such a short time to prove my work, why not wait?"
50406So since we''re all aware of some of the facts, let''s not play any more games than necessary to save face, huh?"
50406So what had really happened last night when Paul Grayson was clipped unconscious?
50406Stacey eyed Paul with a glitter,"D''ye mind if I start going home to my wife?"
50406Stacey greeted them with,"So now what, children?"
50406Sure it was that, but why?
50406That you?"
50406The chairman came forward and spoke to Paul:"Shall I call order, or would you prefer to have a mid- lecture discussion?"
50406The way the guts are parked all over the spaceport and left to rust?
50406Then Stacey said:"What''s on the technical mind, Paul?
50406Then the Z- wave signal came in again,"... Terry said so.... How do I know?...
50406Then what--?"
50406Then what?
50406Then--""How are you going to check between here and Alpha IV?"
50406Then--""Where does she work?"
50406Then--?"
50406There-- or here-- what difference?
50406To stand there and die?
50406To the sergeant, the guard said:"Do you know anything about all this?"
50406We went after him, and then guess what?"
50406Well, forget that and tell me why the American Revolution was fought?"
50406Wha''hoppen?"
50406What can we lose?"
50406What has happened?"
50406What if you died?"
50406What is the method used in testing an unknown method of communication?
50406What kind of job do you hold?"
50406What was that?"
50406What''s this Z- wave business?"
50406When did you miss me?"
50406When he failed, I mean?"
50406Where does her father live?
50406Which of your many girl friends did this?"
50406Why bother going through a lot of piddling little demonstrations to prove what you already know?"
50406Why did n''t you dump the thing out in space?"
50406Why did you feel that you had to falsify?"
50406Why not accept it as attempted theft as the police do?"
50406Why not call them and ask them to come back and explain to the guards here what happened?"
50406Why not have it figure out the betting possibilities and make book on me?"
50406Why this set- up?"
50406Why?
50406Why?
50406Why?
50406Why?"
50406Y''know the only way to shut these bastards up?"
50406Y''know what happens next?"
50406You can head for Neoterra, but does anybody mind if I head for home and fireside?
50406You know old Mupol 3316?
50406You know, do n''t you, Jeffers?"
50406You too, Miss--?"
50406You''re ready?"
50406You''ve got Bennington?"
50406You''ve got''em?"
50406demanded Haedaecker,"does that explain anything?"
57813And she was starved, of course,said a young man;"do you rue it?"
57813End is there none?
57813End is there none?
57813Now, my dear children,said the good priest,"where shall we put St. Patrick?
57813--DANIEL WEBSTER_ How many kinds of series are there?_ Two, the commencing and the concluding.
57813--EDWIN M. STANTON,_ in Sickles''trial__ Distrust of Witnesses._ Are they witnesses to be trusted with report of evidence by words?
57813--EMERSON EMPHASIS_ What is emphasis?_ Any impressive utterance that arrests the attention of the listener.
57813--GEORGE W. CURTIS_ Indirect Question._ When, O Catiline, do you mean to cease abusing our patience?
57813A remarkable change has taken place since; but what did the wise and great men of all parts of the country think of slavery then?
57813A series is often composed of qualifying words; as, What though it breaks like lightning from the cloud?
57813Ah, my friends, is not the reason for the change evident to any one who will look at the matter?
57813Am I mistaken in this?
57813Am I of opinion, then, you will ask, that the conspirators should be set free, and that the army of Catiline should thus be increased?
57813An American no longer?
57813And Themistocles and the men who fell at Marathon and Plataea, think you that they are insensible to what is taking place?
57813And has it come to this?
57813And how are you to accomplish this?
57813And how should we regard the events happening now?
57813And how was this to be enumerated among the high crimes which caused the Colonies to sever their connection with the mother country?
57813And is it not plain to every man?
57813And now in what strains did Homer voice this theme?
57813And what do you suppose will be my thoughts, if I find in this very trial any violation of the laws committed in any similar manner?
57813And what is that evidence?
57813And what matters it to you?
57813And when in Manchester I saw those huge placards:"Who is Henry Ward Beecher?"
57813And, what have we to oppose to them?
57813Are fleets and armies necessary to a work of love and reconciliation?
57813Are my pickaxes and shovels in good order, and am I in good trim myself-- and my sleeves well up to the elbows, and my breath good, and my temper?"
57813Are there not many of us who believe the same thing?
57813Are they the companions of his youth who shared with him the manly toils of the chase or the robust exercises of the palaestra?
57813Are your blandishments more seducing in public than in private, and with other women''s husbands than with your own?
57813As to Gabinius, Statilius, Coeparius, why should I make any remark upon them?
57813Ask of the jurors whether they know Chabrias, Iphicrates and Timotheus, and learn from them why they have honored and erected statues to them?
57813Brothers?
57813But can we, for that reason run ahead, and infer that he will make any particular change, of which he himself has given no intimation?
57813But here you must ask the defendant:"What was your resentment against your country?
57813But how are speakers to do this?
57813But how can a daughter hear that mother''s name without a blush?
57813But how, you may ask, will you decide justly?
57813But if a war should come, what damage must be expected?
57813But if it is, how can he resist it?
57813But what happened directly, almost immediately, afterwards?
57813But when shall we be stronger?
57813But who, it may be asked, will blame any severity that shall be decreed against these parricides of their country?
57813But why at all these tears, these cries, this voice of lamentation?
57813Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it?
57813Can he possibly show that it is less a sacred right to buy them where they can be bought cheapest?
57813Can he, then, be willing to put his life in jeopardy?
57813Can we safely base our action upon any such vague inference?
57813Children?
57813Could not each have made the same request to her husband at home?
57813DIGGING FOR THE THOUGHT JOHN RUSKIN When you come to a good book, you must ask yourself,"Am I inclined to work as an Australian miner would?
57813Did not God choose David from the sheepfolds to make him ruler of his people Israel?
57813Did you think that I would say nothing of such serious matters as these?
57813Do gentlemen hold the feelings and wishes of their brethren at so cheap a rate that they refuse to gratify them at so small a price?
57813Do not such careers illustrate the prophecy of Solomon,"Seest thou the man diligent in his business?
57813Do the concealments of which I speak still cover animosities, which neither time nor reflection nor the march of events have yet suffered to subdue?
57813Do you ask me to support a government that will tax my property; that will plunder me; that will demand my blood, and will not protect me?
57813Do you undertake the cause of impartiality, of integrity, of good faith and religion?
57813Do you undertake the cause of the tribunals?
57813Does Douglas believe an effort to revive that trade is approaching?
57813Does any of you, Athenians, compute or consider the means by which Philip, originally weak, has become great?
57813Does he lack organ or medium to impart his truths?
57813Does he not perceive the feeling of our city towards him?"
57813Does he really think so?
57813Does not the event show they judged rightly?
57813Does that exclude those whose blood and money paid for it?
57813Does"dispose of"mean to rob the rightful owners?
57813Fellow citizens, is this Faneuil Hall doctrine?
57813Finally, why are there so few orators in the world today?
57813For peace?
57813For should we sacrifice them and their children, would this compensate for the murder of your fathers, your sons, and your brothers?
57813For war?
57813For what alliance has come to the state by your procurement?
57813For what purpose could ye have sent for them at that period?
57813For what purpose?
57813For whom else have I to plead for me?
57813Had the Declaration announced that the negroes were free and equal, how was the prince to be arraigned for stirring up insurrection among them?
57813Has Great Britain any enemy, in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
57813Have we anything new to offer upon the subject?
57813Have we no tendency to the latter condition?
57813Have we shown ourselves so unwilling to be reconciled that force must be called in to win back our love?
57813He met my father going out, who said to him:"Are you the visitor whom the company here expect?
57813Here he is in your jurisdiction: shall not his doom be death?
57813How can he oppose the advance of slavery?
57813How can he refuse that trade in that"property"shall be"perfectly free,"unless he does it as a protection to the home production?
57813How can we best do it?
57813How hast thou spent that money?
57813How is any one of the thirty states to defend itself?
57813How is it now?
57813How is it today?
57813How long is that madness of yours still to mock us?
57813How many modern orators measure up to this standard set by the ancient master?
57813How many of you at this moment are, in fancy, back in the dear old county of Greene?
57813How then?
57813How would the intimation have been received that Warren and his associations should have waited a better time?
57813How, then, is this reproach to be avoided?
57813I ask gentlemen, sir, What means this martial array, if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
57813INFLECTION_ What is inflection?_ Inflection is a bending of the voice.
57813If Philip take that city, who shall then prevent his marching here?
57813If my error would thus be criminal, how great would yours be if you should render an unjust verdict?
57813If precedents in bad times are to be implicitly followed, why should we have heard any evidence at all?
57813If the gold standard is a good thing, why try to get rid of it?
57813If the gold standard is the standard of civilization, why, my friends, should we not have it?
57813If we look back to the history of the commerce of this country in the early years of this government, what were our exports?
57813In honoring such an one will you not dishonor yourselves and the gallant men who have laid down their lives for you in the field?
57813In other causes it is usual to ask the accusers:"What is your resentment against the defendants?"
57813In other words, how are you going to compel me?
57813In such a case, does any one talk to me of gentleness and compassion?
57813In what estimation did they hold it at the time when this Constitution was adopted?
57813In what event?
57813Is Philip dead?
57813Is it because thou art a valiant soldier?
57813Is it for his venality, for his cowardice, for his base desertion of his post in the day of battle?
57813Is it not Ctesiphon who is accused, and even for him may not the penalty be moderated by you?
57813Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
57813Is it to solicit that their parents, their husbands, children, and brothers may be ransomed from captivity under Hannibal?
57813Is life so dear, or peace so sweet, as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
57813Is man possessed of talents adequate to the great occasion?
57813Is not the common sentiment, or if not, ought it not to be, of the great mass of our people, North and South?
57813Is the doctrine to be sustained here that it is imprudent for men to aid magistrates in executing the laws?
57813Is there a man so bereft of sense that he will set Leocrates free and so place his own security at the mercy of men who would abandon him?
57813Is there any State in this Union which has contributed so much to the honor and welfare of the country?
57813Is this a body of witnesses that are to be trusted to report words, that are the issues of life, with certainty and accuracy?
57813Is this the part of wise men, engaged in a great and arduous struggle for liberty?
57813Is this the spirit in which this government is to be administered?
57813It is in fact simply this: Has the civil magistrate a right to put down a riot?
57813Men are continually asking each other, had Lovejoy a right to resist?
57813Moreover, consider it[ in this point of view]: if we have been islanders, who would have been more impregnable?
57813Moved not to introduce men who were come for the purpose of conferring with you?
57813Mr. President, has it come to this?
57813My father?
57813Now what is the use of telling us that?
57813On what ground, Dicaeogenes, canst thou ask the jury to give a sentence in thy favor?
57813On what occasion, then, do you show your spirit?
57813Or some other ally?
57813Or tell me, do you like walking about and asking one other, Is there any news?
57813Or was it because scourging is a severer penalty than death?
57813Ought it not to be so?
57813Patrick?"
57813Phocians?
57813QUESTIONS_ How many kinds of questions are there?_ Two.
57813Roll the stone from the grave and what shall we see?
57813Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
57813Shall we put him in a boat sailing over the golden lake when the angels are calling?
57813Shall we put him where the golden light plays around the golden city?
57813Shall we put him where the sapphire river rolls around the throne of the Almighty?
57813Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication?
57813Shall we therefore make a law prohibiting the council and the people hereafter from passing bills and decrees?
57813Shall we try argument?
57813Should we abandon these men too, and Philip reduce Olynthus, let any one tell me what is to prevent him marching where he pleases?
57813Should we deprive them of their property, would this indemnify the individuals whom they have beggared, or the State which they have plundered?
57813So thought Palmyra-- where is she?
57813Such being human nature, am I to be tried and judged by the standard of my predecessors?
57813Take God out of the country and what have we?
57813Take God out of the home and what have we?
57813That noble youth suffered for excess of bravery; and do you hesitate what sentence to pass on the most inhuman of traitors?
57813The cowardice, shall I call it?
57813The falling inflection should also be given all direct questions that are earnest appeals; as, Will you_ please_ forgive me?
57813The falling inflection should be given a direct question such as, Has the gentlemen done?
57813The need is here, but where are the orators?
57813The question now is, did he act within the Constitution and the laws?
57813The questions are here, but where are the orators capable of making those questions clear to the masses?
57813Thebans?
57813Then are you not ashamed that the very damage which you suffer, if he had the power, you dare not seize the moment to inflict on him?
57813Then what prevents your being deprived of everything, yea, of the government itself, according to such argument?
57813This last word was scarcely out of his mouth when some one cried out:"The Tammany Tiger?"
57813This might be aptly answered by putting another question, How did other men become public speakers?
57813This right of equality being, then, according to justice and natural equity, a right belonging to all states, when did we give it up?
57813To such indignities, O bravest of men, how long will you submit?
57813Was I further to see three hundred Athenians perish undeservedly, the city involved in calamity, and the citizens suspicious of one another?
57813Was it because the Porcian law forbids it?
57813Was it intended to render you indignant at the conspiracy?
57813Was it my duty to guard the petty interests of the state, and have sold our main interests like these men?
57813Was not the"Lord of life and all the worlds"for thirty years a carpenter at Nazareth?
57813Was this the object of my ambition; and is this the mode by which a tribunal of justice reconciles contradictions?
57813Well, what was the result?
57813Were we not fighting against that majesty?
57813What am I to be?
57813What are the causes?
57813What are we to think then?
57813What are you going to do?
57813What assistance in money have you ever given, either to the rich or the poor, out of public spirit or liberality?
57813What avails it to have conquered them in the field, if you be overcome by them in your councils?
57813What barricade of wrong, injustice, and oppression has ever been carried except by force?
57813What called forth the Licinian law, restricting estates to five hundred acres, but the unbounded desire of enlarging estates?
57813What can show more evidently the contempt in which he holds you, or the confidence which he reposes in others?
57813What concern, domestic, Hellenic, or foreign, of which you have had the management, has improved under it?
57813What did the Tory party do for the colonies?
57813What do I mean?
57813What do the rebels demand?
57813What does the word country signify?
57813What embassy or agency is there of yours, by which the reputation of the country has been increased?
57813What galleys?
57813What helped him then almost to surprise you in a voluntary snare?
57813What in the world are you good for?
57813What inference can you draw from these facts other than that I am an innocent man?
57813What is it that gentlemen wish?
57813What is to become of the army?
57813What is to become of the navy?
57813What is to become of the public lands?
57813What is to remain American?
57813What malice did you bear your fellow citizens?
57813What motive could I have had?
57813What motive, that even common decency will not allow to be mentioned, is pretended for this female insurrection?
57813What states are to secede?
57813What succors, what acquisition of good will or credit?
57813What terms shall we find, which have not already been exhausted?
57813What the Cineian law, concerning gifts and presents, but that the plebeians had become vassals and tributaries to the senate?
57813What was the effect of this, men of Athens?
57813What was their agreement?
57813What would become of Missouri?
57813What would they have?
57813What, but arguing, some in support of the motion of tribunes; others contending for the repeal of the law?
57813What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution?
57813What, then, Athenians, when will you act as becomes you?
57813What, then, were the statements made by Aeschines, through which everything was lost?
57813What, then, will you take?
57813What, think you, was the reason?
57813When do you shine out?
57813When has a battle for humanity and liberty ever been won except by force?
57813When is there to be an end of that unbridled audacity of yours, swaggering about as it does now?
57813Where are the men to solve those problems?
57813Where is the eagle still to tower?--or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground?
57813Where is the flag of the Republic to remain?
57813Where is the line to be drawn?
57813Where is the man that dreads a patriot grave?
57813Where is the sting of death when a hero falls for his country?
57813Where then is the man who will vote to clear him?
57813Where, then, was the imprudence?
57813Where?
57813Wherein, then, lie the hopes of the masses?
57813Who can now wonder, judges, that he deceived me, a private individual, when he so notoriously deluded you all in your common assembly?
57813Who could have imagined that four years could make that stupendous difference?
57813Who is he that will show his sympathy with crime that shows malice aforethought?
57813Who is so foolish-- I beg everybody''s pardon-- as to expect to see any such thing?
57813Who that is Greek does not know that they took one Tyrtaeus for their general?
57813Who would dare, however, from this, to accuse the people of Athens of a sordid economy?
57813Who would not prefer the perils of Evagoras to the lot of those who inherited kingdoms from their fathers?
57813Why did you rage with unbridled fury against the state itself?"
57813Why did your fathers give to the land her name?
57813Why do I mention this?
57813Why do I not make a figure, distinguished with gold and purple?
57813Why does he not tell us what he is going to do if he fails to secure an international agreement?
57813Why is he then so disquieted?
57813Why is it that within three months such a change has come over the country?
57813Why stand we here idle?
57813Why this change?
57813Why, could there be greater news than a man of Macedonia subduing Athenians, and directing the affairs of Greece?
57813Why, it may be said, do you mention all this now?
57813Why, what should I have done?
57813Why, what would be the result?
57813Why?
57813Why?
57813Why?
57813Why?
57813Will it be the next week, or the next year?
57813Will it be when we are totally disarmed, and when a British guard shall be stationed in every home?
57813Will she join the_ arrondissement_ of the slave states?
57813Will the gentleman venture that argument before lawyers?
57813Will you behold your villages in flames, and your harvests destroyed?
57813Will you die of hunger on the land which your sweat has made fertile?
57813Will you look on while the Cossacks of the far North tread under foot the bodies of your fathers, mothers, wives, and children?
57813Will you not then punish this scoundrel, now that you have him in your power?
57813Will you not, then, awake to action?
57813Will you see a part of your fellow citizens sent to the wilds of Siberia, made to serve in the wars of tyrants, or bleed under the murderous knout?
57813Would not a man whose life was really upright so speak out; only a knave who assumes the garb of virtue would talk as you do?
57813Would she, had our struggle for liberty failed, have considered that we fought for what we believed to be right?
57813Would that man ever have had a favorable hope of his own safety, if he had not conceived in his mind a bad opinion of you?
57813Would the justice of our opposition have been considered?
57813Would ye have the judges set aside a verdict obtained by fair means, and put me a second time in jeopardy of my life for the same offense?
57813Yet his proposal appears to me, I will not say cruel( for what can be cruel that is directed against such characters?
57813Yet what can be too severe, or too harsh, toward men convicted of such an offence?
57813_ Does it consist of force alone?_ No.
57813_ From what source is the speaker to take his illustrations?_ From all sources: history, books, his own experience, and, best of all, nature.
57813_ How are the contrasts to be brought out?_ By means of inflection and emphasis.
57813_ How can this be accomplished?_ By bringing into use all the muscles that act on the lungs, particularly the abdominal muscles and the diaphragm.
57813_ How is one to breathe properly?_ By inflating the lungs fully from their base to their apex.
57813_ How is one to obtain an effective delivery?_ By close observation, hard study, and diligent practice.
57813_ How is the speaker to make the picture so vivid that it will be immediately seen and comprehended by the listener?_ By seeing it himself.
57813_ How many forms of contrast are there?_ There are three: the single, the double, and the triple.
57813_ How many inflections are there?_ Two.
57813_ Is it placed merely on single words?_ No.
57813_ Is there any difference as to how the two series should be spoken?_ Yes.
57813_ What are they called?_ They are called direct and indirect.
57813_ What does the falling inflection signify?_ The falling inflection, in the main, signifies certainty.
57813_ What does the rising inflection signify?_ The rising inflection, in the main, signifies uncertainty.
57813_ What is a concluding series?_ A series is considered a concluding one when the series is complete with the close of the series.
57813_ What is voice?_ Voice is vocalized breath.
57813and for what end?
57813and for what end?
57813and that, at a crisis of such danger to the republic and my own character, I would consult anything rather than my duty and my dignity?
57813demanded the angel again,"And it is this that awes thy soul?"
57813did you come forward to punish and proclaim what you now charge me with?
57813has he_ completely_ done?
57813his army deserted?
57813his province abandoned?
57813or ordered the Manager not to assign them places at the theatre?
57813shall he not serve warning to others?
57813some man may exclaim; do you move that this be a military fund?
57813that by extending clemency to a traitor he will lay himself open to the retribution of heaven?
57813that out of pity for Leocrates he will take no pity on himself, when his choice may mean death at the hands of the foe?
57813that the consul was plundered and betrayed?
57813the holy nature and obligations imposed on him by lot violated?
57813was such eloquence directed?
57813what ammunition?
57813what arsenals?
57813what cavalry?
57813what repair of walls?
57813when?
57813which of you is so simple as not to know that the war yonder will soon be here if we are careless?
57813will not the judges be influenced by the accusation, by the evidence, by the universal opinion of the Roman people?
57813will you die under the exterminating sword of the savage Russians?
54134''What then?''
54134All he says to you, ma''am-- he ast me how come I stay''long wid ole mis''all dis time, and not go off like do rest of de little nigs? 54134 All this is not telling me what mischief you were at in Washington?"
54134Always, my sweet? 54134 Am I out for a stroll?
54134Am I to disbelieve my eyes?
54134An old acquaintance of yours, then?
54134And Senator Winans has left her, they say, Brother Willie?
54134And do you not?
54134And have I not been talking?
54134And have I offered you less?
54134And she was inconsolable at the loss of the baby?
54134And sure did I not recollect?
54134And that silver tea- service from the Bernards-- is it not superb? 54134 And this is Mrs. Winans''baby?"
54134And what happened then?
54134And what has made you nervous to- night?
54134And what is the news with you, John?
54134And what is to become of her?
54134And what sort of a lady was she, and what was her name?
54134And why? 54134 And why?"
54134And will you answer it truthfully? 54134 And you had the energy to drive out here this sweltering day?"
54134And you will leave me again after this-- indefinitely-- or forever?
54134And your husband, ma''am? 54134 Anything new?"
54134Anything new?
54134Are you busy?
54134Are you worried about it? 54134 As we make our beds we lie"has passed into a truth, but is it likely that any other will make it better for us than we try to do for ourselves?
54134At the risk of your own unhappiness?
54134Brother Willie, am I always to be a child?
54134Brownie, have you tried that new song I sent you yesterday?
54134Brownie, willful, teasing little fairy that you are-- you can not, you will not deny that you love me-- can you, honestly, now?
54134Brownie,_ why_?
54134Bruce, what is all this I hear? 54134 But about the child-- what happened while the nurse was gone?"
54134But her baggage, Annie? 54134 But why are you throwing my pansies away?"
54134But you do not ask what it was that I heard?
54134Can not you get Grace to come-- won''t you try?
54134Can you think it of me? 54134 Captain Frank Fontenay, U. S. A.,"he read aloud, and Mrs. Conway said:"A military gentleman-- who is he, Bruce?
54134Certainly-- don''t you remember? 54134 Clen, are you angry with me?
54134Clendenon, is it you?
54134Come back-- you are not going? 54134 Darling, what can you possibly be thinking of?"
54134Darling, what is it that troubles you?--anything new?
54134Darling, why do you ask?
54134Dear, am I to take silence for consent?
54134Did I say all that, Lulu?
54134Did you see him, John?
54134Did_ she_ wear white roses?
54134Do n''t I?
54134Do n''t you care for it? 54134 Do n''t you care to talk?
54134Do they?
54134Do you mean to insinuate that I was affianced to Mr. Conway during his absence, and threw him over for a wealthier rival, Miss Story?
54134Do you not remember the night you were taken ill, when you were half delirious, and he came to see you----"_ Did_ he come to see me?
54134Do you think I could do no good to those poor suffering victims who need gentle womanly tending so badly? 54134 Do you think it such a mad scheme?"
54134Gone-- where?
54134Grace here-- is it possible?
54134Grace, love, will you go to Willard? 54134 Gracie, is it possible that you were entirely delirious, and that you recollect nothing of your husband''s visit and your refusal to see him?"
54134Gracie, is it you?
54134Gracie, may I ask you one question?
54134Gracie, will you answer or not?
54134Gracie, will_ you_ raise me a little?
54134Guess again, Brownie?
54134Had we better send for her?
54134Hardly care to know-- now, really? 54134 Has all the far- famed Louisiana eloquence and fire, I presume?"
54134Have I not taken breakfast? 54134 Have you come to exult over my misery with the stereotyped''I told you so?''"
54134Have your callers been many to- day?
54134He is simply jealous for he is jealous,and where Shakespeare could not find a reason for a thing, how can I?
54134Her name? 54134 How can I, a woman, give you a better one?"
54134How can any of us-- the doctor, even-- tell what will be the result of the crisis? 54134 How did he look?"
54134I asked you is it to be or not to be?
54134I do n''t know-- is it?
54134I have not denied it-- have I?
54134I know, I know; but can not you understand, Lu, that this is remorse that has built its habitation over the grave of love? 54134 I?
54134Is Mrs. Conway at home, John?
54134Is it not? 54134 Is it worth the repetition?"
54134Is that final?
54134Is this true?
54134Is your mother quite well?
54134It is rather a nice little jaunt over there on the ferry- boat over the Elizabeth River-- don''t you think so?
54134Lulu, dear, unreasonable child that you are-- why do you think that I do not love you? 54134 Lulu, dearest, is there anything new under the sun?"
54134Lulu, silly child, why should I ask you to be my wife then? 54134 Lulu, what do you do for Christ?"
54134May I ask you one question?
54134May I think that you love me?
54134Meaning me?
54134Meaning the mammoth bouquet that came this morning with the captain''s compliments?
54134Miss Story, my husband-- he was unhurt, I trust?
54134Moping, are you?
54134Mother is well? 54134 Mrs. Conway is one of her friends, I believe?"
54134Mrs. Conway is well, I hope?
54134Mrs. Winans, are you mad?
54134My dear, will you see your husband? 54134 My dearest, what can I say more than I have already told you?
54134My eyesight not as strong as it once was?
54134My husband-- did you say that?
54134My love,he said, lifting the small, white hand, and toying with its jeweled fingers,"are you ill?
54134My son, what does it mean?
54134Norah,Mrs. Winans had said, a moment before,"it is the fifteenth day of November-- do you recollect?
54134Not Gracie-- Lulu?
54134Not at all; are you? 54134 Not in so many words, perhaps; but you refuse to be my wife-- if you loved me, how could you?"
54134Not so, Gracie, dear little one, he has come to sympathize with you-- won''t you let him come?
54134Nothing more-- was he not a lover?
54134Nothing, brother?
54134Nothing?
54134Now, is not that an exquisite set of bronzes?
54134Oh, Mr. Conway,she almost sobbed,"I have lost my way and can not get out of the capitol; will you set me right?"
54134Oh, indeed?
54134Paul, do you know that I am sleepy and tired, while you are keeping me up with such idle nonsense? 54134 Paul,"she ventured, suddenly,"even supposing that I had loved another before I ever met you, what difference can that make to you?
54134Right-- and what was I doing there? 54134 Seemed insane, you think?"
54134Seen whom?
54134She had lost a child, you said?
54134Since this is your decision,she answered, in calm tones, that belied her tortured heart,"would it not be as well to separate altogether?
54134Sit down, wo n''t you?
54134Smitten at sight-- eh, Clendenon?
54134Still sitting up, Grace?
54134Taking your assertion for granted,said Conway, coolly,"is that any reason why I should marry Miss Grey?"
54134Tell me,she said, desperately,"if he is not coming home, what is it?
54134That he-- what?
54134The law would take my baby from me?
54134The_ poor_ English lady; and why do you call her poor?
54134Then you do not care for him, Grace?
54134There seems to be no abatement of the fever?
54134To France?
54134To be shot down did you say, Miss Story? 54134 To drive-- where?"
54134Violets in the spring You gave me with the dew- tears in their eyes, I said, in faint surprise: Love do not tearful omens round them cling? 54134 Was I right?"
54134Was it? 54134 Was she in bad circumstances?"
54134Was that all he said?
54134Was that your only reason?
54134We may be friends at least?
54134Well, Brownie, what is it?
54134Well, dear?
54134Well, really, I wonder what has happened, and why she is here, and where she is staying? 54134 Well, you told him what?"
54134Well?
54134Well?
54134Well?
54134Well?
54134What did it mean?
54134What have you been doing all this time with yourself?
54134What hopes can there be that your misfortune can possibly destroy?
54134What is it, Paul?
54134What is your name, my girl?
54134What next?
54134What should I do without my baby, my darling? 54134 What was Bruce Conway''s love worth, I wonder?
54134What was he doing to- day? 54134 What was it I said?"
54134Where did you see him?
54134Where shall I turn?
54134Who has not kept some trifling thing, More prized than jewels rare, A faded flower, a broken ring, A tress of golden hair?
54134Who knows the Inscrutable design? 54134 Why Mrs. Winans, did n''t you know of the almost fatal termination of the duel?
54134Why did she tempt his weak mind with her wealth and pride? 54134 Why do n''t you see him, brother, and talk with him, and try to make him look at things fairly?
54134Why do n''t you talk to me?
54134Why have you kept it from me?
54134Why is it you wo n''t consent to have your mother send for her to come on while you are so sick? 54134 Why pursue a useless subject?
54134Why should you? 54134 Why, brother, did you love her, too?
54134Why, my baby, my baby, do you not know your own papa?
54134Why? 54134 Why?"
54134Will not I do as well as Grace?
54134Will you go to see our flowers?
54134Will you take this? 54134 Will you tell me the earthly name of the divinity who absorbs your flattering notice?"
54134Willard, are you here? 54134 Wo n''t you go and see?"
54134Yes, I do think so; had you a nice time?
54134Yes, it is grand, but-- but what did you say about the child of Senator Winans?
54134Yes, of course; that is the law of the land-- do you still desire to have a divorce?
54134You are nervous,she ventures to say, watching the still, impassive face,"will you take some valerian, wine, or something?"
54134You are not angry?
54134You are not going to send me to Europe without one flower, and so rich in floral blessings?
54134You do not suppose_ she_ has stolen the child?
54134You gave him my message? 54134 You have not been falling in love, have you?"
54134You have seen him sometimes in the whirl of gay society, Grace; did you ever notice in him any peculiar attachment for a woman?
54134You have? 54134 You recognized each other?"
54134You still insist on it, Paul?
54134You will marry her?
54134You will not be hard and unforgiving? 54134 You will not take much baggage, then, I suppose?"
54134You will recollect, I suppose, having signified to Senator Winans a wish to revisit the home of your childhood?
54134A faint sarcastic curve of her red lip betrayed her contempt before it breathed in her voice:"Is that all?"
54134A flash of hope in the fever- bright violet eyes, a hopeful ring in the trembling voice:"The baby-- he has brought the baby?"
54134A strange affair that of his child-- don''t you think so?"
54134After a moment,"Have you seen Lulu?"
54134After all, what is any man''s love worth, I wonder, that it should blight a woman''s life?"
54134After you tell her good- by, you will come back to me-- will you?"
54134And are we to separate at last for a woman''s sake?"
54134And is it possible that you knew nothing at all of the affair?"
54134And what if death should come?
54134And, Lulu, I think-- that is-- I should like to see_ her_ and say good- by-- if you think she would see any one?"
54134And,"his glance falling, hers following, on his empty sleeve,"what woman could I ask to give herself to half a man?"
54134Are you happier, Margaret, Than you might have been with me?
54134Are you quite_ certain_?"
54134Are you weary of me?"
54134Are your eyes strong enough, or shall I read it for you?"
54134Attend to the ladies, I mean?"
54134Be weeping o''er her darling''s grave?"
54134Bending to look into his face, she asks, softly:"Willard, are you easy now?"
54134Brownie, can not you guess why I have come here this evening?"
54134Brownie, let us make of that Continental trip a wedding tour?"
54134But are you not weary of looking at all these things?
54134But where does the line of man''s"little brief authority"cross its boundaries?
54134But why ask a question at all?
54134But why hasten her?
54134Can not you like me a little for his sake, and not worry yourself so much?"
54134Can this be so?
54134Can you bear joy as well?"
54134Can you bear to let me go alone?"
54134Can you ever forgive me?"
54134Can you read faces?"
54134Can you undertake to guess?"
54134Captain Clendenon, is it quite_ comme il faut_ for a lady to ask you to take a drive?
54134Captain Clendenon, will you turn the music for her?"
54134Clen, how long has it been-- when was she,"--a great gulp--"married?"
54134Conway fidgeted a little, but he answered nonchalantly enough:"Why do you ask?
54134Conway?"
54134Conway?"
54134Dear madam, will you kindly designate what are your plans for to- day, and command your humble servant?"
54134Dear, were you false or true?
54134Did I not tell you no?"
54134Did he think that I had no pride?
54134Did minutes or hours go by?
54134Did she talk with you much, and tell you the cause of her trouble?"
54134Did the future prove so?
54134Did you ever go to see her at all?
54134Did you like her-- did she like you?"
54134Do n''t you think so?"
54134Do n''t you want to see her?"
54134Do not all our dear"five hundred friends"say the same agreeable things when they congratulate us?
54134Do not all wedding breakfasts look and taste very nearly alike?
54134Do you know people say that you are a hero?"
54134Do you know where I was born?
54134Do you mean to say that you attach no value to fame-- fame that is won by good deeds?"
54134Do you not remember how ill I was in Washington with brain fever, and how Lulu would not let them shave off my long curls?
54134Do you think the sacrifice of my ease, and luxury, and comfort, would count as nothing with Christ?
54134Does her heart deceive her ears?
54134Even if I risked all to do the love- in- cottage romance, what have I left to offer Miss Grey along with my name and love?"
54134Fontenay, is it you?
54134Grace, can you not forgive me, can you not love me?
54134Gracie and I have but just come in and missed you-- why, how pale you are-- are you sick?"
54134Gracie, in that past time when you knew him-- before you ever knew me-- did you-- tell me truly, mind-- did you ever love him?"
54134Has he also given up the search?
54134Has his fickle love turned from her so soon to this"fair Cordelia?"
54134Have n''t I been talking about it ever since I came in here?
54134Have you fallen in love with her?"
54134He is so strong and healthy; but has the Senator written for you to come on?"
54134He saw and loved( what man could see her and not love her?)
54134He tosses his cigar away, and turning, asks, politely:"Are you out for a stroll?
54134He wants to bring her the joyful tidings in his arms, and who can blame him?
54134His voice rises higher, with a throb of pain in it:"''If ye forgive not men their trespasses how shall my Father which is in heaven forgive you?''
54134How can she break with the sounds of human grief the brooding peace that shines on the pathway of this departing spirit?
54134How could she tell him of that unsought, scorned, neglected love that had darkly shadowed the joy of her young girlhood?
54134How did her baggage go down?"
54134How else could I expect to be forgiven?"
54134How is it endurable when love is lost to us?"
54134How will you fill up the long months of her absence?"
54134Hysterical, I presume-- is that it?"
54134I asked you a simple question-- why do you try to evade it?"
54134I do not care to question you of your past; why should you question me of mine?
54134I know that I am unworthy of her-- pure, injured angel that she is-- but what can I do?
54134I may go to Memphis, then, if it so please me?"
54134I must seek diversion, oblivion!--what would you have me do?"
54134I only ask you,_ did_ you ever love Bruce Conway?"
54134I say, did I tell you, Brownie, or did you know that Winans is expected to reply to this speech?"
54134I wonder if Mrs. Winans knows-- how she feels about it?
54134I wonder why I have kept this foolish rhyme all these years?"
54134Is Mrs. Winans not a Virginian, then?"
54134Is he, too, coming home?"
54134Is he-- is he--_dead_?"
54134Is he-- my husband-- is he coming home-- to America?"
54134Is he?"
54134Is it not just as possible that a day may come when you shall bitterly regret that decision?
54134Is it not to be supposed that the bridal reception of the charming Miss Clendenon and the elegant Bruce Conway is_ comme il faut_?
54134Is it so, Captain Clendenon-- did you give your arm for his life?"
54134Is memory busy at her heart?
54134Is not the notice sufficiently flattering?"
54134Is she so very beautiful?
54134Is she so very beautiful?"
54134Is that satisfactory for the present?"
54134Is that what you mean, fair lady?"
54134Is that what you mean?
54134Is there any need to describe it all?
54134Is there anything I can do for you on the other side of the Atlantic-- any commission for Parisian finery-- any message for your husband?"
54134It is only like touching the spot where a pain has been now--''what deep wound ever healed without a scar?''
54134Lulu turned about in some surprise:"What do I do for Christ?"
54134Lulu, for whose sake?"
54134May I bring him in?
54134May I walk with you?"
54134Mother, why not have a nurse for me, and allow yourself and Mrs. Winans some rest?"
54134Mrs. Conway applauds everything, but I believe it is the fashion to do so-- is it not?
54134Mrs. Conway thinks it perfectly natural and right, so does Bruce, so do I-- and do not you think so, too, dear mother?
54134Mrs. Winans, have you heard nothing of the matter lately?"
54134My darling-- beloved, though so cruel to me-- how can I bear this and live?
54134Nursing in the hospital?"
54134Oh, Heaven, what has love ever brought me but agony?"
54134Oh, fathers and mothers, maneuvering sisters, aunts, and relatives, when the young birds are mating and building, why can not you let them alone?
54134Oh, mother, how could you go-- you, and brother Willie, and Grace-- all my dear ones-- when you knew what anguish it must cause me in my absence?
54134Oh, mother, what if one of you should be taken away?
54134Or Paul Winans''either, for that matter?
54134Other men would not have cared-- why should he?
54134Page 18, added missing close single quote after"I told you so?"
54134Page 193, added missing quote after"Why?
54134Page 31, added missing close single quote after"when I was a little child?"
54134Page 70, removed stray period and space before question mark in"her husband again?"
54134Page 79, changed?
54134Paul, can you believe these things if I tell you so on my very knees?"
54134Paul, was I to blame for that?"
54134RENUNCIATION"Am I mad that I should cherish that which bears but bitter fruit?
54134Shall we not go and find Lulu?"
54134She knew it would come, and now that it had, what could she say?
54134She rather likes him-- will marry him, perhaps, but then----""But then?"
54134She said, regretfully:"Is it not a wonder that I have never seen Mrs. Winans?
54134Soothed by the softly spoken words, she asks, timidly:"Tell me if I may go under your care?"
54134That is generous in him-- is it not, poor fellow?"
54134That sounds like a novel, does n''t it, Lulu?"
54134The purple twilight hid his face and expression, yet the captain persevered:"Yet you love her?"
54134The question is, did they hear me, or were they all asleep?
54134This ruby necklace, set in gold and pearls, is from Mrs. Conway----""And this?"
54134Was he looking for his aunt?
54134Was it not hard to be taken away from this bright world so young?"
54134Was it true?
54134Was it?
54134Was she a creature of this lower earth?
54134Was she going to faint?
54134Well, Miss Annie, you preside over the ladies''rooms on this floor?
54134Well, perhaps it is-- yet----""Yet what?"
54134Well, what is the matter with that?
54134What are your favorites?
54134What can you be thinking of, Grace?
54134What did he say?"
54134What discordance will not a mother endure and call it music for the baby''s sake?
54134What duel?"
54134What had he done?
54134What harm was there in that dreamy passion that had cast its glamour over a few months of her girlhood?
54134What have_ you_ been doing secluded here in your quiet home, little saint?"
54134What is it worth?
54134What is it-- what has troubled you?"
54134What is she like?"
54134What is there in the fragrance of a flower that can pierce one deeper than a sword- thrust with the sweet- bitterness of memory?
54134What kinship does it bear to the roses that blossomed in other days, in other hands that we have loved?
54134What mystery is this you are trying to withhold from me?
54134What possesses you to go wandering off to Europe in this mad fashion?"
54134What then?"
54134When do you propose to leave Washington?"
54134When we feel that earth offers no consolation, where can we look but to heaven?
54134Where was he?
54134Who and what is he?"
54134Who can tell?
54134Who is to blame?
54134Why can not I go to Washington, if I choose, for a few days anyhow?
54134Why can not you give me the solace of your company and affection for my few remaining years?"
54134Why did I go in defiance of his will?
54134Why did I go to Washington?
54134Why did n''t he marry her fust, and take her''long wid him to that furrin parts?
54134Why did she continually thwart all his best impulses?"
54134Why did they not tell me of it long ago?
54134Why do n''t you ask_ her_ name; if she is pretty; if she is in the''set;''if she is rich; and so on,_ ad infinitum_?"
54134Why do you ask?"
54134Why had he come there in his proud, strong manhood and beauty, and Bruce Conway lying up stairs like_ that_?
54134Why have I not torn this out long ago?
54134Why how old are you-- sixteen?"
54134Why is it?
54134Why let me love you so?
54134Why need he have gone back to the forbidden subject?
54134Why need they have spoken?
54134Why will you persist in making us both unhappy?"
54134Why, what can you mean?"
54134Will wedding cards and the''fair Cordelia''bear you company?"
54134Will you be glad, dear?"
54134Will you come up into my boudoir, where we can have a quiet chat to ourselves, before your many friends claim your attention?"
54134Will you explain yourself?
54134Will you give her Stella De Vere''s love, and tell her I will come and see her if she will let me?"
54134Will you not go up and see her?--or shall I bring her down?"
54134Will you pardon me if I confess to an interest in her that lends me to inquire frankly if you think you are doing her justice?"
54134Will you see him?"
54134Wo n''t you go up to your old room and lie down to rest?"
54134Wo n''t you have it sent up here to you?"
54134Would Grace have done it had he tried to win her?
54134Would any woman have loved him as well with his one arm as with two?
54134Would not your freedom be better insured by a complete divorce from one who has so deeply deceived you that it seems impossible to trust her again?
54134You do love me-- you will be my wife?"
54134You have heard of the fever that desolated Norfolk and Portsmouth in 1855?
54134You remember his old feud with Bruce, dear mother?
54134You said: But they were sun- kissed, child, what then?
54134You were half delirious, and you fancied your husband had hidden away the child to worry you, and you said----""I said-- oh, what did I say, Lulu?"
54134You will certainly stay to luncheon, will you not?"
54134You wo n''t tell Mrs. Winans?
54134You''members of Julie, de chambermaid?"
54134_ If_ he came, as Lulu had asked her,_ would_ she be glad?
54134_ What is a Novel Worth?_ For years Novels and Magazines have been sold at prices ranging from 25 to 50 Cents.
54134_ Why_ did they believe me?
54134_ Would_ he come?
54134after"that new song I sent you yesterday?"
54134ah, why?"
54134ah, why?"
54134and was she alone?
54134breathed Lulu,"and who broke it to_ her_--the wretched mother?"
54134but,"a gleam of triumph lightening under her black lashes,"you forget that I have my husband''s consent to visit Memphis?
54134dearest, where?"
54134he breathed, in tones of concentrated passion,"Grace Winans, are you as false as this?"
54134is not nine miles a long distance to drive this warm day?"
54134she cries, in a horrified tone,"what is that?"
54134since when has my little Brownie learned to be sarcastic?"
54134then I shall look for Norah, to- morrow-- you have Norah with you?"
54134to?
54134what can you mean?"
54134what did Mrs. Conway say when you told her?"
54134what have I done?"
54134what have you done?"
54134what matter?
54134what_ did_ you want me to do?"
54134why have we always"done that which we ought not to have done?"
41355''How much do you get?'' 41355 A guilty conscience about what, my child?
41355Ai n''t you ashamed to ask me to speak plainly? 41355 Allow me to ask, sir, are you a candidate?"
41355Am I? 41355 Am I?
41355An''do ye know, ma''am, what the little crater did to me to- day?
41355And do you charge it as a fault in my character?
41355And do you know what the red fluid was?
41355And how will the war end?
41355And what then? 41355 And what would be the good of it if we should get into those forms?"
41355And where is Miss Ravenel?
41355And which do you think would beat?
41355And you do n''t want a wedding tour?
41355And you have not broached it to her?
41355Are all the people here?
41355Are there any wounded?
41355Are there?
41355Are they not horrible, these New England isms? 41355 Are you a gymnast, Colonel?"
41355Are you as much scared at the general as your officers are at you?
41355Are you going, papa?
41355Are you going?
41355Are you hurt, Captain?
41355Are you hurt? 41355 Are you in search of a new planet?"
41355Are you not ashamed,she said,"to let me catch you tyrannizing over my native city?"
41355Are you not going to ask in our colored friends?
41355Are you positively serious in making me that proposition?
41355Are you sure you can hold him? 41355 Are you-- is it possible!--are you related to Doctor Edward Colburne of this place who died fourteen or fifteen years ago?"
41355Aurait il découvert,she continued to meditate;"ce petit liaison de monsieur le colonel?
41355But I can not go alone, you perceive; do you not?
41355But how are_ you_? 41355 But how are_ you_?"
41355But how can this fellow have such a political influence?
41355But how if the superintendency ca n''t be had without the colonelcy?
41355But how shall we become triangular, or circular, or star- shaped, or cruciform?
41355But how to light it? 41355 But how will the South stand a contest of five or six years?"
41355But if you are a staff- officer and on detached service?
41355But is it exactly nice to stay forever in a hotel? 41355 But is it not a very wicked city?"
41355But is there no list of killed and wounded? 41355 But suppose Ravvie had become really sick?"
41355But what are you all about?
41355But what the---- do you want to whitewash him for? 41355 But what will become of you?
41355But why did n''t Major Rathbun have him tried for his old offences? 41355 But why did you live in Louisiana if it was such a Sodom, papa?"
41355But why not have some other material?
41355But why?--_why?_ Perhaps he can explain it. 41355 But, papa,"she presently inquired,"will this support you as well as the hospital?"
41355Ca n''t we do it, or some of it, for him?
41355Ca n''t you telegraph for your trunk?
41355Can I do any thing for you, Captain? 41355 Can I see the baby?"
41355Can you afford it, my dear?
41355Cap, what shall I do?
41355Captain Colburne,he said on another occasion,"how about your property returns?
41355Colonel, do you think we shall go into quarters?
41355Colonel, would n''t you like to go on a pic- nic?
41355Could a fellow smoke?
41355Did n''t the assault succeed?
41355Did n''t they speak to you, papa?
41355Did you give it into her own hands?
41355Did you see it yourself, Lieutenant?
41355Do n''t you find it hot?
41355Do n''t you know that I should be ashamed to look her in the face?
41355Do n''t you perceive that I lose my Governorship?
41355Do n''t you see that these were not built by New Bostonians?
41355Do n''t you see them on the right of your position?
41355Do you anticipate such immediate danger?
41355Do you ask for the sake of argument, or for information?
41355Do you know who the offender is?
41355Do you know,she continued, after a scarcely perceptible hesitation,"that I am not so fond of flowers as I was once?
41355Do you know?
41355Do you really think that you are going to New Orleans?
41355Do you suppose that he does n''t like to talk about Colonel Carter? 41355 Do you suppose, Colonel, that the rebels can resist for five or six years?"
41355Do you think I am getting musty?
41355Do you think I am in my dotage?
41355Do you think it best?
41355Do you think peace is proclaimed?
41355Do you think you see people enough?
41355Do you want a chance to domineer over him?
41355Do you want any one, Colonel?
41355Do you want to go back to New Orleans?
41355Do you? 41355 Doctor, have you not thought it odd sometimes that I never consult you professionally?"
41355Doctor, is n''t he an uncommonly handsome child?
41355Does he look like his grandfather?
41355General, have you thought of the sacrifice of Jesus Christ?
41355Going!--Oh, going where?
41355Has he been sick?
41355Have you any idea who it was?
41355Have you been fighting, too? 41355 Have you seen him?"
41355Havn''t_ we_ lost property?
41355How are the saddle- pockets, Cato?
41355How can I tell, my dear? 41355 How can you love poetry without loving flowers?"
41355How could she choose such a husband, so old, so worldly, so immoral? 41355 How could you stay out so?
41355How did he discover it?
41355How do you feel, General?
41355How healthy, and strong, and big he is?
41355How is he?
41355How is my boy Jerry? 41355 How many?"
41355How so? 41355 How''s this?"
41355How_ can_ you say so?
41355I dare say his hair will protect him; wo n''t it?
41355I say, Cap, if the enemy are in force, what are we to do?
41355I wonder where Lieutenant- Colonel Carter is?
41355If you find yourself near a post- office you will let us know it, wo n''t you?
41355Intelligent? 41355 Is Captain Colburne unhurt?"
41355Is Miss Ravenel going?
41355Is Mrs. Carter sheltered?
41355Is he? 41355 Is he?"
41355Is it possible that I have been unjust?
41355Is it possible?
41355Is it really over?
41355Is my hamper ready?
41355Is n''t he pretty?
41355Is n''t he sweet?
41355Is n''t he sweet?
41355Is that all you wear in this season?
41355Is that you, Doctor?
41355Is that your style of conducting a court- martial? 41355 Is the Major- General pleasant?"
41355Is there no other force about here?
41355It does n''t look very bad, does it?
41355It must be,answered Lillie as he went out; and then thought with a blush,"Will papa laugh at me if I am mistaken?"
41355May I ask what part of the South you have resided in?
41355May I write to you when I am away?
41355Men of the world, are they? 41355 Miss Ravenel, have you any messages for New Orleans?"
41355Mr. Walker, if it is sure to pay so well, why do n''t you go in alone?
41355Must we leave our plantation, then?
41355My dear fellow, why wo n''t you undress and go to bed? 41355 My dear, why do you distress yourself so?
41355My dear,_ have_ you gone back to your babyhood? 41355 Nobody else, papa?"
41355Not aware of it? 41355 Not even if I would promise to study mineralogy also?"
41355Now then, will you promise to take a bath and go regularly to bed as soon as I leave you?
41355Oh, what shall I do without you?
41355Oh, where have you been? 41355 Oh, you_ will_ inquire, papa?"
41355On which side, Colonel Carter?
41355Papa, are we going to stay in New Boston forever?
41355Papa, do you believe that Mouton has fifteen thousand men? 41355 Papa, have you been in the parlor this morning?"
41355Pic- nic?--political thing? 41355 Shall I go for help, Captain?"
41355Shall I send him to you to implore your consent?
41355Shall you? 41355 Sick, sir?
41355Sir?
41355So officers can be detached for such purposes? 41355 So we shall beat them?"
41355Tell me, Mrs. Carter,he resumed,"what is it that Mr. Whitewood is to keep secret?"
41355Then how can you advise my father to go into a thing which you call_ vin ordinaire_?
41355Then may he not write to me?
41355Then why did you call him a hollyhock?
41355Then why do you introduce the subject?
41355Violence? 41355 Well, Mr. Brayton, what was the cause of the firing?"
41355Well, how are you?
41355Well, what will you have for dinner? 41355 Well; what is it?"
41355Were you absolutely exiled, sir?
41355Were you acquainted with the McAllisters?
41355Were you in danger of violence before you left New Orleans?
41355Whar my ole man?
41355What are you doing up here?
41355What are you going to call him?
41355What are you lying whimpering there for?
41355What can I do for you?
41355What did I tell you?
41355What did he have to say?
41355What did that mean? 41355 What do you know about my condition?"
41355What do you mean by such hair as that, sir?
41355What do you suppose the old army will think of the negro regiment plan?
41355What do you talk about your tombstone for? 41355 What do you think?
41355What for? 41355 What good be they?"
41355What if he_ would_ marry some one else?--Is it not a humiliating confession?--Do you know what is left to a woman then? 41355 What in God''s name shall I do?"
41355What in Heaven''s name did you let her in here for?
41355What is it?
41355What is it?
41355What is the matter with Mauma Major?
41355What is the matter, my darling?
41355What is the matter?
41355What is the matter?
41355What is the matter?
41355What is the situation?
41355What is the wooden- spoon?
41355What makes you sad? 41355 What makes you voyage north?"
41355What shall I do with myself?
41355What shall we do?
41355What would Mrs. Carter say to it?
41355What''s a gwine to come of you an''Miss Lillie?
41355What-- how did she look?
41355When does your father return?
41355When will you come back?
41355When would Mr. Carter be able to visit them?
41355When?
41355Where are all these fellows?
41355Where are we to live?
41355Where are you going?
41355Where is Doctor Elderkin''s?
41355Where is Mrs. Carter, aunty?
41355Where is the company, Lieutenant?
41355Where''s Gazaway? 41355 Which do you find the most agreeable,"she asked,"the white people of New Orleans, or the brown?"
41355Who are the other field officers?
41355Who are they?
41355Who did I see out? 41355 Who did you see in the streets?
41355Who did you see out, papa?
41355Who ever heard of using silk for mourning?
41355Who is that?
41355Who is to inform? 41355 Who was the man?"
41355Whom did you see there?
41355Why are you so sad?
41355Why ca n''t she be satisfied with loving me?
41355Why ca n''t she continue to live with me?
41355Why did n''t you tell me this before?
41355Why did n''t you write to us that you were sick?
41355Why do n''t you do something?
41355Why do n''t you marry?
41355Why do n''t you?
41355Why not follow it up? 41355 Why not have a private sale?"
41355Why not make some of your men do it?
41355Why not use white silk, or something?
41355Why not? 41355 Why not?
41355Why not?
41355Why slightly? 41355 Why so?"
41355Why were you not frank with me,_ mon ami_? 41355 Why, Ravenel;--didn''t you know?"
41355Why? 41355 Why?
41355Will they all get on board this boat?
41355Will you come back every five minutes and let me see you?
41355Will you promise not to get hurt?
41355Will you smoke?
41355Will you? 41355 Will you?
41355Would you accept it for yourself?
41355Would you be good enough to lend me your gun for a few moments?
41355Wound? 41355 You are not very angry with me?"
41355You do n''t mean that there''s no hope for him?
41355You have taken the oath of allegiance-- haven''t you?
41355_ Would_ you be so kind?
41355''But,''said I,''do n''t you see that you spoil my glory?
41355''How can I punish my men,''says the Captain,''for doing what I do myself?''
41355( By the way, did I tell you that I am a graduate of Columbia College?)
41355--Can you imagine anything more astoundingly wicked than such a petition?
41355--Shortly afterward she asked,"How soon will he talk?"
41355After a moment''s hesitation he added anxiously,"Do you remember your invitation to me?"
41355All in running order?"
41355Am I intruding?"
41355And give up your hospital?"
41355And how is Mrs. Carter?
41355And how soon do you think I will get a letter?"
41355And if this were so, if an army of several thousand Texan riflemen occupied this strong position, how should it be carried?
41355And then, as she thought of his perfections, she went tremblingly back to the inquiry, Did he love her?
41355And what did he say?"
41355And, if the civil office can be founded, you will accept it; is it not so?"
41355Any thing on the bulletin- board?"
41355Are you a Louisianian?"
41355Are you aware, Captain, that a rifle has been fired this morning, outside the camps, in violation of general orders?"
41355Are you going to make New Boston a permanent place of residence?"
41355Are you interested in these matters?
41355At New Orleans?"
41355At another time it was,"Papa, did Mr. Carter ever tell you about his first campaign against the Indians?"
41355At the age of seven she had propounded the question,"Mamma, why do n''t they make papa President of the United States?"
41355At times she defended herself, asking the honest and rational question, How could she help loving this man?
41355Besides,--shall I avow it?--what if I can not marry the man of my choice?"
41355Boat it, eh?
41355Brayton?"
41355But Lillie soon asked him,"What is the matter with you, papa?"
41355But are there not exceptions to all rules, even moral ones?
41355But do you suppose that we in these times ever fight hand to hand?
41355But for what regiment?
41355But how are we to live in the house without money?"
41355But was she lost?
41355But what are we to do about punishing the masses?
41355But what can a woman do?
41355But what right have we to demand that we shall be happy?
41355But what to do?
41355But what was I to do?
41355But what was even this to that other question of union or separation for life?
41355But when her father came in from a walk, it was,"Papa, did you see Mr. Carter anywhere?
41355But why should Mr. Colburne win the kind regards of Miss Ravenel?
41355But would you have the kindness to inquire whether this superintendency could not be established without attaching to it the military position?"
41355But, by the way, how did this fellow get outside your camp- guard with his gun?
41355By ANTHONY TROLLOPE, Author of"Can You Forgive Her?"
41355By the way, did I mention to you that I am a graduate of Columbia College in New York City?
41355By the way, he was perfectly well when you saw him, was n''t he?"
41355By the way, how are you?
41355By the way, it is n''t Sunday, is it?
41355By the way, what are the names of the boats?
41355By the way, who was the fellow who was shot?"
41355Ca n''t you see it?
41355Ca n''t you understand it?
41355Colburne bade them good evening, but on reaching the door stopped and said,"Do you feel safe here?"
41355Colburne nodded, smiled and stopped, saying,"Can I do anything for you?"
41355Colburne rose and called out,"Do you surrender?"
41355Colburne?"
41355Colburne?"
41355Colonel, is that perfectly to your satisfaction?"
41355Could I not be made superintendent of negro labor without being burdened with the military dignity?
41355Could it be Captain Colburne?
41355Could it be that she would come to forgive that man?
41355D.?"
41355Did Bull Run give you such an opinion of the superior fighting qualities of the southerners?"
41355Did he see that tent made out of a blanket?
41355Did n''t you hear any thing?"
41355Did n''t you like them?
41355Did n''t you see any body?
41355Did they see the child in the carriage?"
41355Did you know that I was going on this boat?
41355Did you never read of Austerlitz and Jena and Waterloo?
41355Did you say forty?"
41355Did you thank the people?
41355Do n''t you believe in State rights, Mr. Colburne?
41355Do n''t you know that you are almost delirious on this subject?"
41355Do n''t you know that you are responsible for the firing of this rifle?"
41355Do n''t you like it?"
41355Do n''t you remember the red fluid?"
41355Do n''t you see the resemblance?"
41355Do n''t you take part in it?"
41355Do n''t you think so, sir?--Where was I?
41355Do n''t you think that the fighting is over?"
41355Do n''t you, sir?"
41355Do n''t you?"
41355Do they ever dissect babies?"
41355Do they understand our capacities, duties and destinies?
41355Do you actually want to have me?"
41355Do you always do it this way in New Boston?
41355Do you believe that our loss will be very heavy?
41355Do you believe that our side"( she could call it_ our_ side now)"will be beaten?
41355Do you believe that there will be a great battle?
41355Do you call that a suitable punishment?
41355Do you compare him to a vegetable?"
41355Do you not pity me?
41355Do you recollect how I have laughed about Elderkin for this same trick?
41355Do you see that angle?
41355Do you suppose I am recruiting for rebel regiments?"
41355Do you think I an going to let myself be disgraced?
41355Doctor, will you do it?"
41355Does anybody remember the dinner speeches on board of Sir Charles Napier''s flagship, just before the Baltic fleet set out for Cronstadt?
41355Does n''t it look reproachfully clean compared with me?
41355Ever at Cairo?
41355Everybody says poky; and it is real poky in you to pretend not to understand it; do n''t you think so yourself now?
41355Finally, where else in the United States should we find a prettier or pleasanter little city?"
41355For a moment Carter''s deep voice returned to him, as, fixing his stern eyes on the chaplain, he answered,"Do n''t bother!--where is the brigade?"
41355From this distance he called out, ironically,"I say, Yank, have you heard from Brashear City?"
41355Had Whitewood succeeded, or failed, or not tried?
41355Had he been too hasty in dragging her away from New Orleans, and giving up the moderate salary which was so necessary to them both?
41355Had he lost his place at the hospital?
41355Had he offended Mrs. Carter?
41355Had n''t we better look up a doctor''s shop?
41355Had they gone to Canada or Europe to escape the jealous and exacting loyalty of New England?
41355Has our loss been heavy?
41355Have n''t you already inquired?
41355Have you any spare arms?"
41355Have you failed in getting your promotion?
41355Have you had your breakfast?"
41355Have you lost your memory?"
41355Have you recovered from your wound?"
41355He almost had a return of his vexation when Lillie commenced upon him about her husband, asking,"Is n''t it time to hear, papa?
41355He could live; but could he marry?
41355He wants to do right, but how is he to know what is right?
41355Here, where''s that Louisianny Lieutenant?
41355His room must be on the sunny side, papa-- hear?"
41355How came you to escape?
41355How can you say that to me, a native of it?"
41355How can you wonder, papa, that I allow myself to look down on them a little?"
41355How could I help myself?
41355How could I?
41355How could a mere Major ever hope to go before the people successfully as a candidate for Congress?
41355How could he answer any one of these horrible questions?
41355How could they believe in the things themselves?
41355How could you be so silly?"
41355How could you come away?"
41355How could you do it?
41355How do you go?"
41355How is Mrs. Carter, and the little boy?"
41355How is that?"
41355How is that?"
41355How should she behave under these trying circumstances?
41355I have too much delicacy to ask one of those young ones to stroll off with me in the bushes.--Won''t you have a segar?
41355I turned to the gentleman who shared my seat and said,''Sir, will you have the goodness to tell me where this train is going?''
41355If ever you go out into the world alone, what will become of you?
41355If he would go, it was,"When will you come back?"
41355If it should be so that she had given him cause of anger, how could she make peace with him without demeaning herself?
41355If she were his wife, how could he support her?
41355If the race is benefited by it, why not the individual?
41355Is he as sick as he was at Donnelsonville?
41355Is he?"
41355Is it not utterly amazing?
41355Is it possible?
41355Is it the greater proportion of native blood which causes the cowardice?''
41355Is n''t it a beautiful story?"
41355Is n''t it clear that Pompey''s men began to run away when they got within about ten feet of Cæsar''s?"
41355Is n''t it curious how the poor fellows will be around on their pins, and in their clothes till they die?
41355Is not this the true secret of life?"
41355Is that fighting?
41355Is there anything strange in a man of forty being agreeable?
41355It is perfectly honorable, is it?"
41355It was,"Papa, do you think there will be an active campaign this summer?
41355It was,"Papa, how can the Government be so stupid as to neglect men who know their duties?
41355It''s pretty justice, is n''t it?"
41355Jackson?"
41355Lapped in sweet influences of peace all her loving life, why must she be called to death amid the clamor of murderous contests?
41355Larue?"
41355Lieutenant-- I beg your pardon-- I see you are wounded-- I hope you''re not much hurt, sir-- but have you a drop of the article about the battery?
41355Lillie would not have refused him: it would not have been in the nature of woman: what girl would put off a lover who was going to the battle- field?
41355May I ask you to pledge your word?"
41355May it not have been the chaos(_ vide_ Milton) through which Satan floundered?
41355Meanwhile how about Mrs. Larue?
41355Might I spake t''ye?"
41355Moreover, Colburne asked himself, what right had he to talk if he did not fight?
41355Mr. Colburne, do n''t you think he is too bad?
41355Mr. Van Zandt, did you pass the order to every regiment last evening?"
41355My dear, what did you ever mean by saying that you are not good enough for me?
41355No crowd collected; the men were hardened to such tragedies; four or five bore the victim away; the rest asked,"Who is it?"
41355Not aware of such a deficiency of equipment in your own regiment?"
41355Now could not that point be evaded?
41355Now he is n''t very bad; is he?
41355Now how the devil can these old girls, who have lived long enough to be able to put two and two together, be so dem''d inconsistent?
41355Now what is the punishment that you have allotted to him?
41355Now who will sacrifice himself for his country?
41355Now who would suppose that the Doctor had in his mind all the while a moral lecture to Colburne?
41355Now why was not the young man informed of the real state of affairs in the family?
41355Oh, I though you would come an hour ago?"
41355Oh, Miss Ravenel, I was about to ask you, did you know the Slidells?"
41355Once, after a few moments of silence and revery, she said with an air of earnest feeling,"Is it not a horrible fate for a woman-- solitude?
41355Or do they look upon us from what might be called a pismire point of view?"
41355Papa, do n''t you suppose that Mr. Carter will be allowed to keep his brigade at Thibodeaux?"
41355Promise me that; wo n''t you?"
41355Said I,''What are you doing?''"
41355Shall I send him to the rear?"
41355Should he destroy the letter?
41355Should he give it to Mrs. Larue and crush her?
41355Should he send it to Carter?
41355Should he show it to Lillie?
41355So little?
41355So old Whitewood is no longer the exact model of all the New Bostonians?"
41355So why not give up your mayoralty and go in for the autumn campaign?
41355So you like people who go after you?
41355Still, he looked quite nervous and apprehensive as he said,"What is it, my child?"
41355Suppose General Banks attacks Port Hudson, wo n''t he be obliged to leave Colonel Carter to defend the Lafourche Interior?
41355Suppose I had had the misfortune of being born in the Isle of Pines; would you have me therefore be the apologist of piracy?
41355Suppose the brigade is ordered into the field, will it not, being the best brigade, be always kept in reserve, out of the range of fire?"
41355Suppose the snakes persisted in going about in their last year''s skins?
41355That''s something like hanging homely old women for witches.--By the way, how are the Allstons?
41355The cry of his mother''s heart was,"My son, how can I let thee go?"
41355The question comes up,''Which shall we hang, and which shall we pardon?''
41355Then followed in rapid succession,"Suppose the brigade leaves Thibodeaux, where will it go to?
41355Then, after a moment''s hesitation,"When did you come in?"
41355They ai n''t going to attack the fort, be they?"
41355They are very charming, are they not?"
41355This is the ordinary sort of thing, at least in New Boston:--_ Lady._( smiling) Did you go out yesterday?
41355To keep out of the fighting?"
41355Was Lillie to be married to young Whitewood, or some other conveniently propinquitous admirer?
41355Was it treasonable indifference, or levity, or the sublimity of modesty?
41355Was n''t it capital?
41355Was n''t the Hartford Convention held in New England?"
41355Was she not queen and goddess, Semiramis and Juno?
41355Was she to be ignored, cut, satirized, because she was her father''s daughter?
41355Was she unhappy in her marriage, or widowed, or dead?
41355Was that positively all that you heard?
41355Was this the reward that her love for her native city, her defence of Louisiana in the midst of Yankee- land, had deserved?
41355We ca n''t go back to New Orleans at present; and where else should we go?
41355We gained a victory there; we took an important step towards the end of the Rebellion; but at what cost, through what means, and by whose merit?
41355We owe you so much!--Isn''t it strange that I should be saying such things to you?
41355Well, are they?
41355Well, but what are the probabilities?"
41355Were the Ravenels sick or dead?
41355Were they offended at something which he had written?
41355What are the probabilities?"
41355What are you so patient for?"
41355What business had she to let herself be circumscribed by the limits of such a diminutive creature?
41355What can an army officer know about steam engines or hulls?"
41355What can he do?
41355What could a fellow do, he asked, when a woman would persist in flinging herself at his head?
41355What could it be about?
41355What could the unfortunate man do but be grateful?
41355What did he mean by leaving her alone so, without anybody to speak a word to?
41355What do you do here?
41355What do you say to it now?
41355What do you think are the probabilities?
41355What do you think of that?"
41355What do you think, papa?
41355What do you think?
41355What does a soldier want of black cravats and daguerreotypes and diaries and Testaments?"
41355What does a woman need more?
41355What else should he do?
41355What for?
41355What harm would he choose to do?"
41355What has happened?"
41355What has kept you so long?
41355What have you sacrificed?
41355What if he should get the active brigade?
41355What is the earliest time that I can call without inconveniencing you?"
41355What is the usual proportion of killed in a battle?
41355What is there to save you from suicide but old- rye?
41355What is your opinion of female doctors?"
41355What is your opinion, sir?"
41355What object had she in keeping him at home and out of danger?
41355What other quality, physical or moral, have we that could take the place of this beneficently despotic instinct?
41355What profession may I ask?"
41355What right had Fate to put such questions to him?
41355What right had the fellow to make the movements and inclinations of that woman''s soul an object of curiosity and a topic of conversation?
41355What right had you to be a blonde?"
41355What right has Captain Colburne to demand roses or potatoes of land which has been sown for centuries with nothing but thistles?
41355What the devil are you staying at home for when the whole nation is arming, or will soon have to arm?"
41355What was the use?"
41355What will my share be?"
41355When do you suppose the battle will happen?
41355When he went out it was,"Where are you going?
41355When shall we get the first news?
41355When shall we get the particulars?"
41355When will you come back?"
41355When you said pic- nic, how could I suppose that it was a Sabbath- school excursion?
41355Where did they come from, and where were they going, and what would be the result?
41355Where is he?"
41355Where''s the heroic Major of the Tenth?
41355Where?"
41355Where_ you_ from?"
41355Which is the easiest?
41355Which is the greater of the two crimes?
41355While Colburne was feeling so strongly with regard to Lillie, could she not devote a sentiment to him?
41355Whitewood?"
41355Who else is there in all New Orleans?"
41355Who the devil is Darwin?
41355Who will make the niggers in uniform respectable?
41355Why did I let her go on that silly expedition?
41355Why did he leave me so in the dark?"
41355Why did he not act in accordance with these truly chivalrous sentiments?
41355Why did n''t he tell me that he was going?
41355Why did n''t you ask him to repeat it?"
41355Why do n''t business men take advantage of the opportunity?"
41355Why do n''t they demand five hundred?
41355Why do n''t you come and do something?
41355Why do n''t you do your office on the Lieutenant- Colonel?"
41355Why do n''t you go into the army?
41355Why is it that these grown women are so fond of the society of these students?
41355Why not fall into one of the new regiments which his gallant little State was organizing to continue the struggle?
41355Why not?
41355Why should he not relate it to a stranger who was evidently capable of sympathising with those sentiments and appreciating those convictions?
41355Why then did not Colburne decline the invitation?
41355Why then should I strain my conscience by asserting broadly and positively that Miss Ravenel was a first class beauty?
41355Why will you all be so square?"
41355Why will you do it?
41355Why, Victorine, where can papa be?"
41355Why, sir, do you fully realize what it is to strike an officer, and especially an officer on duty?
41355Why, where was Patterson?"
41355Why-- Governor-- are you aware-- are you perfectly aware why he left the regiment?"
41355Will the General dare to found such an office, and set aside public money for its salary?
41355Will you accept it?"
41355Will you be careful of yourself?
41355Will you come back?
41355Will you do it?"
41355Will you ever come back?
41355Will you go with me?"
41355Will you have it?"
41355Will you instruct me?"
41355Will you not be persuaded?
41355Will you not stop where you are?"
41355Will you take a glass of brandy?
41355Would n''t I knock his head off?
41355Would n''t you stand by Barataria in any and every case?"
41355Would she ever forgive him, and take him back to her heart?
41355Would you, sir, have the goodness to load it for me?"
41355Yes, he would always love her-- and she would always, always, always love him; and what more was there to desire?
41355You are a college man, ai nt you?
41355You are certain that it is our Captain Colburne?"
41355You are not going to the field?"
41355You did n''t suppose they would maltreat a brother West Pointer, did you?"
41355You do n''t know?
41355You do n''t understand that?
41355You must n''t leave me; it''s for your own good-- hear?
41355You must n''t trust yourself to anybody else-- hear?"
41355You wo n''t demand it of me, will you?"
41355You wo n''t get killed, will you?
41355You wo n''t?
41355You''re a college man, ai nt you?
41355You''ve heard of the girl he calls his cousin?
41355Young lady as blooming and blushing as ever?
41355_ Could_ I persuade you to forget the dear departed?''"
41355_ Had_ she offended him by her manner, or by what she had said, or failed to say?
41355_ Is_ the former a crime?
41355_ Lady._ Many people in the streets?
41355_ Lady._ Where?
41355_ Sullivan._ Are ye dead, Sweeney?
41355_ Sullivan._ Did ye see that dead rebel with his oye out?
41355_ Why_ do you hate him so?"
41355and when he returned it was,"Where have you been?"
41355and"What did he say?"
41355and"Who did you see?"
41355do n''t you suppose he had a soul?"
41355how are you?
41355how can I let you go?"
41355how long have you been in this way?"
41355how_ are_ you, my old boy?"
41355paid you adieux?"
41355that you, Cap?
41355to the same Gazaway?
41355what do you suppose your duties are?"
41355what is it?"
41355who comes there?"
41355why has he gone?
41355will he?"
41355you belong to the Tenth?"
41355you never saw it?"
38805Did he call on God or Jesus Christ, asking either of them to forgive his sins, or did he curse them or either of them?
38805My God, my God, why hast thou for-saken me?"
38805To whatpurpose is the multitude of your sacrifices unto me?
38805What is it?
38805When ye come to appear before me, who hath re-quired this at your hand?"
38805Where did he get it? 38805 ''_ Why did you not publish that? 38805 --of his brother ministers? 38805 158 Can he do anything of that nature? 38805 174 The Christian now asks of the atheist: Where is your asylum, where is your hospital, where is your university? 38805 217 Are stories like this calculated to make soldiers merciful? 38805 280 Is such a vision a prophecy? 38805 352 Why was not the mind of each man so made that every religious truth necessary to his salvation was an axiom? 38805 405 Would not a man who had been raised from the dead naturally be an object of considerable interest, especially to his friends and acquaintances? 38805 482 Did the State of New York feel indebted to a drunken beast, and confer upon Thomas Paine an estate of several hundred acres? 38805 85 Do you think that laymen have the same right as ministers to examine the Scriptures? 38805 About how long did God continue to pay particular attention to his children in this world? 38805 After some solicitation on my part he agreed to do so? 38805 After these sinners have died, and been sent to hell, will the Christians in heaven then pity them? 38805 Again I ask, in what respect? 38805 Allow me to ask again, do you believe? 38805 And if he does not believe it, and ad- mits that he does not believe it, then his honesty will not save him? 38805 And suppose that the islander should honestly reject the true religion? 38805 And suppose, further, that the man honestly believed that the efficacy of the sacrifice depended largely on the size of the toad? 38805 And the Lord saidunto him: Wherewith?
38805And what is better calculated to increase the happiness of mankind than to know that the doctrine of eternal pain is infinitely and absurdly false?
38805And why does one who had the power miraculously to feed thousands, allow millions to die for want of food?
38805Are all parts of the inspired books equally true?
38805Are any miracles performed now?
38805Are people to be saved or lost on the reputation of Eusebius?
38805Are we absolutely certain that he ever lived?
38805Are we absolutely sure who wrote them?
38805Are we certain that some of the books that were thrown out were not inspired?
38805Are we indebted for his kindness to the flesh that clothed his spirit?
38805Are we not commanded to love our enemies?
38805Are we under obligation to render good for evil, and to"pray for those who despitefully use us"?
38805Are you satisfied that Christ was abso- lutely God?
38805Are you still of that opinion?
38805Are you willing to accept the challenge; or have you ever read that chapter?
38805As soon as I offered to deposit the gold and give bonds besides to cover costs, did you not publish a falsehood?
38805Aside from the miracles, is there any evidence to show the supernatural origin or character of Jesus Christ?
38805At the time God made these people, did he know that he would have to drown them all?
38805At the time God told Adam and Eve not to eat, why did he not tell them of the existence of Satan?
38805But how can he answer these scientists?
38805But suppose they are good men,-- what then?
38805But why should God be so particular about our believing the stories in his book?
38805But why should I expect kindness from a Chris- tian?
38805But why should Mr. Tal- mage say that?
38805But why, if the flood was local, should he have taken any of the fowls of the air into his ark?
38805By hating infidels and maligning Christians?
38805Can I control these impressions?
38805Can a man be saved now by living exactly in accordance with the Sermon on the Mount?
38805Can a man control his belief?
38805Can a minister be expected to treat with fairness a man whom his God intends to damn?
38805Can any one believe this to be a true account of the personal appearance of Mr. Paine in 1802?
38805Can he even cause a"vehement east wind"?
38805Can it be that to give an honest opinion causes one to die in terror and de- spair?
38805Can such a God be good?
38805Can we rely upon the Catholic Church now?
38805Certainly, birds could have avoided a local flood?
38805Could Christ have prevented the Jews from crucifying him?
38805Could Christ now furnish evidence enough to convince every human being of the truth of the Bible?
38805Could any additional evidence have been furnished?
38805Did Abraham show any gratitude?
38805Did Christ only have pity when he was part human?
38805Did Christ write anything himself, in the New Testament?
38805Did God always know that a Bible was necessary to civilize a country?
38805Did God ever make any other special efforts to convert the people, or to reform the world?
38805Did God hear about this?
38805Did God keep his promise?
38805Did God succeed in civilizing the Jews after he had"removed"the Canaanites?
38805Did God use the prophets simply as instruments?
38805Did I understand you to say that Christ was actually God?
38805Did Jehovah change the canes of the Egyptian magicians into snakes?
38805Did Luke?
38805Did Mark?
38805Did Matthew say anything on the sub- ject of"regeneration"?
38805Did Thomas Paine Recant?
38805Did any of your ancestors ever receive a letter like that?
38805Did any of your ancestors ever receive a letter like that?
38805Did any of your ancestors ever receive a letter like that?
38805Did he create his own"omnipotence"?
38805Did he drown them all?
38805Did he establish any church?
38805Did he ever quite succeed in civilizing them?
38805Did he excuse murderers then, and does he damn thinkers now?
38805Did he get out of hailstones?
38805Did he know exactly how they would use that freedom?
38805Did he know exactly what they would do when he chose them?
38805Did he know just as much before he was born as after?
38805Did he know that billions would use it wrong?
38805Did he know that hundreds and millions and billions would suffer eternal pain?
38805Did he know when Judas went to the chief priest and made the bargain for the delivery of Christ?
38805Did he know when he made them that they would all be failures?
38805Did he make a woman at the same time that he made a man?
38805Did he make the world out of nothing?
38805Did he ordain any ministers, or did he have any re- vivals?
38805Did he put his thoughts in their minds, and use their 337 hands to make a record?
38805Did he refer to the gospel set forth by Mark?
38805Did he tell any of his disciples to write any of his words?
38805Did he then succeed in civilizing them?
38805Did he turn them out of the garden because of their sin?
38805Did he want Garfield assassinated?
38805Did not Christ say that we ought to"bless those who curse us,"and that we should"love our enemies"?
38805Did not the first disciples advocate theories that their parents denied?
38805Did reading the Bible make them bad people?
38805Did the Catholics decide for us which are the true gospels and which are the true epistles?
38805Did they die for a lie?
38805Did they get the idea of persecution from the Bible?
38805Did they not, by reading the same book, come to the conclusion that it was their solemn duty to extirpate heresy and heretics?
38805Did they try to circumvent God?
38805Did this God establish any schools or institutions of learning?
38805Did this convince Pharaoh?
38805Did you not ask me to deposit the money that you might prove the"absurd story"to be an"ower true tale"and obtain the money?
38805Did you not in your paper of the twenty- seventh of September in effect deny that you had offered to prove this"absurd story"?
38805Did you not offer to prove that Paine died in fear and agony, frightened by the clanking chains of devils?
38805Do all men get the same ideas from the Bible?
38805Do all men give the same force to the same evidence?
38805Do any two people in the whole world speak the same language, now?
38805Do good Christians pity sinners in this world?
38805Do they divide profits?
38805Do we know anything of the character of Eusebius?
38805Do we know that Polycarp ever met St. John?
38805Do we know that they picked out the right ones?
38805Do we know where the Garden of Eden was, and have we ever found any place where a"river parted and became into four heads"?
38805Do we know whether any of the dis- ciples wrote anything?
38805Do we know who wrote the gospels?
38805Do we not know absolutely that man is greatly influenced by his surroundings?
38805Do you admit that I have the right to reason about it and to investigate it?
38805Do you admit that Matthew says nothing on the subject?
38805Do you believe all the miracles?
38805Do you believe in the divinity of Jesus Christ?
38805Do you believe that he can help you?
38805Do you believe the story of Jonah to be a true account of a literal fact?
38805Do you consider it just in God to create a man who can not believe the Bible, and then damn him because he does not?
38805Do you consider it necessary to be"regenerated"--to be"born again"--in order to be saved?
38805Do you consider it our duty to love our neighbor?
38805Do you consider it possible for a law to be jusdy satisfied by the punishment of an innocent person?
38805Do you consider such treatment of ani- mals consistent with divine mercy?
38805Do you consider that the inventor of a steel plow cast a slur upon his father who scratched the ground with a wooden one?
38805Do you fear the final triumph of infi- delity?
38805Do you have to employ Christ to mollify a being of infinite mercy?
38805Do you mean that he performs no miracles at the present day?
38805Do you mean to say that there would have been no death in the world, either of animals, insects, or persons?
38805Do you not consider the treatment of the Canaanites to have been cruel and ferocious?
38805Do you not think that a confusion of tongues would bring men together instead of separa- ting them?
38805Do you really believe that Elijah went to heaven in a chariot of fire, drawn by horses of fire?
38805Do you really believe that the infinite God killed some animals, took their skins from them, cut out and sewed up clothes for Adam and Eve?
38805Do you really regard poverty as a crime?
38805Do you remember the pains I took to clean you?
38805Do you see anything"prophetic"in the fate of the Jewish people themselves?
38805Do you still insist that the Old Testa- ment upholds polygamy?
38805Do you suppose it was really brim- stone?
38805Do you suppose that we will care nothing in the next world for those we loved in this?
38805Do you take the ground that there never has been a human being who could predict the future?
38805Do you think that Christ knew the Jews would crucify him?
38805Do you think that Christ wrought 413 many of his miracles because he was good, charitable, and filled with pity?
38805Do you think that God made the Jewish people wanderers, so that they might be perpetual witnesses to the truth of the Scriptures?
38805Do you think that God really endeav- ored to civilize the Jews?
38805Do you think that God, if there be one, when he saves or damns a man, will take into con- sideration all the circumstances of the man''s life?
38805Do you think that Jonah was really in the whale''s stomach?
38805Do you think that Lot''s wife was changed into salt?
38805Do you think that Luke was mistaken?
38805Do you think that Matthew, Mark and Luke knew anything about the necessity of"regen-"eration"?
38805Do you think that Paine was a drunken beast when the following letter was received by him?
38805Do you think that Samson''s strength depended on the length of his hair?
38805Do you think that it is necessary for us to believe all the miracles of the Old Testament in order to be saved?
38805Do you think that light emitted by rocks would be sufficient to produce trees?
38805Do you think that the spirit in which Mr. Talmage reviews your lectures is in accordance with the teachings of Christianity?
38805Do you think that there are any cruel- ties on God''s part recorded in the Bible?
38805Do you think that when he chose Judas he knew that he would betray him?
38805Do you think they did, and are doing great harm?
38805Do you think this brimstone came from the clouds?
38805Do you understand that God made coats of skins, and clothed Adam and Eve when he turned them out of the garden?
38805Do you wish, as Mr. Talmage says, to de- stroy the Bible-- to have all the copies burned to ashes?
38805Does God believe in the right of private judgment?
38805Does Mr. Talmage believe in the doctrine of"tran-"substantiation"?
38805Does Mr. Talmage believe that it is the duty of a man to fight for a government in which he has no rights?
38805Does Mr. Talmage think that it is absolutely neces- sary to believe_ all_ the story?
38805Does an argument depend for its force upon the pecuniary condition of the person making it?
38805Does he always do just what ought to be done?
38805Does he at all times know just what ought to be done?
38805Does he not know, that a fact can not by any possi- bility be affected by opinion?
38805Does he seek to enhance his glory by receiving the adulation of cringing slaves?
38805Does it show that a heart is entirely without mercy, simply because a man denies the justice of eternal pain?
38805Does it show that a man has been entirely given over to the devil, because he refuses to believe that God ordered a father to sacri- fice his son?
38805Does not such a statement devour itself?
38805Does the existence of such people conclusively prove the existence of a good Designer?
38805Does the fact that Buddha taught the same tend to show that he was of divine origin?
38805Does the fact that he died for that belief prove its truth?
38805Does the following sound as though spoken by a God of mercy:"I will make mine arrows drunk"with blood, and my sword shall devour flesh"?
38805Does the good Christian defame unanswering and unresisting dust?
38805Does the real Christian malign the memory of the dead?
38805Does the real Christian violate the sanctity of death?
38805Does the right to read a book include the right to give your opinion as to the truth of what the book contains?
38805For what reason did he place temptation in the way of his children?
38805God''s bodikins, man, much better: use every man after his desert, and who should''scape whipping?
38805Had all of his moral precepts been taught before he lived?
38805Had he no time to give a commandment against slavery?
38805Had he no"omnipotence"left?
38805Had these people any option as to whether they would be made or not?
38805Has any one ever seen any of these cherubim?
38805Has he as much power now as he had when on earth?
38805Has he correctly stated your position?
38805Has he not as much power now as he had then?
38805Has the honesty of his belief anything to do with his future condition?
38805Have I the right to decide for myself whether or not the book is inspired?
38805Have I the right to read the Bible?
38805Have I the right to say that God did not write the Koran?
38805Have all honest men who have exam- ined the Bible believed it to be inspired?
38805Have we any testimony, except human testimony, to substantiate any miracle?
38805Have you any evidence that he was in a drunken condition when he died?
38805Have you any other reasons for be- lieving it to be inspired?
38805Have you in your writings been actuated by the fear of such a consequence?
38805Have you no confidence in any pro- phecies?
38805Have you not the same witnesses in favor of their authenticity, that you have in favor of the gospels?
38805Have you read the sermon of Mr. Talmage, in which he exposes your mis- representations?
38805Have you the right to be guided by your reason?
38805Have you the same right to follow your reason after reading the Bible?
38805How am I to get out of this sinful state?
38805How could a devil have done worse?
38805How could it be worse, when assassins are among the best people in it?
38805How could there have been any progress in this world, if children had not gone beyond their parents?
38805How deep was the water?
38805How did God destroy the people?
38805How did it happen that Christ did not visit his mother after his resurrection?
38805How did it happen that the Canaanites were never convinced that the Jews were assisted by Jehovah?
38805How did the Catholic Church select the true books?
38805How did the Christian religion commence?
38805How did they happen to be there?
38805How did vegetation grow without sun- light?
38805How do I know that you believe the Bible?
38805How do you account for that?
38805How do you account for that?
38805How do you account for the fact that God did not make himself known except to Abra- ham and his descendants?
38805How do you account for the fact that the heathen were not surprised at the stopping of the sun and moon?
38805How do you account for the present condition of woman in what is known as"the civilized"world,"unless the Bible has bettered her condition?
38805How do you answer this?
38805How do you explain the story of Elisha and the children,--where the two she- bears destroyed forty- two children on account of their impudence?
38805How do you know he was converted?
38805How do you know?
38805How do you know?
38805How do you know?
38805How do you under- stand this matter, and has Mr. Talmage stated the facts?
38805How does he prove that he is a Christian?
38805How does he regard the great and glorious of the earth, who have not been the victims of his particular superstition?
38805How does it happen that the two gene- alogies given do not agree?
38805How is it that not one word is said about the death of Mary-- not one word about the death of Joseph?
38805How is it that the Jews had no confi- dence in these miracles?
38805How is it?
38805How long did it take God to make the universe?
38805How long did they remain in slavery?
38805How long is a"good- while"?
38805How many of the Christian witnesses against him, in his judgment, told the truth?
38805How much did it rain each day?
38805How should infidels be treated?
38805How should we regard the wonderful stories of the Old Testament?
38805How was it answered?
38805How was it possible, under the old dis- pensation, to please a being of infinite kindness?
38805How were the people prevented from succeeding?
38805How would their being"broken up"increase the depth of the water?
38805How, then, do you account for the fact that, before the forbidden fruit was eaten, an evil serpent was in the world?
38805How?
38805I ask again, was this cruel?
38805I ask the questions asked by Jefferson:"Is he"honest; is he capable?"
38805I ask you again whether these splendid utterances came from the lips of a drunken beast?
38805I want to ask you a few questions about the second sermon of Mr. Talmage; have you read it, and what do you think of it?
38805If Christ had not been betrayed and 399 crucified, is it true that his own mother would be in perdition to- day?
38805If Christ knew that Judas would betray him, why did he choose him?
38805If God gave laws from Sinai what right have we to repeal them?
38805If God''s witnesses were honest, anybody could believe, and what be- comes of faith, one of the greatest virtues?
38805If I do not believe the Bible, whose fault is it?
38805If I have the right to read the Bible, have I the right to try to understand it?
38805If Mr. Talmage had been born in Turkey, is it not probable that he would now be a whirling Dervish?
38805If Paine had died a millionaire, would you have accepted his religious opinions?
38805If Paine had drank nothing but cold water would you have repudiated the five cardinal points of Calvin- ism?
38805If Paine recanted why should he be denied"a little earth for charity"?
38805If a man honestly thinks that the Bible is not inspired, what should he say?
38805If he concludes that some of them are inspired, and believes them, will he then be damned for that belief?
38805If he could have saved his life and did not, was he not guilty of suicide?
38805If he recanted, he died substantially in your belief, for what reason then do you denounce his death as cowardly?
38805If he wanted to kill anybody, why did he not kill David?
38805If he was and is the God of all worlds, why does he not now give back to the widow her son?
38805If he was false in his testimony as to liberty, what is his affidavit worth as to the value of Christianity?
38805If he was so terribly against that crime, why did he forget to 69 mention it?
38805If it had not been, then, for the con- fusion of languages, spelling books, grammars and dictionaries would have been useless?
38805If it was a local flood, why did they put birds of the air into the ark?
38805If it was necessary to believe on Jesus Christ, in order to be saved, how is it that Matthew failed to say so?
38805If not, is Mr. Talmage a Baptist?
38805If so, what?
38805If the Catholic Church at that time had thrown out the book of Revelation, would it now be our duty to believe that book to have been inspired?
38805If the Catholic Church was not infal- lible, is the question still open as to what books are, and what are not, inspired?
38805If the light of which you speak was sufficient, why was the sun made?
38805If the man had eaten of the tree of life, would he have lived forever?
38805If the political theory of Mr. Talmage is carried out, of course the question will arise in a little while, What is a Christian?
38805If they wanted to show that Christ was of the blood of David, why did they not give the gene- alogy of his mother if Joseph was not his father?
38805If they were honest in the vote they gave, and died without changing their opinions, are they now in hell?
38805If upon reading these apocryphal books a man concludes that they are not inspired, will he be damned for that reason?
38805If we are under obligation to love our enemies, is not God under obligation to love his?
38805If we forgive our enemies, ought not God to forgive his?
38805If we forgive those who injure us, ought not God to forgive those who have not injured him?
38805If you take this away from us, what do you propose to give us in its place?
38805In the Psalms, Jehovah derides the idea of sacrifices, and says:"Will I eat of the flesh of"bulls, or drink the blood of goats?
38805In the first place, what is an"infidel"?
38805In the morn- ing at breakfast my mother asked Willet Hicks the following questions:"Was thee with Thomas Paine during his last sickness?"
38805In what language?
38805In what respect?
38805In what way was his death cowardly?
38805In your judgment, why did God destroy the Canaanites?
38805Instead of having an inspired book, why did he not make inspired folks?
38805Instead of having his commandments put on tables of stone, why did he not write them on each human brain?
38805Is Buddhism true?
38805Is Christ any more willing to take to his heart the whole world than his Father is?
38805Is God infinite in wisdom and power?
38805Is God satisfied with the adoration of the frightened?
38805Is God the author of all books?
38805Is God''s ship to go down in storm and darkness?
38805Is Mr. Talmage willing that the question, What is Christianity?
38805Is Saint John the only one who speaks of the necessity of being"born again"?
38805Is all this a consequence of the wrath of God?
38805Is he a Catholic?
38805Is he as charitable and pitiful now, as he was then?
38805Is he still omnipotent, and has he as much"omnipotence"now as he ever had?
38805Is he the product-- the natural product-- of Chris- 150 tianity?
38805Is he willing that I should exercise my judgment in deciding whether the Bible is inspired or not?
38805Is he willing to accept the testimony even of ministers?
38805Is he willing to admit that the testi- mony of a Bible, reader and believer is true?
38805Is it a sure sign of an impure mind, when a man insists that God never waged wars of extermination against his helpless children?
38805Is it as great a sin to admit into the Bible books that are uninspired as to reject those that are inspired?
38805Is it because the mind of the infidel is poisoned, that he refuses to believe that an infinite God commanded the murder of mothers, maidens and babes?
38805Is it because their minds are vile, that they refuse to believe that an infinite God established or protected polygamy?
38805Is it calculated to convey the slightest information?
38805Is it evidence of a thoroughly scientific mind to believe that one man turned over a house so large that three thousand people were on its roof?
38805Is it neces- sary for those who profess to love the whole world, to hate the few they come in actual contact with?
38805Is it necessary to believe all the miracles?
38805Is it necessary to understand the Bible in order to be saved?
38805Is it necessary, in order to ascertain the truth of Christianity, to look over the election re- turns?
38805Is it not a little strange that religion should make men so coarse and ill- mannered?
38805Is it not astonishing that so little is in the New Testament concerning the mother of Christ?
38805Is it not better for each one to decide honestly for himself?
38805Is it not infinitely impudent in him to contrast his penny- dip with the sun of inspiration?
38805Is it not possible that something can be done for a human soul in another world as well as in this?
38805Is it not singular that they were never mentioned afterward?
38805Is it not strange that Christ, in his Ser- mon on the Mount, did not speak of"regeneration,"or of the"scheme of salvation"?
38805Is it not strange that none of the disciples of Christ 123 said anything about their parents,--that we know absolutely nothing of them?
38805Is it not true that some of these books were adopted by exceedingly small majorities?
38805Is it not wonderful that God failed to pro- tect these innocent wives and children?
38805Is it not wonderful that all the writers 404 of the four gospels do not give an account of the ascension of Jesus Christ?
38805Is it not wonderful that some of them said that he did ascend, and others that he agreed to stay with his disciples always?
38805Is it not wonderful that such awful con- sequences flowed from so small an act?
38805Is it not wonderful that the Egyptians were not converted by the miracles wrought in their country?
38805Is it not wonderful that they were not convinced of the power of God, by the many mira- cles wrought in Egypt and in the wilderness?
38805Is it possible for any intelligent man now to believe that the history of Jonah is literally true?
38805Is it possible that Christ is less for- giving in heaven than he was in Jerusalem?
38805Is it possible that God can be gratified with the applause of moral cowards?
38805Is it possible that a being of infinite power would exercise it in that way instead of in the interest of kindness and peace?
38805Is it possible that a good God would take pains to deceive his children?
38805Is it possible that the God of Mr. Tal- mage could not have made man a success?
38805Is it possible that the eternal welfare of a human being depends upon believing the testimony of Poly- carp and Irenæus?
38805Is it possible that the other writers never heard of these things?
38805Is it possible that this will was made by a pauper--by a destitute outcast-- by a man who suffered for the ordinary necessaries of life?
38805Is it possible to conceive of anything more fig- leaflessly 297 absurd?
38805Is it possible to see"design"in earth- quakes, in volcanoes, in pestilence, in famine, in ruthless and relentless war?
38805Is it scientific to assert that seven priests blew seven rams''horns loud enough to blow down the walls of a city?
38805Is it scientific to imagine that thrusting a spear through the body of a woman ever stayed a plague?
38805Is it scientific to say that a river cut itself in two and allowed the lower end to run off?
38805Is it scientific to say that an animal saw an angel, and conversed with a man?
38805Is it scientific to say that the muscle of a man de- pended upon the length of his locks?
38805Is it unscientific to deny that water gushed from a hollow place in a dry bone?
38805Is it worse in a man than in an angel, to care nothing for his mother?
38805Is it your candid opinion that a man who does not believe the Bible should keep his belief a secret from his fellow- men?
38805Is not self- denial in a man as praise- worthy as in a God?
38805Is not that passage in Mark generally admitted to be an interpolation?
38805Is not this a supply of liquor for dinner and supper?"
38805Is not this true?
38805Is that all we know about Polycarp?
38805Is that portion of the last chapter of Mark found in the Syriac version of the Bible?
38805Is the Bible scientific?
38805Is the God of Mr. Talmage in partnership with the devil?
38805Is the New Testament now the same as it was in the days of the early fathers?
38805Is the man who shoulders his musket in the defence of human freedom good enough to cast a ballot?
38805Is there any evidence that they showed any particular respect even for the mother of Christ?
38805Is there to be a wreck at last?
38805Is there"design"in this?
38805Is this true?
38805Is this true?
38805Is virtue the same in all worlds?
38805Is"inspiration"a question to be settled by the ballot?
38805It is hardly fair to compare her with the inventor of the steamship?
38805Jehovah got angry again, and said to Moses:"How long will these people provoke me?
38805Mr. Talmage also charges you with"making light of holy things,"and seems to be aston- ished that you should ridicule the anointing oil of Aaron?
38805Mr. Talmage also claims that we are indebted to Christianity for schools, colleges, univer- sities, hospitals and asylums?
38805Mr. Talmage asks you whether, in your judgment, the Bible was a good, or an evil, to your parents?
38805Mr. Talmage asks:"What has been the effect upon your children?
38805Mr. Talmage charges that you have taken the ground that the Bible is a cruel book, and has produced cruel people?
38805Mr. Talmage charges you with being"the champion blasphemer of America"--what do you understand blasphemy to be?
38805Mr. Talmage charges you with having said that the Scriptures are a collection of polluted writings?
38805Mr. Talmage in reply to you?
38805Mr. Talmage says that infidels have done no good?
38805Mr. Talmage thinks that you laugh too much,--that you exhibit too much mirth, and that no one should smile at sacred things?
38805Mr. Talmage wants you to tell where the cruelty of the Bible crops out in the lives of Chris- tians?
38805Must a man believe statements that he has every reason to think are false?
38805Now suppose that in this belief the man had died,--what then?
38805Now, if we are to take the testimony of Irenæus, 267 why not take it?
38805Now, suppose that the father is an infidel, and the mother a Christian, what must the son do?
38805Of course, infidels laugh at these things; but what can you expect of men who have not been"born"again"?
38805Of what use are all the sciences, if you lose your own soul?
38805Of what use to the world was Bishop Mcllvaine, compared with the inventor of needles?
38805Of what use were a hundred such priests compared with the inventor of matches, or even of clothes- pins?
38805On what day did God make vegetation?
38805Once he pitied even thieves; does he now abhor an intellectually honest man?
38805Or, was it a belief in the Bible that made Mr. Talmage deny the truth of their statements?
38805Paine, you have not answered my questions; will you answer them?
38805Perhaps it has, but would it not be well enough to answer it once more?
38805Should Christians pray for the con- version of infidels?
38805Should Christians try to convert them?
38805Should a God be worshiped, and a man be damned, for the same action?
38805Should he have betrayed Christ, or let somebody else do it; or should he have allowed the world to perish, in- cluding his own soul?
38805Should we believe the miracles, whether they are reasonable or not?
38805So you think that, after all, it was not God''s intention that the Jews should become civilized?
38805Some may not have seen the answer?
38805Suppose Judas had understood the divine plan, what ought he to have done?
38805Suppose a man is firmly convinced that Polycarp knew nothing about Saint John, and that Saint John knew nothing about Christ,--what then?
38805Suppose he is convinced that Eusebius is utterly unworthy of credit,--what then?
38805Suppose his father had been a Catholic, and his mother a Protestant,--what then?
38805Suppose his parents had both been infidels-- what then?
38805Suppose it should turn out that some of these miracles depend upon mistranslations of the original Hebrew, should we still believe them?
38805Suppose that Hannah More had never lived?
38805Suppose that doubts force themselves upon my mind?
38805Suppose that the Christian religion had been put to vote in Jerusalem?
38805Suppose that the infidel is a good man, how will you answer him then?
38805Suppose that the same man should read the Koran, and come to the conclusion that it is not an inspired book; what ought he to say?
38805The question is: Is the Bible a cruel book?
38805The second time was at the marriage feast in Cana, when he said to her:"Woman, what have I to do"with thee?"
38805The text from which he preached is:"Do men gather grapes of thorns, or figs of thistles?"
38805The worship of the sun was an exceedingly natural religion, and why should a man or woman be destroyed for kneeling at the fireside of the world?
38805Then hypocrisy will not save him?
38805Then the Old Testament tells us how we lost immortality, not that we are immortal, does it?
38805Then why did Luke say in the same verse of the same chapter that"Jesus increased in"favor with God"?
38805Then you regard belief as the safe way?
38805Then you think that there is no such thing as the crime of blasphemy, and that no such offence can be committed?
38805There are in Russia about eighty millions of people--how many Christians?
38805There are more Buddhists than Christians-- why does he vote against majorities?
38805There are more Methodists than Presbyterians-- why does the gentleman remain a Presbyterian?
38805There was a time when an abolitionist could not be elected to office in any State in this Union; what did that prove?
38805There was a time when no man could have been elected to any office, who in- 300 sisted on the rotundity of the earth; what did that prove?
38805There was a time when no man who denied the existence of witches, wizards, spooks and devils, could hold any position of honor; what did that prove?
38805There was a time when they were not allowed to express their honest thoughts; what does that prove?
38805They had wandered so long in the desert that they finally cried out:"Wherefore have ye brought us"up out of Egypt to die in the wilderness?
38805This being so, this miracle is the best attested of all?
38805This being so, why did not God reveal himself to every human being?
38805Twelfth-- If Thomas Paine recanted, why do you pursue him?
38805Was Abraham pursued by the justice of God because of the crime against Hagar, or for the crime against his own wife?
38805Was Christ the God of the universe at the time of his birth?
38805Was God afraid that Adam and Eve might get back into the garden, and eat of the fruit of the tree of life?
38805Was God always patient and kind and merciful toward his children while they were in the wilderness?
38805Was God at that time, in favor of slavery?
38805Was God driven to madness by the conduct of his chosen people?
38805Was God, at that time, merciful?
38805Was Mohammed an im- postor?
38805Was anything more infamous ever recorded in the annals of barbarism?
38805Was he a 479 drunken beast when he wrote the"Crisis"?
38805Was he convinced before that time?
38805Was he in the world before the for- bidden fruit was eaten?
38805Was he the infinite God, creator and controller of the entire universe, before he was born?
38805Was he turned out to prevent his eating?
38805Was he willing that the"unconverted"should cover 308 the fields of victory with their corpses, that this nation might not die?
38805Was he willing, at that time, that sinners should vote to keep our flag in heaven?
38805Was it a belief in the Bible that colored their testimony?
38805Was it beastly to die without a com- plaint, without a murmur-- to pass from life without a fear?
38805Was it beastly to look with composure upon the approach of death?
38805Was it beastly to submit to the inevitable with tranquillity?
38805Was it because in the light of that letter Mary Roscoe, Mary Hinsdale and Grant Thorburn appeared un- worthy of belief?
38805Was it because it proved beyond all cavil that Thomas Paine did not recant?
38805Was it cowardly in him to hold the Thirty- Nine Articles in contempt?
38805Was it cowardly not to be afraid?
38805Was it cowardly not to call on your Lord?
38805Was it cruel, or unjust?
38805Was it kind, was it just, was it noble, was it worthy of a good God?
38805Was it necessary for him to stop the sun and moon and depend entirely upon the efforts of Joshua?
38805Was it necessary to have a devil in heaven?
38805Was it optional with him whether he should make such people or not?
38805Was not God able to write a book that would command the love and admiration of the world?
38805Was such conduct Godlike?
38805Was that a punishment for having had so many wives?
38805Was that before the sun was made?
38805Was that cruel?
38805Was the Catholic Church infallible then?
38805Was the snake who tempted them to eat, evil?
38805Was there any particular"design"in that?
38805Was there not room enough on the tables of stone for just one word on this subject?
38805Was this cruel?
38805Was this fearful destruction an act of mercy?
38805Was this the conduct of a drunken beast?
38805Were animals so treated by the com- mand of a merciful God?
38805Were both these persons inspired by the same God?
38805Were our first parents under the im- mediate protection of an infinite God?
38805Were the Jews guilty of idolatry?
38805Were the men who picked out the in- spired books inspired?
38805Were the people after the flood just as bad as they were before?
38805Were these eight persons totally de- praved?
38805Were they 155 not false,--in his sense of the word,--to their fathers and mothers?
38805Were they the same people that God had promised to take care of?
38805What are the principal reasons that have satisfied you that the Bible is not an inspired book?
38805What are"the fountains of the great deep"?
38805What became of Abraham and his people?
38805What became of all the Canaanites, the Egyptians, the Hindus, the Greeks and Romans and Chinese?
38805What became of the millions and billions who lived in this hemisphere, and of whose existence Jehovah himself seemed perfectly ignorant?
38805What can I be expected to give as a substitute for perdition?
38805What could have been more cruel than the flood?
38805What crime had Thomas Paine committed that he should have feared to die?
38805What did God do then?
38805What did God do with Adam and Eve after he got them done?
38805What did God do with these people after Pharaoh allowed them to go?
38805What did God give us reason for?
38805What did God make man of?
38805What did he make him for?
38805What did he make it out of?
38805What did he say or do of a cowardly character just before, or at about the time of his death?
38805What did he say?
38805What did that prove?
38805What did that prove?
38805What did that prove?
38805What did they do?
38805What do we really know about Polycarp?
38805What do you consider is the strongest argument in favor of the inspiration of the Scrip- tures?
38805What do you consider the strongest argument against the truth of infidelity?
38805What do you mean by that?
38805What do you think of his argument, or of his explanation, rather, of that miracle?
38805What do you think of it?
38805What do you think of the argu- ments presented by Mr. Talmage in favor of the inspiration of the Bible?
38805What do you think of the declaration of Mr. Talmage that the Bible will be read in heaven throughout all the endless ages of eternity?
38805What do you think of the following state- ment by Mr. Talmage:"Oh, I have to tell you that no"man ever died for a lie cheerfully and triumphantly"?
38805What do you think of the story of Daniel-- you no doubt remember it?
38805What do you think of what he has to say?
38805What do you understand by"the"morning and evening"of a"good- while"?
38805What do you wish to have done with the Bible?
38805What does Mr. Talmage think of man- kind?
38805What does a man want in place of a disease?
38805What does he think of some of the best the earth has produced?
38805What does it prove?
38805What does that prove?
38805What effect has the religion of Jesus Christ had upon him?
38805What effect, in his judgment, did the reading of the Bible have upon his enemies?
38805What else did God do in order to in- duce Pharaoh to liberate the Jews?
38805What else did he make?
38805What evidence, according to the Bible, can Mr. Talmage give of his belief?
38805What happened then?
38805What happened to Adam and Eve in the garden?
38805What have you stated upon that subject?
38805What have you to say to the charge that you were mistaken in the number of years that 72 the Hebrews were in Egypt?
38805What is his opinion of the"unconverted"?
38805What is your opinion about that?
38805What is your understanding of this matter?
38805What is"inspiration"?
38805What kind of man was Abram?
38805What makes you think it is inspired?
38805What means did he take to liberate the Jews?
38805What more heartless than to overwhelm a world?
38805What more merciless than to cover a shoreless sea with the corpses of men, women and children?
38805What must we think of your present conduct?
38805What punishment did God inflict upon Adam and Eve for the sin of having eaten the for- bidden fruit?
38805What right has a Christian to ask anybody to love his father, or mother, or wife, or child?
38805What right has he to any opinion upon the subject?
38805What right has he to question the statements of an inspired writer?
38805What then?
38805What was the object of making woman out of man''s side?
38805What was the result?
38805What was this miracle performed for?
38805What was woman made of?
38805What were the affirmations contained in the offer you made?
38805What were the last words of Jesus Christ?
38805What will be the fate of a man who does not believe it, and yet pretends to believe it?
38805What would Russia be, in the opinion of Mr. Tal- mage, but for Christianity?
38805What would he Jiave done had he been remorse- lessly cruel and wicked?
38805What would he have done had he acted from motives of revenge?
38805What would they have done had he been exacting, easily incensed, revengeful, cruel, or blood- thirsty?
38805What, in your judgment, became of the dead who were raised by Christ?
38805When God created each human being, did he know exactly what would be his eternal fate?
38805When he thinks he is right?
38805When the flood came, why did he not drown all?
38805When we take into consideration that it is aided by the momentum of eighteen centuries, is it not wonderful that it is not to- day holding its own?
38805When we were engaged in civil war, did Mr. Tal- mage object to any man''s enlisting in the ranks who was not a Christian?
38805Where did education come from?
38805Where did they get it?
38805Where did"Polycarp get it?
38805Where has he been through all the centuries of slavery and crime?
38805Where is he now?
38805Where is the flaming sword now?
38805Who cares then for the pride of intellect?
38805Who has the right to decide as to the real ideas that God intended to convey?
38805Who made you?
38805Who saw the miracle?
38805Who would not complain under similar cir- cumstances?
38805Whom did he select?
38805Whom do you regard as infidels?
38805Why could we not get along without it?
38805Why did a God of infinite mercy destroy seventy thousand men?
38805Why did he allow him to thwart his plans?
38805Why did he allow himself to be be- trayed, if he knew the plot?
38805Why did he allow the devil to tempt Adam and Eve?
38805Why did he create him?
38805Why did he do this?
38805Why did he fail to reveal himself to the other nations-- nations that, compared with the Jews, were learned, cultivated and powerful?
38805Why did he fill his land with widows and orphans, because King David had taken the cen- sus?
38805Why did he leave innocence and ignorance at the mercy of subtlety and wickedness?
38805Why did he not destroy that 370 snake; or how did he come to make him; what did he make him for?
38805Why did he not give a Bible to the Egyptians, the Hindus, the Greeks and the Romans?
38805Why did he not kill them, and start over again with a perfect pair?
38805Why did he not make them so sharp, intellectually, that they could not be deceived?
38805Why did he not play the role of a Savior instead of that of a 205 detective?
38805Why did he not protect them?
38805Why did he not put them on their guard?
38805Why did he not warn them of this snake?
38805Why did he not, as the leader of this people, his chosen children, feed them better?
38805Why did he permit him to pollute the inno- cence of Eden?
38805Why did he preserve Noah?
38805Why did he produce them?
38805Why did he put"the"tree of the knowledge of good and evil"in the garden?
38805Why did he save for seed that which was"perfectly"and thoroughly corrupt in all its parts and facul-"ties"?
38805Why did his God make a devil?
38805Why did n''t you call your adversary a fool?
38805Why did not Christ tell Zaccheus that he"must be born again;"that he must"believe on the Lord Jesus Christ"?
38805Why did not God punish Saul instead of the people?
38805Why did not these inspired men tell us how to cure some of the diseases that have decimated the world?
38805Why did the bears come?
38805Why did they fail to speak of it?
38805Why did you not publish the entire letter of Bishop Fenwick?
38805Why did you suppress it?
38805Why do you call infidels"fools"?
38805Why do you call upon Jesus Christ to help you?
38805Why do you curse infidels?
38805Why do you pray to him?
38805Why do you think she was changed into salt?
38805Why does a good God permit these things?
38805Why does he allow him now to wrest souls by the million from the redeeming hand of Christ?
38805Why does he not now cure the lame and the halt and the blind?
38805Why does he per- mit him to live?
38805Why does he with- hold light from the eyes of the blind?
38805Why does not God furnish more evidence?
38805Why save such seed?
38805Why should God hate us for being what we are and necessarily must have been?
38805Why should God object to having his book examined?
38805Why should a God of infinite wisdom create people who would gladly murder their Creator?
38805Why should a good God people a world with men capable of burning their fellow- men-- and capable of burning the greatest and 48 best?
38805Why should a ship built by infinite wisdom, by an infinite shipbuilder, carry life- boats?
38805Why should he set up his judgment against the Websters and Jacksons?
38805Why should we have a book for a master?
38805Why was it necessary to save the birds?
38805Why were the miracles recorded in the New Testament performed?
38805Why were they not put upon their guard against the serpent?
38805Why were they thrown out?
38805Why would Paine expect a correct answer about his writings from one who had read very little of them?
38805Why would a God do such an infamous thing?
38805Why, man, what''s the matter?
38805Why, then, did he make them?
38805Why?
38805Why?
38805Why?
38805Why?
38805Will Christians in heaven love their neighbors?
38805Will Mr. Talmage admit that his witness told the truth in this?
38805Will Mr. Talmage be kind enough to explain the stoppage of the moon?
38805Will he give us the names of the painters that existed in Palestine from Mount Sinai to the destruction of the temple?
38805Will he give us the names of the sculptors between those times?
38805Will he have the kindness to perform a miracle?--for instance, produce a"local flood,"make a worm to smite a gourd, or"prepare a fish"?
38805Will he pledge himself in advance to subscribe to such a creed?
38805Will it be necessary at last to forsake his ship and depend upon life- boats?
38805Will somebody be kind enough to show the"design"in this trans- action?
38805Will the reading of these things make children kind to animals?
38805Will you have the fairness to admit it?
38805Would God allow a soul to suffer 426 eternal agony rather than furnish evidence of the truth of his Bible?
38805Would he say,"I can not tell the truth, I must lie,"for the purpose of shedding a halo of glory around"the memory of my mother"?
38805Would he say:"Of"course, my father and mother would a thousand"times rather have their son a hypocritical Christian"than an honest, manly unbeliever"?
38805Would it not have been better to have had his flood at first, before he made anybody, and drowned the snake?
38805Would it not have been far better to leave them unconscious dust?
38805Would it not have been more con- vincing if Christ, after his resurrection, had shown himself to his enemies as well as to his friends?
38805Would it not seem from this, that"regeneration"and a"belief in the"Lord Jesus Christ,"are no part of the gospel?
38805Would not a millionth part of the force necessary to stop the moon, have pierced the enemy''s centre, and rolled up both his flanks?
38805Would not the force employed in stopping the rotary motion of the earth have been sufficient to destroy the enemy?
38805Would not the mission of Christ have been a failure had no one betrayed him?
38805Would such a fish understand any language?
38805Would then a man, by following the course of conduct prescribed by Christ in the Sermon on the Mount, lose his soul?
38805Would there have been no poisonous plants, no poisonous reptiles?
38805Would you regard a revelation now made to the Esquimaux as intended for us; and would it be a revelation of which we would be obliged to take notice?
38805You do not seem to have any great opinion of the chemical, geological, and agricultural views expressed by Mr. Talmage?
38805You have told me that if you did not be- lieve it, you would not tell me?
38805You notice that Mr. Talmage finds nearly all the inventions of modern times mentioned in the Bible?
38805_ Third._ If God is infinitely good, is he not fully as sympathetic as Christ?
38805did he deny that story?
38805not: Was Miss Nightingale a cruel woman?
38805or let me qualify the question, do you wish to believe that Jesus Christ is the Son of God?''
38805should be so settled?
38805why hast thou forsaken me?"
7140''Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before? 7140 ''The question,''Mr. Lincoln replied,''was,"Why does man have breasts?"''
7140''Well, what about General King?'' 7140 ''Well,''he said,''are you on good terms with Price and King?''
7140***On the vote to repeal the Fugitive Slave Law, how did that( Democratic) side of the House vote?
7140And suppose they could be induced by a Proclamation of Freedom from me to throw themselves upon us, what should we do with them? 7140 Are you prepared for such a change in the institutions of your country?
7140But what more was done? 7140 But why should Emancipation South, send the freed people North?
7140Dependenceupon whom, and with regard to what?
7140Descendants of the same people inhabit the country; yet what is the reason of this vast difference? 7140 He said,''Wo n''t General Price vote for it?
7140How will it be with New England? 7140 I ask the Senator to recollect, too, what, save to send aid and comfort to the Enemy, do these predictions of his amount to?
7140If, then, for a common object, this Property is to be sacrificed, is it not just that it be done at a common charge? 7140 If, then, we are at some time to be as populous as Europe, how soon?
7140Is it doubted, then, that the plan I propose, if adopted, would shorten the War, and thus lessen its expenditure of money and of blood? 7140 Is it true, then, that Colored people can displace any more White labor by being Free, than by remaining Slaves?
7140Is there no Justice in putting an end to human Slavery? 7140 It is not,''Can any of us imagine better?''
7140Now, I ask any plain common- sense man what was the meaning of that? 7140 Now, then, tell me, if you please, what possible result of good would follow the issuing of such a Proclamation as you desire?
7140Question.--And of course an abandonment of the purpose for which you were there? 7140 Question.--At that time General Patterson felt it was so important to attack Johnston that he had determined to do it?
7140Question.--Behind his intrenchments? 7140 Question.--Did not General Patterson issue orders at Bunker Hill, the night before you marched to Charlestown, for an attack on the Enemy?
7140Question.--Even if you had received a check there, it would have prevented his junction with the forces at Manassas? 7140 Question.--That order was not countermanded until late on Tuesday, the 16th, was it?
7140Question.--You understood General Patterson to be influenced to make that attempt because he felt there was a necessity for detaining Johnston? 7140 Question[ by the Chairman].--Did he[ Patterson] assign any reason for that movement?
7140Shall one battle determine the fate of empire, or a dozen?--the loss of one thousand men, or twenty thousand? 7140 The question is, if the Colored people are persuaded to go anywhere, why not there?
7140Was it possible to lose the Nation and yet preserve the Constitution? 7140 What are the uses of decisions of Courts?
7140What else was done at the very same session? 7140 What good would a Proclamation of Emancipation from me do, especially as we are now situated?
7140What says the Preamble to the Constitution? 7140 What troops are those?"
7140What,said he, referring to Mr. Ross,"has been the course of that gentleman and his Party on this floor in regard to voting supplies to the Army?
7140Whether such language is not Treason?
7140Why should they leave this Country? 7140 Why should this Property be exempt from the hazards and consequences of a rebellious War?
7140Why was not this taken and accepted? 7140 Will you ever submit to a warfare waged by the Southern States to establish Slavery in Illinois?
7140''Must a Government of necessity be too strong for the liberties of its own people, or too weak to maintain its own existence?''
7140*** But you may ask me what are these rights and these privileges?
7140*** How has the planting of Slavery in new countries always been effected?
7140*** On the subject of arming Slaves, of putting Negroes into the Army, how has my colleague and his Party voted?
7140*** This being so, what is Judge Douglas going to spend his life for?
7140*** What can authorize him to draw any such inference?
7140*** What cause is there for further alarm in the Southern States, so far as the Territories are concerned?
7140*** What is fairly implied by the term Judge Douglas has used,''resistance to the decision?''
7140*** What is now the case?
7140*** Who did it?
7140*** Will it be any more valid?
7140***"''Question.--In what direction would Johnston have had to move to get by you?
7140***"I ask Mr. Lincoln how it is that he purposes ultimately to bring about this uniformity in each and all the States of the Union?
7140***"You may ask, why does the South want us to do it by Constitutional Amendment, when we have just done it voluntarily by Law?
7140******"What more, then, is demanded?
7140********* Question[ by the Chairman].--Would there have been any difficulty in preventing Johnston from going to Manassas?
7140*********"Question.--While at Bunker Hill, the night before you left there, were any orders issued to march in the evening?
7140**********''Question[ by the Chairman].--And that left Johnston free?
7140--said Davies--"and can they get through that road?"
7140--you ask--"What next?"
7140A Freeman?
7140After assisting him in checking his steed, the President said to me:''He came pretty near getting away with me, did n''t he?
7140And Farnsworth met this idea-- which had also been advanced by Messrs. Ross, Fernando Wood, and Pruyn-- by saying:"What constitutes property?
7140And as it is to so go, at all, events, may we not agree that the sooner the better?
7140And as to Oligarchal rule-- the rule of the few( and those the Southern chiefs) over the many,--was not that already accomplished?
7140And how is it, that Johnston gets away from Patterson so neatly?
7140And if such is the case, what are we to hope in the future?
7140And is it not needed whenever it helps us and hurts the Enemy?
7140And then cried the orator- his voice rising to a higher key, penetrating, yet musical as the blast from a silver trumpet:"What would he have?
7140And then, having succeeded in convincing himself of Republican failure, he exultingly exclaimed:"But why enumerate?
7140And to this more than fair proposition to the Southerners-- to this touching appeal in behalf of Peace-- what was the response?
7140And we are asked by one of my colleagues,( Mr. Cox) does the gentleman from New York intend to call us Traitors?
7140And what can that purpose be, but to throw his augmented right upon our left, at Blackburn''s Ford, and so, along the ridge- road, upon Centreville?
7140And what have we seen?
7140And what is this"republican"form of government, thus pledged?
7140And what next?
7140And what was the chief cause or pretext for discontent at that time?
7140And what was the response of the South to this generous and conciliatory message?
7140And when does he do it?
7140And whose the sacrilegious hand that dared be first raised against his Country and his Country''s flag?
7140And why may we not continue that ratio far beyond that period?
7140And why the hasty after- indorsement of the decision, by the President and others?
7140And, above all, is it consistent with any notion, which the mind of man can conceive, of human Liberty?"
7140And, in any event, can not the North decide for itself, whether to receive them?
7140Another, Mr. Charles E. Lex( a Republican), speaking of the Southern People, said:"What, then, can we say to them?
7140Are they not already in the Land?
7140Are they not intended for disorganization in our very midst?
7140Are they not intended to animate our enemies?
7140Are they not intended to destroy our zeal?
7140Are they not intended to dull our weapons?
7140Are we to predict evil, and retire from what we predict?
7140Are we to stop and talk about an uprising sentiment in the North against the War?
7140Are you for it?
7140Are you for it?
7140As a political question and a question of humanity, can I receive the services of a father and mother, and not take the children?
7140Aye, what next?
7140Benjamin, why do you not vote?
7140But do you think they are so perfectly moulded to their state as to be insensible that a better exists?
7140But how can we attain it?
7140But the matter regarded by him of larger moment-- the safety of the Union-- how about that?
7140But to return to Military operations: On December 10th?
7140But what have we seen?
7140But what would be the effect upon South Carolina?
7140Can I have fifty?
7140Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
7140Can aliens make treaties, easier than friends can make laws?
7140Can not this last bloody battle be avoided?''
7140Can the Union endure under such a system of policy?
7140Can their self love be so totally annihilated as not frequently to induce ardent wishes for a change?
7140Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
7140Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens, than laws can among friends?
7140Can we Abolish Slavery in the Loyal State of Kentucky against her will?
7140Can we account for it to ourselves, gentlemen?
7140Can we afford to send them forward to their masters, to be by them armed against us, or used in producing supplies to sustain the Rebellion?
7140Can we do anything more?
7140Continuing, he said:"What more do the Southern States want?
7140Could I get a hundred tolerably intelligent men, with their wives and children, and able to''cut their own fodder''so to speak?
7140Could the one, in any way, greatly disturb the seven?
7140Do not its principles and theories become daily more fixed in our practice?
7140Do we not know it to be so?
7140Do we not know that they have been anxious for a change of Government for years?
7140Do we not know this?"
7140Do you mean that I am to concede the benefits of the political struggle through which we have passed, considered politically, only?
7140Do you mean that I am to give up my convictions of right?
7140Do you mean that we are to deny the great principle upon which our political action has been based?
7140Do you suppose we shall do nothing, even upon the sea?
7140Do you think differently?
7140Do you visit the North in the Summer?
7140Does it appear otherwise to you?
7140Does not the Fugitive Slave Law affect the Black soldier in the Army who was a Slave?
7140Does the Free Republic of the United States exist, in fact, to- day?
7140Does timidity ask WHEN?
7140From your Custom- houses?
7140Gooch].--Was it not the intention to move from Bunker Hill to Winchester?
7140Has Congress any power over the subject of Slavery in Kentucky or Virginia or any other State of this Union?
7140Has he not stolen a march and sent re- enforcements toward Manassas Junction?
7140Has it more waste surface by mountains, rivers, lakes, deserts, or other causes?
7140Have we not at the South, as well as the North, grown great, prosperous, and happy under its operations?
7140How can this be done?
7140How can we feed and care for such a multitude?
7140How can we, by conceding what you now ask, relieve you and the Country from the increasing pressure to which you refer?
7140How did that side of the House vote on the question of arming Slaves and paying them as soldiers?
7140How does it happen that we have not had unanimity enough to agree on any measure of that kind?
7140How is he going to do it?
7140How long have we been at War?
7140How many letters of marque and reprisal would it take to put the whole of your ships up at your wharves to rot?
7140How will he do it?
7140How?
7140I said to Mr. Pickens,''What next do you propose we shall do?
7140I submit to you, my fellow- citizens, whether such a line of policy is consistent with the peace and harmony of the Country?
7140If Rebellion and bloodshed and murder have followed, to whose skirts does the responsibility attach?
7140If one man says it does not mean a Negro, why not say it does not mean some other man?
7140If such persons have what will be an advantage to them, the question is, whether it can not be made of advantage to you?
7140In answer to his compliments about the comfortable location I had made, I said:''Very comfortable, General, when shall we move on?''
7140In that event, could you stand the reaction feeling which the suffering commerce of Charleston would probably manifest?
7140In what do our new Territories now differ in this respect from the old Colonies when Slavery was first planted within them?
7140In what way can that Compromise be used to keep Lee''s Army out of Pennsylvania?
7140Is he going to spend his life in maintaining a principle that no body on earth opposes?
7140Is it doubted that it would restore the National authority and National prosperity, and perpetuate both indefinitely?
7140Is it inferior to Europe in any natural advantage?
7140Is it less fertile?
7140Is it not a mere usurpation without any known mode of justification, under any existing Code of Laws, human or Divine?"]
7140Is it not a time when the measure is most likely to produce danger and mischief to the Country at large?
7140Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before?
7140Is it worth our while to continue this union of States, where the North demands to be our masters and we are required to be their tributaries?
7140Is that what you mean?
7140Is there a single Court or Magistrate, or individual that would be influenced by it there?
7140Is there no danger to the Tranquillity of the Country in its existence?
7140Is there, has there ever been, any question that, by the Law of War, property, both of enemies and friends, may be taken when needed?
7140It forces us to ask:''Is there in all republics, this inherent and fatal weakness?''
7140It has the sanction of God''s own Apostle; for when Paul sent back Onesimus to Philemon, whom did he send?
7140It is only a week ago last Monday, that a Bill was introduced here to punish guerrillas*** and how did my colleague vote?
7140Look to the illustrations which the times now afford, how, in the illustration of that sentiment, do we differ from the Black man?
7140May it not interfere with the common Defense and general Welfare?
7140May they not pronounce all Slaves Free?
7140May they not think that these call for the abolition of Slavery?
7140Mr. Lincoln*** more than once exclaimed:''Must more blood be shed?
7140My friends, is it possible to preserve Peace between the North and the South if such a doctrine shall prevail in either Section of the Union?
7140Not that he feared the North-- but the South; how would the wayward, wilful, passionate South, receive his proffered olive- branch?
7140Now, what do we find?
7140Now, who was it that did the work?
7140Object whatsoever is possible, still the question recurs,''Can we do better?
7140Odell].--Had you any such understanding with Patterson?
7140Odell].--You covered his movement?
7140Of all the times when an attempt was ever made to carry this measure, is not this the most inauspicious?
7140One party to a contract may violate it-- break it, so to speak; but does it not require all, to lawfully rescind it?
7140Or would he conduct this War so feebly, that the whole World would smile at us in derision?"
7140Our position for renewing the action the next morning was excellent; whence, then, our failure?
7140President?''
7140Shall we send a flag of Truce?
7140Simply that a Constitutional Amendment shall be adopted, affirming-- what?
7140Sir, are they not words of brilliant, polished Treason, even in the very Capitol of the Nation?
7140Sir, how can we make Peace?
7140Sir, how can we retreat?
7140Sir, is not this a remarkable spectacle?
7140Suppose he does re- enact the same law which the Court has pronounced unconstitutional, will that make it Constitutional?
7140The immediate Secessionists, or those who are opposed to separate State action at this time?
7140The only question now was, how to get rid of it?
7140The question, then, naturally arises, what are those rights and privileges, and what is the nature and extent of them?
7140These speeches of his, sown broadcast over the Land, what clear distinct meaning have they?
7140To mob law, to partisan caucuses, to town meetings, to revolution?
7140To whom shall you appeal?
7140Upon what terms?
7140WHAT NEXT?
7140WHAT NEXT?
7140Warming up, he proceeded to say:"Can the Union be restored by War?
7140Was it Mr. Clark?
7140Was it that they believed a Monarchical form of government was incompatible with civil liberty?
7140Was it that they were opposed to a Monarchical form of government?
7140Was it the firing on our flag at Sumter?
7140Was that the first adversary passage?
7140Well, so much being disposed of, what is left?
7140Well, suppose he is; what is he going to do about it?
7140Were it his own, would he not have said in"making"it, instead of in"stating"it?
7140What American is not proud of the result?
7140What Commissioners?
7140What Next?
7140What better Compromise could have been made?
7140What can it be?
7140What could I do?
7140What do those terms mean when used now?
7140What do those terms mean?
7140What good does it do to pass a second Act?
7140What has become of it?
7140What has become of that Squatter Sovereignty?
7140What has been their course in regard to raising money to pay the Army?
7140What has now become of all his tirade about''resistance to the Supreme Court?''"
7140What is Popular Sovereignty?
7140What is War?
7140What is it?
7140What more can any man demand?
7140What more?
7140What of future hopes?
7140What of past glories?
7140What should be done with them?
7140What then?
7140What then?
7140What was Squatter Sovereignty?
7140What were they but a clear indication that the framers of the Constitution intended and expected the ultimate extinction of that institution?
7140What will become of Constitutional Government?
7140What will become of public Liberty?
7140What would be its fate there?
7140What would he have?
7140What would our condition be in the event of the greatest calamity that could befall this Nation?"
7140What''vested right''has any man or State in Property in Man?
7140When the navigation laws cease to operate, what will become of your shipping interest?
7140When this Tariff ceases to operate in your favor, and you have to pay for coming into our markets, what will you export?
7140When your machinery ceases to move, and your operatives are turned out, will you tax your broken capitalist or your starving operative?
7140Where is Rome, once the mistress of the World?
7140Where is it?
7140Where is the remedy when you refuse obedience to the constituted authorities?"
7140Where is to be your boundary line?
7140Where the end of the principles we shall have to give up?
7140Which party will prevail?
7140Who defeated it?
7140Who heard of any such thing, because of the Ordinance of''87?
7140Who is responsible for it?
7140Who is so bold as to do it?
7140Who shall treat?
7140Who would go?
7140Who, then, has brought these evils on the Country?
7140Who, then, shall come in at this day and claim that he invented it?
7140Whose fault was it?
7140Why better after the retraction than before the issue?
7140Why declare that within twenty years the African Slave Trade, by which Slaves are supplied, might be cut off by Congress?
7140Why deprive him of supplies by a blockade, and voluntarily give him men to produce them?
7140Why disguise this great truth?
7140Why even a Senator''s individual opinion withheld, till after the Presidential election?
7140Why is this so?
7140Why may not our Country at some time, average as many?
7140Why not save this Proposition, and see if we can not bring the Country to it?''
7140Why not?
7140Why should they do anything for us if we will do nothing for them?
7140Why the delay of a re- argument?
7140Why the incoming President''s advance exhortation in favor of the decision?
7140Why the outgoing President''s felicitation on the indorsement?
7140Why this sad difference?
7140Why was the Court decision held up?
7140Why was the amendment, expressly declaring the right of the people, voted down?
7140Why were all these acts?
7140Will he be able to convince the Court that the second Act is valid, when the first is invalid and void?
7140Will he shrink from armed Insurrection?
7140Will his State justify it?
7140Will it be said the South required in addition to this, laws of Congress to protect Slavery in the Territories?
7140Will its better public opinion allow it?
7140Will liberation make them any more numerous?
7140Will that do any good?
7140Will that success continue?
7140Will the Senator yield to Rebellion?
7140Will the galling comparison between themselves and their masters leave them unenlightened in this respect?
7140Will you not embrace it?
7140Will you not embrace it?
7140Would it be less than stealing?"
7140Would my word free the Slaves, when I can not even enforce the Constitution in the Rebel States?
7140Would we not be in the wrong?"
7140Would you not lose that in which your strength consists, the union of your people?
7140You ask, what is the general''s opinion, upon this subject?
7140You here are Freemen, I suppose?
7140You will ask in this view, how do you consult the benefit of the slaves?
7140and will they not be warranted by that power?
7140and"whether it is in order to talk Treason in this Hall?"
7140are we to tell the People that Republicanism is a failure?
7140because of the Missouri Restriction because of the numerous Court decisions of that character?
7140but,''Can we all do better?''
7140or is it not manifest that there is no just title?
7140or one hundred million or five hundred million dollars?
7140what do you export?
7140what more than we have expressed in the resolutions we have offered?
7140where will their revenue come from?
7140why have not the People of that Heaven- favored clime, the spirit that animated their fathers?
388112 Does one have to be born again to appreciate the beauty and solemnity of such a performance? 38811 And is mine one?"
38811Oh,said the wolf,"Are you chained?
38811Provoked him to anger._Is that true?
38811Would you go if you were invited?
38811You have?
38811_ Can the mind conceive of more horrid blasphemy?_Is not that true?
38811_ Can the mind conceive of more horrid blasphemy?_Is not that true?
38811_ Or the Word of God_--What is that?
38811''s dearest brother James, the Duke of York.. And what else?
38811* Is it true that when a captain with fifty men went after Elijah, this prophet caused fire to come down from heaven and consume them all?
38811About how many sins could an average goat carry?
38811After the passage of such a law by the United States is it not indecent for us to send missionaries to China?
38811Again, what is the difference between a State that has no law on the subject, and a State that has passed an unconstitutional law?
38811All at once there arose a man called Martin Luther, and what did the dear old Catholics think?
38811And are they the"merciful"who when some man endeavors to answer their argument, put him in the penitentiary?
38811And do you know that we ought to feel under the greatest obligation to men who have fought the prevailing notions of their day?
38811And has a man that right?
38811And how are you going to keep from having more?
38811And how would the ministers feel if somebody should invent a clergyman of wood that would to all intents and purposes answer the purpose?
38811And if he could know, how could he convince others?
38811And if the writers of the Bible were in reality inspired, ought not that book to be the greatest of books?
38811And is it possible that a work written by an infinite Being has to be protected by a legislature?
38811And is not this difference founded on the difference in credulity?
38811And is such citizenship within the protecting power of Congress?
38811And suppose he does not believe in any bible whatever?
38811And suppose the highest tribunal of the State holds that the question is of a"social"character-- what then?
38811And that this God at the same time he gave the Ten Commandments ordered the Jews to break the most of them?
38811And what does that mean?
38811And what else says the defendant?
38811And what else?
38811And what has been the result?
38811And what is it that for the moment destroys the sense of right and wrong?
38811And what is it to reap that field?
38811And when children were sold from the breasts of mothers, why was he deaf to the mother''s cry?
38811And when he heard the lash upon the naked back of the slave, why did he not also hear the prayer of the slave?
38811And wherever such laws have been enforced, have the people been friends?
38811And why were the Jews themselves without a Bible until the days of Ezra the scribe?
38811And why?
38811And why?
38811Any harm in saying that?
38811Are all these doubts born of a malignant and depraved heart?
38811Are diseases of the brain-- are deformities of the soul, of the mind, also transmitted?
38811Are his words a shield that he uses to protect himself from suspicion?
38811Are majorities always right?
38811Are not, then, all the immunities and privileges and rights under the protecting power of Congress?
38811Are the brains of criminals exactly like the brains of honest men?
38811Are the majority the pioneers of progress, or does the pioneer, as a rule, walk alone?
38811Are the monk and nun superior to the father and mother?
38811Are there several kinds of knowing?
38811Are they holy?
38811Are vices as carefully transmitted by nature as virtues?
38811Are we any better friends to- day than we were in 1789?
38811Are we any nearer thinking alike to- day than we were then?
38811Are we certain that all people can tell the truth?
38811Are we certain that it does not require genius to be good?
38811Are we going back to superstition?
38811Are we going to take authority for truth?
38811Are we not all children of the same Mother?
38811Are we not all compelled to think, whether we wish to or not?
38811Are we not satisfied now that back of every act and thought and dream and fancy is an efficient cause?
38811Are we to have a God who will re- enact the Mosaic code and punish hundreds of offences with death?
38811Are we to have the God who issued a commandment against all art-- who was the enemy of investigation and of free speech?
38811Are we to retrace our steps?
38811Are you deprived of your liberty?
38811Are"the law of supply and demand,"invention and science, monopoly and competition, capital and legislation always to be the enemies of those who toil?
38811As a matter of fact, is there not now a cause which did not to the same extent exist then?
38811As a matter of fact, miracles could only satisfy people who demanded no evidence; else how could they have believed the miracle?
38811As he lived, he died-- hopeful and serene-- and now, standing in imagination by his grave, we ask: Will the night be eternal?
38811Besides, if all should obey this injunction,"Sell what thou hast and give to the poor,"who would buy?
38811But how is it possible to fix the wages of every man?
38811But let me ask, What is it to be spiritual?
38811But the real question is: Can religion restrain people from committing natural crimes?
38811But what can the United States say?
38811But who is to make known the will of this supreme God?
38811By what standard would he judge?
38811By what testimony can we substantiate the authenticity of the prophets, or of the prophecies, or of the fulfillments?
38811Can God, then, through the Bible, make the same revelation to two persons?
38811Can any man have the egotism to say that he has found it all out?
38811Can anything be done for the reformation of the criminal?
38811Can anything be more absurd?
38811Can anything be plainer-- anything be more forcibly stated?
38811Can anything more brutally hellish be conceived?
38811Can he believe without evidence?
38811Can he get employment?
38811Can he preserve his manhood only by making a false statement?
38811Can his lips be closed by the power of the state?
38811Can it be true that God was afraid to trust himself with the Jews for fear he would consume them?
38811Can it imagine a beginningless being, infinitely powerful and intelligent?
38811Can man become intelligent enough to be generous, to be just; or does the same law or fact control him that controls the animal and vegetable world?
38811Can one who does not believe in this God, conscientiously take such oath, or make such affirmation?
38811Can the Federal arm be palsied by the action or non- action of a State?
38811Can the fatherless and motherless exist?
38811Can the offender be proceeded against in the criminal courts?
38811Can there be anything more consoling than to feel, to know, that Jehovah is not God-- that the message of the Old Testament is not from the infinite?
38811Can these forces of nature be controlled for the benefit of her suffering children?
38811Can this be unpleasant except in an uncivilized community-- a community in which an uncivilized church has authority?
38811Can we blame the Hebrews for getting tired of their God?
38811Can we conceive of nothing as a force, or as a cause?
38811Can we not safely take another step, and say that the criminal is a victim, as the diseased and insane and deformed are victims?
38811Can we now say that the Bible is inspired in its morality?
38811Can you help thinking as you do?
38811Can you imagine an infinitely good God sending a man to hell because he did not believe the bear story?
38811Could a man meet such a goat now without laughing?
38811Could it now, by any possibility, make a man a good father, a good husband, a good citizen?
38811Could the States, in spite of the 13th Amendment, deprive free men of life or property without due process of law?
38811Could they be classified by a naturalist?
38811Could you pour contempt on Shakespeare by saying that his mother was a woman,--by saying that he was once a poor, crying, little, helpless child?
38811Did John Calvin give evidence of his spirituality by burning Servetus?
38811Did a man actually go to heaven in a chariot of fire drawn by horses of fire, or was he carried to Paradise by a whirlwind?
38811Did anybody ever dream of passing a law to protect Shakespeare from being laughed at?
38811Did anybody ever hear of a policeman being dismissed because a new church had been organized?
38811Did anybody ever think of such a thing?
38811Did anybody ever want any legislative enactment to keep people from holding Robert Burns in contempt?
38811Did he know he would drown them when he made them?
38811Did he know they ought to be drowned when they were made?
38811Did he mix his ignorance with the divine information, his prejudices and hatreds with the love and justice of the Deity?
38811Did he not, if the Bible is true, drown the people?
38811Did it please him for man to kill his neighbor, for brother to murder his brother, and for the father to butcher his sou?
38811Did not Congress have that power under the 13th Amendment?
38811Did not Congress, under that amendment, have the power to protect the lives, liberty and property of free men?
38811Did not Congress, under the 13th Amendment, have power to destroy slavery and involuntary servitude?
38811Did that law apply to States, or to individuals?
38811Did the nations thus restrained by religion, prosper?
38811Did the one inspired set down only the thoughts of a supernatural being?
38811Did the prosecution have the courage to attack his reputation?
38811Did the word Protestant"carry an unpleasant significance"?
38811Did they succeed?
38811Did you ever know of a more despicable fraud practiced by one brother on another than Jacob practiced on Esau?
38811Do I think that the marriage of the sickly and diseased ought to be prevented by law?
38811Do not these passages show that these laws were made long after the Jews had left the desert, and that they were not given from Sinai?
38811Do they live upon some kind of food?
38811Do they occupy space?
38811Do they run or float or fly?
38811Do we need to protect him from ridicule by a statute?
38811Do you believe that?
38811Do you know that all the mechanics that ever lived-- take the best ones-- cannot make two clocks that will run exactly alike one hour, one minute?
38811Do you not see what the effect will be?
38811Does an officer, by acting contrary to State law, become so like a State that the word State, used in the Constitution, includes him?
38811Does any intellectual man who has examined the question believe that depraved demons live in the bodies of men?
38811Does any theologian hate the man he can answer?
38811Does citizenship mean anything except certain"rights, privileges and immunities"?
38811Does each man in some degree bear burdens imposed by ancestors?
38811Does he blot out, or dim, one star in the heaven of hope?
38811Does he help the poor?
38811Does he like to lock somebody up in the penitentiary because he has the power of the moment?
38811Does he need assistance from New Jersey?
38811Does he pay his debts?
38811Does he tell the truth?
38811Does he want to crush his fellow citizens?
38811Does he wish to convince his neighbors that the evil thought and impulse were never in his mind?
38811Does he wish to use it as a despot, or as a philanthropist-- like a devil, or like a man?
38811Does it involve moral responsibility?
38811Does it make any difference whether you believe it or not?
38811Does it, or does it not?
38811Does that cast any scorn or contempt upon him?
38811Does the Agnostic take any consolation from the world?
38811Does the Bible describe God as having drowned the whole world with the exception of eight people?
38811Does the Principal of King''s College know any more as to the truth of the Old Testament than the man who modestly calls for evidence?
38811Does the Supreme Court wish to be understood, that until the 14th Amendment was adopted the States had the right to rob and kill free men?
38811Does the great law demand that every worker live on the least possible amount of bread?
38811First of all, is it probable?
38811For what sum of money, for what amount of wealth, would the world have the science of astronomy expunged from the brain of man?
38811Gentlemen, does not that show the need of more missionaries?
38811HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE?
38811HAS FREETHOUGHT A CONSTRUCTIVE SIDE?
38811Had they the public weal at heart, or were they simply endeavoring to be revenged upon this defendant?
38811Has a man the right to examine, to investigate, the religion of his own country-- the religion of his father and mother?
38811Has he got a heart that melts when he hears grief''s story?
38811Has he the confidence of the Infinite?
38811Has he the right to be sincere?
38811Has he the right to say it, if he believes it?
38811Has he the right to show that Martin Luther said he did not believe there was one solitary word of gospel in the Epistle to the Romans?
38811Has he the right to show that some of these books were not written till nearly two hundred years afterward?
38811Has he the right to show that the book of Revelation got into the canon by one vote, and one only?
38811Has he the right to show that there were twenty- eight books called"The Books of the Hebrew''s"?
38811Has he the right to show that they passed in convention upon what books they would put in and what they would not?
38811Has he the right to show that?
38811Has not a mistake been made?
38811Has the Catholic Church thrown away the differences between it and the Protestants?
38811Has the Principal of King''s College any knowledge that he keeps from the rest of the world?
38811Has the father no real love for the children?
38811Has virtue had as many martyrs as vice?"
38811Have all citizens of the United States equal rights, without regard to race or color?
38811Have all citizens the same right to travel on the highways of the country?
38811Have criminals the same ambitions, the same standards of happiness or of well- being?
38811Have the angels no regret, no remorse, no conscience?
38811Have the laborers the same right to consult and combine?
38811Have these scientific assassins discovered anything of value?
38811Have they all the same right to ride upon the railways created by State authority?
38811Have we not advanced far enough intellectually to deny the existence of chance?
38811Have you a right to think about it at all?
38811Have you any suggestions to make in regard to remodeling the libel laws?
38811Have you not the right to read, to observe, to investigate-- and when you have so read and so investigated, have you not the right to reap that field?
38811Have you produced a new argument?
38811Having this control, why did he not see to it that he was recognized in the Constitution of the United States?
38811He goes so far as to say, that:"_ He was found staring foolishly at his own little toes._"And why not?
38811He is the American who is forever asking,"Why?"
38811Honestly-- what do you think they would say?
38811How are we to settle the unequal contest between men and machines?
38811How are you going to judge him?
38811How came the miracles to be believed?
38811How can a man obtain any knowledge of the unseen world?
38811How can a slave owe labor?
38811How can a slave owe service?
38811How can man make friends with God by cutting the throats of bullocks and goats?
38811How can the Deist satisfactorily account for the sufferings of women and children?
38811How can the fact of inspiration be established?
38811How can these miracles be verified?
38811How can we account for an article like that?
38811How can we know that any human being was divinely inspired?
38811How could a slave make a contract?
38811How could even the inspired man know that he was inspired?
38811How could such a being be intelligent?
38811How could such a being be powerful?
38811How could such a law have been constitutional?
38811How could such impostors have escaped exposure?
38811How could the inspired man know that the communication was received from God?
38811How could the master have a legal claim against a slave?
38811How could these priests get wine?
38811How did the Bible get lost?5 Where was the precious Pentateuch from Moses to Josiah?
38811How did these absconding slaves make cherubs of gold?
38811How did they coin the shekel of the sanctuary?
38811How did they come to crucify him?
38811How did they happen to have it, and how did you happen to be deprived of it?
38811How did they make wreathed chains and spoons, basins and tongs?
38811How did they overlay boards with gold?
38811How do we know that it is possible for all people to be honest?
38811How do you know what such men are mentioned for?
38811How does he use power?
38811How else?
38811How has the Catholic Church imposed upon millions of people?
38811How has the church in every age, when in authority, defended itself?
38811How is it a virtue to deny the miracles of Mohammed and to believe those attributed to Christ?
38811How is it possible to know whether the reputed authors of the books of the Old Testament were the real ones?
38811How is it that the rich control the departments of government?
38811How is"the contrary to appear"?
38811How long will they be controlled by friends who seek favors, and by reformers who want office?
38811How was it possible for the Jews to get along without the directions as to fat and caul and kidney contained in Leviticus?
38811How would Jeremy Taylor have treated an Episcopalian like Heber Newton?
38811How, in the desert of Sinai, did the Jews obtain curtains of fine linen?
38811I ask: How did Mohammed deceive the people of Mecca?
38811I do not say whether this is true or not, but has a man the right to say it if he believes it?
38811I have given you my definition of blasphemy, and now the question arises, what is worship?
38811I now ask, has that subject-- that is to say, Liberty,--been submitted to the general legislative power of Congress?
38811I touched him and said,"Did you ever see anything so beautiful?"
38811If Congress was not clothed with such power by the 13th Amendment, what was the object of that amendment?
38811If God be infinitely good and wise and powerful, is it possible he is afraid of anything?
38811If God in reality should appear to a human being, how could this human being know who had appeared?
38811If Hermann, the magician, and Humboldt, the philosopher, could have appeared before savages, which would have been regarded as a god?
38811If a community is thoroughly civilized, why should it be an unpleasant thing for a man to express his belief in respectful language?
38811If a difference exists in brain, will that in part account for the difference in character?
38811If a nation is Christian, will all the citizens go to heaven?
38811If a sick man should come down the street and sit upon your doorstep, what would you do with him?
38811If excluded from one inn, he may be from all; if from one car, why not from all?
38811If he is to be regarded as perfect, although not divine, when did he reach perfection?
38811If he wished other nations to be informed, and revealed himself to but one, why did he not choose a people that mingled with others?
38811If it is not, will they all be damned?
38811If it is true, is it blasphemous?
38811If it was of such vast importance for man to know that there is a God, why did not God make himself known?
38811If one denies the existence of devils, does he, for that reason, cease to believe in Jesus Christ?
38811If others claim the right, where did they get it?
38811If stories like this can be circulated about a living man, what may we not expect concerning the dead who have opposed the church?
38811If the Catholic Church was still in partnership with God, what excuse could have been made for the Reformation?
38811If the Mosaic account does not convince a man that it is true, is he a wretch because he is candid enough to tell the truth?
38811If the argument is against him, it might be unpleasant; but why should simple numbers be the foundation of unpleasantness?
38811If the book and my brain are both the work of the same infinite God, whose fault is it that the book and the brain do not agree?
38811If the majority have the facts,--if they have the argument,--why should they fear the mistakes of the minority?
38811If the minority had never spoken, what to- day would have been the condition of this world?
38811If there be one true religion, how is it possible to ascertain which of all the religions the true one is?
38811If this be true, then your knowledge of the subject is also irrelevant?
38811If this statute is constitutional, why has it been allowed to sleep for all these years?
38811If to deny the existence of these supposed beings is to be an infidel, how can the word infidel"carry an unpleasant significance"?
38811If we can not believe those whom we know, why should we believe witnesses who have been dead thousands of years, and about whom we know nothing?
38811If what the defendant has said is blasphemy under this statute then the question arises, is the statute in accordance with the constitution?
38811If you have the right to work with your hands and to gather the harvest for yourself and your children, have you not a right to cultivate your brain?
38811If, on the other hand, the communication is absurd or wicked, will that conclusively show that the man was not inspired?
38811If, then, all the people in each State, were, by virtue of the 13th Amendment, free, what right had a majority to enslave a minority?
38811If, then, even the inspired man can not certainly know that he is inspired, how is it possible for him to demonstrate his inspiration to others?
38811In examining a philosophy, a system, the ministers asked:"Does it agree with the sacred book?"
38811In order to be really spiritual, must a man sacrifice this world for the sake of another?
38811In other words, is our reason to be the final standard?
38811In other words, what is the difference between no law and a void law?
38811In other words, why may not the mob do quickly that which the State does slowly?
38811In other words: Is the principal bound by the acts of his agent, that act not being within the scope of his authority?
38811In this Manifesto was this argument:"What kind of office must that be in a government which requires neither experience nor ability to execute?
38811In this sense, what is an unbeliever?
38811In what obscure and shadowy recesses of the brain are passions born?
38811In what way will he justify religious persecution-- the flame and sword of religious hatred?
38811Is a State liable-- or is the Government liable-- for the act of any officer, that act not being authorized by law?
38811Is a man to be blamed for not agreeing with his fellow- citizen?
38811Is a man to be sent to the penitentiary for that?
38811Is a person accountable for the constitution of his mind, for the formation of his brain?
38811Is any government, or can any government, be capable of intelligently performing these countless duties?
38811Is any human being responsible for the weight that evidence has upon him?
38811Is any statute needed to keep Euclid from being laughed at in this neighborhood?
38811Is anything, or can anything, be produced that is not necessarily produced?
38811Is he convinced?
38811Is he not paid a thousand times through their caresses, their sympathy, their love?
38811Is hell hungry for those who deny that water gushed from a"hollow place"in a dry bone?
38811Is hell the only place where souls regret the evil they have done?
38811Is it a sin to ask these questions?
38811Is it a sin to be counted?
38811Is it a sin to deny this, and to deny the inspiration of a book that teaches it?
38811Is it a small thing to lift from the shoulders of industry the burdens of superstition?
38811Is it any harm to speak of it?
38811Is it blasphemous to deny that God commanded his children to murder each other?
38811Is it blasphemous to say that he was benevolent, merciful and just?
38811Is it blasphemy to ask that question?
38811Is it blasphemy to deny that a God of infinite love gave such commandments?
38811Is it blasphemy to quote from the"Sacred Scriptures"?
38811Is it blasphemy to say that Solomon was not a virtuous man, or that David was an adulterer?
38811Is it blasphemy to say that you do not like a hypocrite, a murderer, or a thief, because his name is in the Bible?
38811Is it blasphemy to tell the truth and to say exactly what David was?
38811Is it evidence of a new heart to believe that one man turned over a house so large that over three thousand people were on the roof?
38811Is it his duty to close his lips?
38811Is it his fate to work one day, that he may get enough food to be able to work another?
38811Is it likely that a being of infinite wisdom would deliberately do what he knew he must undo?
38811Is it necessary to believe in eternal torment to understand the meaning of the word spiritual?
38811Is it necessary to believe that?
38811Is it necessary to hate those who disagree with you, and to calumniate those whose argument you can not answer, in order to be spiritual?
38811Is it not a little late in the day to object to people because they sacrifice meat and other eatables to their god?
38811Is it not an invasion of citizenship to invade the immunities or privileges or rights belonging to a citizen?
38811Is it not possible to imagine that a great and tender soul living in Palestine nearly twenty centuries ago was misunderstood?
38811Is it not true that the citizen is apt to imitate his nation?
38811Is it not true that the criminal is a natural product, and that society unconsciously produces these children of vice?
38811Is it not within the range of the probable that legend and rumor and ignorance and zeal have deformed his life and belittled his character?
38811Is it not within the realm of the possible that his words have been inaccurately reported?
38811Is it not wonderful that the creator of all worlds, infinite in power and wisdom, could not hold his own against the gods of wood and stone?
38811Is it possible for all men to be generous or candid or courageous?
38811Is it possible for the human mind to conceive of an infinite personality?
38811Is it possible that Christians will break the peace?
38811Is it possible that God commanded them to be done?
38811Is it possible that a book can not be written by a God so that it will not excite the laughter of the human race?
38811Is it possible that a few Chinese can bring our"holy religion"into disgust and contempt?
38811Is it possible that a good and wise God, knowing that he was going to drown them, made millions of people?
38811Is it possible that the average man assaults the criminal in a spirit of self- defence?
38811Is it possible that these things really happened?
38811Is it possible that they will violate the law?
38811Is it possible that thoughts or desires or passions are the children of chance, born of nothing?
38811Is it possible that we must go to the same causes for these effects?
38811Is it possible that women, who have been the Caryatides of the church, who have borne its insults and its burdens, are to be its destroyers?
38811Is it possible to conceive of a despotism beyond this?
38811Is it possible to flatter the Infinite with a constitutional amendment?
38811Is it possible to get any morality out of this history?
38811Is it possible to imagine an infinite intelligence dwelling for an eternity in infinite nothing?
38811Is it possible to put in ordinary English a more perfect absurdity?
38811Is it probable that Christians will congregate together and make a mob, simply because a man has given an opinion against their religion?
38811Is it the God of the Old Testament, who was a believer in slavery and who justified polygamy?
38811Is it the God who commanded the husband to stone his wife to death because she differed with him on the subject of religion?
38811Is it the duty of the General Government to protect its citizens?
38811Is it the duty of the minority to keep silent?
38811Is it to be expected that they will unfrock themselves?
38811Is it very wicked to deny that the universe was created of nothing by an infinite being who existed from all eternity?
38811Is it within the power of man to determine the influence that testimony shall have upon his mind?
38811Is man involved in the"general scheme of things"?
38811Is man under any obligation to his fellows?
38811Is not that an absurd and foolish statute?
38811Is not the difference one of belief instead of knowledge?
38811Is not the tendency to harden and degrade not only those who inflict and those who witness, but the entire community as well?
38811Is not this statement perfectly absurd?
38811Is progress to stop?
38811Is such a denial calculated to pour contempt and scorn upon the God of the orthodox?
38811Is that of any importance?
38811Is that the Christian religion?
38811Is that the Christian religion?
38811Is that the doctrine?
38811Is that the law?
38811Is that to be his only hope-- that and death?
38811Is the god dead?
38811Is the human body at present the residence of evil spirits, or have these imps of darkness perished from the world?
38811Is the human race worthy to be worshiped by itself-- that is to say, should the individual worship himself?
38811Is the man spiritual who endeavors by thought and deed to ennoble the human race?
38811Is the result of such weighing necessary?
38811Is the weight of evidence a question of choice?
38811Is then, the Bible a different book to every human being who reads it?
38811Is there a Christian missionary who could help laughing if in any heathen country he had seen the following command of God carried out?
38811Is there any blasphemy about that?
38811Is there any difference between the knowledge of the Christian and of the Agnostic?
38811Is there any evidence-- has there been any-- to show that the defendant was not absolutely candid in the expression of his opinions?
38811Is there any obligation resting on any human being to believe this account?
38811Is there any other knowledge than a scientific knowledge?
38811Is there any remedy for this?
38811Is there any remedy?
38811Is there anything blasphemous in that?
38811Is there anything in heredity?
38811Is there anything in this that is blasphemous?
38811Is there as much division now in the religious world as then?
38811Is there enough in the Bible to save a soul with this story left out?
38811Is there no joy in seeing their minds unfold, their affections develop?
38811Is there no pity, no mercy?
38811Is there not a connection between all events, and is not every act related to all other acts?
38811Is there not work enough for them at home?
38811Is there nothing in this to excite the admiration, the adoration, of a modern reformer?
38811Is there one particle of evidence tending, to show that he is not a perfectly honest and sincere man?
38811Is there such a thing as honestly weighing testimony?
38811Is there such a thing as scientific ignorance?
38811Is there to be no change?
38811Is this a Nation?
38811Is this a difference in knowledge, or a difference in belief-- that is to say, a difference in credulity?
38811Is this blasphemy?
38811Is this knowledge?
38811Is this law constitutional, or is it simply an old statute that fell asleep, that was forgotten, that people simply failed to repeal?
38811Is this statute in harmony with, the part of the constitution of 1844 which says:"The liberty of speech shall not be abridged"?
38811Is this true?
38811It may be well enough to ask: What is it to be really spiritual?
38811Let another read him who knows nothing of the drama, nothing of the impersonations of passion, and what does he get?
38811Let this be admitted, and what does it prove?
38811Must a man be honest?
38811Must the discoverer of new truths make of his mind a tomb?
38811Must the inventor allow his inventions to die in the brain?
38811Must we admit that Elijah was fed by ravens; that they brought him bread and flesh every morning and evening?
38811Must we judge from the communication?
38811Now, gentlemen, what is blasphemy?
38811Now, how should we treat a new thought?
38811Now, if the legislation of Congress must be"corrective,"then I ask, corrective of what?
38811Now, is it not a fact that the Old Testament does uphold polygamy?
38811Now, is there any blasphemy in saying that the Bible is true?
38811Now, then, to come to the point, to answer the interrogatory often flung at us from the pulpit, What institutions have Infidels built?
38811Now, what has a man the right to say about that?
38811ONE HUNDRED years after Christ had died suppose some one had asked a Christian, What hospitals have you built?
38811Of what shape are they?
38811On the way the wolf happened to notice that some hair was worn off the dog''s neck, and he said,"How did the hair become worn?"
38811Ought I to clap my hand over my mouth and start for another State, and the minute I got over the line say,"It is not true, It is not true"?
38811Ought a man to be despised and persecuted for denying that God ordered the priests to make women drink dirt and water to test their virtue?
38811Ought an honest man to be sent to the penitentiary for simply telling the truth?
38811Ought not the work of a God to be vastly superior to that of a man?
38811SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL?
38811SHOULD INFIDELS SEND THEIR CHILDREN TO SUNDAY SCHOOL?
38811SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED?
38811SHOULD THE CHINESE BE EXCLUDED?
38811Second, Is the Bible true?
38811Shall the nation take life?
38811Shall we now go back to barbarism?
38811She is asked:"Love you the man that wronged you?"
38811Should God allow such wretches to manage his fire?
38811Should it be an unpleasant thing for a man to say plainly what he believes?
38811Should you express that thought?
38811Suppose God is acknowledged in the Constitution, and somebody denies the existence of this God-- what are you to do with him?
38811Suppose a man believes that, and practices it, does it make any difference whether he believes in the flood or not?
38811Suppose a man writes a libelous article, leaves the country, and then the article is published; is there no remedy?
38811Suppose a person denied equal privileges upon the railway on account of race and color, brings suit and is defeated?
38811Suppose the defendant in this case were guilty of something like that?
38811THOUSANDS of Christians have asked: How was it possible for Christ and his apostles to deceive the people of Jerusalem?
38811The defendant also says, that:"_ God was sick when cutting his teeth._"And what of that?
38811The defenders of orthodox creeds should have the courage to candidly answer at least two questions: First, Is the Bible inspired?
38811The first question for you, gentlemen, to decide in this case is: Is this statute constitutional?
38811The great question is, How shall this right of self- defence be exercised?
38811The other day I was asked these questions:"Has there been as much heroism displayed for the right as for the wrong?
38811The question arises: Is a State responsible for the action of its agent when acting contrary to law?
38811The question is, Has it the right to punish?--has it the right to degrade?--or should it endeavor to reform the convict?
38811The question is, Who has the right on his side?
38811The question is: Can miracles be established except by miracles?
38811The question is: Is Christianity declining?
38811The question is: When will people see the defects in their own theology as clearly as they perceive the same defects in every other?
38811The wolf said,"Do you think this man would treat me as he does you?"
38811Then what has happened?
38811Then what have they cursed?
38811Then what would the Turks do?
38811Then what would the Turks say?
38811They may have settled some disputes as to the action of some organ, but have they added to the useful knowledge of the race?
38811They would put the Morristown missionary in jail, and he would send home word, and then what would the people of Morristown say?
38811Think of men and women without love, without desires, without passions?
38811To individuals or to States?
38811To what extent do antecedents and surroundings affect the moral sense?
38811To whom was this clause directed?
38811Under these circumstances, what avenue is opened to the ex- convict?
38811Under what circumstances, then, can Congress be called upon to act by way of"corrective"legislation, as to these particular clauses?
38811WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE?
38811WHAT WOULD YOU SUBSTITUTE FOR THE BIBLE AS A MORAL GUIDE?
38811WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC?
38811WHY AM I AN AGNOSTIC?
38811Was Luther a misfortune to the human race?
38811Was he a good man?
38811Was he simply an instrument, or did his personality color the message received and given?
38811Was it at any time in the history of the world an unpleasant thing to be called a Protestant?
38811Was it reasonable for God to give the Jews manna, and nothing else, year after year?
38811Was it"perhaps right that it should"?
38811Was not the world exactly as God made it?
38811Was that amendment a mere opinion, or a prophecy, or the expression of a hope?
38811Was the Episcopal religion always in the majority?
38811Was there at that time moral, mental and financial growth?
38811Was there ever in the history of man so detestible an administration of public affairs?
38811Well what is it?
38811Well, the great question about that is, is it true?
38811Well, what about the souls in heaven?
38811Well, what is the Christian religion?
38811Were all these found in the desert of Sinai?
38811Were most of them as guilty of blasphemy as is the defendant in this case?
38811Were the Jews the only people who needed a revelation?
38811Were the selfish hermits, who deserted their wives and children for the miserable purpose of saving their own little souls, spiritual?
38811Were the unbelievers in the pagan world better or worse than their neighbors?
38811Were these sins contagious?
38811Were they actuated by good and noble motives?
38811Were they spiritual people who insisted that Infinite Love could punish his poor, ignorant children forever?
38811Were they willing to disgrace the State, in order that they might punish him?
38811Were those who put their fellow- men in dungeons, or burned them at the state* on account of a difference of opinion, all spiritual people?
38811What God is it proposed to put in the Constitution?
38811What action can the State take?
38811What are seas and stars compared with human hearts?
38811What are seas and stars in the presence of a heroism that holds pain and death as naught?
38811What are the restraining influences of religion?
38811What are the restraining influences of religion?
38811What are"the fundamental rights, privileges and immunities"which belong to a free man?
38811What asylums have you founded?
38811What can Congress do?
38811What can the evidence of the first class be worth?
38811What can we say of the persecuted and enslaved?
38811What constructive work has been done by the church?
38811What court, what tribunal of last resort, is to define this God, and who is to make known his will?
38811What did he make them for?
38811What does he get from him?
38811What does it mean?
38811What does it mean?
38811What else did the savage suppose?
38811What for?
38811What harm can come from an honest interchange of thought?
38811What have we destroyed?
38811What have we to say of Russia-- of Siberia?
38811What if God did cry?
38811What is blasphemy?
38811What is holy, what is sacred?
38811What is it to be spiritual?
38811What is lost?
38811What is meant by inspiration?
38811What is morality?
38811What is prayer?
38811What is real blasphemy?
38811What is real religion?
38811What is the authority of the Christian?
38811What is the condition of this man?
38811What is the effect of the example set by a nation?
38811What is the positive side?
38811What is the quarry compared with the statue?
38811What is the use of telling a falsehood about it?
38811What is the"question of religion"to which he referred?
38811What is their religion?
38811What is there in either case to correct?
38811What is to be the result?
38811What knowledge has the Christian of another world?
38811What must we think of a man impudent enough to break in pieces tables of stone upon which God had written with his finger?
38811What of it?
38811What of the kings and nobles who live on the stolen labor of others?
38811What of the priest and cardinal and pope who wrest, even from the hand of poverty, the single coin thrice earned?
38811What reason do you suppose was given?
38811What right had a majority to make any distinctions between free men?
38811What right had a majority to take from a minority any privilege, or any immunity, to which they were entitled as free men?
38811What right had the majority to make that unequal which the Constitution made equal?
38811What right had the other State to pass a law that passengers should be kept separate, on account of race or color?
38811What right has he?
38811What rights are within the protecting power of Congress?
38811What shall be done with the slayers of their fellow- men-- with murderers?
38811What shall be done with these men and women?
38811What then is left?
38811What then is under the protecting power of Congress?
38811What then is, or can be called, a moral guide?
38811What was the office or purpose of that Constitution?
38811What was the spirit of our Government at that time?
38811What was there to be intelligent about?
38811What were the reasons given?
38811What were their opinions?
38811What will conscience trouble the people in hell about?
38811What would Calvin have thought of a Presbyterian like Professor Briggs?
38811What would I do?
38811What would I not give for a picture of Shakespeare as a babe,--a picture that was a likeness,--rocked by his mother?
38811What would John Wesley have thought of a Methodist like Dr. Cadman?
38811What would Lyman Beecher have thought of a man like Dr. Abbott?
38811What would we now think of a God who made his will known to the South Sea Islanders for the benefit of the civilized world?
38811What would we say of an admirer of Humboldt who should claim that the great German could cast out devils?
38811What would we think now of a man who, in writing the life of Charles Darwin, should attribute to him supernatural powers?
38811When asked to give your opinion upon any subject, can it be said that your ignorance of that subject is irrelevant?
38811When some poor mother is found wandering in the street with a babe at her breast, does he quote Scripture, or hunt for his pocket- book?
38811Where and what are the sources of vice and virtue?
38811Where are the Wesleys and Whitfields?
38811Where are the old evangelists, the revivalists who swayed the hearts of their hearers with words of flame?
38811Where are they?
38811Where did a church or a nation get that right?
38811Where did they get the blue cloth and their purple?
38811Where did they get the fine flour and the oil?
38811Where did they get the numberless instruments and tools necessary to accomplish all these things?
38811Where did they get the skins of badgers, and how did they dye them red?
38811Where did they get the sockets of brass?
38811Where is the man with intelligence enough to take into consideration the circumstances of each individual case?
38811Where then, is the blasphemy in saying so?
38811Where would we have been if authority had always triumphed?
38811Where would we have been if such statutes had always been carried out?
38811Whether a man built an ark or not-- does that make the slightest difference?
38811Who are the men who are leading the race upward and shedding light in the intellectual world?
38811Who at that time had the slightest conception of the immediate future?
38811Who can account for the success of falsehood?
38811Who can comprehend the stupidity at the bottom of this truth?
38811Who could have guessed the names of the heroes to be repeated by countless lips before the echoes of that shot should have died away?
38811Who had the impudence to publish it?
38811Who had the impudence to say that lepers had been cleansed, and that the dead had been raised?
38811Who is a worshiper?
38811Who is honestly entitled to this seat?
38811Who is to blame?
38811Who knows the author of Kings and Chronicles?
38811Who knows whether such a man as Moses existed or not?
38811Who made up this story?
38811Who must see to it that this declaration is carried out?
38811Who obtained this indictment?
38811Who then was great enough to see the end?
38811Who were they?
38811Why did God allow, and why does he still allow, a vast majority of his children to remain in ignorance of his will?
38811Why did he compel his priests to be butchers, cutters and stabbers?
38811Why did he make your brain so that you could not by any possibility be a Methodist?
38811Why did he make yours so that you could not be a Catholic?
38811Why did he not answer the prayers of the imprisoned, of the helpless?
38811Why did he not do so?
38811Why did his God sit idly on his throne and allow his enemies to wet their swords in the blood of his friends?
38811Why did not the Supreme Court tell us what may be done when"the contrary appears"?
38811Why has it been allowed to slumber?
38811Why is it that men will suffer and risk so much for the sake of stealing?
38811Why is not the Positive stage the point reached by the Agnostic?
38811Why kick him?
38811Why not?
38811Why not?
38811Why not?
38811Why should God delight in the shedding of blood?
38811Why should God in this desert prohibit priests from drinking wine, and from eating moist grapes?
38811Why should God kill the people for what David did?
38811Why should God object to a man wearing a garment made of woolen and linen?
38811Why should a man allow human love to stand between his soul and the will of God-- between his soul and eternal joy?
38811Why should a man risk an eternity of perfect happiness for the sake of enjoying himself a few days with his wife and children?
38811Why should a man, because he has done a bad action, go and kill a sheep?
38811Why should burning flesh be a sweet savor in the nostrils of God?
38811Why should he allow his children to be stuffed with these foolish and impossible falsehoods?
38811Why should he become an eternal outcast for the sake of having a home and fireside here?
38811Why should he carry them to a land uninhabited?
38811Why should he give his lambs to the care and keeping of the wolves and hyenas of superstition?
38811Why should he want his altar sprinkled with blood, and the horns of his altar tipped with blood, and his priests covered with blood?
38811Why should man waste prayers upon such a God?
38811Why should not a man be as free to say that he does not believe as to say that he does believe?
38811Why should not each human being have the right, so far as thought and its expression are concerned, of all the world?
38811Why should not the laborers combine for the purpose of controlling the executive, legislative, and judicial departments?
38811Why should not the true believer tear every blossom of pity, of charity, from his heart, rather than put in peril his immortal soul?
38811Why should the lips of men feel the ripple of laughter if there is a bare possibility that the creed of Christendom is true?
38811Why should the rich control?
38811Why should the same God kill a man for eating the fat of an ox, a sheep, or a goat?
38811Why should these gentlemen object to a god with big, fiery eyeballs, when their own Deity has eyes like a flame of fire?
38811Why should they take the bread out of their own mouths?
38811Why should we believe that God insisted upon the sacrifice of human beings?
38811Why should we endeavor to beautify a world that is so soon to perish?"
38811Why should we fear our fellow- men?
38811Why should we object to their worshiping God as they please?
38811Why should we send missionaries to China if we can not convert the heathen when they come here?
38811Why should you object to these people on account of their religion?
38811Why then should a free and sensible believer in Science, in the naturalness of the universe, send his child to a Catholic school?
38811Why then should an intelligent man allow his child to be taught the geology and astronomy of the Bible?
38811Why then should there be four inspired accounts?
38811Why was nature not so made that it would give light enough?
38811Why was not a written, or what is still better, a printed revelation given to Adam and Eve in the Garden of Eden?
38811Why will they accept degradation and punishment and infamy as their portion?
38811Why, then, were not the books furnished?
38811Why, whoever did, since the poor man, or the poor God, was crucified?
38811Why?
38811Why?
38811Why?
38811Why?
38811Why?
38811Why?
38811Why?
38811Will extravagance keep pace with ingenuity?
38811Will honest men stop taking off their hats to successful fraud?
38811Will it be a crime to deny the existence of this constitutional God?
38811Will the Principal of King''s College say that having no knowledge is the reason he knows?
38811Will the machine finally go into partnership with the laborer?
38811Will the workers always be ignorant enough and stupid enough to give their earnings for the useless?
38811Will the workers become intelligent enough and strong enough to be the owners of the machines?
38811Will the wrath of God abide forever upon a man for doubting the story that Samson killed a thousand men with a new jawbone?
38811Will there be a supreme tribunal composed of priests?
38811Will these giants, these Titans, shorten or lengthen the hours of labor?
38811Will they always build temples for ghosts and phantoms, and live in huts and dens themselves?
38811Will they always prefer famine in the city to a feast in the fields?
38811Will they become wise enough to know that they can not obtain their own liberty by destroying that of others?
38811Will they ever feel and know that they have no right to bring children into this world that they can not support?
38811Will they ever find how powerful they are?
38811Will they ever recognize the fact that labor, above all things, is honorable-- that it is the foundation of virtue?
38811Will they forever allow parasites with crowns, and vampires with mitres, to live upon their blood?
38811Will they give leisure to the industrious, or will they make the rich richer, and the poor poorer?
38811Will they have no conscience?
38811Will they remain the slaves of the beggars they support?
38811Will they succeed?
38811Will they support millions of soldiers to kill the sons of other workingmen?
38811Will they understand that beggars can not be generous, and that every healthy man must earn the right to live?
38811Will they use their intelligence for themselves, or for others?
38811Will they, at the command of priests, forever extinguish the spark that sheds a little light in every brain?
38811With that view in his mind, he said to himself,"Why should we waste our energies in producing food for destruction?
38811Would a Catholic send his children to a school to be taught that Catholicism is superstition and that Science is the only savior of mankind?
38811Would a white man, under such circumstances, feel that he was in a condition of involuntary servitude?
38811Would he feel that he was treated like an underling, like a menial, like a serf?
38811Would he feel that he was under the protection of the laws, shielded like other men by the Constitution?
38811Would not an infinitely wise and good being-- where belief is a condition to salvation-- supply the evidence?
38811Would not this be the inauguration of religious persecution?
38811You can hardly imagine that there was a time when the same kind of men that made this law said to another man:"You say this world is round?"
38811You may ask, and what of all this?
38811You may not agree with these men-- and what does that prove?
38811You say:"Take a chair; are you thirsty, are you hungry, will you not break bread with me?"
38811You will get your revenge on him through all eternity-- is not that enough?
38811a child that made beehives of lions, incendiaries of foxes, and had a wife that wept seven days to get the answer to his riddle?
38811is it within the experience of mankind?
38811xix, 21, 22 Can it be that an infinite intelligence takes delight in scaring savages, and that he is happy only when somebody trembles?
41595''An''this big wheel, what''s this fur?'' 41595 ''An''who''ll yeze like to see, sure?''
41595''And did n''t you think it was very cruel in them to leave you there to suffer so long?'' 41595 ''And the big black one; who did that come out of?''
41595''And the twins?'' 41595 ''And were you among those poor boys who were left lying where you fell, that bitter cold morning, till you froze fast to the ground?''
41595''Are n''t you Charley----?'' 41595 ''Are you-- that is, do you play rapidly, and at sight?''
41595''Be you the engineer what runs the machine?'' 41595 ''But when it was taken, you were in too great agony to know or care for it?''
41595''But,''I said,''do you not adjust your dress in this way on purpose to give us a chance to look?'' 41595 ''Did the cat''s hair grow?''
41595''Did you count the eggs, Sammy, and get an odd number?'' 41595 ''Fixed the nest up all nice, Sammy?''
41595''Hallo, sir,''growled the schoolmaster( Squeers),''what''s that?'' 41595 ''How many eggs did you set her on, Sammy, dear?''
41595''Indeed, sir? 41595 ''Not beautiful, am I?''
41595''Now, Charley, what brought you back? 41595 ''O, sneezed, did you?''
41595''Then shall I apply some leeches?'' 41595 ''Well, sir, what do you know about the science of medicine?''
41595''Well, sir,''continued the first,''what would you do if during an action a man was brought to you with both arms and legs shot off? 41595 ''Well, why the d----l do n''t you go?''
41595''What hopes, good doctor?'' 41595 ''What is this you have on it?''
41595''What is your mode of treatment, or what school do you represent?'' 41595 ''What shall I do to prevent its falling out?''
41595''What shall I do? 41595 ''What you call that place you''re in?''
41595''What? 41595 ''Where do you live, and what is your name, sir?''
41595''Who?'' 41595 ''Why not?''
41595''Why should he be cupped?'' 41595 ''You want a piano player?''
41595''_ Why_ should you desire to bleed him?'' 41595 A dead man?"
41595A newspaper man?
41595AN''WHO''LL YEZE LIKE TO SEE, SURE?
41595Ai n''t she an angel?
41595And is it two dollars for the snap of a job likes to that, noo, ye''ll be axin''a poor man?
41595And what do you think was the effect of putting cold water into a man''s stomach, under these circumstances?
41595And where will you try your luck next?
41595And who was Anglicus Ponto?
41595And why should any truth be counted as treasonable?
41595And wo n''t he die, if we follow this strange prescription?
41595Anything to eat in that pantry?
41595Are not physicians and apothecaries sometimes owners of patent medicines?
41595Are they not all found?
41595Are you drunk, or sober, doctor?
41595Are you drunk, or sober?
41595Are you not very cold, in those thin clothes?
41595Are you the doctor?
41595At what time do you get up?
41595Be thou as chaste as ice, or pure as snow, thou shalt not escape calumny,and if she fall, who shall restore her?
41595Better?
41595But ca n''t you give me some snuff, doctor?
41595But what has become of the poor, wet fellow? 41595 Ca n''t you tell a story just as well without swearing, Sam?"
41595Can you cure me? 41595 Can you familiarize me with the most direct course to a physician?"
41595Can you tell me where a doctor lives?
41595DOES HE LOVE ME?
41595Did n''t you tell me I had a good case?
41595Did n''t your''grandma sleep during nearly a hundred years''on a feather bed?
41595Did the other party, the young''flirt,''know it?
41595Did you ever hear a teacher say,''I will whip you within an inch of your life?''
41595Did you feel that your sins were so great as to require a frequent repetition of the ordinance?
41595Did you follow my directions?
41595Die with? 41595 Do n''t the newspaper publishers know it is a swindle?"
41595Do n''t you observe the arms of Mrs. Mapp on the carriage?
41595Do n''t you recollect me?
41595Do n''t you see the stove, and feel the awful heat, Frank?
41595Do you have books here, my dear?
41595Do you have to pay the bill, sir?
41595Do you know Lord Barrymore?
41595Do you like soda water?
41595Do you never experience any contrition, at times, for the deed?
41595Do you suppose that old woman is talking there now, with her nightcapped head poked out of the window?
41595Do you think it will relieve me from this oppression, doctor?
41595Does Captain Blank live here?
41595Dr. Smith, have you ever attended a common school?
41595Excuse me, madam, for disturbing your slumbers; but can you inform a stranger if this is the right road to B.?
41595Finally one of them approached and said,--''Stranger, are this''ere a injine?''
41595For Sir George, did you say, Joe?
41595Gentlemen,said the liveried servant, hat in hand,"can your honors tell me if Dr. Hannes is present?"
41595Good evening, Stephen; p''taters doin''well?
41595Good wind, Mr. T.? 41595 Great God,"he cried, in agony of soul,"why did I take you from your father''s house, where you had plenty?
41595HOW MUCH?
41595Have you got any money, young man?
41595Have you got any_ Bonyset arbs_?
41595Have you swallowed it all?
41595He eyed me closely for a moment; then, turning to his companion, he remarked,--''Bill, it do n''t take much of a man to be a engineer-- do it?''"
41595He return it? 41595 He was merely announced as''The Sanatorian,''but was indorsed( true or false?)
41595Here, Sammy; do n''t you know that is one of the nastiest and most indigestiblest things you could put into your stomach? 41595 Hey?"
41595Hiding from the snakes in his back room?
41595Hoss?
41595How are you, my friend, and where have you been? 41595 How could such a lady as you come way down here to take care of us poor, sick, dirty boys?"
41595How could that be possible? 41595 How did it happen?
41595How did she describe the old lady as appearing?
41595How did them old_ anti- delusion_ fellows live?
41595How do you manage to take all those abominable pills and drugs, Madame Bertrand, which the doctor is continually prescribing for you?
41595How is he, woman?
41595How long will it take?
41595How mooch? 41595 How much do you charge, sir?"
41595How much have you made to- day?
41595How shall I be cheerful when all the world goes wrong with me?
41595I beg pardon, but can you tell me if the doctor has many patients?
41595I can not tell,replied the doctor;"what is the difference?"
41595I do forgive her,she whispered,"but can I forget myself, unblessed as I am?
41595I say, madam, when is this farm going to_ sail_?
41595Ignorant?
41595In New York city?
41595In exposing the_ reverend wolf_, do n''t you see they would expose their own weakness? 41595 Is Miss---- at home?"
41595Is he at home?
41595Is he better now?
41595Is it possible?
41595Is it true that consumption of the lungs is ever cured?
41595Is that a bust of Pallas he has over his secretary yonder?
41595Is the disease left in the box when you are done pumping? 41595 Is there anything more wanted?"
41595Is this Dr. Hannes''carriage?
41595Is_ Miss_ Kingsbury at home?
41595Let me see, Mr. Smith: how much did you pay me for that advice?
41595Let me see,said he;"how many patients have you seen to- day?"
41595Ma''am, where did you come from?
41595Madam, what can I do? 41595 May not a man be both?"
41595Me name, is it? 41595 Me tight?
41595Me? 41595 Me?
41595Medicine? 41595 Mine?
41595Ninepence? 41595 Now, what''s your name, boy?"
41595Now,continued the patient, very_ naïvely_,"supposing I did, what the devil was that to him?"
41595O, did you ever see such a comical sight?
41595O, docther, dear, I''ve pizened my boy; what will I do intirely?
41595O, doctor, then I am dying at last-- am I?
41595O, is there a God in Israel?
41595O, mermaids, is it cold and wet Adown beneath the sea? 41595 O, my lord, we never talk about anything but eating and drinking,--except--""Except what, sir?"
41595O, what-- what do I see?
41595PINNY, SIR? 41595 Pinny, sir?
41595SHALL I ASSIST YOU TO ALIGHT?
41595Sanburn,said she,--for that was the invalid''s name,--"could you eat some mush?"
41595Seen, my lord?
41595Shall I assist you to alight?
41595Shall we give him some?
41595Sir, do you see that I have both hands full?
41595Sixty, sir; and how old are you?
41595So you believe me totally incapable of truly loving_ any_ girl, do you?
41595Still, do you believe I never loved that darling girl?
41595Take? 41595 That?
41595The dark one? 41595 Then a patent medicine vender?"
41595Then it is only another''Reverend''dodge-- is it?
41595Then stand on your head; do n''t you see that all the light here comes from the skylight? 41595 Then what do you come here for, sir?"
41595There I''ve been luggin''water all the morning for the doctor''s wife to wash with, and what do you s''pose she give me for it?
41595This man has cut himself very bad on the head; big iron wheel come down on him: can you fix him up?
41595Tongue? 41595 Very sick, any of them?"
41595WHAT''S IN THE MILK?
41595WHO- A''-YOO?
41595WHY DID I TAZE YE?
41595WILL YE TAK''A BLAST, NOO?
41595Was you born in the woods to be scared by an owl?
41595Well, Dr. A., how is practice here, in general?
41595Well, what did you tell him?
41595Well, what has that to do with health and long life?
41595Well, what have you seen?
41595Well, what was his reply?
41595Well, you see that bank and all them nests? 41595 Well,"said the lady,"what do you children want?"
41595Well,said the man of science,"and pray what do you think of me now you have seen me?"
41595What are the proofs?
41595What are you waiting for?
41595What avails it that I know as much as other physicians who have entered upon a practice? 41595 What brings you here, blackie?"
41595What brought you out, and where are you going, on this cold winter morning, my poor boy?
41595What business?
41595What d''ye want?
41595What did she reply?
41595What do you call glucose?
41595What do you suppose I found him doing?
41595What do you talk about?
41595What do you think of this?
41595What explanation can you give for such conduct, sir?
41595What have you got these nailed up over the door for?
41595What have you here?
41595What is a sample clerk, my lad?
41595What is he doing in a slaughter- house, sis?
41595What is it?
41595What is it?
41595What is that you hold in your hand?
41595What is the disease?
41595What is the hour?
41595What is the matter, sir?
41595What is the object of the two canine specimens being always present when I have consulted you?
41595What is the price of this meat, sir?
41595What is your name?
41595What regiment''s yours, and under whose flag Do you fight?
41595What shall I say to her? 41595 What was the effect of the ptisan?"
41595What were you doing at the front door but a moment since?
41595What will Mrs. Codfish say when she sees this turned dress?
41595What''s o''clock?
41595What''s that hollow thing for?
41595What''s the matter? 41595 What''s the matter?"
41595What, in the name of Heaven, shall I now do?
41595What? 41595 What?"
41595Where do you live?
41595Where is it?
41595Where is your father, did you say?
41595Where was I born? 41595 Which shall we follow?"
41595Which way?
41595Who has done this wicked thing?
41595Who wants Dr. Hannes, fellow?
41595Who''s telling this story,--you or me?
41595Who?
41595Why are you up, without my permission?
41595Why did you do such a remarkable deed?
41595Why do n''t some of the thousand victims who have been swindled into buying this worthless stuff expose him?
41595Why not surprised by receiving the letter from a stranger?
41595Why should Mrs. Lozier, a gentle, modest, unambitious, home- loving woman, have chosen the calling of a physician?
41595Why, Bridget, did n''t I tell you never to polish the front door- knobs during the warm season? 41595 Why, what''s the matter at the shanty, Fitzgibbon?"
41595Will they cure this?
41595Will yeze be axin''that much?
41595Will you ask a blessing?
41595Will you go to Mrs. Higgins''s party?
41595Will you please come and see my mother?
41595Will-- will-- you go? 41595 Winked?"
41595Woman, my lord?
41595Would n''t a_ bit_ or two serve you as well?
41595Yes, I am; and you are a--''pathist; are you not?
41595Yes, and did n''t you advise me to sue him?
41595Yes, sir; buy one?
41595Yes; and have you any more pennies?
41595Yes; but I mean, had intemperance anything to do with it?
41595You ca n''t be at Bedford Row( where Abernethy resided)"at nine, then?"
41595You have long desired to visit Bangor?
41595You see that bank over opposite?
41595You were often with him?
41595Yours, sir-- what''s your name?
41595Zounds, woman, have n''t I told you to give him all he will take? 41595 _ Cur?_"( why) was a favorite inquiry of Dr. Abernethy''s.
41595''Are you a clairvoyant?''
41595''Could any tumultuous passion ever have agitated that bosom so gently swelling in repose?''
41595''For God''s sake, Mr. Bilious, have you got any good preventive for falling of the hair?''
41595''How now?''
41595''How will ye have it?''
41595''No hopes,_ dear_ doctor?''
41595''Not beautiful at all, am I?
41595''O, my God, what shall I do?''
41595''Then what did you say"Nothing"for, sir?''
41595''Why ar Moses like er cotton- gin?''
41595( How far can one travel, in this country, without crossing water?)
41595( I nodded, and smiled, for how could I refrain from smiling?)
41595( Would not this be excellent advice to some of the apothecaries of the present day?)
41595( a smile?)
41595*****"Did you know that George is sick?"
41595*****[ Illustration: WHAT KILLED THE DOG?]
41595--A GAY BEAU.--UP THE PENOBSCOT.--DYING FOR LOVE.--"IS HE MAD?"
41595--A GAY BEAU.--UP THE PENOBSCOT.--DYING FOR LOVE.--"IS HE MAD?"
41595--HIS LAST JOKE.--AN ASTONISHED DARKY.--OLD DR. K.''S MARE.--A SCARED CUSTOMER.--"WHAT''S TRUMPS?"
41595--HIS LAST JOKE.--AN ASTONISHED DARKY.--OLD DR. K.''s MARE.--A SCARED CUSTOMER.--"WHAT''S TRUMPS?"
41595--MONEY DOES IT.-- GREAT SUMS OF MONEY.--"LOVE POWDER"EXPOSÉ.--HASHEESH.--"DOES HE LOVE ME?"
41595--MONEY DOES IT.--GREAT SUMS OF MONEY.--"LOVE POWDER"EXPOSE.--HASHEESH.--"DOES HE LOVE ME?"
41595--RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS.--RUNS IN THE FAMILY.--ANECDOTES.--"WHICH GOT THRASHED?"
41595--RIGHT TO BEAR ARMS.--RUNS IN THE FAMILY.--ANECDOTES.--"WHICH GOT THRASHED?"
4159515),"What deed is this that ye have done?
41595A poor mechanic, three weeks after marriage, was addressed by his wife thus:--"Harry, do n''t you think a new silk dress would become my beauty?"
41595A reverend(?
41595A wag once entered one of these apotheco- groco- dry- goods- meat- and- fish- market- stores, and asked the keeper,--"Do you keep matches, sir?"
41595A whisper was passed to a female passenger; a policeman was summoned from outside the ladies''(?)
41595A.?''
41595ANIMAL OR VEGETABLE DIET?
41595Ah, Biddy, will ye have me?"
41595Ah, an''what would me poor mother say, if she was here?
41595Ah, why did I taze ye?"
41595Am I fainting?"
41595Among eighty- five"female physicians"(?)
41595An invalid from boyhood, his time and means exhausted in travelling"in Europe two years,"and was only"sent a missionary(?)
41595And did John rescue the saddle- bags?"
41595And do you not know that life is pretty much what you make it and take it?
41595And for what, and for whom, are you fighting?"
41595And how was I to reach it?
41595And the girls?
41595And what do they leave in their wake?
41595And what is the reverse of this exclusiveness?
41595And what of her brother who was on the other end of the plank?
41595And what was the result?
41595And who shall smooth the dying pillow, hear the last prayer, for self, and for loved ones far away in the northern homes?
41595And why did you stay?
41595And would_ she_ possibly betray the daughter of her old friend?"
41595And yet, what shall I say?
41595And you are next led to ask,--"Where is the''dodge''?
41595Any more, gentlemen?
41595Are not these historical facts?
41595Are sly glances, winks, or billets- doux prayers?
41595Are the_ males_ the only"oppressors"of the gentler sex?
41595Are there not many who now believe this?
41595At which gate did he really make his exit?
41595Away hastened the girl, who, quickly returning, asked in very primitive simplicity,--"How will you have them cooked?"
41595Being late at school, the teacher would inquire,--"Where have you been lingering, that you are behind time at school?"
41595But from Ellsworth, Maine, which way else could one go, without going"south- west,"unless he really went to the"jumping- off place, away down east?"
41595But have n''t you been cleaning the door- knob and the bell- pull?"
41595But how about the bedaubed face and the huge knife?
41595But how old are the twins, and Mike, and the baby?''
41595But how shall we judge of the motives of Dr. Hammond but by_ appearances_?
41595But since the ruined drunkard used tobacco, how do you know it was not tobacco which ruined him?
41595But the abrupt question of the Pantheist was,"Mr. Emmons, how old are you?"
41595But what of thy bewildered votaries?
41595But what would you think of a doctor, a respectable graduate of a medical college, who sought, if not advice, recreation and solace in Mother Goose?
41595But who shall defend the babies''rights?
41595But who was to know whether"the doctor made more visits per week to the widow Wealthy than her state of health seemed to warrant"?
41595But why is the doctor forgot?
41595CUI BONO?
41595CUR?
41595Ca n''t I have some more of that drink?"
41595Can an adulterer perceive it?
41595Can the reader suppose any sensible person would believe this to be magic?
41595Can you help me?
41595Can you see?"
41595Can you, honest reader, believe there are such institutions in our enlightened land?
41595Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away; Children and grandchildren-- where were they?
41595Come, that''ll do very well for a joke; but how could I get water on my chest when I have n''t touched a drop in twenty years?
41595Could I say no to so honest a statement of his low state of finance?
41595Could I take her fee?
41595Could yeze spare a quarter for a poor divil?
41595Did a legitimate business require such mazy windings as I had just passed through?
41595Did our grandfathers or mothers die of consumption?
41595Did the fortune- teller know your address?"
41595Did they dissipate in any way?
41595Did they drink, smoke, or chew?
41595Did you ever know a patient to recover from sun- stroke when ice had been applied to his head?
41595Did you ever see one before?''
41595Did you ever?"
41595Did you propose to Jenny?
41595Did you?
41595Do n''t I sometimes wish I kept an"O''clo''"store, like the old Jew?
41595Do n''t you know me now?"
41595Do n''t you know who I am?
41595Do not"well- informed physicians"prescribe calomel?
41595Do sleep and digestion agree well in their case, and not so in the case of man?
41595Do women dress for men?
41595Do you begin to see the_ dodge_?
41595Do you call that the conduct of a gentleman?"
41595Do you have sore places about your chest?
41595Do you hear now?
41595Do you know a lady of this description whom you like?"
41595Do you know how much money is being squandered to- day, in the United States, in the filthy, health- destroying use of tobacco?
41595Do you understand?
41595Do you wonder it gives him a_ quietus_?
41595Do you wonder that the mortality among children is greatly on the increase?
41595Docther, now what are ye doin''?
41595Does any one question but something of this virus is transmitted to the offspring?
41595Does it act as physic, emetic, a bath, or do the sores follow right out of the blood into the box?"
41595Does it add anything to, or take anything from the limb?"
41595Does it really suck all the disease into the thing by the process?"
41595Does not the female show as strong lungs as the male in its_ earliest_ disapprobation of this unceremonious world?
41595Does she live in_ this house_?"
41595Does the mother, by habits which injure her health, jeopardize the life and health of her offspring?
41595Dr. Saffron took the wounded arm, looked at Job, and said,--"Is this your doings?"
41595Each_ monath_( new moon or month) religious(?)
41595Echo answers,"Where?"
41595Educate a clairvoyant doctor, and what becomes of his clairvoyant power?
41595Familiar title:''Excuse me, how is your stomach?''
41595Females, their victims, drown; but who ever heard of a natural- born villain committing suicide, unless to escape the threatening halter?
41595Fish contains more phosphorus; but are fish- eating Esquimaux,[10] or coast- men, the more intellectual for having made fish their principal diet?
41595Git up?
41595Give her the freedom of the boy, the pure air that the boy breathes; not the romping, rude, boisterous plays, perhaps(?
41595H. S."HOW MUCH?"
41595HOW MUCH?
41595HUNTER''S GENEROSITY.--"WHAT''S THE PRICE OF BEEF?"
41595HUNTER''S GENEROSITY.--"WHAT''S THE PRICE OF BEEF?"
41595Has she accepted, and are you beside yourself with ecstatic joy?
41595Has your doctor failed to do this?
41595Hath a seducer known it?
41595Hear, d---- you, Slush- bucket?"
41595His mother was a widow, very poor, and I asked him,--"What will she say when you return with no money to show for your day''s work?"
41595Hoo much wather, docther dear?
41595Hoo much?
41595Hopen de door, unt I preaks him mit mine feest; do n''t it?"
41595How about curing gout?
41595How about the comparative strength exhibited in the demonstrations of each when the lacteal fluid is not forthcoming in proportion to the appetite?
41595How am I to look into your nose?"
41595How could his dreams but have been disturbed, with the load of guilt and remorse that he ought to have had resting upon his conscience?
41595How else can you account for nearly all the professional clairvoyants( and spiritualists) being persons of low intellectuality?
41595How fares it with the more precious human clay?
41595How is it with you?"
41595How is the patient to detect it?
41595How is the physician to know the cheat?
41595How is the power, or force, conveyed from the operator to the person operated upon?
41595How many young women in Boston can avouch for the truth of this statement?
41595How mooch is the damage?
41595How shall I stay life''s sunny hours?
41595How shall we account for the evil?
41595How shall we, then, tell a pure gum arabic drop from those nasty glue drops?
41595How would our Powers have succeeded as a sculptor, without this knowledge, or Miss Bonheur as a painter of animals?
41595Hunter and Scipio-- in your case, sir?"
41595I discovered it accidentally, but how such an_ error_(?)
41595I have no money, but you see all my treasures arranged along on the mantel- piece there?"
41595I know this was decidedly unprofessional; but what care I?
41595I ran back to see what it was all about, and there was the pianist(?)
41595I was at this time_ seen_( by them?)
41595If it were"spirits,"why does the spirit always seek a_ low organization_ through which to manifest itself?
41595Is Faith of no avail?
41595Is Hope blown out like a light By a gust of wind in the night?
41595Is a sordid man capable of love?
41595Is he much sick?"
41595Is humanity below the animals?
41595Is it an incisor, bicuspid, or a molar?"
41595Is it anything strange that a dissipated, weakened man should die after having a score of suffocative fits?
41595Is it not quite time-- I appeal to the sensible reader-- that such folly was expunged from our literature?
41595Is it really"hidden from the wise and prudent, and given to babes?"
41595Is n''t she lovely?
41595Is she here?
41595Is that"too homeopathic?"
41595Is the active, prancing steed, or the inactive, sluggish swine, the better representative of beauty, strength, and long life?
41595Is there not more happiness and health in the obeying of this command, than in disobedience to it?
41595Is this a bad custom?
41595Is this true?
41595Just then Chaplain C. rode up, and hearing the contraband swearing, said,--"Do you know what the great I Am said?"
41595Keeps the_ lip_ pure, while wood and ivory stains?
41595Landlord and the Santipede( Xantippe?)
41595MAPP?"
41595MAPP?"]
41595Many of the abbeys of Europe and Asia had a"phlebotomaria,"or bleeding- room, connected, in which the sacred(?)
41595Mark says,"What, sir, would the peoples of the earth be without woman?
41595May I ask if it is not right that we should demand of you as much modesty as you demand of us?''
41595May not this man''s bones be full of nicotine, which will come out through, if we replace the integuments, blood, and garments?
41595Mr. Beecher published him as a thief and forger of his name, which only served to bring the doctor(?)
41595Mrs. T. fairly leaped to the bedside, and placing her hand over the daughter''s mouth, with affrighted gestures, she exclaimed,--"What is it?
41595Mustering courage, he said, very gently,--"Madam, if you please, you are standing on my feet--""Your feet, sir, did you say?"
41595Name, did I say?
41595Never heard of it?
41595No spavins?
41595No wonder our informant asks,"Did this really occur?
41595Nothing the matter?
41595Now my friends will think that I have returned from Saratoga--""And is it to Saratogy ye''ve been, ma''am?"
41595Now, can you cure me?"
41595Now, how about the babies?
41595Now, how could he have obtained my address?"
41595Now, how does a Yankee differ in his habits from the rest of the world''s people?
41595Now, is this a"divine"quality, that only ignorance can make use of?
41595Now, will not a child sleeping continually with an aged person or invalid tend to reduce the vitality of the child?
41595Nurse, did he sleep well?"
41595O, was n''t it horrid?
41595O, where is the right heir of all this wealth?
41595Of what?
41595On handing it to the latter gentleman, he asked,--"What is this, Brougham?"
41595On his return, the following dialogue occurred:--"''Sammy, my dear, have you set her?''
41595One day, an elderly gentleman, of the fogy school, blundered into the lawyer''s office, and asked,--"Is the doctor in?"
41595Or can I, in a few chapters, instruct such in the art of curing complicated diseases?
41595Or was it a temptation of the devil?
41595Or was the editor of the_ Mercure_ the original Baron Munchausen?"
41595Ought not he to know best?
41595PUBLIC CONFIDENCE(?
41595PUBLIC CONFIDENCE(?
41595Please, may I make so bold as to ask, are you the doctor?"
41595Pray why do n''t_ you_ get up something similar?"
41595Pusbelly?"
41595S.?"
41595Sell dry or wet goods?"
41595Sending the nurse from the room, I quickly pressed the young girl''s hand within my own, and said to her,--"Do you really wish to live, Emily?"
41595Several visits were thus made, when, on presenting it for the last time, Abernethy said,--"Well?"
41595Shall she seek shelter in the house of prayer?
41595Shall women remain passively resigned to the lamentable physical condition of her sex?
41595She carries the evidences of her guilt( or misfortune?)
41595She smiled, took a second look at me, and said,--"Who?"
41595Shines the_ soul_ fair where Tophet- blackness reigns?
41595Should he hide behind the hedge and solicit the help of some male passer?
41595Should he turn back to the house from whence he had been so ruthlessly ejected?
41595So the M. D. very benevolently(?)
41595So the doctor proposed the following:--"What is the difference between a priest and a jackass?"
41595So the publikin he marched in, and the bar- keeper said,''What want ye?''
41595Some years since there was found, after the flight of one Dr. Jaques(?
41595Stays the_ sight_ clear, while smoke obscures the day?
41595Sure, were n''t we children together in the ould counthry?
41595The Countess said,--"There, my good woman, is it not much better?"
41595The Shakspearian inquiry would at once and repeatedly be put,--"How chance it they travel?
41595The bishop repeated the question,--"Who are you?"
41595The corpse is here?"
41595The doctor made no reply; but when he had completed the sorting of his preparations, he said, looking up,--"Eh?"
41595The following is to the point:--_ Doctor._ Well, deacon, how did your wife manage her new shower bath?
41595The medical attendant, being present, asked the surgeon,--"''Shall I bleed him at once, sir?''
41595The next question was more strange than the first:--"Will the young gentleman marry me, eventually?"
41595The parson was working his Sunday''s text, Had got to_ fifthly_, and stopped perplexed, And what the-- Moses-- was coming next?
41595The question is repeated every time there is a great robbery or a murder committed,--"Why do not the clairvoyants tell who has committed this crime?"
41595The slight hacking cough is scarcely heeded; for do not people often cough without having consumption, and without raising blood?
41595The sound of carriage wheels startled him, but to where should he flee?
41595The windows are wooden, and--""Where was it?"
41595The witches in"Macbeth"( for what impression of the times he lived in has Shakspeare lost?)
41595The young mother has doubtless been sent to a fashionable boarding- school, where she was taught algebra, French,(?)
41595Their bare names would fill a large volume, and who would care to read them?
41595Them''s the biler-- ain''t it?''
41595Then is there no help for woman''s condition in this cold, uncharitable world?
41595Then may not the continued touch of a healthy person( king or subject) affect the health of a weaker, on the principle of increased vitality?
41595Then to her he put the question,--"What is in my pocket?"
41595Then turning to the wagoner, he said,"And you found Sir Scipio lying in the road?"
41595Then, taking two dollars from his purse, he asked,"Wo n''t that do?"
41595Therefore, of what good is it?
41595These, too, are the religious(?)
41595This leads us to ask,"Who are the quacks?"
41595Though Christ, the lowly, the magnanimous, said,"_ Neither do I condemn thee_,"his followers(?)
41595Throat sore?"
41595Through what medium does it act?
41595Vere you leefs ven you''s t''home?
41595Vich a man ca n''t come mit his vife, altogedder?
41595WARM.--THE OLD LADY AND THE AIR PUMP.--SAVED BY HER BUSTLE.--COUNTRY PRESCRIPTIONS AND A FUNNY MISTAKE.--ARE YOU DRUNK OR SOBER?
41595WARM.--THE OLD LADY AND THE AIR- PUMP.--SAVED BY HER BUSTLE.--COUNTRY PRESCRIPTIONS AND A FUNNY MISTAKE.--ARE YOU DRUNK OR SOBER?
41595WHAT KILLED THE DOG?
41595WHAT SHALL WE EAT?
41595Was Dr. Hammond,"a member of the medical profession highly esteemed for scientific attainments,"attempting a reform in medicine?
41595Was it you?
41595Was not the newspaper proprietor who advertised these several offices a_ particeps criminis_ in the transaction?
41595Was not this double quackery?
41595Was not this the office of an overseer, or"keeper of a magazine"?
41595Was there ever a greater mistake?
41595Was this a blow aimed at"quackery"?
41595Was this an expression of God''s wrath upon church- goers?
41595We take a horse- car for up or down town, and opposite, in bold and variegated letters, the persistent remedy(?)
41595Well, he was as religious as a cuss,--that ai n''t swearin'', is it, cap''n?
41595What advantage were they ever to King Saul, the grass- eating king with the long name, or any other individuals, in their perplexities?
41595What class do they principally represent-- the active and virtuous, or the idle and vicious?
41595What de debble you doin''?"
41595What did the old tarantula say to you?"
41595What do men, generally speaking, know of woman''s dress?
41595What do you mean?"
41595What do you suppose the matter is?"
41595What do you think I did?
41595What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around?
41595What does my diploma amount to if I have no patients?"
41595What does she mean?
41595What does that imply?
41595What does this prove?
41595What else should she do?
41595What else?"
41595What for?
41595What have I to do with gilding but on pills?
41595What is a ghost?
41595What is a house without a good foundation?
41595What is it?
41595What is it?"
41595What is that?"
41595What is the connection?
41595What is the difference between the doctor and the ass?"
41595What is the matter?"
41595What is the nature of gypsum, terra alba, or white earth?
41595What is the unseen power, appropriated mostly by the ignorant, which at times controls another weaker mind, or, for the time being, controls disease?
41595What next?
41595What possible use can a man have for_ ten million shirts_?
41595What shall I say of those demoralizing institutions where the"young ladies"are taught algebra, languages, and ill manners?
41595What time would you find it most convenient to perform the little operation?"
41595What was it?
41595What was the value received?
41595What were their habits?
41595What would our modern cooks do without the above enumerated articles in the culinary department?
41595What would you do?''
41595What''s good for the scurvy?
41595What''s wanted?"
41595What-- hic-- do you want?"
41595When Dr. Abernethy gave her the prescription, she asked,--"What am I to do with this, sir?"
41595When a young man is about to be"taken into society,"the question naturally arises, Is the young man, or the society, to be benefited by the accession?
41595When he recovers a little, do not press around and confuse him with questions of"What can I do for you?"
41595Where are your_ men_?"
41595Where had it gone so very suddenly?
41595Where is the other man, or class of men, who would have returned the money, honestly earned, as agreed upon beforehand, unasked?
41595Where they are forbidden to recognize a gentleman in the school- room, prayer- room, or street?
41595Where, then, O where, shall Neatness hope to hide From this o''erwhelming of the blackened tide?
41595Where-- how-- should I raise the money necessary to take me from this land of strangers?
41595Which will you choose?"
41595While making change, the telegraph man said,"My friend, are you not afraid your mother- in- law will take the small- pox?"
41595Who could it be, singing amid the fearful tempest?
41595Who does not love to listen to the beautiful heart and home songs of Dr. J. P. Ordway, such as"Home Delights,""Come to the Spirit Land,"etc.?
41595Who does not love-- and who is not entitled to-- the sweet money earned by labor, be it labor of hand, brain, or cloth?
41595Who ever saw, heard, felt, tasted, or smelled one?
41595Who has developed and promulgated the knowledge relative to anatomy, chemistry, physiology, botany, etc., but the physicians?
41595Who has done it?
41595Who is to soothe the fearful anguish, from lacerated nerve and muscle, by cruel shot and shell?
41595Who loves, what loves, and what is the result?
41595Who says to laugh is"_ hoidenish_?"
41595Who so well knew the value, or injury, of calomel, as he who had used it for twenty odd years?
41595Who will stop it?
41595Who will tell us how these aged people managed to keep up their youthful spirits so long?.
41595Who wonders that he should request his physician to allow him to"_ die in peace_"?
41595Who would put faith in a man with no recommendation, and possessing such a small wardrobe?
41595Why all these intricate passages?
41595Why did I taze ye?"
41595Why did n''t you say so before?"
41595Why did you put so many eggs under her, Sammy?''
41595Why does one''s yawning set a whole room full to yawning?
41595Why so?
41595Why, what''s got inter-- pony?
41595Why?
41595Why?
41595Will I die?"
41595Will ye give me the pinny, sir?"
41595Will you please call her out?"
41595Will you walk in?"
41595Will, he''s ate nothin''for a hole wake, and in the night he wanted some bread an''sugar, do ye see?
41595Without vouchsafing an immediate reply to the query, the dutiful son- in- law remarked,"Sir, are you a married man?"
41595Wo n''t you come in, sir?"
41595Works the_ brain_ true, while poison fills the veins?
41595Wot ye not that such a man as I can certainly divine?"
41595Would it not be well to reverse the thing, and make such murderous physicians as Theveneau and M. Palmery rank as hangmen- extraordinary?"
41595Would n''t they look gay?
41595Would that imply that I was a play- actor, or owner of the Museum?"
41595Would you have known her?
41595Would you have the prayers and blessing of the good?
41595Yankee or Irish, English or Scotch, French or German, they all rush to the drug store for pills, for powder, for whiskey(?
41595Ye''ll have me now-- will ye not?"
41595Yes,"Why?"
41595Yes; they made you sick?
41595You prefer cupping?''
41595You took the pills?
41595[ 9]"The nursery shows thy pictured wall, Thy bat, thy bow, Thy cloak, thy bonnet, club, and ball; But where art thou?
41595[ Illustration:"AN''WHO''LL YEZE LIKE TO SEE, SURE?"]
41595[ Illustration:"PINNY, SIR?
41595[ Illustration:"SHALL I ASSIST YOU TO ALIGHT?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WHAT''S IN THE MILK?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WHO-- A''--YOO?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WHY DID I TAZE YE?"]
41595[ Illustration:"WILL YE TAK''A BLAST NOO?"]
41595_ Apothecary._ Who calls so loud?
41595_ Doctor( with great professional dignity, speaking very slowly)._"Well, mariner, what tooth do you require extracted?
41595_ I was afraid it was a stomach- pump!_""WHAT''S TRUMPS?"
41595_ Lord Clifford._''Tis true the noble should; but who is noble?
41595_ Macbeth._ How now, you secret, black and midnight hags, What is''t ye do?
41595_ Rom._ Art thou so bare, and full of wretchedness, And fear''st to die?
41595_ What_ circumstances?
41595and did n''t we take our potaties and butthermilk out o''the same bowl?
41595and have you derived the anticipated benefit therefrom, sir?"
41595and how shall I know Miss Kingsbury from any other lady?"
41595and why was I each time taken around through them, and out through a different door from that which I entered?
41595do n''t you see it?"
41595do n''t you see them-- crawling along?"
41595doth Charity fail?
41595exclaimed the old negro in astonishment;"hab de Lord done gone an''loss hisself?"
41595have you no faith in your patron saint?
41595he was game-- was he?
41595how''s this?"
41595lend him money?"
41595looking at the bare head;"why did n''t you run after him?"
41595more pedagogues turned doctors?"
41595my grandmother once sarcastically inquired when I was frightened from the barn by an old owl inquiring,--"Who-- a''--yoo?"
41595not money?
41595now, friend,"said the Abbe,"how could you expect me to swallow a quart at a time, when I hold only a pint?"
41595or an annual cost to the people of Boston( and vicinity?)
41595or for each other''s eye?
41595or who-- what was the woman who has been here?"
41595poor child of weakness''?"
41595said the female, and, turning again to me, said,--"Whom did you inquire for?"
41595that so many of the darling, helpless little innocents die from dropsy, brain fever, epileptic fits, and the like?
41595to please the opposite sex?
41595what shall I do?"
41595what wilt ye do, mun?"
41595who shall give the"water"which raging thirst momentarily demands?
7852Is----- under any engagement?
7852MY VERY DEAR FRIEND,Be you yet alive?
7852To- morrow, did I say? 7852 Was it philosophy that supported you in your trials?
7852When and where shall I see you again?
7852Who can view the works of nature, and the productions of art, without the most sublime and rapturous emotions? 7852 Why, Major Burr,"says he,"you are not going?"
7852Would it be agreeable to you that----- should make overtures?
7852_ Plus que jamais à   vous_,dost thou recollect it?
7852_ Question._ Ought the votes of Clinton to be canvassed?
7852''But what did the rascal,''continued he,''state to be the purport of the letter?''
7852''s being out of the question, is there nothing in this line to be found in South Carolina?
7852----Where can----- be?
7852--I rose up suddenly from the sofa, and rubbing my head--"What book shall I buy for her?"
7852A. or Joseph A.?
7852About two o''clock, as the public well know, he expired--"Incorrupta fides-- nudaque veritas Quando ullum invenient parem?
7852After you get through the book you are now reading, which I think is Anacharsis, or is it Gibbon?
7852Again, are they citizens of the United States, or can Congress make them such?
7852Ah, my husband, what can be pleasure to your Theo., unassisted by the charms of your presence and participation?
7852Ah, my husband, why are we separated?
7852Am I dreaming, or do you leave home again before you go to Philadelphia?
7852Am I to blame Strong?
7852And can you really hope, my Theodosia, with all your ingenuity, to convince me that such a being will enjoy equal happiness in marriage with me?
7852And do you find that you converse with more facility in the French?
7852And do you regret that you are not also a woman?
7852And do you, indeed, miss your Theo.?
7852And have you not as much philosophy as I have?
7852And is not Reubon in a way to be coquetted, with his eyes open?
7852And tell me what is laudanum?
7852And what are its effects?
7852And what does all this prove?
7852And what in particular were the contents of such letters or letter, or communication?
7852And what took you to Darien?
7852And when we enter on the theatre of the world, why not act our parts together?
7852And whether a copy of it can be procured?
7852And who can be a judge of these consequences but myself?
7852And why he did not retreat with the army?
7852Are authority and compulsion then the only engines by which you can be moved?
7852Are the Wadsworths with you?
7852Are the wagons you mentioned some time ago returned?
7852Are there any, or very pressing calls at the office?
7852Are you a good girl?
7852Are you afflicted with any of your old, or with what new complaint?
7852Are you content?
7852Aristotle says"that a man should not marry before he is six- and- thirty:"pray, Mr. Alston, what arguments have you to oppose to such authority?
7852As you are likely to make considerable use of it, would it not be worth while to have a few days''work done on it?
7852Better or worse?
7852But even supposing I should fail in this-- where is this sad reverse of fortune?--this lamentable change?
7852But pray, when you have got up to two hundred lines a lesson, why do you go back again to one hundred and twenty, and one hundred and twenty- five?
7852But what has become of poor Alpha Beta?
7852But what necessity for enumerating all these circumstances?
7852But when or where, I pray, are we to meet?
7852But when that love is real, what can amuse, what engage the mind, to banish, for a single instant, the object of its delight?
7852But why am I requested to"_ say nothing about obligations_,"while you continue to load me with new ones?
7852But why do you diminish their value by carelessness?
7852But why need I advise a person of better judgment than myself?
7852But why need I confine myself to these?
7852But why should I desire you to do what I know your own heart will dictate?
7852But why should we connect ourselves with any of them, so as to interrupt our studies?
7852But why these questions, to which I can receive no answer but in person?
7852But why this to you, who know me better than I know myself?
7852But you bear it charmingly; do you think this courage will last, or is it only a spasm?
7852But, allowing both these objections their full force, may there not be a single case that they do not reach?
7852Ca n''t you lug a scrap from him now and then, apropos, into your letters?
7852Can any thing place the charge in a more ridiculous point of view?
7852Can as much be said in favor of his great competitor on that occasion?
7852Can interest repay the sacrifice?
7852Can it be that you have still in memory the vagrant Burr?
7852Can you excuse, sir, the overflowing of a heart that knows not where to stop when on a subject so interesting?
7852Can you form an idea of a more happy mortal than she will be when seated on the throne of Constantinople?
7852Can you imagine what are Miss C.''s occupations and arrangements?
7852Can you leave Mr. Osmer without injury?
7852Can you make little_ chose_ drink the water?
7852Coquetting for admiration and attracting flattery?
7852DEAR SIR, His excellency desires me to inquire whether you have received any information of the enemy''s movements, situation, or design?
7852Did he know the printed orders?--was she sold conformable?
7852Did he not communicate to you that the said David A. Ogden had been requested to see the plaintiff for the purposes aforesaid?
7852Did he or any other person( and if so, who?)
7852Did not the said house ballot for the president several times before a choice was made?
7852Did the conduct of the said Aaron Burr correspond with the declarations contained in the said letter?
7852Did you ever communicate with the plaintiff, or he with you, on the subject?
7852Did you ever know them to countenance a man of talents and independence?
7852Did you receive any letters from the said Aaron Burr after the said equality of votes was known and before the final choice of a president?
7852Did_ he_, the said Aaron Burr, know thereof?
7852Discouraged?
7852Do I read right?
7852Do n''t you see that this sentence would have been perfect and much more elegant without the last_ it_?
7852Do yon recollect the second daughter of Mr. Barclay, of Philadelphia, the sister of Nelly?
7852Do you continue to preserve Madame De S.''s good opinion of your talents for the harp?
7852Do you discover a symptom of it?
7852Do you drink the waters, and bathe, and ride, and walk?
7852Do you ever hear from Natalie?
7852Do you know Miss Joanna Livingston?
7852Do you know any matter, circumstance, or thing which can be material to the defendant in this cause?
7852Do you know any person who did communicate with him?
7852Do you know that any measures were suggested or pursued by any person or persons to secure the election of Aaron Burr to the presidency?
7852Do you know the parties, plaintiff and defendant, or either and which of them, and how long have you known them respectively?
7852Do you know the present boundaries of the French republic?
7852Do you know who such members were?
7852Do you know, or have you been informed( and if so, how?)
7852Do you mean that the forty lines which you construed in Virgil were in a part you had not before learned?
7852Do you not think we may safely enter the house then?
7852Do you or do you not know Aaron Burr, late vice- president of the United States?
7852Do you or do you not know Thomas Jefferson, president of the United States?
7852Do you really feel a vacuum in your pleasures?
7852Do you really find happiness indissolubly blended with her presence?
7852Do you think that 8 would be induced from any motive to vote for him?
7852Do you think this trait ominous of a coward?
7852Do you want the pity of such?
7852Do you, my husband, think as frequently of your Theo., and wish for her?
7852Does Theodosia employ herself ever in the same way?
7852Does he yet know his letters?
7852Does it not drop through your tent?
7852Does our friend Doctor Blythe still reside at Georgetown?
7852Does young Mr. Broome attend?
7852For friendship?
7852Four pages in Lucian was a great lesson; and why, my dear Theo., ca n''t this be done a little oftener?
7852General Knox presented himself, and Burr( then called Major Burr) asked the general what he did there?
7852God bless you; you have my prayers always; and who dare say they are not as good as a bishop''s, or any member of a Presbyterian synod?
7852Had I any thing so much at heart as to render him happy?
7852Has he not informed you, or have you not understood( and if so, how?)
7852Has she a soul framed for love?
7852Has some earthquake, some sudden and dreadful concussion of nature, ingulfed you?
7852Has the God of heaven, in anger, here changed the order of nature?
7852Have my directions been pursued with regard to her Latin and geography?
7852Have our enjoyments for that period been worth the trouble of living?
7852Have you any commands to town, madam?
7852Have you any rice on hand yet?
7852Have you done running up and down stairs?
7852Have you enough of_ gampy_ now?
7852Have you ever ratified the vows she made in your behalf?
7852Have you forgotten the mad project of going to England?
7852Have you not been tormented with some embarrassments which I wickedly left you to struggle with?
7852He added a fourth, to wit: What would be Mr. Jefferson''s conduct as to the public officers?
7852He was turned round and round by each of the company: was asked where he got that very neat bag, and the valuable locket?
7852Heavy business, is it not?
7852Hence arose a question, whether this was not a_ personal trust_, which could not be legally performed by deputy?
7852How am I to judge of the degree intended?
7852How can Mr. Alston, consistently with his views of business, leave the state for five or six months, as you have proposed, for your Northern tour?
7852How could I omit Celeste and her sisters, whom I saw several times?
7852How could I write to you How divine your residence?
7852How could we forget Latimer?
7852How could you be sure that even this opinion had exceeded the bounds which you would yourself deem admissible between political opponents?
7852How do you account for the apathy of the public on this subject?
7852How do you like this essay?
7852How do you live, sleep, and amuse yourself?
7852How does your election advance?
7852How else could he have been questioned with any propriety?
7852How far are you from Natalie?
7852How have you borne it?
7852How is General Vaughan?
7852How is it possible you can write me such short letters, having so much leisure, and surrounded with all that can interest me?
7852How is it possible you had nothing more to write?
7852How is it that I have not a line from_ Mari_, in answer to several letters which I wrote him from New- York?
7852How is this?
7852How is your health?
7852How long are you to stay in Charleston?
7852How many sergeants''parties have you?
7852How was this to be effected?
7852How, then, could I refuse him one day?
7852I asked Alston,''Would you wish to see my notes of what passed between Duane and me?''
7852I have a thousand questions to ask, but why ask of the dumb?
7852I have not asked the price, but not exceeding_ eight hundred dollars!_ Did you take away"The man of Nature?"
7852I set out for camp the last of this week; may I expect letters from my friend?
7852I should doubtless be happier if I enjoyed perfect health and the society of a friend_ like you_; but why do I say like you?
7852I then thought so, as you will readily believe; because, why should I deceive my dear little Theodosia?
7852I went to a wedding supper at Mrs. Moore''s, whose daughter has married Willing-- could any one suppose she was_ unwilling_?
7852I would give, what would I not give to see or know even your most trifling actions and amusements?
7852If I leave Richmond Hill, however, had I not better buy in town, that you may have a resting- place there?
7852If he was not sheriff, can the votes sent by him be legally canvassed?
7852If so, which state or states, and what was the reason or reasons of such belief?
7852If the cabals of the day be not speedily arrested, where shall our political bark be anchored?
7852If yea, what was the tenour of such letter?
7852If you finish your causes before court is over, can not you look at us, even should you return to the manor?
7852If you have any, had you not better send it?
7852If you mean it for a residence, what avail its intrinsic value?
7852If you were half as punctual or as fortunate( which shall I call it?
7852In Charleston, Sullivan''s Island, or Clifton?
7852In plain terms, can you spare me the amount of it?
7852In what case it was taken?
7852Is Chevalier still punctual?
7852Is L. N. coming to live with you?
7852Is it because each revolving day proves thee more deserving?
7852Is it not a very easy matter to fix on another time, and write you word by T. Edwards?
7852Is it owing to ignorance or prejudice that I have not yet met a single person who had discovered or would allow the merit of this work?
7852Is it possible my affection can increase?
7852Is it, then, criminal that a person of mature age should converse on a subject most highly interesting with the friend most likely informed?
7852Is my wife, too, taken from me?
7852Is not that good Irish?
7852Is not that industry?
7852Is that right?
7852Is the language and spelling your own?
7852Is this right?
7852Is this the promised protection?
7852It is so long; how long is it?
7852Laid aside for the present?
7852Let me know whether you are yet suited with horses, and how?
7852Lo Alexander and Cesar, the fabled heroes of antiquity, to what lengths did passion hurry them?
7852MY DEAR SIR, Will you allow me that appellation, who have so long neglected to inform you of the situation of your affairs left in my hands?
7852May l expect to see you here in the spring?
7852May not the same be the case with noxious vapours?
7852Might I safely travel through your low country at this season?
7852Might it not be of service to draw a line, if but for a few days, from Bronx to Rye, or Mamaroneck?
7852Montesquieu says he writes to make people think; and why may not Theodosia?
7852Must I attribute it to the fatality which has already separated us, and, I fear, is determined to put an eternal bar to our junction?
7852Need we a proof of this?
7852Never enjoying, always hoping?
7852Now, how much wiser or better are we than this time last year?
7852Now, ma Minerve, is not this a very ridiculous posture for so grave an affair?
7852Now, say you, what has this to do with the introduction of a correspondence?
7852Now, what are your plans?
7852Oh, why did n''t you bring her?
7852On the 24th of June, 1778, the commander- in- chief propounded to the general officers the question,"Will it be advisable to hazard a general action?"
7852One letter may contain the name, and another the comment--_"Car ou l''arreter?_"is rather too mystical.
7852Or are you so angry as not to think I merit an answer?
7852Or how shall I annex any precise idea to language so indefinite?
7852Or, why should I be denied the common privilege of every liberal mind, that of acknowledging the obligation which I have not the power of cancelling?
7852Ought the votes of Tioga to be canvassed?
7852Ought they to canvass those sealed in the box, and reject the others?
7852Pray can it be true that she was engaged to a young man whom we knew and valued, and who lately died in your country?
7852Pray how do you advance?
7852Pray shake your little noddle, to give the brains, if any there be, a little action; but who can do two things at once?
7852Pray what have you been doing?
7852Pray why have you neglected to answer my letter by Colonel Wadsworth?
7852Pray, do you recollect the opinion which Judge Candour solemnly pronounced upon us both, in a court of reason held at the Indian King?
7852Pray, from whom did you learn that he was angry?
7852Pray, have you lived altogether on pepper?
7852Pray, in what consists the pleasure of a familiar correspondence?
7852Pray, madam, do you know of what consist the"Republic of the Seven Islands?"
7852Pray, say you, what is it to me why you have not been in the army?
7852Quoi faire?
7852Resume, I pray you, this confidence, so flattering to me, so consoling to yourself, may I add, so justly founded?
7852Run off and leave him?
7852Shall I add, their love also?
7852Shall I exchange?
7852Shall I guess again?
7852Shall I or shall I not investigate this point?
7852Shall I write to her to- night, or omit it till to- morrow?
7852She promised to give you now and then a lesson on the forte- piano; is she as good as her word?
7852Stiff with cold, how must his papa have fared?
7852Supposing he should come here the 13th of April, what could I do?
7852Taking lessons of Wisdom from your Minerva?
7852Tell me truly, did you write it without assistance?
7852Tell me, Aaron, why do I grow every day more tenacious of thy regard?
7852That you are not numbered in that galaxy of beauty which adorns an assembly- room?
7852The cheerfullness of all around me led me to ask why all animated nature enjoyed its being but man?
7852The handwriting of the letters various; very good, very bad, and middling; emblematic, shall I say, of the fair authoress?
7852The happiness of my life depends on your exertions; for what else, for whom else do I live?
7852The inquiry was then made--"What are we to do?"
7852The mother I cherished with so much pride?
7852The next question was, Of whom shall the assembly ticket for the city be composed?
7852The question--_When shall we meet_?
7852The reason, indeed, is obvious; for what more necessary to be learned and accurately understood?
7852There; is not that little incident related in the true heroic style?
7852This phenomenon( what shall I call it?)
7852Till that time, my dear friend, can you keep me above water, and do justice to yourself?
7852To this junto you have twice sacrificed yourself, and what have you got by it?
7852To whom am I indebted but to you, my friend, for this unmerited favour?
7852Under such circumstances, am I not only warranted in these remarks, but imperiously called upon to make them?
7852Was Richard R. Smith the sheriff of the county of Otsego when he received and forwarded the ballots by his special deputy?
7852Was you a member of the House of Representatives of the United States, at Washington, in the session of 1800 and 1801?
7852We stared, and asked one another-- How could Burr know that?
7852Were there any letter or letters written communicating such an intention?
7852What are L. N.''s?
7852What brighter mark-- what stronger evidence need we of a God?
7852What can be the reason of the great delay in forwarding letters by the post?
7852What can have exhausted or disturbed you so much?
7852What care you for all that?
7852What co- operation or aid the plaintiff could or would afford towards securing his own election to the presidency?
7852What conduct he would pursue in respect to certain cardinal points of federal policy?
7852What does Mr. Jefferson mean by the declaration that he had formed a cabinet, of which Mr. Burr was to be a member?
7852What greater blessing can await me?
7852What have we left?
7852What in the name of love and matrimony can this mean?
7852What is all this says my friend Aaron?
7852What is become of the rifles?
7852What is the exchange with you?
7852What language can express the joy, the gratitude of Theodosia?
7852What man under heaven ever before discovered an analogy between a moscheto and his mistress?
7852What more could she do?
7852What of that?
7852What other mode remained to set the public mind at ease?
7852What shall I do with the other articles, a small parcel of glassware and rum, and the money arising from the sales of the vessel''s sea- coat,& c.?
7852What then will be your substitute?
7852What think you of this alteration in the plan we settled?
7852What thought suggested my assent?
7852What will you think of the taste of New- York when I shall tell you that Miss Broadhurst is not very generally admired here?
7852What would I not give to have but those four small words from thee?
7852What would be your conjectures in such a case?
7852What would you bet that La G. is not in a kind of quandary just now?
7852What would you say if I should tell you that----- had absolutely professed love for me?
7852What''s the matter I do n''t write to Natalie any more?
7852What-- can neither affection nor civility induce you to devote to me the small portion of time which I have required?
7852When the heat shall be intolerable here, shall I set my face towards the sun?
7852When were these communications made?
7852When, when will that month come?
7852When, when will the month of October come?
7852Where and how made?
7852Where are the promised letters?
7852Where did it loiter so long?
7852Where is Hampton all this while, that you say nothing of him?
7852Where is Miss Burr?
7852Where now was the boy?
7852Where will you be from the 10th to 15th May?
7852Which_ Maria_ did your husband go for, the biped or the quadruped?
7852Who are so naturally our friends as those who are born such?
7852Who can view the miseries of others, without being dissolved into compassion?
7852Who will be appointed?
7852Why are you so cautiously silent as to our little Sally?
7852Why are you still in town?
7852Why did I consent to his departure?
7852Why did I hesitate to decide?
7852Why did you undertake that very laborious task you mention?
7852Why do you delay it so long?
7852Why do you neither acknowledge nor answer my last letter?
7852Why have you not already done it?
7852Why may not Papa Alston be weaned as well as Papa Burr?
7852Why may not this be done again?
7852Why, Burr, all this negligence?
7852Why, then, expose my person?
7852Why, then, will you expose my weakness by ascribing to me imaginary excellences?
7852Will it not advance the service to send you down some biscuit?
7852Will it not be possible for you to meet me at Trenton, that we may travel together to New- York?
7852Will not the same pertinacity and precipitation endanger the better-- the opposite cause?
7852Will not these continued rains deprive us of the pleasure of the promised visit of the W.''s?
7852Will the reader examine the deposition, especially what relates to Mr. McLean and Mr. Latimer?
7852Will you be able to extricate me from the difficulties attending this bill?
7852Will you be abroad any, and what part of the summer?
7852Will you speedily supply the deficiency?
7852Will your health permit you to join the army?
7852Without enjoyment, without distinction?
7852Wo n''t she come up this winter?
7852Would Charles Lee accept the place of secretary of the Senate?
7852Would Mr. Alston be willing to go as secretary to Chancellor Livingston?
7852Would he believe, still further, that it was drawn by an American?
7852Would it be an intolerable labour, if, precisely at half past nine o''clock every evening, you should say,"I will now devote an hour to papa?"
7852Would not these evils be in some measure remedied by sending me a parcel of shoes?
7852Would not this be truly satanic?
7852Would you think it?
7852Yet wherefore?
7852Yet would not a permanent residence in town for some, for many, for all reasons, be better?
7852Yet, on second thought, would it not be better that he break his?
7852You are not contented, my dear Burr, and why are you not?
7852You ask how Miss P. walks?
7852You say nothing of writing or learning Greek verbs;--is this practice discontinued?
7852You sigh for New- Jersey, and why do you not return?
7852_ Interrogatory on the part of the plaintiff_.--Do you know of any matter or thing that may be beneficial to the plaintiff on the trial of this cause?
7852_ It leaves a chasm in my arrangements_ which can not be adequately filled up?"
7852_ Qu''a- t- il_, Alexis?
7852and if so, what did he say?
7852and why?
7852and, therefore, what more proper to engage the attention?
7852can aught on earth compensate for his presence?
7852for what am I reserved?
7852from what unfriendly cause does this arise?
7852frown?
7852has Heaven more to grant?
7852if so, how many times?
7852if so, were such letter or letters forwarded to him through the postoffice by any person, and who?
7852if so, what were their names?
7852if so, who were such person or persons?
7852is she to wear out her youth and beauty, dissipate her talents, and exhaust her spirits without an object in life or a place in society?
7852or flying after the Atalanta''s of Virginia, more swift than their celebrated racers?
7852or the postmaster?
7852or whom?
7852that he was apprized that an attempt would be made to secure his election?
7852that the plaintiff declared, as to the first question, it would not be expedient to enter into explanations, or words to that effect?
7852the anxiety and misery it cost us for some days?
7852what more near and interesting?
7852what sacrifices do you make, and to what end?
8813And pray, sir,continued Lugare, as the outward signs of wrath disappear''d from his features;"what were you about the garden for?
8813But you must be very tired, Frank,rejoin''d the other;"wo n''t you let some of us harness up and carry you?
8813Can you relate nothing, then?
8813Do you know one Richard Hall that lives somewhere here among you?
8813Do you see that, sir? 8813 Do you think to make me believe your lies?
8813For what,he ask''d,"would this life be without immortality?
8813I guess so,said I;"what might it be about?"
8813Not_ all day_, Charley?
8813Now, Mr. Whitman,spoke up one of the girls,"what have you to say about Thanksgiving?
8813The Highest said: Do n''t let us begin so low-- isn''t our range too coarse-- too gross?... 8813 Were you by Mr. Nichols''s garden- fence last night?"
8813What have you to say then to such things?
8813_ H. Heine''s first principle of criticising a book was, What motive is the author trying to carry out, or express or accomplish? 8813 ''What was that plan? 8813 ( Ah, where would be any food for spirituality without night and the stars?) 8813 ( Can this really be true?) 8813 ( Had not all this terrible scene-- making the mimic ones preposterous-- had it not all been rehears''d, in blank, by Booth, beforehand?) 8813 ( Is there not a hint in it for a musical composition, of which it should be the back- ground? 8813 ( The slavery contest is settled-- and the war is long over-- yet do not those putrid conditions, too many of them, still exist? 8813 ( What subtle tie is this between one''s soul and the break of day? 8813 ( Will the time hasten when fatherhood and motherhood shall become a science-- and the noblest science?) 8813 (Are there going to be_ any men_ there?"
8813("There never were men that kept in better spirits in danger or defeat-- what then could they do in victory?"
8813All that has been put in statement, tremendous as it is, what is it compared with the vast fields and values and varieties left unreap''d?
8813Am I starting the sail- craft of poets in line?
8813And I would not go to the grave without briefly, but plainly, as I here do, acknowledging-- may I not say even glorying in it?
8813And could it really be, then?
8813And do we not see, in them, foreshadowings of the future races that shall fill these prairies?
8813And dost Thou subtly mystically now drip it through the air invisibly upon me?
8813And how, think you, rested Philip Marsh that night?
8813And if so, what is it?...
8813And now that he has gone hence, can it be that Thomas Carlyle, soon to chemically dissolve in ashes and by winds, remains an identity still?
8813And so you thought you could do a little robbing, and enjoy yourself in a manner you ought to be ashamed to own, without being punish''d, did you?"
8813And so-- one and all, little and big-- hav''n''t we had a good time?
8813And still goes one, saying,"What will ye give me, and I will deliver this man unto you?"
8813And what if children, growing up, In future seasons read The thing we do?
8813And whence came they?
8813And who remembers the renown''d New York"Tabernacle"of those days"before the war"?
8813Answerest thou, it is?
8813Are its disposals without ignominious distinctions?
8813Are not the United States this day busily using, working, more printer''s type, more presses, than any other country?
8813Are there arts worthy freedom and a rich people?
8813Are there athletes?
8813Are there bright beacons of happiness enjoy''d, and of good done by the way?
8813Are there crops of fine youths, and majestic old persons?
8813Are there perfect women, to match the generous material luxuriance?
8813Are they in their mating season?
8813Are we indignant?
8813Are we not doing well enough here already?
8813Are you not their superior in mental power, in liberal views of mankind, and in comprehensive intellect?
8813As I haunt thee so often, season by season, thou knowest, reckest not me,( yet why be so certain?
8813As I rise for return, I linger long to a delicious song- epilogue( is it the hermit- thrush?)
8813As a mixed political and social question, is not this full of dark significance?
8813As now taught, accepted and carried out, are not the processes of culture rapidly creating a class of supercilious infidels, who believe in nothing?
8813Asiatic or African?
8813At the end of that hour, the words,"perhaps when you arrive she may be_ dead_?"
8813Ay, him, if any one, I love in a sort-- but why?
8813Besides it''s plain at Washington Who likeliest wins the race, What earthly chance has"free soil"For any good fat place?
8813Better still, out of them is not a third theory, the real one, or suggesting the real one, to arise?)
8813But am I alone?
8813But do you know what they are?
8813But is it really advancing?
8813But the katydid-- how shall I describe its piquant utterances?
8813But what blood, my friends?
8813But what is life but an experiment?
8813But what use?
8813But where any former ones with prophecy so broad, so clear, as our times, our lands-- as those of the West?)
8813But why do I say enemies?
8813Can there be any doubt who the leader ought to be?
8813Can those be_ men_--those little livid brown, ash- streak''d, monkey- looking dwarfs?--are they really not mummied, dwindled corpses?
8813Can we attain such enfranchisement-- the true Democracy, and the height of it?
8813Can we, indeed, spare either of them?
8813Can you do it for them?"
8813Can you get hold of it, reader dear?
8813Common teachers or critics are always asking"What does it mean?"
8813Could it be that Black Nell knew her early master?
8813Could it be that he slept?
8813Could we wish humanity different?
8813Could we wish the people made of wood or stone?
8813Did Jesus Christ, the Saviour, ever have any material blood?
8813Did we call the latter imponderable?
8813Did you suppose there could be only one Supreme?
8813Did you, too, O friend, suppose democracy was only for elections, for politics, and for a party name?
8813Do not our publishers fatten quicker and deeper?
8813Do they know that from the single State of Kentucky more Union soldiers fought under our flag than Napoleon took into the battle of Waterloo?
8813Do we feel jeopardized?
8813Do you call those genteel little creatures American poets?
8813Do you term that perpetual, pistareen, paste- pot work, American art, American drama, taste, verse?
8813Do you want anything?"
8813Does it live through them?
8813Does it not undermine the old religious standards?
8813Does it solve readily with the sweet milk of the nipples of the breasts of the Mother of Many Children?
8813Does it still hold on untired?
8813Does not anything short of that third point of view, when you come to think of it profoundly and with amplitude, impugn Creation from the outset?
8813Does the young man think often of him?
8813Does this answer?
8813Duroc?
8813European adventures?
8813Even in the Iliad and Shakspere there is( is there not?)
8813Everywhere-- their own lands included--(is there not something terrible in the tenacity with which the one book out of millions holds its grip?)
8813Finally, the morality:"Virtue,"said Marcus Aurelius,"what is it, only a living and enthusiastic sympathy with Nature?"
8813For how can we remain, divided, contradicting ourselves, this way?
8813For there is something greater( is there not?)
8813For what moved the sick girl uneasily on her pillow, and raised her neck, and motion''d to her mother?
8813Glimmer gentle rays of what was scatter''d from a holy heart?
8813Had he caus''d a letter to be sent them since he got here in Washington?
8813Has any one fancied he could sit at last under some due authority, and rest satisfied with explanations, and realize, and be content and full?
8813Hast Thou, pellucid, in Thy azure depths, medicine for case like mine?
8813Have benevolence, and love, and undeviating honesty left tokens on which thy eyes can rest sweetly?
8813Have n''t I given specimen clues, if no more?
8813Have the marches of tens and hundreds and thousands of years made willing detours to the right hand and the left hand for his sake?
8813Have we at present any such?
8813Have you ever realized it, my friends, that Lincoln, though grafted on the West, is essentially in personnel and character a Southern contribution?"
8813Have you forgotten your appointment?"
8813Have you never realized it, my friends, that Lincoln, though grafted on the West, is essentially, in personnel and character, a Southern contribution?
8813Have you not the treasures of health and untainted propensities, which many of those you envy never enjoy?
8813Have you, with your own eyes, look''d on Grant, and Lee, and Sherman?"
8813How could it happen that so beautiful and inoffensive a being should taste, even to its dregs, the bitterest unhappiness?
8813How does this man compare with the acknowledg''d"Father of his country"?
8813How has it been with thee?
8813I have itemized the night-- but dare I attempt the cloudless dawn?
8813I said,"What is it, my boy?
8813I said,"Why, Oscar, do n''t you think you will get well?"
8813I wonder does any other nation but ours afford opportunity for such a jaunt as this?
8813If the spiritual is not behind the material, to what purpose is the material?
8813In politics, what can be more ominous,( though generally unappreciated then)--what more significant than the Presidentiads of Fillmore and Buchanan?
8813In the revealings of such light, such exceptional hour, such mood, one does not wonder at the old story fables,( indeed, why fables?)
8813In wish and willingness( and if that were so, what matter about the reality?)
8813Indeed has any previous period afforded it?
8813Indeed, what is Nature but change, in all its visible, and still more its invisible processes?
8813Indeed, where else a more pregnant, more splendid one?
8813Indeed, who wants the real animal or hunter?
8813Is he beloved long and long after he is buried?
8813Is it a lingering, inherited remains of man''s primitive wariness, from the wild animals?
8813Is it difficult to imagine ahead of us and them, evolv''d from them, poesy completer far than any they themselves fulfill''d?
8813Is it for the ever- growing communes of brothers and lovers, large, well united, proud, beyond the old models, generous beyond all models?
8813Is it for the nursing of the young of the republic?
8813Is it not indeed strange?
8813Is it not really an intuition of the human race?
8813Is it not worth considering as a problem and puzzle in our democracy-- an indispensable want to be supplied?
8813Is it something grown fresh out of the fields, or drawn from the sea for use to me to- day here?
8813Is it strange that a thunder- storm follow''d such morbid and stifling cloud- strata?
8813Is it uniform with my country?
8813Is it well with thee, thus?
8813Is not here indeed the point underlying all tragedy?
8813Is not nakedness then indecent?
8813Is the fresh and broad demesne of America destined also to give them foothold and lodgment, permanent domicile?
8813Is there a great moral and religious civilization-- the only justification of a great material one?
8813Is there a pervading atmosphere of beautiful manners?
8813Is there not even now, indeed, an evolution, a departure from the masters?
8813Is there not something about the moon, some relation or reminder, which no poem or literature has yet caught?
8813Is this one of its hours, or the like of it?--so impalpable-- a mere breath, an evanescent tinge?
8813Let us hope there is( indeed, can there be any doubt there is?)
8813Need I say I demand the same in the elements and spirit and fruitage of National Literature?
8813Notes:[ 35] A few years ago I saw the question,"Has America produced any great poem?"
8813Now, sir, what was there in that bag?"
8813Of civilized lands to- day, whose of our retrospects has it not interwoven and link''d and permeated?
8813Of many a score-- aye, thousands, north and south, of unwrit heroes, unknown heroisms, incredible, impromptu, first- class desperations-- who tells?
8813Of what use is existence to me?
8813Only here, communion with the mysteries, the eternal problems, whence?
8813Or that there be no justice in destiny or time?
8813Or what is humanity in its faith, love, heroism, poetry, even morals, but_ emotion_?
8813Or, to change the figure, I will present my varied little collation( what is our Country itself but an infinitely vast and varied collation?)
8813Ought not the innovation to be put down by opinion and criticism?
8813Perhaps you only receiv''d the plunder, and had an accomplice to do the more dangerous part of the job?"
8813Poor woman-- what story was it, out of her fortunes, to account for that inexpressibly scared way, those glassy eyes, and that hollow voice?
8813Repeating our inquiry, what, then, do we mean by real literature?
8813Shall I lie?"
8813Shall I tell you, reader, to what I attribute my already much- restored health?
8813Shall we applaud or condemn him?
8813Spices crush''d, their pungence yield, Trodden scents their sweets respire; Would you have its strength reveal''d?
8813Strange,( is it not?)
8813Such a nation-- such a society-- what nobler conception of moral existence can we form?
8813Symphony of fine musician, or sunset, or sea- waves rolling up the beach-- what do they mean?
8813THE WEATHER-- DOES IT SYMPATHIZE WITH THESE TIMES?
8813Take it out, with its radiations, and what would be left?
8813Talking of oratory, why is it that the unsophisticated practices often strike deeper than the train''d ones?
8813The Highest said: Do n''t let us begin so low-- isn''t our range too coarse-- too gross?...
8813The ashiness and the moisture on the brow, and the film over the eyeballs-- what man can look upon the sight, and not feel his heart awed within him?
8813The founders have pass''d to other spheres-- but what are these terrible duties they have left us?
8813The lush and the weird that have taken such extraordinary possession of Nineteenth century verse- lovers-- what mean they?
8813The secession war?
8813The wood of the cedar is of use-- but what profit on earth are those sprigs of acrid plums?
8813Then the camps of the wounded-- O heavens, what scene is this?--is this indeed_ humanity_--these butchers''shambles?
8813Then the other-- may we indeed name him the same day?
8813Then the words come from his lips, very emphatically and slowly pronounc''d, in a resonant, grave, melodious voice,_ What is the chief end of man?
8813Then to Shakspere''s characters-- Hamlet, Lear, the English- Norman kings, the Romans?
8813Then, from one of his many letters, for he seems to have delighted in correspondence: Some may query, What is the cross of Christ?
8813There you are, shoulder- straps!--but where are your companies?
8813They are names which are well known-- almost as well known and as much honor''d in England as in America; and yet what must we say in the end?
8813They complain in Olympia that Washington Territory gets but little immigration; but what wonder?
8813Those white palaces-- the dome- crown''d capitol there on the hill, so stately over the trees-- shall they be left-- or destroy''d first?
8813Thought you greatness was to ripen for you like a pear?
8813To all which we conclude, and repeat the terrible query: American National Literature-- is there distinctively any such thing, or can there ever be?
8813Travel, reciprocity,"interviewing,"intercommunion of lands-- what are they but Democracy''s and the highest Law''s best aids?
8813Truly, in color, outline, material and spiritual suggestiveness, where any more inclosing theme for idealist, poet, literary artist?
8813Two young fellows are having a friendly talk, amid which, says 1st conductor,"What did you do before you was a snatcher?"
8813UNNAMED REMAINS THE BRAVEST SOLDIER Of scenes like these, I say, who writes-- whoe''er can write the story?
8813Unwieldy and immense, who shall hold in behemoth?
8813Upon the whole is not Tennyson-- and was not Carlyle( like an honest and stern physician)--the true friend of our age?
8813WHO GETS THE PLUNDER?
8813Was he, then, a being so accurs''d?
8813We sail a dangerous sea of seething currents, cross and under- currents, vortices-- all so dark, untried-- and whither shall we turn?
8813We see the shreds of Hebrews, Romans, Greeks; but where, on her own soil, do we see, in any faithful, highest, proud expression, America herself?
8813What all through the wanderings of Virgil''s Aeneas?
8813What are these wounds in thy hands?
8813What does this immense and almost abnormal development of Philanthropy mean among the moderns?
8813What fortune else-- what dollar-- does not stand for, and come from, more or less imposition, lying, unnaturalness?
8813What has America?
8813What have we here, if not, towering above all talk and argument, the plentifully- supplied, last- needed proof of democracy, in its personalities?
8813What is Nature?
8813What is Tennyson''s service to his race, times, and especially to America?
8813What is a"boom"?
8813What is happiness, anyhow?
8813What is independence?
8813What is it in us, arous''d by those indirections and directions?
8813What is it to us that the mass pay us not that deference which wealth commands?
8813What is marvellous?
8813What is poor plain George Fox compared to William Shakspere-- to fancy''s lord, imagination''s heir?
8813What is this world without a further Divine purpose in it all?"
8813What mean these phantoms here?
8813What must have been the number unofficial, indirect-- to say nothing of the Southern armies?
8813What others-- what business, profit, wealth, without a taint?
8813What penetrating eye does not everywhere see through the mask?
8813What was Nature to Rousseau, to Voltaire, to the German Goethe in his little classical court gardens?
8813What were the elements, the invisible backgrounds and eidolons of it, to Homer''s heroes, voyagers, gods?
8813What would that do amid astral and bric- a- brac and tapestry, and ladies and gentlemen talking in subdued tones of Browning and Longfellow and art?
8813What, and who was that figure there?
8813What, even of the best and most successful, would be justified by itself alone?
8813What, however, do we more definitely mean by New World literature?
8813Where are the vaunts, and the proud boasts with which you went forth?
8813Where are your banners, and your bands of music, and your ropes to bring back your prisoners?
8813Where one more idealistic- real, more subtle, more sensuous- delicate?
8813Where, elsewhere, one so great?
8813Who Gets the Plunder?
8813Who cares that he wrote about Dr. Francia, and"Shooting Niagara"--and"the Nigger Question,"--and did n''t at all admire our United States?
8813Who is there to whom the theme does not come home?
8813Who knows the curious mystery of the eyesight?
8813Who may fend that danger, and fill that lack in the future, but a class of loftiest poets?
8813Who paint the scene, the sudden partial panic of the afternoon, at dusk?
8813Who remembers the old citizens of that time?
8813Who remembers the old places as they were?
8813Who show what moves there in the shadows, fluid and firm-- to save,( and it did save,) the army''s name, perhaps the nation?
8813Who wants to be any man''s mere follower?
8813Who was Ridman?
8813Who was the stranger?
8813Why do our experiences perhaps of some local country exhorter-- or often in the West or South at political meetings-- bring the most definite results?
8813Why dost thou not speak to me in my grief, and tell me when I shall behold my friends?
8813Why not come down from literary dignity, and confess we are sitting on one now, under the shade of a great walnut tree?
8813Why not even the tiny, turtle- shaped, yellow- back''d, black- spotted lady- bug that has lit on the shirt- sleeve of the arm inditing this?
8813Why not fix your verses henceforth to the gauge of the round globe?
8813Why should I exist in the world, unknown, unloved, press''d with cares, while so many around me have all their souls can desire?
8813Why should my path be so much rougher than theirs?
8813Why was it, too, that the young man''s heart moved with a feeling of kindness toward the harshly treated child?
8813Why would any intrusion, even from people I like, spoil the charm?
8813Will America ever have such an artist out of her own gestation, body, soul?
8813Will the same style, and the direction of genius to similar points, be satisfactory now?
8813Wo n''t you give us a sermon in advance, to sober us down?"
8813Would not that, indeed, be the kingdom of God come on earth?"
8813Would such a fact as this cause your sadness?
8813Would you have in yourself the divine, vast, general law?
8813Yet now the sought- for opportunity offers, I find my notes incompetent,( why, for truly profound themes, is statement so idle?
8813Yet who can wonder?
8813You can cultivate corn and roses and orchards-- but who shall cultivate the mountain peaks, the ocean, and the tumbling gorgeousness of the clouds?
8813[ 38] Is there not such a thing as the philosophy of American history and politics?
8813_ First party_--Why not, then, respect it in your poems?
8813alarm''d?
8813and do the middleaged and the old think of him?
8813and heart and tongue Accurse us for the deed?
8813and how do you like it anyhow?
8813and mortality but an exercise?
8813and the second, Has he achiev''d it?
8813and the young woman think often of him?
8813and which, with no sign of stopping, only regulated and vein''d with fitting appreciation, flows deeply, widely yet?
8813and, if those fail, by the District Attorney?
8813answered the young drunkard, very composedly,"is that all?
8813by the present, or the material ostent alone?
8813do you?
8813especially the democratic literature of the future?
8813have you seen Abraham Lincoln-- and heard him speak-- and touch''d his hand?
8813how entirely they tally on land the grandeur and superb monotony of the skies of heaven, and the ocean with its waters?
8813how freeing, soothing, nourishing they are to the soul?
8813is not that a theme worth chanting, striving for?
8813more than Wellington took with all the allied armies against Napoleon?
8813old history-- miracles-- romances?
8813or from his savage ancestry far back?
8813or the bloodless chalk of Allibone''s Dictionary?
8813or what is the meaning of this plenitude, swiftness, eagerness, display?
8813or, has it advanced for a long while?
8813or,"ca n''t you understand?")
8813said he,"have we met so soon, Mr. Covert?
8813some bumble- bee symphony?)
8813still result in diseases, fevers, wounds-- not of war and army hospitals-- but the wounds and diseases of peace?)
8813the famous pieces of the Grecian masters-- and all masters?
8813the most antique?
8813the whole race?
8813uttering and absorbing more publications than any other?
8813weeds, annuals, of the rank, rich soil-- not central, enduring, perennial things?
8813what is unlikely?
8813where are your men?
8813whither?
8813who bridle leviathan?
8813who can tell?)
8813why does the right phrase never offer?)
9395An ordeal?
9395And how can you get them to stop?
9395And what about Colorland?
9395And what about all the funny characters she says live there?
9395And what about the strange stories?
9395And what is the purpose of your journey?
9395And what may that mission be, if I may be so bold as to ask?
9395And your purpose, my dear?
9395Are n''t they just the most adorable creatures?
9395Are you all right? 9395 Are you aware of the light?"
9395Are you coming to kill me, too? 9395 Are you feeling poorly?"
9395Are you saying that rocks are alive?
9395Are you saying we live two lives simultaneously-- one on earth during the day, and one on the ANIM level at night?
9395Are you saying you think our neighborhood is run down, and you do n''t think any decent person would want to live here? 9395 Are you the leader?"
9395Auntie Em, could I stay home today?
9395But how can you love someone who hates you?
9395But how do you do that?
9395But is n''t it human nature to see things as we want to see them?
9395But order a river? 9395 But we believe Dorothy, do n''t we?"
9395But what can I do?
9395But what on earth do you want a pin cushion for?
9395But why have you returned so soon?
9395But why not?
9395But why not?
9395But you are so nice, why would anyone want to be hurtful?
9395But, as Scarecrow said, it is confusing to read all those different ideas about things?
9395But,said the Scarecrow,"what about the really bad ones?
9395Ca n''t anyone stop all this?
9395Can people really do that?
9395Can they hurt me?
9395Can we do it now?
9395Can you describe it to us?
9395Can you imagine how much worse conditions would be in the world had these masters not lived?
9395Can you tell me the shapes of some other thoughts and what their effects are?
9395Chemicals for their mind?
9395Could n''t you also cover meditation?
9395Dangerous?
9395Depends on what?
9395Did anyone bring a map with them?
9395Did you see that?
9395Do n''t mortals understand that?
9395Do n''t you know that mind is all there is? 9395 Do n''t you see the name of the land next to Colorland?"
9395Do they like plants, too?
9395Do they prefer to be miserable?
9395Do you know what kind of country you headed into?
9395Do you know what you''re saying, Dorothy?
9395Do you know who the Great Wizard is?
9395Do you know,said the Fuzzy Yellow Wogglebug,"that thoughts have shapes?"
9395Do you realize, my friends, the power that is contained in that love that is being offered you? 9395 Do you really think it''ll take that long?"
9395Do you remember studying my life at school in your history lessons?
9395Do you remember when you first arrived in Oz and your house fell on the Wicked Witch of the East and killed her dead? 9395 Do you remember when you first drafted the Constitution of the United States?"
9395Do you see that red haze, Dorothy?
9395Do you still hate us?
9395Do you think I can become attractive?
9395Do you think so?
9395Do you think they would accept what was said, and change their ways?
9395Does n''t it all boil down to what we said earlier? 9395 Dorothy, do you hear me?"
9395Elfland?
9395Excuse me, but did you see something?
9395Excuse me,said Dorothy,"but did I hear you correctly?
9395For example: if the bad person were to say to himself, prior to performing an act of violence,/What am I doing? 9395 Have n''t you been absorbing all that we have been told?
9395Have n''t you heard the song?
9395Have you come for R and R?
9395Have you seen the Octapong before?
9395Help you?
9395Hmmm, is that so?
9395How about this for the last verse?
9395How are things decided, then?
9395How are we going to get back, Dorothy?
9395How can I meet him, then?
9395How can this understanding be accomplished among your people? 9395 How can we achieve that?"
9395How could He love someone so evil?
9395How could they help but see that their lives have great meaning-- that they do n''t just live and die and that''s the end of it?
9395How did she ever think up such a name?
9395How did you do that?
9395How do we define this man? 9395 How do we do that?"
9395How do we know if he can hear us, or even that he exists if no one has seen him?
9395How do you feel, Dorothy?
9395How does it make you feel if you''re not angry or resentful?
9395How long do you think our journey will take?
9395How long will it be before we get to Octapongland?
9395How many great teachers have come and gone? 9395 How often in these times is a problem attacked in this manner?
9395Hungry?
9395I do?
9395I said, what''s the use of a well without a bucket?
9395I said,repeated the Lion,"If the thoughts have forms, what kind of shape must her thoughts be in?"
9395I said,replied Dorothy, beginning to sing:"If thoughts are things that go bump in the night, what kind of thoughts do you think are right?
9395I suppose we must go through Tickleland?
9395I thought this was...?
9395I was wondering which political party is the best for our country, Republican or Democrat?
9395I''m locked out of my own castle?
9395I''m still mystified as to how you create a river to order?
9395I''ve got a good one,said the Tin Woodman:"If the thoughts of witches are jagged and sharp, what kind of thoughts do they think after dark?"
9395I- I thought you were...."Dead?
9395If he is alive, then where is he?
9395If people of earth were to be told the things that have been rejected from us by the powers that be upon your planet, I wonder, would they believe? 9395 If thoughts have forms, what kind of shape must her thoughts be in?"
9395If you, a very powerful witch, can not make her give up her evil ways, what hope have I?
9395In other words, most of our worries never materialize, so why fret constantly over something that in all probability will never occur?
9395Is Dorothy going to help us again?
9395Is anything the matter, Dorothy?
9395Is it dangerous?
9395Is n''t Oz a happy place now?
9395Is n''t that just something?
9395Is n''t that the point of the whole thing?
9395Is that so?
9395Is that true, Dorothy dear?
9395Is that what you mean when you say my goldfish is not really dead?
9395Is there any way we can help you?
9395It appears that way, does n''t it? 9395 It is beautiful, is n''t it?"
9395Know ye not that ye are the Temple of Creation? 9395 Let me try,"said the Scarecrow:"If thoughts are things that can zip and zoom, what kind of thoughts do you think in your room?"
9395May I come to Elfland when I die?
9395More power?
9395Not to change the subject,said the Tin Woodman,"but where do we go from here?"
9395Now everyone,she shouted, waving her arms:"Ohhh... What kind of thoughts do they think after dark?"
9395Now let''s see.... What else were we going to discuss? 9395 Now what?"
9395Now, what is this they called Man who was given dominion over all things by his Creator? 9395 Now, why is man on earth?
9395Now, would you all like to know something of our spaceships?
9395Octapongland?
9395Oh no, what if I ca n''t distinguish between the real and the unreal?
9395Oh, before you go,said Dorothy,"can you tell us about Thoughtformland and Americanindianland?"
9395Oh, it will be so marvelous, wo n''t it?
9395Only... only..."Only what?
9395Or fish? 9395 Or what about your tin- can friend?"
9395Precious to whom, might I ask?
9395R and R?
9395Really now?
9395Really? 9395 Really?"
9395Remember what President Washington told you? 9395 Shall we go in?"
9395So they have to steal other people''s shoes?
9395So, my little one,she sneered,"you decided to help me, eh?
9395Sorry for them?
9395Speaking of which, have you been noticing our surroundings? 9395 T- t- talk to her?"
9395Taking people''s property without their consent?
9395Tell them''do n''t stop''?
9395That key is Love, is n''t it?
9395That the atoms of its body are still in motion and will become a part of some other living thing?
9395The reason they do it is quite simple: they do it for food, and the reason--"For food?
9395Then, is it true?
9395Therapy?
9395They do?
9395Thick and thin what?
9395Thought you could get away, eh? 9395 Tickleland?"
9395Warning you that you''re welcome?
9395Was the happiest?
9395We all had quite a discussion on the subject of knowledge and truth and books?
9395We''ll be extremely careful, wo n''t we everyone?
9395Well what do you call it?
9395Well what?
9395Well, how do we go through?
9395Well, how''s the bag of straw and the tin can?
9395Well, is n''t it precious to you?
9395Well, is n''t it?
9395Well, is n''t that something?
9395Well, my pretty, what say you now, eh?
9395Well, what are you people doing here in the first place? 9395 Well, what shall we do now?"
9395Well, what? 9395 Well, where do you wish to be taken?"
9395Well,continued the Girrephalump,"where do you wish to go?
9395Well,said the Lion,"you''ve heard the expression''so and so makes me see red''?"
9395Well,said the Tin Woodman at length,"how would you like a nice cup of tea?"
9395Were you sleeping?
9395What about a dead animal?
9395What about countries,said the Scarecrow,"whose governments do n''t believe in a supreme intelligence, life after death, or rebirth?
9395What about her?
9395What about me?
9395What about my name? 9395 What are they doing?"
9395What are we going to do?
9395What did he say would be on Dorothy''s head?
9395What did you say would be in the pudding?
9395What did you say?
9395What did you say?
9395What do you make of it?
9395What do you mean, wherever she is?
9395What does UFO mean?
9395What does that mean?
9395What does that thought look like?
9395What happened, Dorothy?
9395What happens if you ask them to tickle you more?
9395What if I fall overboard?
9395What if someone is not content with one of these little houses you have,asked Dorothy,"but wants to build a great big house on top of the hill?"
9395What if they''re really hungry?
9395What if you brought us all home?
9395What is happening to me? 9395 What is it this time?"
9395What is it?
9395What is that supposed to mean?
9395What is the matter with you, child? 9395 What is your intent, sir?"
9395What is?
9395What other work do you do?
9395What shall we do now?
9395What song?
9395What was the general consensus?
9395What would we have done without you?
9395What''s a W.T.?
9395What''s going on?
9395What''s that like?
9395What''s the Golden Rule?
9395What''s the matter?
9395What''s the matter?
9395What''s the matter?
9395What''s the use of a well without a bucket?
9395What, my friends, do you think is the greatest power in the universe?
9395What?
9395What?
9395What?
9395When will that be?
9395Where do you live?
9395Who are you?
9395Who are you?
9395Who are you?
9395Who assigns the Indian guides?
9395Who wrote that? 9395 Who- who does she th- think she is?"
9395Who?
9395Why are n''t we all shouting and dancing for joy?
9395Why are you?
9395Why ca n''t the schools teach the children differently?
9395Why could I not see that at the time?
9395Why do n''t we stay here overnight,she said,"and get an early start in the morning?"
9395Why do n''t you look at each other''s heads with it?
9395Why do people have to go around stealing other people''s things? 9395 Why do people make these chemicals and sell them?"
9395Why do they hate having to do as they''re told so much?
9395Why do they prolong the agony? 9395 Why do you suppose nature is gradually becoming more violent around your planet?
9395Why does God even allow bad people to be born in the first place?
9395Why not?
9395Why on earth do they do that?
9395Why should she be scared of us?
9395Why the Yellow Belt?
9395Why would you be sorry for them?
9395Why would you want to save me?
9395Why, what do you mean? 9395 Will it really fly?"
9395Will they fly?
9395Will they stop tickling you if you ask them to?
9395Will you do it, Dorothy? 9395 Wo n''t that be a surprise for her?"
9395Worry themselves to death?
9395Would n''t we, everyone?
9395Would you care for milk and sugar?
9395Would you care to have tea with me? 9395 Would you care to walk in the garden?"
9395Would you get that?
9395Would you help around the house without being asked? 9395 Would you help me with this, Em?"
9395Would you like a drink of water, Dorothy?
9395Would you like to see your little goldfish?
9395Would you like to take over, George? 9395 Yellow Belt?"
9395You do have a government, then?
9395You have?
9395You have?
9395You mean about Oz?
9395You mean it''s not real?
9395You mean the Great Wizard that Glinda spoke of?
9395You mean the place you''ve been telling us about?
9395You mean there is no lady lion to keep you company?
9395You mean you can see them?
9395You never what?
9395You see?
9395You were going to tell us about Americanindianland?
9395You''re the reason for what?
9395Your little goldfish did recognized you, did n''t he?
9395''/ So, beloved friends, how should you define man?
9395* Chapter Fifteen: Elfland*"Well, what next?"
9395* Chapter Twenty- five: A Mystical Encounter*"Where does this mysterious stranger live?"
9395A strange thought suddenly occurred to her: What if Oz was the real world, and Kansas but a shadowy dream world?
9395Again everyone joined in: Ohhh... What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?
9395Am I not correct?"
9395And Colorland?"
9395And do your homework without putting up a fuss?"
9395And how angry the Wicked Witch of the West was?"
9395And how did each cell of the body, as it reproduced, know that it was to be a liver cell, heart cell, et cetera?
9395And what is the greatest law of all, my friends?
9395Are we, Boys?"
9395Be ye perfect... How shall we become perfect?
9395Because they wish to cling to suffering?
9395Besides, you got us out of the situation, did n''t you?"
9395But how many people of today pay any attention to this kind of advice?
9395But how was I to know the water would melt her down to a puddle?
9395But what else is there to say?
9395But would you like to look around?"
9395By the way, may I ask you a question?"
9395Can you see, my friends, why this is?
9395Can you visualize how different your world would be?
9395Can you visualize the results?
9395Could it be for selfish reasons?
9395Could it be that certain interests see their power crumbling through the introduction of certain improvements upon planet earth?
9395Could this be, my friends?
9395Did n''t anyone tell you that?"
9395Did n''t you hear me calling?"
9395Did you say Sir Bear?
9395Do n''t you agree?"
9395Do n''t you like it?"
9395Do n''t you remember what I told you?"
9395Do n''t your people want to be happy?"
9395Do you feel guilty about killing her sisters?"
9395Do you feel the power as you breathe in?
9395Do you have a slight understanding of what would happen to your planet if suddenly all would start emanating positive thoughts?
9395Do you realize the power that it will place in your hands once you are established in it?
9395Do you think the raft will stay big?
9395Do you understand?"
9395Does n''t He know the state of their soul before they''re born?"
9395Does n''t that feel good?
9395Does that sound bizarre?"
9395Does this sound inconceivable to you, my friends, or can you conceive of this?
9395Does this surprise you?
9395Dorothy began again:"If thoughts are things that can give you a fright, What kind of thoughts will you bring to sight?
9395Dorothy said,"Why do n''t we leave these two alone for a while to get acquainted?
9395Dorothy thought:"What if Aunt Em could see all this?"
9395Dorothy, if your masses and your leaders could realize this, I wonder what their reaction would be?
9395Everyone joined in to repeat the last line:"What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?"
9395Everyone ready?
9395Everyone sang the last line really loud:"What kind of thoughts will you think tooo- night?"
9395Have n''t you ever lost something, then found it in a place you''ve already looked?"
9395How can we be sure of electing only those who have the best interests of our beloved country at heart?"
9395How can we establish love and understanding among us if these things are not mastered?
9395How can you establish this among your people?
9395How could I be?
9395How do you define this thing called man?
9395How do you do this?
9395How do you feel?"
9395How do you think we could make a big raft for you giants?
9395How long ago was their land discovered?"
9395How many earth people would be willing to leave their comfortable homes and work in your slums, to go there and live in the filth that exists?
9395How would it be if everyone in Oz looked the same?
9395How would they like it if someone stole from them?"
9395How/could/ they disbelieve her story?
9395I wonder how many varieties there are?"
9395I''d call that arguing, would n''t you?"
9395Is it?
9395Is it?
9395Is n''t it a beautiful day?"
9395Is that what I heard you say?
9395Is that what you''re saying?
9395It sounds a little bit like Oz, does n''t it?
9395It was pretty funny, huh?
9395It''s good to think, do n''t you agree?"
9395It''s/''do this,/''and/''do that/,''and/''why are n''t you doing so and so/?''
9395Just like that?"
9395May I?"
9395Must we go through Octapongland?"
9395Now, what would Aunt Em think if she could see me?
9395Oh dear, what if it gets little again?
9395Or get up in the morning in time for school, and go to bed at a reasonable hour?
9395Oz her real home and Kansas just a place she was somehow visiting in her dreams...?
9395Peculiar, is n''t it?
9395Remarkable, is n''t it?"
9395Remember that was told to us?
9395Shall we go higher?
9395She glared at Dorothy and screamed,"You thought you''d liquidated me, did n''t you, my pretty?
9395She looked incredulously at Dorothy, and, shaking her head in disbelief, said,"You are trying to save me?"
9395She made one final swoop at Dorothy-- screaming in her ear,"Well, my little pretty, what say you now?
9395Sir Bear?"
9395So why prolong the agony?
9395The Lion said,"Let me make one up: If thoughts have wings and can fly away, what kind of thoughts are you thinking today?"
9395The Scarecrow interceded,"We discussed this recently, did n''t we, Dorothy?"
9395The Wicked Witch of the West screamed at her:"So, you thought you''d get away from me, eh?
9395The leader of the Girrephalumps walked right up to Dorothy and said,"You knocked, madam?"
9395The question I now pose to you is: How can we solicit help from the people themselves?"
9395Then, turning to the Pinhead child, he asked,"How much will it cost?"
9395They all sang at the top of their voices:"What kind of thoughts do you think in your room?"
9395This sounds like a big order, does it not?
9395Well, would you like to begin?"
9395Well,"the Witch said, looking around at all her friends,"are we all ready?"
9395What about them?
9395What has happened?"
9395What is the nature of this living energy that appears to have an intelligence all its own?
9395What kind of a life is this?
9395What kind of thoughts do you think to yourself?
9395What kind of thoughts do you think to yourself?
9395What kind of thoughts do you think to yourself?
9395What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?"
9395What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?"
9395What kind of thoughts will you think tonight?"
9395What on earth has food got to do with it?"
9395What solution could we arrive at that would be most beneficial to all concerned?
9395What would be the results if love and harmony existed around this table, and around all your conference tables?
9395Where are you?"
9395Who do you think you are?"
9395Who is to be the supreme authority on the matter?"
9395Who''s going to do it?
9395Who, no matter what they go through, continue to be as evil as ever?
9395Why clutter up the proceedings with a lot of unnecessary rhetoric?
9395Why do n''t we transport your Aunt Em and Uncle Henry to Oz?
9395Why is this, my friends?
9395Why the refusal to accept?
9395Why the stubbornness?
9395Why, oh why, make it difficult?
9395Why?
9395Will you tell your story?"
9395Would you behave in school, and concentrate on learning all you could?
9395Would you like to answer first, George?"
9395Would you like to continue, George?"
9395Would you like to hear the famous Wogglebug song?
9395Would you move over please?
9395Yet how few, even to a small degree, attempt to follow the teachings?
9395You mean you can order a river on demand?
9395You say you will mention how kind I''ve been?"
9395You were sitting on your friend the rock, having a conversation with him?"
9395You will accompany us on our journey, wo n''t you?"
9395Your great Avatar often spoke of the I AM, but how has it been interpreted by your people?
9395Your scraggly stuffed friend?"
9395but rather''What is best for all concerned?''
9395questioned Dorothy,"You mean rest and recreation?"
9395said Dorothy, as they all chimed in:"What kind of thoughts are you thinking today?"
12444''But the rose?'' 12444 ''Did you git''em, boss?"
12444''Did you git''em, boss?
12444''How is Congress divided?'' 12444 ''How''s that, my boy?''
12444''Jim,''he said,''how is it the colonel is able to sleep so soundly with so many mosquitoes around?'' 12444 ''Liza, what fo''yo''buy dat udder box of shoe- blacknin''?"
12444''My, my,''I said,''what am I to do now?'' 12444 ''See that there tree?''
12444''Seen Ole?'' 12444 ''Ullo, Bill,''ow''s things with yer?"
12444''Wait a moment,''said Bill,''is it codfish they caught?'' 12444 ''Well,''said the teacher,''what do you say the answer is?''
12444''What office do you mean, uncle?'' 12444 ''What s the matter?
12444''What s the matter? 12444 ''What''s in here?''
12444''What''s that?'' 12444 ''What''s the matter?''
12444''Who broke the glass in the back window?''
12444''Who''s there?'' 12444 ''Who''s there?''
12444''Why do you cherish in this way,''my friend said to his host,''that common brick and that dead rose?'' 12444 ''William,''said I,''your face is fairly clean, but how did you get such dirty hands?"
12444''Wot''s so funny about bein''flogged?'' 12444 ''Would n''t change hit, boss, would he?''
12444''Would n''t change hit, boss, would he?'' 12444 A compromise?"
12444A missionary in a slum once laid his hand on a man''s shoulder and said:''Friend, do you hear the solemn ticking of that clock?
12444A sense of humor? 12444 A wish?"
12444Ah,she answered in the sweetest of tones,"I did n''t miss it so far, after all, did I?"
12444Ai n''t there a lot o''stuff in the pantry?
12444Ai n''t they fine boys?
12444Ai n''t we got a good house to live in?
12444Ai n''t yer''fraid ye''ll freeze?
12444All paid, eh?
12444All right, Jake, but what are you going to do this time?
12444An''how long have ye been here?
12444An''what are ye thinkin''about noo-- anither, eh?
12444An''what micht it be?
12444And are you a regular communicant?
12444And did he say he would not come?
12444And did you actually see this yourself?
12444And did you call Mr. Jones a worse fool?
12444And do n''t you take anything for it?
12444And do you have to be called in the morning?
12444And how do you plant it?
12444And how much money have you given her?
12444And how would you do it?
12444And is your husband a good provider?
12444And so you''re working''ard to keep out of mischief?
12444And were you not decorated?
12444And what are those things on her head?
12444And what can I do for you?
12444And what did he say?
12444And what did you do, Johnny?
12444And what did you get a hundred in?
12444And what did you say?
12444And what did you say?
12444And what do you do in winter?
12444And what do you wish the new one to be?
12444And what have you brought me?
12444And what kind of an egg might that be?
12444And what were you talking about?
12444And what,he asked,"do you suppose is the name of the chap who keeps a whole county dry?"
12444And who are you?
12444And why not?
12444And you are trying to free the niggers, are n''t you?
12444And you would n''t let a man beat you-- not even if he was your husband-- would you?
12444And you would n''t let a man beat you-- not even if he was your husband-- would you?
12444Any good? 12444 Any good?"
12444Any good?
12444Any trouble, Tom?
12444Anything on your mind, Catherine?
12444Are fried potatoes rich in carbohydrates or not?
12444Are n''t they rather light?
12444Are n''t you working to- day, Uncle?
12444Are there any trout out there?
12444Are we all goin'', too?
12444Are ye the captain of that vessel?
12444Are you a lawyer?
12444Are you a pillar of the church?
12444Are you a woman suffragist?
12444Are you an Episcopalian?
12444Are you an experienced aviator?
12444Are you drunk, too?
12444Are you going back?
12444Are you hurt, dear?
12444Are you married?
12444Are you positive of it?
12444Are you quite sure that was a marriage license you gave me last month?
12444Are you quite sure they wo n''t leave us any money?
12444Are you sick?
12444Are you sure this is all you have?
12444Are you the boss?
12444Are you trying to save souls from hell?
12444Are you waiting for me, dear?
12444Are you?
12444As to how?
12444Ask me?
12444Better?
12444Burn?
12444Burned, eh?
12444But do you really, after a year, want to marry?
12444But how can I help that?
12444But how did that fact make you think you were still alive?
12444But how is it that you have the candy now?
12444But what would we do with the other two days?
12444But why does laziness make him howl?
12444But why not?
12444But why should n''t faith work as well in one case as in the other?
12444But would n''t tomorrow night do just as well?
12444But you''re a Jew?
12444But your views, as you expressed them some time ago?
12444But, my dear sir,expostulated the author,"does he sign them with his feet?"
12444But,one asked,"how does it get to the other end of the hole?"
12444By the way, do you put these fines back into the roads?
12444By whom?
12444By whom?
12444Can you give me some particulars of this accident?
12444Can you ride a horse and swim, too?
12444Can you ride a horse and swim, too?
12444Chicken pie? 12444 Choked to death?"
12444Come, come, I know that-- drunk again, I suppose?
12444Conductor,he demanded indignantly,"do you permit drunken people to ride upon this train?"
12444Could you not do it yourself, father? 12444 Could you tell him what to do in case of an attack?"
12444D''ye call thot applause?
12444D''ye think thot I''m goin''to put in me whole day drivin''ye around for two hours? 12444 D''you s''pose I''d be workin''in the garden on Saturday morning if she was n''t?"
12444Dare yez to answer me when I puts a question to yez?
12444Dat''s hard luck,said the first;"did youse lose anyt''ing?"
12444Dead?
12444Dear me, how tiresome,said the lady;"have you Praed?"
12444Dear me, son, how did that happen?
12444Dear, dear, that''s too bad;''oo did it happen?
12444Did Hardlucke bear his misfortune like a man?
12444Did n''t I tell ye she''d had her pound of meat?
12444Did n''t I tell ye the fire department was comin?"
12444Did n''t I tell ye to keep out of the way?
12444Did n''t he wire you too?
12444Did n''t that make him come across?
12444Did n''t the boy bring that dozen bass I gave him?
12444Did n''t you hear of the lawsuit over a title that I had with Jones down in Malone last summer?
12444Did n''t you notice that he counted his fingers after I had shaken hands with him and we were coming away?
12444Did n''t you tell Dr. Brooks last week that they were Episcopal kittens?
12444Did she tell you she''d forgotten?
12444Did the ass fancy that one would pay any attention to his wire?
12444Did ye see as Jim got ten years''penal for stealing that''oss?
12444Did you cast your vote, Aunty?
12444Did you come by it honestly?
12444Did you get rid of him?
12444Did you have orders?
12444Did you run like the wind, Sam?
12444Did you say your prayers before you went to bed?
12444Did you see it?
12444Did you sleep well, Mary?
12444Did you take it?
12444Did you tell the police?
12444Did you write this report on my lecture,''The Curse of Whiskey''?
12444Did youse git anyt''ing?
12444Do I understand, Mr. Stevens,asked the Judge, eying"old Thad"indignantly,"that you wish to show your contempt for this court?"
12444Do n''t you ever pray?
12444Do n''t you know what becomes of little boys who stay away from school to play baseball?
12444Do n''t you like the show?
12444Do n''t you love me too?
12444Do n''t you remember what happened to Ananias and Sapphira?
12444Do n''t you think he offers up a good prayer, Joe?
12444Do n''t you think she is a wonder?
12444Do n''t your wife miss you on these occasions?
12444Do you believe in the doctrine of election to be saved?
12444Do you call that an insult?
12444Do you call that thunder? 12444 Do you cycle?"
12444Do you doubt it?
12444Do you drink yourself?
12444Do you have much trouble with your automobile?
12444Do you know that that bulldog of yours killed my wife''s little harmless, affectionate poodle?
12444Do you know where Johnny Locke lives, my little boy?
12444Do you know who I am?
12444Do you know,said the swimmer,"this is the third time to- day that I''ve fallen off that bally old ranch of mine?"
12444Do you live in this house, too?
12444Do you live in this house?
12444Do you live in this parish?
12444Do you mean to say such a physical wreck as he gave you that black eye?
12444Do you motor?
12444Do you save up money for a rainy day, dear?
12444Do you see those two men sitting in the corner? 12444 Do you still like them?"
12444Do you think only of me?
12444Do you think that is long enough to know a man before taking such an important step?
12444Do you understand the requirements of that responsible position?
12444Do you want a lawyer?
12444Do you want me to help you upstairs?
12444Do you, sir,the doctor asked, in the course of his examination,"talk in your sleep?"
12444Do you, then, perhaps, fly?
12444Does being bald bother you much?
12444Does de white folks in youah neighborhood keep eny chickens, Br''er Rastus?
12444Does he pray for the members?
12444Does n''t he just take all the hope out of life?
12444Does n''t it ever rain around here?
12444Does n''t it?
12444Does your head feel better now, Mamma?
12444Does your wife want to vote?
12444Doin''any good?
12444Don''yo''want y''soul washed w''ite as snow, Brudder Jones?
12444Doyle,he asked,"how is it that you have n''t shaved this morning?"
12444Er-- have you kissed the bride?
12444Excuse me, are you a preacher?
12444Excuse me,interrupted the would- be- wit;"but can you tell us what the evening wore on that occasion?"
12444Felicia,said her father upon her return,"did you give him the check?"
12444Five dollars for what?
12444Found a horse? 12444 From headquarters, I suppose?"
12444From where in hell do you come, sir?
12444General, why do you not give the order to fire?
12444George,his wife said,"why did n''t you stand up?"
12444Gerald,said the young wife, noticing how heartily he was eating,"do I cook as well as your mother did?"
12444Get it?
12444Guilty, or not guilty?
12444Had Solomon really seven hundred wives?
12444Hair cut?
12444Hand- clapping?
12444Happy? 12444 Happy?
12444Hard? 12444 Hard?"
12444Has he a sense of humor?
12444Have a good time?
12444Have n''t I got damages enough already, man? 12444 Have they such tall buildings in America as they say, Pat?"
12444Have you a good cook now?
12444Have you a newspaper in town?
12444Have you any money left?
12444Have you done anything for her?
12444Have you heard about the new manner in which the planters are going to pick their cotton this season?
12444Have you no other ambition, Mr. Herford,she demanded,"than to force people to degrade themselves by laughter?"
12444Have you tried brown paper and a hot iron?
12444Have you tried gasoline?
12444Have you_ A Joy Forever_?
12444Heavens, Clancy, do n''t you ever stop?
12444Henry,faltered the young bride,"do you still love me?"
12444Here, officer,he said,"what''s this man charged with?"
12444Here,said a congressman to the head waiter,"why do n''t you put them things on our table too?"
12444Hey, how far''s the next town?
12444Homesick at a time like that?
12444Homesick?
12444Hoo is it, Jeemes, that you mak''sic an enairmous profit aff yer potatoes? 12444 How about beefsteak?"
12444How am I out of order?
12444How are you getting on?
12444How are you making out?
12444How are you, Mary?
12444How can that be,continued the storekeeper,"when it was cured only a week?"
12444How can we ever get Papa out of that little hole?
12444How can we?
12444How dare you say that when we all heard him? 12444 How dare you tell me that with the beard you have on your face?"
12444How did he get his title of colonel?
12444How did you hurt your feet, Dinah?
12444How did you like our railroad trains?
12444How did you lose your arm?
12444How did you pull it?
12444How did you sleep?
12444How did you write my name?
12444How do you do?
12444How do you get along here?
12444How do you know that this one is mine?
12444How do you know?
12444How do you mean it''s no use?
12444How do you plow that field?
12444How do_ you_ know?
12444How does it happen that you are five minutes late at school this morning?
12444How far apart were they?
12444How far in?
12444How far to the next town?
12444How fast is your car, Jimpson?
12444How has it worked?
12444How long did he cry?
12444How long have you been married, Uncle Moses?
12444How many children have you?
12444How many of you boys,asked the Sunday- school superintendent,"can bring two other boys next Sunday?"
12444How many people work in your office?
12444How many shots did you hear?
12444How many strokes?
12444How many times have I told you not to play with that bad Jenkins boy?
12444How many trees have you?
12444How much are they?
12444How much did he leave?
12444How much did that medicine cost, Doc?
12444How much have you saved, darling?
12444How much land have you?
12444How much to pay?
12444How old are you, Tommy?
12444How old are you?
12444How so?
12444How so?
12444How so?
12444How so?
12444How soon?
12444How was that?
12444How was that?
12444How was that?
12444How will you do it?
12444How would you make a Venetian blind?
12444How''s that?
12444How''s that?
12444How''s times?
12444However did you reconcile Adele and Mary?
12444I beg the gentleman''s pardon,said General Cochrane, springing to his feet;"but what was that last remark?"
12444I ca n''t, ca n''t I?
12444I do n''t remember having seen you here before,said she;"how long have you been in the asylum?"
12444I know a very outspoken painter whose little daughter called at a friend''s house and said:''Show me your new parlor rug, wo n''t you, please?''
12444I presume,she remarked,"that you begin the day over here the same as they do in New York?"
12444I suppose that interfered with his holding a good position?
12444I suppose you gave it up then?
12444I wonder if that''s what makes the Delaware Water Gap?
12444If he is good for nothing what do you want him back for?
12444Igh cost o''livin''not''ittin''yer, Bill?
12444In the first place, where did you meet this woman who, according to your story, has treated you so dreadfully?
12444In the first place, where did you meet this woman who, according to your story, has treated you so dreadfully?
12444Insulted?
12444Insulted?
12444Is a spanking hereditary?
12444Is he as good as Foy?
12444Is he balky?
12444Is he hurt?
12444Is he?
12444Is it true that he is henpecked?
12444Is it true, father,he asked,"that marriage is a failure?"
12444Is it, laddie?
12444Is n''t it?
12444Is n''t this the---- Theater?
12444Is she short or is she tall, slender, willowy?
12444Is that nitrogenous?
12444Is that the city gas- works?
12444Is that the truth?
12444Is that you, dear?
12444Is the baby strong?
12444Is there any one you would like to see?
12444Is this it?
12444Ish it possible I have the honor of speakin''to Misshus Smith?
12444It did n''t hurt as much as you expected it would, did it?
12444It is very gratifying to know that your mother thought of me in her illness,said he,"Is your minister out of town?"
12444It''ll last till you git another husband, wo n''t it? 12444 It''s a fine thing for you to belong to the church,"replied the younger brother,"If I join the church who''ll weigh the coal?"
12444It''s cold out to- day, is n''t it?
12444It''s like dis, aindt it? 12444 It''s pretty rough to be gone through like this, ai n''t it, sir?"
12444It''s you, John, is it? 12444 Johnny,"said the mother as she vigorously scrubbed the small boy''s face with soap and water,"did n''t I tell you never to blacken your face again?
12444Kinder chilly, ai n''t it?
12444Large and affectionate?
12444Last days of Pompey? 12444 Look here, Sam,"he said,"what did I order?"
12444Look here, young lady,she said,"who are you that calls my husband and insists on talking to him?"
12444Madam,he said,"if this man were your husband and had given you a beating, would you call in the police?"
12444Martha, have you wiped the sink dry yet?
12444Martha, is it possible that you are thinking of getting married?
12444Mary,he asked,"will you marry me?"
12444May I venture to inquire as to the nature of the book you propose to write?
12444Maybe you are a Baptist?
12444Maybe--here the sentry laughed--"maybe you''re the major himself?"
12444Me mind your machine? 12444 Me?"
12444Miss Annie, is that so?
12444Miss Annie,said the young man, in deep earnest tones,"I am thinking of proposing to your sister Kate-- will you make your home with us?"
12444Mister,he inquired,"was you tryin''to ketch that Pennsylvania train?"
12444Mr. Henry? 12444 Mulligan, what the divvil ar- re ye doin''?"
12444My boy, is it true that you called Mrs. Jones a fool?
12444My dear man,observed the onlooker,"are you not afraid that your brain will be affected in the hot sun?"
12444My friend,he said, shrugging his shoulders and indicating the crowd in front,"I quite agree with you, but what are we two against so many?"
12444My friend,says I,"I''ve heard that there''s nothing in a name, but are you not one of the Wood family?"
12444My horses?
12444My mother, Flora? 12444 My mother, Flora?
12444My poor man,he said,"I suppose you will have to make good this loss out of your own pocket?"
12444New minister?
12444No use?
12444No? 12444 No?
12444Not much chance for caddying then, I suppose?
12444Not that young fellow who has been calling on you lately?
12444Now supposing you had your wish, what would you do?
12444Now that you have made$ 50,000,000, I suppose you are going to keep right on for the purpose of trying to get a hundred millions?
12444Now, Charlie,she pleaded,"are you going to let the sun go down on your wrath?"
12444Now, Lena,she asked earnestly,"are you a_ good_ cook?"
12444Now, look here, Mother,said Bobby,"do I look as if we''d been playing?"
12444Now, what did he say?
12444Now, where in hell have I seen you?
12444Now,said the clergyman to the Sunday- school class,"can any of you tell me what are sins of omission?"
12444Now,said the teacher,"why did n''t you know when Moses lived?"
12444Nurse,he said one day, leaving his blocks and laying his hand on her knee,"nurse, is this God''s day?"
12444O, Mother, why are the men in the front baldheaded?
12444Oh nonsense, uncle, you do n''t mean to say that you subscribe to all the articles of the Presbyterian faith?
12444Oh, Cousin John, what is that?
12444Oh, ai n''t he?
12444Oh, dearest, how did you do it? 12444 Oh, do n''t you_ love_ Ibsen?"
12444Oh, is it?
12444Oh, is that all?
12444Oh, my brother,groaned the reverend gentleman,"wouldst thou rob me?
12444Oh, that''s all right,replied Ben;"but what about the mornings I do n''t get home in time?
12444Oh, that''s too bad, but just supposing you were, whom would you support in the present campaign?
12444Oh, well, your servant is honest, is n''t she?
12444Ole,she said desperately,"why do n''t you say something?"
12444Oxford, Oxford,remonstrated that surprised dignitary,"why this unseemly haste?"
12444Pardon me,continued the Hubbite,"but what did you try to get him to swallow?"
12444Pass you in? 12444 Pete?"
12444Please, Mis''Mary, might I have the aft''noon off three weeks frum Wednesday?
12444Pride, eh?
12444Prisoner at the bar,called out the clerk,"do you wish to challenge any of the jury?"
12444Quite,said the clergyman;"but do you really want an appropriate verse?"
12444Rain? 12444 Rain?"
12444Robbers?
12444Say, Captain,he said"you ai n''t got anything but the habit, have you?"
12444Say, cap''n,said one of them,"what ought I to carry home to the children for a souvenir?"
12444Say, do you know where I can buy a folding toothbrush?
12444Say, do you know who I am?
12444Say, fellers,he murmured anxiously,"is the boss mad?
12444Say, friend,called out one of the men,"how far is it to the next town?"
12444Say, have you seen this show?
12444Say, young man,asked an old lady at the ticket- office,"what time does the next train pull in here and how long does it stay?"
12444Say,asked the stranger, mopping his brow,"do you always go home like this?
12444See that millinery shop over there?
12444Senator, why do n''t you unpack your trunk? 12444 Shall I help you upstairs?"
12444Shine yer boots, sir?
12444Shine''em so''s yer can see yer face in''em?
12444Sho,said Uncle Abe,"who they buryin''today?"
12444Shore dere was-- plenty of''em,the other hastened to assure his minister"What was dey a- doin''?"
12444Smoking, is it, sor? 12444 So I is, Missus, but do you''spose I''d keep all dis yer money in de house wid dat strange nigger?"
12444So you did n''t spend your 2 cents?
12444So you have adopted a baby to raise?
12444So you have had a long siege of nervous prostration?
12444So you heard the bullet whiz past you?
12444So you think the author of this play will live, do you?
12444So you want to see the boss?
12444So?
12444Something else, Jimmy? 12444 Souls?"
12444Squirrel whisky?
12444Sunrise?
12444Suppose a reporter should visit our church?
12444Sure?
12444Surely you are glad?
12444Suspicious? 12444 Tall buildings ye ask, sur?"
12444Tart, what?
12444Tart, what?
12444Tell me,pleaded the insurance agent, when the lad came into the kitchen,"are you the boss of the house?"
12444That so? 12444 That your boy, Billups?"
12444That? 12444 The barber from the village?"
12444The burglar''s legs?
12444The morrn''?
12444Then how are you an Episcopalian?
12444Then nothing passed between ye?
12444Then what in thunder''s she hollering for?
12444Then where is the funny paper?
12444Then why did you come away?
12444Then why do n''t you go into the speculation?
12444Then why do you call it chicken pie? 12444 Then why do you give it to me?"
12444Then why do you persist in hissing the performers?
12444Then,said James,"why do n''t you chew cloves?"
12444There are several I have n''t heard, are n''t there?
12444They ca n''t sell liquor at all there?
12444Three months, is it? 12444 Tite Harrison, hey?
12444To drink?
12444To what parish do you belong?
12444Tommy,said his mother reprovingly,"what did I say I''d do to you if I ever caught you stealing jam again?"
12444Up the soide of the hill is it, sor?
12444Up the soide of the hill? 12444 Up to my shoulders?"
12444Vell, say,he whispered again,"he must be pretty exbensive, then, ai n''t he?
12444Vittles fo''what?
12444Vocation?
12444Want a raise, do you? 12444 Want to buy some nice cold tea?"
12444Want to see the boss?
12444Was Helen''s marriage a success?
12444Was Minerva married?
12444Was dere any white men dere?
12444Was they brought on specially for this show, or do they live here?
12444Watcher want?
12444Well did anybody ever?
12444Well then tell me do you believe that I am elected to be saved?
12444Well, Bobby, what do you want to be when you grow up?
12444Well, George, have you tried ammonia?
12444Well, I''ll tell you,he said then, thoughtfully:"why do n''t you sugar your head and go as a pill?"
12444Well, Jenny?
12444Well, Pat, what good would it do if yez knew?
12444Well, William?
12444Well, Willie?
12444Well, boys, where have you been all afternoon?
12444Well, did n''t they give any encouragement? 12444 Well, did you have a good night''s rest?"
12444Well, father, was he the man who said,''Give me liberty or give me death?''
12444Well, how did you like the piece, my dear?
12444Well, if yer do n''t like it,the conductor finally blurted out,"why in thunder do n''t yer git out an''walk?"
12444Well, it may turn out all right, but do n''t you think you are taking chances?
12444Well, little girl,the mother began,"did you tell God all about how naughty you''d been?"
12444Well, my good woman,said he,"so you are ill and require the consolations of religion?
12444Well, my little man, and what can I do for you?
12444Well, my little man, did you want to see me?
12444Well, my lord, you''ll excuse me, but he said,''Who''s that old woman with the red bed curtain round her, sitting up there?
12444Well, then, madam,requested the little man,"would you mind changing seats with me?
12444Well, what about it?
12444Well, what are we called?
12444Well, what are you going to do about it?
12444Well, what are you going to do, then?
12444Well, what do the revolutionists want?
12444Well, what do we care,mumbled John, rolling over,"so long as they do n''t die in the house?"
12444Well, what do you think of that?
12444Well, what do you want me to do?
12444Well, what if I do? 12444 Well, what is it, sweetheart?"
12444Well, what is it?
12444Well, what is it?
12444Well, what is it?
12444Well, what of it?
12444Well, why do n''t you go there then?
12444Well, why do you preach your doctrines up here? 12444 Well, why is n''t your wife helping you to celebrate?"
12444Well,rejoined the Governor,"now that you have seen one, are you satisfied?"
12444Well,said the first,"what''s new this morning?"
12444Well?
12444Well?
12444Well?
12444Were any of them receipted?
12444Were any of your boyish ambitions ever realized?
12444Wh- why are you following me?
12444Whah wuz yo''soul washed w''ite as snow, Brudder Jones?
12444Whar did you git such a fine goose?
12444Whar yo''vittles?
12444Whar''d yoh jine?
12444What American name would you like to have?
12444What about?
12444What are her days at home?
12444What are they?
12444What are ye wearin''thot mournful thing for?
12444What are you cutting out of the paper?
12444What are you cutting out of the paper?
12444What are you doing for her?
12444What are you doing here?
12444What are you eating?
12444What are you going to do with all that paper, Henry?
12444What are you going to do with it?
12444What are you going to do with it?
12444What are you going to do?
12444What are you in bed for?
12444What are you running for, Mose?
12444What are you trying to do? 12444 What are you, then, uncle?"
12444What caused it? 12444 What caused the coolness between you and that young doctor?
12444What d''ye mane?
12444What did he say?
12444What did he say?
12444What did he want?
12444What did they do? 12444 What did they do?"
12444What did you bring that sign in here for?
12444What did you do with it?
12444What did you do?
12444What do they do to you?
12444What do you consider the most important event in the history of Paris?
12444What do you mean by bo''n oratah?
12444What do you mean by following me in this manner?
12444What do you mean by that?
12444What do you mean? 12444 What do you mean?
12444What do you think I''m running? 12444 What do you think about it, Uncle Bill?"
12444What do you want?
12444What does he say?
12444What does this mean, your being asleep out here? 12444 What does your mother say when you tell her those dreadful lies?"
12444What explanation have you,he asked severely,"for not speaking to your wife in five years?"
12444What floor do you live on?
12444What for?
12444What for?
12444What for?
12444What good will thet be?
12444What great event took place July 4, 1776?
12444What happened?
12444What has that to do with it? 12444 What have you there?"
12444What is a drunken man like, Fool?
12444What is a steward?
12444What is a''faculty''?
12444What is faith, Johnny?
12444What is he so angry with you for?
12444What is it?
12444What is that Japanese idol over there worth?
12444What is that little boy crying about?
12444What is that?
12444What is the charge against these young men?
12444What is the matter with him?
12444What is the matter, dearest?
12444What is the name of your automobile?
12444What is the old one?
12444What is the trouble, my dear?
12444What is the trouble?
12444What is this for?
12444What is this?
12444What is this?
12444What is wrong, dear?
12444What is your ideal man?
12444What is your name?
12444What is your opinion of a tolerable egg?
12444What little boy can tell me the difference between the''quick''and the''dead?''
12444What made you go crazy?
12444What makes you carry that horrible shriek machine for an automobile signal?
12444What makes you think the baby is going to be a great politician?
12444What of it?
12444What on earth are you doing, man?
12444What on earth are you trying to do there, Dudley?
12444What on earth has the dog to do with it?
12444What profit do you make out of that?
12444What punishment did that defaulting banker get?
12444What seems to be the trouble?
12444What sort of a man is he?
12444What sort of a ticket does your suffragette club favor?
12444What sort of chap is he?
12444What then have you got?
12444What was he put in for?
12444What was that, feyther?
12444What was the dream?
12444What was the matter?
12444What was your adventure, though?
12444What were you and Mr. Smith talking about in the parlor?
12444What were you in for?
12444What will we do?
12444What with all their clothes on?
12444What you been doin''to get tired?
12444What''d he do with it?
12444What''d he do?
12444What''ll ye pay?
12444What''s brought you here?
12444What''s that man shaking his stick at her for?
12444What''s that? 12444 What''s that?"
12444What''s the charge ag''in this man?
12444What''s the charge?
12444What''s the greatest play you ever saw?
12444What''s the matter there?
12444What''s the matter, Bill?
12444What''s the matter, Crane? 12444 What''s the matter, Jim?"
12444What''s the matter?
12444What''s the matter?
12444What''s the matter?
12444What''s the matter?
12444What''s the trouble?
12444What''s the word?
12444What''s this?
12444What''s this?
12444What''s up? 12444 What''s wrong now?"
12444What''s wrong?
12444What,asked the Sunday- school teacher,"is meant by bearing false witness against one''s neighbor?"
12444What- all''s de matter wif de chile?
12444What? 12444 What?"
12444What?
12444When is you gwine to git married, Miss Maudie?
12444When will I be old enough to, Mama?
12444Where am I-- in heaven?
12444Where am I?
12444Where are the bottles?
12444Where did you come from, Lizzie?
12444Where did you get the pattern, Mamma?
12444Where did you sit?
12444Where do all them troopers come from?
12444Where do you feel worst?
12444Where hae you been the nicht, Andrew?
12444Where have you been?
12444Where is everybody?
12444Where is he?
12444Where is your lawyer?
12444Where were you when the first shot was fired?
12444Where were you when the second shot was fired?
12444Where''d you go?
12444Where''s old Four- Fingered Pete?
12444Where''s the fish?
12444Which one?
12444Who are those people who are cheering?
12444Who are you?
12444Who confirmed you, then?
12444Who is Orlando Day?
12444Who is it?
12444Who is this?'' 12444 Who''s going to pay me for my horse?"
12444Who''s there? 12444 Who''s there?"
12444Who, father, is that gentleman?
12444Who-- who the devil is this, anyhow?
12444Whom do you wish to see?
12444Why are you driving so recklessly? 12444 Why did you break your engagement with that school teacher?"
12444Why did you come to college, anyway? 12444 Why did you run when you had this permit?"
12444Why do n''t both sides come together and arbitrate?
12444Why do n''t women have the same sense of humor that men possess?
12444Why do n''t you make up?
12444Why do n''t you stay in out of the rain?
12444Why do you ask?
12444Why do you ask?
12444Why do you object to Baedeker?
12444Why do you wish to change your name?
12444Why does it take him so long?
12444Why in thunder do n''t you make it a rule to tell only half what you hear?
12444Why is it,asked the persistent poetess,"that you always insist that we write on one side of the paper only?
12444Why is it?
12444Why not? 12444 Why not?"
12444Why not?
12444Why on earth did you agree to do it for so little?
12444Why on earth did you do that?
12444Why should I keep your money for you? 12444 Why was it you never married again, Aunt Sallie?"
12444Why were you not at our revival?
12444Why you no ringa da bell?
12444Why, Brudder Brown,he asked,"whar''r all yo''chickens?"
12444Why, I came home late, and my wife heard me and said,''John, what time is it?'' 12444 Why, Johnny,"said his mother,"what''s the matter?"
12444Why, Mother dear, did n''t you know that was the ribbon I won at the show?
12444Why, colonel, what''s the matter?
12444Why, how big is your father''s farm?
12444Why, mother,cried Hilda,"ca n''t you see?
12444Why, then,the stranger queried,"should the dog howl?"
12444Why, what is it, Harry?
12444Why, what on earth''s the matter?
12444Why, what''s he been doin''now?
12444Why, what''s the matter, dear?
12444Why, you would not speak to a strange man, would you?
12444Why,asked headquarters,"do you wish to be transferred?"
12444Why,he inquired,"do you, who fought on the other side, give me so much more than any of those who were my comrades in arms?"
12444Why,said he,"does a bride invariably desire to be clothed in white at her marriage?"
12444Why,said the teacher,"George Washington did his own sewing in the wars, and do you think you are better than George Washington?"
12444Why?
12444Will they bite easily?
12444Will they?
12444Will you give me a certificate to that effect?
12444Will you please tell me, sir, what is the extreme penalty for bigamy?
12444Will you take tart or pudding?
12444Will you, really?
12444Willie,she said,"did you invite Tommy to your party tonight?"
12444Wo n''t do? 12444 Wo n''t you try it on?"
12444Wot cheer, Alf? 12444 Wotcher wages?"
12444Would n''t it be awful?
12444Would n''t yo''gib me one?
12444Would n''t yo''give me twenty- five?
12444Would you be offended if I was to present him with a nice brass collar?
12444Would you call Si Perkins a liar?
12444Would you mind writing all that down for me?
12444Ye do n''t, hey? 12444 Yes, Father, but how can I tell when I have enough or am drunk?"
12444Yes, but how about the man who works and has to listen to him?
12444Yes, ma''am,replied the salesman;"something very strong?"
12444Yes, sir,said the waiter, reaching for the sandwich;"will you eat it or take it with you?"
12444Yes, yes,said the Bishop of London with the suspicion of a twinkle in his kindly old eyes,"but why such haste?
12444Yes; what is it?
12444Yes? 12444 Yes?"
12444Yes?
12444Yis, sor, but is this the relief station?
12444You blithering idiot,said the foreman,"did n''t I tell you to get out of the road?
12444You can make doors, windows, and blinds?
12444You did n''t suppose God was a Yankee, did you?
12444You do n''t know? 12444 You do n''t mean to imply that he is a spendthrift?"
12444You do n''t mean to say they sell whiskey in a millinery store?
12444You do n''t suppose God would be loafing around here this time of day, do you? 12444 You do n''t think they''ll take everything, do you?"
12444You do n''t think we''re rehearsin''with him, do you?
12444You had$ 35 when you left the fort, did n''t you?
12444You have a pretty tough looking lot of customers to dispose of this morning, have n''t you?
12444You have been conspicuous in the halls of legislation, have you not?
12444You have? 12444 You say you are your wife''s third husband?"
12444You say your jewels were stolen while the family was at dinner?
12444You thoroughly understand carpentry?
12444You''re a Jew, ai n''t you?
12444You''re sure it''s in style?
12444You- all carried moah''n a million passengers? 12444 Young man,"he said brusquely,"do you know what time it is?"
12444Your chief? 12444 Your fortune?"
12444Your husband will be all right now,said an English doctor to a woman whose husband was dangerously ill."What do you mean?"
12444''"Ow long''ave yer been at it?"
12444''"Tis cold, ai n''t it?
12444''Any entertainment here tonight to help a stranger while away his evening?''
12444''Are ye dead?''
12444''Honest?''
12444--_The Advertiser_ SALOONS"Where can I get a drink in this town?"
12444A Bostonian died, and when he arrived at St. Peter''s gate he was asked the usual questions:"What is your name, and where are you from?"
12444A German woman called up Central and instructed her as follows:"Ist dis de mittle?
12444A darky meeting another coming from the library with a book accosted him as follows:"What book you done got there, Rastus?"
12444A freighter?"
12444A genius who once did aspire To invent an aerial flyer, When asked,"Does it go?"
12444A gentleman sprang to assist her; He picked up her glove and her wrister;"Did you fall, Ma''am?"
12444A passing Irishman stopped and watched him with great interest for two or three minutes; at last he said:"Well, why do n''t ye jump?"
12444A playmate passed him, looked at his position, then sang out:"Hey, Bobbie, have you lost your other skate?"
12444A political speaker, while making a speech, paused in the midst of it and exclaimed:"Now gentlemen, what do you think?"
12444A poor lady the other day hastened to the nursery and said to her little daughter:"Minnie, what do you mean by shouting and screaming?
12444A woman stuck her head out of a second- story window and demanded, none too sweetly:"What do you want?"
12444AERONAUTICS A flea and a fly in a flue, Were imprisoned; now what could they do?
12444AEROPLANES"Mother, may I go aeroplane?"
12444AGENTS"John, whatever induced you to buy a house in this forsaken region?"
12444ALERTNESS"Alert?"
12444ALIMONY"What is alimony, ma?"
12444ALLOWANCES"Why do n''t you give your wife an allowance?"
12444ANNIVERSARIES MRS. JONES--"Does your husband remember your wedding anniversary?"
12444ASPIRING VOCALIST--"Professor, do you think I will ever be able to do anything with my voice?"
12444AUTOMOBILES TEACHER--"If a man saves$ 2 a week, how long will it take him to save a thousand?"
12444AVIATOR( to young assistant, who has begun to be frightened)--"Well, what do you want now?"
12444About two months later she cuddled up close to him on the sofa one evening, and said:"Robert dear, have you saved up that thousand yet?"
12444According to directions he knocked and the Dean asked:"Who is there?"
12444After a few minutes he leaned over to a gentleman near him and whispered,"Say, mine frient, this must be a pretty goot doctor, ai n''t he?"
12444After a few moments''deep thought:"Say, ma, then do n''t you think they''d be lots more surprised if you did take us all?"
12444After looking around in considerable astonishment Pat replied:"And is it yez, captain?
12444After the beau had made a rapid exit, the father turned to the girl and said in astonishment:"What was the matter with that fellow?
12444After the service the preacher met the Judge in the vestibule and said:"Well, your Honor, how did you like the sermon?"
12444After the train had made another stop and gone on, the brakeman came into the caboose and said to the conductor:"Well, is he off?"
12444Ai n''t that a character for ye?"
12444Am I walking straight?"
12444Am you habbing prosper''s times?"
12444An aviator alighted on a field and said to a rather well- dressed individual:"Here, mind my machine a minute, will you?"
12444An old farmer, driving past the place after work had been started, and seeing a man in the doorway, called to him:"What be ye doin''in this place?"
12444An''ef yo''had a hundred watermillions would yo''gib me fifty?"
12444And are you married?"
12444And he was ground to pieces, I suppose?"
12444And oh, friend, do you know what day it inexorably and relentlessly brings nearer?"
12444And when he says to me,''Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband?''
12444Any tender little romance there?"
12444Anybody happen to know?"
12444Approaching an old lady in a Lakewood hotel, he said:"Can you crack nuts?"
12444Are n''t you a- gwine in?"
12444Are n''t you aware that I am a divine?"
12444Are there any questions to be asked?"
12444Are yo''corresponding wif some other female?"
12444Are yo''so good for nuffen lazy dat yo''cahn''t wish fo''yo''own watermillions?"
12444Are you married?"
12444As I jabbed the pen back into the dish of bird shot, I said:"''Can you direct me to the bank?''
12444As he passed down the street a gamin yelled:"What''s the kid done?"
12444As the waiter placed the order before him he said in a loud voice:"Waiter, what is largest tip you ever received?"
12444At last, unable to stand it longer, he arose and demanded, in a high, penetrating voice,"Is there a Christian Scientist in this room?"
12444At the conclusion of the service the American chanced to ask one of the jackies:"Are you obliged to attend these Sunday morning services?"
12444At the end he said,"Did the other doctor take your temperature?"
12444B--"Would you mind telling me what it was?"
12444BALL-"What is silence?"
12444BARGAINS MANAGER( five- and- ten- cent store)--"What did the lady who just went out want?"
12444BEER A man to whom illness was chronic, When told that he needed a tonic, Said,"O Doctor dear, Wo n''t you please make it beer?"
12444BEES TEACHER--"Tommy, do you know''How Doth the Little Busy Bee''?"
12444BIBLE INTERPRETATION"Miss Jane, did Moses have the same after- dinner complaint my papa''s got?"
12444BILLY--"Then why ai n''t you sick today?"
12444BOBBY--"When did you begin, then, Mamma?"
12444BOGGS--"What luck did you have with them?"
12444BOOKS AND READING LADY PRESIDENT--"What book has helped you most?"
12444BORES"What kind of a looking man is that chap Gabbleton you just mentioned?
12444BRIDGE WHIST"How about the sermon?"
12444BROOKLYN At the Brooklyn Bridge.--"Madam, do you want to go to Brooklyn?"
12444BUSINESS ETHICS"Johnny,"said his teacher,"if coal is selling at$ 6 a ton and you pay your dealer$ 24 how many tons will he bring you?"
12444Bangs?"
12444Be you the whistle?"
12444Being told that such was the case the old darky said;"Do you mind telling me something that has been botherin''my old haid?
12444But I got out shust in time, eh?"
12444But I will give you two thousand,"answered the upholder of American honor; and then in a moment he added:"May I ask who gave you the thousand francs?"
12444But how on earth did you do it, Ethel?"
12444But how was I to know?
12444But how, pray, could he really know?
12444But sure, this is the relief station?"
12444But taking the matter seriously, how would one define humor?
12444But what are you going to do now?"
12444But what in tarnation was them drunken painters in sech an all- fired hurry fer?"
12444But what on earth is she doing up in Virginia?"
12444But where are you dining tonight?"
12444But where does the insult to you come in?"
12444But where does the insult to you come in?"
12444But you see that big man over there?"
12444But"--suddenly looking up--"where the divvil is the cat?"
12444CASEY--"Now, phwat wu''u''d ye do in a case loike thot?"
12444CHAMPAGNE MR. HILTON--"Have you opened that bottle of champagne, Bridget?"
12444CHIEF CLERK( to office boy)--"Why on earth do n''t you laugh when the boss tells a joke?"
12444CHINAMAN--"You tellee me where railroad depot?"
12444CITIZEN--"What''s the matter, John?
12444CLANCY--"Loike phwat?"
12444CLERK--"To cut out?"
12444CLERK--"What is it, please?"
12444COLLEGE STUDENTS"Say, dad, remember that story you told me about when you were expelled from college?"
12444COLONEL HIGHFLYER--"What are your rates per column?"
12444COMMUTERS BRIGGS--"Is it true that you have broken off your engagement to that girl who lives in the suburbs?"
12444CONFESSIONS"You say Garston made a complete confession?
12444CONUNDRUMS"Mose, what is the difference between a bucket of milk in a rain storm and a conversation between two confidence men?"
12444COST OF LIVING"Did you punish our son for throwing a lump of coal at Willie Smiggs?"
12444COUNTRY LIFE BILTER( at servants''agency)--"Have you got a cook who will go to the country?"
12444COURAGE AUNT ETHEL--"Well, Beatrice, were you very brave at the dentist''s?"
12444COURTSHIP"Do you think a woman believes you when you tell her she is the first girl you ever loved?"
12444CRITIC--"By George, old chap, when I look at one of your paintings I stand and wonder--"ARTIST--"How I do it?"
12444CRITIC--"Why not give it to an institution for the blind?"
12444CRUELTY"Why do you beat your little son?
12444CURIOUS CHARLEY--"Then what tree does the doughnut grow on?"
12444Ca n''t you tell the difference?"
12444Can it be possible in a civilized country?"
12444Can nothing he done to stop it?"
12444Can you write?
12444Clemens?"
12444Come on, sir, what was it?"
12444Could n''t yer make it a quarter an''thoroly enjoy yourself?"
12444Could you love a girl like that?"
12444Could you not spoil the marriage?"
12444D''ye think I''d be relyin''on total strangers for support if I had a wife?"
12444D''ye want to drown me?"
12444DANCING He was a remarkably stout gentleman, excessively fond of dancing, so his friends asked him why he had stopped, and was it final?
12444DEMOCRACY"Why are you so vexed, Irma?"
12444DEMOCRATIC PARTY HOSPITAL PHYSICIAN--"Which ward do you wish to be taken to?
12444DEWLEY--"Is the machine on the market yet?"
12444DIVORCE"When a woman marries and then divorces her husband inside of a week what would you call it?"
12444DOGS LADY( to tramp who had been commissioned to find her lost poodle)--"The poor little darling, where did you find him?"
12444Dey ai n''t no dog in a dog biscuit, is dey?"
12444Did he mention any names?"
12444Did n''t I tell you to take care and get out of the way?
12444Did n''t the lady you last worked for have them on the table?"
12444Did n''t they appreciate it?"
12444Did n''t they ask you to come before the curtain?"
12444Did ye not hear it?"
12444Did, eh?"
12444Do n''t you care anything about your souls?"
12444Do n''t you know me?
12444Do n''t you know the difference in value?
12444Do n''t you see how it reads?
12444Do n''t you see the gentleman wants to take the lady''s picture?"
12444Do n''t you think that is very nice of them?"
12444Do ye see this big dent in my head?
12444Do you do it to avoid repeating yourself?"
12444Do you ever take alcoholic drinks?"
12444Do you know her equal?"
12444Do you know why?
12444Do you mean to say that they actually used to quarrel?"
12444Do you think I am made of money?"
12444Do you think-- is it your opinion-- that they have, so to speak, decreased in violence, if I may use that word?"
12444Do you understand?"
12444Do you understand?"
12444Do you understand?"
12444Do your parents look after your moral welfare?"
12444Dost thou love life?
12444Dost thou love life?
12444EARNEST YOUNG MAN--"Don''t work?"
12444EARNEST YOUNG MAN--"Have you any advice to a struggling young employee?"
12444EDITOR--"Well, what further proof do you want?"
12444EDITOR--"You wish a position as a proofreader?"
12444ELECTRICITY In school a boy was asked this question in physics:"What is the difference between lightning and electricity?"
12444EMPLOYERS AND EMPLOYEES"You want more money?
12444Each favorite vintage in its turn,-- What man could wish for more?
12444Elated with her seeming quick perception, he then turned to the picture of a Chimpanzee and said:"Baby, what is this?"
12444Elizabeth gazed at the sardines in wonder, and then asked:"But, mother, how do the large fish get the cans open?"
12444Excuse my asking you, but is there much more to do before we get there?"
12444Eyeing her sleepily he said curiously,"Say, are you talking yet or again?"
12444FAIR VISITOR--"Why are you giving Fido''s teeth such a thorough brushing?"
12444FAST FRIEND--"Who from?"
12444FATHER( impressively)--"Suppose I should be taken away suddenly, what would become of you, my boy?"
12444FATHER( reprovingly)--"Do you know what happens to liars when they die?"
12444FATHER-"And what did he say?"
12444FEET BIG MAN( with a grouch)--"Will you be so kind as to get off my feet?"
12444FIGHTING"Who gave ye th''black eye, Jim?"
12444FIRST DEAF MUTE--"He was n''t so very angry, was he?"
12444FIRST ENGLISHMAN--"Why do you allow your wife to be a militant suffragette?"
12444FIRST EUROPEAN SOCIETY LADY--"Wouldn''t you like to be presented to our sovereign?"
12444FLATS"Hello, Tom, old man, got your new flat fitted up yet?"
12444FORESIGHT"They tell me you''re working''ard night an''day, Sarah?"
12444FOUNTAIN PENS"Fust time you''ve ever milked a cow, is it?"
12444FOURTH OF JULY"You are in favor of a safe and sane Fourth of July?"
12444FREE THOUGHT TOMMY--"Pop, what is a freethinker?"
12444FRIEND-"So your great Russian actor was a total failure?"
12444FRIEND--"So you''re going to make it hot for that fellow who held up the bank, shot the cashier, and got away with the ten thousand?"
12444Fee?"
12444Finally the captain, taking him by the shoulder and giving him a vigorous shake said:"Pat, why do n''t you answer?
12444Finally the hostess turned to Field and asked:"You, sir, must have often seen these affairs?"
12444Finally the traveler approached and asked, solicitously:"Is your horse sick?"
12444Finally the young man asked timidly,"Do n''t you think, sir, that this painting of mine is-- well-- er-- tolerable?"
12444Finally the youngster asked,"Are you really and truly a governor?"
12444Fishin''?"
12444Freddie read over the list, and then said:"Mother, have n''t you a list for a bad little boy?"
12444From almost every berth on the car a head came out from between the curtains, and with one accord nearly every man shouted:''What''s that?''"
12444GENTLEMEN"Sadie, what is a gentleman?"
12444GERTIE--"Then you think every woman should have a vote?"
12444GOVERNMENT OWNERSHIP"Do n''t you think the coal- mines ought to be controlled by the government?"
12444GRAFT"What is meant by graft?"
12444GUARANTEES TRAVELER( on an English train)--"Shall I have time to get a drink?"
12444GUESTS"Look here, Dinah,"said Binks, as he opened a questionable egg at breakfast,"is this the freshest egg you can find?"
12444Get home all right?"
12444H.F.--"What have you to live on?"
12444H.F.--"Will you have a church or a private wedding?"
12444HASH"George,"said the Titian- haired school marm,"is there any connecting link between the animal kingdom and the vegetable kingdom?"
12444HE--"But what reason have you for refusing to marry me?"
12444HE--"Why stop there?
12444HEALTH RESORTS"Where''ve you been, Murray?"
12444HEIRLOOMS HE( wondering if his rival has been accepted)--"Are both your rings heirlooms?"
12444HER SUITOR--"Then do n''t you think you''d better let me take her off your hands?"
12444HEREDITY"Papa, what does hereditary mean?"
12444HIS BETTER HALF--"But why wait?
12444HIS FATHER--"And what were your thoughts after you had done so?"
12444HIS FATHER--"Well, my son?"
12444HIS WIFE( in surprise)--"Honestly?"
12444HUSBAND( to his wife)--"Shall I have another glass, Henrietta?"
12444HUSBAND--"At the counter where the sweet little blond works?
12444HUSBAND--"Did he whisper it or say it out loud?"
12444HUSBAND--"What letter?"
12444HUSBANDS"Is she making him a good wife?"
12444Hamlet?
12444Harold, what would your mother say if she saw you smoking cigarets?"
12444Has Easter gone back on you?''
12444Has Easter gone back on you?''
12444Has anybody got any whiskey?"
12444Has n''t his father got an automobile, too?"
12444Has you, sah?"
12444Have a bite?"
12444Have n''t you got any more sense than to eat persimmons at this time of the year?
12444Have n''t you washed that Afghan yet?"
12444Have you any money?"
12444Have you fixed the day of the wedding?"
12444He answered,"My queen, Is it manners you mean, Or do you refer to my figure?"
12444He asked a native:"How long does it take you to carry your goods to market by muleback?"
12444He got the wrong number and, without asking to whom he was talking, he said,"Can I get a box for two to- night?"
12444He paused at the door, asking:"Sor, may I speak to you, not as an officer, but as mon to mon?"
12444He smiled and added:"Is there anything quite so queerly cosmopolitan as a New York cafe?
12444He stepped up to the man in charge and inquired:"Is this the relief station, sor?"
12444He walked ahead of the servant for a short distance and then asked:"How is it?
12444He was once approached at a reception by a fussy old lady, who demanded,"Oh, Mr. Zangwill, what is your Christian name?"
12444Hence the following conversation in Brownsville recently between two of the old- time residents:"Where have you been lately, Bob?
12444Hennessey?"
12444Henry?"
12444His answer was:"What On?"
12444His wife said to him on his arrival:"Well, what luck?"
12444How can I repay you?
12444How can I show my gratitude?
12444How can you eat so much?"
12444How dare you do that?"
12444How many battles was he in?"
12444How many children have you?"
12444How much are you getting?"
12444How would you like to stay back in this class another year and have little Mary go ahead of you?"
12444How''s this guy Hitchcock, anyhow?"
12444Hurriedly came the answer:"Mine frent, you surely vould not refuse me two per zent discount on a strictly cash transaction like dis?"
12444I cried:"What is my fault?
12444I have thought of journalism--""What are your own inclinations?"
12444I may look like her, but do you tink dat''s a favor?"
12444I paid the cook this noon, and what do you think?
12444I said,''Pat, will you have a drink of whisky?''"
12444I thought you were going to be married?"
12444I wonder where all the pins go to, anyway?"
12444I wonder why?"
12444I''d like to know what you think I''m sending you to college for?
12444INSURGENTS"And what,"asked a visitor to the North Dakota State Fair,"do you call that kind of cucumber?"
12444INTERVIEWS"Have n''t your opinions on this subject undergone a change?"
12444If woman fair he strove to please, Where did he get his"hours of ease"?
12444In China when the subscriber rings up exchange the operator may be expected to ask:"What number does the honorable son of the moon and stars desire?"
12444In Nola Chucky one day I said to a man:"''What is the principal occupation of this town?''
12444In answer to the question,"Disposition of carcass?"
12444In life''s small things be resolute and great To keep thy muscles trained; know''st thou when fate Thy measure takes?
12444In the grim silence she turned to an old gentleman on her right and said:"Would you like a sonata before going in to dinner?"
12444In what way?"
12444Is Pompey dead?
12444Is Tite dead?"
12444Is a joke that does not produce a laugh a joke at all?
12444Is it a go?"
12444Is it a go?"
12444Is it counterfeit?"
12444Is it much of a walk?"
12444Is it possible that the laugh is not the test of the joke?
12444Is n''t it grand?
12444Is n''t that where we live?"
12444Is n''t there something about that word"sportive,"on the lips of so learned an authority, that tickles the fancy-- appeals to the sense of humor?
12444Is that so, Father?"
12444Is that so?"
12444Is that the idea?"
12444Is that the proper way to beg?"
12444Is there an Absolute in the realm of humor, or must our jokes be judged solely by the pragmatic test?
12444Is there anything the matter?"
12444Is your mother in?"
12444Is your wife at home now?"
12444It read:"When you are through, will you please turn off the lights, lock the door, and put the key under the mat?"
12444It was at a recent examination at her school that the question was put,''Who makes the laws of our government?''
12444It was"My Lord, will you have some of this?"
12444JENNIE--"What makes George such a pessimist?"
12444JEWS What is the difference between a banana and a Jew?
12444JOHNNY--"Papa, would you be glad if I saved a dollar for you?"
12444JONES--"How''d this happen?
12444Jones busted in, stopped, looked my witnesses over carefully, and said:''Paul, are those your witnesses?''
12444Just as he reached the clump he heard a voice say:"Why in hell did you play that card?"
12444Just as he was leaving, he said:"Did you hear about that man who died the other day and left all he had to the orphanage?"
12444Just what is the difference between them?"
12444LADY--"And ca n''t you get one?"
12444LADY--"I guess you''re gettin''a good thing out o''tending the rich Smith boy, ai n''t ye, doctor?"
12444LEADING MAN IN TRAVELING COMPANY--"We play_ Hamlet_ to- night, laddie, do we not?"
12444LISPING"Have you lost another tooth, Bethesda?"
12444LITTLE BROTHER--"What''s etiquet?"
12444Leaning over the dash- board, he inquired, in the gentlest of tones:"Pardon me, ladies, but shall I get you a couple of chairs?"
12444Leaning over to the white- haired man at his side, evidently an old member of the congregation, he whispered:"How long has he been preaching?"
12444Lillie''s tone changed to indignation:"Now, Miss Annie, what yo''think?
12444Looking back, he demanded, in a very fever of interest:"Which horn did she blow?"
12444Lost?"
12444Love the sea?
12444MADELINE--"Who was speaking?"
12444MAGISTRATE--"And what was the prisoner doing?"
12444MAGISTRATE--"You admit you stole the pig?"
12444MAKING GOOD"What''s become ob dat little chameleon Mandy had?"
12444MAN--"Is there any reason why I should give you five cents?"
12444MANDY--"What foh yo''been goin''to de post- office so reg''lar?
12444MARRIAGE MRS. QUACKENNESS--"Am yo''daughtar happily mar''d, Sistah Sagg?"
12444MEDICAL INSPECTION OF SCHOOLS PASSER- BY--"What''s the fuss in the schoolyard, boy?"
12444MEDICAL STUDENT--"I mean what did he have?"
12444MEDICAL STUDENT--"What did you operate on that man for?"
12444MESSAGES"Have you the rent ready?"
12444MICE"What''s the matter with Briggs?"
12444MIDDLE CLASSES WILLIE--"Paw, what is the middle class?"
12444MINORITIES Stepping out between the acts at the first production of one of his plays, Bernard Shaw said to the audience:"What do you think of it?"
12444MISSIONS"What in the world are you up to, Hilda?"
12444MISTRESS--"Have you a reference?"
12444MISTRESS--"Who is your intended, Delia?"
12444MOLLYCODDLES"Tommy, why do n''t you play with Frank any more?"
12444MOTHER--"The teacher complains you have not had a correct lesson for a month; why is it?"
12444MOTHER--"What makes you say that, darling?"
12444MR. HENPECK--"Are you the man who gave my wife a lot of impudence?"
12444MR. HENPECK--"Do you know if I am going with her?"
12444MR. HENPECK--"Is my wife going out, Jane?"
12444MR. SLIMPURSE--"But why do you insist that our daughter should marry a man whom she does not like?
12444MRS. HOUSEN HOHM--"Do you expect to be called Miss Arlington?"
12444MRS. HOUSEN HOHM--"What is your name?"
12444MRS. LITTLETOWN--"Doesn''t she get tired of always reading the same one?"
12444MRS. MCGORRY--"Me vain?
12444MRS. MURPHY--"As long as thot?"
12444MRS. PECK--"Henry, what would you do if burglars broke into our house some night?"
12444MRS. POST--"But why adopt a baby when you have three children of your own under five years old?"
12444MUNICIPAL GOVERNMENT"What''s the trouble in Plunkville?"
12444MUSICIANS FATHER--"Well, sonny, did you take your dog to the''vet''next door to your house, as I suggested?"
12444Macbeth?"
12444May I ask how much it cost you?"
12444May I not instruct my Lord High Treasurer to reimburse you for it?"
12444May I open it?''"
12444Mike, seeing Pat crying, exclaimed:"Phat be ye cryin''fer?"
12444Mistook a stranger for an acquaintance?"
12444Mr. Roosevelt seized a pitchfork and-- but where was the hay?
12444NATIVES FRIEND( admiring the prodigy)--"Seventh standard, is she?
12444NATURE LOVERS"Would you mind tooting your factory whistle a little?"
12444NEIGHBOR--"I s''pose your Bill''s''ittin''the''arp with the hangels now?"
12444NEW CONGRESSMAN--"What can I do for you, sir?"
12444NURSE GIRL--"Oh, ma''am, what shall I do?
12444Nagasaki?"
12444Near the station he saw a newsboy smoking, and approached him with:"Say, son, got another cigarette?"
12444Next day Goodwin saw the boy again near the theater, so he asked:"Well, sonny, how did you like the show?"
12444Next day a plantation owner said to one of his men:"Sam, were you in that crowd that gathered last night?"
12444Nobles and heralds by your leave, Here lies what once was Matthew Prior; The son of Adam and of Eve; Can Bourbon or Nassau claim higher?
12444Now then, what would you regard as a fair settlement between you and the railroad company?"
12444Now what did Pompey die of?"
12444Now where is he?"
12444Now who can foresee What his morals_ might_ be?
12444Now, I suppose you do not speak Chinese?"
12444Now, let''s see; what do they accuse you of stealing?"
12444Now, madam, what do you want?"
12444Now, what little boy or girl can tell me what the people of Maine are called?"
12444O''Flarity?"
12444OFFICE BOYS"Have you had any experience as an office- boy?"
12444OLD MAID--"But why should a great strong man like you be found begging?"
12444ONIONS Can the Burbanks of the glorious West Either make or buy or sell An onion with an onion''s taste But with a violet''s smell?
12444OPERA"Which do you consider the most melodious Wagnerian opera?"
12444Once when Dean Briggs, of Harvard, and Edward Everett Hale were on their way to a game at Soldiers''Field a friend asked:"Where are you going, Dean?"
12444One day Mose sought his employer, an acquaintance of mine, and inquired:"''Say, boss, is yo''gwine to town t''morrer?''
12444One day a hostess asked a well known Parisian judge:"Your Honor, which do you prefer, Burgundy or Bordeaux?"
12444One day a stranger asked him:"Why do you always take the penny?
12444One day an old- timer met him with:"How are you getting along, Pat?"
12444One day he asked:"Why ca n''t you join the church like I did?"
12444One day he remarked to one of his sons:"Can you tell me the reason why the lions did n''t eat Daniel?"
12444One of the girls became indignant and scornfully asked:"What line do you think you are on, anyhow?"
12444Only three months an''as black as thot?
12444Or would you have me wait a year And give you then a hundred clear, If I should find the marriage state As happy as I estimate?"
12444Overwork?"
12444PAT--"Is it dangerous she is?"
12444PAT--"Is it dangerous she is?"
12444PATIENT--"Tell me candidly, Doc, do you think I''ll pull through?"
12444PITTSBURG"How about that airship?"
12444POETS EDITOR--"Have you submitted this poem anywhere else?"
12444POLICE COMMISSIONER--"If you were ordered to disperse a mob, what would you do?"
12444POLICEMAN--"Why did n''t you tell me before?"
12444POLITICAL PARTIES ZOO SUPERINTENDENT--"What was all the rumpus out there this morning?"
12444POLITICIAN--"Now what in thunder did you want to bring up that point for?"
12444PRESENCE OF MIND"What did you do when you met the train- robber face to face?"
12444PRODIGALS"Why did the father of the prodigal son fall on his neck and weep?"
12444PROFESSOR--"Now, Mr. Jones, assuming you were called to attend a patient who had swallowed a coin, what would be your method of procedure?"
12444PROHIBITION"Talking about dry towns, have you ever been in Leavenworth, Kansas?"
12444PROMPTNESS"Are you first in anything at school, Earlie?"
12444PROVIDENCE"Why did papa have appendicitis and have to pay the doctor a thousand dollars, Mama?"
12444PUBLIC SPEAKERS ORATOR--"I thought your paper was friendly to me?"
12444Pat, of course, saw the donkey''s head on his coat, and, turning to the Englishmen, said:"Which of yez wiped your face on me coat?"
12444Presently the maiden asked archly:"Of course, you''ve read''Romeo and Juliet?''"
12444Provoked by her irresponsiveness, he said,"You do n''t seem to care for this magnificent scenery?"
12444QUARRELS"But why did you leave your last place?"
12444QUIRE--"What are those women mauling that man for?"
12444RACE SUICIDE"Prisoner, why did you assault this landlord?"
12444RACES In answer to the question,"What are the five great races of mankind?"
12444RECALL SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER--"Johnny, what is the text from Judges?"
12444REMEDIES MISTRESS--"Did the mustard plaster do you any good, Bridget?"
12444REMINDERS The wife of an overworked promoter said at breakfast:"Will you post this letter for me, dear?
12444RESIGNATION"Then you do n''t think I practice what I preach, eh?"
12444RESPECTABILITY"Is he respectable?"''
12444RETALIATION You know that fellow, Jim McGroiarty, the lad that''s always comin''up and thumpin''ye on the chest and yellin'',''How are ye?''"
12444RICH MAN--"Would you love my daughter just as much if she had no money?"
12444SECOND MUSIC CRITIC--"Why?"
12444SECOND TRUSTEE--"True; but what can we do?
12444SEEDY VISITOR--"Do you have many wrecks about here, boatman?"
12444SENSE OF HUMOR"What of his sense of humor?"
12444SERVANTS TOMMY--"Pop, what is it that the Bible says is here to- day and gone to- morrow?"
12444SHE--"And so you are going to be my son- in- law?"
12444SHE--"How did they ever come to marry?"
12444SHE--"Why?"
12444SHOPPING CLERK--"Can you let me off to- morrow afternoon?
12444SKYBOUGH--"Why have you put that vacuum cleaner in front of your airship?"
12444SLASHER--"Been in a fight?"
12444SOLEMN SENIOR--"So your efforts to get on the team were fruitless, were they?"
12444SON--"May I stay up till he does?"
12444SON--"May I stay up till he does?"
12444SON--"Why do people say''Dame Gossip''?"
12444SOP--"Been scratching your head?"
12444SPINSTERS"Is there anyone present who wishes the prayers of the congregation for a relative or friend?"
12444SPOONLEIGH--"Does your sister always look under the bed?"
12444STEAK"Can I get a steak here and catch the one o''clock train?"
12444STEAM"Can you tell what steam is?"
12444STRANGER--"What''s the fight about?"
12444STUDE--"Do you drink, sir?"
12444STUDE--"Do you smoke, professor?"
12444STUDE.--"Is it possible to confide a secret to you?"
12444SUB- MANAGER--"Why?"
12444SUMMER RESORTS GABE--"What are you going back to that place for this summer?
12444SUNDAY SCHOOL TEACHER--"Willie, do you know what beomes of boys who use bad language when they''re playing marbles?"
12444SURGEON AT NEW YORK HOSPITAL--"What brought you to this dreadful condition?
12444SURPRISE"Where are you goin'', ma?"
12444Said one:"What do you make of that, Bill?"
12444Said the bibulous gentleman who had been reading birth and death statistics:"Do you know, James, every time I breathe a man dies?"
12444Said the two to the tutor,"Is it harder to toot, or To tutor two tutors to toot?"
12444Say, Cap, jest throw on another wagon, will yer?"
12444Schmidt?"
12444See?"
12444Shall a joke be judged by its intent or by its consequences?
12444Shall we stop there?"
12444Shaw?"
12444She here again?
12444She looked fondly down upon him and after a few minutes murmured gently,"Laws, honey, ai n''t yo''shamed to be so han''some?"
12444She was long in returning, and after a tiresome wait the missionary went to the door and called with some impatience:"Are n''t you coming in?
12444Shoot him?"
12444Smith?"
12444Smith?"
12444So I stepped out and asked:''Where are you going with that umbrella, young fellow?''
12444So proud was he of his father''s valor, his eyes fairly shone, and he cried:"He could n''t knock any brains out of you, could he, Father?"
12444So soon?
12444So we''ll have banns published and when the wedding day comes the parson will say to thee,''Wilt thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?''
12444So you think I had better have it?"
12444So, before the group of ministers, he said:"You are Wendell Phillips, are you not?"
12444Soon the silence was broken by the little one''s question:"Mother, may I come down now?"
12444Still another for the Wrights, Finally one of them turned to a little man who had remained silent:"Who do you think?"
12444Suddenly a voice from the rear inquired:"Who''s the printer?"
12444Suppose it does not excite the laugh expected?
12444Suppose the other speakers have not heeded Bacon?
12444TARIFF Why not have an illuminated sign on the statue of Liberty saying,"America expects every man to pay his duty?"
12444TEACHER-"Now, Tommy, what is a hypocrite?"
12444TEACHER--"And why is it nice of them, Corky?"
12444TEACHER--"Now, Johnny, suppose I should borrow$ 100 from your father and should pay him$ 10 a month for ten months, how much would I then owe him?"
12444TEACHER--"Now, Tommy, suppose a man gave you$ 100 to keep for him and then died, what would you do?
12444TEACHER--"Now, Willie, where did you get that chewing gum?
12444TEACHER--"Willie, did your father cane you for what you did in school yesterday?"
12444THE AUTHOR--"Would you advise me to get out a small edition?"
12444THE LADY--"And loving parents?"
12444THE LADY--"Are they bringing you up to be a good and helpful citizen?"
12444THE LADY--"Little boy, have n''t you any home?"
12444THE LADY--"Will you ask your mother to come and hear me talk on''When Does a Mother''s Duty to Her Child Begin?''
12444THE NEW GIRL--"An''may me intended visit me every Sunday afternoon, ma''am?"
12444TOM--"What does he say?"
12444TOMMY''S AUNT--"Won''t you have another piece of cake, Tommy?"
12444TRADE UNIONS CHAIRMAN OF THE COMMITTEE--"Is this the place where you are happy all the time?"
12444TRAMPS LADY--"Can''t you find work?"
12444TRAVELER--"Can you give me a guarantee that the train wo n''t start?"
12444TREES CURIOUS CHARLEY--"Do nuts grow on trees, father?"
12444TROUBLE"What is the trouble, wifey?"
12444TWINS"Faith, Mrs. O''Hara, how d''ye till thim twins aparrt?"
12444Tell me now, what have ye been doin''wid yer uniform an''arms an''bills?
12444The Englishman turned to his friend and said:"I say, old chap, what_ are_ yonkers?"
12444The angler, after a moment''s thought, exclaimed,"Say, do you know who I am?"
12444The applicant drew himself up and answered haughtily:"What for?
12444The boss, thinking that he would get ahead of Pat, said:"Say, Pat, how many shirts can you get out of a yard?"
12444The doctor pulled up and said:"My dear man, how do you manage to train your dog that way?
12444The following dialogue ensued:"Your name, sir?"
12444The governor listened quietly and then said:"Did I ever tell you about Mose Williams?
12444The laborer contemplated him for a moment and then replied:"Do you think a man with any brains would be working at this kind of a job?"
12444The lady''s eyes sparkled as she responded,"Ah, he says he is asleep, eh?
12444The latter took it, looked it over for a moment or so, and then asked:"Which horse do you want?"
12444The man seized him by the arm and said between pants:"Have you a permit to fish on this estate?
12444The miner responded with a stream of forcible and picturesque profanity, winding up with:"And what kind o''trail did you have?"
12444The minister, to make congenial conversation, inquired:"Have you a dog?"
12444The next day the woman called, and the dialogue was as follows:"Better?"
12444The old fellow rose slowly and drawled out:"Be you going to shoot if I go?"
12444The only question is, how did he do it?
12444The other leaned over and called:"Are yez dead or alive, Mike?"
12444The preacher spent some time praying and talking, and finally the old man said:"What do you want me to do, Parson?"
12444The question is, What would become of you?"
12444The retort came like a flash:"Are you still beating your wife?"
12444The senator turned with a pleased expression on his benign countenance and said,"Major, did you see that pretty girl smile at me?"
12444The sentry, not recognizing him, did not salute, and the major stopped and said:"What''s that you have there?"
12444The teacher asked:"When did Moses live?"
12444The tramp tried to slink past the group without speaking, but one of them called to him:"Well, did you get something from our young brother?"
12444The young man reflected for a moment and then inquired:"You have n''t one about fifty, have you?"
12444The youthful redskin lifted his eyes from his work, calmly surveyed his questioner, and then replied:"No, are you?"
12444Then Willie answered between sobs:"Well, Father, who started this war, anyway?"
12444Then he added,"Be you the gentleman over yonder from New York?"
12444Then he stopped as if that told the whole story, so said the baron,"What of that?"
12444Then it occurred to him,"Why not tell them all?"
12444Then looked up at the lawyer and said:"What''s the matter with this dollar?
12444Then she ventured to ask the brakeman how he had lost his finger:"Cut off in making a coupling between cars, I suppose?"
12444Then the next day the girl in love visited the pretty one and said anxiously:"Well, did you ask him?"
12444Then the parson said to the woman:"Wilt thou have this man to be thy wedded husband?"
12444Then, during a pause in the conversation, little Willie looked up at the young gentleman and piped:"Am I as heavy as sister Mabel?"
12444Then, with the utmost gravity, he asked the boy:"Are you civilized?"
12444Then:"Well, how can_ I_ stop it?"
12444There was a small boy in Quebec, Who was buried in snow to his neck; When they said,"Are you friz?"
12444There was an old man who said,"How Shall I flee from this horrible cow?
12444Thinking that a small drop of whisky might do him good, the captain called Pat aside and said,"Pat, will you have a wee drink of whisky?"
12444Treason doth never prosper: what''s the reason?
12444Turning to her mother, the little girl said:"I look just like you now, Mother, do n''t I?"
12444VANITY MCGORRY--"I''ll buy yez no new hat, d''yez moind thot?
12444VILLAGE GROCER--"What are you running for, sonny?"
12444VILLAGE GROCER--"Who are the fellows?"
12444VISITOR--"And you always did your daring robberies single- handed?
12444VISITOR--"Can I see that motorist who was brought here an hour ago?"
12444VOX POPULI--"Do you think you''ve boosted your circulation by giving a year''s subscription for the biggest potato raised in the county?"
12444Vat does he charge?"
12444W-- who sent the others?"
12444WAITER--"Have another glass, sir?"
12444WEATHER"How did you find the weather in London?"
12444WEIGHTS AND MEASURES"Did n''t I tell ye to feed that cat a pound of meat every day until ye had her fat?"
12444WIDOWS During the course of conversation between two ladies in a hotel parlor one said to the other:"Are you married?"
12444WIFE( to her mother)--"Shall he have another, mother?"
12444WILLIE--"Well, what are the others here for?"
12444WILLIS--"What''s the election today for?
12444WIND VISITOR--"What became of that other windmill that was here last year?"
12444WIVES"Father,"said a little boy,"had Solomon seven hundred wives?"
12444Wad ye like to be buried there too?"
12444Well, will you be kind enough to return and ask him when he intends to wake up?"
12444Were his plans carried out?"
12444Were you run over by a street- car?"
12444What are you crying about, something that happened at home or something that happened in a novel?"
12444What are you going to do about it?
12444What be ye goin''to keep it in?"
12444What can I do for you?"
12444What causes, pray, This unprovoked assault?"
12444What did he get-- five years?"
12444What did you do with the other$ 3?"
12444What did you say?"
12444What do they feed you on?"
12444What do you and I know about it?"
12444What do you get for preaching?"
12444What do you suppose I heard her say to that boy of hers this afternoon?"
12444What do you think?"
12444What do you want?"
12444What do you want?"
12444What do you want?"
12444What do you want?"
12444What do your folks call it?"
12444What does it say there?"
12444What does that mean?"
12444What for you see Baedeker?"
12444What for?"
12444What has appealed to you as the real basis of your unusual vigor of mind and body, and has been to you an unfailing comfort through joy and sorrow?
12444What have I done?
12444What have you got on that wagon?"
12444What is it?"
12444What is your first name?"
12444What is your name?"
12444What is yours?"
12444What made you change your mind again?''
12444What made you change your mind again?''
12444What more can I do?"
12444What of the joke that misses fire?
12444What on earth are you doing here this time o''night?"
12444What ought I to do, Oscar?"
12444What prompted you to do it?"
12444What question did the teacher ask, Johnnie?"
12444What shall be the play?
12444What stirred it up?"
12444What the deuce?
12444What was it?"
12444What will follow, I repeat?"
12444What would you suggest?"
12444What would your Majesty have done had I lost both arms?"
12444What would yours be if you were a lion?
12444What''s her address?"
12444What''s the matter with''raise''and''lift''?"
12444What''s the matter?"
12444What''s the matter?"
12444What''s wrong with the school?"
12444Whatever do you mean, my dear?"
12444When a few days later he returned he took the horse back to the stable and asked the man who had given it to him:"Keep this horse for funerals?"
12444When he had listened to the recital of Mrs. Delehanty''s troubles, the lawyer said:"You want to get damages, I suppose?"
12444When shall it be?"
12444When she had finished her story she said:"Dear Billy, if your papa were to die, would you work to support your dear mamma?"
12444When she had finished she said:"Well, Tommy, what have you to say?"
12444Where is it?
12444Where is it?"
12444Where is she?"
12444Where''s the dispute in that?"
12444Whereupon the unmoved lawyer asked:"Have you any other business?"
12444Which do you prefer, a ton of coal or a gallon of good whiskey?"
12444Which will you hab?"
12444While acting as magistrate at an Irish village, Lord Rossmore said to an old offender brought before him:"You here again?"
12444Who goes there?"
12444Who is he telling it to?"
12444Who is your chief, pray?"
12444Who married three wives at a time: When asked,"Why a third?"
12444Who, then, did Cain marry?"
12444Why are n''t you at the head, where you ought to be?"
12444Why did n''t you have a pal?"
12444Why did n''t you run up the side of the hill?"
12444Why did n''t''e buy the''oss and not pay for''i m like any other gentleman?"
12444Why did you take Mrs. Gilkie''s chicken?"
12444Why do n''t you go over into Kentucky?"
12444Why do n''t you try the same?"
12444Why do you call him Izaak Walton?
12444Why not make your note for five hundred, and you and I will split it?"
12444Why not on both?"
12444Why not?"
12444Why not?"
12444Why should I do that?"
12444Why should I know how to cuss any better than he does?
12444Why should n''t I be?"
12444Why should n''t I look happy?
12444Why was it?"
12444Why, I--""No, excuse me,"he interrupted;"what I want to ask is this: What date have you and your mother decided upon for our wedding?"
12444Why?"
12444Why?"
12444Why?''
12444Will you fix one for me?"
12444Will you kindly let me know whether you liked it or not?"
12444Will you persist in hurling the corner stone of our personal liberty to your wolfish hounds of collectors, thirsting for its blood?
12444Will you-- hic-- come down an''pick out Mr. Smith?
12444Winnie had been very naughty, and her mamma said:"Do n''t you know you will never go to Heaven if you are so naughty?"
12444With a frown he summoned the page and asked:"Did you tell the gentleman from Texas what I said?"
12444Wo n''t you come to the mourners''bench at the next service?"
12444Wo n''t you please tell me?"
12444Would that seem appropriate?"
12444Would you pray for him?"
12444Y''know what I''ll do?
12444YALE UNIVERSITY The new cook, who had come into the household during the holidays, asked her mistress:"Where ban your son?
12444YOUNG DOCTOR--"Why do you always ask your patients what they have for dinner?"
12444Yer lookin''sick; wot is it?"
12444You admit it yourself, do n''t you?"
12444You didn''t--?"
12444You hear dat fool question I am axed?
12444You know how bridegrooms starting off on their honeymoons sometimes forget all about their brides, and buy tickets only for themselves?
12444You know what a tremendous voice he has?"
12444You married for love, did n''t you?"
12444You''ll be sure to remember?"
12444You''re his father, are n''t you?"
12444You''re his mother, are n''t you?"
12444ZONES TEACHER--"How many zones has the earth?"
12444a son of mine grow up and not he able to figure up baseball scores and batting averages?
12444exclaimed her son:"that blue ribbon-- you have n''t been wearing that at the temperance meeting?"
12444exclaimed the Bishop, starting up in assumed terror,"pray, what might that be?"
12444he asked,"Drunk?"
12444he cried;"Did you think,"she replied,"I sat down for the fun of it, Mister?"
12444he said, turning to his son,"who''d''a''s''posed that thing had a colt?"
12444he said,"you hear dat, brederen an''sisters?
12444next Saturday afternoon, at three o''clock, at Lyceum Hall?"
12444remarked Mr. Gladstone;"does a pint of champagne really help you to answer the twenty letters?"
12444said she sweetly;"is that any worse than men going into saloons to get their noses red?"
12444take your choice to cry or laugh; Here Harold lies- but where''s his Epitaph?
12444where''s all the hay?"
12444with your new trousers on?"
7010The owlet Atheism, hooting at the glorious sun in heaven, cries out,''Where is it?''
7010What are you making?
7010+ Adverbs of Degree are those that generally answer the question+, To what extent?
7010+ Adverbs of Manner are those that generally answer the question+, In what way?_ SENTENCE- BUILDING.
7010+ Example+.--King Agrippa, believest thou the prophets?
7010+ Hints for Oral Instruction+.--In the sentence,_ The robin''s eggs are blue_, the noun_ robin''s_ does what?
7010+ Observation Lesson+.--Of what are the lines above a picture?
7010+ Observation Lesson+.--When the interrogative word is subject or a modifier of it, is the order natural, or transposed?
7010+ Paragraphs+.--Does every sentence in the first paragraph aid in picturing the helplessness of the old grandfather?
7010+ Paragraphs+.--Which paragraph puts before you the dog as a whole?
7010+ T+.--A_ spoken word_ then is the sign of what?
7010+ T+.--Did you see the thing when you were thinking of it?
7010+ T+.--Do you see any connection between these ideas?
7010+ T+.--Does this complement express the quality of the subject, or does it name the same thing that the subject names?
7010+ T+.--Does_ Florida_ alone, tell where he marched?
7010+ T+.--Does_ into_ alone, tell where he marched?
7010+ T+.--If they stand for the same idea, how do they differ?
7010+ T+.--If we call the other word_ bud_ a_ spoken_ word, what shall we call this?
7010+ T+.--In the sentence,_ A man who is wise will be honored_, the word_ who_ stands for what?
7010+ T+.--Is_ Florida_ joined directly to the predicate, as rapidly was in Lesson 25?
7010+ T+.--It is equivalent then to what part of speech?
7010+ T+.--It then performs the office of what?
7010+ T+.--Letters then are the signs of what?
7010+ T+.--Then what part of speech is it?
7010+ T+.--This clause then performs the office of what part of speech?
7010+ T+.--What does it do?
7010+ T+.--What does_ falling_ do?
7010+ T+.--What is the object complement of_ teach_?
7010+ T+.--What is the principal word of the group?
7010+ T+.--What little word comes in to unite the modifier to_ marched?_+ P+.--_Into_.
7010+ T+.--What office then does it perform?
7010+ T+.--What office then does this clause perform?
7010+ T+.--What tells where De Soto marched?
7010+ T+.--What then are the words_ too_ and_ hastily?_+ P+.--Adverbs.
7010+ T+.--What then is the attribute complement?
7010+ T+.--What then is the subject of_ is taught_?
7010+ T+.--What then is_ too?_+ P+.--An adverb.
7010+ T+.--What word names the owner or possessor?
7010+ T+.--What word names the things owned or possessed?
7010+ T+.--What word tells how hastily?
7010+ T+.--What word_ does_ tell what is thought of leaves?
7010+ T+.--What_ part of speech_ is_ much?_+ P+.--An adjective.
7010+ T+.--When I say,_ Falling leaves rustle_, does_ falling_ tell what is thought of leaves?
7010+ T+.--When I say,_ God is_, what does_ is_ express?
7010+ T+.--When I utter the two words_ bud_ and_ swelling_, thus:_ bud swelling_, do you see any connection in the ideas they stand for?
7010+ T+.--Why is_ too_ in the first sentence an adverb?
7010+ T+.--Why?
7010+ T--+Suppose that a boy should inform me that all of the boys on that seat had whispered, what would he say?
7010+ T.--+If I should accuse several of you of whispering, and one should speak for himself and for the others whispering with him, what would he say?
7010+ T.--+If I should ask who whispered, and some boy should promptly confess, what would he say?
7010+ T.--+If I should tell that boy to close his book, when his book was already closed, what would he say without mentioning the word book?
7010+ T.--+Suppose that I had_ spoken to_ that boy and had accused him of whispering, how should I have addressed him without mentioning his name?
7010+ T.--+Suppose that, without using his name, I had told you what he did, what should I have said?
7010+ T.--+What then do these letters, taken separately, picture to your eye?
7010+ T.--+What word would be used instead of the name of the boy_ to_ whom I spoke?
7010+ T.--+What word would have been used instead of the name of the boy_ of_ whom I spoke?
7010+ T.--+What word would he use instead?
7010+ T.--+Would he mention his own name?
7010+ Teacher+.--What did you learn in the previous Lesson?
7010+ Teacher+.--When I pronounce the two words_ star_ and_ bud_ thus:_ star bud_, how many ideas, or mental pictures, do I call up to you?
7010+ The Description+.--How does the description above impress you?
7010+ The Paragraphs+.--What have you learned about the sentences that make up one paragraph?
7010+ The Uses of Words and Groups of Words+.--What is the order of subject and predicate in the first sentence of this selection?
7010+_ Adverbs of Time_ are those that generally answer the question+,_ When?__+ Adverbs of Place are those that generally answer the question+, Where?
7010+_ Adverbs of Time_ are those that generally answer the question+,_ When?__+ Adverbs of Place are those that generally answer the question+, Where?
701030. Who wrote the Declaration of Independence?
7010A phrase modifying a predicate is equivalent to what?
7010A phrase modifying a subject is equivalent to what?
7010A_ spoken_ word is the sign of what?
7010A_ written_ word is the sign of what?
7010After having been told that your answers were correct, would it be a disappointment to be told that they were not all correct?
7010Are a habit, a result of it, and a cause of it related in thought, or meaning?
7010Are only characteristic parts and features selected?
7010Are prepositions and interjections subdivided?
7010Are the adjectives that precede the name of this object of the same rank?
7010Are the clauses separated by the semicolon as closely connected as those divided by the comma?
7010Are the paragraphs more, or less, closely related than the sentences of each paragraph?
7010Are these few features enough to give you a distinct and vivid picture of Rab?
7010Are these letters, taken separately, signs to you of anything?
7010Are those that follow of the same rank?
7010Ask yourself the question, Artists do what?
7010Ask yourself the question, What swim, sink, hunt, etc.?
7010Besides the first word, what words begin with capitals in each of these three groups?
7010Can a noun be an attribute complement?
7010Can any other class of pronouns be used to connect clauses?
7010Can girls skate?
7010Can the order anywhere be changed without throwing the story out of joint?
7010Can the pronoun_ I_ be used to stand for the one spoken to?--the one spoken of?
7010Can you illustrate this classification?
7010Can you name them?
7010Did you sleep good?
7010Do the sentences of the first paragraph all help to tell of a certain habit of angleworms?
7010Do the sentences of the second paragraph tell what results from this habit?
7010Do the sentences of the third paragraph tell what is thought to be the cause of this habit?
7010Do these touches of fancy or imagination help the picture?
7010Do these two words express two ideas merely associated, or do they express a thought?
7010Do they all_ mean_ the same thing?
7010Do they show that the author was in love with her work?
7010Do those that she does mention suggest to you everything else?
7010Do we ordinarily speak of looking anything?
7010Do you find any choice in the four positions of this phrase?
7010Do you not think that each sub- topic must suggest some thoughts that the general topic alone would not suggest?
7010Do you think that such a_ framework_ helps a writer to tell his story?
7010Does Mary sing?
7010Does he instruct?
7010Does he try to get us to do something?
7010Does it assert action?
7010Does it contain an unnecessary sentence?
7010Does not some of the charm of a description lie in the reader''s having something left him to supply?
7010Does the relative pronoun distinguish by its_ form_ the speaker, the one spoken to, and the one spoken of?
7010Does the semicolon show that this connection is close?
7010Does this clause read so closely as not to need a comma before_ who_?
7010Does_ bowed_ assert action?
7010Does_ brook hidden_, in 3, contain a predicate?
7010Does_ coming_ express action?
7010Does_ forgetful_ describe the persons represented by_ who_?
7010Does_ the whistles completed_ make complete sense?
7010Does_ to grasp_ assert action?
7010For what do interrogative pronouns stand?
7010Has the North Pole been reached?
7010Have you ever heard stories badly told?
7010Have you got time to help me?
7010Have you not had some experience that you can work up into a good story?
7010Have you now two sentences, or one?
7010How are adjectives regularly compared?
7010How are adverbs compared?
7010How are sentences classified with respect to form?
7010How are sentences classified with respect to meaning?
7010How are the forms_ mine, yours_, etc., now used?
7010How are the parts marked?
7010How are the two kinds of_ consonant_ sounds made?
7010How are these adjective clauses connected with one another?
7010How are they separated on the page?
7010How are_ vowel_ sounds made?
7010How can girls skate?
7010How do they differ?
7010How do they help?
7010How do they help?
7010How do they stretch?
7010How do you determine the case of an explanatory noun or pronoun?
7010How do you determine the number, gender, and person of pronouns?
7010How does a participle differ from a predicate verb?
7010How does a verb agree with its subject?
7010How does it differ from the others as to punctuation and the first letter?
7010How is a noun parsed?
7010How is this shown by the punctuation?
7010How many capitals do you find in each of the names just mentioned?
7010How many cases are there?
7010How many degrees of comparison are there?
7010How many different kinds of participles are there?
7010How many genders are there?
7010How many modes are there?
7010How many modifications have nouns and pronouns?
7010How many modifications have verbs?
7010How many numbers are there?
7010How many paragraphs do you find in the selection above?
7010How many parts of speech are there?
7010How many persons are there?
7010How many tenses are there?
7010How many voices are there?
7010How many, when it is in the middle?
7010How much trouble one has, do n''t they?
7010If one of these noun clauses were not itself divided into clauses by the comma, would the semicolon be needed?
7010If so, what were the faults?
7010If this clause were placed after its principal clause, would the comma be needed?
7010If(_ h_) were an answer to the question, When did you meet him?
7010In how many ways are the genders distinguished?
7010In the expression,_ Peter, turning, said_, what word expresses an action as_ assumed_, and which_ asserts_ an action?
7010In the sentence,_ The squirrel ran up a tree_, what word shows the relation of the act of running, to the tree?
7010In the sentence,_ We started at sunrise_, what phrase is used like an adverb?
7010In this group of words used as object complement can you find a subject, a predicate, and a complement?
7010In this same paragraph what words are quoted exactly as the old man uttered them?
7010In what two ways may nouns be used as modifiers?
7010In which is a question merely referred to?
7010In which is a question quoted just as it would be asked?
7010In which of the above sentences is a quotation interrupted by a parenthetical clause?
7010In( 8) do you find a period after_ Miss_?--after_ Mrs._?
7010In_ who are looking reproach_, what is the object complement of_ are looking_?
7010Into what classes are letters divided?
7010Into what may a participial phrase be expanded?
7010Into what may a phrase used as an adverb be expanded?
7010Into what may an adjective be expanded?
7010Into what may some participles be changed?
7010Is a preposition needed before_ day?_ In the same sentence_ years_ is used adverbially to modify the adjective_ old_.
7010Is one of these divisions itself divided into parts by commas?
7010Is the body of water mentioned in( 1) known as_ Michigan_, or_ Lake Michigan_?
7010Is the interest in a story best kept up by first telling the important points and then the unimportant particulars?
7010Is the last sentence now joined to the first as a modifier, or are they two separate sentences?
7010Is the order of these paragraphs the right one?
7010Is the picture complete?
7010Is the same thought expressed in both?
7010Is the town mentioned in( 2) named_ Jersey_, or_ Jersey City_?
7010Is_ Chicago_, or_ City of Chicago_ the name of the steamer mentioned in( 2)?
7010Is_ Irish_, or_ Irish Sea_ the name of the body of water mentioned in( 4)?
7010It is not because he can not conjugate the verb or decline the pronoun that he falls into such errors as"How many sounds_ have_ each of the vowels?"
7010Let the pupils compare"I proved it to be_ him_"with"I proved that it was_ he;_""_ Whom_ did you suppose it to be?"
7010Letters are the signs of what?
7010May a verb consist of more than one word?
7010May the subject be modified?
7010May we not find"sermons in stones and good in everything"?
7010Nouns and pronouns denoting possession may sometimes be changed into what?
7010Of what do you think when you hear the word_ bud_?
7010Of what is something thought?
7010Of what two parts does a sentence consist?
7010Of what use are the phrases_ at first_ and_ toward the brook_ in sentence 2?
7010Omitting_ till_, would this group of words be a sentence?
7010Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
7010Should, then, some mark of wider separation be put between the main divisions of 2?
7010The clause_ beyond... stomach_ goes with what word?
7010The group of words_ as deeply as Toddie was( imbedded)_ is joined to what?
7010The group_ almost motionless_ describes what things?
7010The group_ close beneath the mouths of their burrows_, used like a single adverb, tells what?
7010The infinitive phrase modifies what?
7010The infinitive phrase modifies what?
7010The interrogative pronoun stands for the unknown name, and asks for it; as,_ Who_ comes here?
7010The phrase beginning with_ at_ and ending with_ earth_ does what?
7010The question is,"Can law make people honest?"
7010The subject of inquiry was, Who invented printing?
7010To what four different things did we call attention in Lesson 1?
7010Verbs are the only words that do what?
7010We give the following questions to illustrate our method of conducting an+ Observation Lesson+.--Are_ city_ and_ Albany_ both names?
7010We have often occasion for thanksgiving, Now this is to be done how?
7010We must ask, What are we living for?
7010Were you there?
7010What adjectives are sometimes called articles?
7010What adjectives can not be compared?
7010What are all names?
7010What are auxiliaries?
7010What are consonants?
7010What are modifications of the parts of speech?
7010What are parts of speech?
7010What are prepositions?
7010What are sometimes substituted for nouns?
7010What are such classes called?
7010What are such words called?
7010What are the cautions for the position of the adverb?
7010What are the cautions for the use of the adverb and the adjective?
7010What are the number and the person of a verb?
7010What are the principal parts of a verb?
7010What are the subject and the predicate of this added sentence?
7010What are the words_ an_ or_ a_, and_ the_ called by some grammarians?
7010What are vowels?
7010What by adding the idea of color?
7010What by adding the idea of form?
7010What by adding the idea of number?
7010What called up this idea?
7010What can you say of_ hidden?_ Find a noun in 3 used to complete the predicate and make the meaning of the subject plainer.
7010What comparisons do you find?
7010What conjunction connects these?
7010What conjunction introduces each of these clauses?
7010What conjunction joins on another expression that by itself would make a complete sentence?
7010What conjunction joins them together?
7010What connects each to_ man_?
7010What connects this group to_ looked_?
7010What did you hear?
7010What difference can you discover in meaning?
7010What difference is found in the punctuation of these several groups?
7010What different offices may a noun perform?
7010What do astronomers teach?
7010What do the horses stretch?
7010What do you call it?
7010What do you call it?
7010What do you discover in the names found in( 11)?
7010What do you say I have in my hand?
7010What do you see?
7010What do you understand by a compound predicate?
7010What do you understand by a compound subject?
7010What do you understand by a participle?
7010What do you understand by natural language?
7010What does each of the other paragraphs describe?
7010What does the group of words_ for hours_ do?
7010What does the last phrase of(_ j_) modify?
7010What does the second_ their_ go with?
7010What does_ by looking down into their burrows_ tell?
7010What does_ home_ do?
7010What does_ is_ assert of teaching?
7010What does_ just_ do?
7010What does_ occasionally_ do?
7010What does_ of shrieks_ modify?
7010What does_ often_ do?
7010What does_ one day_ do in the third paragraph?
7010What does_ same_ go with?
7010What does_ suddenly_ do?
7010What does_ suddenly_ go with?
7010What does_ those_ mean?
7010What does_ till he has fed his horses_ do?
7010What five as the subject of a school composition?
7010What four as the title of a poem?
7010What girls can skate?_ You are happy.
7010What group of adjectives modifies_ place_?
7010What group of eight words tells in what way Mr. Darwin noticed this fact?
7010What group of words goes with_ was diverted_ to tell when?
7010What group of words in( 6) is treated as an individual name?
7010What group of words is joined to_ looked_ to tell on what occasion or how often?
7010What help to the narrative do these descriptive touches give?
7010What in form?
7010What in( 8)?
7010What is English Grammar?
7010What is English grammar?
7010What is a clause?
7010What is a complex sentence?
7010What is a compound sentence?
7010What is a conjunction?
7010What is a conjunction?
7010What is a declarative sentence?
7010What is a dependent clause?
7010What is a diagram?
7010What is a diagram?
7010What is a letter?
7010What is a modifier?
7010What is a modifier?
7010What is a noun?
7010What is a noun?
7010What is a participle?
7010What is a phrase?
7010What is a phrase?
7010What is a preposition?
7010What is a pronoun?
7010What is a pronoun?
7010What is a sentence?
7010What is a sentence?
7010What is a simple sentence?
7010What is a verb?
7010What is a verb?
7010What is a word?
7010What is an adjective?
7010What is an adjective?
7010What is an adverb?
7010What is an adverb?
7010What is an attribute complement?
7010What is an attribute complement?
7010What is an exclamatory sentence?
7010What is an idea?
7010What is an imperative sentence?
7010What is an independent clause?
7010What is an infinitive?
7010What is an interjection?
7010What is an interjection?
7010What is an interrogative sentence?
7010What is an object complement?
7010What is an object complement?
7010What is artificial language, or language proper?
7010What is artificial language?
7010What is comparison?
7010What is conjugation?
7010What is declension?
7010What is gender?
7010What is it?
7010What is mode?
7010What is number?
7010What is poetry?
7010What is synopsis?
7010What is taught by astronomers?
7010What is tense?
7010What is the analysis of a sentence?
7010What is the analysis of a sentence?
7010What is the difference between the two expressions,_ ripe apples_ and_ apples are ripe_?
7010What is the first step in parsing?
7010What is the foundation on which every sentence is built?
7010What is the modified predicate?
7010What is the modified subject?
7010What is the name of the island mentioned in( 3)?--in( 4)?
7010What is the object complement of this verb?
7010What is the office of the dependent clause in the next sentence?
7010What is the office of_ minute_ in the second sentence of the first paragraph?
7010What is the office of_ the_,_ ejected_, and the group_ over the burrows_?
7010What is the predicate of a sentence?
7010What is the principal office of a verb?
7010What is the rule for forming the possessive case?
7010What is the rule for the exclamation point?
7010What is the rule for writing abbreviations?
7010What is the rule for writing individual names?
7010What is the subject of a sentence?
7010What is the subject of_ look_ in 4?
7010What is_ Old Testament_ the particular name of?
7010What long adjective clause is joined to_ those_ by_ who_?
7010What long group of words made up of two sentences tells why the beasts are looking reproach?
7010What long phrase describes_ place_?
7010What mark of punctuation between?
7010What modification have adjectives?
7010What must every predicate contain?
7010What must every predicate contain?
7010What names in( 7) usually denote relationship?
7010What new subject begins with page 95?
7010What new use of the period have you discovered in this exercise?
7010What new way of varying the meaning of words is introduced in Lesson 78?
7010What noun by three adjectives two of which are of the same rank?
7010What noun follows this verb to tell what Mr. Darwin noticed?
7010What noun is modified by three adjectives of different rank?
7010What object is pictured by the help of five adjectives?
7010What offices does an infinitive phrase perform?
7010What offices does the infinitive phrase perform?
7010What offices may be performed by a phrase?
7010What other change do you find necessary?
7010What other office has this connective?
7010What other word can you use?
7010What other words can I use to modify_ coin_?
7010What part of speech is used as subject and object?
7010What parts of speech are explained in the preceding Lessons?
7010What parts of speech may connect clauses?
7010What peculiar use of capitals do you discover in these lines of poetry?
7010What phrase is joined to_ was imbedded_ to tell where?
7010What preposition could be put in?
7010What rule for the period?
7010What rule for the use of capital letters have you learned?
7010What states border on the Gulf of Mexico?
7010What then do you think of placing this phrase at the end?
7010What things that the author imagined but did not really see are mentioned in the third paragraph?
7010What three kinds of expressions are spoken of in Lessons 3 and 4?
7010What three words in this exercise are used together as the title of a book?
7010What two long noun clauses aroused to complete_ should remember_?
7010What two parts must every sentence have?
7010What two sentences does_ and_ here bring together?
7010What two sentences does_ but_ here bring together?
7010What two words are used to join 3 and 4 together?
7010What whole sentence does_ this_ take the place of?
7010What word here helps to bring two sentences together?
7010What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ direction_ of sailing?
7010What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ manner_ of sailing?
7010What word is here joined to_ sails_ to tell the_ time_ of sailing?
7010What word is there one- half of which is_ p''s_?
7010What word may be used for the phrase,_ to that place?_+ P+.--_There_.
7010What word may be used for the phrase_ of the morning?_+ P+.--_Morning_.
7010What word modifies_ much_ by telling how much?
7010What word tells how she decided?
7010What word, then, makes an adjective modifier of this sentence and joins it to_ feet_?
7010What words are used only in the nominative case?
7010What words are used only in the objective case?
7010What words in( 9) and( 10) are used as names of the Deity?
7010What, by a clause?
7010What, different offices may an adjective perform?
7010What, then, joins this group, and makes it do the work of an adverb?
7010When I say,_ Plants grow_, is_ grow_ the name of anything?
7010When a verb has two or more subjects, how does it agree?
7010When is_ a_ used, and when_ an?_ Give examples of their misuse.
7010When is_ a_ used?
7010When is_ an_ used?
7010When the interrogative word is an adverb, what is the order?
7010When the interrogative word is object or attribute complement, or a modifier of either, what is the order?
7010When the phrase is at the beginning or at the end of the sentence, how many commas do you need to set it off?
7010When there is no interrogative word, what is the order?
7010When was America discovered?
7010Where do they stretch their shoulders?
7010Where may the antecedent of an interrogative pronoun generally be found?
7010Where must this paragraph naturally stand?
7010Where was you when I called?
7010Where, and in what kind of house, do you think this picture was seen?
7010Which are_ individual_ names?
7010Which course will you choose?
7010Which is the largest city in the world?
7010Which is the longer of the rivers of America?
7010Which is the more northerly, Maine, Oregon, or Minnesota?
7010Which of the following expressions contain words that have_ no connection_, which contain words_ merely associated_, and which are_ sentences_?
7010Which of the names just written are_ class_ names?
7010Which of these four objects has Mr. Beecher in the paragraphs we quote?
7010Which paragraph describes Rab''s character?
7010Which question would you call_ direct?_ Which,_ indirect_?
7010Which question would you call_ direct?_ Which,_ indirect_?
7010Which word tells what is thought?
7010Which words indicate the time of sailing?
7010Which words of these groups are regarded as the most important?
7010Which, the manner?
7010Which, the place?
7010Who did you ask for?
7010Who did you mean, when you said that?
7010Who did you see?
7010Who did you speak to just now?
7010Who is there?
7010Who was that?
7010Who will catch this?
7010Whom did you say that it was?
7010Whom did you see?
7010Why are such expressions as_ a wooden pretty bowl_ faulty?
7010Why are the days shorter in winter?
7010Why are they so called?
7010Why do they stretch with more energy?
7010Why is a comma used before_ forgetful_?
7010Why is this a_ sentence?_ Ans.--Because it expresses a thought.
7010Why is_ an enthusiastic, noisy, large crowd_ faulty?
7010Why is_ hastily_ an adverb?
7010Why is_ hear, o israel_, wrong?
7010Why is_ i may be Mistaken_ wrong?
7010Why is_ them books_ wrong?
7010Why is_ too_ in the second sentence an adverb?
7010Why stand we here idle?
7010Why?
7010Why?
7010Why?
7010Why?
7010With a good framework clearly before you, must not your story move along in an orderly way from a beginning to an end?
7010With respect to what, do we classify words( Lesson 14)?
7010With what kind of letter~(4)~_ each_ of these names~begin~?
7010With what mark~(4)~ imperative_ sentences_~end~?
7010Would it help you to have clearly before you from the beginning the object you are seeking to accomplish?
7010You are here told to see what?
7010] spoken by Moses?
7010_ Across a large fern_ is joined like an adverb to what?
7010_ Bowed under the heavy collar_ describes what?
7010_ By a piercing shriek of delight_ does what?
7010_ By some exquisite ferns_ is joined to what?
7010_ Coming home with sacks of grain_ does what?
7010_ Does_ either landlord or tenant profit by this bill?
7010_ In a great deal of agony_ modifies what?
7010_ Of the worm''s body_ modifies what?
7010_ That bore the"Jacks"_ does what?
7010_ That seem to grasp the firm earth_ goes with what?
7010_ Then_ and_ very often_ do what?
7010_ What_ did he attempt?
7010_ What_ is base?
7010_ What_ is this?
7010_ When... stomach_ modifies what verb?
7010and do they therefore stimulate your fancy or imagination?
7010are You going home?
7010crooked| five| some| all| What words here modify_ boys_ by adding the idea of size?
7010or would you prefer some other wording of it?
7010with"_ Who_ did you suppose it was?"
5403''Somebody come to see ME?'' 5403 ''Strawberries fer supper?''
5403''The new peanner''s come?'' 5403 ''W''y, what''s pleased YOU so?''
5403''Who is the man?'' 5403 ''Who-- who''s the man?''
5403A barn? 5403 A cellar for what?"
5403A double?
5403A friend?
5403A glass? 5403 A skull, you say!--very well!--how is it fastened to the limb?-- what holds it on?"
5403Ah-- what about?
5403Ah? 5403 Ai n''t you''shamed o''yo''self-- suh--?"
5403An''she tu''ned roun'', an''he sez:''Do yo''want''i m?''
5403An''will yo''please tell me, marster? 5403 And do you, then, suppose me such a creature?"
5403And grace?
5403And how is this to be done?
5403And how many people may you have told about it?
5403And it''s not the dinners and dances? 5403 And what cause have you, Jupiter, for such a supposition?"
5403And why not to- night?
5403And why not?
5403And you got the pass?
5403And you really solved it?
5403And you think that was growin''out of the holy- water?
5403And you think, then, that your master was really bitten by the beetle, and that the bite made him sick?
5403And you?
5403Are you badly, badly hurted?
5403Are you fond of vis big girl, Coppy?
5403Are you going to carry us away?
5403Arfter a minit Miss Anne she said somethin'', an''Marse Chan he cotch her urr han''an''sez:''But if you love me, Anne?''
5403Aw, what for?
5403Be you goin''to buy more cows?
5403Because I''d done something to offend you? 5403 Bill,"says I,"there is n''t any heart disease in your family, is there?"
5403Bolted?
5403Brother? 5403 But how did you proceed?"
5403But how do you know he dreams about gold?
5403But how was it possible to effect this?
5403But if your uncle has such an eye on you, what does he say to your swallowing knives out here in this Siberian wild?
5403But out yonder in the wide forest, who knows what storms are raving to- night in the hearts of men, though all the woods are still? 5403 But then it will be too late, do n''t you understand?"
5403But what, in the name of all that is mysterious, is your''Massa Will''going to do with scythes and spades?
5403But your uncle--?
5403By yourself!--what do you mean?
5403Captain Thornton''s troop?
5403Colossus, will you do ez I tell you, or shell I hev to strike you, saw?
5403Could n''t I jest get a peep at it?
5403Den I beared Mr. Gordon say,''Gent''mens, is yo''ready?'' 5403 Did he tell you?"
5403Did n''t I tell you I was goin''to whoop you if you let Saty out?
5403Did you call me?
5403Did you say it was a DEAD limb, Jupiter?
5403Did your uncle send you after me?
5403Do I look as bad as all that?
5403Do n''t you put the hay in the new barn; there''s room enough in the old one, ai n''t there?
5403Do you need him more than the Master does?
5403Do you see this foot?
5403Do you think I have no more generous aspirations than to sin, and sin, and sin, and, at last, sneak into heaven? 5403 Do you think you ai n''t a- going to take me with you?"
5403Do you wand any boods?
5403Does he really love things?
5403Doing what?
5403Father, ai n''t you got nothin''to say?
5403Father, wo n''t you think it over, an''have a house built there instead of a barn?
5403Fonder van you are of Bell or ve Butcha-- or me?
5403For what price?
5403Good gracious, child, what are YOU doing here?
5403Has the General ever heard of the trick Morgan played on Sun Boy, sir?
5403Has your uncle a brother?
5403Have they caught a real live rat?
5403Have you got that pain in your side this mornin''?
5403Have you not tried it?
5403Have you ridden all the way from cantonments, little man? 5403 He in the homespun?"
5403Him?
5403How I know? 5403 How are you, Dick?"
5403How came you here?
5403How could you know I meant that? 5403 How d''dyou know my name was Jones?"
5403How far is it to the stockade, kid?
5403How far mus go up, massa?
5403How high up are you?
5403How long can you hold him?
5403How long have you known it?
5403How many?
5403How much fudder is got for go?
5403How? 5403 I hope you''re not famished?"
5403I thought father wanted them to put the hay into the new barn?
5403I want to know what you''re buildin''that new barn for, father?
5403I? 5403 Ill?
5403In any one?
5403In what way?
5403Is he as good as you, Jools?
5403Is he goin''to buy more cows?
5403Is his name Miles Morgan?
5403Is that so?
5403Is this yer a d-- d picnic?
5403It ca n''t be you think you need another barn?
5403It''s like ve sputter- brush?
5403Jest then Morris''s hoss whinnied in the barn, and she glanced up quick and smilin''and says,''Somebody come to see somebody?'' 5403 Jules who?"
5403Jupiter,cried he, without heeding me in the least,"do you hear me?"
5403Mais, w''at de matter, Posson Jone''?
5403Mais, what could make it else? 5403 Marse Chan he didn''speak fur a minit, an''den he said:''Who is with you?''
5403Me?
5403Miche?
5403Miles Morgan?
5403Mother,said she,"do n''t you think it''s too bad father''s going to build that new barn, much as we need a decent house to live in?"
5403Mother,whispered the child,"why did you cry out so loud, when the priest was going to send me to Valhalla?"
5403Mr. Gessler in?
5403My last will and testament?
5403Never visite?
5403Never w''at?
5403No, massa, I bring dis here pissel;and here Jupiter handed me a note which ran thus:"MY DEAR----, Why have I not seen you for so long a time?
5403Not charitable?
5403Now, will you go easy as a burglar, or shall I tell these men who you are and what I DO want you for? 5403 Of course Mr. Faxon''s an American citizen?"
5403Oh, by the way, Uncle Jack-- Mr. Faxon wants to know if you''ve got a double?
5403Oh, does there have to be a seal?
5403Oh, mother, he ai n''t going to build another barn?
5403Oh, mother, what for?
5403On such nights? 5403 Or any relation who-- who looks like him?
5403Put our feet into the trap?
5403Red Chief,says I to the kid,"would you like to go home?"
5403Religious, eh? 5403 S''posin''I had wrote to Hiram,"she muttered once, when she was in the pantry--"s''posin''I had wrote, an''asked him if he knew of any horse?
5403Sam,says he,"what''s two hundred and fifty dollars, after all?
5403Sammy, did you know father was going to build a new barn?
5403Say it be lost, say I am plunged again in poverty, shall one part of me, and that the worst, continue until the end to override the better? 5403 Sen''for who, wife?"
5403Shoes?
5403Should I have''em lit?
5403Still your uncle''s cabinet? 5403 Sure the Lieutenant''ll niver be thinkin''to g''wan alone-- widout me?"
5403That being so,he said,"shall I show you the money?"
5403The new secretary? 5403 The what?"
5403Then you WILL come, wo n''t you? 5403 There is to be a bull- fight?
5403This is better''n a private box, ai n''t it?
5403To me?
5403To who is he speak--?
5403Two or three years ago, did I not see you on the platform of revival meetings, and was not your voice the loudest in the hymn?
5403Uncle Billy,she said severely,"did n''t I tell you not to let Saty out?"
5403VERY sick, Jupiter!--why did n''t you say so at once? 5403 Very true; but what are they doing here?"
5403W''at you lookin''?
5403Wat?
5403Well now, Jupiter, do exactly as I tell you-- do you hear?
5403Well, Jup, perhaps you are right; but to what fortunate circumstance am I to attribute the honor of a visit from you to- day?
5403Well, Jup,said I,"what is the matter now?--how is your master?"
5403Well, Mr. Gessler,I said,"how are you?"
5403Well, den, w''at I shall do wid IT?
5403Well, my friend,exclaimed Brother Rabbit, when the dessert was brought in,"how do you like your dinner?"
5403Well, then, what matter?
5403Well, what is it, mother?
5403Well, where is Marse Chan?
5403Well, you know,said Jones--"where''s Colossus?
5403Well,returned the managing editor,"I do n''t think we can wait; do you?"
5403Well,said Mrs. Penn,"what does he say about the folks?"
5403Well?
5403What am I to do?
5403What are YOU, I''d like to know?
5403What are them men diggin''over there in the field for?
5403What are they digging for, mother?
5403What are you driving at?
5403What are you?
5403What can that be?
5403What de matter now, massa?
5403What de matter, massa?
5403What fight? 5403 What fight?"
5403What have I said?
5403What in the name of heaven shall I do?
5403What is it, Reeder?
5403What is it?
5403What is it?
5403What is the matter?
5403What is the meaning of all this, Jup?
5403What is the use of this talk? 5403 What meks me think so?
5403What mischief have you been getting into now?
5403What on airth does this mean, mother?
5403What on airth you all down here for?
5403What say?
5403What will happen?
5403What will you do with them?
5403What you getting up so soon for, Sam?
5403What you goin''to do, mother?
5403What you talkin''about, mother?
5403What--Adoniram sniffed--"what is it smells like cookin''?"
5403What''s been the matter with me, anyhow?
5403What''s he up to now?
5403What''s the trouble, Bill?
5403What''s this?
5403What?
5403What?--sunrise?
5403When do you wand dem?
5403When we get to the lodge, ca n''t we telephone to the stable for a sleigh?
5403Where are you going, Papa, muffled up with such a burden? 5403 Where are you going?"
5403Where is the hurry?
5403Where?
5403Whew- w- w, why did you hold it out on me, old man?
5403Which way mus go now, Massa Will?
5403Who are you? 5403 Who are you?"
5403Who can do so? 5403 Who goes there?"
5403Who is Marse Chan?
5403Who is hurt?
5403Who is your father, sonny?
5403Who''s goin''to throw me? 5403 Who''s got a seal?"
5403Why did n''t you tell of it?
5403Why in hell did n''t you stop when I told you to?
5403Why not a glass?
5403Why, mother, what makes you look so?
5403Will you excuse me? 5403 Will you tell me all about it?"
5403Will you?
5403Yes; but--"Speaking of constitutions,Mr. Grisben intervened:"Frank, are you taking care of yourself?"
5403You are not going, too?
5403You are to use this money on the Stock Exchange, I think?
5403You ask me why not?
5403You came to save me--how was it? 5403 You do n''t think he''ll run away, do you, Sam?"
5403You escaped from them?
5403You expected a sleigh from Weymore?
5403You goddem we d before dey found demselves?
5403You have n''t heard anything from town?
5403You know me?
5403You know w''at I goin''do wid dis money?
5403You mean, to punctuate it?
5403You sent for me, sir?
5403You will-- you will--what was it the Colonel wanted to say?
5403You wo n''t go away and leave me here alone, will you, Sam?
5403You wo n''t turn me off for running away, will you?
5403You''re bound to win?
5403You''re here about three days in the month, are n''t you? 5403 ... What would YOU do?
5403... You''re NOT ill, are you?"
54030''co''se, Providence put de bank dyah, but how come Providence nuver saved Marse Chan?
54034J);806*;48f8lIeo)) 85;;] 8*;:$* 8f83(88)5*f;46(,- 88* 9e*?
5403Ai n''t it awful, Sam?
5403Alone?
5403An''den he sez,''Ef I''m wounded, kyar me home, yo''hear?''
5403An''then what you reckon the little feller said?
5403An''what yo''''spose''twuz?
5403And I would say:"How do you do, Mr. Gessler?
5403And are my vices only to direct my life, and my virtues to lie without effect, like some passive lumber of the mind?
5403And den he keep a syphon all de time----""Keeps a what, Jupiter?"
5403And he would say:"To- morrow fordnighd?"
5403And now, wo n''t you kindly shut up?"
5403And popular?
5403And shall I tell you what religion means to those who are called and chosen to dare and to fight, and to conquer the world for Christ?
5403And supposing it breaks his heart to be whipped as it has broken mine?
5403And then he asked, with a queer note in his voice, partly of dread and partly of hope,"Am I in time, sir?"
5403And while the big man who came to the door was putting Satan into Dinnie''s arms, he said sharply:"Who brought that yellow dog here?"
5403And why did you insist on letting fall the bug, instead of a bullet, from the skull?"
5403And with utter slowness, he traced round my foot, and felt my toes, only once looking up to say:"Did I dell you my brudder was dead?"
5403And yet, in that strip of doubtful brightness, did there not hang wavering a shadow?
5403Answer me, ye people, are not these things true?"
5403Any kin of yours?
5403Are the stars hot?
5403Are there any real Indians in these woods?
5403As the embers slowly blackened, the Duchess crept closer to Piney, and broke the silence of many hours:"Piney, can you pray?"
5403At last he stood before me, and, gazing through those rusty iron spectacles, said:"Mr.--, isn''d it?"
5403Be helped by you?
5403Brother Rabbit went up a little closer, and asked again:"Who are you?"
5403But can you not look within?
5403But he did make a hideous mess of it, did n''t he?
5403But here, within the house, was he alone?
5403But if John Lavington was ruined?
5403But that''s what one must do-- a commanding officer-- isn''t it so, General?
5403But this discovery gives us three new letters, o, u, and g, represented by$?
5403But what could he do or say?
5403But what did he hit me for?
5403But where are the antennae you spoke of?"
5403But why into his-- just his?
5403But, sir, when I went out to open the gate for him, what on top o''this round hemisp''ere do you reckon Sonny done?
5403By and by, Bill sits up and feels behind his ear and says:"Sam, do you know who my favorite Biblical character is?"
5403Can you not read me for a thing that surely must be common as humanity-- the unwilling sinner?"
5403Can you not see within me the clear writing of conscience, never blurred by any wilful sophistry, although too often disregarded?
5403Can you not understand that evil is hateful to me?
5403Canst thou work miracles?"
5403Cayetano?"
5403Colossus and this boy can go to the kitchen.--Now, Colossus, what AIR you a- beckonin''at me faw?"
5403Could he"do this kind of stuff in fine style"?
5403Could you make me a pair of Russia leather boots?"
5403D''yo''ever heah''bout dat?
5403D''yo''ever see a hoss rar he head up right sudden at night when he see somethin''comin''to''ds''i m from de side an''he don''know what''tis?
5403Dear God, man, is that all?"
5403Dey tells me dat de Bible sey dyar won''be marryin''nor givin''in marriage in heaven, but I don''b''lieve it signifies dat-- does you?"
5403Did n''t Mr. Oakhurst remember Piney?
5403Did some one hurt you?"
5403Did you mean it?
5403Didn''yo''?
5403Do I look like a burglar, you fool?"
5403Do I say that I follow sins?
5403Do n''t you see I''m waitin''fer ye?''
5403Do n''t youse know no better than that?"
5403Do oxen make any noise?
5403Do what?
5403Do you MIND being called Coppy?
5403Do you hear me?
5403Do you hear me?"
5403Do you hear them?
5403Do you like to see it?
5403Do you see this foot?
5403Do you think anybody will pay out money to get a little imp like that back home?"
5403Do you wand any boods?"
5403Do you wand some boods?"
5403Does he dwell here?
5403Does he protect it?"
5403Does he remind you of some one?"
5403Does the trees moving make the wind blow?
5403Doing the story or just working the press- badge graft?
5403Ez she got in, she sey to me,''Hev yo''brought him home?''
5403Ez we rode along, he said:"''Sam, you an''I wuz boys togedder, wa''n''t we?''
5403Faxon?"
5403Faxon?"
5403Fearest thou?"
5403For Christmas?
5403Gessler?"
5403Gessler?"
5403Glad he does n''t belong to you, are n''t you?"
5403Had he bought them to put there?
5403Had you a thought in your mind?
5403Has anything unpleasant happened since I saw you?"
5403Has he got anything to do with the fight?"
5403Has n''t he told you what ails him?"
5403Have n''t you got a quill somewhere?"
5403Have n''t you noticed the flowers?
5403Have they killed a so- long snake?
5403Have you ever heard of any important treasure being unearthed along the coast?"
5403Have you found it?"
5403Have you got a gun about you, Sam?"
5403Have you got beds to sleep on in this cave?
5403Have you the final line- up?"
5403He buried his freckled nose in a tea- cup and, with eyes staring roundly over the rim, asked:"I say, Coppy, is it pwoper to kiss big girls?"
5403He would bark,"Howdy- do?"
5403Hearken, Bernhard, wilt thou go to Valhalla, where the heroes dwell with the gods, to bear a message to Thor?"
5403His son replied with a smile of affectionate admiration:"It made you think of your own teams, did n''t it?
5403How about you-- seen any Indians, have you?"
5403How can I ride to the stockade without a hoss?"
5403How could be have foreseen that the flying sparks would have lighted the Colonel''s little hay- rick and consumed a week''s store for the horses?
5403How is Mis''Hersey?"
5403How is it possible to extort a meaning from all this jargon about''devil''s seats,''''death''s- heads''and''Bishop''s hotels''?"
5403How many does it take to make twelve?"
5403How many limbs have you passed?"
5403How old is he?
5403How would the lad"take his medicine"?
5403How''bout that?"
5403I dare say you''ve heard of him-- John Lavington?"
5403I hazard a guess now, that you are in secret a very charitable man?"
5403I pity the poor; who knows their trials better than myself?
5403I thought you were to be shipped off to New Mexico?"
5403If it is n''t pwoper, how was you kissing Major Allardyce''s big girl last morning, by ve canal?"
5403If the Goblins ran off with her as they did with Curdie''s Princess?
5403Is a man in a fit?
5403Is he confined to bed?"
5403Is it any wonder, then, that I prize it?
5403Is it far away?
5403Is n''t that what I''m here for?"
5403Is that all?
5403Is that this morning''s paper?
5403Is this, then, your experience of mankind?
5403It is very dark yet, but had n''t we better ride?
5403It may have been on most unimportant topics, but how could she know that?
5403It seemed a minute before either of them moved, and then the officer took a step forward, and demanded sternly,"Who is that?
5403It seems like a special proviDENCE.- Jools, do you believe in a special proviDENCE?"
5403It was wrong, of course, he knew it; but was it for him to rebuke the wrong- doing of such an exalted personage?
5403It''ll take you out of hot theatres and night restaurants, anyhow.... And all the rest of it.... Eh, Balch?"
5403It''s the on''yest time I ever been from home; now you would n''t of believed that, would you?
5403Jools, where''s my pore old niggah?"
5403Jools?
5403Kyarnt heah me callin'', I reckon?
5403Lavington, you have a wafer?"
5403Legrand?"
5403Let us talk of each other; why should we wear this mask?
5403Mais, if I keep dis money, you know where it goin''be to- night?"
5403Mais, why you ca n''t cheer up an''be''appy?
5403Mr. Richard Giddings danced madly across to him:"Afraid to see him play were you, you silly old fool?
5403Must I take my bow and arrows for the wolves?"
5403Nothing else tempted; could that avail?
5403Now, are you going to be good, or not?"
5403Now, the point of the story is this: Did the tiger come out of that door, or did the lady?
5403Now, what do you say?"
5403One day a feller-- a stranger in the camp, he was-- come acrost him with his box, and says:"''What might it be that you''ve got in the box?''
5403PREFACE Why must we confine the reading of our children to the older literary classics?
5403Perhaps a couple of blows with a mattock were sufficient, while his coadjutors were busy in the pit; perhaps it required a dozen-- who shall tell?"
5403Perhaps you did n''t know you''ve been discharged?"
5403Posson Jone'', is that something to cry, because a man get sometime a litt''bit intoxicate?
5403Putting his hand on my instep, he said:"Do dey vid you here?
5403Quick, speak up; shall I?"
5403Ricollect, one Sunday the preacher, he preached a mighty powerful disco''se on the doctrine o''lost infants not''lected to salvation-- an''Sonny?
5403S''pose your father made you go out an''work for your livin''?
5403See, I''ve been wearing this pair nearly all the time I''ve been abroad; and they''re not half worn out, are they?"
5403Shall I call out your real name or not?
5403Shall I fetch you, or can you find your way down?
5403Shall I help you; I, who know all?
5403Shall I run quickly?
5403Shall I tell them?
5403Shall I tell you where to find the money?"
5403She had lost him, but who should have him?
5403She that used to wait on the table at the Temperance House?
5403Should he put his sanity to the test and go back?
5403Sir?
5403Sir?
5403So I leave it with all of you: Which came out of the opened door-- the lady or the tiger?
5403So up I goes tippin'', skeered like, an''old marster sez,''Ain''you Mymie''s son?''''
5403So, says I, turnin''''round an''facin''him square, says I:"Rector,"says I,"why not baptize him where he is?
5403Still cutting coupons for a living?"
5403Surely not?"
5403THE LADY OR THE TIGER[ Footnote: From"The Lady or the Tiger?"
5403The Lieutenant''ll ride slow, sorr, f''r me to catch up on ye, sorr?"
5403The boyish night city editor glanced along the copy- readers''table and petulantly exclaimed:"Is n''t that spread head ready yet, Mr. Seeley?
5403The man is surely mad!--but stay-- how long do you propose to be absent?"
5403The two upper black spots look like eyes, eh?
5403Then it was that his quick and anxious glance asked the question,"Which?"
5403There''s no great harm in looking at a fight, is there?
5403They looked up inquiringly as he passed, and the city editor asked,"Any news yet?"
5403They trudged on in silence for a few minutes; then Faxon questioned:"You''re not too done up?"
5403Thus, in The Lady or the Tiger?
5403To get away from his reproachful eyes and voice I hastily remarked:"What have you done to your shop?"
5403Understandest thou what thou readest?"
5403Was he also to be beaten by one colossal blunder?
5403Well, I win''it by a specious providence, ai n''t it?"
5403Well, there should n''t be any difficulty in our making a deal, should there?
5403Well, what''s HE good for?''
5403What are these stains?
5403What are we to make of the skeletons found in the hole?"
5403What are you doing there?
5403What are you doing there?"
5403What are you doing?"
5403What better adventure could a brave man ask than to go forth against them, and wrestle with them, and conquer them?
5403What breastplate can guard a man against these fiery darts but the breastplate of righteousness?
5403What business was it of HIS, in God''s name?
5403What could he be dreaming of?
5403What could it mean to him, how was he related to it, what bearing had it on his case?
5403What could you expect with his ideas?"
5403What does he complain of?"
5403What for?"
5403What have we been thinking of?
5403What helmet is strong enough for this strife save the helmet of salvation?
5403What is it, then?"
5403What is meant by setting?
5403What is thy counsel for the tribes of the woodland on this night of sacrifice?"
5403What kind of a game is it?"
5403What make him dream bout de goole so much, if taint cause he bit by de goole- bug?
5403What makes your nose so red, Hank?
5403What might one call yo''name?
5403What on earth did you do it for?"
5403What shall I do?"
5403What shoes can stand the wear of these journeys but the preparation of the gospel of peace?"
5403What tribunal would dare make such a choice?
5403What was the use?
5403What was there to worry about?
5403What would Coppy say if anything happened to her?
5403What would you have thought, father, if we had had our weddin''in a room no better than this?
5403What"business of the highest importance"could HE possibly have to transact?
5403What''s the latest odds?
5403What?
5403When Uncle Carey first heard that name, he asked gravely:"Why, Dinnie, where in h---,"Uncle Carey gulped slightly,"did you get him?"
5403When you left the Bishop''s Hotel, what then?"
5403Whence come you, and what seek you here?"
5403Where I''m goin''to fin''one priest to make like dat?
5403Where is your horse picketed?"
5403Where is your horse?"
5403Where''d you get it?"
5403Who are you?"
5403Who cares for gates or doors?
5403Who do you want to kiss?"
5403Who knows, we might become friends?"
5403Who might be mistaken for him?"
5403Who the deuce is this Seeley?
5403Who will take my message to the Colonel Sahib?"
5403Who would n''t be?"
5403Whose?
5403Why are n''t your lights lit?"
5403Why are oranges round?
5403Why did n''t you get a broomstick?
5403Why else, in the name of any imaginable logic, human or devilish, should he, a stranger, be singled out for this experience?
5403Why had he alone been chosen to see what he had seen?
5403Why not ask him--?"
5403Why should I?
5403Why should he, their best- beloved, throw away his life-- a life filled to the brim with hope and energy and high ideals-- on this futile quest?
5403Why should heavenly God to men have such regard?
5403Why, then, should Coppy be guilty of the unmanly weakness of kissing-- vehemently kissing-- a"big girl,"Miss Allardyce to wit?
5403Why?
5403Why?"
5403Whyn''t yo''come on, dawg?"
5403Will you serve a helpless god?
5403Will you take the glass?"
5403With a grievous outcry he smote the table and shouted:"Collins out of the game?
5403Wo n''t you come in an''set down?
5403Would it break his heart or rouse him to fight more valiantly?
5403Would it not be better for him to die at once, and go to wait for her in the blessed regions of semi- barbaric futurity?
5403Would the other face turn if he said yes?
5403You ai n''t goin''to build a barn over there where we was goin''to have a house, father?"
5403You ai n''t going to let the chance go, are you?"
5403You came of age to- day, did n''t you?
5403You do n''t answer?"
5403You say your new doctor thinks it wo n''t do you any good; but he does n''t pretend to say it will do you harm, does he?
5403You see dis money-- w''at I win las''night?
5403You will, of course, ask''where is the connection?''
5403You wo n''t leave me long with him, will you, Sam?"
5403You wo n''t take me back home again, Snake- eye, will you?"
5403ai nt dis here my lef eye for sartain?"
5403and is this crime of murder indeed so impious as to dry up the very springs of good?"
5403answered Gregor,"art thou mighty?
5403asked Winfried;"and will you take the wood that is fit for a bow to make a distaff?"
5403ay, and then?
5403cried Legrand, apparently much relieved,"what do you mean by telling me such nonsense as that?
5403cried Legrand, highly delighted,"what is it?"
5403cried Markheim:"the devil?"
5403cried Winfried,"art thou angry?
5403cried the parson, bounding up with radiant face--"is that so, Jools?"
5403cursed paleface, do you dare to enter the camp of Red Chief, the terror of the plains?"
5403de bug, massa?
5403do you hear me?"
5403do you know your right hand from your left?"
5403do you thing I would go again''my conscien''?
5403don''you know?
5403exclaimed Brother Goat, exultingly,"You do n''t like the brambles?
5403exclaimed Brother Rabbit,"Are you dead?
5403here fairly screamed Legrand,"do you say you are out to the end of that limb?"
5403or is it because you find me with red hands that you presume such baseness?
5403remarked the visitor;"and there, if I mistake not, you have already lost some thousands?"
5403said Legrand,"but it''s so long since I saw you; and how could I foresee that you would pay me a visit this very night of all others?
5403said the old butler,"keeping me from ketchin''Christmas gifts dis day?"
5403says Bill,"would you like to have a bag of candy and a nice ride?"
5403says I,"an''have what did?"
5403settled to your satisfaction, you will then return home and follow my advice implicitly, as that of your physician?"
5403sez he,''you didn''come all through those woods by yourse''f at this time o''night?''
5403shall a man make hisse''f to be the more sorry because the money he los''is not his?
5403she says, laughin'', as she druv through slow- like and a- ticklin''my nose with the cracker of the buggy- whip.--''What''s pleased YOU?''
5403was the skull nailed to the limb with the face outward, or with the face to the limb?"
5403what I keer for de bug?"
5403what IS dis here pon de tree?"
5403what do you mean?"
5403what must do wid it?"
5403where''s yo''pony?''
5403whistled Gallegher,"where''s it to be?"
5403who knows what haunts of wrath and cruelty and fear are closed to- night against the advent of the Prince of Peace?
57383''Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before? 57383 ''The question,''Mr. Lincoln replied,''was,"Why does man have breasts?"''
57383''Well, what about General King?'' 57383 ''Well,''he said,''are you on good terms with Price and King?''
57383***On the vote to repeal the Fugitive Slave Law, how did that( Democratic) side of the House vote?
57383And suppose they could be induced by a Proclamation of Freedom from me to throw themselves upon us, what should we do with them? 57383 Any chickens?"
57383Any eggs?
57383Any flour or grain?
57383Any guerrillas?
57383Are you a member of the other House?
57383Are you prepared for such a change in the institutions of your country? 57383 Are you the Governor of a State?"
57383But what more was done? 57383 But why should Emancipation South, send the freed people North?
57383Certainly not"Have you ever had a vote of thanks by name?
57383Dependenceupon whom, and with regard to what?
57383Descendants of the same people inhabit the country; yet what is the reason of this vast difference? 57383 Do you think you could become so interested in my conversation as not to notice the door- keeper?"
57383Have you any meat?
57383He said,''Wo n''t General Price vote for it? 57383 How will it be with New England?
57383I ask the Senator to recollect, too, what, save to send aid and comfort to the Enemy, do these predictions of his amount to? 57383 If, then, for a common object, this Property is to be sacrificed, is it not just that it be done at a common charge?
57383If, then, we are at some time to be as populous as Europe, how soon? 57383 Is anybody in the house?"
57383Is it a good road, and how far?
57383Is it doubted, then, that the plan I propose, if adopted, would shorten the War, and thus lessen its expenditure of money and of blood? 57383 Is it locked up?"
57383Is it true, then, that Colored people can displace any more White labor by being Free, than by remaining Slaves? 57383 Is no one about who can get in?"
57383Is there no Justice in putting an end to human Slavery? 57383 It is not,''Can any of us imagine better?''
57383Now, I ask any plain common- sense man what was the meaning of that? 57383 Now, then, tell me, if you please, what possible result of good would follow the issuing of such a Proclamation as you desire?
57383Now, where is the proper place to break it?
57383Question. � And of course an abandonment of the purpose for which you were there? 57383 Question. � At that time General Patterson felt it was so important to attack Johnston that he had determined to do it?
57383Question. � Behind his intrenchments? 57383 Question. � Did not General Patterson issue orders at Bunker Hill, the night before you marched to Charlestown, for an attack on the Enemy?
57383Question. � Even if you had received a check there, it would have prevented his junction with the forces at Manassas? 57383 Question. � That order was not countermanded until late on Tuesday, the 16th, was it?
57383Question. � You understood General Patterson to be influenced to make that attempt because he felt there was a necessity for detaining Johnston? 57383 Question[ by Mr. Odell]. � Had you any such understanding with Patterson?
57383Question[ by Mr. Odell]. � You covered his movement? 57383 Question[ by the Chairman]. � Did he[ Patterson] assign any reason for that movement?
57383Shall one battle determine the fate of empire, or a dozen? � the loss of one thousand men, or twenty thousand? 57383 The question is, if the Colored people are persuaded to go anywhere, why not there?
57383Was it possible to lose the Nation and yet preserve the Constitution? 57383 Well, ai n''t you on our side?"
57383Well,said he,"did n''t you think it was the biggest shuck and the littlest ear that ever you did see?"
57383Well,said he,"did you see him take it off?"
57383Well,said he,"what do you want of me?"
57383Well,said he,"why do n''t you go into the gallery?"
57383What appointment?
57383What are the uses of decisions of Courts? 57383 What do you know of Uncle Billy?"
57383What do you live on?
57383What else was done at the very same session? 57383 What good would a Proclamation of Emancipation from me do, especially as we are now situated?
57383What is to be done with the freedmen?
57383What is your badge?
57383What says the Preamble to the Constitution? 57383 What troops are those?"
57383What,said he, referring to Mr. Ross,"has been the course of that gentleman and his Party on this floor in regard to voting supplies to the Army?
57383Where?
57383Whether such language is not Treason?
57383Why should they leave this Country? 57383 Why should this Property be exempt from the hazards and consequences of a rebellious War?
57383Why was not this taken and accepted? 57383 Why?"
57383Will you ever submit to a warfare waged by the Southern States to establish Slavery in Illinois? 57383 � you ask �"What next?"
57383''Must a Government of necessity be too strong for the liberties of its own people, or too weak to maintain its own existence?''
57383*** But you may ask me what are these rights and these privileges?
57383*** How has the planting of Slavery in new countries always been effected?
57383*** On the subject of arming Slaves, of putting Negroes into the Army, how has my colleague and his Party voted?
57383*** This being so, what is Judge Douglas going to spend his life for?
57383*** What can authorize him to draw any such inference?
57383*** What cause is there for further alarm in the Southern States, so far as the Territories are concerned?
57383*** What is fairly implied by the term Judge Douglas has used,''resistance to the decision?''
57383*** What is now the case?
57383*** Who did it?
57383*** Will it be any more valid?
57383***"''Question. � In what direction would Johnston have had to move to get by you?
57383***"I ask Mr. Lincoln how it is that he purposes ultimately to bring about this uniformity in each and all the States of the Union?
57383***"You may ask, why does the South want us to do it by Constitutional Amendment, when we have just done it voluntarily by Law?
57383******"What more, then, is demanded?
57383********* Question[ by the Chairman]. � Would there have been any difficulty in preventing Johnston from going to Manassas?
57383*********"Question. � While at Bunker Hill, the night before you left there, were any orders issued to march in the evening?
57383**********''Question[ by the Chairman]. � And that left Johnston free?
573831, but are in the immediate neighborhood, on their plantations?
573839:45 p.m."LIEUTENANT- GENERAL GRANT:"Would it not be well for Warren to go down with his whole corps and smash up the force in front of Sheridan?
57383A Freeman?
57383A few days afterward the husband again appealed to his commanding officer( Taylor), who exclaimed:"Have n''t you got a musket?
57383After assisting him in checking his steed, the President said to me:''He came pretty near getting away with me, did n''t he?
57383After shaking hands all round, the Governor said,"Coleman, what the devil is the matter here?"
57383And Farnsworth met this idea � which had also been advanced by Messrs. Ross, Fernando Wood, and Pruyn � by saying:"What constitutes property?
57383And as it is to so go, at all, events, may we not agree that the sooner the better?
57383And as to Oligarchal rule � the rule of the few( and those the Southern chiefs) over the many, � was not that already accomplished?
57383And how is it, that Johnston gets away from Patterson so neatly?
57383And if such is the case, what are we to hope in the future?
57383And is it not needed whenever it helps us and hurts the Enemy?
57383And then cried the orator- his voice rising to a higher key, penetrating, yet musical as the blast from a silver trumpet:"What would he have?
57383And then, having succeeded in convincing himself of Republican failure, he exultingly exclaimed:"But why enumerate?
57383And to this more than fair proposition to the Southerners � to this touching appeal in behalf of Peace � what was the response?
57383And we are asked by one of my colleagues,( Mr. Cox) does the gentleman from New York intend to call us Traitors?
57383And what can that purpose be, but to throw his augmented right upon our left, at Blackburn''s Ford, and so, along the ridge- road, upon Centreville?
57383And what have we seen?
57383And what is this"republican"form of government, thus pledged?
57383And what next?
57383And what was the chief cause or pretext for discontent at that time?
57383And what was the response of the South to this generous and conciliatory message?
57383And when does he do it?
57383And whose the sacrilegious hand that dared be first raised against his Country and his Country''s flag?
57383And why may we not continue that ratio far beyond that period?
57383And why the hasty after- indorsement of the decision, by the President and others?
57383And, above all, is it consistent with any notion, which the mind of man can conceive, of human Liberty?"
57383And, in any event, can not the North decide for itself, whether to receive them?
57383Another, Mr. Charles E. Lex( a Republican), speaking of the Southern People, said:"What, then, can we say to them?
57383Are they not already in the Land?
57383Are they not intended for disorganization in our very midst?
57383Are they not intended to animate our enemies?
57383Are they not intended to destroy our zeal?
57383Are they not intended to dull our weapons?
57383Are we to predict evil, and retire from what we predict?
57383Are we to stop and talk about an uprising sentiment in the North against the War?
57383Are you for it?
57383Are you for it?
57383As I drew up by the party, Bismarck accosted me with,"Well, General, are n''t you hungry?
57383As a political question and a question of humanity, can I receive the services of a father and mother, and not take the children?
57383At every meal the steward would come to me, and say,"Captain Sherman, will you bring your ladies to the table?"
57383At this General Grant remarked:"Did he say so?
57383Aye, what next?
57383Benjamin, why do you not vote?
57383But do you think they are so perfectly moulded to their state as to be insensible that a better exists?
57383But how can we attain it?
57383But it first became necessary to settle the important question of who should succeed General McPherson?
57383But the matter regarded by him of larger moment � the safety of the Union � how about that?
57383But to return to Military operations: On December 10th?
57383But what have we seen?
57383But what next?
57383But what would be the effect upon South Carolina?
57383Ca n''t you defend your own family?"
57383Can Grant supply himself from the Mississippi?
57383Can I have fifty?
57383Can aliens make treaties easier than friends can make laws?
57383Can aliens make treaties, easier than friends can make laws?
57383Can it be that such a resort finds root in any stratum of American opinion?
57383Can not this last bloody battle be avoided?''
57383Can the Union endure under such a system of policy?
57383Can their self love be so totally annihilated as not frequently to induce ardent wishes for a change?
57383Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens than laws can among friends?
57383Can treaties be more faithfully enforced between aliens, than laws can among friends?
57383Can we Abolish Slavery in the Loyal State of Kentucky against her will?
57383Can we account for it to ourselves, gentlemen?
57383Can we afford to send them forward to their masters, to be by them armed against us, or used in producing supplies to sustain the Rebellion?
57383Can we do anything more?
57383Can we whip the South?
57383Can you expedite the sending to Nashville of the recruits that are in Indiana and Ohio?
57383Continuing, he said:"What more do the Southern States want?
57383Could I get a hundred tolerably intelligent men, with their wives and children, and able to''cut their own fodder''so to speak?
57383Could not such a camp be established about Pocotaligo or Coosawhatchie?
57383Could not such escaped slaves find at least a partial supply of food in the rice- fields about Savannah, and cotton plantations on the coast?
57383Could not your cavalry go back by the way of Stony Creek depot and destroy or capture the store of supplies there?
57383Could the one, in any way, greatly disturb the seven?
57383Davis, etc.?
57383Do not its principles and theories become daily more fixed in our practice?
57383Do we not know it to be so?
57383Do we not know that they have been anxious for a change of Government for years?
57383Do we not know this?"
57383Do you mean that I am to concede the benefits of the political struggle through which we have passed, considered politically, only?
57383Do you mean that I am to give up my convictions of right?
57383Do you mean that we are to deny the great principle upon which our political action has been based?
57383Do you suppose we shall do nothing, even upon the sea?
57383Do you think differently?
57383Do you visit the North in the Summer?
57383Does it appear otherwise to you?
57383Does not the Fugitive Slave Law affect the Black soldier in the Army who was a Slave?
57383Does the Free Republic of the United States exist, in fact, to- day?
57383Does timidity ask WHEN?
57383From your Custom- houses?
57383General Blair simply asked,"Do you like it?"
57383General Grant remarked,"What is to prevent their laying the rails again?"
57383General Halleck had a map on his table, with a large pencil in his hand, and asked,"where is the rebel line?"
57383Governor of a State?
57383Halleck was present and spoke up, saying:"How would Sheridan do?"
57383Halleck''s telegram of last night says:"Who sent Smith''s division to Nashville?
57383Has Congress any power over the subject of Slavery in Kentucky or Virginia or any other State of this Union?
57383Has any thing been heard from the troops ordered from Vicksburg?
57383Has he not stolen a march and sent re- enforcements toward Manassas Junction?
57383Has it more waste surface by mountains, rivers, lakes, deserts, or other causes?
57383Have any more troops arrived from Richmond, or are any more coming, or reported to be coming?
57383Have we not at the South, as well as the North, grown great, prosperous, and happy under its operations?
57383He asked me,"Where?"
57383He dropped out of the retinue with an orderly, and after we had ridden a mile or so he overtook us, and I asked him,"What luck?"
57383He inquired,"Why not both?"
57383He remaining mounted, spoke first to me, saying simply,"How are you, Sheridan?"
57383He said:"What is the use of your persevering?
57383He then asked in his quizzical way,"Are you a foreign embassador?"
57383He then said,"Have you any impudence?"
57383He turned to me and said,"Ca n''t you take your regiment up there?"
57383How can this be done?
57383How can we feed and care for such a multitude?
57383How can we, by conceding what you now ask, relieve you and the Country from the increasing pressure to which you refer?
57383How did that side of the House vote on the question of arming Slaves and paying them as soldiers?
57383How does it happen that we have not had unanimity enough to agree on any measure of that kind?
57383How is he going to do it?
57383How long have we been at War?
57383How many letters of marque and reprisal would it take to put the whole of your ships up at your wharves to rot?
57383How will he do it?
57383How?
57383I answered, rather shortly,''How the devil do you know there is a masked battery?
57383I answered:"How can you go to New York?
57383I asked Deshler:"What does this mean?
57383I assured him with thanks that I was"first- rate,"when, pointing toward the village, he asked,"Is General Lee up there?"
57383I had on my undress uniform indicating my rank, and inquired of the sentinel,"Is General Fremont up?"
57383I presume that some one said to the Governor about this time,"Why do n''t you get Sheridan?"
57383I said I had come to see him on business; and he added,"You do n''t suppose that he will see such as you?"
57383I said to Mr. Pickens,''What next do you propose we shall do?
57383I submit to you, my fellow- citizens, whether such a line of policy is consistent with the peace and harmony of the Country?
57383I touched it and examined one or two of the larger pieces, and asked,"Is it gold?"
57383If Hood goes to the Alabama line, will it not be impossible for him to subsist his army?
57383If Rebellion and bloodshed and murder have followed, to whose skirts does the responsibility attach?
57383If one man says it does not mean a Negro, why not say it does not mean some other man?
57383If such persons have what will be an advantage to them, the question is, whether it can not be made of advantage to you?
57383If the rebel leaders were to arm the slaves, what would be its effect?
57383If you ca n''t get over, how can the rebels get at you?''
57383In answer to his compliments about the comfortable location I had made, I said:''Very comfortable, General, when shall we move on?''
57383In that event, could you stand the reaction feeling which the suffering commerce of Charleston would probably manifest?
57383In that event, would it not be possible for you to become a citizen of our State?
57383In what do our new Territories now differ in this respect from the old Colonies when Slavery was first planted within them?
57383In what way can that Compromise be used to keep Lee''s Army out of Pennsylvania?
57383Is he going to spend his life in maintaining a principle that no body on earth opposes?
57383Is it doubted that it would restore the National authority and National prosperity, and perpetuate both indefinitely?
57383Is it inferior to Europe in any natural advantage?
57383Is it less fertile?
57383Is it not a mere usurpation without any known mode of justification, under any existing Code of Laws, human or Divine?"]
57383Is it not a time when the measure is most likely to produce danger and mischief to the Country at large?
57383Is it possible, then, to make that intercourse more advantageous or more satisfactory after separation than before?
57383Is it worth our while to continue this union of States, where the North demands to be our masters and we are required to be their tributaries?
57383Is that what you mean?
57383Is there a single Court or Magistrate, or individual that would be influenced by it there?
57383Is there no danger to the Tranquillity of the Country in its existence?
57383Is there, has there ever been, any question that, by the Law of War, property, both of enemies and friends, may be taken when needed?
57383It forces us to ask:''Is there in all republics, this inherent and fatal weakness?''
57383It has the sanction of God''s own Apostle; for when Paul sent back Onesimus to Philemon, whom did he send?
57383It is only a week ago last Monday, that a Bill was introduced here to punish guerrillas*** and how did my colleague vote?
57383Look to the illustrations which the times now afford, how, in the illustration of that sentiment, do we differ from the Black man?
57383MAJOR- GENERAL THOMAS, Nashville, Tenn. Is there not danger of Forrest moving down the Cumberland to where he can cross it?
57383Major Childs inquired,"Where is Coacoochee?"
57383Major W. T. Sherman: Will you accept the chief clerkship of the War Department?
57383Mason said to me,"What is that?"
57383May it not interfere with the common Defense and general Welfare?
57383May they not pronounce all Slaves Free?
57383May they not think that these call for the abolition of Slavery?
57383Member of Congress?"
57383Mr. Lincoln*** more than once exclaimed:''Must more blood be shed?
57383Mr. Lincoln, who was still standing, said,"Threatened to shoot you?"
57383My friends, is it possible to preserve Peace between the North and the South if such a doctrine shall prevail in either Section of the Union?
57383Not that he feared the North � but the South; how would the wayward, wilful, passionate South, receive his proffered olivef- branch?
57383Now, what do we find?
57383Now, who was it that did the work?
57383Object whatsoever is possible, still the question recurs,''Can we do better?
57383Of all the times when an attempt was ever made to carry this measure, is not this the most inauspicious?
57383Of parties claiming foreign protection?
57383Offering the flask to his uncle, he said:"You''ve had a hard day of it; wo n''t you refresh yourself?"
57383Often"Johnny"would call:"Well, Yank, when are you coming into town?"
57383One party to a contract may violate it � break it, so to speak; but does it not require all, to lawfully rescind it?
57383Or would he conduct this War so feebly, that the whole World would smile at us in derision?"
57383Others say:"What are we to do?
57383Our position for renewing the action the next morning was excellent; whence, then, our failure?
57383Pausing awhile, and watching the operations of this man roasting his corn, he said,"What are you doing?"
57383President?''
57383Renick said,"What do you want with General Fremont?"
57383Shall we send a flag of Truce?
57383Sherman said to me:"Admiral, how could you make such a remark to McClernand?
57383Should his request be granted, who would you like as his successor?
57383Should we allow them to escape, etc.?
57383Simply that a Constitutional Amendment shall be adopted, affirming � what?
57383Sir, are they not words of brilliant, polished Treason, even in the very Capitol of the Nation?
57383Sir, how can we make Peace?
57383Sir, how can we retreat?
57383Sir, is not this a remarkable spectacle?
57383So that among the younger officers the query was very natural,"Who the devil is Governor of California?"
57383So that the only questions that remained were, would he surrender at Raleigh?
57383Some say:"I have such a one sick at my house; who will wait on them when I am gone?"
57383State in what manner you would rather live-- whether scattered among the whites, or in colonies by yourselves?
57383State what you understand by slavery, and the freedom that was to be given by the President''s proclamation?
57383State what, in your opinion, is the best way to enlist colored men as soldiers?
57383Suppose he does re- enact the same law which the Court has pronounced unconstitutional, will that make it Constitutional?
57383The Governor knocked at the door, and on inquiry from inside"Who''s there?
57383The immediate Secessionists, or those who are opposed to separate State action at this time?
57383The next was,"What are WE to do?"
57383The only question now was, how to get rid of it?
57383The question, then, naturally arises, what are those rights and privileges, and what is the nature and extent of them?
57383Then followed the question,"Is Fort McAllister taken?"
57383These speeches of his, sown broadcast over the Land, what clear distinct meaning have they?
57383This being so, how is it possible for the people still here( mostly women and children) to find any shelter?
57383This feature was more than acceptable to the parents at times, for how else could they so thoroughly learn all the neighborhood gossip?
57383To mob law, to partisan caucuses, to town meetings, to revolution?
57383To whom shall you appeal?
57383Tracy desiring"to know whether, in these Halls, the gentleman from Maryland invoked Almighty God that the American Arms should not prevail?"
57383Upon what terms?
57383WHAT NEXT?
57383WHAT NEXT?
57383WHAT NEXT?
57383Warming up, he proceeded to say:"Can the Union be restored by War?
57383Was it Mr. Clark?
57383Was it that they believed a Monarchical form of government was incompatible with civil liberty?
57383Was it that they were opposed to a Monarchical form of government?
57383Was it the firing on our flag at Sumter?
57383Was that the first adversary passage?
57383We then returned to Benicia, and Wool''s first question was,"What luck?"
57383Well, so much being disposed of, what is left?
57383Well, suppose he is; what is he going to do about it?
57383Were it his own, would he not have said in"making"it, instead of in"stating"it?
57383What American is not proud of the result?
57383What Commissioners?
57383What better Compromise could have been made?
57383What can I do for you?"
57383What can it be?
57383What could I do?
57383What do those terms mean when used now?
57383What do those terms mean?
57383What good does it do to pass a second Act?
57383What has become of it?
57383What has become of that Squatter Sovereignty?
57383What has been their course in regard to raising money to pay the Army?
57383What has now become of all his tirade about''resistance to the Supreme Court?''"
57383What is Popular Sovereignty?
57383What is War?
57383What is it?
57383What more can any man demand?
57383What more?
57383What of future hopes?
57383What of past glories?
57383What should be done with them?
57383What signified the terms to them, so long as we obtained the actual surrender of people who only wanted a good opportunity to give up gracefully?
57383What then?
57383What then?
57383What was Squatter Sovereignty?
57383What was to be done with the rebel armies when defeated?
57383What were they but a clear indication that the framers of the Constitution intended and expected the ultimate extinction of that institution?
57383What will become of Constitutional Government?
57383What will become of public Liberty?
57383What would be its fate there?
57383What would he have?
57383What would our condition be in the event of the greatest calamity that could befall this Nation?"
57383What''vested right''has any man or State in Property in Man?
57383When ground is owned by parties who have gone south, and have leased the ground to parties now in the city who own the improvements on the ground?
57383When he did speak it was to ask:"Grant, how many wolves do you think there are in that pack?"
57383When houses are occupied and the owner has gone south, leaving an agent to collect rent for his benefit?
57383When houses are owned by loyal citizens, but are unoccupied?
57383When movable property is found in stores that are closed?
57383When parties owning houses have gone south, and the tenant has given his notes for the rent in advance?
57383When parties who occupy the house are creditors of the owner, who has gone south?
57383When the navigation laws cease to operate, what will become of your shipping interest?
57383When the owner has gone south, and parties here hold liens on the property and are collecting the rents to satisfy their liens?
57383When the owner lives in town, and refuses to take the oath of allegiance?
57383When the tenant has expended several months''rent in repairs on the house?
57383When this Tariff ceases to operate in your favor, and you have to pay for coming into our markets, what will you export?
57383When your machinery ceases to move, and your operatives are turned out, will you tax your broken capitalist or your starving operative?
57383Where are you?"
57383Where is Rome, once the mistress of the World?
57383Where is it?
57383Where is the remedy when you refuse obedience to the constituted authorities?"
57383Where is to be your boundary line?
57383Where the end of the principles we shall have to give up?
57383Which party will prevail?
57383Who defeated it?
57383Who ever supposed they would come away down here in Alabama?"
57383Who have prompted him?
57383Who heard of any such thing, because of the Ordinance of''87?
57383Who is responsible for it?
57383Who is so bold as to do it?
57383Who shall treat?
57383Who would go?
57383Who, then, has brought these evils on the Country?
57383Who, then, shall come in at this day and claim that he invented it?
57383Whose fault was it?
57383Why better after the retraction than before the issue?
57383Why declare that within twenty years the African Slave Trade, by which Slaves are supplied, might be cut off by Congress?
57383Why deprive him of supplies by a blockade, and voluntarily give him men to produce them?
57383Why disguise this great truth?
57383Why do you not obey my orders to report strength and positions of your command?
57383Why do you not obey my orders to report strength and positions of your command?
57383Why even a Senator''s individual opinion withheld, till after the Presidential election?
57383Why is this so?
57383Why may not our Country at some time, average as many?
57383Why not attack at once?
57383Why not save this Proposition, and see if we can not bring the Country to it?''
57383Why not?
57383Why should they do anything for us if we will do nothing for them?
57383Why the delay of a re- argument?
57383Why the incoming President''s advance exhortation in favor of the decision?
57383Why the outgoing President''s felicitation on the indorsement?
57383Why this sad difference?
57383Why was the Court decision held up?
57383Why was the amendment, expressly declaring the right of the people, voted down?
57383Why was this, or why was all mention of any field of duty for the head of the army left out of the army regulations?
57383Why were all these acts?
57383Will he be able to convince the Court that the second Act is valid, when the first is invalid and void?
57383Will he shrink from armed Insurrection?
57383Will his State justify it?
57383Will it be said the South required in addition to this, laws of Congress to protect Slavery in the Territories?
57383Will its better public opinion allow it?
57383Will liberation make them any more numerous?
57383Will that do any good?
57383Will that success continue?
57383Will the Senator yield to Rebellion?
57383Will the galling comparison between themselves and their masters leave them unenlightened in this respect?
57383Will you not embrace it?
57383Will you not embrace it?
57383Wo n''t you speak your mind freely on this question of slavery, that so agitates the land?
57383Would it be less than stealing?"
57383Would my word free the Slaves, when I can not even enforce the Constitution in the Rebel States?
57383Would we not be in the wrong?"
57383Would you not lose that in which your strength consists, the union of your people?
57383You ask, what is the general''s opinion, upon this subject?
57383You here are Freemen, I suppose?
57383You will ask in this view, how do you consult the benefit of the slaves?
57383and will they not be warranted by that power?
57383and"whether it is in order to talk Treason in this Hall?
57383are we to tell the People that Republicanism is a failure?
57383because of the Missouri Restriction because of the numerous Court decisions of that character?
57383but,''Can we all do better?''
57383or is it not manifest that there is no just title?
57383or one hundred million or five hundred million dollars?
57383said Mr. Lincoln,"how are they getting along down there?"
57383said a listener,"do n''t you know that old Sherman carries a duplicate tunnel along?"
57383what do you export?
57383what more than we have expressed in the resolutions we have offered?
57383where are they to come from?"
57383where will their revenue come from?
57383why have not the People of that Heaven- favored clime, the spirit that animated their fathers?
57383will you work?
57383� said Davies �"and can they get through that road?"
5977''Are-- are you really my brother?'' 5977 ''Are-- are you sure of it?''
5977''Can you give me work?'' 5977 ''How much do you want?''
5977''I sympathize with you,''I said at the conclusion of Paul''s story;''but how can I help you?'' 5977 ''The whole?''
5977''What do you mean by that?'' 5977 ''What do you want?''
5977''What kind of work?'' 5977 ''What, dead?''
5977A chance to do what?
5977A letter from Harry? 5977 A serious fever, doctor?"
5977Ai n''t my credit good?
5977Ai n''t she a beauty?
5977Ai n''t you afraid to have him drive?
5977Am I?
5977And I suppose you divide the next period by five, for the same reason, do n''t you?
5977And if you''re sick will you promise to come right home?
5977And is that what brought you to Centreville?
5977And lend you the money? 5977 And what do you expect to find to do?"
5977And what put it into your head to start out in this way?
5977And what will be the second?
5977Anything new stirring, Squire?
5977Are you going back to the city soon?
5977Are you going to Pentland to- night?
5977Are you going to join the class, Walton?
5977Are you going to pay cash down?
5977Are you going to stop long?
5977Are you going to the exhibition, Walton?
5977Are you going to the school examination, father?
5977Are you going?
5977Are you married, sir?
5977Are you ready to pay the account I have against you?
5977Are you sick, Harry?
5977Are you sick, sir?
5977Are you sure we are right?
5977Are you the treasurer of this concern?
5977Are you travelin''far?
5977Are you two thick together?
5977Business?
5977But practice would n''t make everybody a ventriloquist, would it?
5977But sha n''t you need me?
5977But suppose you do-- suppose you get sick?
5977But what shall I do to- night?
5977But will your parents consent? 5977 But you do n''t feel sure?
5977But you work out, do n''t you?
5977Ca n''t she come here?
5977Ca n''t you leave me five dollars?
5977Can I take out a book?
5977Can you do it?
5977Can you have it done before two o''clock?
5977Can you make more money in a store than working in a shoe shop?
5977Can you perform tricks, too?
5977Can you start with me to- morrow morning?
5977Can you tell me which road to take to Pentland?
5977Could n''t you say thirty- seven?
5977Cut up? 5977 Did he come all the way home with you?"
5977Did he cut up?
5977Did he ever see Jackson?
5977Did he go away from home when he was a boy?
5977Did he have any money of yours with him?
5977Did n''t Harry Walton lose his money?
5977Did n''t I tell you I''d pay three dollars now?
5977Did n''t he go out with you?
5977Did n''t suit you? 5977 Did n''t you like it?"
5977Did the old man ever discover your agency in the affair, Professor Henderson?
5977Did you drop it out of your pocket?
5977Did you ever work much?
5977Did you sleep there?
5977Did you think of this before you read that book?
5977Do n''t you know no better than to lock up a child where she ca n''t get no air?
5977Do n''t you remember?
5977Do n''t you think he''ll pay me?
5977Do n''t you think so?
5977Do n''t you think, Squire, it''s rather hard on a poor man, to make him forfeit ten dollars because he ca n''t meet his note?
5977Do you always pay your bills right off?
5977Do you board here?
5977Do you doubt my word?
5977Do you know him?
5977Do you know of anyone that wants to hire a boy?
5977Do you know what this is for?
5977Do you know what time it is?
5977Do you know who I am?
5977Do you like him? 5977 Do you live in town?"
5977Do you live near here?
5977Do you live over there?
5977Do you mean me?
5977Do you mean that for me?
5977Do you mean that for me?
5977Do you mean to charge me with taking it?
5977Do you mean to go to school when you''re a gray- headed old veteran?
5977Do you mean to say I stole''em?
5977Do you really think it would be a good plan, Harry?
5977Do you see that old lady ahead?
5977Do you see this blot on one of the bills-- a two?
5977Do you think I can get into any other shop in town?
5977Do you think I shall be long sick?
5977Do you think I wo n''t pay you back?
5977Do you think Luke took it?
5977Do you think you will get it, Harry?
5977Do you think you''ll like shoemaking better?
5977Do you understand the shoe business?
5977Do you want my advice?
5977Do you? 5977 Does Walton know this?"
5977Does he live alone, I wonder?
5977Does he?
5977Does it pay well?
5977Does n''t Henry Clay want you to be President again?
5977For yourself?
5977Frank,said Luke, turning to his companion,"lend me five dollars, ca n''t you?"
5977From Luke Harrison?
5977General, can you accommodate me till morning?
5977Got any new cloths in, Merrill?
5977Granton? 5977 Harry Walton?"
5977Harry,said Professor Henderson, gravely,"how often have I told you not to be so unmannerly?"
5977Has Harry come yet?
5977Has Harry spoken to you about his plan of going away from home?
5977Has he been in the village long?
5977Has he ever bought anything of you?
5977Has he lived long around here?
5977Has n''t he got one for me, too?
5977Has the boy returned?
5977Has the professor been giving exhibitions up there?
5977Have I seen it? 5977 Have a cigar, Walton?"
5977Have you been with him long?
5977Have you cut the pants?
5977Have you ever worked in a shop?
5977Have you found your money, Walton?
5977Have you got any more business with me?
5977Have you got any new cloth for coats?
5977Have you got anything else new?
5977Have you got anything new in? 5977 Have you got the answer?"
5977Have you mentioned the matter to your father yet, Harry?
5977Have you studied either at all?
5977Have you? 5977 He does, does he?"
5977He wo n''t have me taken up-- will he?
5977Hev you come home to stay?
5977How are you gettin''on?
5977How are you, Walton?
5977How are you, Walton?
5977How are you, neighbor?
5977How can I prepare myself?
5977How could you decline such a magnificent offer?
5977How did you come to trust him in the first place?
5977How did you get it?
5977How did you get it?
5977How did you happen to come to me?
5977How do you happen to be in this neighborhood?
5977How do you like the business?
5977How do you like the new cow, father?
5977How does it pay?
5977How far have you been in arithmetic?
5977How far is it, sir?
5977How is that cow a- doin''?
5977How large it the note?
5977How long has he lived here? 5977 How long have you been thinking of this plan, Harry?"
5977How long''s he been so?
5977How much did it cost?
5977How much did you lose?
5977How much do you ask for her?
5977How much do you calc''late to pay?
5977How much do you pay Abner Kimball?
5977How much do you pay for board?
5977How much is it?
5977How much is it?
5977How much is there?
5977How much money did he take from you?
5977How much money do you think I have brought home?
5977How much more?
5977How much pay do you give, sir?
5977How much would you want after you have learned?
5977How much?
5977How old are you?
5977How old is Harry now?
5977How old is she?
5977How old were you when you began to be a ventriloquist?
5977How shall I go over?
5977How unlucky?
5977I am afraid I shall,said the farmer, thinking in surprise,"Can he be going to reduce the price?"
5977I asked you where you got it from?
5977I did n''t say anything against it, did I? 5977 I did n''t say anything, did I?"
5977I mean, how did he act?
5977I will be very careful; but, madam,he said, in seeming surprise,"what have you got in it?"
5977I wonder if Harry''s grown?
5977I wonder what Luke Harrison will say?
5977I wonder what he want anyway?
5977I''ve lost my pocketbook,said Harry.."How much was there in it?"
5977If you are not otherwise occupied, will you accompany me to my room?
5977In history?
5977Is Luke Harrison at home?
5977Is he trustworthy?
5977Is he your son?
5977Is n''t he?
5977Is n''t that rather steep?
5977Is n''t there any shoe shop where I could get in?
5977Is she dead, Hiram?
5977Is she in the barn?
5977Is she so bad as that?
5977Is that all? 5977 Is that the cheapest you have?"
5977Is that your dog?
5977Is the squire at home?
5977Is there any chance, do you think?
5977Is there anything by which you can identify any of the bills?
5977Is this horse yours?
5977Is this your first appearance as a magician?
5977Is your book interesting, Harry?
5977Is your father living?
5977It is the life of Franklin, is n''t it?
5977It wo n''t trouble your family too much, will it?
5977It''s a pretty thing, Merrill,said Luke, struck by it;"what''s your price for a pair off of it?"
5977It''s about Benjamin Franklin, is n''t it?
5977Just credit me with that on the bill, will you?
5977Leave home? 5977 Left your overcoat at home, did n''t you?"
5977Let me see,he said,"how much are they?"
5977Look here, has Walton been talking against me?
5977Luke,said Mr. Merrill, looking him steadily in the eye,"where did you get that money you paid me?"
5977Massy sakes, what do you want of it?
5977May I go too, father?
5977May n''t I sit up a little longer?
5977Mean what for you?
5977Merrill''s making them, is n''t he?
5977Merrill,said he,"have you got in any new goods?
5977More wages?
5977More''n ten dollars?
5977Must I lose my overcoat, too?
5977No; what makes you think so?
5977Not now?
5977Now tell me what it was that detained you?
5977Now we are all ready,said Professor Henderson,"Would you like to drive?"
5977Now what do you do next?
5977Now when will you pay the rest?
5977Now, Ephraim, do you think you can explain it?
5977Now, my son, what is it?
5977Now, supposing Luke has taken this money, how is he likely to spend it?
5977On a farm?
5977Out of three dollars a week?
5977So you are his treasurer, are you?
5977So you thought you would leave home and try something else?
5977So you wo n''t hire out the boy?
5977Such as what?
5977Suppose I take my motto? 5977 Suppose he does, what do you want me to do?"
5977Suppose he says no?
5977Suppose you are sick, Harry?
5977Suppose you do n''t get work?
5977Suppose you fail?
5977Take your overcoat alone,said Jeff;"or will you come up and get after breakfast?"
5977Then ca n''t I take any book to- night?
5977Then where did it come from?
5977Then why did you leave him?
5977Then why wo n''t you lend it to me?
5977Then you like learning?
5977This is a very pretty pistol, is n''t it? 5977 Through the square and cube root?"
5977To buy cigars?
5977To school? 5977 To- day?"
5977Was it yours?
5977Was it yours?
5977Was n''t there anything that could have saved her?
5977Was you a- meanin''to pay anything down?
5977Well, Luke, what do you say to that?
5977Well, Merrill, what do you want to see me about?
5977Well, neighbor Walton, so the cow''s sick?
5977Well, what have you got? 5977 Were you ever a soldier?"
5977Were you ever there?
5977What are they?
5977What are you doing, then?
5977What are you going to do next?
5977What are you going to do?
5977What brings you here, Harry?
5977What business is he in?
5977What can I do for you, sir?
5977What can I do for you?
5977What can you save out of that?
5977What could you do, Tom?
5977What did he say?
5977What did you do before?
5977What did you do?
5977What did you say?
5977What did you say?
5977What did you think?
5977What do you ask for her, squire?
5977What do you charge for your rolls?
5977What do you do that for?
5977What do you do?
5977What do you hear from that boy of yours? 5977 What do you mean by that?"
5977What do you mean? 5977 What do you think has become of it?"
5977What do you think of her, neighbor Perkins?
5977What do you think she is really worth?
5977What do you think, Bob?
5977What do you think?
5977What do you want to know for?
5977What do you want to tie my hands for?
5977What do you want, then?
5977What do you want?
5977What does he say, father?
5977What does he say?
5977What excuse will he have now?
5977What for?
5977What have I to do with that?
5977What have we here?
5977What have you got for us to- day, mother?
5977What if I do,said Luke, sharply,"as long as I am going to pay for them?"
5977What is her name?
5977What is it you want me to do, sir?
5977What is it?
5977What is it?
5977What is it?
5977What is its value?
5977What is that for?
5977What is the matter, Hiram?
5977What is the prize?
5977What is there to pay?
5977What is your name?
5977What is your name?
5977What is your name?
5977What kind of store is it you are going into?
5977What kind of work?
5977What made you come here, General Jackson?
5977What made you go there?
5977What makes you ask me that question? 5977 What makes you think so?"
5977What makes you think so?
5977What prize?
5977What put it into your head?
5977What sort of a place is Granton, where you come from?
5977What sort of one do you want-- pretty nice?
5977What subject shall I take?
5977What success, Harry?
5977What time is it?
5977What wages did he offer?
5977What was he talking about?
5977What was the matter?
5977What was your lesson to- day?
5977What''s happened?
5977What''s his name?
5977What''s that?
5977What''s the matter, Caesar?
5977What''s the matter?
5977What''s the use of being stingy, Harry? 5977 What''s what?"
5977What, at the old crazy man''s that lives down here a piece?
5977What, away from home?
5977What, the magician?
5977When are your pants going to be ready?
5977When can you have the job finished?
5977When did she die?
5977When do you expect to be President again?
5977When was the last letter received?
5977When will it be given?
5977When will you have them done?
5977Where are you going, Hiram?
5977Where are you going, Walton?
5977Where are you going?
5977Where did I get the money?
5977Where did this horse come from?
5977Where did you come from, Harry?
5977Where did you come from?
5977Where did you get it?
5977Where did you get that coat, Walton?
5977Where did you get this letter?
5977Where do you expect to go?
5977Where do you sleep?
5977Where do you think I could raise money, Squire?
5977Where do you think he is gone?
5977Where do you think of going, Harry? 5977 Where do you think you lost the money?"
5977Where does Mr. Leavitt live?
5977Where does he think I am going?
5977Where is he stopping?
5977Where is that?
5977Where''d he get it? 5977 Where''ll you get the money?"
5977Where''s Luke Harrison?
5977Who are you?
5977Who did it?
5977Who ever heerd the like?
5977Who is he?
5977Who is the boy that called at my house?
5977Who would?
5977Who''s the boy?
5977Who''s there?
5977Why ca n''t he, attend upon you?
5977Why could n''t you help it, I''d like to know?
5977Why did n''t he take you?
5977Why did n''t you tell him you had found it?
5977Why did n''t you wake me up?
5977Why do n''t he say something?
5977Why do n''t you borrer somewhere?
5977Why do n''t you keep on?
5977Why do n''t you work for him?
5977Why do you need to borrow of me? 5977 Why is it different?
5977Why is it singular?
5977Why not now? 5977 Why not?
5977Why not? 5977 Why not?"
5977Why not?
5977Why not?
5977Why, Caesar,he called,"what is the matter with you?"
5977Why, you hain''t hired out your boy to anybody else, have you?
5977Why-- didn''t you take the measure right?
5977Will any lady lend me a ring?
5977Will any young gentleman come forward and assist me in the next trick?
5977Will he insist on that condition?
5977Will you explain how you did it? 5977 Will you let me go now, sir?"
5977Will you swear to that?
5977Will you tell me something of your circumstances? 5977 Wo n''t you get in and ride?
5977Wo n''t you hire me?
5977Wo n''t you?
5977Wo n''t you?
5977Wo n''t you?
5977Would n''t it be possible for me to earn money enough to pay for the cow in six months? 5977 Would you rob me?"
5977Yes,said the old man;"and you wo n''t tell anybody, will you?"
5977Yes; What of it?
5977You ai n''t afraid of me, are you?
5977You are not such a fool as to go without one when you have money in your pocket, are you?
5977You did n''t come from there this morning?
5977You did n''t enjoy the prospect, did you?
5977You do n''t expect him-- do you?
5977You do n''t know enough to hurt you, do you, Luke?
5977You do n''t mean to say you''ve lost all that?
5977You do n''t want to leave home, do you?
5977You have n''t concluded to sit up all night, have you?
5977You have n''t got more?
5977You have n''t got so far along, hey?
5977You have n''t run away from home?
5977You have n''t tried, have you?
5977You have n''t? 5977 You have n''t?
5977You like that better than working on a farm, then?
5977You mean working on your father''s land, I suppose?
5977You pay him ten dollars a month, do n''t you?
5977You plague him, do n''t you?
5977You were President once, I believe?
5977You''ll have most of it ready, wo n''t you?
5977You''ll let in your friends for nothing, wo n''t you?
5977You''ll let me in free, to- night, wo n''t you?
5977You''re most eighty, ai n''t you?
5977You, Harry?
5977''Tisn''t counterfeit, is it?"
5977Ah, Harry Walton, how came you here?
5977Anybody might get ink on a bill, might n''t he?"
5977Are you going, mother?"
5977Are you quick at figures?"
5977Are you tied?"
5977Are you willing to remain with me?"
5977Are you working in this town?"
5977Bates?"
5977Been a- doin''well, has he?"
5977But how will you get back?"
5977CHAPTER V. THE PRIZE WINNER"Are you going to the examination to- day, mother?"
5977Ca n''t you take my word?"
5977Can remember?"
5977Can you do it?"
5977Can you fire a pistol?"
5977Can you tell me the right road to Pentland?
5977Colman,"--turning to a young man present at the time--"did you see Luke Harrison pay me this money?"
5977Could he get work in any other shop?
5977Could he have left it on the counter?
5977Do n''t he know how to read and write and cipher?"
5977Do n''t you see that?"
5977Do you go to France to- morrow?"
5977Do you handle all the money?"
5977Do you intend to take out books often from the library?"
5977Do you know, mother, he was a poor boy, and he worked his way up?"
5977Do you live about here?"
5977Do you mean to be a printer?"
5977Do you see this piece of gold?"
5977Do you take books out of the library?"
5977Do you want an office?"
5977Does he go to school?"
5977Got the prize, did n''t you?"
5977Had n''t you better go back to Merrill?"
5977Harry told his story, Mr. Leavitt listening attentively"And you came right home?"
5977Has he got all them names?"
5977Have n''t you got a father?"
5977Have n''t you got as much?"
5977Have you any idea?"
5977Have you any plans at all, or any idea what you would like to do?"
5977Have you ever practiced writing compositions?"
5977Have you got a good place?"
5977Have you got any hot water in the house?"
5977Have you seen it?"
5977Have you the rest?"
5977Hayden?"
5977He came back here, did n''t he?"
5977He went up to her, and said, politely,"Madam, will you kindly lend me your bonnet?"
5977Hev you got the ten dollars that you agreed to pay ef you could n''t meet the note?"
5977How do you sell your apples?"
5977How far do you go, ma''am?"
5977How long have you been working for Professor Henderson?"
5977How much did he have?"
5977How much do you earn a week?"
5977How much is to pay?"
5977How much will it cost?"
5977How should I have seen it?"
5977How soon do you start?"
5977How''s the cow a- doin''?"
5977I suppose you''ll be ready?"
5977IN THE TAILOR''S POWER"Is that the bill you spoke of, Walton?"
5977Is he doin''well?"
5977Is he industrious?"
5977Is it a good business?"
5977Is it a large place?"
5977Is it because of the hard work?"
5977Is it the gold piece?"
5977Is n''t it good money?
5977Is n''t it most time to take your medicine?"
5977It was prepaid in the city?"
5977Just measure me, will you?"
5977Le''me see, how long is it since I sold her to ye?"
5977Leavitt?"
5977Luke opened it and read as follows:"Will you call at my shop at seven this evening about the pants you ordered?
5977Merrill?"
5977Morgan?"
5977Mr. Leavitt''s son is in a store in Boston, is he not?"
5977Now, father, what do you say?"
5977Now, tell me if you are at work, or do you attend school?"
5977PAGES FROM THE PAST"What will the old lady think of you?"
5977School through, ai n''t it?"
5977Shall you come round to the hall, to- night?"
5977So you are his assistant, are you?"
5977So you''ve got to have a cow?"
5977So you''ve made money, have ye?"
5977Suppose they ca n''t have them done by the ready to start?"
5977THE REWARD OF FIDELITY"Where am I?"
5977That''s better than walking, is n''t it?"
5977The squire fixed his eyes cunningly on his intended victim, and said,"Goin''to buy one in town?"
5977The thin white hair, uncombed, gave a wild appearance to the owner, who, in a thin, shrill voice, demanded,"Who are you?"
5977Then there wa''n''t nobody in the trunk?"
5977They are done, ai n''t they?"
5977Wall, neighbor, what do you say to goin''out to see the cow?"
5977Was he to be successful or not?
5977Was that all you woke me up about?"
5977Was that why you left Merrill?"
5977Well, what will be the first period?"
5977Were all his bright dreams of future success to terminate in this?
5977What are you doin''there, Harry?
5977What are you going to do about it?"
5977What do you do first?"
5977What do you say to fifty dollars?"
5977What do you say?
5977What does he want?"
5977What does she lick you with?"
5977What have you done with the rest of it?"
5977What have you done with those bills you had this afternoon?"
5977What have you got to say about it, old women?"
5977What is it?"
5977What is your answer?"
5977What is yours?"
5977What made him crazy?"
5977What was she wuth?"
5977What was the name of the place?"
5977What will be the consequence?"
5977What''s that?''
5977When are you going to pay it?"
5977When did you have it last?"
5977When did you reach town?"
5977When do you want to go?"
5977When do you want to take the cow?"
5977When he came to Harry; he asked,"What do you propose to study?"
5977When he came to this part of the entertainment, he said:"Will any young gentleman assist me?"
5977When should I get the money again?"
5977When will you have the pants done?"
5977Where did you get that answer?"
5977Where is he?
5977Where''s he goin''?"
5977Where?"
5977Who are you?"
5977Who ever heard of a boy of fifteen who had an objection to travel?
5977Why could he not form a private class, to meet in the evening, to be instructed in advanced arithmetic, or, if desired, in Latin and Greek?
5977Why should he not give it to him?
5977Why, he is going to give an entertainment here to- night, is n''t he?"
5977Will that answer?"
5977Will that be satisfactory?"
5977Will you answer me truly?"
5977Will you go to work for him at three dollars a month?"
5977Will you unlock it?"
5977Wo n''t it be too much for you after teachin''in the daytime?"
5977You did n''t find it in any arithmetic, did you?"
5977You do n''t live in this village, do you?"
5977You do n''t want any help, do you, squire?
5977You wo n''t mind sleeping with me?"
5977You wo n''t tell, will you?"
5977You would n''t exchange, would you?"
5977You''ll have my coat done soon?"
5977exclaimed Mrs. Walton"What does the boy know about magic?"
5977repeated his mother, in surprise,"what could you do to earn the money?"
59640''William Tell,''hey?
59640After all,said the doctor inwardly,"am I my brother''s keeper?
59640Ah, thin, I''ve been investin''--investin''in stocks-- or is it shares, I dinnaw?
59640Ah? 59640 Ai n''t I right, John?
59640And she refused him? 59640 And who was Capoul?"
59640And_ I''m_ simply having the most_ awful_ time-- you do n''t know of a good cook, do you, Huddesley?
59640Arch? 59640 Are any of you related to them?
59640Are they nice? 59640 Are you another detective, sir?"
59640As we went back to the house, I said to the colonel:''That was rather startling, was n''t it, being shouted at to halt that way?'' 59640 Bad men to throw stones at, on the whole----""Champagne, sir?"
59640Beg parding, Mr. Breckinridge, sir, but you ai n''t goin''to give hup the plays on haccount of Mr. Theodore, are you?
59640Beg parding, sir, did you say----?
59640Billy Rice?
59640Bob? 59640 But right now you''re not going near Mrs. Pallinder, d''ye hear me?
59640But was n''t that last a funny thing for a man like that to say? 59640 But why do you suppose Gwynne----?"
59640But, beg parding, sir,''ow''ll you hexplain?
59640Cents or dollars, ma''am?
59640Could n''t you give him some stuff-- something strong that would bring him around, Doctor?
59640Did Muriel ask after any of us?
59640Did they laugh at Teddy?
59640Did you ever see her, Cousin Charlotte?
59640Did you say he''d gone out? 59640 Do I understand that Huddesley has got himself in trouble owing someone?"
59640Do n''t you remember me-- Judd-- don''t you remember me at the bank?
59640Do you need money, Cousin Eleanor?
59640Do you remember what she wore, Doctor?
59640Do you suppose I''ll ever get home with this thing?
59640Do you suppose Mr. Potter really looks at all like a detective?
59640Do you suppose he really did''square it''after he got out?
59640Doctor Vardaman?
59640Does n''t he ever talk to you about Governor Gwynne? 59640 Does n''t your father ever tell you about him-- what a great man he was, and all?"
59640Ever think of investing, Doctor?
59640Fiddle- de- dee, what''s the difference? 59640 Fresh paint?"
59640Funny they do n''t teach''em to_ dance_, on the other side, is n''t it?
59640Gloves?
59640Good- bye, Doctor; you''ll come up this evening, anyway?
59640Got himself good and tanked, did n''t he?
59640Has Tim got well? 59640 Has she changed much?"
59640Have they got a telephone? 59640 Have they got someone to take his place?"
59640Have you talked to Mr. Templeton? 59640 He ai n''t dangerous, is he?"
59640He went the kilt one better, did n''t he?
59640Here''s a nice how- de- do, now what''s to be done?
59640Hey? 59640 Hey?
59640Hey?
59640Hock, sir? 59640 Hope you ai n''t forgetting that it''s Sam''s money, too, you''ve been letting go all this year and a half?"
59640How could Huddesley-- what possible motive----?
59640How do you do, Mr. Carson? 59640 How is Bob doing?"
59640How long you had him anyway, Doc.?
59640How old she''s beginning to look, is n''t she?
59640Huddesley got the necklace?
59640Huddesley is n''t likely to get mixed up about it, is he?
59640Huddesley? 59640 Huddesley?"
59640I do n''t understand?
59640I repeat, sir, no Southern gentleman----"If we had the money, do n''t you suppose we''d pay your old bill?
59640I should think anybody''d like it, would n''t you?
59640I''d have asked his opinion anyhow-- I meant to-- that''s what I''m here for----"You have n''t been to the Pallinders''then?
59640Is Doctor Vardaman there?
59640Is anyone hurt or sick?
59640Is it a telegram? 59640 Is that package the diamonds?
59640Is that you, Doctor? 59640 Is the fellow that owes you responsible-- solid, I mean, you know?"
59640Is-- ah-- is this your card, sir?
59640Is_ that_ it? 59640 It''s a lie, ai n''t it, Hannah?"
59640It''s a pity about that young Peters''folks being that way, so many of''em, ai n''t it?
59640It_ is_ pretty, is n''t it?
59640Kind of stagey, was n''t he?
59640Look here, how do you happen to be here yet, my son? 59640 Louise?
59640Mazie was n''t with them, was she?
59640Mazie''s grandmother is not-- well-- er-- she''s not at all-- you know?
59640Me? 59640 Me?"
59640Miss Pallinder?
59640Most of your American jokes are like that, are n''t they? 59640 My Lord, Mr. Gwynne, whatever is the matter?"
59640Nice job for the Pallinders, is n''t it? 59640 No, you do n''t say?
59640Nobody''s sick, is there?
59640Now what is it you want me to tell Gwynne? 59640 Oh, Lord, that was n''t a client, Doctor, that old creature-- what was her name now, MacGonigal, MacGilligan, MacSomething?
59640Oh, Mr. Carson, we-- I ought to give Huddesley something, ought n''t I? 59640 Oh, is n''t it?"
59640Oh, look here, it has''John to Louise, June, 1839,''on it,''John to Louise''--who was that, do you suppose?
59640Pardon me, Mrs. Botlisch, you were saying----?
59640Save trouble how?
59640Say, Huddesley, did n''t you see me shake my head when you gave Mr. Johns that last glass? 59640 Say, Teddy''s had a lot of substitutes this evening, has n''t he?
59640Say, have you heard anything more about the colonel? 59640 Shall you be going up to Mrs. Pallinder''s to dinner this evening, sir?"
59640She looked more like Mrs. Langtry, did n''t she?
59640She? 59640 Sir?"
59640Somebody hurt?
59640Taylor-- what Taylor?
59640Teddy''s part-- the part Huddesley contrived to get himself substituted in, was that of a butler who steals the diamonds----"_ Well_, WELL?
59640Tell that Hopple man, will you?
59640Templeton, their agent, has a desk with us-- do you know_ him_?
59640That fellow can hump, ca n''t he?
59640That him?
59640That old Gwynne feller''s crazy, ai n''t he?
59640That''s all right, Mr. Taylor, you just sit right down in your chair-- it''s a nice chair; you just sit right down, now wo n''t you?
59640The question is, what next?
59640The wistaria on the dining- room porch is going to bloom, do n''t you want to see it?
59640There is something you wanted to see me about, Cousin Mollie?
59640There''s been a fuss with the Colonel, has there? 59640 They ai n''t but that one Pallinder in town, is there?"
59640They keep it up pretty late, do n''t they? 59640 This here party, Doc., I guess it was goin''to be pretty swell, was n''t it?
59640WHEN?
59640Waiting to see Gwynne?
59640Was it? 59640 Was that slang?"
59640Was that your last place?
59640We''d better start out to see them, the Pallinders, you know-- right away, had n''t we?
59640Well, I guess I wo n''t wait-- if you''ll be so kind as to tell him I was here? 59640 Well, but what''s all this got to do with Gwynne?"
59640Well, but whose advice_ did_ you take?
59640Well, what''s happened?
59640Well, who from then?
59640Well?
59640Were n''t you frightened?
59640Were you looking for him?
59640What I want to know is, what are we going to do now?
59640What about the Pallinders_ now_?
59640What are they going to do with things like that?
59640What did you think of it?
59640What have you been doing since?
59640What have you been doing?
59640What is his business, Gwynne?
59640What is the bottom of all this? 59640 What is your name?"
59640What on earth do you suppose has happened?
59640What on earth is the boy arguing with himself about?
59640What you got there, Johnny?
59640What''s the matter? 59640 What, all of us?
59640What, behind? 59640 What, it is n''t?
59640What-- what''s that you say?
59640What? 59640 When he went?"
59640When he went?
59640Where did you get it? 59640 Who for?"
59640Who''s that, Huddesley?
59640Why are those rods there?
59640Why did you leave it? 59640 Why do I wear the kilt and all the rest of it?
59640Why do n''t they tell''em to go home, and let us have a little peace and quiet?
59640Why do n''t you believe us? 59640 Why not let the Dutchman have it?
59640Why not, if he''s funny?
59640Why, I''ve been to Doctor Vardaman''s, mister, how''d you s''pose I happened to come here?
59640Why, how could he? 59640 Why, no, why should it?
59640Why, no-- what for?
59640Why, yes, especially in''Tell,''do n''t_ you_?
59640Will you come with me over to Pallinder''s office now?
59640Will you drive me into the street?
59640Wo n''t you sit down, Mr. Grimm? 59640 Yes, Huddesley, had him about eight or ten weeks, ai n''t you?
59640Yes, and what do you think that daughter of mine said to me the other day? 59640 Yes, what is it?"
59640Yes-- very unfortunate, was n''t it?
59640Yez will have yer joke, now, wo n''t ye, Docthor?
59640You all think Mr. Johns is very good in his part, do n''t you?
59640You have a reference?
59640You have n''t been there yet?
59640You mean it was braided?
59640You mean to the house? 59640 You surely asked_ somebody_ besides Caleb What''s- his- name?
59640You wanted to see me about something, Cousin Eleanor?
59640You''re not going?
59640You''re not going?
59640You''ve talked to Pall----?
59640You-- you''re not vexed, are you?
59640You_ will_ come to dinner, wo n''t you, Mr. Gwynne? 59640 _ Do n''t_ you?
59640_ So_ interesting, is n''t it? 59640 _ What!_ Did n''t you_ know_?
59640''An''what''ll th''docthor be doin''for somewan to clear- starch his shirrts th''way he loikes?
59640''Do you think my stock is all right?
59640''E''as''ad a leetle too much, ai n''t''e?
59640''I know_ you_, Mr. Gwynne; you''re Governor Gwynne''s cousin, and that''s good enough for me, or anybody----''""Who''s Jake Bennett?"
59640''If you''ll partake, sir----?''
59640''Is this your chicken- thief, Huddesley?''
59640''It''s a riddle, is n''t it?
59640''Lordy, Mistah Pallindah, you would n''t tu''n me off for not gwine to yo''doctah?''
59640''Muriel''_ is n''t_ that_ English_?
59640''Now ca n''t you say something nice to_ me_?''
59640''Oh, Lord, Colonel Pallinder, sir, is it you?''
59640''Really?''
59640''Really?''
59640''Say, you do n''t mind asking questions, do you?''
59640''What on earth is all this?''
59640''Who are you?''
59640''Why, good heavens, my child,''I said,''do you think I''m_ made_ of money?
59640''You mean you were the burglar all the time?''
59640''You were the burglar?''
59640''s voice?"
59640("Now was n''t that_ Gwynne_ all over?"
59640After all, he''s had a pretty hard time for a young man-- he''s not over thirty, I think-- what would you have?
59640All ready?"
59640Am-- Am-- Amirkhanian-- there, now, what do you think of_ that_?"
59640And Miss Baxter, too-- what will_ she_ think?
59640And Mr. Peters is such a dear, is n''t he?
59640And Mrs. Botlisch began again:"What''s the matter?
59640And Sam-- was Sam"queer"?
59640And anyway my name''s Peters-- Gwynne''s just my given name-- so it would n''t be true, see?"
59640And as they walked away, the doctor heard Bob say,"Is n''t Huddesley_ immense_, though?
59640And he went right on, without paying much attention,''Ah, indeed?''
59640And of whom had he been thinking, if not solely of himself?
59640And then the darky waiter got hold of it somehow, and wore it to the party?
59640And we-- we bought some stock, Gwynne-- it was''Phosphate''--a mine, or was it a well, Sister Mollie?
59640And what have you been doing in the meantime?"
59640And what on earth ought I to do?"
59640And when Mrs. Gwynne went away she said she''d had a_ lovely_ time-- wasn''t it nice of her?
59640And when at last the smoke of conflict lifted, where were the Pallinders?
59640And where are the snows of yester- year?
59640And you pay that manure- fellow as soon as you get home, will you?"
59640And, besides, what was there to blush about?
59640Any doctor will always pull an ass out of a ditch on the Sabbath day-- what''s that they say about the letter of the law killing the spirit?
59640Are ladies taught these things from their cradles?
59640Are we grown better, or only more prudent?
59640At that very moment, the length of the table away, Archie Lewis was saying,"Suppose you''ve heard that about Gwynne Peters, Doctor?"
59640B. with increasing mildness,"perhaps you will be good enough to explain what you are doing here?"
59640B. wrote the verses-- it''s awfully funny, do n''t you think, Muriel?
59640B., Muriel?"
59640B.?
59640B.?
59640B.?"
59640B.?"
59640Bob Carson had it, did n''t he?"
59640Botlisch?"
59640Breckinridge, do n''t you know me?''
59640But I-- I should like to ask you if you have ever had any business dealings with Colonel Pallinder?
59640But Steven, eying him, suddenly growled out,"You''re Judge Lewis''son, ai n''t you?"
59640But did n''t you ever have any suspicions?"
59640But has Gwynne ever mentioned Mrs. Pallinder to her?
59640But he''ll be along in a little while, I dare say,"said the doctor easily-- and wondered within him what Steven was about_ now_?
59640But if the men were a weird crew, what were we?
59640But that''s one of the things they''re laughing at; is n''t that funny?"
59640But what do you think Pallinder did?
59640But who''s going to tell''em?"
59640But who, indeed, young or old, is not somewhat moved by the brave and sad and beautiful words of the Service?
59640But you know that song you sing in''Tell,''''The Maiden on the Icy Plank,''that first verse-- would you mind explaining?
59640But, say, did n''t I play it smooth?
59640Ca n''t anybody-- can''t one of you fellows take his part?
59640Ca n''t you hear the bell?"
59640Ca n''t you_ see_?
59640Can I do anything?"
59640Carson?"
59640Carson?"
59640Come here to Cousin Jennie, dearie; what have you got there?
59640Come home and take lunch with us, wo n''t you, Doctor?"
59640D''ye suppose Adam, the great father of mankind, wore gloves?
59640Did I, or did I not write you, answer me that?"
59640Did n''t it strike you as kinder queer he should''a''been so well up in the stage- business?
59640Did she enjoy listening to old Steven''s dreary, everlasting talk?
59640Did you know that all these boys have been going down to your house to get Huddesley to hear them their parts?"
59640Did you meet the old lady-- Mrs. Botlisch?
59640Did you say you were looking for Huddesley, Mr. Grimm?
59640Did you tell him about this?"
59640Do n''t you know whether he''s in or not?
59640Do n''t you know you may disturb your Aunt Caroline?"
59640Do n''t you remember?"
59640Do n''t you think there''s some mistake?"
59640Do n''t you want me to enjoy the comedy?"
59640Do you suppose Adam wore mittens?"
59640Do you suppose anyone suspects?"
59640Do you suppose he ever asked her, though?"
59640Do you suppose it was a good likeness?
59640Do you suppose she has ever heard that those blue India- ware plant- tubs, those great big elegant things were intended to be given to Lucien''s wife?
59640Do you think four dips of that is going to cure six- foot- two of nigger?
59640Doctor Vardaman, how-- in-- thunder, now--_how_--_in_--_thunder_ do you suppose they came to have that-- that----?"
59640Does n''t anybody ever tell you to remember that you''re a Gwynne?"
59640Dozens of others are daily doing the same thing; why not?
59640Drag their noble name through the mud and riot of a Common Pleas suit?
59640Eh, Louise?"
59640Eh?
59640Eh?
59640Faith, there''s stocks an''_ stocks_, think o''that, now?"
59640Five dollars?
59640For coming this evening?
59640Give up the game, and so betray her husband''s interests, or engage in a little harmless flirtation to put off the hour of his reckoning?
59640Go ahead, Mr. Grimm, what do you want?"
59640Good Heavens, do you suppose the doctor expects us to eat all that pudding and jelly stuff, and fruit and nuts and cheese into the bargain?
59640Gwynne, dear, how did you get that great black bruise on your forehead?"
59640Gwynne?"
59640Gwynne?''
59640Has n''t he, girls?"
59640Have n''t you heard about the fuss with Pallinder and all?"
59640Have n''t you made enough by this last deal in Phosphate to satisfy you_ yet_?''
59640Have we not seen them rejecting poor Silberberg''s offer with contumely?
59640Have you seen Miss Pallinder?
59640He called to the carpenters to stop their racket; it was warm, was n''t it?
59640He cleared his throat, and said yes, he had heard about the robbery-- they did n''t get anything after all, did they?
59640He gave it to Tom Corwin, did n''t he?
59640He hails a friend:"Hi, Joe, want to ride?"
59640He menaced them with a closed fist; and they went on shamelessly:_ Gessler_(_ in a loud voice_)--Who are these fellows?
59640He ought to sue, ought n''t he, John?"
59640He paused and then some indefinable feeling prompted him to add:"Fine office Colonel Pallinder has, has n''t he?
59640He took an''wrote,''Why am I like Desdemona?
59640He was generous to the last penny-- with money that was shadily come by, to be sure, but what would you have?
59640He wrote just that:''Why am I like Desdemona?''
59640He''d have Hannah get us something, some lemonade, would n''t we like it?
59640He''s dropped out of the play-- did you know?"
59640He''s short and stout and wears spectacles, does n''t he?"
59640He''s your real agent, you know; he does the collecting, does n''t he?
59640Her father is Sir Julian-- no, it''s Lucien-- no, Mr. Peters, I believe my eyes are failing-- can you make out what that word is?"
59640Here, Ollie Hunt-- or you, Joe?"
59640Here, you, one- o''-the- finest, what''s your name?"
59640How can I sit in judgment on him?
59640How dare you say that, Sam?
59640How dare you tell?"
59640How did it happen you did n''t go to dinner at Doctor Vardaman''s with the others?"
59640How much had she overheard?
59640How''d that happen?"
59640Huddesley, you can get us up something, ca n''t you?"
59640I asked him if he had ever been to see his great- grandfather''s portrait in the State- House?
59640I mean ladies all diked out with diamond earrings an''breast- pins, hey?"
59640I mean-- anybody we''d_ know_?"
59640I saw Gwynne Peters on the street to- day----""Hock or madeira, sir?"
59640I should n''t have known what to ask for, you know; why, there''ve been millions and_ millions_ of plays written-- did you know that?
59640I should think your hands would be cold this weather, Cousin Steven; do n''t you want to buy a pair of gloves?"
59640I suppose you think all this--"he waved his hand around--"market- place-- beasts at Ephesus, hey?"
59640I thought she was stunning in that red dress and the diamonds-- why did n''t she put them on again?
59640I told him that there big house standin''back with them big pillows up the front, ai n''t that right?"
59640I would n''t have dreamed of suspecting Huddesley; why, he''s been in and out of the house all day long for_ weeks_, has n''t he, ma?
59640If you will oblige me with your name, sir, and the object of this visit----?"
59640If you-- you have ever bought any of his mining or''Phosphate''stocks, in short?"
59640In the hall one of the men could be heard asking what was the matter, and excuse him, but could he be of any use?
59640Irving cards and spades, though?
59640Is he going back to work?"
59640Is he here now, do you know?"
59640Is he in the house now?"
59640Is it fire?
59640Is my bonnet straight?
59640Is n''t he the_ dearest_ old gentleman?
59640Is n''t it a beauty?
59640Is n''t it funny you never see actors standing still, and looking stumped for something to do?
59640Is n''t that_ interesting_?
59640Is that all you wanted to know, Mr. Grimm?
59640Is the house took fire?"
59640Is there a picture of her?
59640Is there any other outside- doors, Doc.?"
59640Is there anything else-- any other joke, I mean, that you''d like to get at the true inwardness of?"
59640Is-- ah-- is Miss Pallinder going to come and help her mother receive?
59640It''s all in the start a man gets, ai n''t it?''"
59640It''s not bad news for anyone, is it?"
59640It_ is_ cold, is n''t it?"
59640Jack, where''re my gum- shoes, please?
59640Jack?
59640Just read that, will you?
59640Keerful, cahn''t yo''?
59640Kitty was undoubtedly a cat, but----"You''re in the play, too, are n''t you, Miss Oldham?"
59640Like you and Muriel, was n''t it?"
59640Little dark, stocky fellow; talks like he was English; says he was butler to the nobility over there-- ain''t that him?
59640Lo, the hour was arrived, but where was the man?
59640Lord, what difference does it make to you whether he turns it into a beer- garden or a cemetery?
59640Maginnis?"
59640Maginnis?"
59640Maybe it''s being sent to storage?
59640Mirandy, where are you?
59640Miss Pallinder told you about Huddesley, did n''t she?
59640Miss Pallinder, do you remember when he went?"
59640Mr. Peters had said something about them-- I think he''s_ lovely_, do n''t you?
59640Must I spank me own che- ild?"
59640Must you be going?
59640My wife sometimes accuses me of extravagance in the table, but I always say:''Well, Miranda, we''ve got to_ live_, have n''t we?''
59640No?
59640Not long since, as we were discussing it in a company, someone said:"Was n''t it awful when I fell over the jardinière right out by the footlights?"
59640Now is n''t that like Jennie Gwynne?
59640Now who are you and what do you want?"
59640Now you quit it, you hear me?"
59640Now you''re getting your December money in November, see?
59640Of what stuff are we all made?"
59640One of the boys in the office says:''Oh, come now, Mr. Scheurmann, let him down easy, knock off the eight cents, wo n''t you?''
59640Only how do they think up all the things they do?
59640Or how much guessed?
59640Pallinder''s a great friend of yours, is n''t he, Doctor?"
59640Pallinder?''
59640Public Library?"
59640Quit practice?
59640Remember what a sweet voice he had?
59640Right at the end there, where they find them, I mean?"
59640S. P.?
59640Sam?
59640Sam?
59640Say it were not such a habit, what then?
59640Say, Doc., it''s a good ways to Broadway, ai n''t it?"
59640Say, have you heard that about Gwynne Peters?"
59640Say, if I''d been different, if I''d been born and brought up like you, for instance, I''d have cut a pretty wide swath, now, would n''t I?
59640Say, maybe he ai n''t been on a bat, ai n''t he?
59640Say, you got a man named Huddesley, ai n''t you?"
59640Shall I put you down here?
59640Shall I write the English?"
59640She''s got some sparklers, you know, regular headlights; you''ve seen her wear them?
59640Shut up, will you?"
59640So she comes to me:''Oh, papa, would n''t it be nice if we could have a real tiara?
59640So we want to have some of the young men, too-- of course you, Mr. Peters, and do you think Mr. Lewis would come?
59640Somebody, recovering from the contemplation, wanted to know what"William Tell"would be like with only men in it?
59640Sounds just like Dickens, do n''t it?"
59640Steven?"
59640Tankerville,''no dinner at Doctor Vardaman''s-- who can say what might have happened instead?
59640Taylor?"
59640Taylor?"
59640Tell you, the telephone''s an institution, is n''t it?
59640Ten dollars?"
59640That admirable argument, at once so condensed and so forcible, what respectable person would dare to utter it to- day?
59640That poor tiara, what has become of it?''"
59640That seems to me a very small thing-- a woman''s duty-- what else are we for?
59640That''s a hundred and twenty apiece that''s coming to us, John, ai n''t that correct?"
59640That-- that_ settles_ it, do n''t you see?
59640The Colonel''s a great old blatherskite, is n''t he?
59640The bottle?"
59640The day came and the hour-- why was it that something invariably prevented him?
59640The fact is--_yeast_, you know,_ yeast_, well, it makes things_ rise_, and she_ fell_----''"Oh, she_ ate_ the yeast?"
59640The house?
59640The uninformed might very well inquire, as did Doctor Vardaman, what under Heaven Arnold von Winkelreid was doing in this_ galère_?
59640The veil of the sanctum was rent in twain-- what would he do or say next?
59640Then:''Will you''ave''ock with your hoysters, sir?''
59640There was a dreary odour-- an odour?
59640There wo n''t be anything coming to you from the house the first of December, understand?
59640There''re a whole lot of medicine- bottles upstairs, over three hundred-- do you think the doctor could use them?
59640There''re those three large rooms in the wing at the back, and the small one over the hall-- plenty of room, do n''t you think so, Mr. Gwynne?
59640These are whole, prosperous and victorious; these maimed, mad, dull, helpless, or hopeless-- and who is to blame?
59640These ladies must not be disturbed any more, do you understand?
59640These opinions were shared by everybody who heard the circumstances; what made us change our minds?
59640They could-- they could make oath before a notary, could n''t they?"
59640They had been given him who knows how long ago, and by whom?
59640They have to find''em on you, do n''t they?
59640They used to get him to sing''Comfort ye, my people,''in Trinity the last Sunday in Advent, do n''t you remember?
59640They would keep him from having a voice in his own proper affairs?
59640They''re always walking around, or they''ve got something in their hands to fuss with, or----""Well, that''s_ business_, is n''t it?"
59640They''re perfectly lovely people, are n''t they?
59640Think I''d be roped in by any such con game as that?
59640Those Pallinders are kind of dressy people, hey?
59640Those people?
59640Tinkleton''?
59640To be sure, Huddesley had hinted-- but what does a servant''s chatter amount to?
59640To the back?
59640Upon what bank of misty Acheron does he now perform his melodies?
59640Upstairs?
59640Was I so wise at twenty- four?
59640Was Mr. Peters''brother one of''em that died in the house?
59640Was it pleasant for Mrs. Pallinder to blarney Gwynne into forgetfulness?
59640Was it possible, he asked himself, that he ought to revise his opinion of Pallinder?
59640Was it to this party to- night?
59640Was she with them?"
59640We have changed all that; who so plain- spoken as the lady- novelist of to- day, whom everybody reads, and, what is more, discusses?
59640We''re all going down there to dinner Friday night, did you know it?"
59640Well,_ will you look_?
59640What a terrific big red nose the old boy had, did n''t he?"
59640What are you staying around here for?
59640What became of Huddesley toward the last there?"
59640What care had he given to Sam or Sam''s interests of late?
59640What could it have been?"
59640What do they do?"
59640What do you suppose they''ll do with Caroline_ now_?
59640What do you think?
59640What for?"
59640What had Mrs.--ahem!--what had those two poor women done?
59640What had the doctor done?
59640What has become of her?''"
59640What has happened?"
59640What if the Pallinders were besieged by duns, and their servants unpaid?
59640What is all that infernal din about?"
59640What is the amount, if I may----""Say, ai n''t you barking up the wrong tree?"
59640What on earth was the matter with her?
59640What ought I to give him?
59640What was it about?"
59640What was the matter with all the Gwynnes?
59640What will everybody say?
59640What will the girls think?
59640What''s that thing you''ve got on, that tight jacket thing-- or is it a-- a waist?
59640What''s that?
59640What''s the difference anyhow?
59640What''s''forcible entry,''Cousin Gwynne?"
59640When I heard someone say''The Incurables''Home?
59640When?"
59640Where his anathemas?
59640Where is he?
59640Where was his animosity?
59640Where''d he go?
59640Where''s his room?
59640Where''s that Taylor feller?"
59640Where''s the money?
59640Where''s your telephone?"
59640Who ever heard of a washerwoman with a husband that was worth anything?
59640Who is so care- free, so luxurious in his habits, so open- handed and open- hearted as the man who never pays his debts?
59640Who so wise as our young people?
59640Who was Cynara?"
59640Who was that I heard you having such a squabble with at the kitchen door yesterday afternoon, Huddesley?"
59640Who went up and drank at that sempiternally flowing spring-- who, in plain language, invested with Colonel Pallinder?
59640Who''s that upstairs?"
59640Who?"
59640Why ca n''t you finish?"
59640Why did n''t you come to me-- or Cousin Jennie?"
59640Why do n''t you come and look on a while, Maze?
59640Why do n''t you come to see_ me_, ever?
59640Why do n''t you go away?
59640Why have any circulating medium?
59640Why have any?
59640Why was he standing up?
59640Why, I thought somebody said Sam Peters was in Honduras or Alaska or somewhere-- is it the same one?
59640Why, it''s my money just as much as yours, and am_ I_ worrying?
59640Why, then the dialect was put on, like a garment; and for what reason?
59640Why, we''ve got a little business together, forgot that, hey?"
59640Why-- why-- Sam had gone-- had gone back to Canada, did n''t we know it?
59640Will anyone ever forget her appearance as_ Astarte_ at the Charity Ball?
59640Will it go any higher?
59640Will it go any lower?''
59640Will the rising generation treasure so picturesque a memory?
59640Will you kindly ask all those ladies if they''ll take account o''stock and see if they''re missing anything?"
59640Will you please let me have my chair, Cousin Steven?
59640With-- with Sam, I mean?"
59640Wo n''t something else take a rise?''
59640Would n''t it be nice if these people turned out really-- really_ nice_, so that the house would be the way it was in your grandfather''s time?"
59640Would n''t we sit down?
59640Yez did n''t see me in the Turrner Buildin''th''marrnin''?"
59640You do n''t mind our being here, do you?
59640You hear_ me_?''
59640You''d just as lief go and see Doctor Vardaman, would n''t you?"
59640You''ve been at your country- place all winter, have n''t you?"
59640You''ve been out to the house?"
59640You-- you have n''t seen him going up to the Pallinder''s, have you?"
59640_ Gessler_(_ louder, pointing to Tell_)--Who''s that fellow with the freckles?
59640_ Mercy!_ is n''t that_ awful_?
59640_ You_ can let things alone, if you choose, Mr. Peters, but_ I''m_----""What are you going to do?"
59640and was going to have all her family call on us-- wasn''t that kind?
59640but we had n''t any idea there was such a big connection; the house belongs to all of them-- did you know that?
59640it shouted,"What d''ye mean by_ this_?"
59640where''s my hundred and twenty dollars, Gwynne Peters?"
12606Change places,cries poor Lear,"_ change places_, and_ handy- dandy_, which is the justice and which the thief?"
12606Did I use that phrase? 12606 Do you believe in the existence of a God?"
12606In what condition would this country be, if appeals could be thus taken to courts and juries? 12606 May they not possibly be more successful than their mother country has been in preserving that reverence and authority which are due to the laws?
12606Shall I live here for ever?
12606That is a very large number, my friend,I said;"but how is that?"
12606Well,said I,"where are they, and what are they?"
12606What interest,asks he,"has South Carolina in a canal in Ohio?"
12606What,he exclaims, putting his argument in his favorite interrogative form,--"what is the most odious species of tyranny?
12606When did you see Dick?
12606When is he going to kill the old man?
12606Whence am I, what am I, and what is before me?
12606Why, then,he asks us,"why forego the advantages of so peculiar a situation?
12606[ 46] Have the plaintiffs lost their franchises bydue course and process of law"?
12606_ Alcibiades._ How could any one deny that? 12606 _ But must they rest here, as in the utmost effort of human genius?
12606A remarkable change has taken place since; but what did the wise and great men of all parts of the country think of slavery then?
12606Add to this the fact of its having been dated at Lynn, and mailed at Salem four days after it was dated, and who could doubt respecting it?
12606Again I ask, Why do they not meet the case?
12606Again, therefore, I ask, If he can not tell us what the Constitution is, and what it means, who can?
12606Again,"Do you believe in a future state of rewards and punishments?"
12606Agreement?
12606An American no longer?
12606And as for the local discount, do you wish it?
12606And as to the_ soundness_ of the currency, how does that stand?
12606And at a more recent date, did they ask the citizens of Cracow what change they would have in their constitution?
12606And can more than one power, in cases of this sort, give the rule, establish the system, or exercise the control?
12606And can not all these great truths be taught to children without their minds being perplexed with clashing doctrines and sectarian controversies?
12606And does he use, without stint or measure, all precedents which may augment his own power, or gratify his own wishes?
12606And does not this prove him to have had a knowledge of the conspiracy?
12606And does not this very idea of uniformity necessarily imply that the construction given by the national courts is to be the prevailing construction?
12606And does the granting of a charter, which is only done to perpetuate the trust in a more convenient manner, make any difference?
12606And have not the States granted bank charters with a condition, that, if the charter should be accepted, they would not grant others?
12606And here let me turn to the consideration of the question, What is an oath?
12606And how does it contrast with the scene now actually before us?
12606And how is it with California?
12606And how is it with the credit of our own Commonwealth?
12606And how is that inconsistent with any thing said by me now, or ever said by me?
12606And how was it in the Senate?
12606And how will they be filled?
12606And if force be used, may that force be lawfully repelled?
12606And if such provision had been made, what power, or custody, or control, would the President have possessed over them?
12606And if the war must go on, why put off longer the Declaration of Independence?
12606And in regard to the individual who addresses you,--what do his brother Whigs mean to do with him?
12606And is a press that is purchased or pensioned more free than a press that is fettered?
12606And is a reasonable check on the power of removal any thing more than a qualification of the tenure of office?
12606And is it not plain to every man?
12606And is it not so?
12606And is there any difference, in legal contemplation, between a grant of corporate franchises and a grant of tangible property?
12606And may it not fear to speak, too, when its conductors, if they speak in any but one way, may lose their means of livelihood?
12606And may not the good be preserved, and the evil still avoided?
12606And now, Mr. President, what is the reason for passing laws like these?
12606And now, Sir, I ask, if this be so, why was not this appropriation recommended to Congress by the President?
12606And now, Sir, I repeat, how is it that a State legislature acquires any power to interfere?
12606And now, Sir, how does the honorable member propose to deal with this case?
12606And now, Sir, it becomes important to ask, When was this bill, thus amended, returned to the House of Representatives?
12606And now, Sir, let me ask, when did the honorable member relinquish these early opinions and principles of his?
12606And now, Sir, what has been the conduct pursued by the Allied Powers in regard to this contest?
12606And now, let me ask, What is, in contemplation of law,"a charity"?
12606And pray, what is to constitute the suitableness of time?
12606And since we must fight it through, why not put ourselves in a state to enjoy all the benefits of victory, if we gain the victory?
12606And then there were New Mexico and Utah; what was to be done with them?
12606And this experiment, with all its cost, is to be tried, for what?
12606And this improvement,--how was it to be accomplished, and who was to accomplish it?
12606And what consolation for all this is it, that the public lands are paid for in specie?
12606And what did I do here to oppose it?
12606And what did we witness, Sir, when the administration actually commenced, in the full exercise of its authority?
12606And what has been her progress?
12606And what has been the result?
12606And what has been the subsequent practice?
12606And what is it all for?
12606And what is it?
12606And what may not an unlimited representative of the people do?
12606And what sort of a character is likely to be made by this process, this experimental system of instruction?
12606And what will be the result of opposing their re- election?
12606And what, under the operation of such a rule, may be thought of our example?
12606And when the Decalogue was delivered to the Jews, with this great announcement and command at its head, what said the inspired lawgiver?
12606And where are their rights, covenants, and stipulations expressed?
12606And where does he find any such right or any such duty?
12606And who can say that it has failed?
12606And who has authority, without law, to create an office, to fix a salary, and to pay that salary out of this money?
12606And why is it particularly set down and expressed, if any power was intended to be granted under the general words?
12606And why not?
12606And why should I not expect to be libelled?
12606And why were there not one third?
12606And why?
12606And why?
12606And why?
12606And would it not be just as easy to prevent sectarian doctrines from being preached by a clergyman, as from being taught by a layman?
12606And, Sir, how did this debate terminate?
12606And, Sir, what is its tendency but to excite this jealousy, and create groundless prejudices?
12606And, after an experience of thirty- five years, what is there which an enemy could condemn?
12606And, in the first place, what is the condition of our commerce?
12606Another important point involved in this question is, What becomes of the Christian Sabbath, in a school thus established?
12606Are all verdicts, judgments, and orders of courts null and void, if made after midnight on the day which the law prescribes as the last day?
12606Are exchanges at par, or only at the same low rates as in 1829 and other years?
12606Are fundamental changes in the frame of a government to be thus proved?
12606Are not our fathers libelled and abused by their own children?
12606Are not rewards always offered, when great and secret offences are committed?
12606Are our colleges deserted?
12606Are people to be dumb and still, through fear of overdoing?
12606Are the Crowninshields and the Knapps innocent?
12606Are the causes of alarm less now than in 1829?
12606Are the people to judge for themselves, or are others to judge for them?
12606Are these States both right?
12606Are they a sudden and violent usurpation on the rights of the States?
12606Are they prepared to defend it?
12606Are they quite new in the history of the government?
12606Are they to resign?
12606Are they true?
12606Are they willing to look it in the face, and then say they embrace it?
12606Are they worthy of belief?
12606Are we at a post which we are at liberty to desert when it becomes difficult to hold it?
12606Are we elevated, or degraded, by its operation?
12606Are we going to cut the throats of her people?
12606Are we in that condition still?
12606Are we not threatened with dissolution of the Union?
12606Are we not thrown back again, precisely, upon the old Confederation?
12606Are we not told that the laws of the government shall be openly and directly resisted?
12606Are we now looking for the time when we can charter a United States Bank with a large private subscription?
12606Are we to endanger our pacific relations?
12606Are we to go to war?
12606Are we to interfere in the Greek cause, or any other European cause?
12606Are we to stifle all these for ever?
12606Are we to suffer all these persons, many of them meritorious and respectable, to be pressed to the earth for ever, by a load of hopeless debt?
12606Are we to thrust the sword deeper and deeper into the"vital parts"of Mexico?
12606Are we yet at the mercy of State discretion and State construction?
12606Are we, then, to do nothing to save the vessel from sinking, till the chances of the winds and waves have landed us on the shore?
12606Are you, or any of you, ashamed of this great work of your fathers?
12606Are, then, these acts of the legislature, which affect only particular persons and their particular privileges, laws of the land?
12606As fathers, do we wish for our children better government, or better laws?
12606As there was no liberty in Spain, how could liberty be transmitted to Spanish colonies?
12606As to Richard''s being alone in the house, was not that known?
12606As to his being out that night, was not that known?
12606As to his returning afterwards, was not that known?
12606As to its being proposed by Joseph, was not that known?
12606As to the club, was not that known?
12606As to the daggers, was not that known?
12606As to the enormity of freehold suffrage, how long is it since Virginia, the parent of States, gave up her freehold suffrage?
12606As to the time of the murder, was not that known?
12606At what former period, under what former administration, did public officers of the United States thus interfere in elections?
12606Be it so; but did she propose the Carolina remedy?
12606Because they are incapable?
12606Because they are incompetent?
12606Because they are remiss, negligent, or inattentive?
12606Besides, Sir, how should it ever occur to anybody, that we should continue to export gold and silver, if we did not continue to import them also?
12606Besides, what is all this to the present purpose?
12606Between those powers questions may arise; and who shall decide them?
12606But James abdicated, and King William took the government; and how did he proceed?
12606But are not the friends of a convertible paper_ hard- money men_, in every practical and sensible meaning of the term?
12606But at present, what could the richest landholder do, against one regiment of disciplined troops?
12606But at this moment of its apparent struggle, can we as men, can we as patriots, add another stone to the weight that threatens to carry it down?
12606But bound by what?
12606But by what means is it proposed to preserve this peace?
12606But can any reasonable man doubt the expediency of this provision, or suggest a better?
12606But can that be truly called a charity which flies in the face of all the laws of God and all the usages of Christian man?
12606But did ever any man under that authority attempt to exercise a particle of official power?
12606But did not every gentleman who voted for it take the responsibility and deserve the honor of that single vote?
12606But do we need to be informed, in this country, what a_ constitution_ is?
12606But does he know how remarks of that sort will be received by the laboring people of the North?
12606But does not everybody see and know, that it was matter of absolute necessity to have a special session of the court?
12606But first, let me ask, is it not very remarkable that there is no attempt to show where Richard Crowninshield, Jr. was on that night?
12606But have not these governments as great an interest to cripple our marine, by preventing the growth of our commerce and navigation?
12606But have we gained as much as we have lost?
12606But how could they safely admit that?
12606But how has the gentleman returned this respect for others''opinions?
12606But how interpose, and what does this declaration purport?
12606But how is it now?
12606But how stands the inland frontier?
12606But how will he oppose?
12606But if the interest can not be paid without pressure, can both interest and principal be paid in four years without pressure?
12606But is not every such article the product of our own labor as truly as if we had manufactured it ourselves?
12606But is there any justice in this mode of calculation?
12606But is there yet no other way, besides These painful passages, how we may come To death, and mix with our connatural dust?
12606But it is utterly hopeless to look for such an amendment; who expects to live to see its day?
12606But now, Sir, what do we want of a greater force than we have in Mexico?
12606But now, Sir, who and what is Mr. Polk?
12606But suppose the continuance of the charter should prove beneficial to the stockholders; do they not pay for it?
12606But suppose, Sir, there was less hope than there is, would that consideration weaken the force of our obligations?
12606But the Senate sometimes_ rejects_ the new nomination; and what then becomes of the old incumbent?
12606But the laboring man, what can he hoard?
12606But the question for your honors to decide here is, What is a charity, or a charitable use, in contemplation of law?
12606But then, Sir, what relieves the case from this enormity?
12606But what did he say?
12606But what did those care who had had the benefit of their votes?
12606But what do we now see?
12606But what do we propose to do for it?
12606But what ground is there for a distinction?
12606But what have the friends and admirers of Mr. Jefferson to say to this_ appropriation_?
12606But what is your own language on this point?
12606But what law has provided for such an officer?
12606But what of that?
12606But what sort of liberty?
12606But what then?
12606But what were we to do?
12606But what, then, becomes of the interests of others?
12606But who are the innocent whom the law would protect?
12606But who can enjoy political liberty if he is deprived, permanently, of personal liberty, and the exercise of his own industry and his own faculties?
12606But who is to judge whether Congress has made this plenary exercise of power?
12606But who shall decide this question of interference?
12606But who shall reconstruct the fabric of demolished government?
12606But who, from beneath the weight of mortification and shame that would oppress him, could look up to behold it?
12606But whose act was it, in truth and reality?
12606But why is it not produced now?
12606But will they view the question in its other aspect?
12606But, Sir, do we not now see that it was time, and high time, to press this bill, and to send it to the President?
12606But, Sir, if, in the course of forty years, there have been undue effervescences of party in New England, has the same thing happened nowhere else?
12606But, Sir, is it true that the motive for these laws is such as is stated?
12606But, Sir, what is the prospect of change?
12606But, Sir, what is this danger, and what are the grounds of it?
12606But, it is asked, what could Mr. Girard have done?
12606But, then, what is labor?
12606But, then, who is to be judge of this truth and justice?
12606By the airs he gives himself?
12606By the party he belongs to?
12606By what argument, do you imagine, Gentlemen, was such a proposition maintained?
12606Can New York shut her ports to all but her own citizens?
12606Can a State grant a monopoly of trade?
12606Can a State make any thing but gold and silver a tender in payment of future debts?
12606Can any man deny that the plaintiffs had rights, under the charter, which were legally vested, and that by these acts those rights are impaired?
12606Can any one doubt this being the same evening?
12606Can any person doubt that they were there for purposes connected with this murder?
12606Can any such connection be proved upon him, can he prove it upon himself, before that time?
12606Can any thing occur to disfigure and derange the form of government under which we live more signally than that?
12606Can individuals make a currency?
12606Can individuals regulate money?
12606Can it be doubted for an instant that sentiments like these are derogatory to the Christian religion?
12606Can it so modify a debt that it shall not be always binding, in law as well as in morals?
12606Can not every man see this distinction to be consistent?
12606Can she authorize others to do it?
12606Can she refuse admission to ships of particular nations?
12606Can the courts of the United States take notice of the indulgence of a State to commit treason?
12606Can the people look for truths to partial sources, whether rendered partial through fear or through favor?
12606Can we abstain from exercising it?
12606Can we lay our heads upon our pillows, and, without self- reproach, supplicate the Almighty Mercy to forgive us our debts as we forgive our debtors?
12606Can we rely on the constancy and perseverance of the people?
12606Can we sell a dollar of it?
12606Can you conceive of any thing more enormous, any wickedness greater, than the circulation of such reports?
12606Can you conceive of crime more odious and abominable?
12606Can you, therefore, entertain a doubt that he was one of the persons seen in Brown Street?
12606Coming from what source higher than the Constitution?
12606Congress has acted on this power; it has done all that it deemed wise; and are the States now to do whatever Congress has left undone?
12606Could I do otherwise?
12606Could a State lay a stamp tax on the process of the courts of the United States, and on custom- house papers?
12606Could a State tax the_ coin_ of the United States at the mint?
12606Could he have aided the silence of his movements?
12606Could he have facilitated his retreat, on the first alarm?
12606Could he have helped him to fly?
12606Could he know, under such circumstances, whether it was ten minutes past ten, or ten minutes before eleven, when his brother spoke to him?
12606Could it tax the transportation of the mail, or the ships of war, or the ordnance, or the muniments of war, of the United States?
12606Could they have adopted a more direct method of exposing their own infamy?
12606Cut off from all hope of royal clemency, what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws?
12606Did I attempt to find any other cause than an honest one for these scruples?
12606Did I not know Massachusetts feelings and prejudices?
12606Did I retract a jot or tittle of what Mr. Forsyth had said?
12606Did I, in that speech, or any other, insist on excluding all convertible paper from the uses of society?
12606Did a man ever live that had a respect for the Christian religion, and yet had no regard for_ any one_ of its ministers?
12606Did any man ever bring a suit?
12606Did ever an officer make an arrest?
12606Did he concur, or did he non- concur, in what the perpetrator was about to do?
12606Did he do this for authority, or for a topic of reproach?
12606Did he go there by agreement, by appointment with the perpetrator?
12606Did he suppose that he should be suspected?
12606Did irredeemable bank paper ever enrich the laborious?
12606Did it aim to maintain artificial and unnatural prices?
12606Did it carry further the laws of prohibition and exclusion?
12606Did it draw closer the cords of colonial restraint?
12606Did it maintain a swollen and extravagant paper circulation?
12606Did not I commit myself in 1837 to the whole doctrine, fully, entirely?
12606Did not even- handed justice erelong commend the poisoned chalice to their own lips?
12606Did not the first Bank of the United States contain a similar restriction?
12606Did she possess a port in the Mediterranean?
12606Did she then possess Gibraltar, the key to the Mediterranean?
12606Did that system of instruction ever exist, which denounced the whole body of Christian teachers, and yet called itself a system of Christianity?
12606Did the perpetrator know he was there, there waiting?
12606Did the prisoner at the bar countenance this murder?
12606Did they bandy about the chance of life, between these two, in this way?
12606Did they exercise sovereign power?
12606Did they give information that they had been assaulted that night at Wenham?
12606Did they make hue and cry?
12606Did they mean executive power as known in England, or as known in France, or as known in Russia?
12606Did they move them?
12606Did they not soon find that for another they had"filed their mind"?
12606Did they take it as defined by Montesquieu, by Burlamaqui, or by De Lolme?
12606Did true constitutional liberty then exist?
12606Did violent fluctuations ever do good to him who depends on his daily labor for his daily bread?
12606Did we ever hear of an instance, does history record an instance, of any part of the globe Christianized by lay preachers, or"lay teachers"?
12606Did wild schemes and projects ever benefit the industrious?
12606Did you, Gentlemen, sleep quite as quietly in your beds after this murder as before?
12606Do adjectives and epithets avail any thing?
12606Do fathers find themselves less able than usual to educate their children?
12606Do n''t we call it so?
12606Do n''t we hear it avowed every day, that it would be proper also to take Sonora, Tamaulipas, and other provinces of Northern Mexico?
12606Do not some people call it a covenant with hell?
12606Do not they say that?
12606Do our constitutional rights and duties terminate where the water ceases to be salt?
12606Do public improvements favor intercourse between place and place?
12606Do they concur in any general constitutional principles?
12606Do they know the same man?
12606Do they mean to deny that Captain White is dead?
12606Do they mean to deny that the two Crowninshields and the two Knapps were conspirators?
12606Do they mean to deny the conspiracy?
12606Do they mean to deny the conspiracy?
12606Do they need further protection?
12606Do they wish to establish a_ minority_ government?
12606Do they wish to subject the will of the many to the will of the few?
12606Do we fear to stand out against him?
12606Do we hope to better our condition by change?
12606Do we mean to submit to the measures of Parliament, Boston Port Bill and all?
12606Do we mean to submit, and consent that we ourselves shall be ground to powder, and our country and its rights trodden down in the dust?
12606Do we not challenge the respect of the whole world?
12606Do we not feel ourselves on an eminence?
12606Do we not know what has been the case in this State?
12606Do we not owe it to the instrumentality of the Christian ministry?
12606Do we not see that banking capital and bank paper are enormously increasing?
12606Do we tax, or did we ever tax, the foreign holders of our public debt?
12606Do we want a man to give a better vote in Congress than Mr. Hale gives?
12606Do we wish to withhold that approbation?
12606Do we, or do we not, mean to conform to it, and to execute that part of the Constitution as well as the rest of it?
12606Do you believe Phippen Knapp against these two respectable witnesses, or them against him?
12606Do you look for the current of the Ohio to change, and to bring you and your commerce to the tidewaters of Eastern rivers?
12606Do you not see mighty motive enough on the one side, and want of all motive on the other?
12606Do you propose,--I will not put it in that form,--but would it be proper for this court to reverse that adjudication?
12606Do you, in State Street, wish that the nation should send millions of untaxed banking capital hither to increase your discounts?
12606Does Pennsylvania, New York, or Ohio tax the foreign holders of stock in the loans contracted by either of these States?
12606Does any history show property more beneficently applied?
12606Does any man doubt the purpose for which it was penned?
12606Does he admit or deny?
12606Does he admit the converse of the proposition, that we have a right to check the States?
12606Does he mean legal responsibility?
12606Does he not see how cogently he might be asked, whether it be the character of nullification to practise what it preaches?
12606Does he wish to leave an undefined impression that something was done, or something said, by me, not now capable of defence or justification?
12606Does it call itself a"compact"?
12606Does it call itself a"league,"a"confederacy,"a"subsisting treaty between the States"?
12606Does it discharge the debtor?
12606Does it not admit the power of Congress, at once, upon all these minor objects of legislation?
12606Does it not find itself affected in its credit by the general state of the credit of the country?
12606Does it not show that he had a knowledge of the object and history of the murder?
12606Does it require of a public man to refuse to concur in amending laws, because they passed against his consent?
12606Does it rest with the general government, in all or any of its departments, to exercise the office of final interpreter?
12606Does it style itself a league, confederacy, or compact between sovereign States?
12606Does not the event teach us, that the measure was not brought forward one moment too early?
12606Does not the general government comprise the same people who make up the State governments?
12606Does not the gentleman perceive, Sir, how his argument against majorities might here be retorted upon him?
12606Does not the honorable gentleman well know all this?
12606Does not this approach absurdity?
12606Does not this carry an implication of the guilt of the defendant?
12606Does not this language mean that particular sums shall be assigned by law to particular objects?
12606Does nullification teach any thing more revolutionary than that?
12606Does or can this change the nature of the charity, and turn it into a public political corporation?
12606Does repudiation pay a debt?
12606Does the President, then, reject the authority of all precedent except what it is suitable to his own purpose to use?
12606Does the gentleman affirm that I said that?
12606Does this need arguing?
12606For ourselves, we may be ready to run the hazard; but are we ready to carry the country to that length?
12606For why should Richard Crowninshield, Jr. kill Mr. White?
12606From whom does this clamor come?
12606Gentlemen, what must we do in such a case?
12606Gentlemen, will you allow me, for a moment, to advert to myself?
12606Had he any intimation of this conspiracy?
12606Had he wit enough to invent this?
12606Had the prisoner at the bar, then, a knowledge of this conspiracy or not?
12606Had they a right to annul that law?
12606Happily, this power was not granted; but suppose it had been, what would then have been the true condition of this government?
12606Has any English sovereign since Cromwell''s time dared to send such a message to Parliament?
12606Has he a dollar?
12606Has he a prerogative of dispensation which they do not possess?
12606Has he accounted for himself on that night to your satisfaction?
12606Has he admonished the country that the Union is in danger, and called on all the patriotic to come out in its support?
12606Has he anywhere discouraged them?
12606Has he anywhere rebuked them?
12606Has he come within beat of drum of any position of mine?
12606Has he disproved a fact, refuted a proposition, weakened an argument, maintained by me?
12606Has he followed the bright example of his predecessors?
12606Has he hands to labor?
12606Has he held fast by the institutions of the country?
12606Has he here stood on the ramparts, brandishing his glittering sword against assailants, and holding out a banner of defiance?
12606Has he maintained his own charges?
12606Has he proved what he alleged?
12606Has he summoned the good and the wise around him?
12606Has he sustained himself in his attack on the government, and on the history of the North, in the matter of the public lands?
12606Has his influence been exerted to inspire respect for the Constitution, and to produce obedience to the laws?
12606Has it any warrant in the practice of former times?
12606Has it been resorted to in an hour of misfortune, calamity, or peril, to save the state?
12606Has not that been our whole history?
12606Has not this been as predicted?
12606Has nullification, in its wildest flight, ever reached to an extravagance like that?
12606Has the Senate a right_ to have an opinion_ in a case of this kind?
12606Has the community lost all moral sense?
12606Has the defendant proved where he was on that night?
12606Has the gentleman found any thing by which he can make good his accusation?
12606Has the government done nothing but prey upon them, and eat out their substance?
12606Have gentlemen considered this?
12606Have not the people of New York lately amended their constitution, so as to require, in certain legislative action, votes of two thirds?
12606Have the gentleman''s State- rights opinions always kept him aloof from such unhallowed infringements of the Constitution?
12606Have they any notion of our institutions, or of_ any_ free institutions?
12606Have they any notion of popular government?
12606Have they any thing to do with the resolution of the 28th of March?
12606Have they flourished only by our neglect of them?
12606Have they forgotten, all forgotten, and wholly abandoned even all pretence for specific appropriation?
12606Have they looked at it?
12606Have they no countenance at all in the Constitution itself?
12606Have we more reliance on the patriotism, the firmness, of others, than on our own?
12606Have we yet to fight it out to the utmost, as if nothing pacific had intervened?
12606Have you ever read or known of folly equal to this?
12606He believed the embargo unconstitutional, and so did others; but what then?
12606He is asked,"Are you a Christian?"
12606He is asked,"What is your religion?"
12606He was fully aware that his end was near; and in answer to the question,''Can you now rest with firm faith upon the merits of your Divine Redeemer?''
12606He writes in a disguised hand; but could it happen that the same Grant should be in Salem that was at Belfast?
12606Here they are; what answer does he give to them?
12606His being there is a proof of his intent to aid and abet; else, why is he there?
12606His construction gets us into it; how does he propose to get us out?
12606Home, from what scene?
12606How are these questions to be settled?
12606How are they amidst the general depression?
12606How are you going to diminish it?
12606How can a State undo what the whole people have done?
12606How can she absolve her citizens from their obedience to the laws of the United States?
12606How can she annul their obligations and oaths?
12606How can the agriculturist make his own iron?
12606How can the members of her legislature renounce their own oaths?
12606How can the ship- owner grow his own hemp?
12606How can they allow her to be judge of her own obligations?
12606How can we, how dare we, make a perfect dead letter of this part of the Constitution, which we have sworn to support?
12606How can you have more proof than this?
12606How comes the general government itself_ a party_?
12606How could I be blamed for it?
12606How could Leighton have made up this conversation?
12606How could he give most effect to this statement?
12606How could he have innocently known these facts?
12606How could he have possibly known this, unless he had been there?
12606How could it exist?
12606How could that be judged of?
12606How could this fact, or these facts, have been known to Palmer, unless Frank Knapp had brought the knowledge?
12606How deep stained with blood, how reckless in crime, how deep in depravity may it be, and yet retain innocence?
12606How deprive?
12606How did Massachusetts deal with it?
12606How did he at that time read and understand the Constitution?
12606How did they conduct themselves on this occasion?
12606How did they treat this charge; like honest men, or like guilty men?
12606How do they know that?
12606How do we know the use they intended to make of it, or the kind of aid that he was to afford by being there?
12606How do you propose to defend us?
12606How does he relieve us from this difficulty, upon any principle of his?
12606How else are the secret designs of the wicked to be proved, but by their wicked companions, to whom they have disclosed them?
12606How else, Sir, is it possible that uniformity can be preserved?
12606How far are the rights of minorities there respected?
12606How has it accomplished this great and essential end?
12606How have they deserved it?
12606How have they done in the schools of New England?
12606How is each of the thirty States to defend itself?
12606How is he to be punished or impeached if he colludes with any of these banks to embezzle the public money or defraud the government?
12606How is it along the vast lakes and the mighty rivers of the North and West?
12606How is it that the means of food, clothing, and shelter are now so much more cheaply and abundantly procured than formerly?
12606How is it that they are able to meet, and in some measure overcome, universal competition?
12606How is it to be done without the consent of the previous government?
12606How is it to be done?
12606How is that virtue to be inspired, and how is that intelligence to be communicated?
12606How is the fact, that three fourths of the people are in favor of the new government, to be legally ascertained?
12606How is the motive to be ascertained?
12606How is this minority, how are these men, regarded?
12606How is this to be accomplished?
12606How is this witness able to fix the time at ten minutes past ten?
12606How little is there in it, after all, that did not appear from other sources?
12606How long is it since nobody voted for governor in New York without a freehold qualification?
12606How original?
12606How should these questions be disposed of?
12606How was it in this most important particular?
12606How, Sir, can a law be examined on any such ground?
12606How, Sir, do the ship- owners and navigators accomplish this?
12606How, Sir, were we to know that this appropriation"was in accordance with the views of the executive"?
12606How, then, can a State secede?
12606How, then, could this fact of the prisoner''s being in Brown Street be better proved?
12606How, then, shall I escape?
12606How, then, they would ask, do you propose to defend us?
12606How?
12606I am a countryman of Washington?
12606I am not saying, What do we want of a force greater than we can supply?
12606I appeal to you, Sir,( turning to Captain Benjamin Rich, who sat by him,) is not this true?
12606I ask again, Sir, is this legal responsibility?
12606I ask gentlemen who know, whether the harbor of Charleston, and the river of Savannah, be not crowded with ships seeking employment, and finding none?
12606I ask him if the power is not found there, clearly and visibly found there?
12606I ask, Sir, Is this republicanism?
12606I ask, Sir, if there can be a more irregular or a more illegal transaction than this?
12606I do not ask what remains to the few, but to the many?
12606I may ask, What nation ever reached the like prosperity without promoting foreign trade?
12606I must now beg to ask, Sir, Whence is this supposed right of the States derived?
12606I pray to know who is to put beneath my feet a freer soil than that upon which I have stood ever since I have been in public life?
12606I voted accordingly, and who doubts now the correctness of that vote?
12606I would ask the gentlemen from New Orleans, if their magnificent Mississippi does not exhibit, for furlongs, a forest of masts?
12606If Congress should abolish the whole department to- morrow, would the banks not expect the United States to replace this borrowed money?
12606If I choose to remain in the President''s councils, do these gentlemen mean to say that I cease to be a Massachusetts Whig?
12606If John Fries had produced an act of Pennsylvania, annulling the law of Congress, would it have helped his case?
12606If Mr. Dorr had had a government, what became of it?
12606If a dollar is received on that account, is not its only true destination into the general treasury of the government?
12606If all this may be done with but slight pressure on the community, what course of conduct is to accomplish it?
12606If he had nothing to do with the murder, no part to act, why not stay at home?
12606If he had said,"When did you_ see_ Dick, Frank?"
12606If he is a false man, why should he tell truths against himself?
12606If he is the people''s representative, and as such may exercise power, without any other grant, what is the limit to that power?
12606If he says he does it upon executive recommendation, where is his voucher?
12606If in Brown Street, was he there by appointment?
12606If it be not so, where is the limit, or who shall fix a boundary for the exercise of the power of the States?
12606If it be not, will it ever become so, or what disputed question ever can be settled?
12606If it ever came in, what put it out of existence?
12606If it may have an opinion, how is that opinion to be ascertained but by resolution and vote?
12606If it should, it will leave a great vacuum; and how shall that vacuum be filled?
12606If men may not resist the Spanish Inquisition, and the Turkish cimeter, what is there to which humanity must not submit?
12606If not for this purpose, what were they there for?
12606If not, how could they sanction such a vote as this?
12606If not, which is in the wrong?
12606If one bring a bill to set aside a judgment, is that judgment itself a good plea in bar to the bill?
12606If one should reason in that way, what would become of the distinguished honor of the author of the Declaration of Independence?
12606If otherwise, who is there in the whole length and breadth of the land that will care for the consistency of the present incumbent of the office?
12606If so, the second inquiry is, Was he so connected with the murder itself as that he is liable to be convicted as a_ principal_?
12606If such be the state of our commerce and navigation, what is the condition of our home manufactures?
12606If such well- known distinction exists, where are the proofs of it?
12606If the Knapps and the Crowninshields, then, were not the conspirators, who were?
12606If the President and Senate make peace, may one State, nevertheless, continue the war?
12606If the States be parties, as States, what are their rights, and what their respective covenants and stipulations?
12606If the case can not come before the courts, and if Congress be not trusted with its decision, who shall decide it?
12606If the constitutional question were made to hinge on matters of this kind, how could it ever be decided?
12606If the fact is out, why not meet it?
12606If the parties chose it, why should we doubt about it?
12606If the precise moment of actual time were to settle such a matter, it would be material to ask, Who shall settle the time?
12606If there be no power to settle such questions, independent of either of the States, is not the whole Union a rope of sand?
12606If they have, where is it?
12606If they were not received in this way, why not explain how they came by them?
12606If this be excitement, is it an unnatural or an improper excitement?
12606If this be so, what is there which has since occurred to compromit this dignity?
12606If this great_ Western Sun_ be struck out of the firmament, at what other fountain shall the lamp of liberty hereafter be lighted?
12606If this was intended to be a compact or league, and the States to be parties to it, why was it not so said?
12606If we adopt a system that withdraws capital from active employment, do we not diminish the rate of wages?
12606If we curtail the general business of society, does not every laboring man find his condition grow daily worse?
12606If we draw within the circle of our contemplation the mothers of a civilized nation, what do we see?
12606If we fail, who shall venture the repetition?
12606If we look back to the history of the commerce of this country in the early years of this government, what were our exports?
12606If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on, or to give up, the war?
12606If we still refuse, what is to be done?
12606If you find him there, can you doubt why he was there?
12606If you will not try this plan, why not propose something else?
12606If you"secede,"what do you"secede"from, and what do you"accede"to?
12606If, then, the act of removing the Secretary be not the assumption of power which the resolution declares, in what is that assumption found?
12606In his childhood and boyhood the Christian question,"Who is my neighbor?"
12606In reading such couplets we are reminded of the noted local poet of New Hampshire( or was it Maine?)
12606In such a case, under such circumstances, how did Massachusetts demean herself?
12606In that very House of Commons of which the gentleman from South Carolina has spoken with such commendation, how was it received?
12606In the name of the hundreds of thousands of our suffering fellow- citizens, I ask, for what reasonable end is this experiment to be tried?
12606In what age, by what sect, where, when, by whom, has religious truth been excluded from the education of youth?
12606In what condition has it placed us?
12606In what estimation did they hold it at the time when this Constitution was adopted?
12606Is a proved conspirator to murder innocent?
12606Is dependence on government for bread no temptation to screen its abuses?
12606Is dissolution the_ object_?
12606Is every measure of this sort, for the relief of such abuses, to be rejected?
12606Is force to be used?
12606Is he bound to consider them both right?
12606Is he not called a bloodhound on the track of the African negro?
12606Is he out of office, or is he still in?
12606Is he still in, then, or is he out?
12606Is he to be blind, though visible danger approaches?
12606Is he to be deaf, though sounds of peril fill the air?
12606Is he to be dumb, while a thousand duties impel him to raise the cry of alarm?
12606Is he to palter?
12606Is his oath less stringent than theirs?
12606Is it a law, or is it a nullity?
12606Is it a measure of remedy, yielded to the importunate cries of an agitated and distressed nation?
12606Is it either wise or safe?
12606Is it guiding, controlling, giving the rule to commerce, as a subsisting thing or is it putting an end to it altogether?
12606Is it not absolutely essential to the peace of the country that this power should exist somewhere?
12606Is it not an idea perfectly familiar, definite, and well settled?
12606Is it not doing strange violence to language to call a league or a compact between sovereign powers a_ government_?
12606Is it not money justly due to the United States, and paid, because it is so due, for the advantage of holding the deposits?
12606Is it not precisely_ objectio ejus, cujus dissolutio petitur_?
12606Is it not probable that he was in Brown Street to concur in the murder?
12606Is it not proper for us, at all times, is it not our duty, at this time, to come forth, and deny, and condemn, these monstrous principles?
12606Is it not so with respect to Texas?
12606Is it not the acknowledgment of a wish and object to create political strength by uniting political opinions geographically?
12606Is it not the preaching of ministers of the Gospel that has evangelized the more civilized part of the world?
12606Is it not to be taken for granted, that a man seeks to accomplish his own purposes?
12606Is it not true that the vote of the Liberty party taken from Mr. Clay''s vote in the State of New York made Mr. Polk President?
12606Is it on the bank power?
12606Is it possible, then, for this court, or for the court below, to know any thing of it?
12606Is it the creature of the State legislatures, or the creature of the people?
12606Is money in New Orleans now as good, or nearly so, as money in New York?
12606Is not Mr. Colman''s testimony credible, natural, and proper?
12606Is not Washington libelled and abused?
12606Is not all expectation of advantage centred in a sort of vague hope, that change may produce relief?
12606Is not all this shocking?
12606Is not the Constitution of the United States libelled and abused?
12606Is not the teaching of laymen as sectarian as the preaching of clergymen?
12606Is not the whole country looking, with the utmost anxiety, to what may be the result of these threatened courses?
12606Is not this a contract?
12606Is not this anarchy, as well as revolution?
12606Is not this conclusive, if not explained?
12606Is not this enormous?
12606Is not this revolution?
12606Is not this revolutionary?
12606Is not this the plain result?
12606Is not this the very essence of local feeling and local regard?
12606Is nullification at all more disorganizing than that?
12606Is one State to sit sole arbitress?
12606Is property more secure, or industry more certain of its reward?
12606Is success so probable as to justify it?
12606Is that penalty, or what other penalty, to be incurred by resistance to visit in time of peace?
12606Is that_ our_ liberty?
12606Is the currency_ uniform_ now?
12606Is the government of the State, on that account, not a popular government?
12606Is the obligation of that contract created by the laws of that State, or does it subsist independent of those laws?
12606Is the voice of one State conclusive?
12606Is the whole world expected to acquiesce in principles which entirely subvert the independence of nations?
12606Is there a slave, or will there ever be one, in either of those territories?
12606Is there any forty- shilling attorney here to make a question of it?
12606Is there any hope that the national sentiment will recover its accustomed tone, and restore to the government a just and efficient administration?
12606Is there any mistake about that?
12606Is there less bank paper in circulation?
12606Is there less fear of a general catastrophe?
12606Is there nobody ready to make a movement in this matter?
12606Is there nothing to be said on the other side in relation to inequality?
12606Is this a government of laws?
12606Is this doctrine, as has been alleged, of Eastern origin?
12606Is this hugging them as a favorite treasure?
12606Is this infliction of capital punishment constitutional?
12606Is this just or fair?
12606Is this language which describes the formation of a compact between States?
12606Is this legal responsibility?
12606Is this logical?
12606Is this power of organization common among orators?
12606Is this the true nature of a government with written laws and limited powers?
12606Is this true?
12606It has also been asked,"Can not Mr. Girard be allowed to have his own will, to devise his property according to his own desire?"
12606It is all there, and what is it?
12606It is certain, also, that he had more knowledge of the position of the club than this; else how could he have placed his hand on it so readily?
12606It is in the condition of a man that buys more than he sells; and how can such a traffic be maintained without ruin?
12606It is obvious, is it not, Sir?
12606It is true that at the Revolution, when all government was immediately dissolved, the people got together, and what did they do?
12606It may be asked, If a vessel may not be called on to show her papers, why does she carry papers?
12606It may now be asked, perhaps, whether the expression of our own sympathy, and that of the country, may do them good?
12606It may, in the next place, be asked, perhaps, Supposing all this to be true, what can_ we_ do?
12606It says, then, does it not?
12606Let me ask, Three or four years ago, where was he THEN?
12606March off from what?
12606March off from whom?
12606May not the twenty- three entertain an opinion as well as the twenty- fourth?
12606May not these Europeans ask us how long it may be before the national councils will repudiate public obligations?
12606May they not hope, without presumption, to preserve a greater zeal for piety and public devotion than we have alone?
12606May we fly at the approach of danger?
12606May we not crave some mercy, under favor and protection of the gentleman''s own authority?
12606Mr. President, take away this credit, and what remains?
12606Mr. President, what is the result of this?
12606Mr. Webster entered his carriage and proceeded on his journey; but Goodridge,--who has since ever heard of him?
12606Must Congress also furnish all means of commerce?
12606Must I not have been absolutely malicious, if I could have thrust myself forward, to destroy sensations thus pleasing?
12606Must it furnish weights and scales and steelyards?
12606Must not every man come to the conclusion, that these persons thus seen in Brown Street were the murderers?
12606Need I say, that that doubt respects the permanency of our Union?
12606No doubt she may be called on to show her papers; but the question is, Where, when, and by whom?
12606No doubt the executive power is vested in the President; but what and how much executive power, and how limited?
12606Now how did this question arise?
12606Now the question is,_ By what means_ is this ascertainment to be effected?
12606Now what State ever altered its constitution in any other mode?
12606Now what is here stipulated, enacted, and secured?
12606Now, Gentlemen, what infliction does the State of Mississippi suffer under?
12606Now, Sir, I ask again, What becomes of this power, if the authority of precedent be taken away?
12606Now, Sir, again, I ask the gentleman, What is to be done?
12606Now, Sir, does our legislation, under the Constitution, furnish any precedent for all this?
12606Now, Sir, how came this?
12606Now, Sir, how has the gentleman met this?
12606Now, Sir, how is it possible that this vast amount can be collected in so short a period without suffering, by any management whatever?
12606Now, Sir, is not this the exact opposite of the doctrine of the gentleman from South Carolina?
12606Now, Sir, is not this the truth of the whole matter?
12606Now, Sir, is the exercise of this power of discrimination plainly and palpably unconstitutional?
12606Now, Sir, since he claims the right to interpret the Constitution as he pleases, how can he deny the same right to them?
12606Now, Sir, what contradiction does the gentleman find to this sentiment in the speech of 1825?
12606Now, Sir, what is the common application of these words?
12606Now, Sir, what is the remedy for existing evils?
12606Now, Sir, where does the executive find its authority, in or through any department, to borrow money without authority of Congress?
12606Now, are not laymen equally sectarian in their views with clergymen?
12606Now, can any man be wild enough to make any inference from this as to the gain or loss of our trade with Holland for that year?
12606Now, does not this tend to subvert all belief in the utility of teaching the Christian religion to youth at all?
12606Now, how could individual States assert a right of concurrent legislation, in a case of this sort, without manifest encroachment and confusion?
12606Now, how was it to be dealt with?
12606Now, if he knows the time, and went home afterwards, and does not excuse himself, is not this an admission that he had a hand in this murder?
12606Now, is there reasonable doubt that Mr. Webster did see him there that night?
12606Now, is this regulating commerce, or destroying it?
12606Now, supposing this to be the_ real_, and not merely, as it is, the nominal, par of exchange between us and England, what would it prove?
12606Now, what are the undoubted facts?
12606Now, what does the testimony of these four young men amount to?
12606Now, what is the contingency?
12606Now, what is the import of this, but that Congress is to give the rule, to establish the system, to exercise the control over the subject?
12606Now, what is the inevitable consequence of this mode of reasoning?
12606Now, what is the utility or the necessity of this?
12606Now, what is this but substantially a tonnage duty, under the law of the State?
12606Now, what will be the relation between these Senators and the people they represent, or the States from which they come?
12606Now, what, in the mean time, had become of Mr. Dorr''s government?
12606Of the Bank of the United States, indeed, we may free ourselves readily; but how are we to annihilate the State banks?
12606Of what benefit to anybody?
12606Of what do we deprive them?
12606Of what nature are all rights of suffrage?
12606On these pleadings the substantial question is raised, Are these laws such as the legislature of New York has a right to pass?
12606On what other subjects did men differ?
12606On whose responsibility was it adopted?
12606Or are gentlemen ready to establish the practice, as an example for the benefit of those who are to come after us?
12606Or did they take away their constitution, laws, and liberties, by their own sovereign act?
12606Or disappointment, rather, and sore mortification,--dust and ashes, the common fate of vaulting ambition overleaping itself?
12606Or does it make any difference, whether the receipts go directly into her own treasury, or into the hands of those to whom she has made the grant?
12606Or how should he answer him who dwells perpetually on local interests, and fans every kindling flame of local prejudice?
12606Or may each of the States, as well as the general government, claim this right of ultimate decision?
12606Or through what period has your prosperity been greater, or your peace and happiness better secured?
12606Or who ever heard, before, that a gift to a college, or a hospital, or an asylum, was, in reality, nothing but a gift to the State?
12606Or, if one branch appears to encroach on the rights of the other two, have these two no power of remonstrance, complaint, or resistance?
12606Or, if she may judge of her obligations, may they not judge of their rights also?
12606Or, if they admit it, will they tell us how those who framed the Constitution fell, thus early, into this great mistake about its meaning?
12606Or, if we were to see the President issuing commissions to office to persons who had never been nominated to the Senate, are we not to remonstrate?
12606Or, in other words, what is the value of a protest on one side, balanced by an exactly equivalent protest on the other?
12606Pennsylvania and New York would have it so; and what were we to do?
12606Permanent power?
12606Pope says, you know,"Ask where''s the North?
12606Pray, Sir, in what school is such reasoning as this taught?
12606Pray, what does all this mean?
12606Pray, what is the evidence which every gentleman must have obtained on this subject, from information sought by himself or communicated by others?
12606Quem enim alium appellem?
12606Responsible?
12606Say, Mr. Speaker, shall we shut the door, And keep him out; or shall we let him in, And see if we can get him out again?"
12606Shall it be done by public authority, or shall every man observe the tick of his own watch?
12606Shall the decisions be decisions of peace, or decisions of war?
12606Shall they be decided by law, or by force?
12606Shall we admit ourselves incompetent to carry on the government, so as to be satisfactory to the whole country?
12606Shall we admit that there has so little descended to us of the wisdom and prudence of our fathers?
12606Shall we take peace without new States, or refuse peace without new States?
12606Should not the opinions of men high in office, and candidates for re- election, be known on this, as on other important public questions?
12606Should we ship it, by cargoes, every day, from New York to New Orleans, and from New Orleans back to New York?
12606Sir, I ask once more, Is a great and intelligent community to endure patiently all sorts of suffering for fantasies like these?
12606Sir, as these secessions go on, one after another, what is to constitute the United States?
12606Sir, did I state this as matter of reproach?
12606Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom?
12606Sir, does political consistency consist in always giving negative votes?
12606Sir, how would this sort of argument apply to other cases?
12606Sir, is not the end to which all this leads us obvious?
12606Sir, we believed the embargo unconstitutional; but still that was matter of opinion, and who was to decide it?
12606Sir, we take New Mexico and California; who is weak enough to suppose that there is an end?
12606Sir, what can such men want?
12606Sir, when did the power of the States, or indeed of any government, go to such an extent as that?
12606So our learned opponents say,"Change places, and,_ handy- dandy_, which is the governor and which the rebel?"
12606So they ought; but, Gentlemen, what does all this amount to?
12606Substantial good?
12606Suppose he had been in the house, suppose he had followed the perpetrator to the chamber, what could he have done?
12606Suppose he were to declare war against a foreign power, and put the army and the fleet in action; are we still to be silent?
12606Suppose that a considerable number of Whigs secede from the Whig party, and support a candidate of this new party, what will be the result?
12606Suppose that population should flow into Texas, where will it go?
12606Suppose the Constitution to be a compact, yet here are its terms; and how does the gentleman get rid of them?
12606Suppose the parties to have contemplated this act, what did they contemplate?
12606Suppose the parties, after the contract, to remove to another State, do they carry the law with them as part of their contract?
12606Suppose this not to be the result, what then?
12606Suppose this were so; why should_ he_ therefore abuse New England?
12606Suppose we should see him borrowing money on the credit of the United States; are we yet to wait for impeachment?
12606Suppose, Sir, that we should see him enlisting troops and raising an army, can we say nothing, and do nothing?
12606THEIR eyeballs were seared( was it not so, Sir?)
12606Take away this system of credit, and then tell me what is left for labor and industry, but mere manual toil and daily drudgery?
12606That is true; but would the judge admit our plea?
12606That may all be so; but if the tribunal should not happen to be of that opinion, shall we swing for it?
12606That she had no occasion, in reference to her own interest, or from a regard to her own welfare, to take up arms in the Revolutionary contest?
12606That would be very imposing; but what then?
12606The Greeks have declared the Turkish coasts in a state of blockade; may we not inform ourselves whether this blockade be_ nominal_ or_ real_?
12606The President being of opinion, therefore, that the appropriation was necessary and proper, how is it that it was not recommended to Congress?
12606The Protest asserts an absolute right to remove all persons from office at pleasure; and for what reason?
12606The State legislatures?
12606The contest was, Who should have this privilege?
12606The disputes about the meaning of words and passages; you will admit that?
12606The fabricated letters from Knapp to the committee and to Mr. White, are they nothing but stuff?
12606The first question then is, What does it say of itself?
12606The great question is, Whose prerogative is it to decide on the constitutionality or unconstitutionality of the laws?
12606The great question, therefore, to be decided is, To which class of corporations do colleges thus founded belong?
12606The honorable gentleman asks, What then is the limit?
12606The language of Colonel Barre, in reply to this, was:"They planted by your care?
12606The law has nothing to do with the contract till it be broken; how, then, can it be said to form a part of the contract itself?
12606The letter from Palmer at Belfast, is that no more than flimsy stuff?
12606The only question is, Shall it be a coercion of law, or a coercion of arms?
12606The people have ordained a Constitution; can they reject it without revolution?
12606The power of appointment was not left to be so implied; why, then, should the power of removal have been so left?
12606The question for you to consider is, Did the defendant go into Brown Street in aid of this murder?
12606The question is not, Are they the fittest means, the best means?
12606The question still is, Are the money, time, and labor well laid out in these cases?
12606The question was put, according to the form then practised,"Shall these words stand as a part of the plan?"
12606The reply would be, I think, not impertinent,"Who made you a judge over another''s servants?
12606The second and the material inquiry is, Was the prisoner present at the murder, aiding and abetting therein?
12606The time had come when the people wished to know the decision of the administration on the question of the bank?
12606The"one thousand dollars that was to be paid,"--where could he have obtained this knowledge?
12606Their"property"?
12606These pretended reforms, these extraordinary exercises of power from an extraordinary zeal for the good of the people, what have they brought us to?
12606They had heard that they were suspected; how could they have heard this, unless it were from the whisperings of their own consciences?
12606They had not conceived the administration to be capable of such a thing; and yet they said, What can_ we_ do?
12606They have established a form of government; can they overthrow it without revolution?
12606This free form of government, this popular assembly, the common council held for the common good,--where have we contemplated its earliest models?
12606This is denied; and here arises the great practical question,_ Who is to construe finally the Constitution of the United States_?
12606This is the usual course of Congress on such subjects; and why should it be departed from?
12606This part of the message would have been referred to the committee on finance; but what could they say?
12606Those who murdered Banquo, what did they win by it?
12606To any proceeding to which the President was party?
12606To any proceeding to which the Senate was party?
12606To the history of what proceedings?
12606To those unfortunate individuals, doomed to the everlasting bondage of debt, what is it that we have free institutions of government?
12606To what principles, to what interests, are these facts important?
12606To whom lies the last appeal?
12606Truly, Sir, is not this a little too hard?
12606Under these circumstances, does not every man''s heart tell him that he has a duty to discharge?
12606Very well, Sir, supposing me to be accurately reported in that expression, what is the contradiction?
12606Was I not a Northern man?
12606Was Malta hers?
12606Was ever any thing more reasonable?
12606Was he in a situation to speak of time with precision?
12606Was her great Australian empire hers?
12606Was it Mirabeau, Mr. President, or some other master of the human passions, who has told us that words are things?
12606Was it a thing to be slept upon or forgotten?
12606Was it not much better and kinder, both to sleep upon them myself, and to allow others also the pleasure of sleeping upon them?
12606Was it unduly detained here, so that the House was obliged afterwards to act upon it suddenly?
12606Was not that exactly the case of passing a law to ascertain the will of the people in a new exigency?
12606Was not that true?
12606Was not the doctrine there held this,--that the_ sovereigns_ should say what changes shall be made?
12606Was that the doctrine of Laybach?
12606Was the southern extremity of Africa, was the Cape of Good Hope, hers?
12606Was_ he_ likely to know the intentions of the Convention and the people?
12606Was_ he_ likely to understand the Constitution?
12606We all agree that the Constitution is the supreme law; but who shall interpret that law?
12606We are asked, What nations have ever attained eminent prosperity without encouraging manufactures?
12606We have expended, as everybody knows, large treasures in the prosecution of the war; and now what is to constitute this indemnity?
12606We know the importance of a firm and intelligent judiciary; but how shall we secure the continuance of a firm and intelligent judiciary?
12606Well, Sir, and now what does the gentleman make out against me in relation to the tariff?
12606Well, Sir, in what did we differ?
12606Well, Sir, what is now the demand on the part of our Southern friends?
12606Well, Sir, what is the amount of that?
12606Well, is he to tamper with that?
12606Well, what was the object of those meetings?
12606Well, what was the result?
12606Were not the Russian and Polish merchants purchasers there to a great amount?
12606Were the Ionian Islands hers?
12606Were the settlers in the West driven thither by our oppression?
12606Were the whole of her vast possessions in India hers?
12606Were they ever lower, or even so low?
12606Were they to be excluded from the new government because they tolerated the institution of slavery?
12606Were we to pick clean teeth on a constitutional doubt which a majority in the councils of the nation had overruled?
12606Were we to stand aloof from the occupations which others were pursuing around us?
12606What States are to secede?
12606What aid is to be rendered?
12606What alteration has ever been brought in, put in, forced in, or got in anyhow, by resolutions of mass meetings, and then by applying force?
12606What am I to be?
12606What am I?
12606What amount of population have we in comparison with our extent of soil, what amount of capital, and labor at what price?
12606What are its boundaries?
12606What are the oppressions experienced under the Union, calling for measures which thus threaten to sever and destroy it?
12606What are the probabilities as to the time of the murder?
12606What are the_ facts_ in relation to this presence?
12606What are their crimes, that they hide themselves in darkness?
12606What are they?
12606What are we to think of a constitutional argument which deals in this way with historical facts?
12606What class of creditors desire it?
12606What commission has he received?
12606What consideration of public good demands it?
12606What could be expected of such a party, unless animated by a spirit of conciliation and harmony, of union and sympathy?
12606What could be his motive?
12606What could be his motive?
12606What could come nearer to a solemn farce, than to bind a man by oath, and still leave him to be his own interpreter of his own obligation?
12606What could ensue from such a manner of conducting the public business, but quarrel, confusion, and conflict?
12606What could mislead this witness at the time?
12606What course did he adopt to effect this?
12606What do I contend for?
12606What do gentlemen mean by it?
12606What do they mean by"property"?
12606What do they mean?
12606What do they say?
12606What do we mean by our neutral policy?
12606What do we propose to do, then, with these thirty regiments which it is designed to throw into Mexico?
12606What do we propose?
12606What do you get that from?
12606What do_ we_ not owe to the cause of civil and religious liberty?
12606What does he mean by being"responsible"?
12606What does he propose?
12606What does it appear that the members of this government did?
12606What does it mean?
12606What does it purport to be?
12606What does the law mean, when it says, that, in order to charge him as a principal,"he must be present aiding and abetting in the murder"?
12606What does this bill propose for its relief?
12606What does this mean?
12606What does this offer call on your honors to do?
12606What else can they do, with not enough of absolute capital, and with no credit?
12606What enormous evil is to be remedied by all this inconvenience and all this suffering?
12606What fair foundation is there for this remark?
12606What follows?
12606What great and good object, worth so much cost, is it to accomplish?
12606What great calamity is to be averted?
12606What had Richard Crowninshield to do at Wenham, with Joseph, unless it were this business?
12606What has Germany done, learned Germany, more full of ancient lore than all the world beside?
12606What has Italy done?
12606What has been, and what is to be, Old England?
12606What has been, what is, and what may be, in the providence of God,_ New_ England, with her neighbors and associates?
12606What has given us this just pride?
12606What has happened since?
12606What has he done?
12606What has it left undone, which any government could do, for the whole country?
12606What has placed us thus high?
12606What has reform done?
12606What has the great cry for hard money accomplished?
12606What have they done who dwell on the spot where Cicero lived?
12606What hinders Vermont from considering herself equally the representative of the public, and from resuming her grants, at her own pleasure?
12606What if Texan troops, assisted by thousands of volunteers from the disaffected States, had gone to New Mexico, and had been defeated and turned back?
12606What inconsistency does he show?
12606What inconsistency in word or doctrine has he been able to detect?
12606What induces this armed pursuit, and this arrest of fugitives, of all ages and both sexes?
12606What is a_ constitution_?
12606What is easier than to throw off a cloak, and again put it on?
12606What is even this Constitution itself to them, in its actual operation, and as we now administer it?
12606What is innocence?
12606What is it proposed to do?
12606What is it that binds him?
12606What is it that is to be regulated?
12606What is it that makes us the object of the highest respect, or the most suspicious jealousy, to foreign states?
12606What is it that most enables us to take high relative rank among the nations?
12606What is it that we have public and popular assemblies?
12606What is it to him but a wide- spread prospect of suffering, anguish, and death?
12606What is its aspect to them, but an aspect of stern, implacable severity?
12606What is likely to occur?
12606What is meant by"_ appropriations_"?
12606What is our condition under its influence, at the very moment when some talk of arresting its power and breaking its unity?
12606What is our reliance?
12606What is revolution?
12606What is such a state of things but a mere connection during pleasure, or, to use the phraseology of the times,_ during feeling_?
12606What is that act?
12606What is that glorious recollection, which thrills through his frame, and suffuses his eyes?
12606What is the alternative presented to the Whigs of Massachusetts?
12606What is the consequence?
12606What is the course of policy suited to our actual condition?
12606What is the difference between unlettered laymen and lettered clergymen in this respect?
12606What is the effect of such a nomination?
12606What is the end of all government?
12606What is the inevitable tendency of such an education as is here prescribed?
12606What is there in New Mexico that could, by any possibility, induce anybody to go there with slaves?
12606What is there now, in the existing state of things, to separate Carolina from_ Old_, more, or rather, than from_ New_ England?
12606What is there to recommend a construction which leads to a result like this?
12606What is there which either his friends, or the friends of the country, could wish to have been otherwise?
12606What is there, Sir, in all this, for the gentleman to complain of?
12606What is this but anarchy?
12606What is to be the limit to such a principle, or to the practice growing out of it?
12606What is to become of the army?
12606What is to become of the navy?
12606What is to become of the public lands?
12606What is to become of them in this separation?
12606What is to remain American?
12606What laurels does he gather in this part of Africa?
12606What law was passed?
12606What model or example had the framers of the Constitution in their minds, when they spoke of"executive power"?
12606What oath does he take?
12606What occasion had he to call himself to an account?
12606What oppression prostrates her strength or destroys her happiness?
12606What other circulation or medium of payment is to be adopted in the place of the bills of the bank?
12606What other orb shall emit a ray to glimmer, even, on the darkness of the world?
12606What other thirty millions are to supply the place of these thirty millions now to be called in?
12606What page in your history, or in the history of any one of you, is brighter than those which have been recorded since the Union was formed?
12606What part is it?
12606What precise meaning, then, does he attach to the term_ constitutional_?
12606What right has he to send a message to either house of Congress telling its members that they disobey the will of their constituents?
12606What see we to- day in the agitations on the other side of the Atlantic?
12606What service could he have rendered, if there?
12606What shall it be?
12606What should hinder us from exercising our own judgments upon these provisions, singly and severally?
12606What should hinder?
12606What should stay our hands from this good work?
12606What sort of concurrent powers are these, which can not exist together?
12606What then had become of Mr. Dorr''s government?
12606What then happened in the State of Rhode Island?
12606What then was to be done, as far as Texas was concerned?
12606What then?
12606What then?
12606What thing was done for his benefit?
12606What was I ever?
12606What was done on the receipt of the letter from Maine?
12606What was the defendant''s object in his private conversation with Burns?
12606What was the liberty of Spain, or Gaul, or Germany, or Britain, in the days of Rome?
12606What was their purpose?
12606What were then his rules of construction and interpretation?
12606What will be his course of remedy?
12606What will guard our cities from tribute, our merchant- vessels and our navy- yards from conflagration?
12606What would be the natural result in such a case?
12606What would become of Missouri?
12606What would become of all that now renders the social circle lovely and beloved?
12606What would become of society itself?
12606What would become of their morals, their character, their purity of heart and life, their hope for time and eternity?
12606What would have been the state of this country, now, at this moment, if these laws had not been passed?
12606What would you get for shares?
12606What writers of authority on public law, what adjudications in courts of admiralty, what public treaties, recognize it?
12606What, Sir, are these causes?
12606What, Sir, were other leading sentiments or leading measures of that day?
12606What, in any case, but sovereign pleasure, is to decide whether the example be good or bad?
12606What, indeed, are the general indications of the state of the country?
12606What, then, do gentlemen wish?
12606What, then, is the attempt of our adversaries?
12606What, then, is the state of English opinion?
12606What, then, is the true and peculiar principle of the American Revolution, and of the systems of government which it has confirmed and established?
12606What, then, shall we do?
12606What, then, shall we do?
12606What, then, the question recurs, remains for us?
12606What, then, was intended by"the executive power"?
12606What, then, was the state of things in 1850?
12606What, then, was this conspiracy?
12606What, then, were we to do?
12606What_ is_ executive power?
12606Wheatland does not recollect the questions or answers, but recollects his reply; which was,"Is not this_ premature_?
12606When did he announce himself a State- rights man?
12606When did he ever go down to low- water mark, to make an ousting of tide- waiters?
12606When did he ever take away the daily bread of weighers, and gaugers, and measurers?
12606When did he make known his adhesion to the doctrines of the State- rights party?
12606When has it happened that history has had so much to record, in the same term of years, as since the 17th of June, 1775?
12606When has labor been rewarded, I do not say with a larger, but with a more certain success?
12606When has there been a time in which the means of living have been more accessible and more abundant?
12606When have they deserved it?
12606When he has planned a murder, and is present at its execution, is he there to forward or to thwart his own design?
12606When he says there was no confession, what could he expect to bear witness of?
12606When or how could the prisoners have been tried without a special session?
12606When the question is asked, What will be their constitution?
12606When the traveller pauses on the plain of Marathon, what are the emotions which most strongly agitate his breast?
12606When the treasury experiment was first announced, who supported, and who opposed it?
12606When there is a cause so near at hand, why wander into conjecture for an explanation?
12606When war is declared by a law of Congress, can a single State nullify that law, and remain at peace?
12606When we give our money_ for any military purpose whatever_, what remains to be done?
12606When we shall have nullified the present Constitution, what are we to receive in its place?
12606When will that be?
12606When would persons, with a knowledge of these facts, be most likely to approach him?
12606When, Sir, did any English minister, Whig or Tory, ever make such an inquest?
12606When, before this instance, have the States granted monopolies?
12606When, until now, have they interfered with the navigation of the country?
12606Whence are their diplomas?
12606Whence do such contracts derive their obligation, if not from universal law?
12606Whence, then, are the means to come for paying this debt?
12606Whence, then, is the power derived to the President?
12606Where can it exist, better than where it now does exist?
12606Where can they go to learn the truth, to reverence the Sabbath?
12606Where do they find the power to interfere with the laws of the Union?
12606Where do they mean to place me?
12606Where do we now stand?
12606Where has the improvement brought it?
12606Where have they deserved it?
12606Where is he?
12606Where is she now?
12606Where is the difference of the cases, upon principle?
12606Where is the eagle still to tower?
12606Where is the flag of the republic to remain?
12606Where is the ground of the gentleman''s triumph?
12606Where is the inconsistency?
12606Where is the line to be drawn, between acting, and omitting to act?
12606Where is the line to be drawn?
12606Where is the proof of this?
12606Where shall the power of judging, in cases of alleged interference, be lodged?
12606Where sooner than here, where louder than here, may we expect a patriotic voice to be raised, when the union of the States is threatened?
12606Where was Mr. Van Buren then?
12606Where was the constitutional authority for this?
12606Where will they end?
12606Where will those who oppose a coercion of law come out?
12606Where would such strides of power stop?
12606Where, Sir, should we put it, and what should we do with it?
12606Where, but here, and in one other place, are they likely to be resisted?
12606Where, then, are these little children to go?
12606Where, then, are we to stop, or what limit is proposed to us?
12606Where, then, is the authority for saying that the President is the_ direct representative of the people_?
12606Which side are they to fall?
12606Which way do you think his State- rights doctrine led him?
12606Who are they that profit by the present state of things?
12606Who better calculated to judge of these things than the murderer himself?
12606Who can defend opinions which lead to such results?
12606Who can derive any authority from acts declared to be criminal?
12606Who can estimate the amount, or the value, of the augmentation of the commerce of the world that has resulted from America?
12606Who can find substantial fault with its operation or its results?
12606Who can make this comparison, or contemplate this spectacle, without delight and a feeling of just pride?
12606Who can tell, from any thing yet before the committee, whether the proposed duty be too high or too low on any one article?
12606Who concurred in his appointment?
12606Who did he suppose was to decide that question?
12606Who doubted that these august sovereigns would treat each other with justice, and rule their own subjects in mercy?
12606Who ever appointed a legislature to administer his charity?
12606Who ever endowed the public?
12606Who for a moment can read these letters and doubt of Joseph Knapp''s guilt?
12606Who fulfil the public treaties?
12606Who govern this District and the Territories?
12606Who has authorized these learned doctors of Troppau to establish new articles in this code?
12606Who is Mr. Colman?
12606Who is he that thus charges them with the insanity, or the recklessness, of putting the lamb beneath the lion''s paw?
12606Who is so foolish, I beg everybody''s pardon, as to expect to see any such thing?
12606Who is there prepared with a greater or a better example?
12606Who is there that will deny this?
12606Who is there who would not cover his face for very shame?
12606Who is to decide that question?
12606Who is to judge between the people and the government?
12606Who is to judge of it?
12606Who knows, or who hears, there of your proud State, or of my proud State?
12606Who likes it?
12606Who perform the constitutional guaranties?
12606Who retain the public property?
12606Who shall decide these controversies?
12606Who shall frame together the skilful architecture which unites national sovereignty with State rights, individual security, and public prosperity?
12606Who shall interpret their will, where it may be supposed they have left it doubtful?
12606Who shall rear again the well- proportioned columns of constitutional liberty?
12606Who thinks that the hunger for dominion will stop here of itself?
12606Who warned the country against it?
12606Who were these persons?
12606Who were these suspicious persons in Brown Street?
12606Who will pay the debts?
12606Who wishes it?
12606Who would desire the power of going back to the ages of fable?
12606Who would subscribe?
12606Who would wish for an origin obscured in the darkness of antiquity?
12606Who would wish that his country''s existence had otherwise begun?
12606Who, then, shall construe this grant of the people?
12606Who, then, were the conspirators?
12606Whose agent is it?
12606Whose eyeballs would not be seared by such a spectacle?
12606Whose money is it out of which this salary is paid?
12606Whose the navy?
12606Whose will accomplished it?
12606Whose will be the army?
12606Why all this complaint against the manner in which the crime is discovered?
12606Why all this fear of revenue?
12606Why conceal it, or postpone its declaration?
12606Why did it not meet on the day to which it had adjourned?
12606Why did the gentleman allude to my votes or my opinions respecting the war at all, unless he had something to say?
12606Why did they not express their meaning in plain words?
12606Why do they not come to the fact?
12606Why do they rail against Palmer, while they do not disprove, and hardly dispute, the truth of any one fact sworn to by him?
12606Why do we at this day enjoy the lights and benefits of Christianity ourselves?
12606Why does he not rend this stuff?
12606Why does he not scatter it to the winds?
12606Why else have we a government?
12606Why is there found no one expression in the whole instrument indicating such intent?
12606Why quit our own to stand upon foreign ground?
12606Why shall not a manacled press be trusted with the maintenance and defence of popular rights?
12606Why should he jeopard his own life, if it was not agreed that he should be there?
12606Why should he not call that a donation to foreigners of many millions?
12606Why should not these provisions be passed into a law, and others left to be decided upon their own merits, as a majority of the House shall see fit?
12606Why should there be nothing but trust and confidence on our side, and nothing but discretion and power on his?
12606Why should we shut our eyes to the whole history of Christianity?
12606Why should we thus run in advance of all our own duties, and leave the President completely shielded from his just responsibility?
12606Why was Mr. Colman with the prisoner?
12606Why was it not said,"the States enter into this new league,""the States form this new confederation,"or"the States agree to this new compact"?
12606Why was not similar language used in the Constitution, if a similar intention had existed?
12606Why was_ he_ singled out?
12606Why, Sir, has it become a settled axiom in politics that every government must have a judicial power coextensive with its legislative power?
12606Why, as in regard to the tariff, give out one set of opinions for the North, and another for the South?
12606Why, then, all this alarm?
12606Why, then, can not the iron be manufactured at home?
12606Why, then, did they leave their intent doubtful?
12606Why, then, is it not wrought?
12606Why, then, should they find such difficulty in writing it?
12606Why, then, should we defer the Declaration?
12606Why, then, this reference to his official oath, and this ostentatious quotation of it?
12606Why, then, why then, Sir, do we not as soon as possible change this from a civil to a national war?
12606Why, what would be the result?
12606Why, where else can we look but to the people for political power, in a popular government?
12606Why, who are the laboring people of the North?
12606Will gentlemen, Sir, now answer the argument drawn from these proceedings of the first Congress?
12606Will he admit that these questions ought to be regarded as decided by the settled sense of Congress and of the country?
12606Will he reply to them, according to the doctrines of his annual message in 1830, that_ precedent_ has settled the question, if it was ever doubtful?
12606Will he say to them, that the revenue law is a law of Congress, which must be executed until it shall be declared void?
12606Will he urge the force of judicial decisions?
12606Will she join the_ arrondissement_ of the slave States?
12606Will the gentleman be good enough to explain what sort of a Mexican I am?
12606Will the honorable Senator allow me to repeat my statement of the object of the bill?
12606Will the honorable Senator permit me to interrupt him for a moment?
12606Will the press always speak the truth, when the truth, if spoken, may be the means of silencing it for the future?
12606Will they show us how it is possible for a government to get along with four- and- twenty interpreters of its laws and powers?
12606Will they stand up and justify it?
12606Will they tell us how it should happen that they had so soon forgotten their own sentiments and their own purposes?
12606Will they undertake to deny that that Congress did act on the avowed principle of protection?
12606Will this be said to be the law of the land, by any lawyer who has a rag of a gown left upon his back, or a wig with one tie upon his head?"
12606Will you concur in measures necessary to maintain the Union, or will you oppose such measures?
12606Will you take peace without territory, and preserve the integrity of the Constitution of the country?
12606With him who thinks thus, what can be the value of the Christian revelation?
12606With what intent, or to what end?
12606With what propriety, then, could the Senate be called on to sanction a proceeding so entirely irregular and anomalous?
12606With whom do they repose this ultimate right of deciding on the powers of the government?
12606Witness to what?
12606Would Pennsylvania alone ever have constructed it?
12606Would Pennsylvania, New Jersey, and Delaware have united to accomplish it at their joint expense?
12606Would Samuel Knapp have gone to sea if it were then thought of?
12606Would any one infer from that circumstance, that the city of London had concurrent power with Parliament or the crown to regulate commerce?
12606Would any thing, with such a principle in it, or rather with such a destitution of all principle, be fit to be called a government?
12606Would he go down to Ipswich and defend the accused?
12606Would he have furnished his cloak for protection?
12606Would he have minorities never submit to the will of majorities?
12606Would he have pointed out a safe way of retreat?
12606Would he have tried to shield him?
12606Would he have us always oppose the policy adopted by the country on a great question?
12606Would it have been quite amiable in me, Sir, to interrupt this excellent good feeling?
12606Would it not be better to convince you that he has committed no crime?
12606Would it not be better to show his innocence?
12606Would it not be extremely hard to impute to him perjury for this?
12606Would it not be out of all possibility to find the money?
12606Would it not have cast an air of ridicule on the whole provision, if the Constitution had gone on to add the words,"as he understands it"?
12606Would not the two houses be necessarily put in immediate collision?
12606Would that have settled the boundary question?
12606Would they have equal information?
12606Would they stand on equal footing?
12606Ye men of James River and the Bay, places consecrated by the early settlement of your Commonwealth, what do you say?
12606Ye men of Virginia, what do you say to all this?
12606Ye men of the South, of all the original Southern States, what say you to all this?
12606Yes, Sir, and what sort of a war has he made of it?
12606Yet has the rest of the country no right to its opinion also?
12606Your first inquiry, on the evidence, will be, Was Captain White murdered in pursuance of a conspiracy, and was the defendant one of this conspiracy?
12606_ But if a man die, shall he live again?_"And that question nothing but God, and the religion of God, can solve.
12606_ Whose resolution was this?_ On the 1st of October, they were removed.
12606_ Why did they not confer the power in express terms?_ Why were they thus totally silent on a point of so much importance?
12606_ Why did they not confer the power in express terms?_ Why were they thus totally silent on a point of so much importance?
12606a mode of reasoning which disregards plain facts for the sake of hypothesis?
12606a thing of force, or a thing of no force?
12606about what?
12606among whom?
12606an aspect of refusal, denial, and frowning rebuke?
12606and does not this show that the law is no part of the contract, but something above it?
12606and if any, how much?
12606and in what medium is payment to be made?
12606and is not this same restriction in daily use in the national House of Representatives itself, in the case of suspension of the rules?
12606and need I say, that that doubt is now caused, more than any thing else, by these very proceedings of South Carolina?
12606and where else could he have obtained this knowledge, except from Frank?
12606and, of course, whether it shall be regarded or disregarded?
12606as stating history, rather than as presenting an argument?
12606but, What is the object of bringing these new regiments into the field?
12606can you doubt as to the fears he then had?
12606did she threaten to interfere, by State authority, to annul the laws of the Union?
12606he said,''I trust I do, upon what else can I rest?''
12606home, from what fact?
12606home, from what place?
12606home, from what transaction?
12606if New Mexico and Utah had been left as desert- places, and no government had been provided for them?
12606if the question of the Texas boundary had not been settled?
12606is he there to assist, or there to prevent?
12606its words only, or its legal effect?
12606its words, or the force which the Constitution of the United States allows to it?
12606or do they exist, in full vigor, on the shores of these inland seas?
12606or has the effectual government of the country, at least in all that regards the great interest of the currency, been in a single hand?
12606or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground?
12606or is this resolution to be held up to government as an invitation or a provocation to turn them out?
12606or language describing the grant of powers to a new government, by the whole people of the United States?
12606or rather, which has the best right to decide?
12606or that it might grant a monopoly of the navigation of the Thames?
12606or why, at least, have we not seen some specimens?
12606or will they not act as the people of other countries have acted, and, wearied with a long war, submit, in the end, to a worse oppression?
12606quem implorem?
12606quem obtester?
12606something not reconcilable with true patriotism?
12606than the allegation of crimes, if committed, capital?
12606that it should be kept from children?
12606that it should be reserved as a communication fit only for mature age?
12606that their ambition, though apparently for the moment successful, had but put a barren sceptre in their grasp?
12606that, whatever embarrassment and distress pervade the country, the Western wilderness is thickly sprinkled over with eagles and dollars?
12606the condition?
12606the consideration?
12606the power of internal improvement?
12606the promise?
12606the tariff power?
12606to concur, or to oppose?
12606to do nothing, and to say nothing?
12606to favor, or to thwart?
12606to the principle of lawful resistance?
12606to the principle that society has a right to partake in its own government?
12606to the whole North?
12606to those who make, and to those who execute them?
12606was he there for, or against, the murderer?
12606was he there to aid, if aid were necessary?
7521How many attributes have nouns?
7521Of what class?
7521Of what gender?
7521Of what sort?
7521What are they?
7521What are they?
7521What is a noun?
7521What part of speech is_ arma_?
7521Why is not the singular used?
7521Why neuter?
7521( b) If a stranger buys a prospective draught of fishes and the fisherman draws up a casket of jewels, does the stranger own the jewels?
7521( b) in Germany?
7521( c) in England?
7521( d) in the United States?
7521(_ b_) as adapted to the changed conditions of Imperial Rome?
7521(_ b_) assuming the body of knowledge for each subject known to- day?
7521), Empedocles( 460?-361?
7521), Xenophanes( 628?-520?
7521A SCHOOL: A LESSON IN GRAMMAR( After a woodcut printed by Caxton in_ The Mirror of the World_, 1481(?).
7521About how much training would be represented to- day by the Seven Liberal Arts,(_ a_) assuming the body of knowledge then known?
7521About what opportunities for grammar- school education did this afford?
7521All towns had to spend money for roads, defense, bridges, and the like, and why not some for schools?
7521Are somewhat similar ends served?
7521Are the Athenian characteristics, stated in the middle of page 19, characteristics capable of development by training, or are they native, or both?
7521Are there universities anywhere to- day of which we know as little as Ticknor was able to find out( 339) a century ago?
7521As a State increases in importance and enlarges its world contacts, is a correspondingly longer training and enlarged culture necessary at home?
7521Aside from differences in teachers, why are some university subjects today taught much more compactly and economically than other subjects?
7521Assuming that there may be some validity to the arguments of Kay- Shuttleworth, what are the limitations to such reasoning?
7521At what period in our national development did home education with us occupy substantially the same place as it did in Rome before 300 B.C.?
7521At what time was the old Roman civilization and learning most nearly extinct?
7521By Freeman( 5)?
7521C. Master, may not I and my uncle''s Licetne, Magister, ut ego& son go home?
7521Can all men be trained for leadership?
7521Can progress be made with such an attitude dominant?
7521Can you explain why Pestalozzian ideas found such slow acceptance in England?
7521Can you explain why periods of prolonged warfare are usually followed by periods of social and political unrest?
7521Can you read it?
7521Considering Aristotle''s great intellectual worth( 88) and work( 87), is it to be wondered that the mediaevals regarded him with such reverence?
7521Considering equipment provided and comparative money values, then and now, about how much of an effort did support( 292) involve?
7521Considering the nature of heresy at the time, does the extract from Thomas Aquinas( 152) indicate a narrow or a liberal attitude?
7521Could any Sophist teacher have trained anyone?
7521Could the Socratic method( 9) be applied to instruction in psychology, ethics, history, and science equally well?
7521Could these problems ever be decided at all?
7521Could they well have worked otherwise?
7521Could we select teachers with such care?
7521Could we?
7521Cur tam citò vultis ire?
7521Did Greece attempt to deal with them in the same way?
7521Did any other country have, in the eighteenth century, so mixed a type of elementary education as did England?
7521Did it really pay, people asked themselves, to kill each other and devastate each other''s countries for the sake of such questions?
7521Did scholasticism represent the innocent intellectual activity, from the Church point of view, pictured by Rashdall( 92)?
7521Did such conditions as Dinter describes( 279) exist, even later, with us?
7521Did the leaders in Norwich( 319) use good diplomacy?
7521Did this Christian attitude toward fiction and poetry continue long?
7521Did this prove to be a good thing for the future of civilization?
7521Different?
7521Do Mann''s three propositions( 316) hold equally true to- day?
7521Do any American cities to- day maintain colleges or universities, as did the Italian cities( 105)?
7521Do normal schools?
7521Do periods of great political, commercial, and intellectual expansion usually subject old systems of morality and education to severe strain?
7521Do such changed conditions always demand educational reorganizations?
7521Do such classes to- day show the same type of interest in aiding learning?
7521Do such conditions as Krüsi describes( 234) exist anywhere to day?
7521Do universities, when founded to- day, secure a charter?
7521Do universities, when founded to- day, usually start with all four of the mediaeval faculties represented?
7521Do university professors to- day have privileges akin to those granted professors in a mediaeval university?
7521Do we accept all the fourteen points of Rousseau''s theory to- day?
7521Do we as a nation face danger from the flood of individualism we have encouraged in the past?
7521Do we believe that virtue can be taught in the way the Hellenic peoples did?
7521Do we carry such a belief into practice?
7521Do we give an equivalent training?
7521Do we have any modern analogy to the same teacher teaching both schools, as was sometimes done?
7521Do we have many mediaeval- type people to- day?
7521Do we select teachers for training as carefully in the United States today as they did in Prussia eighty years ago( 278)?
7521Do we to- day place as much emphasis on habit formation as did Locke?
7521Do we today accept Abelard''s premise( 91 a) as to attaining wisdom?
7521Do you consider that his Order ever made what would be called rapid progress?
7521Do you see any special reason why Venice should have become the early center of the book trade?
7521Do you understand that any large percentage of youths in the Roman State ever attended any school?
7521Does Denmark form any exception as to what might be done( 370) in any country, such as Russia?
7521Does Huxley overdraw( 337) our dependence on science?
7521Does a comparison of Readings 99, 201, and 242 indicate a static condition of apprenticeship education for centuries?
7521Does every great advance in provisions for human welfare require a period of education and propaganda?
7521Does his description of Athens( 29) tally with the description of the Athenians given in the text?
7521Does it require a higher quality of teaching to impart the cultural aspect of a study than is required for the disciplinary?
7521Does the Boy Scouts movement embody any of the chivalric ideas and training?
7521Does the Greek idea that a harmonious personal development contributes to moral worth appeal to you?
7521Does the list of items drawn up by the Church Council of Constance( 149) indicate a general recognition of the need for extensive Church reform?
7521Does the reasoning of Herbert Spencer appeal to you as sound?
7521Does the rise of a new Estate in society indicate a period of slow or rapid change?
7521Does the sentence quoted from Elyot''s_ Governour_ express well the changed conditions in England at the middle of the sixteenth century?
7521Does the success of the Order show the importance to society of finding and educating the future leader?
7521Does the university of to- day play as important a part in the progress of society as it did in the mediaeval times?
7521England and France?
7521Enumerate a number of different things which have enabled the modern university greatly to shorten the period of instruction?
7521Even if the parents of converts wished to provide additional educational advantages for their children, what could they do?
7521Explain the difference in the results attained by the two attacks?
7521For the times was it a more practical plan?
7521From Ascham''s statements( 139), what do you infer as to the reception of the new learning at the English court?
7521From the selection from Rashdall( 154), what do you infer as to the effect of the Reformation on the schools?
7521Give reasons why the Laws of the Twelve Tables( 12) were considered of such fundamental importance( 13) in the education of the early Roman boy?
7521Has it been successful in this?
7521Has such opposition as that described in 329 completely died out even now?
7521Has that attitude entirely passed away?
7521Has the development of separate nationalities and different national languages aided in advancing international peace and civilization?
7521Have the difficulties experienced in the transformation of instruction in China( 365) been essentially different than with us?
7521Have we any remaining vestiges of this church control over books?
7521Have we ever experienced similar changes?
7521Have we ever had such religious requirements as those so long maintained( 305) at the English universities?
7521Have we the beginnings of a social problem of this type?
7521Hippocrates( 460- 367?
7521How advanced for the time was the work of Duke Ernest of Gotha( 163)?
7521How advanced was the ground taken by Luther( 158)?
7521How can the bitter opposition to the reading and study of the Bible be explained?
7521How could we develop an aim as clearly defined and potent as theirs?
7521How could we incorporate into our school instruction some of the important aspects of Greek instruction in music?
7521How did the education of an Athenian girl differ from that of a girl in the early American colonies?
7521How did the fact that Dialectic( Logic) now became the great subject of study in itself denote a marked intellectual advance?
7521How did the school in Saint John''s parish( 241) differ from apprenticeship training?
7521How do you account for the American practice of admitting students to the professional courses without the Arts course?
7521How do you account for the Athenian State leaving literary and musical education to private initiative, but supporting state_ gymnasia_?
7521How do you account for the fact that the wonderful promise of Alexandrian science was not fulfilled?
7521How do you account for the much smaller emphasis on literature and music in the elementary instruction at Rome than at Athens?
7521How do you account for the relatively recent interest in the education of defectives and delinquents?
7521How do you account for the superiority shown by one?
7521How do you account for the very large privileges granted university students in the early grants( 101, 102) and charters( 103)?
7521How do you explain Luther''s ideas as to coupling up elementary and trade education in his primary schools?
7521How do you explain the Christian attitude toward disease, and the scientific treatment of it?
7521How do you explain the Greek failure to achieve political unity?
7521How do you explain the all- absorbing interest in scholasticism during the greater part of a century?
7521How do you explain the attitude of the ancients toward scientific inquiry?
7521How do you explain the change in attitude toward him shown by the successive statutes enacted( 90 a- d) for the University of Paris?
7521How do you explain the change in relative importance of the two?
7521How do you explain the decline in importance of the once- popular mental arithmetic?
7521How do you explain the difference in the effect, on the scholars of the time, of the Revival of Learning in Italy and in northern lands?
7521How do you explain the general prevalence of harsh discipline well into the nineteenth century?
7521How do you explain the greater emphasis placed by the Romans on secondary education than on elementary education?
7521How do you explain the lack of any permanent influence on Spanish life of the work of the benevolent despots in Spain?
7521How do you explain the later neglect of so valuable a library as that at Monte Cassino( 126) or Saint Gall( 127 a)?
7521How do you explain the long rejection of the new sciences by the universities?
7521How do you explain the long- continued objection to teacher- training?
7521How do you explain the need for so many years to master the Seven Liberal Arts( 74)?
7521How do you explain the opposition and failure to do so?
7521How do you explain the slow evolution of the elementary teacher into a position of some importance?
7521How do you explain the very early German interest in compulsory school attendance, when such was unknown elsewhere in Europe?
7521How do you explain their being supplanted later by the Latinized_ Odyssey_?
7521How do you explain this German far- sightedness?
7521How do you explain this addition to mother- land practices?
7521How far was Pestalozzi right as to the power of education to give men intellectual and moral freedom?
7521How for the much larger emphasis on formal grammar in the secondary schools at Rome?
7521How generally was his dictum that a knowledge of Latin and Greek were essential for a well- educated gentleman( 135) accepted?
7521How is our problem like and unlike that of Athens after the Peloponnesian War?
7521How many of the thirteen principles of the Innovators do we still hold to be valid?
7521How may the demoralization incident to such expansion be anticipated and minimized?
7521How sound was Kay- Shuttleworth''s reasoning( 302)?
7521How would this have advanced the character of the instruction in Arts in the university?
7521How?
7521How?
7521If not, why not?
7521If so, from whom, and what terms are included?
7521In comparing the Chinese transformation and the Renaissance( 335), does Mr. Ping propose comparable events?
7521In how far do nations to- day accept the theories of La Chalotais( 255)?
7521In how far would Locke''s ideas still apply to the education of a boy of the leisure class?
7521In schools so formally organized as those of La Salle, how do you explain the great freedom allowed in questioning on arithmetic and the Catechism?
7521In what respects was the education given boys and girls similar?
7521In what respects were the educational provisions of the first Indiana constitution( 261) remarkable?
7521In what respects were the educational provisions of the first Ohio constitution( 260) remarkable?
7521In what way was the fact that Dante wrote his_ Divine Comedy_ in Italian instead of Latin an evidence of large independence?
7521In what ways was the conquest of Alexander good for world civilization?
7521In what ways was the_ Sic et Non_ of Abelard a complete break with mediaeval traditions?
7521Is Kingsley right in stating( 50) that the best elements of all the modern European peoples came from the barbarian invaders?
7521Is it as thorough or as well done?
7521Is it probable that a quarter- century of Bolsheviki rule in Russia would produce results comparable to those described by Giry and Réville( 49)?
7521Is it probable that the apprenticing of paupers had always given such( 301) results?
7521Is it to be wondered that the Romans were finally led to persecute"the vast organized defiance of law by the Christians"?
7521Is technical grammar at present taught in the best possible place?
7521Is the chief university force to- day exerted directly or indirectly?
7521Is the evolution still in process?
7521Is the idea necessarily opposed to nationality or even to a strong state government?
7521Is the modern state teacher''s certificate a natural outgrowth of the mediaeval licenses( 83) to teach grammar and song?
7521Is there any special reason why we need it more than did they?
7521Is this a good characterization of a phase of the movement?
7521Is this true also for our modern notices of appointment( 84 a)?
7521John Adams?
7521John Jay?
7521Just what advantages for boys and for girls existed in Boston( 307 a, b) before the creation of the reading schools?
7521Just what attitude toward education did the action of Napoleon in changing the character of the school at Compiègne( 282) express?
7521Just what attitude toward religion is shown in the extract from Voltaire( 248)?
7521Just what did Pestalozzi attempt( 267) to accomplish?
7521Just what did the Massachusetts Law of 1827( 328) require?
7521Just what did the Scotch law of 1646 provide for( 179)?
7521Just what did the Synod of Dort provide for( 176) in the matter of schools, school supervision, and ministerial duties?
7521Just what do the Hamburg( 159) and Brieg( 160)_ Ordnungen_ indicate?
7521Just what does the Boston Report on Primary Schools( 313) reveal as to the character of education then provided?
7521Just what does the Cambridge Scheme of Study indicate as being taught there?
7521Just what does the instruction described as given by Campion( 146) indicate?
7521Just what educational conditions does Governor Clinton( 349) indicate as existing in New York State, in 1827?
7521Just what kind of a school system did Knox propose( 1560) for Scotland?
7521Just what kind of an education does Montaigne outline, and how great a reaction was this from existing conditions?
7521Just what kind of elementary schools did Boston have( 314) in 1823?
7521Just what kind of schools did the Act of 1870( 304) make provision for?
7521Just what kind of schools do the Providence regulations( 309) of 1820 provide for and describe?
7521Just what kind of schools existed in the cities of Pennsylvania in 1830, judging from the Report( 315) of the Workingmen''s Committee?
7521Just what light on school teaching, in 1841, does the teacher''s contract given( 352) throw?
7521Just what state of vernacular education in Teutonic lands is indicated by the three selections( 231, 232, 233)?
7521Just what type of education did the Quakers mean to provide for, as shown in the extract from their Rules of Discipline( 199)?
7521Just what type of educational institutions did Washington have in mind in the quotation from his Farewell Address?
7521Just what type of educational provisions, and what administrative organization, did the recommendations of the Clergy of Blois( 252) contemplate?
7521Just what type of educational system did Jefferson propose to organize in Virginia( 263)?
7521Just what type of school is indicated by selection 178?
7521Just what was new in the nine fundamental rules laid down by Ratke, in his_ Methodus Nova_?
7521M. To what end?
7521M. When is she to be married?
7521M. Why will you go so quickly?
7521Mexico?
7521Might a Rousseau have done work of similar importance in Russia, early in the twentieth century?
7521Normal schools?
7521Of Cicero''s_ Orations_ and_ Letters_?
7521Of the plans for a gymnasium at Saros- Patak?
7521Of the reasoning of the two men, which is now accepted in France and the United States?
7521Of what is the difference in rate an index?
7521Of what is the recent development of evening, adult, and extension education an index?
7521Of what is this interest an expression?
7521Of what type of person is the reasoning of Governor Cleveland( 317) typical?
7521Of what was the exposure of the forgery of the"Donation of Constantine"a precursor?
7521Of which type was the reasoning of Galileo as to Jupiter''s satellites?
7521On character?
7521On good breeding?
7521On what basis could Catholic and Protestant wage war on one another to try to enforce their own particular belief?
7521Ptolemy( b.?
7521Quando est nuptura?
7521Quid eó?
7521Should a university student to- day have any privileges not given to all citizens?
7521Spencer: What Knowledge is of Most Worth?
7521Suppose you knew nothing about the Japanese, what type of government would you take theirs to be from reading the Imperial Rescript( 334b)?
7521THE FATHER OF MEDICINE HIPPOCRATES OF COS( 460- 367?
7521THOMAS DILWORTH(?-1780) 133.
7521THOMAS DILWORTH(?-1780) The most celebrated English textbook writer of his day.
7521Tertullian, in his_ Prescription against Heresies_, exclaims: What indeed has Athens to do with Jerusalem?
7521Thales( 636?-546?
7521The same with reference to the course given in a small English country grammar school, as described by Martindale( 145)?
7521The volume contains four essays: What Knowledge is of Most Worth?
7521To what class of subjects is the Socratic quiz applicable?
7521To what extent did the religious teachings of the time support Locke''s ideas as to the disciplinary conception of education?
7521To what extent do we now accept Robert Owen''s conception of the influence of education on children?
7521To what extent does early Roman education indicate the importance of the parent and of study of biography in the education of the young?
7521To what is the difference due?
7521To what university mother does Harvard go back, ultimately?
7521VOCATIONAL WHAT IS VOCATIONAL EDUCATION?
7521Viewed from the purposes the Order had in mind, was it warranted in neglecting the education of the masses?
7521Viewed in the light of history, what would we say of the present opposition to health work( 375) in the schools?
7521Was Guizot''s Law of 1833( 285) in harmony with the recommendations of Cousin( 284)?
7521Was Lionardo Bruni''s letter to Poggio( 127 b) overdrawn?
7521Was Luther probably right when he wrote, in 1524, that the schools"were deteriorating throughout Germany"?
7521Was Luther''s idea that a clergyman should have had some experience as a teacher a good one, or not?
7521Was Napoleon right in his attitude toward education and schools?
7521Was Wycliffe''s attack( 147) as direct and fierce as Luther''s( 151)?
7521Was he right in his position as to the relation of the schools and national needs and welfare?
7521Was it a good thing for peace and civilization that the modern languages arose, instead of all speaking and writing Latin?
7521Was it possible for the Roman and the Christian to understand one another, thinking as they did in such different terms( 30 a- b)?
7521Was it right to put him thus into two schools of thought?
7521Was the Brown University grant exceptional, or common in other American foundations?
7521Was the Christian or the pagan attitude more nearly like that of modern times?
7521Was the Church wise in adopting and sanctifying the education of chivalry?
7521Was the College at Geneva( 175) a true humanistic- revival school?
7521Was the Hellenization of Rome which ensued a good thing?
7521Was the Prussian school system, as described by Cousin( 280), a centralized or a decentralized system?
7521Was the Report correct with reference to"a monopoly of talent"?
7521Was the attitude of Anselm a perfectly natural one for the Middle Ages?
7521Was the challenge of Wycliffe''s followers on indulgences( 148) any less direct than that of Luther( 151)?
7521Was the course of instruction provided for the primary schools in 1833, times and needs considered, a liberal one, or otherwise?
7521Was the early argument as to the influence of higher education on the State a true argument?
7521Was the first English parliamentary grant( 299) expressive of deep national interest?
7521Was the introduction of the Greek pedagogue as a fashionable adjunct natural?
7521Was there anything pedagogically sound about the letter of Saint Jerome( 45) on the education of girls?
7521Was there anything unnatural about the work and customs of the Italian societies for studying the classics( 129)?
7521Were the Sophists a good addition to the Athenian instructing force, or not?
7521Were the difficulties that surrounded scientific inquiry and progress, as described by Bacon, easily removed?
7521Were the evils of the Sophist teachers, which Isocrates points out( 8), natural ones?
7521What German characteristics that Tacitus describes( 47) would prove good additions to Roman life?
7521What additional unsolved problems would you add to the list given on the preceding page?
7521What analogous instruction do we provide in the American high schools?
7521What are the elements of truth and falsity in Rousseau''s idling- to- the- twelfth- year( 264 d) idea?
7521What are the marked features of the refounding act( 172) for Canterbury cathedral school?
7521What are the relative values to- day?
7521What as to the condition of learning and teaching in England in Bede''s day?
7521What basis, if any, did the opponents of Colet''s school have for denouncing it as a temple of idolatry and heathenism?
7521What better methods could the Italian court schools have used to enable them to cover the university Arts course in shorter time?
7521What between heretics and Christians?...
7521What changes do you note between the mediaeval Indenture of Apprenticeship( 99) and the eighteenth- century English form( 242)?
7521What civilizing problem, somewhat comparable to that of barbarian Europe, have we faced in our national history?
7521What class of children did Raikes( 293) make provision for?
7521What conception of education is revealed by the Virginia apprenticeship laws( 200 a, 1- 3) and the North Carolina court records( 200 b, 1- 3)?
7521What concord is there between the Academy and the Church?
7521What correctives have we that Rome did not have?
7521What could be done that he might be educated, like every one else, and yet not run the risk of losing his faith?
7521What degree of State supervision of education is indicated by Plato( 2)?
7521What did the founding of a chantry grammar school( 142), instead of a song school, indicate as to the progress of education?
7521What did the mediaeval license( 110, 111, 112) really signify?
7521What differences might there have been had Comenius lived and done his work in the time of Pestalozzi?
7521What do all the changes enumerated by Buckle( 250) indicate as to the spread of general education, irrespective of schools, among the English people?
7521What do modern nations have that is much akin to Emperor worship?
7521What do the Free School Rules of 1734( 245) indicate as to duties and discipline?
7521What do the beginnings of teacher training in England( 347, 348) indicate as to conceptions then existing as to the educational process?
7521What do the proposals of La Chalotais, Rolland, and Turgot indicate as to the degree of unification of France attained by the time they wrote?
7521What do the selections from Bede( 59 a- c) indicate as to the preservation of the old learning in the cities of southern Italy?
7521What do the statutes regarding prayers( 169) indicate as to the nature of the grammar schools of the time?
7521What do the three professional courses reproduced( 345, 346, 350 b) indicate as to the development of pedagogical work by about 1840?
7521What do the tributes of Woodbridge( 269) and Mayo( 270) reveal as to the character of Pestalozzi and his influence?
7521What do the two time- tables reproduced( 122, 123) reveal as to the nature of a university day, and the instruction given?
7521What do you think of the contentions of Aristotle and Plato that the State should control school music as a means of securing sound moral instruction?
7521What do you understand Pestalozzi to have meant by"the development of the faculties"?
7521What do you understand to be meant by the failure of the Greeks to standardize their observations by instruments?
7521What does a glance at the page giving the university foundations before 1600( 100) show as to the rate and direction of the university movement?
7521What does the Farmer''s Calendar( 14) reveal as to the character of Roman life?
7521What does the Plymouth Colony appeal for Harvard College( 194 b) indicate as to community of ideas in early New England?
7521What does the court citation of Topsfield( 192) show?
7521What does the decree of Constantine( 26) indicate as to the social status of the higher teachers under the Empire?
7521What does the distribution of scholars at Roxbury( 188) show as to the character of the school?
7521What does the emphasis on the People''s High Schools in Denmark indicate as to the political status of the common people there?
7521What does the exclusive devotion of these schools to such studies indicate as to professional opportunities at Rome?
7521What does the extract from Roger Bacon( 118) indicate as to the character of the teaching of Theology?
7521What does the founding of the Polytechnic School( 257) indicate as to the French interest in science?
7521What does the lack of independent scholars during the Middle Ages indicate as to possible leisure?
7521What does the list indicate as to the state of learning of the time?
7521What does the long continuance, without great changes in character, of the university as an institution indicate as to its usefulness to society?
7521What does the need for_ Realschulen_ indicate as to the evolution of German society and the recuperation from the ravages of war?
7521What does the oath of a freeman( 96) indicate as to social conditions?
7521What does the qualification for a charity- school teacher( 238 a) indicate as to the nature of the teacher''s calling in such schools?
7521What does the selection from Lanfranc( 44) indicate as to the state of monastic learning?
7521What does the selection on The Puritan Attitude( 183) reveal as to the extent and depth of the Reformation in England?
7521What does the use of the lottery for school support( 246) indicate as to the conception and scope of education at the time?
7521What does the work of Pope Nicholas V, in establishing the Vatican Library( 132), indicate as to his interest in the new humanistic movement?
7521What educational theory, conscious or unconscious, formed the basis for mediaeval education and instruction?
7521What effect did the development of song- school instruction have on the instruction in the cathedral schools?
7521What form of a charter, if any, has your university or normal school?
7521What great lessons may we draw from the work of the Hebrews in maintaining a national unity through compulsory education?
7521What great modern subjects of study have been developed out of the mediaeval subjects of arithmetic, geometry, and astronomy?
7521What great subject of study has been developed out of one part of the study of mediaeval rhetoric?
7521What had fixed the Italian?
7521What has caused the old Arts Faculty to break up into so many groups, whereas Law, Medicine, and Theology have stayed united?
7521What has taken the place of the license?
7521What have we added and omitted?
7521What ideals and practices from chivalry have been retained and are still in use to- day?
7521What important contributions to world progress came out of chivalric education?
7521What improvements and additions did the reading schools( 307 c) introduce?
7521What improvements are indicated?
7521What instruction did the textbooks as printed( 239) provide for?
7521What is probably the greatest work of any university, in any age?
7521What is the best American practice in this matter to- day, and what tendencies are observable?
7521What is the difference between the Plymouth requirement as to grammar schools( 194 d) and the Massachusetts requirement( 191)?
7521What is the social significance of the development of parallel secondary schools and courses, in all lands?
7521What is the status of the idea to- day( a) in China?
7521What is the ultimate outcome of the process?
7521What is to be said of the fact that there are four seasons of the year, four quarters of the heavens, and four principles of the elements?
7521What is your estimate of the vernacular schools as outlined by Comenius?
7521What kind of a school attitude is indicated by the close supervision of English teachers, as described in 164 and 165?
7521What kind of a school was the first one established in Philadelphia( 198)?
7521What kind of schools does Rashdall describe as existing?
7521What merit was there to the"payment- by- results"recommendation of the Duke of Newcastle Commission( 303)?
7521What might have been the result in America had the New England Colonies established the school as a parish institution, as did the central Colonies?
7521What modern analogies do we have to the civilizing work of the monks and clergy during the Middle Ages?
7521What new principle is added( 191) by the Law of 1647, and what does this new law indicate as to needs in the colony for classical learning?
7521What new subjects did Diderot add to the religious elementary school of his time?
7521What particular Roman need did the higher schools of oratory and rhetoric supply?
7521What rate of scientific progress is indicated by its translation and length of use?
7521What real progress was made by the National Convention( 258 a), and to what degree did it fail?
7521What reasons were there for the development of the more practical Academy in America, rather than in England?
7521What scope of knowledge is represented in the library( 78) of the tenth- century schoolmaster?
7521What stage in scientific knowledge do the selections from Anglicus( 77 a- b) indicate?
7521What subjects of study as we now know them were included in the Roman study of grammar and rhetoric?
7521What theory as to education would naturally lie behind a"payment- by- results"plan of distributing state aid?
7521What type of a school was provided for in the Aldwincle chantry( 73)?
7521What type of administrative organization was proposed by Condorcet( 256)?
7521What type of education is presupposed in 264 f?
7521What type of higher educational advantages does the selection from Horace( 22) indicate as prevailing in Roman cities?
7521What type of school was it intended to endow from the Cape Cod fisheries( 194 c)?
7521What type of school( 283) was the re- created Superior Normal?
7521What types of schools and conceptions of education were combined in the Philanthropinum( 265)?
7521What was the character of the education King Alfred provided for his son( 68)?
7521What was the condition of learning among the higher clergy and monks as shown by Charlemagne''s proclamations( 64)?
7521What was the educational significance of such a bequest as that of William Sevenoaks( 141)?
7521What was the effect of the Christian attitude toward the care of the body, on scientific and medical knowledge, and on education?
7521What was the effect on inquiry and individual thinking of the method of presentation used by Saint Thomas Aquinas in his_ Summa Theologica_?
7521What was the governmental advantage of the adoption of the Nicene Creed( 42)?
7521What was the importance of the rediscovery of Hebrew?
7521What was the most marked advance over the Greeks in the early Roman training?
7521What was the nature and extent of the library of Master Stephen( 119)?
7521What was the nature and purpose of the Harvard College instruction as shown by the selection 186 a- d?
7521What was the nature of the cathedral school at Salisbury( 72)?
7521What was the nature of the progress from that time to the thirteenth century( 94 b)?
7521What was the nature of this public?
7521What was the particular importance of the recovery of Quintilian''s_ Institutes_?
7521What was the position of the State in the matter of the education of youth( 5)?
7521What was the purpose of the Latin instruction, as you received it?
7521What was the relative condition of learning in Frankland and England, about 900 A.D.?
7521What was the significance of the position of Luther for the future education of girls?
7521What was the significance of the prominence of this study for the future of thinking?
7521What was the significance of these provisions?
7521What were some of the chief defects of Athenian schools( 5)?
7521What were the actuating motives behind the German Emperor''s speech( 368)?
7521What were the great merits of the Athenian educational and political system of training( 6)?
7521What were the main things Justinian hoped to accomplish by the preparation of the great Code, as set forth in the Preface( 93)?
7521What were the motives behind the organization of the religious charity- schools?
7521What were the strong points in the experimental work of Basedow?
7521What were two of the important contributions of the Infant- School idea to American education?
7521What will be the result when many nations( 372) become highly skilled?
7521What would be necessary for the proper training of one for eloquence?
7521What would be the most probable effect on education of the erection of the polished- man- of- the- world ideal?
7521What would be the natural effect on the teaching occupation of such legislation as the Act of Uniformity( 166)?
7521What would have been the effect of the continued rejection of secular books called for in the Apostolic Constitutions( 41)?
7521What would have been the probable results had the Dartmouth College case been decided the other way?
7521What?
7521When Greece and Rome offered no precedents, how did the Church come to so fully develop and control the education which was provided?
7521When was the great era of each?
7521Which is the better attitude for a nation to assume toward the foreigner-- the Greek, or the American?
7521Which of the professional faculties has changed most in the nature and character of its instruction?
7521Which of the three type plans in the American colonies by 1750 most influenced educational development in your State?
7521Which one?
7521Why are imaginative ability and many- sided natures such valuable characteristics for any people?
7521Why did Aristotle''s work seem of much greater value to the mediaeval scholar than the Moslem science?
7521Why did apprenticeship education continue so long with so little change, when it is now so rapidly being superseded?
7521Why did the Church insist on these when Rome had not required such?
7521Why did the Greek boy need three teachers, whereas the American boy is taught all and more by one primary teacher?
7521Why did the Sunday- School movement prove of so much less usefulness in America than in England?
7521Why did the rule of Saint Benedict( 43) requiring readings and study lead to the copying and preservation of manuscripts?
7521Why do older people usually oppose changes in school work manifestly needed to meet changing national demands?
7521Why does a state military socialism, such as prevailed at Sparta, tend to produce a people of mediocre intellectual capacity?
7521Why does the coming of large landed estates introduce important social problems?
7521Why has such reasoning been abandoned now?
7521Why has the result of these changes been to extend the period of dependence and tutelage of children?
7521Why has this been so?
7521Why have we been able to obtain results so much more rapidly?
7521Why is a period of very rapid expansion in a State likely to be demoralizing?
7521Why is an emotional faith better adapted to the mass of people than an intellectual one?
7521Why is it that a strong religious control is never favorable to originality in thinking?
7521Why is more extended education called for as"industrial life becomes more diversified, its parts narrower, and its processes more concealed"?
7521Why is progress that is substantial nearly always a product of slow rather than rapid evolution?
7521Why is such an evolution of importance for education and civilization?
7521Why is the ability to make progressive changes, possessed so markedly by the Athenian Greeks, an important personal or racial characteristic?
7521Why is the licensing of university professors to teach not followed in our American universities?
7521Why must the education of leaders always precede the education of the masses?
7521Why not in the less advanced nations?
7521Why should La Salle''s work have been so opposed by both Church and civil authorities?
7521Why should a license from the Church have been necessary to print a book?
7521Why should the American be a free school, while those in Europe are tuition schools?
7521Why should the light literature of Spain be spoken of as a gay contagion?
7521Why the difference in assimilative power?
7521Why was Jesus''idea as to the importance of the individual destined to make such slow headway in the world?
7521Why was it difficult to develop good cathedral schools during the early Middle Ages?
7521Why was it not important that more than a few be educated under the older theory of salvation?
7521Why was it so badly mixed there?
7521Why was it such a good thing for the future of civilization in England and France that so many of its nobility perished in the Crusades?
7521Why was the change in the type of Athenian education during the Ephebic years a natural and even a necessary one for the new Athens?
7521Why was universal education involved as a later but ultimate consequence of the position taken by the Protestants?
7521Why were the cities more anxious to escape from the operation of the pauper- school law than were the towns and rural districts?
7521Why were the pauper- school and the rate- bill so hard to eliminate?
7521Why were the universities not opposed?
7521Why would dialectic naturally not be of much importance, so long as instruction in theology was dogmatic and not a matter of thinking?
7521Why would the introduction of real studies into them be especially slow?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521Why?
7521With Russia, after the destruction wrought by the Bolshevists?
7521Would Adam Smith''s reasoning( 295) still hold true?
7521Would Macaulay''s reasoning( 300) still be true?
7521Would Milton''s definition of the purpose of education be true, still?
7521Would Rome probably have been better able to withstand the barbarian invasions if Christianity had not arisen, or not?
7521Would education for citizenship with us to- day possess the same defects as in ancient Greece?
7521Would his questions( 91 b) excite much interest to- day?
7521Would it be possible to- day for any one city to become such a center of the world''s intellectual life as did Alexandria( 10)?
7521Would schools have advanced in importance as they have done had the industrial revolution not taken place?
7521Would such a training up to twelve( 264 e) be possible, or desirable?
7521Would that of Malthus( 296)?
7521Would the Athenian method of instruction have been possible had all children in the State been given an education?
7521Would the English 1802 conditions be found in any Christian land today?
7521Would the convents have tended to attract a higher quality of women than the monasteries did of men?
7521Would the extract from Roger Bacon( 89) lead you to think him a man ahead of the times in which he lived?
7521Would the interest awakened be comparable with that awakened by the revival of Greek in Italy?
7521Would the reasoning of Fichte( 277) apply to any crushed nation?
7521Would we accept the logic of his argument to- day?
7521Would we consider such knowledge as of any value?
7521Would you add anything else to Spencer''s requirements to prepare for complete living?
7521Writing, in 1840, he said: Who would suppose that education were a thing which had to be advocated on the ground of local expediency, or any ground?
7521[ 19] Dreaming that he had died and gone to Heaven, he was asked,"Who art thou?"
7521[ 4] Donatus begins as follows:"How many parts of speech are there?"
7521[ 4]"What would have been the result had the Council of Constance succeeded where it failed?
7521and the failure of science for a time to find a home in the German universities?
7521he discreetly rejoined,"the Lord of heaven and earth had but two such, and wouldst thou have twelve?"
7521patruélis eámus domom?
36336''In the dark all are as the devil,''quoted Victor, impatiently,"how should I know?
36336A line of her writing, a letter, her private papers would be a treasure, eh?
36336A squatter?
36336A what?
36336Ai n''t it time to take that medicine?
36336Ai n''t you ashamed, Gabe?
36336All?
36336Am I dead and buried,said Jack, gravely, looking around the dark vault,"or have I got''em again?"
36336And Don Pedro?
36336And Donna Maria?
36336And Philip?
36336And after so long, whence now, thou little blackguard?
36336And did that man mean to say he do n''t know whether Gracey is livin''or dead? 36336 And do you know, Father Felipe, that he went away without coming_ near me_?"
36336And ez to_ her_?
36336And have n''t I let out the tucks, and did n''t I put three fingers of the best sacking around the waist? 36336 And he asked you?"
36336And how were these suspicions aroused?
36336And if you knew that I had been foolish enough to put a good deal of money in it, you would still talk to me as you did the other day-- down there?
36336And is this all that you have to tell me?
36336And kill him?
36336And rub it?
36336And she is pretty-- tall and slender like the Americans, eh?--large eyes, a sweet mouth?
36336And she would n''t hev ye, Gabe,said Olly, thoughtfully,"after all that?
36336And that one is enough, eh?
36336And that-- there-- is-- a-- prospect-- that-- the-- stock of this big mine may-- de-- pre-- ciate in value?
36336And the notices-- in German and French?
36336And the paper and envelope are lost?
36336And there is no more any sister, eh-- only a wife?
36336And these are your American ethics?
36336And this fair client-- who is she?
36336And what did he say?
36336And what have they done with the murderer?
36336And where?
36336And who are you,he went on, without heeding her,"which of the Mesdames Devarges is it now?
36336And why did you not correct the mistake?
36336And why not this visit before?
36336And why was_ I_ not told of the presence of this strange_ Americano_? 36336 And why, Victor?"
36336And why?
36336And wot did he say?
36336And you did n''t kill Ramirez?
36336And you do n''t find anything?
36336And you have never seen him since?
36336And you have no directions to give me?
36336And you have seen it?
36336And you know the hand?
36336And you reckoned your wife did?
36336And you took the thing on yourself?
36336And you-- you?
36336And you?
36336And you?
36336Anybody here I know?
36336Anywhere, my friend?
36336Are they worth re- collecting and preserving?
36336Are you aware that among the-- er-- er-- unfortunates who perished, a body that was alleged to be yours was identified?
36336Are you going to help me?
36336Are you going to tell me?
36336Are you ready?
36336As purty as Sophy?
36336As to- day?
36336As we are talking of one of my clients and one of your parishioners, are we not getting a little too serious, Father? 36336 Better?"
36336Bress us-- it tain''t no whisky, Mars Jack, arter all de doctors tole you?
36336But I reckon I never seen ye look so peart afore, Olly; who''s been here?
36336But are you satisfied that Mrs. Conroy_ is_ really the person who stands behind Colonel Starbottle and personates my wife?
36336But can we not wait? 36336 But did n''t he say anythin''more, Olly?"
36336But her brother?
36336But how are they going to prove that?
36336But how did Gabriel get this?
36336But how will you explain this to him? 36336 But how?
36336But my sister and brother?
36336But s''pose it does n''t mean Grace after all?
36336But the name of Philip, my brother, is there?
36336But the old man-- the Doctor?
36336But to right the oppressed? 36336 But two for the same land, my brother?"
36336But whar ez she-- whar kin I git to see her?
36336But what did you say, Gabe?
36336But what do_ you_ say?
36336But what does''look at home''mean?
36336But what has passed?
36336But what''s all this about? 36336 But who would do that?"
36336But why did you not tell me this before?
36336But why do n''t you satisfy yourself?
36336But why?
36336But wot did she mean by saying that the house and lands was hers?
36336But wot''s the use of huntin''Grace if she says she''ll never return?
36336But you ca n''t use a Chinaman''s evidence before a jury?
36336But you expect-- ah-- you expect?
36336But you''re goin''to do what he says,asked Mr. Hamlin,"ai n''t you?"
36336But,continued the mystified Mr. Raynor,"do you really mean to say that you have any idea this news is true?"
36336But_ what_ was it?
36336By Grace?
36336By the way, darling, what was that paper that Gabriel gave you?
36336Ca n''t you come back this way and hev a little talk about ol''times?
36336Can I do anything for you, Miss?
36336Can you climb to the top?
36336Can you explain that circumstance?
36336Can you procure me a fresh horse? 36336 Can you tell me the way to the hotel-- the Grand Conroy House I think they call it?"
36336Can you_ prove_ his motives?
36336Come, now, pretend you do n''t know, will you?
36336Comes he?
36336Could you get to it?
36336Count me in,he said, promptly;"when shall I go?"
36336Did I tell?
36336Did I? 36336 Did he ask you any more questions about-- about old times?"
36336Did n''t you say something about-- about-- your sister, the other day?
36336Did she? 36336 Did you tell this to him-- to Gabriel?"
36336Do n''t you remember, Gabe,she said, quickly,"the first night that sister July came here and stood right in that very door?
36336Do they know us?
36336Do you know that man?
36336Do you know them?
36336Do you reckon I''d hev rung myself in as a wandering cripple-- a tramp thet he d got peppered-- on a lady like_ her_? 36336 Do you think-- that Philip-- ate Grace?"
36336Down in San Antonio?
36336Dry up!--don''t you see you''re driving me half- crazy with your infernal buzzing?
36336Eh-- what did you say?
36336Eh? 36336 Except Father Felipe, her confessor?"
36336First, let me ask you, do you believe your wife is living?
36336Friends of yours, I suppose?
36336From Pico?
36336From whom?
36336Gabe says-- Gabe says-- let me go, will you? 36336 Gabe, do you know what Mrs. Markle says of you?"
36336Gabriel Conroy,repeated Mrs. Sepulvida,"and-- and-- and-- his"----"His sister?"
36336Gabriel Conroy,said Lawyer Maxwell, suddenly dropping into the vernacular of One Horse Gulch,"are you a fool?"
36336Gabriel?
36336Go on-- or is this all?
36336Gone on an errand foh you, sah?
36336Grace-- that was his sister who was lost-- wasn''t it?
36336Has she ever been here-- in this room?
36336Have you a brother by the name of Gabriel Conroy?
36336Have you any newly discovered evidence that makes the issue doubtful?
36336Have you any proof of that fact other than your statement?
36336Have you any reason to doubt the genuineness of this particular document?
36336Have you done?
36336Have you ever tried the benefit of change of scene-- of habits of life? 36336 Have you got everything fixed-- all right?"
36336Have you had any further interview with Colonel Starbottle?
36336He denied any personal knowledge of Mrs. Conroy in this affair?
36336He is Gabriel Conroy?
36336He was here but for a little----"And he went away when?"
36336Her what?
36336Here?
36336How are ye?
36336How are you to keep it from her?
36336How came you here? 36336 How did they look?"
36336How did ye come yer?
36336How did you expect me to institute a comparison?
36336How did you get here?
36336How did you get here?
36336How do you account for them?
36336How do you indicate it?
36336How do you know she was pretty?
36336How do you think Sue''s looking now-- ez a friend interested in the family-- how does she look to you?
36336How do?
36336How have you identified the young girl?
36336How is he gettin''on, Gabe?
36336How is this? 36336 How know you this?"
36336How long have I been dr-- I mean how long has this-- spell lasted?
36336How long is it since you have seen him?
36336How long?
36336How many years?
36336How-- do-- I-- know-- it?
36336How-- much-- would I lose?--if how? 36336 How?
36336How?
36336How?
36336How?
36336How?
36336How?
36336How_ deep_ are you? 36336 Humph!--what else?"
36336I knew you would come, son,said Padre Felipe;"but where is she?
36336I reckon ye mean my real name?
36336I said----"What?"
36336I suppose,said Mr. Fitch, respectfully,"we''re to look after your foreman, Mr. Conroy, sir?"
36336In the name of God, what have we here in this imbecile and forward creature, and why is this so and after this fashion?
36336Inside of thirty minutes-- how''s that, eh?
36336Is he able to remember?
36336Is it dogs that we are, my compatriots?
36336Is it more you ask? 36336 Is it not enough that she has married this Gabriel, her brother?"
36336Is it not so? 36336 Is it well?
36336Is it wolf or bear?
36336Is that all?
36336Is that all?
36336Is that document a forgery?
36336Is there anything among these papers and collections worth our preserving?
36336Is there anything?--any fact that Mrs. Sepulvida has forgotten?
36336Is this all your news?
36336Is we gwine to Sacramento, Mars Jack?
36336It has?
36336It is Don Arturo Poinsett?
36336It is called''One Horse Gulch;''why-- who knows? 36336 It is precious,"said the stranger:"and it is all, ha?"
36336It''s a bad business,he would say;"what do you propose?"
36336Jack,he said, softly,"ef thet picter of yours-- that coloured woman"----"Which?"
36336July,queried Jack, reflectively;"what''s she like?"
36336Kin ye hang on a minnit longer?
36336Look here,he said, facing Mrs. Conroy in a hard, matter- of- fact way,"do you mean to say that what that man-- your husband-- said, was true?
36336Look here,said Jack, turning savagely on Maxwell,"what are you talking about anyway?"
36336Lost it, without having opened it or learned its contents? 36336 May I ask what it means?"
36336May I ask you further, without impertinence, if it is upon this evidence that you propose to abandon your claim to a valuable property?
36336May n''t be nothing in it, but it looks mighty like----"Like what?"
36336Might I change my mind regarding your offer of a moment ago, and take a glass of wine and a biscuit now?
36336Must you go to- night? 36336 My wife-- July-- is_ she_ clar too?"
36336Name?
36336Never down about San Antonio, visiting friends or relations?
36336No talk-- nothin''in the newspapers?
36336No use?
36336No? 36336 Nor want to, eh?"
36336Not found?
36336Not gone yet? 36336 Not much account, I reckon?"
36336Now what would be your opinion if you was on a jury onto a case like this? 36336 Of course,"roared out Jack, impatiently,"did you think I was talking of----?"
36336Oh, I''ll look around here-- I suppose there''s not much beyond this?
36336Oh, it''s that, is it? 36336 Oh, sir,"said this arch hypocrite, sweetly,"how can you jest so cruelly at such a moment?
36336Oh, where is he hurt, Pete? 36336 Olly,"he said, after an airy preliminary toss,"would ye like to have a nice dolly?"
36336One Horse Gulch?
36336One moment,said Arthur, quietly,"how do you know that it is an impostor?"
36336Only by that?
36336Only to abuse me?
36336Pardon?
36336Perhaps,said Donna Dolores:"who knows?"
36336Poinsett?
36336Purty?
36336Ran off with some fellow, did n''t she? 36336 San Antonio?"
36336Say what?
36336Say you''ve got important business?
36336Say?
36336Securely?
36336Shall I?
36336She ai n''t goin''on my account, Gabe?
36336Starved to death?
36336Suppose you can? 36336 Suthin''what?"
36336Take me with you, Gabe?
36336Tell me, Father Felipe,she said, hastily,"did the Don Arturo pass the night here?"
36336Tell to me, Mees Clark,he said, suddenly turning all his teeth on her, with gasping civility,"where is this Señor Perkins, eh?"
36336That offer''s open for ninety days-- will you take it? 36336 The prisoner at the bar?"
36336The whole story?
36336The_ real_ thing?
36336Then I''ll expect you over to my office at eleven to- morrow?
36336Then perhaps we may be travelling companions?
36336Then thet thar''Personal''wozent writ by you, and thet P. A. do n''t stand for Philip Ashley?
36336Then what did she reckon to let on by that note?
36336Then why not make the proper application for a patent?
36336Then you believe you''re going to die?
36336Then you do n''t think that Mrs. Conroy is the culprit?
36336Then you never saw July at all?
36336Then you think it is a genuine grant?
36336Then_ you_ are Mr. Dumphy''s long- lost wife?
36336There is nothing then that you are leaving behind you?
36336There''s a step- ladder from the gallery,said the sheriff, joyously,"but wo n''t they see us, and be prepared?"
36336These Americanos-- come they here often?
36336Thet reads--''Look at little Olly-- ain''t she there?'' 36336 Through the snow-- in the earth?"
36336To whom did_ you_ give it?
36336To_ her_--who is_ she_?
36336Truly, Dolores?
36336Truly-- from whom?
36336War you goin'', Olly?
36336Was it a real man-- a pure man?
36336Was that draft paid?
36336Was there no mark upon the envelope by which it might be known without explaining its contents?
36336Well, and how did ye find the young couple gettin''on, Sal?
36336Well, sir?
36336Well, then, the first thing to do is to find out_ who_ she is, what she knows, and what she wants, eh?
36336Well, then?
36336Well, wot did_ you_ do, Gabe? 36336 Well, you awful old Gabe, what difference does it make_ who_ sent it?"
36336Well,he said, at last,"what is your defence?"
36336Well,said Gabriel, turning round and addressing himself impatiently to the screen,"wot if it is?"
36336Well?
36336Well?
36336Well?
36336Well?
36336What animal have we in the next room?
36336What are you doing here?
36336What are you doing with the fire?
36336What are you goin''to do?
36336What ca n''t be done, Gabe?
36336What class?
36336What day is this?
36336What did he want, Gabe?
36336What did she look like, Olly?
36336What did you say your name was?
36336What did_ you_ say?
36336What do I care who hears me now? 36336 What do you mean anyway-- why do n''t yer speak out?
36336What do you mean?
36336What do you mean?
36336What do you propose?
36336What do you want with him?
36336What does she look like, Pete?
36336What for?
36336What has this to do with me?
36336What have we?
36336What have you got against my giant? 36336 What have you got to propose?"
36336What he d he bin doin''?
36336What is your name?
36336What is-- er-- your name?
36336What made ye allow I was hidin''yer? 36336 What made you think_ I_ did it?"
36336What man?
36336What man?
36336What time is it, you d-- d old fool, ai n''t it dark enough yet to git outer this hole?
36336What was the matter, Gabe?
36336What''s that got to do with it?
36336What''s that to you? 36336 What''s the man''s name that killed him-- the man that you took?"
36336What''s the matter?
36336What''s the row, Bill?
36336What''s to be done? 36336 What''s to be done?"
36336What''s up?
36336What''s your hurry?
36336What''s your profession?
36336What,he asked, lazily, yet with a slight colour on his cheek,"did you say was the name of the chap that fetched that little Mexican?"
36336What,she said huskily,"what if I were to refuse?"
36336What-- money-- have-- you-- got-- in-- it?
36336What?
36336What?
36336When and where did you see her last?
36336When does the up- stage pass through San Geronimo?
36336When was it?
36336When you dragged me, my child?
36336When, Bill?
36336When?
36336Where are the others?
36336Where are you going?
36336Where are you going?
36336Where did you see him last, and under what circumstances?
36336Where from?
36336Where has she been all this while?
36336Where is the other?
36336Where''s Olly?
36336Where''s your proof that your husband is the first discoverer?
36336Where?
36336Where?
36336Where?
36336Where?
36336Which?
36336Which?
36336Which?
36336Which?
36336Who are those people?
36336Who are you?
36336Who did he kill, Bill?
36336Who did you say?
36336Who did you see down town?
36336Who did, then?
36336Who do you mean?
36336Who does n''t belong here?
36336Who is above?
36336Who is he?
36336Who is it?
36336Who is this Donna Dolores?
36336Who knows?
36336Who knows?
36336Who was it?
36336Who''could n''t''it be?
36336Who''s Perkins?
36336Who''s Sophy?
36336Who''s_ she_?
36336Who''s_ she_?
36336Who? 36336 Who?"
36336Who?
36336Who?
36336Who?
36336Who?
36336Why ca n''t he come? 36336 Why did he stir the fire, Grace?"
36336Why did n''t you come into the parlour?
36336Why did n''t you send word where you was?
36336Why did you come here to see me?
36336Why do n''t some on ye take his place? 36336 Why do they come, and how do they know where we are?"
36336Why is he?
36336Why limit my stay to two or three months?
36336Why not? 36336 Why not?
36336Why not?
36336Why not?
36336Why should they rub it? 36336 Why should_ he_ know more?
36336Why the devil did you keep me waiting?
36336Why, where did you ever see Mrs. Conroy before?
36336Why?
36336Why?
36336Why?
36336Why?
36336Why?
36336Why?
36336Will you let me see that note?
36336With tears in your eyes, Don Arturo? 36336 With the piano?"
36336Wo n''t that paper that Dr. Devarges gave his sister show that the doctor was really the discoverer of this lead?
36336Wot circumstances?
36336Wot specimens?
36336Wot''s that dream you was talkin''''bout jess now?
36336Wot,he asked, gravely,"would be_ your_ idee of a good defence?
36336Would n''t you like to have me sign some bit o''paper?
36336Ye ai n''t goin''near Mrs. Markle''s, are ye?
36336Ye did n''t know her, Mr. Hamlin? 36336 Ye do n''t know whether Lawyer Maxwell has any bisness up this way, Gabriel, do ye?"
36336Ye mean I kin go?
36336Yes, what are the proofs?
36336Yes, yes,said Philip, hastily;"but you were speaking of this girl, Grace Conroy; what do you know of her?"
36336Yes,replied Maxwell, demurely,"did he ever talk much to you about her?"
36336Yes; but not so very guileless,said Pilcher,"eh, Dyce?"
36336Yes?--you think-- you think? 36336 You DID?"
36336You ai n''t bin and gone done nuffin''agin de doctor''s orders, Mahs Jack?
36336You ai n''t goin''into deep water to- day, Gabe, are you?
36336You ai n''t worrying about that woman, Gabe?
36336You are an American?
36336You are not frightened? 36336 You are not rich, friend Gabriel?"
36336You are not seriously alarmed?
36336You buried the case and papers?
36336You came to my assistance alone?
36336You do n''t get anything out of that hill- side?
36336You do n''t know then that the Conroy mine has gone up with the earthquake, eh? 36336 You do n''t mean to allow, Jack, ez you reckon she_ did n''t_ do it?"
36336You do?
36336You have been an invalid then-- Donna Dolores?
36336You have nothing more?
36336You have prospected all over the ridge?
36336You have read this?
36336You have some business with me, eh? 36336 You know not then for whom was this mass?
36336You know of him?
36336You know the great American advocate-- our friend-- Don Arturo Poinsett?
36336You know this to be a fact?
36336You saw''em take it from the fire?
36336You say so?
36336You see that, after all, your advice is necessary, and what I began as an explanation of my folly may be of business importance; who knows? 36336 You see, Poinsett, as a man of business I do n''t go as much into society as you do, but she seems to be a straight up and down girl, eh?"
36336You speak Spanish, Don Arturo?
36336You tell him everything-- did you tell him that?
36336You were having a mass for the dead, Father Felipe?--you have then suffered here?
36336You wo n''t laugh at my writing?
36336Your sister?
36336_ Quien sabe?_ But I am rambling again. 36336 _ We?_ No, sir.
36336''Are you never going to get that cloak on, Star?''
36336--"What thing, Gabe?"
36336--don''t you see, Gabe?"
36336--here Mr. Dumphy snapped his finger and thumb, to illustrate the lame and impotent conclusion of Donna Maria''s investment--"don''t you know that?"
36336A ray of hope shot through Grace''s sad fancies; if they were so near help, might not it have already reached the sufferers?
36336After a moment he said--"Do ye want to know why I like this old cabin and this yer chimbly, Olly?"
36336After you run away with him does he propose to marry you?"
36336Ah, you doubt-- you doubt?
36336Ah?
36336Ai n''t my husband dead, and is n''t that skunk-- an entire stranger-- still livin''?"
36336Allowin''it''s one o''my idols-- I axes you as a brother Pagan-- whar ez she?"
36336Am I right?"
36336And I put it to you as far- minded men, if it ai n''t mighty queer?
36336And could he count upon Mrs. Conroy''s absence or neutrality?
36336And ef it was n''t you, who was it?"
36336And ef it''pears queer to strangers, wots the odds?
36336And having disposed of this unimportant feature of the interview, he continued,"Ye have n''t heard nought o''Grace-- ye mind Grace?
36336And he pertendin''to hev bin her bo?"
36336And here I tumbled you off your own stoop, did n''t I?
36336And his name-- you have forgotten?"
36336And how was the deed committed?
36336And how''s thet little Manty o''yours gettin''on?
36336And how''s things, eh?
36336And if Spanish grants are so easily made, why might not this one of mine be a fabrication?
36336And maybe, if you''ve got time, you''ll tell me what was the reason I made that pleasant little trip to Sacramento?
36336And my watch-- who_ has_ got my watch?"
36336And then Gabriel, after the fashion of_ his_ sex, ignored all but the present, and holding Olly in his arms, said--"It''s my little girl, ai n''t it?
36336And then a Chinyman gins us your note"----"My note?"
36336And then nothing will be said?"
36336And this brother-- what proof is there that he is not an impostor too?"
36336And this is your house?
36336And whar''bouts was ye found?
36336And where am I now?
36336And where have you been, you naughty girl?
36336And where was Grace?
36336And why should it be given to_ you_?"
36336And why were these other pleasure- seekers rushing by the windows, and was not that a lady fainting in the hall?
36336And why?"
36336And wot passengers?
36336And ye wo n''t take nothin''more?
36336And yet how?
36336And you-- only an hour here?"
36336Any relation to the_ Carámbas_ of Dutch Flat?
36336Appil or cranbear''pie?--our own make?
36336Are ye goin''with him?"
36336Are ye hark''nin'', dear?"
36336Are you stationed here?"
36336Art thou certain, my brave friend, there are not_ three_ to this of which thou speakest?
36336Arthur!--what are you doing here?"
36336As it is, I imagine she wishes to make some compromise with the thief-- pardon me!--the what do you say?
36336As that was the subject his visitors came to speak about-- a fact of which Mr. Dumphy was fully aware-- he added, sharply,"What do you propose?"
36336As the clerk disappeared, Arthur turned to Dumphy,"I suppose it was to meet this man you sent for me?"
36336Axin ye ez a lawyer having experin''s in them things, and reck''nin''to pay ez high ez eny man fo''the same, wot would_ you_ call a good defence?"
36336Axin''your parding, do n''t they, Miss?"
36336Because you''re religious, do you expect me to starve?
36336Been doing pretty well lately, and having a good time, eh?
36336But I am curious to know how you could deliberately set about to wrong this woman; what was the motive?"
36336But after a pause, he suggested with a consciousness of great discretion and artfulness,"Suppose thet July does n''t come back?"
36336But first, tell me who is that wicked, dashing- looking fellow outside the courtyard?
36336But go on-- how did you do it?
36336But how does it come that a patent for this has not been applied for before by Gabriel?
36336But if it were Grace-- the sister, you understand-- what would be your advice?"
36336But is she living?
36336But now that we understand each other, would you mind telling me what was your motive for this peculiar and monstrous form of deception?
36336But tell me, do you really think that letter of this man Conroy is true?"
36336But what are the men looking at?
36336But what do you know of his history?
36336But what in blank are you waiting for?
36336But what''s this got to do with our affair?
36336But where?"
36336But who is he?"
36336But who is this woman?"
36336But whose business is it, anyway, legally, I mean?"
36336But why had they all risen with a common instinct, and with faces bloodless and eyes fixed in horrible expectancy?
36336But wot are_ you_ goin''to do without me?"
36336But would he be overtaken meanwhile by those in his rear?
36336But you''re not drinking, Mr. Dumphy, eh?
36336But you''re not startin''out agin without your dinner, and it waitin''ye in the oven?
36336But you, Arthur, how chanced you to be here in this vicinity?
36336By the way, there is another sister, is n''t there?"
36336C.''s?"
36336Can you reach the skylight?"
36336Can you think of any one?
36336Can you--_will_ you do it?"
36336Comprehendest thou, Victor, my friend?
36336Conroy?"
36336Could Don Pedro have been treacherous?
36336Could Dr. Devarges have made a mistake?
36336Could anything be done?
36336Could he have known, could they all-- Arthur Poinsett, Dumphy, and Julie Devarges-- have known this fact of which he alone was ignorant?
36336Could he not, with Dumphy''s assistance, procure a gang of men from San Francisco?
36336Could he regain the_ corral_?
36336Could it be really his wife?--had not the supercilious Poinsett been himself tricked-- or was he not now trying to trick him, Dumphy?
36336Could n''t Starbottle be bribed to expose at least the name of his client?
36336Could n''t you kinder drop in in passing and look after things?"
36336Could there have been any further facts regarding this inopportune grant that Mrs. Sepulvida had not disclosed?
36336Could this have been what Donna Maria meant, or had there been a later convulsion of Nature?
36336Did Gabriel even assume a virtue, and under the pretext of an injured husband challenge the victim to the field of honour?
36336Did he make any fight?
36336Did n''t I tell you to go round and see what was the kind of religious dispensation here?"
36336Did n''t they always pass the Fort where we were stationed?
36336Did n''t they beg what they could, and steal what they otherwise could n''t get, and then report to Washington the incompetency of the military?
36336Did you bring her with you?"
36336Did you hev a good time down there?"
36336Did you know him?"
36336Did you know who that was?"
36336Did you not get her message?"
36336Did you not, Victor?"
36336Did you not?"
36336Did your anonymous correspondent explain that fact?
36336Do I understand that I am to press this claim with a view of ousting these parties?
36336Do n''t ye mind that-- ar dress I copper fastened?"
36336Do n''t ye mind the nights I used to kem up from the gulch and pitch in to mendin''your gownds, Olly, and you asleep?
36336Do n''t you remember them-- the men gaunt, sickly, vulgar, low- toned; the women dirty, snuffy, prematurely old and prematurely prolific?"
36336Do n''t you see he ca n''t stand-- much less talk?
36336Do n''t you see it?
36336Do n''t you see"----"What?"
36336Do n''t you see?
36336Do n''t you see?
36336Do n''t you see?
36336Do n''t you see?"
36336Do you comprehend?
36336Do you comprehend?"
36336Do you hear me, Victor Ramirez?
36336Do you hear?
36336Do you not trust me, Victor?"
36336Do you suppose I came here to- night to congratulate you?
36336Does he know of the mine?"
36336Dumphy cast a suspicious glance at him and said--"Who?"
36336Dumphy?"
36336Dumphy?"
36336Dumphy?"
36336Echo answers''where?''
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?
36336Eh?"
36336Eh?"
36336First, I suppose your title''s all right, hey?"
36336For God''s sake, do you hear?
36336For why, Olly?
36336For why?
36336Gabe says he knew"----"Whom?"
36336Gabriel( cunningly, and leaning confidentially over the arm of his chair):"Wot would be_ your_ idee of a motif?"
36336Go to him at Wingdam?
36336Grace, what do you know of that man?"
36336Had anything occurred since then?--had any new resolution entered his head to which such a revelation would be fatal?
36336Had he not been cheated again, and this time by a blunder in his own malice?
36336Had he really become Devarges''s heir, and if so, why had he not claimed the grant boldly?
36336Had he-- had Dr. Devarges ever exhibited as noble trust, as perfect appreciation of her nature and sufferings?
36336Had his connexion with it been in any way revealed to the Donna Dolores?
36336Had it suddenly sank in the earth, or had he diverged from his path?
36336Had she heard it?
36336Had they not thrown away the priceless pearl of this woman''s love through ignorance and selfishness?
36336Hamlin( after another pause):"Has Pete Dumphy got anything agin you?"
36336Hamlin( with frightful deliberation):"you DID?"''
36336Hamlin,"Yes;"with a leading question,"sorter dark complected sometimes, hey?"
36336Hamlin:"You ca n''t?"
36336Hamlin?"
36336Hang it, my boy, do n''t you see why she was excepted?
36336Has Dr. Devarges any heirs to contest the grant?"
36336Has he got any sand in him?"
36336Have n''t made up your mind-- hey?
36336Have you any word to send-- to-- anybody?"
36336Have you had an attachment that was superior to novelty or self- interest?"
36336He groaned, and after a pause added fiercely,"How do you know your wife did it?"
36336He must see her at once; but how and where?
36336He only said,"Have you legal evidence that she_ is_ the widow?
36336He rose, and, standing respectfully before his fair client, said--"Have you decided fully?
36336He turned his small black eyes on Arthur, and said--"Do you think you are capable of such a passion, my son?
36336He turned to her gravely--"Ef you wus ever asked, Olly, ef I had been sweet upon Mrs. Markle, wot would ye say?"
36336Hev you been in the ditches agin, Olly?"
36336Hey?
36336Hey?
36336How comes dese dings?
36336How could he pass the time?
36336How did she do it?
36336How did ye reckon to find me?
36336How did you do it, Gabe?"
36336How did you find out what had become of me?
36336How do, Olly?
36336How do?"
36336How many leagues square?
36336How many miles you think to the stage town?
36336How much would you_ lose_?"
36336How soon?"
36336How then did this impostor gain the knowledge necessary to set up the claim?
36336How''s that?
36336I ai n''t askin''who nor which it is-- but ony this-- ez thet-- thet-- thet young woman dark complected ez that picter allows her to be?"
36336I ask you again-- will you share it with me?
36336I wish to inquire, sir, if it was then delivered to you?"
36336If he could come to Wingdam, why could n''t he come here,--that''s what I want to know?"
36336If my room is n''t large enough, and they ca n''t wait, there''s a handy lot o''ground beyond on the next square--_Plaza del Toros_, eh?
36336If she should be delayed, as often happened, for several hours?
36336If the steamer should not go?
36336If what?"
36336In making this exposure had he not precipitated a catastrophe as fatal to himself as to the husband?
36336Is her complexion like the young bark of the madroño-- the most beautiful thing ever seen-- did every other woman look chalky beside her, eh?"
36336Is it even necessary for me to give the name of my client?"
36336Is it not so?"
36336Is it so?"
36336Is the sister or the brother real-- or are they both impostors?
36336Is there a legal marriage?
36336Is there any family here-- any house that will receive him under your advice for a week?
36336Is your rifle loaded?"
36336It does not take you from us?
36336It is foolish, perhaps-- vanity-- who knows?
36336It is weary- eh?
36336It is what?"
36336It is worth the fee of another bottle?
36336It was a probable one-- was it not?"
36336It was given five years ago to a Dr. Devarges-- I beg your pardon, did you speak?"
36336It''s five years and over-- ain''t it?
36336It''s mean, ai n''t it?--they''ll grow again, wo n''t they?"
36336Jack( after a long crushing silence):"Were you ever under medical treatment for these spells?"
36336Jack,"Always white?"
36336Jo?"
36336Lead dropped out-- eh?
36336Look here, Olly, say!--do you take any stock in that lost sister of yours that your fool of a brother is always gabbing about?
36336Look you, Poinsy, d''ye see this yer posy in my buttonhole?
36336Lookin''at it, by and large, thar do n''t seem to be much show for a fellow ez hez been in enny ways kind to a gal, is thar?"
36336Looking up his bank account, eh?
36336Maxwell rose hopelessly,--"Then, if I understand you, you intend to admit"----"Thet I done it?
36336May I ask how you have acquired these later details?"
36336May they not calculate somewhat on your_ indisposition_ to prove it legally; on the theory that you''d rather not open the case, for instance?"
36336Maybe they have n''t time and are in a hurry now?
36336Me likee you!--shabbee?
36336Might he not have been delirious or insane when he wrote of the treasure?
36336Might n''t I, Johnny?"
36336Might they not both drive this woman into the arms of another man?
36336Mon Dieu, is it possible that one should mistake a giant?
36336Mr. Hamlin asked,"When?"
36336Mr. Hamlin( doubtfully):"You mean a run of luck?"
36336Nevertheless, the instincts of good humour and hopefulness were stronger, and he presently asked--"How will they come?"
36336No?
36336No?
36336Nothing more?
36336Nothing?
36336Now what do you propose?"
36336O, Señor, are they living or dead?
36336Olly, dubiously,"In the pictures?"
36336Olly, sharply--"Where?"
36336Olly, what did you say?"
36336Openly and in the presence of witnesses?
36336Or did he refuse you even that excuse for your perfidy?
36336Or had the Secretary deceived her as to its location?
36336Or have you taken the name of the young sprig of an officer for whom you deserted me and maybe in turn married?
36336Or is it the wife and accomplice of this feeble- minded Conroy?
36336Or, if not, is he her legally constituted heir?
36336People who could be strong only in proportion to their physical strength, and losing everything with the loss of that?
36336Perhaps they''ll call with you?
36336Perhaps you''ll kindly inform me what I''m lying here crippled for?
36336Poinsett?"
36336Possibly, she was at mass?"
36336Presently Philip called to her--"Do you see that log?
36336Question repeated:--"What was your idea or motive in assuming the name of Gabriel Conroy?"
36336Question:"In your early acquaintance with the deceased, were you not known to him as Gabriel Conroy always, and not as-- er-- er-- Johnny Dumbledee?"
36336Read it-- or are you a traitor too?
36336Rough times them, Gabriel-- warn''t they?
36336Said she''d been swindled?
36336Sepulvida?"
36336Sha n''t I bring you a chair?
36336Sha n''t I go for a glass of water, a carriage?"
36336Shabbee?
36336Shabbee?
36336Shabbee?
36336Shabbee?
36336Shabbee?"
36336Shabbee?"
36336She likee you-- shabbee?
36336She taught the child of the widower Don José Sepulvida, herself almost a child; you understand?
36336Sho?"
36336Should he tell Arthur of Colonel Starbottle''s interview with him, and the delivery and subsequent loss of the mysterious envelope?
36336So he said curtly--"What do you propose?"
36336So it seems I''m lucky in coming to you-- no trouble in finding this_ woman_ now, hey?
36336Suppose we did?
36336Surely this is nothing new to you?
36336Surely you will not refuse our hospitality to- night?"
36336Surely you will stop at the Blessed Fisherman, if only for a moment, eh?"
36336That do n''t look well for me nor you-- does it?"
36336That he knows nothing of you; of the circumstances under which you came here?"
36336The Señorita marries the rich man, eh?"
36336The handwriting was unfamiliar, but even if it were Jack''s, how did_ he_ manage to send it without his knowledge?
36336The house of Gabriel Conroy is upon the land, the very land, you understand?
36336The widow is rich, eh?--handsome, eh?
36336Then after a pause, he asked cautiously--"And how did_ ye_ come by this yer?"
36336Then more gravely,"But what is this?
36336Then she said, looking at the fire--"Ai n''t you well?"
36336Then, you have nothing really to make you suspicious of your own claim but the fact of its recent discovery?
36336They might-- weeks hence-- discover the bodies-- but who knows?
36336This Gabriel-- is he married?"
36336This is all what you call too theen, eh?
36336Thou didst observe his fear, Tiburcio?
36336Thou dost understand, friend Victor?
36336Through what unhallowed spell had this woman-- once the meekest and humblest of wives-- become the shrillest and most shrewest of widows?
36336To do justice to the unjustly accused, eh?
36336To the infinite credit of a much abused sex, be it recorded that Mrs. Markle overlooked the implied slur, and asked--"But what about Olly?"
36336To whom was it given?"
36336Turn your weaknesses-- eh?
36336Two lovers not rich, eh?
36336Under what circumstances is it held-- who holds it?
36336Victor bowed and answered with his teeth,"_ We_, eh?"
36336Victor raised his eyes and yellow fringes to the ceiling, and said, with a shrug--"_ Quien sabe?_ there are grants and grants!"
36336Was Olly really sincere in her dislike of his wife?
36336Was he going mad too?
36336Was he mistaken, and had Mrs. Conroy''s anger actually been nothing but a joke?
36336Was he not a dupe?
36336Was it not possible to dig in the ruins for the bodies?
36336Was it worth while to go on?
36336Was she about to revenge herself on Arthur for her long suffering with the late Don José?
36336Was that all?
36336Was there anything he could tell this terrible child-- his own sister-- which she did not already know better than he?
36336Was this not a country of gods?
36336Was this woman who has disappeared-- this sister-- this sole and only legatee-- a married woman-- had she a child?
36336We are proud, sir, we admit, of such men-- eh?
36336We understand each other, eh?
36336Well, what do you say?
36336Well, what happens?
36336Well, who wants her to?
36336Well, why dost thou stare?
36336Well-- what do you propose to do about this claim?
36336Were n''t they always getting up rows with the Indians and then sneaking away to let us settle the bill?
36336Were they not laughing at him now?
36336What are you afraid of?
36336What are you doing, you old fool?"
36336What are your propositions, what if I refuse, hey?"
36336What can you expect from that class of people?"
36336What could you expect?
36336What did I do?
36336What did he come back for?
36336What did you say?
36336What do you care?
36336What do you know of him?"
36336What do you propose?
36336What do you say?"
36336What does all this mean, Ramirez?"
36336What had a woman of that kind to do with such weakness?
36336What has become of her?"
36336What has he told you?"
36336What have you got to propose about it, eh?
36336What have you got to propose?"
36336What have you there?"
36336What have you to fear from this man?"
36336What is it?"
36336What is the matter?
36336What is this?
36336What matters that he had an explanation-- possibly a quarrel on his hands?
36336What matters?
36336What more was wanted to justify his worst suspicions?
36336What name shall I call you?
36336What need of any witness now?
36336What reason have you to charge_ her_ with being designing?"
36336What revelation would the next question bring?
36336What says it?
36336What should they do?
36336What the devil"----"Beg your pardon, sir; do you know anything about her?"
36336What then?
36336What was he doing here?
36336What was it?
36336What was that noise?
36336What was that?
36336What was your idea, Mr. Dumbledee, in-- er-- assuming the name of-- er-- er-- Gabriel Conroy?"
36336What would they think of it?
36336What you were doing up in the Court House, when you were driving those people crazy with excitement?
36336What you''re hiding here in this blank family vault for?
36336What''s become of that little boot- black that you used to bedevil?
36336What''s the matter, Gabe, ye ai n''t goin''?"
36336What''s the size of the figures to- day?
36336What''s their general complexion?"
36336What''s your balance at the Gulch, Mr. Peebles?
36336What''s your hurry?
36336What,"he asked suddenly and aggressively,"have_ you_ got to say about it, anyway?"
36336When are ye goin'', Gabe?"
36336When the stock is issued I''ll write you a cheque: or perhaps you''d take a share of stock?"
36336Whence came the power that had animated this fragile shell?
36336Where did you spot him?
36336Where have you been these long years?"
36336Where in blank are you going?
36336Where is this modest property?
36336Where shall I fetch her to?"
36336Where was the other tower?
36336Where''s the doctor?"
36336Which shall we have first?
36336Who are the survivors?
36336Who ez she-- enyway?
36336Who is that cavalier?"
36336Who is your plaintiff?"
36336Who is_ she_?"
36336Who knows?
36336Who then_ is_ she?"
36336Who was it-- another lawyer, dear?
36336Who was that man that just left the next room?"
36336Why did n''t he go right off to the Presidio?
36336Why did n''t ye rush in and grip his throat until he told yer?"
36336Why do n''t ye call?
36336Why do n''t you read it?"
36336Why do n''t you say something?"
36336Why do you trust your lives and the lives of women to that thar Ashley?"
36336Why does she remain absent?"
36336Why had n''t she managed it so as to kill Gabriel too?
36336Why not let her remain?"
36336Why?
36336Will you trust this paper with me?"
36336Wo n''t tak''nothin''drink?
36336Wot put thet into your head, Olly?
36336Would Don Arturo grant the Donna his further counsel and presence?
36336Would he not let her order some slight repast before they proceeded further in this horrid business?
36336Would it be sufficient to enable him to reach the_ casa_?
36336Would they believe his statement?
36336Would they continue to retreat as he advanced?
36336Would ye like to help her play with it?"
36336Ye ai n''t heerd anything o''her-- nor seen her, may be-- hev you?"
36336Yes?
36336Yes?
36336Yes?
36336Yet she prudently asked--"Is it ever hungry?"
36336You ai n''t such a blasted fool as to be stuck after her still, are you?"
36336You and St. Anthony in partnership, eh?
36336You are not alone?"
36336You are wet with this heretic fog-- eh?
36336You comprehend, Dumphy?
36336You do n''t believe it?--eh?
36336You do?
36336You had possession of the deed or will, had n''t you?
36336You hear?"
36336You know not that a saint has gone-- that Donna Dolores has at last met her reward?"
36336You read Spanish?
36336You rek''leck ole times on Sweetwater, eh?
36336You remember-- the house of Donna Dolores?"
36336You represent them, I think?
36336You sabe?"
36336You see her break that plate just now?
36336You see you and me''s-- so to speak-- ole pards, eh?
36336You shabbee shelliff?"
36336You shall stay with me to- night and we wo n''t let brother Gabe hear our little secrets-- shall we?
36336You think?
36336You understand?
36336You understand?"
36336You understand?"
36336You will help me?
36336You would not advise me to be false to that?
36336You''re sure you did n''t?"
36336You''re sure you feel better now?"
36336Your heart is not in your work-- eh?"
36336_ Sabe?_ Let''s understand each other.
36336_ Sabe?_ You''re a gentleman-- so am I,"he continued, hastily.
36336_ she_ said so, did she?"
36336afore folks?"
36336and so I ask you again, what are_ you_ doing here?"
36336and the widow''s fifty- six thousand?"
36336are_ you_ there?"
36336asked Arthur, quietly;"are you willing to go on and establish the fact?"
36336but she is a_ woman_--what would you?"
36336but what do_ you_ know''bout cards?"
36336does he not?"
36336echoed Olly, scornfully;"do you think I''d ever let on to thet woman ennything?
36336eh, Poinsett?"
36336eh?
36336eh?
36336eh?
36336eh?
36336eh?"
36336for a lady perhaps-- eh, Mees Clark?
36336for a lady?"
36336gasped Ramirez hoarsely,"you?"
36336going away, Mees Sal?
36336good God, what is the matter?"
36336he added, stroking Arthur''s riding- coat, and examining critically as if he had been a large child,"what have we-- what is this, eh?
36336he is the affianced of a rich widow in the Southern Country, you understand?
36336he repeated,"that''s a healthy lookin''_ sister_ of such a man as you-- ain''t it?
36336he said, abruptly,"why should this be forged?"
36336imprecated Mr. Hamlin furiously to the driver;"what are you waiting for?"
36336impulsive?
36336interjected Gabriel, suddenly,"thet looks bad, do n''t it?
36336is he going to die?"
36336is it necessary for me to say what these proceedings are?
36336is it so, Don Arturo?
36336or was it really the voice of little Olly?
36336or will you leave them for the present in undisturbed possession of the land?"
36336said Dumphy abruptly,"how much have you got in that thing?"
36336said Olly.--"Then?"
36336said Olly;"what was she saying when we came in?"
36336such as_ you_ can not even imagine-- do you suppose such a woman would not have guarded against even this?
36336that I am to be kept in ignorance of my duty as the hostess of the Blessed Trinity, or are you, Don Juan, my dueña?
36336what are you waitin''for?
36336what have we here-- a correction in the date-- in still another hand?
36336what have we here?"
36336what if a devoted, exhausting passion for somebody else already filled my heart?
36336what in dash are you dashingly doing here, dash you?"
36336what is this to you?
36336what is this?"
36336what''s gone of her?"
36336what''s that thou sayst?
36336what''s that?"
36336what''s that?"
36336what''s that?"
36336will you?"
36336you are wise, you are wise, Mees Clark, I would not for much money find myself under these criticism, eh?"
36336you did not?
36336you will listen, will you not?
51854Am I alive?
51854Am I under arrest?
51854And how about yourself, Arthurjean?
51854And made it twenty- two?
51854And now what do you think of me?
51854And the doctor did n''t keep away?
51854And what am I doing here, General Wakely?
51854And what are you going to do about it?
51854And what is that?
51854And what''s the drip about the Alaska?
51854And which do you prefer-- Scotch or rye?
51854And who is the Chief?
51854And who the hell, Arthurjean, is Mr. Willamer of the S.E.C.?
51854And why do you think the hospital will be letting you go, Mr. Tompkins? 51854 And why not?
51854And why not?
51854And why not?
51854And you ca n''t find a trace?
51854And you say that so far nobody has been able to help you?
51854Angles? 51854 Any kids?"
51854Any news today, Mary?
51854Are these checks good?
51854Are they going to make you an Ambassador or something?
51854Are you a friend of Frank''s? 51854 Are you alive?"
51854Are you all right, Winnie?
51854Are you catching the ten o''clock, dear?
51854Are you feeling okay?
51854Are you sure you need him?
51854Are you trying to tell me that he''s dead?
51854But how''m I going to get to Washington and do all these things?
51854But there''s no doubt that the Alaska went down like a stone?
51854But what about Von Bieberstein?
51854But what can we do?
51854But what did you want to see me about?
51854But what if the old girl dies within the next five years? 51854 But what is Z-2?"
51854But what is my moral responsibility in this predicament, Dr. McGregor? 51854 But you''re going to look, are n''t you?"
51854Ca n''t you at least check on the Jacklin angle?
51854Ca n''t you explain without touching it?
51854Can you drive me out to my place?
51854Can you give me a lead?
51854Celebrate what?
51854Change yo''luck?
51854Convince them of what?
51854Did he ever tell you that he''s head of Nazi intelligence in this country?
51854Did she make you happy?
51854Did they-- Are you-- Are you all right?
51854Did you ever see a wife who could n''t spot a sex- situation at a hundred yards up- wind on a dark and rainy night?
51854Did_ I_ say that you had no chance?
51854Do n''t tell me that I''m going to be offered a Morgan partnership?
51854Do n''t these treatments take a long time?
51854Do n''t you like it here? 51854 Do n''t you mean the Purple Heart?"
51854Do n''t you see what I mean,I grated,"or must I spell it out for you?
51854Do they let wives come and visit their husbands?
51854Do you realize you flopped with that blade in your hand and might have cut an artery?
51854Do you think I ought to call my lawyer in before I proceed with our talk?
51854Do you think that you can drive a wedge between me and my husband?
51854Do you want to make me ill, with your talk of collies?
51854Does n''t the State Department have something to say about it?
51854Drop in again some time and tell me, will you?
51854Exactly what_ is_ your mission?
51854Except what?
51854Expense account, you spy- catcher?
51854For me?
51854Frank said--"How do I know you''re telling the truth?
51854Goin''to leave your coop down here?
51854Good afternoon, Mr. Harcourt,I said pleasantly,"and what can I do for the F.B.I.?"
51854Got any comment on that, Graham?
51854Half- past sixish?
51854Has success gone to his head?
51854Have a drink?
51854Have some?
51854Have_ you_ anything to say?
51854He too?
51854He''s had no lunch?
51854Her chaplain?
51854Him? 51854 His little Wac wo n''t like it?"
51854Honeychile,I asked,"did you by any chance, think to bring me some of the office brandy?
51854How about Wasson?
51854How about Winnie? 51854 How about a collie?"
51854How about a drink, Merry?
51854How about barbershops?
51854How about commodities, Graham?
51854How about his food?
51854How about meeting me at the Pond Club at one o''clock?
51854How about my lawyer?
51854How about peace- babies?
51854How about some food?
51854How about the third charge?
51854How are you going to set out?
51854How did it go, Tompkins?
51854How did you guess?
51854How do you do it, Tompkins?
51854How do you think we boys on the Committee make a living? 51854 How does that fit into the picture?"
51854How in hell_ could_ I know?
51854How many women is it you''ve been trying to keep away from each other? 51854 How much do you need?"
51854How much will it cost me to be Ambassador to Canada?
51854How much?
51854How rich are we, anyway?
51854How''s Ponto?
51854How''s that again?
51854How''s that again?
51854How''s that again?
51854How''s your health? 51854 How?"
51854How?
51854How_ is_ he?
51854Hullo, Ray? 51854 I can see how Hitler or Tojo might want to get rid of Roosevelt but who else?
51854I mean, wo n''t there be a stink in Congress about it? 51854 I''m not leaving home, for God''s sake?
51854If God finds you, Winnie,she said,"I hope He does n''t arrive when-- I mean, it might be rather embarrassing?"
51854Ireland?
51854Is Merriwether Vail your lawyer?
51854Is he still asleep?
51854Is n''t it going to be a headache?
51854Is n''t that what a wife''s for?
51854Is that it? 51854 Is that what you wanted to tell me?"
51854Is that you, Jimmie?
51854Is that you, Ponto?
51854Is that your opinion, Phil?
51854Is there any particular man I should see at the Department, sir?
51854Is there anything_ wrong_ with me? 51854 Is there enough to eat?"
51854Is this a joke?
51854Is your name Ponto?
51854It does sound crazy, does n''t it?
51854It''s a good gag, Winnie,Tolan laughed,"but now you''ve had your fun, how about another drink?"
51854It''s not so bad, is it, Winnie?
51854Jacklin? 51854 Jacklin?
51854Jimmie too?
51854John Smith?
51854Just between us, Tompkins,he whispered,"who put you up to that Z-2 line of yours?
51854Let''s see,I stalled,"when was the last time I consulted you?"
51854Mad at me?
51854Merry?
51854Miss Briggs,I asked,"have we any brandy in the office?"
51854Mr. Tompkins,he said,"you''re a married man, are n''t you?"
51854No dancing in the streets?
51854No, did I?
51854Not so keen about it, eh?
51854Now how about my friends? 51854 Now let''s take a look at this paper.... What?
51854Now, Tompkins,the General resumed,"what''s this word about Von Bieberstein being dead?"
51854Now, what is it you want to know?
51854Of course, you''re going to stay with us, Myrtle, but however did you guess?
51854Oh, a buy?
51854Oh, ask him to see one of the other partners, will you?
51854Oh, come, doctor, who''s loony now?
51854Oh, he did, did he?
51854Oh, hell, girls,she said,"What''s the use?
51854Oh, is that so?
51854Oh, is_ that_ all?
51854Oh, that? 51854 Operation Octopus, sir?"
51854Or drugstores? 51854 Poor, darling Virginia,"she murmured,"why do n''t you go away and have a good rest?
51854Remember me, Winnie?
51854Roscommon?
51854Say you need half a million to start with and I put it up, what do I get out of it?
51854Say, Winnie, what the hell have you been up to?
51854Shall I ask him to wait?
51854Shall I bring my books?
51854Shall I tell Mrs. Tompkins you are here?
51854Should n''t he have a special diet?
51854Since Roosevelt was n''t murdered, what am I here for?
51854So that''s how it''s done, is it? 51854 So that''s the way it is, is it?"
51854So that''s what you call them? 51854 So you do n''t remember where you were before Monday?"
51854So you take it out on me, eh?
51854So you think she''s on the level?
51854So you want to railroad me to an asylum, eh?
51854So you''re still working for the bank?
51854Speaking of cashing checks,I reminded her,"how in hell am I going to get some dough?
51854Speaking of luck,I asked,"What''s the news from the kennels?
51854Stinky? 51854 Stormy weather?"
51854Sue?
51854Sugar- puss?
51854Suicide, eh?
51854Suppose I wo n''t play?
51854Sure you want to see this?
51854Tammy,I said,"will you get me the latest Social Register?"
51854Tell me, Mr. Tyler,I inquired,"did you ever hear of Axel Roscommon?"
51854Tell me, Winnie,she asked,"has anything gone wrong?"
51854That sounds wonderful, Mr. Willamer, but what has it got to do with me? 51854 That would be Harcourt-- A. J. Harcourt-- wouldn''t it?
51854That''s right, but they do it, do n''t they? 51854 That''s the one we lost, is n''t it?"
51854The doctor who bandaged Booth''s leg after the murder of Lincoln? 51854 The other night, I mean, it was all so-- What''s the matter?
51854The principle of vicarious sacrifice has been observed ever since that ne''er- do- weel Cain asked,''Am I my brother''s keeper?'' 51854 The usual, sir?"
51854Then what the hell_ is_ this?
51854Then what''s your advice, counselor?
51854Then why all this interest in me?
51854Then you ca n''t help me?
51854Then you''re still investigating me?
51854There''s much in what you say, Dr. Potter,I complimented him,"but what the hell can I do about it bottled up here in the Sanctuary?
51854This another of your tousled blondes?
51854To whom do you refer?
51854Today?
51854Tompkins?
51854Tonight?
51854Trifled with the Mann Act? 51854 War getting too much for you?
51854Was I tight, Tammy?
51854Was he glad to get home from the nasty old kennel? 51854 Was he murdered?"
51854Was he the one who argued that there might be several sexes? 51854 Was that it?
51854We ca n''t have our customers starve to death, can we? 51854 We''re both in what?"
51854Well, Miss Briggs, who''s next?
51854Well, are n''t we cashing in?
51854Well, gentlemen,I asked,"what will you have to drink?"
51854Well, have you anything to say?
51854Well, how''m I going to get some dough?
51854Well, then, gentlemen,I announced,"will you have one more round of drinks and then kindly get the hell out of here?
51854Well, what seems to be wrong with you, old man?
51854Well, what''s all this about?
51854Well?
51854Well?
51854Wha''yo''want, honey- man?
51854What about Commander Chalmis?
51854What about South America?
51854What about Virginia? 51854 What about me?"
51854What about that Great Smoky bear?
51854What am I supposed to have done, Merry?
51854What are you driving at, Merry?
51854What can he do to me?
51854What can you suggest?
51854What did you tell her, Tammy?
51854What do you mean''sell the war short?''
51854What do you mean?
51854What do you mean?
51854What do you really think of me?
51854What do you think? 51854 What do you think?"
51854What do you think_ we''re_ going to have?
51854What do_ you_ think?
51854What dog you talkin''about? 51854 What else would you call it?
51854What gives, angel?
51854What good would it do? 51854 What is it, Myrtle?"
51854What is your problem?
51854What job did he do?
51854What kind of go- round is this? 51854 What on earth made you confuse him with Von Bieberstein?"
51854What on_ earth_ happened to you? 51854 What proof have you?"
51854What shall I tell Phil Cone, though?
51854What sort?
51854What this dog?
51854What was that about kidnapping?
51854What will it take to get myself cleared?
51854What would you do if you were me? 51854 What you want, mammy?
51854What you want?
51854What''s all this fine print?
51854What''s all this_ nonsense_?
51854What''s eating you, Winnie?
51854What''s happened to you?
51854What''s he done?
51854What''s he like?
51854What''s it about, Jim?
51854What''s that?
51854What''s that?
51854What''s that?
51854What''s the charge?
51854What''s the matter with Ireland, anyhow?
51854What''s the second strike on me?
51854What''s the use of all this coy stuff? 51854 What''s_ your_ price?"
51854What''sa alla so secret, hey?
51854What? 51854 What_ is_ the matter?"
51854When I come-- came-- in with the bowl of water like you said, there he was lying on-- on-- your bed, like a Human, and-- and--"And what?
51854When did I ever threaten the President?
51854When were you ever at Kwajalein, Winnie?
51854Where can I find Him? 51854 Where did you come from?
51854Where did you know him?
51854Where have you been waiting?
51854Where is Commander Jacklin?
51854Where is Von Bieberstein?
51854Where is here?
51854Where shall I dump my hat and coat, Mary?
51854Where were we? 51854 Where''s the Marine Band and''Hail to the Chief''?"
51854Which is?
51854Which? 51854 Who dreamed up that swindle?"
51854Who ever mentioned pay?
51854Who is her commander and what''s his nickname?
51854Who said anything about the S.E.C.?
51854Who was that?
51854Who were they from, Tammy?
51854Who? 51854 Who_ are_ you?"
51854Whoever said you were n''t?
51854Whoever wanted Winnie to be half- way decent?
51854Why did n''t you try something comparatively safe, like robbing a she bear of her whelps or yelling''Hurray for Hitler''in Union Square? 51854 Why do you do this?"
51854Why if it is n''t Ponto? 51854 Why not, indeed?"
51854Why not, sir? 51854 Why that particular week?"
51854Why the twenty- fifth of March?
51854Why would I expose myself to a bad check charge just to keep out of a private asylum with my lawyer fully equipped with a writ?
51854Why? 51854 Why?"
51854Will he go to jail?
51854Will that help you remember? 51854 Will you arrange to have me see Colonel McIntosh tomorrow morning?
51854Will you dance, Miss Post?
51854Will you join us for dinner and a drink at-- what''s the best hotel here now we''ve a war on?
51854Winnie,she repeated,"_ must_ you go to a doctor?
51854Winnie?
51854Winnie?
51854Wonder what she meant by that?
51854Would that be true of that Mrs. R., sir?
51854Would you mind giving me a drink of brandy?
51854Yes, Jimmie?
51854Yes, Mary?
51854Yes, and who are you, sir?
51854Yes, madam? 51854 Yes,"I interrupted,"but do you consider that I am bound by this body or will I be returned to my own before I come to the Judgment?
51854Yes?
51854You all right, mister?
51854You are n''t, are you?
51854You do n''t seriously think that she knows anything about Von Bieberstein, do you?
51854You do n''t suppose that sex is any news to the Old Man, do you? 51854 You do n''t want any public scandal about your husband, do you?"
51854You fin''out what you wan''?
51854You have got yourself into a bad mess, have n''t you?
51854You know this dog?
51854You may be sure of your facts, General,I agreed,"but do you happen to know a man named Axel Roscommon?"
51854You mean sell it?
51854You mean this war?
51854You mean those five men following us, do n''t you, Winnie?
51854You mean you''ll lend me some?
51854You need money?
51854You overheard our conversation down the dummy, did n''t you?
51854You understand I''m acting as your attorney now?
51854You wanta me? 51854 You- all from the South, honey- chile?"
51854You_ have_ been drinking, have n''t you?
51854until Bill gets back,and what could he do for me?
51854''Him gone home?''
51854''Meet''and''Meat,''see?
51854''s been hunting Von Bieberstein for the last ten years and what do we find?
51854("How''m I doing?"
51854A good write- up in the papers?
51854A moment later a pleasant voice said,"Yes?
51854A skinny sort of s.o.b., was n''t he?"
51854A ticket to a prize fight?
51854Abba Jabba?"
51854After all, what is money worth if it ca n''t buy what is n''t for sale?"
51854After all,"Germaine added wryly,"the whole thing is pretty much of a family affair, is n''t it?
51854Ai n''t that something?"
51854Ai n''t that something?"
51854All I want to know is how you managed to imitate my dog?"
51854Am I going nuts?"
51854Am I repulsive?
51854Am I to be responsible for the sins the other man committed?"
51854Am I under arrest?
51854And Germany''s about to flop?
51854And how could he tell the medium how to imitate Ponto''s bark?
51854And is my soul involved in another man''s sins?"
51854And what are you doing there?
51854And what can we do for you?"
51854And what happened to Virginia?
51854And where, Mary, shall I leave my hat and coat?"
51854And who are you?"
51854And you?"
51854Any children?"
51854Any damage, I mean?"
51854Any other changes?"
51854Any suggestions of where I can find a hotel room for the next few days?"
51854Anybody in the Club?"
51854Anyhow the tax- collector will be waiting for you, so why worry?"
51854Are we all dead?
51854Are you all right?
51854Are you dead?
51854Are you free for cocktails or dinner this evening?"
51854Are you happy?"
51854Are you sure that you would be benefited by casting out the soul of Frank Jacklin and resuming command of your own personality?
51854Are you, by any chance, employed in my husband''s office?"
51854Blind- fold?"
51854Bought black market nylons for my mistress?
51854Bowels regular?
51854Business conditions and war- orders would continue, would n''t they?"
51854But if I''m not to pass word on to anybody, what''s the point of telling me about it-- assuming it to be true, which I doubt?"
51854But it''s all right now, Ponto, is n''t it?
51854But what happened to my ship?
51854CHAPTER 21"You were what?"
51854CHAPTER 27"What''s the big idea?"
51854CHAPTER 9"Say, old man, what happened to your hand?"
51854Ca n''t we move in there without risk?"
51854Ca n''t we try the_ other_ prescription-- I mean, give it a_ good_ try?"
51854Ca n''t you give me a hint?
51854Can I get her some aspirin?"
51854Can it be fits?"
51854Can you let me have some money?
51854Can you see him today?"
51854Can you take a look at my horoscope and tell me what the stars were doing to me then?"
51854Can you think of anything else?"
51854Come clean, ca n''t you?
51854Could Chalmis have deliberately destroyed Alaska and sacrificed his life in the interest of General Groves and the Army''s bomb?"
51854Could n''t you_ tell_ that it did n''t suit my plans to be clubby with Jimmie?"
51854Crazy?
51854Did he have a nice honeymoon, poor darling?
51854Did you finish copying what we said yesterday?"
51854Did you get a chance to give him a fill- in about the Navy and you- know- what?"
51854Did you hurt yourself?"
51854Didja hear me contradict anybody?
51854Do n''t you feel well, dear?"
51854Do n''t you know that all respectable married couples sleep in separate rooms, according to''House and Garden''?"
51854Do n''t you speak to your old friends any more?"
51854Do n''t you think it would be a good idea to send him to the kennels and have him bred?
51854Do n''t you think you could have trusted your wife?"
51854Do n''t you think you''d be better for a little special care?"
51854Do you know an Axel Roscommon, Arthurjean?"
51854Do you mind?"
51854Do you plan to receive them or shall I ask them to return tomorrow?"
51854Do you think you can get my check cleared through the bank or should I write Winnie''X''Tompkins, his mark?"
51854Does it hurt much?"
51854Elizabeth''s?"
51854Ever see a man die of malignant malaria, Merry?
51854Failed to notify the local draft board that I was taking the train to New York?
51854Folsom?"
51854Got a hang- over?
51854Got any ideas?"
51854Got any other passengers?"
51854Grant?"
51854Had n''t I better call the doctor?"
51854Had n''t my wife said something about girls in the office?
51854Harcourt?"
51854Has Ponto met his fiancee yet or have n''t the banns been published?"
51854Have you any other appointments I could help you with, Grant?"
51854Have you changed your mind again?"
51854Have you filled in that gap?
51854Have you had any luck filling in that blank period before Easter?
51854Have you tried hypnotism?
51854He had separated from his wife while you were tangled up with a lot of women....""But how did I know that Mrs. Jacklin had a mole on her left hip?"
51854He listened to what I had to say and then do you know what he did?
51854He was the one that had distemper so bad, was n''t it, sir?
51854He''s your dog, is n''t he?
51854He-- what_ did_ happen to your head, darling?"
51854He--""Who?
51854Help me, wo n''t you?"
51854How about a couple of dozen Cotuits and some black coffee?"
51854How about astrologers, say?
51854How about it, Jerry?"
51854How about it?
51854How about my tracing it?"
51854How about selling some of the war industries short?"
51854How about this nosey A. J. Harcourt?
51854How are you, hound?
51854How come you''ve skipped them?
51854How come?"
51854How did Harcourt know about Ponto when he had never seen him?
51854How do you get there?"
51854How do you think we ought to fight this war, anyhow?
51854How does Winnie sign himself at the City Farmers anyhow?"
51854How in God''s name should I act with her?
51854How in blazes did they expect to minister to a mind diseased, if they began by the old routine of getting the patient stripped and bedded?
51854How in hell do I find myself here?
51854How much did Willamer want you to put into his racket?"
51854How much will you need?"
51854How will the heirs feel when they have to take a loss of$ 60,000?"
51854How''d you like to be a Brigadier- General?"
51854How''s Ponto?"
51854How''s your golf?
51854Huh?
51854Huh?"
51854Hullo, Winnie, is this another of your homes away from home?"
51854I never knew dogs got drunk, did you?"
51854I turned to my secretary,"Do n''t tell me that you''ve shown my letters to this legal lout?"
51854I wondered--""You mean that perhaps we ought to patch things up between us?"
51854I would n''t know where the lavatory was, let alone her bedroom, and what should I call the maid who answered the door, assuming we had a maid?
51854I''ll see you later?"
51854I''m married to him and I ought to know my own husband, should n''t I?
51854If I kidnapped Tompkins, who am I supposed to be?
51854If I''m ever asked,''Grandma, what did_ you_ do in the second Great War?''
51854If Roosevelt has n''t warned them, why should you?
51854If he was to die, we''d have this Missouri guy-- whatsisname?
51854If it did n''t how could the President abolish it?"
51854In the meantime, why do n''t you follow up that Roscommon angle?
51854Internal Revenue?
51854Ireland?
51854Is Dalrymple satisfied?
51854Is he all right?"
51854Is n''t speculation legal any more?"
51854Is n''t that something that belongs to the Army?"
51854Is n''t that wonderful, now?"
51854Is not Winfred Tompkins a better and happier man under the influence of Jacklin than he was as himself?
51854Is she pretty?"
51854Is that a laugh, hey, Ponto?
51854Is that clear?"
51854Is that the game?"
51854Is that the way J. Edgar Hoover trains his Gestapo?"
51854Is there a room where we could have a private conversation and still get something to drink?"
51854Is this supposed to be heaven?
51854It began then, not so?
51854It''s always best to put these things in the record, is n''t it?"
51854Jacklin?"
51854Jacklin?"
51854Jacklin?"
51854Jimmie may think I''m mean but after that experience who wants off- spring, cannon- fodder or kennel- fodder?
51854Jimmie?"
51854Just for that are you going to go through hell just to have a little animal that will go''Aah- Aah- Aah''at you?"
51854Lamb?"
51854Let you go, with the Navy howling for action?"
51854Mr. Harcourt, have I no legal right to privacy in my hotel room?"
51854Neat, eh?"
51854Need vitamins?
51854No fooling?...
51854No star- gazer, eh?
51854No, I do n''t know what your game is but I''m on to you and we''re going to be real buddies from now on or--""Or what?"
51854Not so?"
51854Now you''re in trouble with the cops, so how about me helping you?
51854Now, would n''t that look nice on my record?
51854Of course, she was a fraud, but how had she imitated the barking of the Great Dane?
51854Okay, you take it up with Graham, will you?
51854Old Chalmis?
51854One of those flashy blondes from your office?"
51854Or do n''t you care?"
51854Or is it another woman?"
51854Or is that part of the gag?"
51854Or scopolamine?
51854Partners closing in on your assets or has your wife made book with your lawyer?"
51854Perhaps when you were a child, you hated your father?
51854Reinvesting?"
51854Right?
51854Roosevelt''s dead?
51854Root beer or Moxie?"
51854Roscommon?"
51854Rutherford?"
51854Rutherford?"
51854Rutherford?"
51854Say it''s spring or what- have- you?
51854Say, Andy, has n''t she a friend named Pierrot?"
51854Say, what do the initials A. J. stand for in your name?
51854Say, what is it you''ve supposed to have done-- kissed MacArthur?"
51854Say,"he added,"what''s come into you to make you act this way?
51854Shall I give him a hand- out and tell him to go away?"
51854Shall I phone the Pentagon?"
51854Shall I tell Mr. Snyder not to wait for you for gin rummy?"
51854Shall we say about half past five?"
51854Shaughnessy?"
51854She promptly referred me to Information, who told me that Mrs. Dorothy Jacklin was on Extension 3046, shall- I- connect you?
51854She used to put her arms around my neck and press against me and give me a smack on the back and a"Go on with you, ca n''t you see I''m busy?"
51854Should I send for my lawyer?"
51854So I put my arm around her, gave her a friendly kiss and said,"Name, please, and when do you get off duty?"
51854So I''m Von Bieberstein?
51854So why not shake hands and quit friends?"
51854Started to remember anything?"
51854Suddenly she cackled,"You do n''t say?
51854Sure you''re okay?"
51854Suspicion of kidnapping?...
51854Switzerland?
51854Tell him that, will you, old man?
51854Tell me, Winnie, have you got her on your string, too?
51854Tell me, what the President was like?"
51854That dog-- wha''s his color now?"
51854That time he tried to tattoo the little Masters girl-- But wo n''t they keep you locked up and do things to you?"
51854That will be the tenth, wo n''t it?"
51854That''s right, is n''t it, Harcourt?"
51854That''s somewhere in America, ai n''t it?"
51854That''s the only practical way modern wars can be fought, eh?
51854The Deputy Director looked slightly ill."He did, did he?"
51854The S.E.C?"
51854The dog was to blame?
51854The point is, where do we go from here?
51854The stars being mean to you?
51854The third- floor front had been made into a pleasant little two- room suite-- a"master''s bedroom"( Why not''mistress''s?''
51854There was a bomb.... Say, where am I and what day is it anyway?"
51854There''s myself, of course, but wives do n''t count any more, do they?
51854They build such lovely New England churches and they believe in infant damnation, or is that the Mormons?"
51854They have all sorts of gadgets but they all amount to the same thing: Is your nervous system functioning normally or is it not?
51854Think I could get a check cashed on it?"
51854Think I''d better join the Marines?"
51854This is a mighty fine little city, is n''t it?
51854This sense of special persecution, sir, have you had it long?
51854Thorium bombs, was n''t it?
51854Told fibs on my income tax return?
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Tompkins?"
51854Took a run into New York today and is that one mad- house?
51854Truman?--and what can he offer?"
51854Tyler?"
51854Von Bieberstein?"
51854W.P.B.?
51854Want a doc?"
51854Want me to make an appointment?"
51854Want to make anything of it?
51854Want to play ball and get next to the biggest break you ever heard of?"
51854Was your girl- friend nice, old boy?
51854We ca n''t have a moralist around here, can we, Myrtle?"
51854We do n''t want to keep 23 Wall waiting, do we?"
51854We''re buddies now, are n''t we, old fellow?"
51854What about it?
51854What can I do for you?"
51854What can we cook up?
51854What did I owe Roosevelt?
51854What did he ever do to you, anyhow?
51854What do we do to clean up?"
51854What do you think you remember from the blank period?"
51854What do you want to know?"
51854What do you want?
51854What gives with you?"
51854What happened to Frank Jacklin?
51854What happened to the Alaska?"
51854What has Ireland to do with your duty to the United States?"
51854What has changed?"
51854What have you done with her?"
51854What have you in mind?"
51854What have you invested in the only thing you will be permitted to take with you when you leave?"
51854What is it now?"
51854What is your own reaction to my story?"
51854What medicine did you give him?
51854What seems to be the trouble, Mr. Tompkins?
51854What shall I tell the gang?"
51854What sort of a guy is he?
51854What was he telling you?"
51854What was wrong with him?
51854What would happen to the market?"
51854What would you be doin''in Atlanta?"
51854What''ll it be?
51854What''s been going on around here?
51854What''s been happening around here, anyhow?
51854What''s cooking?
51854What''s cooking?"
51854What''s happened?"
51854What''s the big idea?"
51854What''s the idea of having me sign away my liberty like that?"
51854What''s the matter now?"
51854What''s the matter?"
51854What''s the matter?"
51854What''s the trouble with the black market, anyhow?
51854What''s the word?
51854What''s the word?"
51854What''s wrong about$ 25,000 a year guaranteed by your Uncle Sam?"
51854What''s your first operation, once you get the money in Inter- Alia to finance it?"
51854What''s your price?"
51854What_ had_ Winnie been up to?
51854What_ have_ you been doing, dear, that you ca n''t remember when our whole life may depend on it?"
51854What_ were_ your other plans, anyhow?"
51854When was Alaska commissioned?"
51854Where does my duty lie?"
51854Where is he?"
51854Where shall I tell him to take the dog?"
51854Where was I the week before Easter?
51854Who else did you expect?
51854Who is this Von Bieberstein anyhow?
51854Who wants to be happy?
51854Who was Stinky''s exec?"
51854Who would have dreamed it?
51854Who''s left now?"
51854Who''s that?"
51854Who''s this little guy from Montana, anyhow?"
51854Who''s to question a man doing Stations of the Cross if somebody else does''em at the same time?"
51854Who_ are_ you, Mr. Tompkins?
51854Who_ are_ you?"
51854Whoever told you you could touch my liquor?
51854Why did you admit anything?"
51854Why do n''t you let Jerry send you for a few weeks to the Hartford Sanctuary for psychoanalysis and a good rest?"
51854Why do n''t you let it go at that?"
51854Why does n''t anybody tell me these things?
51854Why not?
51854Why not?"
51854Why?"
51854Will you accept a check for your church-- say a thousand dollars?"
51854Will you go or stay?"
51854Will you please sign this form?"
51854Wo n''t he find out?
51854Wo n''t the estate be liquidated?
51854Wonder what happened to him?"
51854Would a million and a half do?"
51854Would n''t that just put me right in line for promotion?
51854Would this be murder?
51854Would you like to put in for one of the pups?"
51854Yes, I''ll stick here until you can get over.... What shall I order for you, a double Scotch?...
51854Yes.... Oh, Ned?...
51854You are n''t planning to murder anybody, are you?"
51854You ask what they can do to you?
51854You do n''t mean to go America First, separate peace or any of that rot, do you?"
51854You got any idea, Winnie?
51854You heard these gentlemen try to blackmail me and you heard me tell them to go to hell, did n''t you?"
51854You jealous again, old boy?
51854You know Manny Oppenheimer of Auchincloss, Morton, Caton, Beauregard& Oppenheimer?
51854You know how he used to lick your boots if you stood still long enough for him to kneel down and stick his tongue out?
51854You never heard of him?
51854You will have taken this other man''s wife, will you not?
51854You wo n''t tell anybody about it, will you?
51854You''d better see him quick, huh?
51854You''ll see that she gets the money, wo n''t you?"
51854You''re not a Catholic, of course?"
51854You''re not supposed to be blind to that, are you?"
51854Your operatives?
51854_ Now_ do you understand?"
51854_ Was_ it murder?
51854_ Winnie, what''s wrong?_"Not a pleasant spot to be in, even if it was only part of a trial- run in purgatory.
51854a run for its money and what could they do to me?
51854but red tape wo n''t let us, eh?
51854could I forget it?
51854for questioning?"
51854have_ you_ ever been introduced to a great big dog and told she''s your wife?
51854or what?"
28039But Theodore is not a weekly; why did he not come to the Convention and tell us what he thought?
28039But what is we to do? 28039 But would you have woman hold elections like ours"?
28039But,I said,"did n''t he know how black you were before he married you?"
28039But,said Ting,"what is the special object of your preaching Christianity?"
28039Can you let me stay anywhere?
28039How many have you?
28039Is she to be taxed in South Carolina to support the aristocracy?
28039Shall Maria pay a tax and have no voice?
28039Shall this softer, gentler, more fragile creature be the equal of the ruder, stouter man?
28039Well, dare you?
28039Well, then, why do you try to convert the women?
28039Well,said I,"why do n''t he support the children?"
28039What does it mean? 28039 What have you done?"
28039What next?
28039What relations?
28039Why has he left you?
28039Will you walk into my parlor, said the spider to the fly?
28039Would you have a woman participate in the scenes preliminary to an election?
28039''Who has we but the Lord and you?''
28039''s misapprehension of his rights justify his act?
28039..."What then, is the next step,"he asks,"in the progress of reconstruction?"
280392. Who may act as attorneys?
280397: Secondly, who are capable of becoming agents?
28039A LADY: I want to ask the lady who just spoke if the women of the Revolution found it necessary to form Loyal Leagues?
28039A LADY: If the men would give themselves, why not freely?
28039A MAN IN THE AUDIENCE: The question was asked, as I entered this house,"Is it right for women to meet here and intermeddle in our public affairs?"
28039A VOICE: Allow me to inquire if men have a right to vote on this question?
28039A VOICE:--Is that not all true about black women?
28039A VOICE:--What are they doing?
28039A change might come-- even to them, but if it did not, ought they not to pity other women whose situation was less comfortable than their own?
28039A lady of society asked me,"Are you in favor of woman''s rights?"
28039A lady says to me,"What more can be expected of women if men fail to some extent in our military affairs?"
28039A thousand times in the last years, in this struggle for bread, have I been asked,"Why do n''t you let your sons support you?"
28039Again, if the right to share in the joint government is not inherent, from whence does it come?
28039Again, in the trial of the inspectors of election, why were both judge and jurymen so merciful?
28039Amendment apply to her?
28039Amendment declaring that it shall not be denied on account of either race, color, or previous condition of servitude, to be regarded?
28039Amendment speaks of all persons, etc., and declares them to be citizens, it means all male persons and unmarried females?
28039Amendment, are qualified to hold office?
28039Amendment, by what possible authority are they voting by hundreds of thousands throughout this country?
28039Amendment, the privilege of earning a livelihood by practicing at the bar of a judicial court?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendment?
28039Amendments secured suffrage to women as well as to colored men, who would be willing to admit that they desired to obtain suffrage through trickery?
28039Amendments, in some way or other, the colored man came into possession of this right of suffrage; and the question is, where did he get it?
28039Among these is the question,"Are women equal with men?"
28039And I say to the oldest daughter,"Can you shoot?"
28039And are there any intrinsic necessary conditions that go to constitute liberty in society?
28039And do you know why?
28039And has not also the moral and spiritual nature its inalienable rights?
28039And how shall provision be made for us unless we make it ourselves by voting for it?
28039And how shall we acquire this unless we are taught?
28039And how shall we be taught unless provision is made for us?
28039And if a man may divest himself of this right, what right is sacred from his renunciation?
28039And if a woman is bad enough to commit a heinous crime, must we absurdly assume that women are too good to know that there is such a crime?
28039And if exemptions which appertain to males may be recognized as valid, why not similar exemptions for like reason when applied to females?
28039And if it be either of these, shall we say that education has unsphered and unsexed her?
28039And if men can not live in this country in safe homes, except their neighbor men are enfranchised, can they live without enfranchised women any more?
28039And if not, is there any reason why she should not do directly what she does indirectly?
28039And if suffrage was necessarily one of the absolute rights of citizenship, why confine the operation of the limitation to male inhabitants?
28039And if that be so, how can their admission rightfully depend upon the majority?
28039And is not their political subjection as absolute as was that of the African slaves?
28039And is there a man who does not know, that when questions of justice and humanity are blended, woman''s instinct is better than man''s judgment?
28039And now, let me ask you, what are these men sent here for and who sent them?
28039And now, may a woman be an artist?
28039And shall an American woman shrink from her duty when there is so much power in her hands for good?
28039And shall it not also be pre- eminently so with woman?
28039And shall we say that a woman may properly command an army, and yet can not vote for a Common Councilman in the city of Washington?
28039And should not the ballot- box be as respectable, and as respected, and as sacred as the church?
28039And the great question of to- day is, How shall work find leisure, and in leisure knowledge and refinement?
28039And upon what principle ought they to be asked?
28039And what grew there?
28039And what has the great little Napoleon done?
28039And when I say,"Is it so?"
28039And where can there be a virtuous and happy home unless a Christian marriage shall have consecrated it?
28039And who does not know that they govern us?
28039And who, by common consent, is the educator of the world?
28039And why now, and why not ten, fifteen, or twenty years ago?
28039And why should not even Republican government take to itself other modes of administration without infraction of its fundamental liberties?
28039And why so?
28039And why?
28039And why?
28039And will our force all fail, having done that?
28039And would the gentleman also contend that a lack of power to cut off a thing not in existence also creates the thing?
28039Are lawyers, merchants, tailors, cobblers, bootblacks less skilled in their specialties because they vote?
28039Are not all our chief possessions held in common?
28039Are not these interests equal to those of the negro and of his race?
28039Are not women as much interested in good government as men?
28039Are not women people?
28039Are not"the truths as self- evident"to- day to the intelligent public as they were a century ago?
28039Are politicians so pure, politics so exalted, the polls so immaculate, men so moral, that woman would pollute the ballot and contaminate the voters?
28039Are the instincts of woman so low that unless man puts up a bar, she will immediately fall into man''s obscene conversation and disreputable habits?
28039Are the men alone to say?
28039Are there not large classes even among men in this country who are exempt from service in our armies for physical incapacity and for other reasons?
28039Are there seventeen students in Harvard College who take mathematical astronomy, do you think?"
28039Are there two laws in this country, one for the negro, and another for woman?
28039Are these to be excluded from the polls?
28039Are they capacities merely?
28039Are they capacities merely?
28039Are they degraded?
28039Are they lacking in the necessary intelligence?
28039Are they not also rights?
28039Are they not also rights?
28039Are they not shown to be subjects of the other half, who are the sovereigns?
28039Are we and future generations to be ever imprisoned in the uncouth alternative of monarchical or democratic forms as they now obtain?
28039Are we only a handful?
28039Are we sure that he, once entrenched in all his inalienable rights, may not be an added power to hold us at bay?
28039Are we to have no progress in the modes of government among men?
28039Are women not Saxons?
28039Are women politically oppressed that they need the ballot for their protection?
28039Are you a rich man, afraid of your money?
28039Are you to compel wickedness and crime?
28039Are you to force prostitution and wrong upon those people by these unjust laws?
28039Are you willing to believe, women, that your girls are sixteen times less valuable than the boys?
28039As I asked one of my friends one day,"What are you rebelling for?
28039As Milton so grandly says in Paradise Lost: What though the field be lost?
28039As capital has ever ground labor to the dust, is it just and generous to disfranchise the poor and ignorant because they are so?
28039As to her not being protected, what lady has ever said that her rights were not protected because she had not the right of suffrage?
28039At that time, in an article entitled,"Can a Judge Direct a Verdict of Guilty?
28039Ay, sir, did it not only respond to a demand which was there pressed, but did it not imply a duty, a pledge which this party ought to redeem?
28039Aye, more, that a principle He has made true, it is not safe not to apply?
28039Because a man is a father, must he needs be nothing else?
28039Because it is not a natural right, is it any less unjust to deprive a large part of the people of it?
28039Because some women are mothers, shall all women concentrate every thought in that direction?
28039Because the freedman has that talisman in his hands which the politician is looking after?
28039Because they have learned our Constitution?
28039Before the art of printing, were all men fools?
28039But I ask you, to- day,"Is it safe to bring in a million black men to vote, and not safe to bring in your mother, your wife, and your sister to vote?"
28039But are women, who are not infants, ever included in this category?
28039But at what age has any nation of any period or place become wise, rich, or even strong; to say nothing of good?
28039But did any revolution or any special trouble grow out of this recognition of woman''s right?
28039But does this concession belittle the importance of woman''s political rights?
28039But have they done as they promised?
28039But have women, then, no sphere as women?
28039But how could the amendment be written without the word"male"?
28039But how is it with men?
28039But how was it to be obtained?
28039But if she can make two dollars to his one, allowing him to carry out his part of the appointments of life, why should not she do it?
28039But if we are to have a new general in his place, we may ask, what has become of Sigel?
28039But is a self- made woman less honorable than a self- made man?
28039But is it enough, if the work for which the war is_ now_ prosecuted is not accomplished?
28039But is it true that the equality of man and woman would not be useful to society?
28039But it is asked, why make this disturbance?
28039But it is asked: What do you want of the ballot?
28039But it may be asked: If this be so, why was not the question sooner raised?
28039But it may be said, if the States had no power to abridge the right of suffrage, why the necessity of prohibiting them?
28039But suppose that a majority do not want the ballot, how does that affect the rights of the minority who do want it?
28039But the question remains, What relief can be granted?
28039But the war being over, and a new million of black males being added to the many million white males as rulers of the land, what do we find to- day?
28039But they can load all the four rifles, and he can not fire half as fast as they can load; and I say to the mother,"Can you shoot?"
28039But what are compromises, and what is laid down in those constitutions?
28039But what does election day do for him?
28039But what great reformatory movement was ever treated any better at the outset?
28039But what is an organ played with the feet, if all the upper part is left unused?
28039But what political agency has righted so many?
28039But what practical use will the ballot be to women?
28039But what put the dram- bottle out of the home?
28039But what was the result to the country?
28039But what were the rights?
28039But what word can I speak that will not be better spoken?
28039But what would it be if every foreigner and every ignorant man could not go out on election day, and prove that he was as good as anybody?
28039But when her duties called her there, who ever found her unfaithful to her trust?
28039But when they came to do that, they then asked themselves,"Where are our good right hands?"
28039But when was the consent of woman ever asked to one single act on all the statute books?
28039But who ever heard of a right being conferred by omission?
28039But who shall decide as to"spears?"
28039But who would be willing to banish from the literary world to- day such names as Browning, Hemans, Stowe, and Gage?
28039But why exclude women?
28039But would you, seriously, I am asked, would you drag women down into the mire of politics?
28039But yet I will descend a step lower; and doth not our law, temporal and spiritual, admit of women to be executrixes and administratrixes?
28039But, shall we have a woman for President?
28039But, the objectors continue, would you have women hold office?
28039But, to look at it seriously, what is the defect of this statement?
28039But,"said Sojourner,"where is Theodore Tilton''s paper?"
28039By Judge Selden:_ Q._ Did they advise the registry or did they not?
28039By what right, then, except that of mere force, do you deny me a voice in the laws which I am forced to obey?"
28039C. Storrs, a United States Commissioner, in the city of Rochester, when her case was examined?
28039CAN A WOMAN PRACTICE LAW OR HOLD ANY OFFICE IN ILLINOIS?
28039CHIEF- JUSTICE-- Coverture then incapacitated a woman from voting?
28039CONKLING.--May I ask a question?
28039Ca n''t get rum?
28039Can a ballot in the hand of woman, and dignity on her brow, more unsex her than do a scepter and a crown?
28039Can any one give a good reason why there should be such a difference between the rights of the widow and the widower?
28039Can any one tell a good reason why?
28039Can any one tell a good reason why?
28039Can any one tell me a good reason why?
28039Can it be said that the people acquire their privileges from the instrument that they themselves establish?
28039Can it be that any colored person feels like that?"
28039Can men do less than empty their pockets for the good of the race?
28039Can not they see, also, that two entire opposing civilizations are mustered into the conflict?
28039Can sex either qualify or disqualify a chooser, one of the people to cast a ballot for President?
28039Can such accusers look each other in the face and not laugh?
28039Can that be abridged which does not exist?
28039Can there be a more direct recognition of a right?
28039Can this court say that married women have no rights that are to be respected?
28039Can you Republicans so utterly stultify yourselves, can you so entirely work against yourselves, as to refuse us a Declaratory Law?
28039Can you longer deny us the protection we ask?
28039Can you think of any model so good as the divine model set before us in the family?
28039Could a State disfranchise and deprive of the right to a vote all citizens who have red hair; or all citizens under six feet in height?
28039Could ideas of justice, and liberty, and equality be more grandly and beautifully expressed than in the preamble to our Federal Constitution?
28039Cross- examination by Judge Selden:_ Q._ Prior to the election, was there a registry of voters in that district made?
28039Deprive a man or woman of that, and of what use is your habeas corpus act, of what use your law of penalties or acquittal?
28039Did Elizabeth unsex herself?
28039Did Southern slaveholders ever understand the humiliations of slavery to a proud man like Frederick Douglass?
28039Did any brave Englishman who rode into the jaws of death at Balaklava serve England on the field more truly than Florence Nightingale?
28039Did any despot ever say anything else?
28039Did his loyalty in the army count for more than her educational work in teaching the people sound principles of government?
28039Did it respond to no demand?
28039Did it show the wisdom of British Conservatism that it waited to grant the Reform bill of 1832 until England hung upon the edge of civil war?
28039Did man put woman in the parlor?
28039Did not Joan of Arc save France when the king had fled, and the armies were scattered, and English soldiers did their will in all that land?
28039Did that mean nothing?
28039Did the children, fully armed and equipped for the battle of life, spring, Minerva- like, from the brains of their fathers?
28039Did the coarse, low- bred master ever doubt his capacity to govern the negro better than he could govern himself?
28039Did the defendant vote in good faith in that belief?
28039Did the men of that period become mere satellites of the dinner- pot, the wash- tub, or the spinning- wheel?
28039Did the negro''s rough services in camp and battle outweigh the humanitarian labors of woman in all departments of government?
28039Did the sexes change places?
28039Did they say,"Go away from here; this is no place for women; you will unsex yourself?"
28039Did we wait for emancipation until the slaves petitioned to be free?
28039Did woman put man in that bar room?
28039Did you ever analyze a voter-- hold him up and see what he was?
28039Did you tell me that Mr. Greeley is a delegate to the Constitutional Convention?"
28039Do cow- boys, hostlers, pot- house politicians ever doubt their capacity to prescribe woman''s sphere better than she could herself?
28039Do n''t know?
28039Do n''t you perceive, then, the importance of the elective franchise?
28039Do n''t you represent her?
28039Do not all great thoughts come from the heart?
28039Do not moral principles, like water, seek a common level?
28039Do not the American people vote in this Senate to- day on this question?
28039Do our intelligent and refined women desire to plunge into the vortex of political excitement and agitation?
28039Do they desert their workshops, their plows, and offices, to pass their time at the polls?
28039Do they not vote in the House of Representatives?
28039Do they not, in that event, occupy politically exactly the position which the learned Chief- Justice assigns to the African slaves?
28039Do we expect any massive concentration of results?
28039Do we expect the whole- hearted sympathy of any monarchy?
28039Do we find any recognition of inequality of rights?
28039Do we not claim that here all men and women are nobles-- all heirs apparent to the throne?
28039Do you believe women should vote?
28039Do you deprive them of the ballot?
28039Do you know, my friends, what will take place if something decisive is not soon done?
28039Do you mean me, General?
28039Do you not know, Theodore, that we have vowed never to go disfranchised into the Kingdom of Heaven?
28039Do you point me to the Cabinet?
28039Do you say that Northern Republicans would not accept such a proposition?
28039Do you suppose if they had ballots they would not make their voices heard here and get for the same work the same pay?
28039Do you think the spirit of our society is wholly different?
28039Do you think we can disembarrass ourselves of history?
28039Do you, said she, own your own persons, according to the law of God, or do you not?
28039Does Congress intend to sustain State Rights?
28039Does any lawyer doubt my statement of the legal status of married women?
28039Does any man say that there is any sense or any justice in that distinction?
28039Does any one question whether Lucy Stone may speak?
28039Does any such principle of exclusion apply to them?
28039Does domestic peace exist in the exact ratio of a woman''s inferiority to the man she calls her husband?
28039Does he believe in the absolute right of women to vote?
28039Does he give it to his slave?
28039Does he not here recognize the enunciation of a principle as directly opposed to liberty as even Judge Hunt''s control of jury trial?
28039Does it mean the male freedman only, or does it mean the freedwoman also?
28039Does it not prove that there is nothing in the argument so far as it involves the question of right?
28039Does it, or does it not give to the possessor the right to vote?
28039Does it, then,"provide for the common defense,"to deny to one half the adult citizens of the republic that voice and vote?
28039Does not his republicanism revolt from such a sentiment?
28039Does some officer distinguish himself by an act of personal bravery in the army of the West?
28039Does the Constitution of the United States recognize or permit class distinctions to be made between its citizens?
28039Does the act injure her?
28039Does the creature extend rights, privileges and immunities to the creator?
28039Does the honorable gentleman think, therefore, that women only should make the laws?
28039Does the preamble look like it?
28039Does this really abrogate the servitude of the wife, and invoke in her favor the action of Congress?
28039During the Convention Lucy got a dispatch from Lawrence as follows:"Will you lecture for the Library Association?
28039During the dynasty of women and negroes, does history record any social revolution peculiar to that period?
28039EDMUNDS.--I am not asking whether I am mistaken or not; I am asking if the clause remains as it stood reported by the committee?
28039Enter any Western hotel and what do you see, General?
28039For instance, when we say"the ladies,"do we not mean them all?
28039For that reason, shall we say to a woman,"You shall not walk in the road?"
28039For what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
28039For what one civil right is worth a rush, after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
28039For, what one civil right is worth a rush after a man''s property is subject to be taken from him at pleasure without his consent?
28039Forty years ago that conscience asked,"Do men have fair play in this country?"
28039Grew''s question-- why the_ Tribune_ does not inquire about these ignorant men who are abusing the franchise?
28039Has it come to this, that because she is a woman the defendant can not get a fair and impartial trial?
28039Has nature ordained that the lark shall rise fluttering and singing to the sun in the spring?
28039Has not each State a right to amend her own Constitution and establish a genuine republic within her own boundaries?
28039Has society been injured thereby?
28039Has the prisoner anything to say why sentence shall not be pronounced?
28039Have I not as many interests at stake as he has?
28039Have not 200,000 names been sent in to Congress already?
28039Have not petitions been already made?
28039Have not those who are training up sons and daughters an interest beyond the home, in the great outer world, where they are soon to act their part?
28039Have not"black male citizens"been heard to say they doubted the wisdom of extending the right of suffrage to women?
28039Have they been injured by mixing with the rude affairs of war in camps and among soldiers?
28039Have they not been as good wives as they were formerly?
28039Have they the means of giving their consent to it?
28039Have they, then, been battling for over thirty years for a fraction of a principle?
28039Have you heard of a State in which women and women only bear rule, and the constitution of which was made by women only?
28039Have you read the_ Herald_ too, children?
28039Having had considerable experience with officers of justice(?
28039He comes here, and what does he find?
28039Hear people say,"What will be the effect?"
28039How can man''s intellect determine what kind of legislation suits the condition of woman?
28039How can statesmen believe the Nation secure unless personal rights are held inviolable?
28039How can that form of government be republican, when one- half the people are forever deprived of all participation in its affairs?
28039How can the State deny or abridge the right of the citizen, if the citizen does not possess it?
28039How can we purify them?
28039How can you abridge a thing that does not exist?
28039How can you know it?
28039How can you know yours as women, but by obedience to the same law?
28039How could a woman be responsible for her deeds to God if somebody had control over her conscience?
28039How could anyone that had no self- government enjoy any inalienable right?
28039How could the four million negroes be made voters if the two million women were not included?
28039How could we know it but that, unconstrained by art, their winking eyes respond to that soft breath?
28039How do I know my sphere as a man, but by repelling everything that would arbitrarily restrict my choice?
28039How do they answer it?
28039How does he know?
28039How does he overtake her swift steps?
28039How goes the good fight?
28039How is it in military affairs?
28039How is it on the deck of a battle- ship?
28039How is it that our courts act in this way?
28039How is the voice of women on this subject to be heard?
28039How many of the male bipeds who do our voting are qualified to hold high offices?
28039How often have mothers governed large kingdoms, as regents, during the minority of their sons, and governed them well?
28039How shall we improve the one?
28039How stands the comparison, Aristocratic England and Democratic America?
28039How tame and bind her fiery soul?
28039How then could the defendant be lawfully deprived of the right to ask every juror if the verdict had his assent?
28039How was my presence regarded by the populace?
28039How would the honorable Senator from Massachusetts face the recent meeting of the Equal Rights Society in Philadelphia?
28039I am often jeeringly asked,"If the Constitution gives you this right, why do n''t you take it?"
28039I answer, there is an inconsiderable minority which deserve such epithets; but even if all women deserved them, who is in fault?
28039I ask honorable Senators of his faith how they are to answer those ladies there?
28039I ask the honorable Chairman of the Committee, whether he thinks that a citizen should have no vote because he has influence?
28039I ask what is our duty?
28039I ask you what sort of peace, what sort of prosperity, have we had?
28039I ask you whether the women of this country have ever given their consent to this Government?
28039I ask you, men of the Empire State, where on the footstool do you find such a class of citizens politically so degraded?
28039I can not ask you,"Is it safe to leave them in the hands of the Government or the city?"
28039I do n''t deny it, but how do you know it?
28039I have been asked"Why not wait for the settlement of the one that now fills the minds of men?
28039I have had persons say to me,"Would you, now, take your daughter and your wife, and walk down to the polls with them?"
28039I have sometimes been asked, even by sensible men,"If woman had the elective franchise, would she go to the polls to mix with rude men?"
28039I pray our opponents to tell us then what is conferred by this first section of this wonderful article, if it be not these rights?
28039I refer to this for the purpose of coming, by and by, to the question,"What ought to be done?"
28039I repeat, if they are represented, when was the choice made?
28039I said to her,"Have you no husband?"
28039I said to their shadows in another world,"Why did you leave this accursed system of slavery for us to suffer and die under?
28039I was often asked,"Why do n''t the Government pay my wife''s earnings to me?"
28039If Hindoo women could have shaped the laws of India, would widows for ages have been burned on the funeral pyres of their deceased husbands?
28039If I am asked what do women want the ballot for, I answer the question with another, what do men want it for?
28039If I am not admitted, the public will ask,''Where is Douglass?
28039If any man says to me,"Why will you agitate the woman''s question, when it is the hour for the black man?"
28039If duty requires him to go out into the world and fight its battles, who blames him, or puts a ban upon him?
28039If it does not belong to the individual whence does it come?
28039If it is a question of precedence merely, on what principle of justice or courtesy should woman yield her right of enfranchisement to the negro?
28039If it is proper that her opinion should influence a man''s vote, is there any good reason why it should not be independently expressed?
28039If it were, do you not perceive that it applies as well to infants as to adults?
28039If men can not be trusted to legislate for their own sex, how can they legislate for the opposite sex, of whose wants and needs they know nothing?
28039If not, where is the argument?
28039If seventy years be the life of a man, what should be the life of a nation?
28039If she believed she had a right to vote, and voted in reliance upon that belief, does that relieve her from the penalty?
28039If she finds the complement of her incomplete being, what more can she want?
28039If so, then did women acquire it by the same amendment?
28039If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities, why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, etc.?
28039If suffrage was one of these privileges or immunities, why amend the Constitution to prevent its being denied on account of race, etc.?
28039If taxation and representation are to go hand in hand, why should they not go hand in hand with regard to the female as well as the male?
28039If that be true, why not incorporate some other element?
28039If the act of Virginia affects Ballard''s citizenship so far as respects that State, can it touch his citizenship so far as regards the United States?
28039If the framers of the Constitution meant they should not, why did they not distinctly say so?
28039If the question were put to me, If I thought the woman''s reform contrary to Christianity, would I throw it overboard?
28039If these Southern aristocrats are to be colonized, Mrs. President, do n''t you think England is the best place for them?
28039If they are capable and desirous, why not?
28039If this right of suffrage is not an individual right, from what place and body did you get it?
28039If we are given over to fashion, frivolity, and vice, does it follow that rights and privileges, duties and responsibilities will not help us?
28039If women should vote one day in the year, must every duty and function of their being be subordinated to that one act during the whole 365?
28039If you can not live in safety with irresponsible men in your midst, how can you live with irresponsible women?
28039If you vote, are you ready to fight?"
28039If, then, voting is a matter of State control alone, what authority had the United States to prosecute Susan B. Anthony?
28039In like manner, what determines the sphere of any morally responsible being, but perfect liberty of choice and liberty of development?
28039In making up His jewels at the last great day, will not the Lord say of her as of one of old,"She has loved much, and much is forgiven her?"
28039In that case would they think the time past for discussion and petition?
28039In that view of the case, is there anything to go to the jury?
28039In the first place, what has been the effect upon woman of enlarging the sphere of her influence?
28039In the light of the history of your Confederacy, can any Southerner fear to trust the women of the South with the ballot?
28039In the light of the recent action of the British Parliament, is this asking too much?
28039In the name of all womanhood, and of all manhood, I beg to know why this may not be so?
28039In the oft- repeated experiments of class and caste, who can number the nations that have risen but to fall?
28039In what way is it different?
28039Is Susan with you?
28039Is a conscription itself consistent with freedom?
28039Is a negro a man?
28039Is a woman demeaned by dropping her ballot into the box?
28039Is any one afraid of it?
28039Is he a rational, accountable man or not?
28039Is it a credit to a_ man_ to be called a professional politician?
28039Is it a mere question of privilege or immunity?
28039Is it a natural right or an acquired right?
28039Is it any reason if I do not choose to avail myself of my rights that I should be deprived of them?
28039Is it for the court to say, in advance, that it will not admit a married woman?
28039Is it graceful, I ask, to walk on one leg?
28039Is it no wrong?
28039Is it not an anomaly that the lesser rights shall be held by the Nation, the greater by the States?
28039Is it not as safe that woman should govern in the halls of national legislation as in the family and in the school?
28039Is it not because we have no voice in public affairs that Europe is on fire now?
28039Is it not our election day?
28039Is it of any importance to you whether the dram- shops be closed or not?
28039Is it on the ground of color or sex, that the black man finds greater favor in the eyes of the law than the daughters of the State?
28039Is it only stupidity, ignorance and rascality which ought to possess political power?
28039Is it right and safe that the women of this country should have a voice in its administration?
28039Is it said that she influences the man now?
28039Is it said that this right exists by virtue of State citizenship, and State laws and Constitutions?
28039Is it strange that with such foremothers we should love liberty?
28039Is it that they ought not to go to public political meetings?
28039Is it the nature of flowers to open to the south wind?
28039Is it to perfect this bill?
28039Is it to vindicate a principle in which he believes?
28039Is my honorable friend from Maine afraid of it?
28039Is n''t such a position, I ask you, humiliating enough to be called"servitude"?
28039Is not change the primal condition on which all life is permitted to exist?
28039Is not that a distinction without a difference?
28039Is not that the kind of government, sir, which we wish to propose for this State?
28039Is not the only amendment needed to Article 1st, Section 3d, to strike out the exceptions which follow"respective numbers?"
28039Is not the property of a woman as secure under this provision as that of a man?
28039Is not the wife as much interested in the preservation of property as her husband?
28039Is not this a great step in advance?
28039Is that a reason for denying the right to those who would vote?
28039Is that born again?
28039Is that not enough?
28039Is the United States a Nation?
28039Is the gentleman in favor of the amendment he has indicated?
28039Is the giving of the ballot to a foreigner who comes among us a burden so great that he should not have it imposed upon him?
28039Is the right to vote one of the privileges or immunities of citizens?
28039Is the_ World_ Horace Greeley''s paper?"
28039Is there any doubt now as to what"citizen"means?
28039Is there any force in that?
28039Is there any one of us who believes that?
28039Is there any reason why Mrs. Smith should be governed by a goat- head of a mayor any more than John Smith, if he could correct it?
28039Is there any reason why that should not take place?
28039Is there any reason why the emoluments of place should more than repay the labor it calls for?
28039Is there anything essentially different in such duties and the powers necessary to perform them from the functions of legislation?
28039Is there anything in this world that has so great a reputation for lawlessness as a camp?
28039Is there no part of God''s great work in providence that should lead you to be discontented with your ease and privileges until you are enfranchised?
28039Is there no radical method, no force yet untried, a power not only of skillful checks, which I do not undervalue, but of controlling character?
28039Is there no remedy?
28039Is there not a clear distinction between the regulation of a right and its destruction?
28039Is there then any natural incapacity in women to understand politics?
28039Is this an extreme view?
28039Is this no injustice?
28039Is this right of franchise a conventional arrangement, a privilege that society or government may grant or withhold at pleasure?
28039Is this what Mr. Editor of the Albany_ Law Journal_ means?
28039Is"taxation without representation"justice established?
28039It asks another question,"Do women have fair play in this country?"
28039It has been sometimes said"Can this be done?"
28039It is alleged that women are already represented by men?
28039It is asked sometimes,"Would you like to have your wife or daughter go to the polls and vote?"
28039It is sometimes said as a triumphant argument in favor of the exercise of this power,"Has not the judge the power to order a verdict of acquittal?"
28039It seems to me that the voice of God''s providence to you to- day is,"Oh messenger of mine, where are the words that I sent you to speak?
28039It was pertinently asked,"If this may be done in one instance, why not in all?"
28039Let me ask you if you will agree to give every woman a family that has n''t got one?
28039Let the Democrats, as they are now called, get into office, and what would be the consequence?
28039Liberty is the steam, responsibility puts on the brakes, and then what is the safety- valve, I ask you?
28039Loyal to what?
28039MADAME DE HERICOURT said: I wish to ask if rights have their source in ability, in functions, in qualities?
28039MERRIMON.--Why do you want to go into a remote, sparsely settled Territory to make the experiment?
28039MERRIMON.--Why not try it in this city?
28039MORTON.--Does the Senator speak of the Constitution of the United States?
28039MORTON.--How?
28039MORTON.--Will the Senator cite what follows?
28039MY DEAR FRIENDS: I once had a neighbor who was for years entirely crippled with rheumatism, and she, when asked,"How are you to- day?"
28039May she sing in public?
28039May she speak in public?
28039May she vote, or sit upon committees in matters pertaining to local or National interests?
28039May they, therefore, be properly and justly disfranchised?
28039Men strike from their workshops and they succeed, and why?
28039Miss ANTHONY: I would like to know if the testimony of a person who has been convicted of a crime can be taken?
28039Miss ANTHONY:--Will some one put the motion?
28039Miss Anthony has made all my arrangements; but perhaps you will allow me to ask you if Mr. Wood is a democrat?
28039Mr. BAYARD: Did the Senator from Indiana answer the Senator from Vermont in the affirmative or negative?
28039Mr. BAYARD: I ask are the rights of children different from those of men?
28039Mr. BROOKS: How exclude them, when Chinese are to be included in the basis of representation?
28039Mr. BROOKS: How exclude them?
28039Mr. COWAN: I should like to ask whether the presence of ladies on an occasion of that kind would not tend to suppress everything of that sort?
28039Mr. DOUGLASS:--I want to know if granting you the right of suffrage will change the nature of our sexes?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: Morally, legally, and every other way?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: Suppose I should answer the Senator and say I do not know?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: What right?
28039Mr. EDMUNDS: Which way was the report?
28039Mr. FOSTER:--What are these principles?
28039Mr. MERRIMON: What clause of the Constitution does the Senator assert creates the right?
28039Mr. MORTON: I ask the Senator, if there are natural rights, do not the natural and necessary means to protect those rights become a part of them?
28039Mr. SARGENT: Why not?
28039Mr. SEAVER rose to a point of order, and asked,"Who are the men shaking in their boots?"
28039Mr. STEVENS: Is the gentleman from N.Y.[ Mr. Brooks] in favor of that amendment?
28039Mr. STEVENS: Is the gentleman in favor of his own amendment?
28039Mr. STEWART: Is it a natural or acquired right?
28039Mr. STEWART: Then what right has society, the body of men, to govern an individual?
28039Mr. STEWART: What right have they to take from him his freedom in his savage state to do as he pleases?
28039Mr. TILTON-- How is it that you know so much more about corkscrews than about Galatians?
28039Mr. VAN VOORHIS: If the jury should find a verdict of not guilty, could your honor set it aside?
28039Mr. VAN VOORHIS: Then why should it go to the jury?
28039Mr. VAN VOORHIS: You took the two oaths there, did you?
28039Mrs. H. M. TRACY CUTLER said: Many of us have grown old in this work, and yet some people say,"Why do you still work in a hopeless cause?"
28039Mrs. MARY A. LIVERMORE:--Is it quite generous to bring George Francis Train on this platform when he has retired from_ The Revolution_ entirely?
28039Mrs. SPENCE asked( for information) whether they were willing to receive the Conscription law as it was?
28039Mrs. SPENCE: If your husbands propose to pay three hundred dollars, would you urge them to go themselves?
28039Must we be told that woman herself does not ask the ballot?
28039Napoleon once said to Madame de Stael,"Why will you women meddle with politics?"
28039Not rule?
28039Now what do we behold?
28039Now what is proposed by the reformers of the present time?
28039Now what is the ballot?
28039Now would Mr. Ward with Mr. Wade, do this, and so let me breathe and live?
28039Now, I ask if women are a part of"the governed?"
28039Now, I ask you, can a woman or negro vote in Missouri?
28039Now, I ask, why not take a shorter course, and ask to have the men do for us what we might do for ourselves if we had the ballot?
28039Now, could not twelve honest, intelligent jurymen be trusted to defend their birthright against one woman?
28039Now, is it not possible to have republican institutions and to eliminate or decrease largely this element of evil?
28039Now, ladies, what is really the legal status of marriage, so far as the condition of the wife is concerned?
28039Now, sir, to come down to the main question, I ask if the women of this country have given their consent to this Government?
28039Now, sir, what is the sincerity of this proposition?
28039Now, what are abstract rights?
28039Now, what does this discussion mean?
28039Now, what is his position?
28039Now, what is this idea?
28039Now, who is their target?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: How about Minnesota without Train?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: How is it now?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: What is it?
28039OLYMPIA BROWN: Why did Republican Kansas vote down negro suffrage?
28039Of course, his conclusion is correct if his premises are true; but is the right to vote a natural right?
28039Of the three, which should take the precedence?
28039Of what crime are American women guilty that they are to be compelled to stand on a political platform with such men as these?
28039On what principle, then, do you deny her representation?
28039One gentleman remarked,"Why do you push Pomeroy forward in your movement?
28039Or Margaret Fuller, or Julia Ward Howe, do you call these women unwomanly?
28039Or do you say that she was an exceptional woman?
28039Or is it said that she is represented by men?
28039Or that they should not go to the polls?
28039Or, will it be said that women do not want the ballot and ought to be asked?
28039Ought it not to be as much as possible like the government of a well- ordered family?
28039Our Saxon men have held the ballot in this country for a century, and what honest man can claim that it has been used for woman''s protection?
28039Our household gods be desecrated, and our proud lips, ever taught to sing peans to liberty, made to swear allegiance to the god of slavery?
28039Please look at the paper now shown you and see if it contains the minutes you kept upon that occasion?
28039Pound, was she asked there if she had any doubt about her right to vote, and did she answer,"Not a particle"?
28039Pray, what means"loyal"?
28039Pretty soon, however, when the dinner reached the point of champagne, some one exclaimed,"Who has a corkscrew?"
28039Re- direct examination by Mr. CROWLEY:_ Q._ Was Miss Anthony challenged before the Board of Registry?
28039Robinson came to her and said,"Where''s Mrs. Stanton?
28039SARGENT.--What clause is he commenting on?
28039SARGENT.--Will my friend allow me a moment?
28039SARGENT.--Will the Senator allow me to direct his mind to one consideration?
28039STANTON.--Is such the law in case of a daughter?
28039STEPHEN S. FOSTER: Will you give us the evidence that the statement that the women of this country do not want the ballot is not true?
28039STEWART.--The Senator from North Carolina asks,"Why not try it here?"
28039STEWART.--Why not try it everywhere?
28039STEWART.--Will the Senator allow me to ask him a question?
28039Said a rumseller who is bitterly opposed to female suffrage,"What more do you want?
28039Says a French lady in a private letter received a few days since,"Oh, is it not time that women come?
28039Set bounds to the political, social, or religious liberty of a man, and what figures of speech would he employ?
28039Shall I give you a picture of him?
28039Shall I tell her that she is"owned"by some living man, or is some dead man''s"relict,"as the old phrase was?
28039Shall Maria pay a tax and have no voice?"
28039Shall an American Congress pay less honor to the daughter of a President than a British Parliament to the daughter of a King?
28039Shall it be heard from that class only who are satisfied with their protection, or shall the voice of the weak and the starving be heard?
28039Shall it not have it?
28039Shall nothing ever be done by statesmen until wrongs are so intolerable that they take society by the throat?
28039Shall our free presses and free schools, our palace homes, colleges, churches, and stately capitols all be leveled to the dust?
28039Shall the lawyer?
28039Shall the merchant?
28039Shall the minister vote?
28039Shall the poor man?
28039Shall the rich man?
28039Shall the right of suffrage be extended to negroes?
28039Shall the right of suffrage be extended to women?
28039Shall the sun of the nineteenth century go down on wrongs like these, in this nation, consecrated in its infancy to justice and freedom?
28039Shall their unthinking acquiescence or the intelligent wish of their thoughtful sisters decide the question?
28039Shall there not be one law for the brothers and the daughters throughout this entire country?
28039Shall we be beggars for that which is, of right, ours?
28039Shall we dare to go on for another period of our national existence knowing that at the foundation of our government there is a tremendous wrong?
28039Shall we not, in this"crisis of our country''s destiny,"imitate the example of these heroic worthies, if"hereunto we are called"?
28039Shall we prolong and perpetuate such injustice, and by increasing this power risk worse oppressions for ourselves and daughters?
28039Shall we refuse them?
28039Shall we send men to Liberia who are ready to tread the black man under their feet?
28039Shall we who are in some sense the weaker sex have no guarantee for our rights?
28039Shall women govern the country?
28039She gave an able address, answering the questions,"What is to be gained and what is to be lost, by giving women the ballot?"
28039She has a right to think,--has she a right to practice?
28039She has been growing up in the scale of power; has she been going down in the scale of moral character?
28039She liked the idea of working women, but she would like to know if it was broad enough to take colored women?
28039She looked up, and said,"What was I made for?
28039She said,"Is it possible that any person thinks like that?
28039She wished to know who, loving the black man, could take this pledge?
28039Should not our petitions command as respectful a hearing in a republican Senate as a speech of Victoria in the House of Lords?
28039Should she be placed in the militia to enforce the results of a ballot?
28039Some one said,"Who has a New Testament?"
28039State whether that is the poll list of voters kept upon the day of election in the first election district of the 8th Ward, of the city of Rochester?
28039Stone?"
28039Suffrage and amnesty to whom?
28039Suppose I concede that, what then?
28039Suppose the assertion true, is it a peculiarity of this reform?...
28039Taxes are not to be laid on the people"( are not women and negroes people?)
28039That the Border States will join with the now crippled rebel States?
28039That the balance of power between parties is held by a very small number of voters; and in practical action what is the fact?
28039That the elective franchise is conferred upon persons of African descent, or those who have suffered from a previous condition of servitude?
28039The CLERK: Gentlemen, have you agreed upon your verdict?
28039The CLERK: How say you, do you find the prisoners at the bar guilty of the offense whereof they stand indicted, or not guilty?
28039The COURT: Is there anything upon which I can give you any advice gentlemen, or any information?
28039The COURT: What?
28039The COURT: You presented yourself as a female, claiming that you had a right to vote?
28039The Democratic party obtained the control of the Government for two generations because it appealed to that sense of justice?
28039The LADY: What kind of soldiers would copperheads make?
28039The PRESIDENT_ pro tem._: Does the Chair understand the Senator from Missouri as yielding the floor?
28039The PRESIDENT_ pro tem._: Will the Senator from Missouri suggest the disposition he wishes made of this petition?
28039The SPEAKER.--Is there objection?
28039The SPEAKER.--With the names?
28039The ancients did all this, but where are those haughty omnipotences now?
28039The case of Cooper_ vs._ The Mayor of Savannah( 4 Geo., 72), involved the question whether a free negro was a citizen of the United States?
28039The men of Kansas in their speeches would say,"What would be to us the comparative advantage of the amendments?
28039The only question left to be settled now, is: Are women persons?
28039The only question to be asked in connection with this movement is, is it right, is it just?--not, is it expedient?
28039The practical question, therefore, is how shall this protection be best attained?
28039The question with me is, is it right?
28039The right to see came with the eye and the light: did it not?
28039The world says:"Why do you not labor to build up fortunes and reputations for yourselves if you will labor?
28039Then if we say,"Shall a woman vote?"
28039Then why say it to women?
28039Then, gentlemen, what would you gain by this exclusion?
28039There is no escape, and where is the use of courting disgrace and defeat?
28039There may have been slaves who preferred to remain slaves-- was that an argument against freedom?
28039These are certainly great ameliorations of the law; but how have they been produced?
28039These men tell what their wives have done, and then ask, shall such women be left without a vote?
28039They said,"How can we form a true Union?"
28039They_ do nothing_, why should we?"
28039Think you the women of America then had no interest in public measures?
28039Think you they would continue to be the servants of mere fashion, as too many of them now are?
28039This being our political state at present with reference to electoral action, what do you propose?
28039This being the case, is it presumable that a foreign citizen is intended to be placed higher than one born on our soil?
28039Time?
28039To correct your system?
28039To his wife?
28039To reform existing evils and abuses?
28039To study it as patriots, as men of reflection and good sense?
28039To what class, however rich, or intelligent, or honest, they would themselves surrender_ their_ power?
28039To whom do you owe the most-- your father or your mother?
28039To whom?
28039Under the operation of this Amendment, what will become of the family hearthstone around which cluster the very best influences of human education?
28039Upon what reasonable grounds does it rest?
28039Very well; do you object to that?
28039Visit the solemn battle- field, and in anguish we murmur,"My God, why hast Thou forsaken us?"
28039Was Elizabeth incompetent?
28039Was ever a more disreputable phrase penned?
28039Was everything turned upside down?
28039Was it an inherent right in them as a part of"the people?"
28039Was that mere euphuism, mere phrasing?
28039Was the defendant legally entitled to vote at the election in question?
28039We all came together by one common instinct-- saying,"What shall we do?"
28039We are often asked the question,"On what do you base your assertion that the ballot can achieve so much for woman?
28039We frankly say to fathers, brothers, Husbands, too, and several others, We''re bound to win our right of voting, Do n''t you hear the music floating?
28039We have got all Europe, and all Asia is coming, and who sends them?
28039Well knowing how a single petition is suffocated, would it not be well for all the States to unite, and be presented at the same time?
28039Well, may all orphan women, and unmarried women, and women that have no abiding place of residence vote?
28039Well, now, since compromises are coming into vogue again, will you compromise with me, and agree that until a woman has a home she may vote?
28039Well, would I go to the church to mix with rude men?
28039Were the Apostles and martyrs worth$ 250?
28039Were the laws of nature suspended?
28039Were they dwarfed and crippled in body and soul, while their enfranchised wives and mothers became giants in stature and intellect?
28039Were they not the more women?
28039Were you ever so cruelly hurt by any course of lectures before?
28039Whar did she come from?
28039What State of the thirty- seven has power to make a treaty, to form an alliance, to declare war?
28039What am woman?
28039What are the facts?
28039What are the privileges and immunities of citizens?
28039What are the privileges and immunities of the citizens of the United States?
28039What are we beside that giant?"
28039What are we to do with our conquered provinces of the South?
28039What are wealth and jewels, home and ease, sires and sons, to the birthright of freedom, secured to us by the heroes of the Revolution?
28039What are you afraid of?
28039What are you seaboard people doing to vindicate your honor?
28039What argument is not already familiar to the reading and thinking mind?
28039What better is it for those 10,000 men that they became naturalized?
28039What business man studies a business foreign to his own?
28039What can I say?
28039What can free us from their laws so unjust?"
28039What can liberty expect from such a man?
28039What can woman hope from such a party?
28039What did they say when the women came among them?
28039What did they think of the$ 300 clause about substitutes?
28039What do I infer, then, from all this?
28039What do the character and status of citizens import?
28039What do we gain in this?
28039What do we mean when we say the privileges?
28039What do you do with men who are past the years of military service and exempted by your laws?
28039What do you think, Sojourner, of free trade?
28039What does he have of it, then?
28039What does it confer?
28039What does it mean?
28039What does this article say?
28039What else but its recognition to drive every liquor- saloon from the land, making temperance universal?
28039What else does woman suffrage mean?
28039What else have they given women to do?
28039What else is needed but this principle to settle the vexed question of"Solid North"or"Solid South"?
28039What for?
28039What freedom have you given us to act independently and earnestly?
28039What gives influence?
28039What has brought on this war?
28039What have we done?
28039What have you given us to do well?
28039What if their mothers on this platform be angular, old, wrinkled, and gray?
28039What if woman did not carry the bayonet on the battle- field?
28039What if woman should even abuse the use of the ballot at first?
28039What is a slave?
28039What is an attorney?
28039What is he doing?
28039What is involved in the right of the Magdalen to be a woman redeemed and disenthralled from the bondage of sin?
28039What is it that the woman''s reform asks for woman?
28039What is it?
28039What is servitude?
28039What is the chief glory of our democratic institutions?
28039What is the difference between putting a fraudulent ballot in, and keeping a lawful ballot out?
28039What is the effect of it?
28039What is the high and holy mission of any woman but to be the best and most efficient human being possible?
28039What is the meaning of"regulate"and"establish?"
28039What is the motive of my honorable friend in introducing it?
28039What is the proposition now before the Senate?
28039What is the question?
28039What is the reason of this low valuation of woman?
28039What is the right worth if that be denied?
28039What is the right?
28039What is the sum total of his citizenship?
28039What is the trouble between us?"
28039What is the"white male citizen"--the voter in the Republic of the United States?
28039What is woman going to do with the ballot?
28039What is your State unless it is founded upon virtuous and happy homes?
28039What less than_ this_ would the loving Saviour of men have done for one like her?
28039What less would_ you_, who have battled half a century for her freedom, have done in a case like that?
28039What matters it that the tyranny be of many instead of one?
28039What means the right of the drunkard''s wife to be a woman?
28039What next?
28039What next?
28039What particular function does it require to vote?
28039What phantom can the sons of the Pilgrims be chasing, when they make merchandise of a power like this?
28039What place would henceforth be safe from the assaults of these irrepressible amazons of reform?
28039What privilege does the vote give to the"white male citizen"of the United States?
28039What privilege or immunity has California or Oregon the constitutional right to deny them, save that of the ballot?
28039What shall I say?
28039What shall we learn from the other?
28039What should the government of a nation be?
28039What then?
28039What thinking man can talk of_ coming down_ into the arena of politics?
28039What to either class was the nation''s life, so long as the flag gave them no protection against the humiliating distinctions of caste?
28039What to them were boasted republican institutions, so long as their rights, privileges, and immunities as citizens were denied?
28039What victories have been achieved, what defeats suffered with patience?
28039What was meant by them?
28039What was that woman to do?
28039What was the old theory of the common law?
28039What was the result?
28039What was the theory of it?
28039What were the conditions?
28039What will this law do?
28039What woman studies a business foreign to her own?
28039What would be the effect upon their minds?
28039What would he do here?
28039What would he naturally do, with his old world antecedents and training, when he is thus aggrieved as he conceives himself to be?
28039What would money be worth to you without it?
28039What would the family be with a father and without a mother?
28039What wrong is done her?
28039What, pray, does the resident alien acquire by the transmuting process of naturalization?
28039What, then, are the"privileges and immunities of citizens of the United States"which are secured against such abridgment, by this section?
28039What, then, is the basis of rights?
28039What, then, was the law upon this subject when the Constitution was adopted?
28039What?
28039When a man has seen the error of his ways and confesses it, what more is there to be done except to receive him seventy and seven times?
28039When she heard this she asked herself what part women had in such a celebration?
28039When such women come up now and ask for the right of suffrage, who will deny their request?
28039When the Democrats said that my vote should_ not_ go in the box, one Republican said to the other,"What do you say, Marsh?"
28039When there was no father''s hand or brother''s arm to help, what could woman do?
28039When we want a response from men how do we propound the question?
28039When you proclaimed emancipation, did you go to slaveholders and ask if a majority of them were in favor of freeing their slaves?
28039When you propose legislation so fatal to the best interests of woman and the nation, shall we be silent till the deed is done?
28039When you ring the changes on"negro suffrage"from Maine to California, have you proof positive that a majority of the freedmen demand the ballot?
28039When, therefore, the Committee declare that voting is at war with the distribution of functions between the sexes, what do they mean?
28039Whence arises the right of the majority to govern and the obligation of the minority to obey?
28039Whence did they derive it?
28039Whence, then, does he derive it?
28039Where a cave of dimensions equal to those of the Mammoth Cave of Kentucky?
28039Where are Cleopatra and Semiramis, and Zenobia and Catharine, and Elizabeth and Victoria?
28039Where are there any women, as wives and mothers, more beautiful in their home life than Lucretia Mott and Lucy Stone, or Antoinette Brown Blackwell?
28039Where are they so represented?
28039Where can I get some pamphlets containing the best arguments for universal suffrage?
28039Where does it reside?
28039Where does self- government begin?
28039Where has been the assembly at which this right of representation was conferred?
28039Where has been the assembly at which this right of representation was conferred?
28039Where has this provision wrought anything but good?
28039Where is the Democrat who favors woman suffrage?
28039Where is there a mob such that the announcement that a woman is present does not bring down the loudest of them?
28039Where shall we find another Niagara?
28039Where was the compact made?
28039Where was the compact made?
28039Where would Story be now, if living?
28039Where, gentlemen, did you get the right to deny the ballot to all women and black men not worth$ 250?
28039Where, when, and how did they get it?
28039Wherein is the foundation for any democratic society, predicated on the rights of individuals?
28039Which is the superior to- day?
28039Which shall I treat first, the wrong done to the individual or that done to society?
28039Which way am she gwine to?"
28039While all men, everywhere, are rejoicing in new- found liberties, shall woman alone be denied the rights, privileges, and immunities of citizenship?
28039Whither is a nation tending when brains count for less than bullion, and clowns make laws for queens?
28039Who belittle their capacities?
28039Who can doubt it?
28039Who can give the right to govern another?
28039Who can hesitate to decide, when the question lies between educated women and ignorant negroes?"
28039Who can say he is not just as good at twenty- nine?
28039Who controlled the family most effectually?
28039Who does realize in life all that in starting was looked for?
28039Who does she belong to?
28039Who ever knew a labor strike of women to succeed?
28039Who governed you when you were children?
28039Who has been?
28039Who has nothing to regret?
28039Who have carried the spelling- book to the South?
28039Who is it that ought to be protected by these republican governments?
28039Who is to carry them there?
28039Who is willing to shut the pulpit against Mrs. Mott, when she has filled it with such acceptance, in so many places, and on so many occasions?
28039Who knows but that to- night we are laying the corner- stone of an equally grand movement?
28039Who ought to possess the ballot?
28039Who says that she does not want it?
28039Who shall bring it up if he refuses to do it?
28039Who squeeze their minds?"
28039Who will venture to judge the future by any political almanac of by- gone times?
28039Who would n''t maintain the peace when entreated from such a quarter?
28039Who, asked Mrs. Rose, was the first to call a National Convention of women-- New York or Massachusetts?
28039Who, to- day, considers it improper for Lucy Stone, Anna Dickinson, Mrs. Stanton, Mrs. Gage, to appear upon a public platform?
28039Whose dull, dead ear has been raised to life by that vocalization of heaven, that was given to you more than to any other one?"
28039Whose laws, pray?
28039Whose right is it?
28039Why ca n''t you be satisfied?"
28039Why divert and distract their thoughts?"
28039Why do the British workmen at this moment so urgently demand it?
28039Why do they get up meetings for the colored men, and call them fellow- men, brothers, and gentlemen?
28039Why do they not at the same time protect the negro woman?
28039Why do we want it?
28039Why do you consult women if this right shall be given them?
28039Why do you give him the ballot, pray, or permit him to take it for himself?
28039Why do you scold us, poor weak women, for being fashionable and dressy, when snares are set at every corner to tempt us?
28039Why do you waste your time and efforts on this ungrateful soil?"
28039Why does that disinterested, noble- minded, freedom- loving man in vain ask of the Administration to give him an army to lead into the field?
28039Why had nobody thought about it?
28039Why have I so recently arrived at that conclusion?
28039Why have all former republics vanished out of existence?
28039Why have they not this right politically, as well as men?
28039Why ignore 15,000,000 women in the reconstruction?
28039Why is he not seen in the convention?''
28039Why is it that every father in this country is educating his daughter as well as his son in all branches of science?
28039Why is it that labor is oppressed and that working women and working men are in some respects worse off than ever before?
28039Why is it, my friends, that Congress has enacted laws to give the negro of the South the right to vote?
28039Why is this term"male"used in the constitutions, pray?
28039Why is this?
28039Why may a colored citizen be admitted to the bar?
28039Why may a colored citizen buy, hold, and sell land in any State of the Union?
28039Why not begin the experiment?
28039Why not further amelioration and adaptation?
28039Why not go back to the tribal custom of the desert, and let the patriarch do all the voting?
28039Why not let a woman, if it is desired that she should be a student, inquire of her husband?
28039Why not try it in North Carolina?
28039Why not, Mr. President?
28039Why not?
28039Why not?
28039Why not?
28039Why ought she?
28039Why say a man can not be a member of the Senate until he is thirty years of age?
28039Why should I not be sincere?
28039Why should I or any person be forbidden to select the agent whom we think the most competent and truly representative of our will?
28039Why should n''t they?
28039Why should not large reductions transpire in those opportunities that invite the most sinister combination for offices and spoils?
28039Why should not the landlady of that hotel over the way share the profits of their joint labors with the landlord?
28039Why should the African prove more just and generous than his Saxon compeers?
28039Why should the head of the household, or rather the_ hand_ of the household, be masculine rather than feminine?
28039Why should the woman who does not care to vote prevent the voting of her neighbor who does?
28039Why should the word_ male_ be in it?
28039Why should there be any restriction?
28039Why should they desire to overturn the existing order of things?
28039Why should this church be granted for such a meeting as this, but for the progress of the cause?
28039Why should we?
28039Why should women, whose supple fingers can set type-- why should not they be type- setters?
28039Why should you not throw them in?
28039Why such zeal, such more than Roman sternness?
28039Why this partiality to the black man?
28039Why this, if it was not in the power of the Legislature to deny the right of suffrage to some male inhabitants?
28039Why was it limited to those three causes?
28039Why, do n''t you know that a woman had seven devils in her: and do you suppose a woman is fit to rule the nation?"
28039Why, in organizing a system of liberality and justice, not recognize in the case of free women as well as free negroes the right of representation?
28039Why, in this hour of reconstruction, with the experience of generations before us, make another experiment in the same direction?
28039Why, then, should not the females have a right to participate in their construction as well as the male part of the community?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Why?
28039Will America obey heaven''s voice, or does republicanism exist only in name?
28039Will God perform a miracle to feed this multitude?
28039Will Mrs. Griffing let Mr. Sumner know what institution or person should disburse the money appropriated?
28039Will it be said that the renunciation of allegiance to the former implies or draws after it a renunciation of allegiance to the latter?
28039Will it be said that this sex does not claim a right to representation?
28039Will it not in fact sever those relations to which I have referred as being essential for the virtue and safety of a State?
28039Will men never learn that a principle which God has made true He has also made it safe to apply?
28039Will not their weakness render them subservient to the strong and their ignorance to the artful?
28039Will not these new electors you propose to introduce be more approachable than men who now vote to all corrupt influences?
28039Will that ever be remedied until woman has the right to vote?
28039Will the Clerk poll the jury?
28039Will the gentleman accept an amendment to that resolution that there shall be no distinction in regard to sex?
28039Will they not be more easily caught and enraptured by superficial declamation, because more incapable of profound reflection?
28039Will they not be more passionate, and therefore more easily influenced by the demagogue?
28039Will woman be deprived of the guarantees in this section and the right of trial by jury because the masculine pronoun is used?
28039Will you also give me the names of members whom you think would present petitions for us?
28039Will you be good enough to tell me which woman you think to- day is the superior?
28039Will you have Rome?
28039Will you let me know distinctly if you propose to commit yourselves to the idea of loyalty to the present Government?
28039Will you not give to every woman the power to maintain the integrity of her womanhood-- the ownership of herself?
28039Will you pay the debt that has been incurred?"
28039Will you tell me Democracy, Republicanism, consecrated by Christianity, is the remedy for all these ills?
28039Will you, sir, please send me whatever is said or done with our petitions?
28039With all this equity in their favor, may they not be allowed, without censure, to avail themselves of a legal right?
28039With its 75,000 subscribers, and five times that number of readers, what can the poor little_ Standard_ do for us, compared with that?
28039With the argument all on our side, the only question that remains is, does woman herself demand the right of suffrage at this hour?
28039Woman has been fined, whipped, branded with red- hot irons, imprisoned and hung; but when was woman ever tried by a jury of her peers?
28039Woman has been tried in every office from the throne to the position of the humblest servant; and where has she been found remiss?
28039Women of the North, will you not strive for your own enfranchisement?
28039Women of the South, will you not work for your own freedom?
28039Would he contend that therefore every new- born baby might at once grasp a musket?
28039Would it not be well for the women of to- day to emulate Deborah in her zeal and love of country?
28039Would it not turn the blackguard into a gentleman, so that we should have nothing but good conduct?
28039Would not the charge of cowardice, certain to be brought against you, prove more damaging than that of amalgamation?
28039Would revolvers, bowie- knives, whisky barrels, profane oaths, brutal rowdyism, be the feature of elections if women were present?
28039Would that policy in any way conduce to their peace, their purity, and their happiness?
28039Would the Senator argue from that, that they had no natural rights, or that they were consenting to their bondage?
28039Would you have it otherwise?
28039Would you not be branded all over the land as dastardly hypocrites, professing principles which you have no wish or intention of carrying out?
28039You may, perhaps, ask me, before I go any further,"What is the use of preaching to us that we_ ought_ to do it, when we are not permitted to do it?"
28039You might as well ask,"Are all men equal to each other?"
28039You say what of course you can not know, but even if it were so, what then?
28039You say you find the defendant guilty of the offense whereof she stands indicted, and so say you all?
28039_ First Clown._ How can that be, unless she drowned herself in her own defense?
28039_ Plaintiffs''Attorneys._ But is this law?
28039_ Q._ And on that advice the registry was made with the judgment of the inspectors?
28039_ Q._ And she was registered accordingly?
28039_ Q._ At the time of the registry, when her name was registered, was the Supervisor of Election present at the Board?
28039_ Q._ By and between whom?
28039_ Q._ Did she give evidence?
28039_ Q._ Did she name any particular amendment?
28039_ Q._ Did she, upon that occasion, state that she consulted or talked with Judge Henry R. Selden, of Rochester, in relation to her right to vote?
28039_ Q._ Did the Board consider that and decide that she was entitled to register?
28039_ Q._ Did the Board consider the question of her right to registry, and decide that she was entitled to registry as a voter?
28039_ Q._ Did you keep minutes of evidence on that occasion?
28039_ Q._ Did you receive the tickets from Miss Anthony?
28039_ Q._ Did you see her vote?
28039_ Q._ Do you know the defendant, Miss Susan B. Anthony?
28039_ Q._ Do you know the defendant, Susan B. Anthony?
28039_ Q._ From that poll list what tickets does it purport to show that she voted upon that occasion?
28039_ Q._ Had the Board of Inspectors been regularly organized?
28039_ Q._ In what Congressional District was the city of Rochester at the time?
28039_ Q._ In what capacity were you acting upon that day, if any, in relation to elections?
28039_ Q._ In what election district were you inspector of elections?
28039_ Q._ Into how many election districts is the 8th Ward divided, if it contains more than one?
28039_ Q._ It was canvassed previous to election day between them?
28039_ Q._ On what ground?
28039_ Q._ She was not challenged on the day she voted?
28039_ Q._ State generally what was done, or what occupied that hour''s time?
28039_ Q._ State to the jury whether you had separate boxes for the several tickets voted in that election district?
28039_ Q._ State, if you please, what occurred when you presented yourself at the polls on election day?
28039_ Q._ That she was a woman?
28039_ Q._ There was a stenographic reporter there, was there not?
28039_ Q._ Turn to the evidence of Susan B. Anthony?
28039_ Q._ Under that she claimed her right to vote?
28039_ Q._ Upon the 5th day of November, did the defendant, Susan B. Anthony, vote in the first election district of the 8th Ward of the city of Rochester?
28039_ Q._ Was Miss Anthony challenged upon that occasion?
28039_ Q._ Was he consulted upon the question of whether she was entitled to registry, or did he express an opinion on the subject to the inspectors?
28039_ Q._ Was not this question put to her,"Did you have any doubt yourself of your right to vote?"
28039_ Q._ Was she called as a witness in her own behalf upon that examination?
28039_ Q._ Was she challenged at any time?
28039_ Q._ Was she sworn?
28039_ Q._ Was the preliminary and the general oath administered?
28039_ Q._ Was there a poll list kept of the voters of the first election district of the 8th Ward on the day of election?
28039_ Q._ Was there any objection made, or any doubt raised as to her right to vote?
28039_ Q._ Well, was the question of your right to be registered a subject of discussion there?
28039_ Q._ Were you one of the officers engaged in making that registry?
28039_ Q._ What did you do with them when you received them?
28039_ Q._ What number is it?
28039_ Q._ What was the defect in her right to vote as a citizen?
28039_ Q._ When she offered her vote, was the same objection brought up in the Board of Inspectors, or question made of her right to vote as a woman?
28039_ Q._ When the registry was being made did Miss Anthony appear before the Board of Registry and claim to be registered as a voter?
28039_ Q._ Where were you living on the 5th of November, 1872?
28039_ Q._ Who were inspectors with you?
28039_ Q._ Will you state to the jury what tickets she voted, whether State, Assembly, Congress and Electoral?
28039_ Q._ Wo n''t you state what Miss Anthony said, if she said anything, when she came there and offered her name for registration?
28039_ Q._ You did n''t hear any such statement as that?
28039_ Second Clown._ But is this law?
28039_ What can woman do?_ has been with me from the beginning of this war a question of the uppermost importance.
28039and can those who are mothers be nothing else?
28039and did she not answer,"Not a particle"?
28039and how can any give what he has not got?
28039and what effect did it produce?
28039and what they would do if any class attempted to usurp that power?
28039and when was the choice made?
28039but what does that mean?
28039can there be an extreme view, when one is considering individual freedom?
28039or Mrs. Livermore?
28039or Mrs. Stanton?
28039or expired at last in sunsets of serenity and glory, and been embalmed and enshrined in the tears and gratitude of mankind?
28039or has achieved proportionally, so long a life?
28039or not?
28039or why woman as a student, a wife, a mother, a widow, and a citizen, should be held at such a disadvantage?
28039to exalt ignorance above education, vice above virtue, brutality and barbarism above refinement and religion?
28039to which the reply was,"Yes, now and ever heart and soul a woman"; that Judge Hunt should ask her"if she voted as a female"?
28039what came of all these dark forebodings of timid men?
28039when he classes adults as fully capable of exercising an enlightened judgment as himself with infants?
28039which commands most respect?
28039why do n''t these brothers of ours call us, the reserves, into action?
28039why do n''t they call the reserves into action?
44851''What constitutes a State? 44851 And now, Mr. President, what, under all these circumstances, is it our duty to do?
44851And what is the text in the proceedings of Virginia which this spurious doctrine of nullification claims for its patronage? 44851 Are the people of the United States prepared for this?
44851But why do I waste my breath? 44851 Can it now be said that the question of a recharter of the bank was not decided at the election which ensued?
44851Did they, Mr. President, said Mr. W., succeed by this artifice in benefiting the citizens who had sustained injuries? 44851 Finally, sir, the treaty itself, what is it?
44851He asked if it was probable that a valuation in Liverpool could escape a constitutional objection, if a home valuation were unconstitutional? 44851 How can a result so contrary to all anticipation be explained?
44851How is this to be effected? 44851 Is this the Congress to do these things?
44851Let me ask, sir, on what grounds is it maintained that the United States received a valuable consideration for these claims? 44851 Now, what was the actual curtailment, during the same period?
44851Sir( said Mr. W.), why has the senator from Missouri assailed the Committee on Public Lands, and himself, as its humble organ? 44851 Sir, why has this investigation been resisted?
44851So then, it is come to this, that the Senate has no right to express its opinion in relation to the Executive? 44851 The inquiry remains, what ought to be the specific application of the fund under the restriction stated?
44851The question is, by virtue of whose will, power, dictation, was the removal of the deposits effected? 44851 The senator from Kentucky has changed his opinion about the constitutionality of the bank; but has he changed it about the legality of the trust?
44851The senator wishes to know what we are to do? 44851 The true question, therefore, is, whether there be a''constitutional''right in a single State to nullify a law of the United States?
44851This, Mr. President, is the enactment; and what is such an enactment? 44851 Under these circumstances, the question presented was, whether the general government had a right to sustain those people in their pretensions?
44851What are the tendencies of a great moneyed power, connected with the government, and controlling its fiscal operations? 44851 What has France gained by these measures in duties on her wines and her silks, which she would otherwise have been bound to pay?
44851What have we done, continued Mr. B., to draw this squadron upon us? 44851 What have you to gain by division and dissension?
44851What is the legal effect of this vast capacity to acquire, and this legal power to retain, real estate? 44851 What occasion then has the Senate, sitting as a court of impeachment, for the power of execution?
44851What public, or national, or political object had we in the negotiation of 1800, which led to the treaty of the 30th September of that year? 44851 What security have the people against the lawless conduct of any President?
44851What was to be learned from the action of their respective negotiators? 44851 What, sir, is the cause of Southern distress?
44851Where is the distinction, in principle, as regards the reception of bank paper on public account, between the two provisions? 44851 Why have we so small an amount of specie in circulation?
44851With what propriety, then, could the Senate be called on to sanction a proceeding so entirely irregular and anomalous? 44851 ''The Mameluke;''''That field covered with rice?'' 44851 ''The Mameluke;''''These gardens?'' 44851 ''The Mameluke;''''Who this country house?'' 44851 107; is it expedient to weaken the future State? 44851 191; by whom is it to be exercised? 44851 257; the bank is finished, why debate it now? 44851 403; by virtue of whose will, power, dictation, were the deposits removed? 44851 405; the instance of CÃ ¦ sar, 405; what is it our duty to do?
44851After this example, can any one doubt the capacity of the United States to supply itself with specie?
44851After this, after such an example, will American Senators be unwilling to obey the people?
44851Again, look at the species of evidence which will be invited to appear before these commissioners; of what description will it be?
44851All articles of leather, from tanned side to the finest harness or saddle, have been excluded from importation; and why?
44851All we ask is, does a government actually exist?
44851And are we to forestall and anticipate them?
44851And can it be supposed that the British stockholders are indifferent to the issue of this election?
44851And can we justify ourselves to the people by longer lending to it the money and power of the government, to be employed for such purposes?
44851And did not South Carolina, in derision of that compromise, nullify the law?
44851And he demanded, why hurry on this amendment before that information can come in?
44851And how are we to treat the subject?
44851And how has he acquired it?
44851And how is this proved?
44851And how was that great reform effected?
44851And how will he qualify the denial of this principle?
44851And how?
44851And if it did, what then?
44851And if not, how are the United States to enforce an act solemnly pronounced to be unconstitutional?
44851And if they were so disposed, would it be the duty of this government to protect them in the attempt?
44851And is he not right?
44851And is the Senate to justify the directors for this contempt?
44851And is there any reason why we should not prepare now?
44851And let me ask, what was that principle, which now, it seems, is to be destroyed?
44851And now how could this be effected, and in a country so vast and intelligent?
44851And now, sir, I repeat, how is it that a State legislature acquires any power to interfere?
44851And now, sir, what is the spectacle we behold?
44851And now, what is the point here?
44851And now, why resuscitate these buried recollections?
44851And now, why this allusion?
44851And now, why this mortifying exhibition of a disgusting depravity?
44851And shall these two verdicts stand?
44851And shall they remain in fashion here?
44851And the last question to be decided will be, shall the bill pass?
44851And was not the one release the necessary consideration for the other?
44851And what bank is to be selected as the agent to effect this salutary change?
44851And what did they get in return for this vast burden?
44851And what do they see?
44851And what has been his reward?
44851And what have they asked in return?
44851And what is it now?
44851And what is the course of the honorable senator?
44851And what next?
44851And what other execution is now required for delinquent public men, than the force of public opinion?
44851And what was the conduct of the Senate all this time?
44851And what was the consequence?
44851And what was the reason then assigned by the president of the bank for this postponement?
44851And what was the result?
44851And what was the result?
44851And what were they?
44851And what, sir, is the nature and tendency of the system we are discussing?
44851And who are the''architects of ruin''that have resolved its downfall?
44851And who can doubt it?
44851And who composed that society?
44851And why do you refuse to do the same with your grand system of public education?
44851And why engrave it, except to multiply copies for extensive distribution?
44851And why may not an American citizen do the same?
44851And why none of those things?
44851And why nothing?
44851And why that refusal?
44851And why this difference?
44851And why were the specifications then dropped?
44851And why?
44851And why?
44851And why?
44851And why?
44851And why?
44851And why?
44851And will that disposition ever be wanting to such an institution as that of the Bank of the United States?
44851And with how much real capital is this banking system, so burdensome to the people of the United States, carried on?
44851And with what weapons?
44851And, I repeat the question, is there a senator, or intelligent man in the whole country, who entertains a solitary doubt?
44851And, at the conclusion of this paper, what does he say?
44851Another question, sir, occurs to me: what sum of money will this bill abstract from the treasury?
44851Are gentlemen, said Mr. K., prepared for this?
44851Are the directors liable for excessive issues?
44851Are the enterprising, liberal, high- minded, and intelligent_ merchants_ of the Union willing to countenance such a measure?
44851Are the increasing discontents, nothing?
44851Are the republicans, said he, possessed of fleets and armies?
44851Are there no woods, marshes or prairies, except where you dwell?
44851Are they drawn in the name of the corporation?
44851Are they limited to the minimum size of five dollars?
44851Are they not dangerous to every interest, public and private-- political as well as pecuniary?
44851Are they payable at other branches?
44851Are they payable where issued?
44851Are they receivable in payment of public dues?
44851Are they signed by the president of the bank and his principal cashier?
44851Are they subject to the double limitation of time and amount in case of credit?
44851Are they subject to the supervision of the Secretary of the Treasury?
44851Are they the base, the ignorant, and the unprincipled?
44851Are they transferable by delivery?
44851Are they under the corporate seal?
44851Are we in that condition still?
44851Are we legislating, or amusing ourselves with phantasmagoria?
44851Are we powerless to prevent it?
44851Are we prepared now?
44851Are we respected, or despised abroad?
44851Are we thence to infer the inferiority of the officers thus elected, and the consequent degradation of the countries over which they presided?
44851Are we yet at the mercy of State discretion, and State construction?
44851As a publication in New Hampshire, it was clearly forbid; as part of our congressional proceedings would it still be forbid?
44851As he approached the harbor of New- York, he made inquiry of some acquaintance to know whether he could find a hack to convey him to a hotel?
44851At all events, he would demand if she was not now able to cease pressing them?
44851At what hour does Christmas commence?
44851Baring, Brothers,& Co.?
44851Because no majority could be found to agree in them?
44851But does it prove either the one or the other?
44851But how can we pass over the great measure of the removal of the public moneys from the Bank of the United States, in the autumn of 1833?
44851But how now?
44851But how stands the truth, recorded upon our own journals?
44851But how?
44851But how?
44851But in what condition do I find this child?
44851But what has been the fact?
44851But what has been the result of the system which has been pursued ever since?
44851But what is the example which we are now required to exhibit?
44851But what was the actual state of the fact?
44851But when?
44851But where are the hundreds of thousands, with their descendants, who neither removed, nor were thus destroyed?
44851But where is this money?
44851But who shall decide this question of interference?
44851But why go back, exclaimed Mr. B., to the nations of antiquity?
44851But why refer it to the Committee of Ways and Means?
44851But why this specification?
44851But, if he has failed to discover the source of the evils he deplores, who can unfold it?
44851But, sir, who knows the sentiments of that body on this question?
44851But, why use this feeble pen, when the voice of Webster is at hand?
44851By a few desultory exertions in the parliament itself?
44851By receiving these petitions one after another, and thus tampering, trifling, sporting with the feelings of the South?
44851By what authority does the President derive power from the mere result of an election?
44851By whom is all this power to be exercised?
44851Can any gentleman make the same pledge that no such proposition shall come from the North?
44851Can any one do more than suppose, or argumentatively assume it?
44851Can any thing be conceived more revolting and atrocious than to direct the funds of the treasury, the property of the people, to such iniquitous uses?
44851Can he, said Mr. C, look to me, and say that he never used the language attributed to him in the placard which he refers to?
44851Can it be any other than this; that it affords the only certain means of building up in a wilderness, great and prosperous communities?
44851Can not the Bank of the United States, if re- chartered, act in the same way?
44851Can that voice be disregarded?
44851Can the gold bullion of North Carolina be circulated as currency?
44851Can the vengeance of the bank never be appeased while he lives and moves on earth?"
44851Can you prove, by any argumentative deduction, that it is possible to be safe without one of them?
44851Can you tie their hands?
44851Confinement to their separate jurisdictions is the duty of each; but if encroachments take place, which is to judge?
44851Could an account of the President''s conversation with his cabinet be called for?
44851Could it be necessary to take up the question of rechartering the bank at the present session?
44851Could language be more explicit?
44851Could measures more eminently calculated to prepare the country for a state of war have been devised or adopted?
44851Could the Indians establish a separate republic on each of their reservations in Ohio?
44851Could the copy of a speech made to the cabinet be called for?
44851Could they expect to produce a change of mind in the Southern people?
44851Did Michigan do right in thus fixing the elective franchise?
44851Did any government ever pass a law of temporary non- intercourse with a public enemy?
44851Did any one doubt what would be the opinion of the committee on finance?
44851Did gentlemen call this backing their friends?
44851Did no other part of the country owe money to the bank?
44851Did the Government stop?
44851Did the president of the bank himself assign this reason?
44851Did the wheels of the State chariot cease to turn round in those years for want of treasury oil?
44851Did they do it without any consideration at all?
44851Did they not perish miserably by the knives of infuriated negroes and the desolating ravages of pestilence?
44851Did they not spurn it with contempt?
44851Did this declaration light up the flame of discord in this House?
44851Did we not have forty millions of income in the year 1817?
44851Do they think the West is to be bought?
44851Do we hear of indignity, or outrage in any quarter?
44851Do you, or does any one, possess any information which justifies him in asserting that it is more unfriendly than this House?
44851Does he admit or deny?
44851Does he mean to say that the President has recommended a measure which is to make him sole judge of the constitution?
44851Does he not stand between the country and the bank?
44851Does it authorize the raising of armies?
44851Does it give to the President the power of declaring war?
44851Does not a compromise imply an adjustment on terms of agreement?
44851Does not the member from South Carolina[ Mr. McDuffie] remember that this question divided the country into federalists and republicans?
44851Does the act which he has done deserve the definition which has been put upon it?
44851Follow out the principle, and where will it lead you?
44851For what purpose could such a picture be intended, unless to inflame the passions of slaves?
44851For what purpose?
44851From what cause, then, does so startling a difference arise?
44851From what obligations, I would ask, were we relieved?
44851Had it increased the specie in actual and general circulation?
44851Had it increased the specie in the country?
44851Had it no reasonable motive in the relinquishment?
44851Had the bank manifested a willingness to pay out the public money in its possession for this object?
44851Had they a right to annul that law?
44851Has any gentleman yet ventured to designate it?
44851Has any one here risen in his place, and announced his satisfaction and his determination to abide by it?
44851Has he any by the constitution?
44851Has the holder a right to sue at the branch which issues the order?
44851Has the warning voice of Washington been forgotten?
44851Have the domestic manufactories produced an adequate supply for the country?
44851Have the people of the West no taste for public improvements, for the useful and the fine arts, and for literature?
44851Have they no exports?
44851Have those who threatened the Union accepted it?
44851Have we forgotten the universal giving way of conscience, so that the senator from Missouri was left alone?
44851Have we no interest in doing so?
44851Have we no power?
44851Have we not the right to see that our own bargain is honestly fulfilled?
44851Have we peace, or war, with foreign nations?
44851He asked how?
44851He told us then that the power of the purse commanded that of the sword-- and would he commit both to the hands of foreigners?
44851He was asked if any person were present during the conversation?
44851He was asked if he could name any one who had told him so?
44851He was asked if he ever threatened to shoot Mr. Clay, Mr. Webster, or Mr. Calhoun, or whether he would shoot them if he had an opportunity?
44851He was then asked if he was well pleased with the speeches of Col. Benton and Judge White?
44851He would ask that gentleman if they had it not in their power to retrace their steps when they have done wrong?
44851He wrote thus:"Why does the army, of late years, desert more than formerly?
44851How assailed?
44851How came all these anomalies?
44851How could Cuba, St. Domingo, or Brazil, bear the loss of their coffee trade with us?
44851How could this happen?
44851How did this happen?
44851How far will this authority extend?
44851How has it accomplished this great and essential end?
44851How is a bank to be used as the means of correcting the excess of the banking system?
44851How is it now, with near double as much specie, and five millions less of notes out, and twelve millions less of debt?
44851How is it possible, under such circumstances, to retain specie in circulation?
44851How is it received-- how received by those who called for it?
44851How is this difficulty to be overcome?
44851How many?
44851How much better that the Committee on Manufactures heal the wound which has been inflicted?
44851How much better, then, to grant redress?
44851How much has the treasury received for lands sold within her limits?
44851How much of this dark shadowing is ascribable to each singly, and to all in combination?
44851How often have we said to each other, well, what can we do?
44851How often, when acting on the case of the nominated successor, have we felt the injustice of the removal?
44851How would England, France, or Germany, bear the loss of their linen, silk, or wine trade, with the United States?
44851How would it stop the agitation?
44851How, sir, I ask, are we to know the motives of men?
44851How, then, are we to account for this cry of no money, in which so many respectable men join?
44851How, then, could it be contended that the discharge of the one was not a full and adequate consideration for the discharge of the other?
44851How, then, could it be said, with any justice, that we sought our release at the expense of the claimants?
44851How, then, shall we be persuaded that, in virtue of this guaranty, we are bound to pay the debts and make good the spoliations of France?
44851I demand, where is there a chief magistrate of whom so much evil has been predicted, and from whom so much good has come?
44851I repeat, what was she, under these circumstances, to do?
44851I say manufacturers-- and why do I say so?
44851I see before me senators who could not swallow that resolution; and has its nature changed since then?
44851I take it in the mildest supposed character of this Congress-- shall we go there to_ advise_ and_ consult_ in council about it?
44851If France, who committed the wrong, could not justly be called upon to atone for it, how can the United States now be called upon for this money?
44851If it had done no evil, what good had it done?
44851If malignant, why create one?
44851If mere reduction of deposits was to be attended with these effects at one time, why not at the other?
44851If not, he would ask what it had produced?
44851If not, to what could they appeal for defence and support?
44851If so, why take an oath?
44851If that should be against them, they must yield; if for them, did gentlemen mean to say, that public will should be assailed by force?...
44851If the President and Senate invade the legislative field of Congress, which is to judge?
44851If the expunging of that article discharged the United States from obligations thus onerous, did it not discharge France from the fellow obligations?
44851If the first day of a year or month begins and ends at midnight, does not every other day?
44851If the national legislature can pass resolutions to approve the conduct of the President, may they not also pass resolutions to censure?
44851If the precise moment of actual time were to settle such a matter, it would be material to ask, who shall settle the time?
44851If these banks are beneficial institutions, why not several?
44851If these persons have not a right to claim, in the face of the tribe, these sums, as promised to them by their Great Father?
44851If they had it not in their power to correct their own journal when asserting what was not true?
44851If they had thought that a postponement would have endangered their interests, would they not have said so?
44851If this is done under the first charter, what may not be expected under the second?
44851If this spirit extends, who can check it?
44851If you may expunge a part, you may expunge the whole; and if it is expunged, how is it kept?
44851In reply to Mr. Frelinghuysen, who asked where was the gold currency?
44851In the next place, how is it in point of price?
44851In what did her debt consist, which it is alleged France gave up in payment for these claims?
44851In what proportion have they acted?
44851In what respect is the country you inhabit better than another?
44851In what sense then is it a compromise?
44851In what, he asked, does it violate the constitution?
44851Is his declaration in his proclamation, that the burdens of the South ought to be relieved, nothing?
44851Is it any more constitutional now than it was then?
44851Is it as good as the foreign?
44851Is it at midnight or at noon?
44851Is it correct?
44851Is it credible, sir?
44851Is it fair?
44851Is it just thus to pursue that gentleman, and to pursue him unjustly?
44851Is it not the creation of a new species of mortmain?
44851Is it right to treat the House thus?
44851Is it said we were released from obligations?
44851Is it to stand as the law of the land and the rule of the treasury, under the administration which is to ensue?
44851Is it, said Mr. K., even unprecedented and unusual?
44851Is not the right of petition a fundamental right?
44851Is not the_ distribution_ part of the contract as well as the_ payment_?
44851Is not this anarchy, as well as revolution?
44851Is not this revolution?
44851Is not this revolutionary?
44851Is one State to sit sole arbitress?
44851Is one senator the apparent object of assault, when another is designed as the real victim?
44851Is the domestic article furnished as cheap as the foreign?
44851Is the issue of numerous elections, including that of the highest officer of the government, nothing?
44851Is the service of that axe invoked here upon''General Andrew Veto?''
44851Is the tendency of recent events to unite the whole South, nothing?
44851Is the unconstitutionality of these laws of that description?
44851Is this evasion?
44851Is this fancy, or is it fact?
44851Is this right?
44851Is this the Congress to impose restrictions upon the power of their successors?
44851Is this the Congress to tie the hands of all Congresses till the year 1851?
44851It dispatched an agent to London, without the knowledge of the treasury, and for what?
44851It has coined, and that at a large expense to the United States, 2,262,717 pieces of gold, worth$ 11,852,890; and where are these pieces now?
44851It has tied up the hands of its successors; and if this can be done on one subject, and for twenty years, why not upon all subjects, and for all time?
44851It is demanded of us, Do you seek to impose restrictions on Arkansas, in violation of the compromise under which Missouri entered the Union?
44851It is one which can not be discussed in_ this_ chamber on_ this_ day; and shall we go to Panama to discuss it?
44851It is true that the question then was, how much, and in what way, should the double duties of the war be reduced?
44851It might show who was the real author of the removal of the deposits-- whether the President, or the Secretary of the Treasury?
44851It puts them in military array; and for what purpose but for the use of force?
44851It varies in almost all the States; and yet who ever supposed that Congress could interfere to change the rules adopted by the people in regard to it?
44851It was a pretty fable, and well told; but the moral-- the application?
44851It was asked, Mr. B. said, what loss has the Western People now sustained for want of gold?
44851It was called the Bank of the United States, and ought it to be the bank of the nobility and gentry of Great Britain?
44851It was objected that it was vague and indefinite in its character; and how is that objection got over?
44851Let the lawyers bring their books, and answer us, if there is not a case here presented for the application of that ancient and most remedial writ?
44851May I not, then, disable him?
44851Mr. Adams, and who could be a more competent judge?
44851Mr. B. demanded if that was not true?
44851Mr. Calhoun, not seeing him, eagerly and loudly asked where was the Vice- President?
44851Mr. Hamer, of Ohio, said, why oppose this inquiry?
44851Mr. Morris also wished to know if the Senate was about to make a double distribution of the same money?
44851Mr. W. asked, what one?
44851Nay, must we, too, suffer ourselves to be made the conscious instruments of its consummation?
44851Nay, would it not be his indispensable duty to have removed him?
44851Need he refer them to the case of Wilkes?
44851Need he refer those gentlemen to the course of their own reading?
44851Need he say more?"
44851Nominally, this_ bonus_ has been paid, but out of what moneys?
44851Not a party question?
44851Nothing to send abroad?
44851Now for the Spanish milled dollars-- how do they stand in the United States?
44851Now, could it be decided, by this description, what publications should be withheld from distribution?
44851Now, had the Southern States the capacity to produce indigo?
44851Now, how came that memorial to be presented at a time so inopportune?
44851Now, in which of these characters did the Senate act when it adopted the resolution in question?
44851Now, what became of these inhabitants?--their property?
44851Now, what could be more vague and indefinite than this description?
44851Now, what, let us inquire, was the reason which has induced all nations to adopt this system in the settlement of new countries?
44851Now, whose fault was it that there was no time left for acting on the report of the conferees?
44851On the general question, allow me to ask if the doctrine of prohibition, as a general doctrine, be not preposterous?
44851On what ground was the inquiry opposed?
44851On what principle is this grounded?
44851On what principle was it, said he, that this discrimination ever prevailed?
44851Or was there a state of peace in June, 1798?
44851Ought a national institution to be the private property of aliens?
44851Shall all the labor and exertions of government to extinguish the public debt be in vain?
44851Shall it be done by public authority; or shall every man observe the tick of his own watch?
44851Shall our journal bear the verdict of infamy, while the hearts of the people glow and palpitate with the verdict of honor?
44851Shall the copy survive here, after the original has been destroyed there?
44851Shall the people be denied the least repose from taxation?
44851Shall the people be prevented from feeling in reality that we have no debt: shall they only know it by dinners and public rejoicings?
44851Shall the young whelp triumph in America, after the old lion has been throttled and strangled in England?
44851Shall we set so small a value upon the lives of the people?
44851Should he give examples?
44851Sir, can we forget the scene which was exhibited in this chamber when that expunging resolution was first introduced here?
44851Sir, do we not see what the gentleman probably desires?
44851Sir, is Congress prepared thus to pamper the effeminacy of these young gentlemen, at such an expense, too, upon the public Treasury?
44851Sir, is there a senator here who will now tell me that the removal was not the measure and the act of the President?
44851Sir, what are some of these results?
44851Sir, what is demanded by those that threaten the integrity of the Union?
44851Still our negotiators consented to put the negotiation upon the basis of continued peace, and why?
44851Such an export would indicate unparalleled wealth; but what was the fact?
44851Such was the state of the country when General Jackson became President: what was it when he left the Presidency?
44851Suppose they should vote for the bill, what then?
44851Talk of precedents?
44851Talk to me of the voice of the people?
44851The Roman general won an immortality of honor by one act of continence; what praise is due to Jackson, whose whole life was continent?
44851The Senate, therefore, could not, at too early a period, enter on the question-- what was the actual condition of the treasury?
44851The act is limited to armed vessels; but why was this, if general war existed?
44851The counsel of the law, or of fear?
44851The cruisers of France were preying on our commerce; if there was war, why were we restrained from general reprisals on her commerce?
44851The one was,''On what ground was the government of the United States answerable to any extent for the injury done to these claimants?''
44851The other,''To what extent was the government in justice bound?''
44851The penalty of double interest for delayed payment?
44851The prohibition against suspending specie payments?
44851The qualification is in the question whether the treaty is confined to the business of the treaty- making power?
44851The question is no longer what laws will Congress pass, but what will the Executive not veto?
44851The question was put, according to the form then practised:''Shall these words stand, as part of the plan,''& c.?
44851The reply would be, I think, not impertinent: who made you judge over another''s servants?
44851The second is, whether the English landed upon this coast while it was so unoccupied?
44851The teller, beginning to understand him, and willing to make sure, said, inquiringly,''You want silver?''
44851The year is half gone, and the season for labor largely lost; yet what is the state of the general, national, and most essential appropriations?
44851Then the teller, lifting boxes to the counter, said politely:''Have you a cart, Mr. Randolph, to put it in?''
44851Then why not inquire, and find out which is right, and legislate accordingly?
44851Then why speak?
44851Then, why speak three hours?
44851They had asked if foreigners did not hold stock in road and canal companies?
44851They voted for the bill of July last, and that was a bill passed expressly to save the Union; but did they not flout at it?
44851This Union consists of twenty- four States; would you have preserved the Union by striking out one of the States-- one of the old thirteen?
44851This inquiry,"May I not disable him?"
44851This is exactly what the Senate did; and what did it do next?
44851This is the principle: what is the fact?
44851This is the sum total out of which any man in debt can legally pay his debt: and what is his chance for making payment out of this brief list?
44851This message brought up the question, virtually, Which was the nominating power, in the case of the government directors of the bank?
44851This opens the door to boundless emissions; for what can be more unbounded than the will and pleasure of successive Congresses?
44851This was the scene then; and for what object?
44851To introduce slavery into the heart of the North?
44851To say nothing of her gains in the participation in such a commerce, what would be her loss in the exclusion from it?
44851To whom do they speak?
44851To whom is all this power granted?
44851To whom lies the last appeal?
44851To whom, then, should they look?
44851Totter, sir, I totter?
44851Under what onerous stipulations did she lie?
44851Was ever such a thing heard of before?
44851Was expurgation the proper mode?
44851Was it any thing to be valued?
44851Was it extraordinary that the deposit banks should be strengthened?
44851Was it right for the Senate to interpose between those bodies, while these questions were depending?
44851Was it right to interfere on the part of the bank?
44851Was it that it was improper?
44851Was it that it was unusual?
44851Was it their duty to remain silent while abuses of the most injurious and dangerous character were daily practised?
44851Was not the release of the obligations on the one side the release of them on the other?
44851Was not this an offer to make use of private property for public purposes?
44851Was she now willing to give it up without any equivalent?
44851Was the United States to depend upon foreigners in a point so material to our existence?
44851Was the charge true?
44851Was the constitution violated, broken down, and destroyed, under the administration of the father of his country?
44851Was the intended motion to clear the journal of the resolution right in itself?
44851Was the surrender wholly gratuitous?
44851Was the will of the State respected?
44851Was there not danger that the fourteen days would be exhausted in useless debate?
44851Was this bill in accordance with the general force and temper of the constitution and its amendments?
44851Was this neglecting the claims of our citizens?
44851Was this the intention of those measures, on the part of the government, and was that intention carried out into action?
44851We are breeding six little corporations at a birth, to issue$ 2,250,000 of paper currency: and on what terms?
44851We copied our bank charter from theirs; why not imitate them in their improvements upon their own work?
44851We copied their evil ways; why not their good ones?
44851We could not, therefore, justly urge these claims against France; and I therefore demand, how can they be urged against us?
44851We must first order each of these bills to be read a third time; the next question then will be, when shall the bill be read a third time?
44851Well, then, how stands the matter of the public treasury?
44851Well, what had Illinois done in this matter?
44851Were the States to be less protected than individual members on that floor?
44851Were the whole of the charges to be blown out of the paper by the breath of the Senate?
44851Were these subsisting claims against France up to the time of the treaty?
44851Were they bound to disregard the call?
44851Were they to decide on the question, each senator sitting there as witness and juror in the case?
44851Were we now to be told, that our failure in these efforts had created a liability against us to pay the money?
44851What Congress is this?
44851What are the facts?
44851What are the invincible arguments by which gentlemen establish the justice and validity of these claims?
44851What are they to do?
44851What are those''other causes?''
44851What assurance have we of that?
44851What could the federal government do, in such a case?
44851What counsel?
44851What do we now behold, sir?
44851What do you think of Col. Benton, Mr. Van Buren, or Judge White, for President?
44851What effect could be brought about by the interference of these petitioners?
44851What encouragement did such treatment afford to our friends at the North to step forth in our behalf?"
44851What evidence do we require to disprove the assertion?
44851What evidence have we of the fact?
44851What evidence of fraud, and selfishness, and treachery, has red or white malice been able to exhibit against the dead warrior?
44851What excuse?
44851What further investigations did gentlemen require?
44851What had already been the effect throughout the country of the broadside discharged by the message at the bank?
44851What had the bank done to prevent such redemption?
44851What had the government done to protect the rights of these claimants?
44851What has become of the screaming babes that have been held up after the ancient Roman method, to excite pity and move our sympathies?
44851What has become of the widows and original claimants?
44851What has not been done by the United States on behalf of these claims?
44851What has the tariff led us to already?
44851What have we not witnessed in this chamber?
44851What honorable man, who votes for this bill, could sustain such a measure?
44851What is our duty to do?
44851What is revolution?
44851What is that point?
44851What is the consideration that the United States is to receive?
44851What is the fact, sir?
44851What is the inference?
44851What is the meaning of the word palpable, in the sense in which it is here used?
44851What is the motive of this opposition against his measures?
44851What is the picture?
44851What is the present situation of our commerce?
44851What is the price which she pays for this consideration?
44851What is the state of these markets?
44851What law may it not hereafter demand, that it will not, if it pleases, be able to enforce by the same means?"
44851What may not be the result?
44851What name shall we give to this division of money among them?
44851What necessity?
44851What new bill of indictment was to be presented?
44851What next?
44851What objections can possibly be raised to it?
44851What others were mentally intended?
44851What others were suggested?
44851What provisions will be necessary?
44851What stronger proof could there be of mutuality of consideration?
44851What then becomes of all this cry about ruined fortunes, fallen prices, and the loss of growing crops?
44851What then becomes of the charge faintly shadowed forth by the committee, and publicly and directly made by the bank and its friends?
44851What then rendered that court so intolerably odious to the English people?
44851What then?
44851What was the Executive''s complaint against the bank?
44851What was the effect of this notification?
44851What was the evidence upon this point?
44851What was the liberty of the press?
44851What was the object of the motion?
44851What was the principle on which this bill was professedly founded?
44851What was the value of an obligation to negotiate''at a convenient time?''
44851What was the value or the burden of such an obligation upon the United States?
44851What was the whole expenditure of the government for each of those years?
44851What were the losses which led to these claims?
44851What were they for the latter period?
44851What would be decided?
44851What would it have been in victory?
44851What would the Father of his country have thought if members had come to him to solicit office?
44851What, he would ask, must hereafter be the condition on this floor of the senators from the slaveholding States?
44851What, sir, have we no power to see that our own treaty is carried into effect?
44851What, sir, is the essential characteristic of a freeman?
44851What, sir, was the conduct of Napoleon, with respect to money?
44851What, then, is the cause of this strange contrast?
44851What, then, must be done?
44851What, then, was New England to do?
44851What, then, was the conduct of Virginia, in the memorable era of''98 and''99?
44851When asked if any one advised him to shoot Gen. Jackson, or say that it ought to be done?
44851When asked if he would shoot Mr. Van Buren?
44851When did it break out?
44851When did those''differences,''of which the acts of Congress speak, assume a character of general hostility?
44851When does the first day of the year, or the first of January, commence?
44851When the light of one of these stars shall have been extinguished, will the flag wave over us, under which our fathers fought?
44851When the same memorial was presented to that House, what had been the course pursued by the friends of the bank?
44851When too, this sacrifice is made at the instance of a single interest, which they verily believe will not be promoted by it?
44851Where are the invincible arguments by which the public treasury is to be emptied?
44851Where did they get such authority?
44851Where does it go?
44851Where is it to be exercised?
44851Where is it to end?
44851Where is the boundary to the tremendous power which he has assumed?
44851Where is the difference, if the people are to be taxed by the manufacturers or by any others?
44851Who are those Goths?
44851Who are to advise and sit in judgment upon it?
44851Who can comprehend this?
44851Who could answer such a declaration?
44851Who could say where the liability would end?
44851Who denies it?
44851Who did it?
44851Who shall interpret their will, where it may be supposed they have left it doubtful?
44851Who that was not a party to this arrangement, could one hour ago have credited this?
44851Who then shall construe this grant of the people?
44851Who told you he was a tyrant?
44851Who, in your opinion, of the Senate, would make a good President?
44851Why are lips unsealed now, which were silent as the grave when this act was on its passage through the Senate?
44851Why debate the bank question now, he exclaimed, and not debate it before?
44851Why did it not amend, by the easy, natural, obvious, and parliamentary process of disagreeing, insisting, and asking for a committee of conference?
44851Why does that remain unchanged?
44851Why had not the committee, who seemed to know so well what would be the opinion of the Senate, imbodied that opinion in a legislative form?"
44851Why has the tariff been dropped in the Senate?
44851Why look beyond the boundaries of Europe?
44851Why not adopt the same course now?
44851Why not reduce it at once, at least to the actual wants of the service, and dispense with your corps of supernumerary lieutenants?
44851Why not then stop the curtailment, and restore the exchanges to their former footing?
44851Why not?
44851Why quit our own day?
44851Why then attempt to control it here?
44851Why then were not the North and the South included in the fancied fate of the West?
44851Why this sad and ominous decline?
44851Why this sudden pressure?
44851Why vary the mode now?
44851Why was a commission to be established to ascertain their validity, a duty in ordinary cases discharged by Congress itself?
44851Why was not the naval power of the country let loose at once, if there were war, against the commerce of the enemy?
44851Why were our citizens sent to capture the French, to spill their blood, and lay down their lives upon the high seas?
44851Why were these claims, more than others, grouped together, and attempted to be made a matter of national importance?
44851Why, then, did he speak?
44851Why, then, had the senator from Missouri assailed him( Mr. W.), and permitted the author of the measure to escape unpunished?
44851Why, then, has she sent this squadron, to observe us first, and to strike us eventually?
44851Why, then, should Southern men now make an effort to give precedence to the bill for the admission of Arkansas into the Union?
44851Why?
44851Will any man, said Mr. W., call this a state of peace?
44851Will members of a republican Congress be less obedient to the voice of the people than were the representatives of a monarchical House of Commons?
44851Will submission render such a corporation more forbearing in its course?
44851Will the Chair state the point of order?
44851Will the Senate deny it?
44851Will the amendment proposed by the committee reach their object?
44851Will the gentleman contend that juries are to be coerced to find verdicts at the point of the bayonet?
44851Will the honorable member from New- York tell us when the war commenced?
44851Will they go further, and not only refuse to place it on the Journal, but refuse even to suffer it to remain in the Senate?
44851Will they receive memorials, resolutions, essays, from all that choose to abuse the President, and not receive a word of defence from him?
44851Will they refuse this act of sheer justice and common decency?
44851Will they refuse to permit it to remain on file, but send it back, or throw it out of doors, without condescending to reply to it?
44851Will they require people to teach Congress the lesson which Mr. Fox says the English people had taught their Parliament fifty years ago?
44851Will you appease the angry spirit of discord by an oblation of blood?
44851Will you however permit me to suggest the catastrophe that might arise by General Gaines''s compliance with the last clause of your order?
44851Will you seek to preserve it by force?
44851Will you take the trouble to satisfy yourself on the point?"
44851Wise inquired of him whether in his own opinion, if his amendment should be adopted, the State of Arkansas would, by this bill, be admitted?
44851With any documents to show that he is in error?
44851With what object do they speak?
44851With whom do they repose this ultimate right of deciding on the powers of the government?
44851Would even an affirmative vote on the motion quiet the agitation of the subject?
44851Would he have inserted two lines in the treaty to rescind them, to get rid of such claims, when he would not pay those he had acknowledged?
44851Would it not be far better to gratify this moneyed aristocracy, to the whole extent at once, and renew their charter for ever?
44851Would such a movement have been made, had it not been intended thereby to give strength to the course of the opposition?
44851Would that prevent the presentation of others?
44851Would the Senate proceed while this unfinished investigation was depending in the other end of the building?
44851Would the people of Maine permit the Penobscot tribe to erect an independent government within their State?
44851Would the tariff be at all felt or denounced, if these other causes were not in operation?
44851Would they have been worth further negotiation?
44851Would they have been worth the five millions of dollars you propose to appropriate by this bill?
44851Yes, sir, and why not on the face as easily as on the back?
44851Yet has the rest of the country no right to its opinions also?
44851Yet, what was the conduct of the Senate with respect to this bill?
44851Yet, what was the state of the country?
44851You recollect, no doubt, sir, the dialogue to which I allude:''Who owns that palace?''
44851], and say that you never used that language out of the State of Missouri?
44851_ Congress_, 22d, its members, 208; their talent, 208; commencement of 24th, 568; when does the term of its session expire?
44851all these violations of right, decency and propriety?
44851and can he tell which mode of raising money has been most productive?
44851and can you live nowhere but under your own sun?
44851and did we not have an empty treasury in 1819?
44851and does not encroach upon the legislative power of Congress?
44851and how much in duties paid on imports purchased with the exports derived from her soil?
44851and how stands this narrow limitation of vacancies to"_ ordinary casualties_?"
44851and is not this the propitious time for putting it in defence?
44851and other gentlemen speak a whole day?
44851and permitting none to serve but those whose conduct should be subordinate to the views and policy of the bank?
44851and possessions?
44851and precedents drawn from a foreign country?
44851and whether it was expedient so to reduce, and thus weaken the territory( and future State) of Arkansas?
44851and whether the bank should have the virtual nomination of the government directors by causing those to be rejected which the government nominated?
44851and which, in every particular that tries the credit, is superior to the one which is receiving so much homage and admiration?
44851and why are the most able citizens to be found in one assembly rather than in the other?
44851and why this so great apparent contradiction?
44851and, had he not, would not he have been universally and justly held responsible?"
44851and, if so, I ask again, at what time after that period, and before September, 1800, did the war break out?
44851and, unless they did, would it not be the duty of the general government to support them in resisting such a measure?
44851by whom?
44851call for defence?
44851de Tocqueville judge the importance of victories by the numbers engaged, and the quantity of blood shed, or by their consequences?
44851for do we not know that this was impossible to the fleets and armies of France, under Le Clerc, the brother- in- law of Napoleon himself?
44851is an adequate protection on woollens?
44851of American citizens impressed into foreign service?
44851of merchants robbed in foreign ports?
44851of the national flag insulted any where?
44851of vessels searched on the high seas?
44851one, at least, and each independent of the other, to each great section of the Union?
44851or because it was thought prudent to drop the name of the Bank of the United States?
44851or for both these reasons together?
44851or have designs already been formed to sever the Union?
44851or is each to judge for itself?
44851or the bank and the Senate?
44851or who is to judge between them?
44851repeal facts?
44851that is, how will he deny it, and yet apparently maintain it?
44851to get between them and the House?
44851to obtain redress for these claims; and what was the consequence?
44851to the subjects which fall under its jurisdiction?
44851was it the President and Senate?
44851what application of its moral?
44851what but a determination to make its power felt and feared occasioned the pressure at that place?
44851what has been the working of the government at this point?
44851which have reduced exchange below the rates of the federal bank?
44851whose bills of exchange are as eagerly sought for as those of the federal bank?
44851whose individual deposits are greater than those of the rival branches of the Bank of the United States, seated in their neighborhood?
44851whose stock upon the exchange of London and New- York, is superior to that of the United States Bank?
44851would be higher at the latter place?
49806''And you like this ring? 49806 ''Apiary''?"
49806''Hath not a Jew eyes? 49806 ''If she be not fair to me, What care I how fair she be?''
49806''Turkish delight''? 49806 A feeling of wider philanthropy perhaps, more in the Don Quixote line?"
49806A ghost of a chance of what?
49806A pretty song, is it not, Jack?
49806A walk, Sally? 49806 Addie, Addie, look at the new piano; is n''t it grand?
49806Addie, Addie, why did you leave me-- my love, my love?
49806Addie, that means a ball, does n''t it? 49806 Addie, what has put death into your thoughts to- day, you silly little girl?
49806Addie, what in the world do you mean by letting that child loose as you do? 49806 Addie, where are you going?"
49806Addie,asks Lottie, her great staring eyes fixed on her sister''s uneasy face,"what''s a honeymoon like?
49806Addie,he says quickly,"would you like me to take you home, my darling?"
49806Addie,says Miss Rossitor slowly, hesitatingly,"I think I know of a situation that might suit you, if you really wish--""You do?
49806Addie-- Addie missing? 49806 Adelaide"--he speaks in a sweet thrilling voice that sounds so incongruous coming from the hard sensual mouth--"are you here?
49806Am I not almost pretty to- night? 49806 Am I really?"
49806Am I welcome?
49806And Bob, dear Bob?
49806And Hal too?
49806And have you lived all your life at Kelvick?
49806And how can I tell them about it? 49806 And how long do you intend going on burning?"
49806And so you like her, Bob?
49806And this subject need never be reopened between us; do you hear me, Addie?
49806And what did you say?
49806And what does she say?
49806And what is he going to do now?
49806And you mean to tell me you are not going to the Arkwrights''on Friday, Polly?
49806And you think of rewarding his fidelity? 49806 And you think she may, seriously?"
49806And you, my dear, have you any prospect for yourself?
49806And you,she asks wistfully--"you?
49806And, Addie, where is he now?
49806And, Tom dear,puts in Lottie, rubbing her cheek affectionately against his coat- sleeve,"you''re going to London, are n''t you?
49806And, if the thing-- the person is determined the other way, what then?
49806And-- and you did not interfere?
49806And-- and your lover-- where is he? 49806 Any other birthday- gift?"
49806Apes?
49806Are n''t they awful? 49806 Are n''t they lovely?"
49806Are you hurt?
49806Are you sure?
49806Are you? 49806 As to looks, who would compare them?"
49806At his club?
49806Aunt Jo, let me say grace to- day, will you?
49806Ay, Flo? 49806 Believe you?
49806Births, deaths, and marriages?
49806Breakfast?
49806But can you walk?
49806But medicine-- what medicine is she to get? 49806 But surely he can not have deserted you altogether-- have left you five children totally unprovided for?"
49806But the discovery, Polly, the discovery? 49806 But why should I betray the secret she has guarded so gallantly?
49806But you used to like the sea, do n''t you remember, Addie?
49806But, Jack, what would my poor husband have left then? 49806 But, Mr. Everard, what am I to tell you?
49806Ca n''t you give me a moment to breathe-- to feel-- to understand?
49806Ca n''t you let me die in peace? 49806 Cissy, Cissy, ca n''t you speak?
49806Come, Addie dear, are you not too severe on your father? 49806 Could she have known-- have guessed I should look round?"
49806Cream and sugar,he repeats stupidly, as if half asleep--"cream and sugar?
49806Crying?
49806Did they?
49806Did you ever see such a basketful? 49806 Did you expect to see monkeys in Mrs. Morgan''s apiary, Addie?"
49806Did you mean that bracelet as a birthday- gift? 49806 Do I?"
49806Do n''t you see? 49806 Do n''t you think, my dear niece, you had better mend that hole in your stocking, just above the heel, first?"
49806Do n''t you?
49806Do we?
49806Do you fancy I gave your nonsense a second thought? 49806 Do you know her partner, Tom?"
49806Do you know, I think you are exaggerating his defects a little, Bob?
49806Do you like it in the higher or lower key best? 49806 Do you like me, Tom?"
49806Do you remember, Addie, the long mornings she used to spend trying to make Bob and you understand the difference between latitude and longitude?
49806Do you think my years weigh on her life? 49806 Do you think so?
49806Eh? 49806 Five hundred pounds?"
49806For whom?
49806For whom?
49806Go and tell them all, all-- to come to the arbor at once, and to stay with me the whole time that Mr. Armstrong is here; do you hear? 49806 Going home, and the ball only beginning?
49806Great Heaven, boy, what surer proof could I give you than her own words? 49806 Great Heaven,"he cries,"is it you?"
49806Have you come to say good- by to me, Addie?
49806Have you no one to help you? 49806 Have you not learned to thank Providence for your escape?"
49806Have you spoken to her, Florry?
49806Have you?
49806He is gone?
49806Headache all gone, Addie?
49806Headache? 49806 Heaven?"
49806Her husband-- Tom-- what does he say? 49806 Hoax?"
49806Horsy?
49806How can I do that with such a threat ringing in my ears? 49806 How can Pauline stand him?
49806How do you know I shall ever marry him at all? 49806 How do you know I was going to say that, after all?
49806How does your ankle feel this morning?
49806How long will you be away?
49806How-- how dare you ask me such a question?
49806I hope, Lady Crawford,says Addie meekly, though with twinkling eyes,"that you do not think we overdid it?"
49806I know; but what else can I say?
49806I say, Addie,asked Bob incidentally,"is n''t it time your skipper was due?
49806I say, Everard, you know every one here; tell me who is that girl coming in at the door with the big yellow man? 49806 I wonder if I shall know the flavor of butcher''s meat if I ever taste it again?"
49806I wonder what has put his back up? 49806 I wonder what they are talking about so earnestly?
49806I wonder,says Addie, after a short pause,"if he has heard of my intended marriage?"
49806I''ll go in to him; you''re all there, are n''t you?
49806I''m glad we came home; are n''t you, Tom?
49806I-- I suppose now she''d know that an apiary was n''t an ape- house?
49806I-- I suppose you would n''t be tempted to join our festive party, would you?
49806I? 49806 I?"
49806If I let you go like this, how do I know I shall ever get you back again?
49806In the way?
49806Is he, Tom?
49806Is he?
49806Is n''t a cousin a detestable institution, Miss Lefroy?
49806Is n''t it grand news, Addie? 49806 Is n''t she?"
49806Is that-- that man your father?
49806Is the game worth the candle?
49806Is the road wide enough for you and me to walk abreast, Jack Everard?
49806Is there anything the matter with you, Jack? 49806 It has not a ghostly feel, has it?
49806Jack, Jack, where are you going? 49806 Just turn the key in the door, Tom, will you?
49806Kindly repeat that statement, Addie, will you?
49806Knows what, dear?
49806Like a turn on the pier, dear?
49806Looking? 49806 Losh yer way, did shye, me love?
49806Lottie, Lottie, what are you talking about?
49806Love,he says, at last,"wo n''t you say farewell?"
49806Lovely aft''noon, ai n''t it?
49806Lovely?
49806May I come in?
49806May I ride by your side as far as the Park gates? 49806 May I?"
49806Me a wall- flower? 49806 Miss Addie, Miss Addie, what are you doing sitting moping there?
49806Miss Challice, is she a good player?
49806Miss Lefroy, will you allow me to introduce you to my cousin, Miss Wynyard, who is anxious to make your acquaintance?
49806Mrs. Armstrong, were you ever in love?
49806My dear Everard,he says, in mock indignation,"will you please remember that I am a man and a husband?
49806My dear child, why should you mind that? 49806 My lover?"
49806My position? 49806 Need he join what ship-- where?
49806Never mind; are ye going out? 49806 Newton?
49806No, Polly? 49806 No?
49806No? 49806 Norway?
49806Not a woman living?
49806Now is your time, girls, to tell me everything about every one,Addie says presently, her spirits reviving--"dear Aunt Jo, and the boys?"
49806Of winning your sister, of getting her to like me?
49806Oh, Robert, Robert, do you think it will be as bad as that?
49806Oh, Ted, Ted, did you mean anything on that day when you were rushing away? 49806 Oh, a-- well, how can I remember?
49806Oh, auntie, auntie, ca n''t you believe us? 49806 Oh, but, Addie, do n''t you know Poll''s gone?
49806Oh, dear,exclaims Addie, very much taken aback,"is it as bad as that?
49806Oh, do n''t you remember? 49806 Oh, how, Pauline?"
49806Oh, is that you, Sir Arthur?
49806Oh, what has happened? 49806 Oh, what is it, aunt?
49806Oh, why, why did you not do as I told you, Jack? 49806 Old Sally-- mother''s old nurse?"
49806Pity, compassion?
49806Queer Street? 49806 Saint Cecilia, you here?"
49806Sally,says Addie, after a short pause,"I am very like my mother, am I not?"
49806Shall I be as much in the way here as I seem to be everywhere else, Cicely?
49806She is lovely, is n''t she, Tom? 49806 She''s getting on fairly for a beginner, is n''t she?
49806So I began life unembarrassed by family connections-- a-- a-- foundling, in fact-- you do n''t mind, do you, Addie? 49806 Soldiering?
49806Stick to my troubles, Sally? 49806 Teddy Lefroy?
49806That dress of yours, Miss Lefroy, was particularly well made-- Armine, was n''t it? 49806 That our father has abandoned us altogether-- that he has other family- ties we-- we knew nothing of--""Addie, my dear, what are you talking of?"
49806That''s all, is it?
49806That,cries Mrs. Turner, with a loud shrill laugh--"that?
49806The man?
49806The money-- the money,he says eagerly,"you wanted for your father?"
49806The''Chimborazo,''you say? 49806 Then I may do it?
49806Then the solution is myself-- eh? 49806 Then what does it mean?
49806Then you did not find him oppressively vulgar, did you?
49806Then you do not believe in the eloquence of love?
49806Then you do not think I look like a girl who would die young?
49806Then you will marry me, Miss Lefroy?
49806They have all gone?
49806They want to go? 49806 This is not a trick, a ruse, to get away and make me stay on here-- is it-- is it?
49806Three hundred years, is n''t it, Addie, since the Lefroys first settled at Nutsgrove?
49806Tired of you?
49806To Miss Lefroy?
49806To-- to marry you? 49806 Tom, Tom, where are you?"
49806Tom, Tom,he bursts out at once,"what-- what is the meaning of all this?
49806Tom,says Robert, rising to his feet,"will you grant me a last request?
49806Trying to do?
49806Trying to what?
49806Two letters for me, Goggles? 49806 Well, Addie, well,"exclaims Robert triumphantly,"was n''t I a good prophet?
49806Well, what of that? 49806 Well,"he says aloud, with an irritation he strives in vain to repress,"have you understood my question, Miss Lefroy?
49806What a jolly little evening we''ve had, have n''t we, Tom? 49806 What am I to ask him?"
49806What am I to do with myself all the afternoon?
49806What are you doing? 49806 What are you trying to do, Jack?"
49806What brings you here alone? 49806 What can I do?"
49806What can I say, woman?
49806What did she do?
49806What did they tell you, love?
49806What did you think of it?
49806What do they mean?
49806What do you mean, Adelaide? 49806 What do you mean, Thomas Armstrong?
49806What do you want? 49806 What good would it do you or me?"
49806What harm will it do for me to see you dressed? 49806 What have you to say to me, Adelaide?
49806What if I refused to accept your explanation-- to believe in your excuses?
49806What is it? 49806 What is it?
49806What is it? 49806 What is the matter, Sally?"
49806What is the matter?
49806What is this large square envelope, crested and monogrammed, addressed in a lady''s writing, kissing the face of the income- tax? 49806 What is your opinion?
49806What is your programme for the afternoon?
49806What makes you think of it at all?
49806What put what into my head?
49806What right had he to treat me like that? 49806 What suspicions?
49806What then? 49806 What will they say?
49806What words are needed to emphasize the retribution of your sin to me? 49806 What would you have done, Addie?"
49806What-- alone, Pauline?
49806What? 49806 What?"
49806When I have time; they are not of much importance-- only bills, prospectuses, begging- letters, receipts--"May I settle them for you? 49806 When did you leave Mr. Armstrong''s office?"
49806When?
49806Where have you been? 49806 Where have you been?
49806Where is Heaven? 49806 Where is he now-- with his regiment?"
49806Where is he-- in England?
49806Where''s little Emmy? 49806 Where?
49806Where?
49806Which is it to be, Jack? 49806 Who are you, pray-- the Queen of Sheba?--Cleopatra?"
49806Who indeed?
49806Who is she-- eh, Everard? 49806 Who is who?"
49806Who''s--"''A denigin''of it?'' 49806 Who-- who told you this was my birthday?
49806Who-- who told you?
49806Why ca n''t you study quietly in the house, like any other sensible girl?
49806Why did I leave you? 49806 Why did you tell me anything about it?
49806Why do you say that to me?
49806Why not suggest her giving the part to a more competent person? 49806 Why not, pray?"
49806Why should I not be? 49806 Why should Mr. Armstrong want to marry you unless he were in love with you, I''d like to know?"
49806Why, you have been a Jack- of- all- trades, Tom-- sailor, soldier, inventor, miner, manufacturer-- what else?
49806Why? 49806 Why?"
49806Will that homage to your plumage do fair sister- in- law?
49806Will there be''chocolate- cream''and''Turkish delight''in it?
49806Will you allow me to ring and order some for you now?
49806Will you give me their address?
49806Will you tell Robert you have changed your mind, and do not wish him to enter the army?
49806Will you-- help me up to my room? 49806 Wo n''t you at least wait to take a cup of tea, Miss Lefroy?
49806Wo n''t you say a word to me, Addie?
49806Wo n''t you sit down?
49806Wo n''t you sit down?
49806Would n''t they-- wouldn''t they keep her?
49806Would you like it answered? 49806 Would you like to be moving, Addie?
49806Would you? 49806 Yes, five hundred pounds, can you give it to me to- night?
49806Yes, yes-- to whom else?
49806Yes?
49806Yes?
49806You are alone?
49806You are happy, Cicely?
49806You are ill?
49806You are looking much better, Miss Lefroy; are you quite free from pain now?
49806You are not hunting to- day, are you, Jack?
49806You are-- are going-- where?
49806You ask me to-- to be your wife?
49806You could not keep him? 49806 You did n''t see his shadow last night, Polly?"
49806You did n''t? 49806 You did then, you did?"
49806You did, you jolly little girl?
49806You have been living with him lately?
49806You have enjoyed yourself, my dear?
49806You have quite made up your mind then, Addie?
49806You know, Goggles? 49806 You mean to insinuate that she''d take Armstrong''s part against us?
49806You think she is flirting? 49806 You want nothing in your life?"
49806You were not unhappy?
49806You will dine with us this evening, wo n''t you, Jack? 49806 You will sit inside with us?"
49806You wish to see Miss Lefroy, sir? 49806 You wish to speak to me?"
49806You wo n''t have any one at the ceremony but just our immediate circle-- not even your Aunt and Uncle Beecher?
49806You would like it really, Tom?
49806You would not bring me here?
49806You would not rather have a brandy- and- soda, a sherry- and- seltzer-- eh? 49806 You''ll be sure to be back before the theatricals, Tom?
49806You''ll give a fellow a chance, wo n''t you? 49806 You''ll tell me what it was, wo n''t you?"
49806You''ll tell me what she said, wo n''t you, Miss Lefroy?
49806You''ll tell me? 49806 You''re coming back?
49806You-- you bear me no ill- will, Addie? 49806 You-- you were fond of your old home, were you not, Miss Lefroy?"
49806You?
49806Your husband? 49806 _ Avez- vous mon frère''s plume- couteau?_"Miss Lefroy tosses back the tattered Ahn in speechless disgust.
49806''For what was ancient Babylon famed?''
49806''Have you my brother''s penknife?''"
49806''Her beauty hangs upon the cheek of Night like a--''What?"
49806*****"Addie, Addie,"cries Pauline, dancing in,"are n''t you dressed for dinner yet?
49806*****"What''s for dinner?"
498063?
49806A despicable state of existence, was n''t it?
49806A long time, was n''t it, Jack?"
49806About your dress?
49806Addie does not reply at once; a sudden wave of color floods her soft face, and she says hurriedly--"After all, why should n''t I tell you?
49806Addie turns to her husband with dewy eyes, and lays her hand timidly on his breast, echoing the last eager words--"''Dost thou like the picture?''"
49806Addie''s voice drops; she says, scarcely above her breath--"And you, Tom-- are you happy too?"
49806Addie, have you your dress ready?
49806After all, what is she to him, or he to her, his wife in name only?
49806Ah, who can believe in heaven then, I ask?
49806Am I not blest?
49806Am I right?"
49806Am I to share his gentility in a Belgravian mansion or a suburban villa?"
49806Am I touching pitch?"
49806And I suppose Mr. Armstrong will have none of his friends or relatives either?"
49806And all the others-- the boys-- I suppose they have shot up too?
49806And do you always get what you determine on?"
49806And how are you all doing since I saw you last, Cicely?
49806And may I sometimes come down to you in the morning for a practice?
49806And now, if we knew some kind friend who would take us to see the Kendals, I think we should die happy, should n''t we Susie?"
49806And now-- now will you go?
49806And so you think I shall do?"
49806And so you think your dusty old heart would feel me, your drumless ear would hear me a century hence?"
49806And what follows this move?
49806And what was her history?"
49806And who d''ye think you have got for your housekeeper, my dear?
49806And you''ll come and look me up sometimes at Broom Hill if I screw up my courage to stay, wo n''t you?
49806And you, dear boy, is it not so with you?"
49806And you-- you surely would not have me do so, eh?
49806And yours?"
49806And, after all, have I not the best things in life left to me still-- my own darling brothers and sisters and the home I love?
49806And, as for toning him down, polishing him up-- you remember, Bob, what you said we should have to do when he married Addie?
49806And, if I love too wildly, Who would not love thee like Pauline?''
49806Any one hurt?"
49806Any one ill-- hurt?"
49806Are there not primroses in the room?
49806Are you afraid to touch me?
49806Are you as anxious as your brother Robert that I should go in for senatorial honors?"
49806Are you aware of it?"
49806Are you destitute?"
49806Are you going there?"
49806Are you listening?
49806Are you very unhappy?
49806Armstrong?"
49806Armstrong?"
49806Armstrong?"
49806Armstrong?"
49806Armstrong?"
49806Armstrong?"
49806As long as we are all together, as long as we have the dear old place to live in, what does anything else matter?
49806As you do n''t mean to dance, I suppose one of your ordinary evening grenadines, with a little furbishing up, will do very well?"
49806Believe you?
49806But tell me-- what has brought you to this part of the country again?
49806But the question is, How long will these doubtful means of happiness be left to you?
49806But what is the use of talking?
49806But-- but there''s justice and mercy somewhere, is n''t there, old fellow-- if we believe what the parsons tell us-- eh?"
49806By Charles Reade 20 236 Which Shall It Be?
49806By Georges Ohnet 10 220 Which Loved Him Best?
49806By Jove, I wonder what it means?
49806By the author of"LOVE OR LANDS?"
49806By the author of"Love or Lands?"
49806By the author of"Love or Lands?"
49806By the bye, what''s your name?"
49806By the bye, you''re not going to the Arkwrights on Friday?
49806By"Ouida"20 229 Maid, Wife, or Widow?
49806Ca n''t you speak?"
49806Ca n''t you tell me more about him?
49806Can I do anything more for you?"
49806Can I now live and feel myself your murderess?
49806Can you come to PAULINE?"
49806Could you not have let me be?
49806Did I not tell you?
49806Did her senses deceive her?
49806Did n''t I tell you how it would be?
49806Did n''t I tell you you''d open the gates for him and give him the run of the county-- eh?
49806Did n''t he tell you?"
49806Did n''t she tell you?"
49806Did n''t you see how Tom stared the other night when you asked him which would take longest, to go to New York or Calcutta?
49806Did you ask him to, Bob?"
49806Did you know him at once?
49806Did you know where you were at once?"
49806Did you sail to Melbourne with your cousin as his wife?"
49806Did you say anything to annoy her?
49806Do I-- oppress her?"
49806Do n''t they, Tom?"
49806Do n''t you agree with me, Robert?"
49806Do n''t you feel it-- eh?
49806Do n''t you remember?
49806Do n''t you see that their attitude of studied care, of smiling deference, is just assumed to hide something they do n''t want the world to see?"
49806Do n''t you see they''re much too polite, too ceremonious, too anxious, as you put it, to please each other to be a happy couple?
49806Do not criticise, but help me to render you justice, to repair the wrong I have done you in my--""Wrong-- wrong?
49806Do the others know?"
49806Do you accept or reject my offer then?"
49806Do you agree?"
49806Do you care to go?"
49806Do you feel equal to such an undertaking?
49806Do you hear me?
49806Do you hear me?"
49806Do you intend to play the tragedian all night, or have you come to ask me to dance at last?"
49806Do you like him, Flo?"
49806Do you think I am in earnest now?"
49806Do you think I have no heart, no feeling left, because I am married-- no memory?"
49806Do you think I shall enjoy my honeymoon?"
49806Do you think he runs pins into her, pinches her when we''re not looking?
49806Do you think he''ll let us?
49806Does he stick to the shop all Saturday too?"
49806Dost thou like the picture?''"
49806Dropped your scissors, Mrs. Armstrong?
49806Echo answers,"How?"
49806Everard?"
49806Father, mother well?
49806Fine opening, is it not?
49806Flo, the question is, Was the man worth such a Spartan struggle?
49806Fond of Nutsgrove?
49806For Heaven''s sake, Armstrong, ca n''t you speak?
49806From Mr. Armstrong?
49806Gaze into my limpid countenance, and tell me can you detect therein the faintest trace of uneasiness or apprehension?
49806Had I a headache, Tom?
49806Had he twelve thousand a year?"
49806Had we not better take seats?
49806Had you no father or mother that you remember?"
49806Had you, though?
49806Hal kept an account; and the rats and the mice she has killed-- no one could keep an account of them-- could they, my darling, could they?"
49806Hal said at first that I was n''t to come-- wasn''t it nasty of him?
49806Has anything happened?"
49806Has-- has anything else happened?
49806Have I a pretty arm?"
49806Have I said anything wrong?
49806Have n''t I your entire approbation?"
49806Have n''t you read''Our Mutual Friend''?
49806Have they no soul, no heart, no conscience?
49806Have you any other festivity in prospect?"
49806Have you had enough of the sea?
49806Have you met him?
49806He bends his dark face over his wife''s, and asks sentimentally--"Are you happy, Addie?"
49806He is killed-- my boy?"
49806He is not a strict Sunday- man, is he, Addie?
49806He stares at her in unspeakable surprise for a moment, and then says:"My dear girl, what is the matter-- what has excited you so?
49806He throws himself into a chair, stretches his legs well before him, and says huskily--"Seen the morning''s paper, Armstrong?"
49806He''s a very good fellow-- just returned from India, has he not?"
49806He-- he is nothing much to look at, of no particular position, not well off, and-- and I suppose-- in fact, I know-- I could do better; but--""Yes?"
49806He-- he knows where she is?
49806Her lovely face softens for a moment; she smiles half sadly, half contemptuously, as she whispers--"Not a word, Jack?
49806How am I to pick out the stricken one?
49806How can I swallow all these good things at a gulp?
49806How can I tell them about it-- how can I tell them?
49806How can Robert, whom I thought so haughty, so proud, so sensitive, take it as he does?
49806How can they stand it, all of them?
49806How can you bear it-- how?"
49806How can you know?
49806How can you understand?
49806How could I ask him?
49806How could I do such a thing when I was your wife?
49806How could any girl wear or order one hundred and eighty- four pounds''worth of clothes in less than six months?
49806How could you degrade yourself by listening to such low, vile slanders?
49806How dare she blind me as she has done?
49806How dare she debase me in my own eyes, and make my life unbearable?
49806How dare you address such words to me?"
49806How did I do it?
49806How did you find out?
49806How did you guess all that?"
49806How did you guess my taste-- how?
49806How did you know I was dying for a bracelet just like this?
49806How did you manage to get leave?"
49806How do you make that out?
49806How is she getting on?"
49806How is she to kill the afternoon?
49806How shall we get on without you, love?
49806How was he looking?
49806How was that?"
49806How well she is looking, and how grandly she carries it off, does n''t she?
49806How-- how did you know this was my birthday?"
49806How?
49806How?"
49806However, I suppose, having risen from the ranks, he could scarcely at the eleventh hour go over to Toryism--""Because he married a Lefroy?
49806I became torpid, callous, and I thought no more of you or-- Tom, Tom, what is the matter?
49806I believe she was an actress at a London theater--""My dear child,"interrupts Miss Rossitor, much flurried and shocked,"where did you hear all this?
49806I do n''t believe you''d marry him, Pauline, not for all--""Would n''t I, just?"
49806I do n''t suppose it would become me to call you pretty, would it?
49806I do not ask you to accept the bracelet if you do not like it; only I think you--""You are angry with me?"
49806I do not look like a person likely to die young, do I-- do I?"
49806I had just been reading about the hanging gardens of-- of-- what''s its name?"
49806I know of one who once loved a man-- Jack, are you listening?
49806I must soon knock that nonsense out of you; and you''ll come to the Arkwrights''if I work the invite?
49806I never meant to hurt or harm him-- Heaven knows that-- he knows it too-- therefore why ca n''t I be happy by and by?
49806I say, Archer, introduce me to that girl in pink over there, will you?
49806I suppose you''ll have a very pleasant evening?"
49806I wonder did he get the ferret out of old Rogers?"
49806I wonder has he seen it yet?
49806I wonder how long will she be getting up sufficient steam?
49806I wonder if Carleton has won his race?
49806I wonder if anything or any one in the world would be as glad to see me after a few months''absence?"
49806I wonder if you received any other birthday- gift quite as ungraciously as you did mine to- day, Adelaide?"
49806I wonder shall I have to climb very high for the nest I want?"
49806I wonder was she in the plot, too?
49806I wonder what you would say if I showed you that little red stain on my handkerchief?
49806I wonder why?
49806I wonder will the boys turn up early?
49806I wonder would there be any truth in it if they did?
49806I wonder, if I went in and told them you had just returned from America very bad with yellow- fever, would it rout them before dinner, do you think?"
49806I''d better hedge a bit while there is yet time, pause on the brink of-- what?
49806I''ll write for you when-- Eh, whom have you here?
49806I''m to marry a gentleman still, am I?
49806I-- I am not what you call a cheerful or fascinating companion for any man-- am I?
49806I-- I want to cure her quickly; what am I to do?"
49806I-- I wonder is the change in them, or in me, or in both?
49806I-- I wonder what''s it about?"
49806If ever she changes it, will she get another to suit her as well?
49806If you have a match, will you strike it?"
49806If you prick him, does he not bleed?
49806If you tickle him, does he not laugh?
49806Is he awfully in love, like Guy was in the''Heir of Redcliffe,''you know?
49806Is he to be rich, poor, or something between?
49806Is it a becoming expression?"
49806Is it any good?"
49806Is it because he may want to kiss you?"
49806Is it my fault?
49806Is it possible that her manner, so boastfully elated, her unabashed account of her conquests, jars on him, as it does on her-- Addie?
49806Is it so hard to say the word''Farewell,''little friend?"
49806Is it to punish me, to avenge the wrong I did you, to heal the wound I dealt your pride, by humbling mine to the dust?
49806Is it very nice?
49806Is my information correct?"
49806Is not this your twenty- first birthday?
49806Is she going home only to die?
49806Is the bribe sufficient?"
49806It may mean nothing-- I dare say it does mean nothing; but still, if it did mean liberty to you, would you take it gladly or painfully?
49806It was nice of them to ask me, was n''t it, Addie?"
49806It''s an awful pity, is n''t, it?
49806M. P.''after your name, my dear?"
49806Marry him?
49806May Bennet sings it in sharps; but I like flats best-- don''t you?"
49806May I enter?
49806May I thank you as graciously as I can, Tom-- may I?"
49806Missing-- where?"
49806Mr. Armstrong"--with sudden desperate bluntness--"you have come for your answer, have you not?
49806Mr. Everard, what do you mean?"
49806Mrs. Armstrong, Miss Lefroy, I was right; she did backbite me-- said something about me-- eh?"
49806Must I repeat it?
49806Need he-- must he join his ship on Saturday?"
49806Next year I wonder where we shall be?
49806No?
49806No?
49806Not a very promising patchwork-- eh?"
49806Now are you satisfied?"
49806Now are you satisfied?"
49806Now what do you imagine, Pauline?"
49806Now, honestly, what do you think of my feathers, Tom?"
49806Now, will you concentrate your powerful intellect on my train for a minute?
49806Of all the howling Bond Street cads I ever-- I say, Mrs. Armstrong, do you know what little Loo Hawker christened him?
49806Of course it is a great bribe, a great temptation; but-- but--""But what?
49806Oh, Ted, Ted, does it mean that you are coming across the sea to me-- now-- now, at the eleventh hour?
49806Oh, ca n''t you believe me-- can''t you believe me a little sometimes?"
49806Oh, ca n''t you feel for me, ca n''t you understand me?"
49806Oh, dear, dear, what put it into his head?
49806Oh, have you got it-- have you really got it?
49806Oh, how can such women be?
49806Oh, is n''t it well for you?"
49806Oh, what shall I do?
49806Oh, why ca n''t I take the good things in my way like Pauline and the others?
49806Oh, why ca n''t I-- why ca n''t I?
49806Oh, why do you do it-- why?
49806Oh, why will you make me say such things?"
49806Pauline raises her saucy eyes to her brother- in- law''s disturbed face, and asks innocently--"Am I flippant, Tom?
49806Pauline, are you aware that those are about three of the most expensive materials you could hit upon?
49806Perhaps they''ll guess, they''ll suspect something, when they see me in his brougham?
49806Polly, what''s the matter?
49806Poor Armstrong, what an--""Jack-- Mr. Everard-- won''t you say good morning to me?
49806Right, Pauline?
49806Right, eh?
49806Right?
49806Seven o''clock, is n''t it?"
49806Shakespeare is such a grind sometimes; is n''t he, Susie?
49806Shakespeare, is it?
49806She does not mind a bit-- why should she?
49806She had a row with her husband after dinner, and must have gone away soon after, and--""Yes-- Aunt Jo?
49806She has been looking over an old photographic album, and, stopping before one of her sisters-- Pauline-- she says lightly--"The others, Tom?
49806She has no conversational powers, she says; but Rob and Polly have a lot-- haven''t they?
49806She opens her arms, draws her sister''s head on her bosom, and whispers, half crying herself--"What is it-- what is it, Addie, my darling?
49806She''s a woman, I''m a man; why should I not ask her to marry me?"
49806Sisters and brothers ditto?
49806So I look hungry?
49806Something will come of it-- eh?"
49806Stay and dine with you-- eh?
49806Suppose I turn back and do so now?
49806Suppose you all trot up there now-- Robert, Pauline, Hal, and you, and have a good morning''s feed-- eh?"
49806Suppose you and I strike up a defensive alliance in the cause of common womanhood, and refute their slanders with an eternal friendship?"
49806Surely you will give her something to strengthen her?"
49806Teddy Lefroy?
49806Tell me about them, Polly; how did they end?"
49806Tell me, sister darling-- is he unkind to you?"
49806Tell me-- do you want the back all to yourself?"
49806That can''t-- can''t mean that simple little dolman she wore going to the theatricals the other night?
49806That''s better than anything in an old Ahn or Ollendorff, is n''t it?
49806That?
49806The boys came over of course?
49806The boys?"
49806The day is perfect, is it not?"
49806The last scene?
49806The old woman grunts, and then says abruptly--"When is your husband coming home, Miss Addie?
49806The''delight''is flat and pink and sticky, powdered in sugar-- you''ll remember?
49806Then it is decided we return together?
49806Then will you kindly put me out of pain-- that is the correct term, I believe-- as soon as you can?"
49806Then you did not celebrate Lottie''s birthday in the grove, as you had intended?"
49806Then, after a short pause--"And so you think I can make you happy, husband-- you do n''t regret it?
49806There are no scissors on the premises?"
49806There is a brief silence, broken by Addie asking confusedly, her cheeks flushing--"What do you mean, Lottie?
49806There is a brougham at the door-- for me, is n''t it?
49806Therefore is he not making an ass of himself-- an unmitigated ass?
49806They are doing well, are n''t they-- dear old Jo and Polly and Bob and Hal and Lottchen?"
49806They say love begets love, do n''t they?
49806They want him to stand for Kelvick?"
49806Three years do make a difference, do they not?"
49806To bring the case nearer to your heart and understanding, Goggles, it is pleasanter to nibble plum- cake than dry bread, is n''t it?"
49806Tom, do you think I have a pretty arm?
49806Tom, why do n''t you speak-- why do n''t you look at me?
49806Ugh, how dark and cold the morning has become, has n''t it?
49806Vitriol bought me Nutsgrove, and Nutsgrove bought me you, and you bought--""Armstrong of Kelvick, is that you in the flesh?
49806WHAT IS SAPOLIO?
49806Was he well off?"
49806Was n''t I right to resist?
49806Was not my note delivered?"
49806Was she dreaming?
49806We''d just as soon have rabbit as anything else-- wouldn''t you, boys, would n''t you?
49806We-- we are friends still, are we not?"
49806Well, Addie, you''ll have quantity, if you do n''t have qua--""I say, Addie,"bursts in Bob, excitedly,"did you ask him about my ship?"
49806Well, Everard, how are you?
49806Were we fond of Nutsgrove?
49806Were you speaking?"
49806What are we to see, Tom?"
49806What are you laughing at?
49806What are your views?
49806What attitude?"
49806What can a woman do, tied down, hampered, checked on every side by the superstition of ages?
49806What can have tempted you into the giddy haunts of fashion, so far from your savory chimney- pots, my dear fellow?"
49806What can she mean?
49806What chance has it of escaping moneyed Vandalism?
49806What chance should I have competing against Saunderson''s sodden face, his fine leaden eye, his baronetcy, his twelve thousand a year?
49806What could I want more than I have?"
49806What d''ye mean?"
49806What did you do with him?
49806What did you say?"
49806What do they stand for?"
49806What do you mean by--""Did you not receive my note?"
49806What do you mean, Polly?
49806What do you mean, Sally?
49806What do you take me for?"
49806What does anything else signify?
49806What does anything matter now that we are all separated and have lost our beloved home for ever?
49806What does he say?"
49806What does it matter now?"
49806What does it mean?
49806What does it mean?
49806What does it mean?"
49806What else had we to be fond of?
49806What good am I?
49806What had I done to her, the jade?
49806What harm can I do you, Jack?
49806What has happened?
49806What has happened?
49806What have they in common?
49806What hold have I on your life?
49806What is he doing?"
49806What is her fascination, her attraction?
49806What is it?"
49806What is it?"
49806What is the good of telling you anything about her if you believe she is a myth?"
49806What is the matter with you?
49806What is the matter?"
49806What is the use?
49806What is there between you and Addie?
49806What is your news, Jack?
49806What made him think of such a thing?
49806What made you ask me to marry you?"
49806What makes you so miserable and uneasy?"
49806What makes you think that?"
49806What motive could I have in forging the record of my dishonor?"
49806What mystery surrounds it?
49806What of him?
49806What other reason could he have?"
49806What place have I in the world?
49806What put it into your head?"
49806What risk?"
49806What sort of man is he?"
49806What spirits she was in this evening, was n''t she?"
49806What stranger?
49806What the deuce do you mean, Pauline?"
49806What was he like?
49806What was the price of the chocolate?''"
49806What will Sapolio do?
49806What will Tom say when he comes in?
49806What will become of them, thrown destitute on the world?
49806What will they do?"
49806What will you do?
49806What woman could love me, I should like to know?
49806What would my dear uncle the bishop have felt if he could have heard it?"
49806What wrong have you done me?"
49806What''s the matter?
49806What''s the matter?
49806What''s the matter?
49806What''s the matter?"
49806What''s the matter?"
49806What-- are you not getting out too?"
49806What-- what made you think that?
49806What?
49806When are you going to settle them?"
49806When did you arrive?
49806When did you remember?
49806When is he coming to see us?"
49806When, Tom?
49806Where are the others?
49806Where are the others?"
49806Where are the servants?"
49806Where are you going, child?"
49806Where are you staying now?"
49806Where could we go?"
49806Where did you get it?
49806Where did you pick it all up?"
49806Where has she gone to?
49806Where is that, Pauline?
49806Where is the money to come from?"
49806Where will you go?"
49806Where''s Polly?
49806Where''s Tom?
49806Where''s my fan, bouquet, handkerchief?
49806Where''s my husband?"
49806Where''s your hat?
49806Where-- when-- how long?"
49806Where?"
49806Who are they?"
49806Who asked them?"
49806Who brought me here?"
49806Who could deceive your gimlet- eyes?"
49806Who is Viola, pray?
49806Who is she-- eh, eh?"
49806Who is this?"
49806Who told you?
49806Who was it, Robert?"
49806Who would be your father''s henchman in the cloth?"
49806Who''ll lend me a thimble and a needle and some cotton?"
49806Who''s afraid?
49806Who''s afraid?
49806Whom is it from, Bob?"
49806Whom-- whom does she mean?
49806Why are you not with them?"
49806Why did I go clambering up into that wretched tree, like the shameful tomboy that I am?
49806Why did n''t I study quietly at home as the aunt suggested-- why, why?
49806Why did you carry that heavy tray?
49806Why did you come?
49806Why did you make me, your brothers and sisters, believe that you-- you were worthless-- oh, why-- in Heaven''s name, why?"
49806Why did you not return home on Saturday?
49806Why did you sit up?
49806Why do you ask?"
49806Why do you bring me these things?
49806Why do you think it strange I should be aware of the fact?"
49806Why do you turn away?
49806Why else did he give up three afternoons in the last fortnight to return those calls with Pauline and you, I should like to know?"
49806Why not ask her yourself?"
49806Why should I be made to suffer for his iniquity?
49806Why should I lose what he inherited in solemn trust for his son or next of kin?
49806Why should I, why should I, my dear, my dear?
49806Why should I?
49806Why should my marriage prevent Teddy from coming here?"
49806Why should we say that?"
49806Why should you mind talking about him with me, your dearest friend, your own Florrie?
49806Why then should he make himself ridiculous, pose as an outraged husband?
49806Why will she not accept the inevitable, and give me peace at least?
49806Why, man alive, I''ve heard you scores of times railing against her heartlessness, her selfish--""Oh, what does all that signify?
49806Why, then, in Heaven''s name, should he interfere with her lover''s enjoyment of them, the lover whom she jilted for his gold?
49806Why?
49806Will that do?"
49806Will that satisfy you?
49806Will they never go?"
49806Will you ask them to come, Tom?"
49806Will you come into my study for a few minutes?"
49806Will you follow my father?"
49806Will you give me a few hours more-- until to- morrow-- to think and talk it over with the others?"
49806Will you give me a kiss, Cissy, to let me know you bear me no ill- will-- a farewell kiss, dear?
49806Will you go in to him, or are we to bring him out here?"
49806Will you let me tell you what they are?
49806Will you listen to them now, or would you rather hear of them from him?"
49806Will you marry me, Miss Lefroy?
49806Will you not let me enter, my dear?"
49806Will you take me as you find me and strike up a friendship with me?
49806Will you tell Bob where I''m going, if he asks for me?"
49806Will you, will you?"
49806With an impulse that she can not control, she looks up into his face and says quickly, with a puzzled frown--"What made you do it?
49806Wo n''t you sit down?
49806Would it be too much for you?"
49806Would n''t it be better if I said nothing at all about it until he had left?
49806Would n''t you almost guess it by the extra vitality of his mustache?"
49806Would n''t you say she was the heroine of half a dozen London seasons at the least?
49806Would n''t you think I had soaked it in a tub of water?
49806Would you be sorry or glad, frightened or relieved?
49806Would you be startled as Sally was?
49806Would you miss me at all as I miss you now?
49806Would you think of her kindly, pitifully, tenderly even, and forgive her at last?"
49806Yes; if ever he marries, it will be some one like her, very like her-- her exact counterpart, in fact; and where is he to find that?
49806Yes?
49806Yes?
49806You are afraid?
49806You are sorry for me?
49806You come straight from there, do n''t you?"
49806You do n''t believe me-- ah, you do n''t believe me?"
49806You do not mean that?"
49806You do not mind my opening them?
49806You feel that you believe me, do n''t you, dear, do n''t you?"
49806You have missed me, you say-- ay, missed me as a callous child might miss a--""Tom, will you clear that end of the table, please?
49806You have no other plan you would like better to suggest?"
49806You have no secrets?"
49806You have not been long engaged?"
49806You have not changed, or grown cold, or ceased to care for me; you love me just the same?
49806You have some other relatives to help you?
49806You have sowed your wild oats, and I am a respectable British matron; we-- we could n''t flirt now even if we tried, could we?
49806You know most of them, Polly, do n''t you?"
49806You like my youth, do n''t you?
49806You liked her acting, did n''t you?"
49806You remember of old my list of accomplishments?
49806You see, I-- I believe there was some misunderstanding or other between our family and theirs in days gone by, and--""Misunderstanding?
49806You understand that, I hope?"
49806You want to speak to me?"
49806You were determined, were you?
49806You were very fond of Nutsgrove, were you not?"
49806You wo n''t find us too much for you at Nutsgrove?
49806You wo n''t mind, will you, Jack?
49806You would have been his third wife, would n''t you, Poll?"
49806You would n''t like to be there?"
49806You would never say they were ladies, would you?"
49806You would not have me older?
49806You''d come with us, too, would n''t you?"
49806You''d know me if you met me in the streets now, would n''t you, Tom?
49806You''ll let me know my fate as soon as possible, wo n''t you?
49806You''ll not forget-- twelve- buttoned, six- and- a- quarter, foamy green?
49806You''ll share it with your beloved brother, wo n''t you?"
49806You''re coming back?"
49806You''re going, of course?"
49806You''ve deposed me to- night; for three years since I came out I have been the undisputed belle of Nutshire society-- haven''t I, Jack, have n''t I?
49806You''ve had a real good time of it, have n''t you, Addie?"
49806You-- you believe me, do n''t you?"
49806You-- you do n''t suppose it''s a fraud?
49806You-- you heard me last night?"
49806You-- you will try to like me a little, wo n''t you, Addie?"
49806Your present feelings tally with mine, do they not?"
49806_ Esker le policeman est en amour_--eh?
49806how could I imagine such a thing?"
49806what am I to do?
47476And I lay upon my deer- skins all one moon of falling leaves( Who hath care for song or corn- dance, when the voice within her grieves? 47476 And do we fall short,"said Burke, getting mad,"When it''s touch and go for life?"
47476And hark what the General orders, For I could not catch his words; But what means that hurry and movement, That clash of muskets and swords?
47476And so as his mighty''headlands''Are scarcely a league away, What say you to landing, sweetheart, And having a washing- day? 47476 And the rest?"
47476And who art thou?
47476And you''re sure we shall take her?
47476Are they out of that strait accurst?
47476Are you not hit?
47476Are you ready, California, Arizona, Idaho? 47476 But what of my lady?"
47476But what of that? 47476 But when won the coming battle, What of profit springs therefrom?
47476But you?
47476Can it be?
47476Did we count on this? 47476 Do you know the Blue- Grass country?"
47476Do you know, sir, whom you have thus addressed? 47476 Giles Corey,"said the Magistrate,"What hast thou heare to pleade To these that now accuse thy soule Of crimes and horrid deed?"
47476Glory to share?
47476Hath he let vultures climb his eagle''s seat To make Jove''s bolts purveyors of their maw? 47476 Hearts are mourning in the North, While the sister rivers seek the main, Red with our life- blood flowing forth-- Who shall gather it up again?
47476Hearts of oakare British seamen?
47476His policy--how does it hap?
47476His policy?
47476Home, home-- where''s my baby''s home? 47476 How can he fight,"they whispered,"with only half a crew, Though they be rare to do and dare, yet what can brave men do?"
47476How many?
47476How so? 47476 Is Oregon worth saving?"
47476Is it a chapel bell that fills The air with its low tone?
47476Is it not like the ancient tale they tell of Phaeton, Whose ignorant hands were trusted with the horses of the sun? 47476 Is the doom sealed for Hesper?
47476Is there never one in all the land, One on whose might the Cause may lean? 47476 Is there no hope?"
47476Let me of my heart take counsel: War is not of life the sum; Who shall stay and reap the harvest When the autumn days shall come?
47476Like the herdsman of Tekoa, in Israel of old, Shall we see the poor and righteous again for silver sold?
47476Load double,cried Corse,"every cannon; Who cares for their ten to our one?"
47476MR. JOHNSON''S POLICY OF RECONSTRUCTIONSOME COMMENT FROM THE BOYS IN BLUE"His policy,"do you say?
47476Major, your men?
47476My Dawn? 47476 My cargo?
47476Nor soberness availeth aught; for who hath suffered worse, Through persecutions undeserved, than good Rebecca Nurse? 47476 Not of you?"
47476Now who will buy my apples?
47476Now, what shall I bring for a bridal gift When my home- bound pennant flies? 47476 O cacique, brave and trusty guide, Are we not near the spring, The fountain of eternal youth that health to age doth bring?"
47476Patience?
47476She be----,says the farmer, and to her he goes, First roars in her ears, then tweaks her old nose,"Hallo, Goody, what ails you?
47476Sure? 47476 THE DAYS OF''FORTY- NINE"You are looking now on old Tom Moore, A relic of bygone days; A Bummer, too, they call me now, But what care I for praise?
47476Tell us, tell us why you look so?
47476The Flag?
47476The river widens,said the men;"Are we not near the spring, The fountain of eternal youth that health to age doth bring?"
47476Then in whose name the summons?
47476Well, who comes next?
47476What if,''mid the cannons''thunder, Whistling shot and bursting bomb, When my brothers fall around me, Should my heart grow cold and numb?
47476What is it that you say,-- Where do I hail from pray, What is my cargo, eh? 47476 What is this I am told about Lee''s arrest,-- Is it true?"
47476What make we, murmur''st thou? 47476 What makes you look so dull?
47476What saw I?
47476What say ye now, my comrades?
47476What shall I say, brave Admiral, say, If we sight naught but seas at dawn?
47476What ship is that?
47476What''s the trouble?
47476What''s this, about''Marthy Virginia''s hand''?
47476What''s your report?
47476Where be the smiling faces, and voices soft and sweet, Seen in thy father''s dwelling, heard in the pleasant street? 47476 Where go they?"
47476Where is our little drummer?
47476Who are they? 47476 Who dares"--this was the patriot''s cry, As striding from the desk he came--"Come out with me, in Freedom''s name, For her to live, for her to die?"
47476Who will go to Deerfield Meadows and bring the ripened Grain?
47476Who''ve ye got there?
47476Whom have you there?
47476Why touch upon such themes?
47476Why, Jack, old man, so blue and sad? 47476 Ye, at whose ear the flatterer bends, Who were my kindred before all others,-- Hath he set your hearts afar, my friends?
47476''Tis the front wall besieged-- have the rebels rushed in?
47476''Twas by Fayal, where Portugal Still flaunts her Blue- and- White; What cares their Floyd for Portugal Or what cares he for right?
47476''Twas our policy, boys, from our muster- day, Through skirmish and bivouac, march and fray--"His policy,"do you say?
47476( Shall the music bang and blow?)
47476( Who but the dead were there?)
47476( Who would hesitate?)
47476( we could hardly speak, we shook so),--"Are they beaten?
47476(?)
47476(_ Aside._) HATHORNE Who did these things?
47476), Did they pause for a life, For a sweetheart or wife?
47476), Right into the camp of the Sioux( What was the muster?
47476), They gather and swoop, They come like a flood, Maddened with blood, They shriek, plying the knife( Was there one begged for his life?
47476), Who can their courage recount?
47476***** Would you hear of the river fight?
47476--"But Braddock of Fontenoy, stubborn and grim, Who but he carved a cross on the wilderness rim?
47476--"Men, what will_ you_ do?"
47476--What meant its iron stroke?
47476--What tears can widows weep Less bitter than when brave men fall?
47476--have I not learned it, Under the crushing years?
47476A MESSAGE[ July 1, 1882] Was there ever message sweeter Than that one from Malvern Hill, From a grim old fellow,--you remember?
47476A NEW SONG[ 1780]"Has the Marquis La Fayette Taken off all our hay yet?"
47476A Yankee ship and a Yankee crew-- Constitution, where ye bound for?
47476A dream?
47476A pariah, bearing the Nation''s hate?
47476A rebel?
47476A third-- a fourth-- Gunboat and transport in Indian file Upon the war- path, smooth from the North; But the watch may they hope to beguile?
47476AFTER THE WAR After the war-- I hear men ask-- what then?
47476ANNE HUTCHINSON''S EXILE[ March 28, 1638]"Home, home-- where''s my baby''s home?
47476ARE they beaten?"
47476ARTHUR LEE(?).
47476Above the wrecks that strewed the mournful past, Was the long dream of ages true at last?
47476Across the rolling prairie rings-- A gun?
47476Afraid of the music?"
47476Ah France-- how could our hearts forget The path by which came Lafayette?
47476Ah, memories crowding so thick and fast, Ye were the first; is this the last?
47476Ah, not for him we weep; What honor more could be in store for him?
47476Ah, where are they Who bade the hostile surges stay, When the black forts of Monterey Frowned on their dauntless line?
47476Ai nt it cute to see a Yankee Take sech everlastin''pains, All to get the Devil''s thankee Helpin''on''em weld their chains?
47476All day-- all day and all night; and the morning?
47476Alone?
47476And Beaujeu the Gay?
47476And Owen?
47476And Travis, great Travis, drew sword, quick and strong; Drew a line at his feet...."Will you come?
47476And can not pride be sold?
47476And can your ship these strokes sustain?
47476And did he slink, or did he shrink From that relentless ring?
47476And do her castles no more bloom With legends rare and olden?
47476And do you stand in the doorways now as when your own went forth?
47476And life once over, who shall tell the rest?
47476And lifting up his head( The drums and trumpets rattle), And to his army said,"I pray how goes the battle?"
47476And must these sons of Brittany Be clouded, set in western skies, And fall a savage sacrifice?
47476And now poor Westmoreland is lost, Our forts are all resigned, Our buildings they are all on fire,-- What shelter can we find?
47476And now the foe hath won the day, Methinks their words are these:"Ye cursed, rebel, Yankee race, Will this your Congress please?
47476And now, is the tree to blossom?
47476And shall the slanderer''s demon breath Avail with one like me, To dim the sunshine of my faith And earnest trust in thee?
47476And shall their memory ever grow pale?
47476And shall this count for nothing?
47476And the Tagals-- dare they face Such a desperate company?
47476And the kind who forged these fetters?
47476And the mower thinks to him Cry both bell and drum,"Morgan Stanwood, where art thou?
47476And then began the sailors''jests:"What thing is that, I say?"
47476And then-- why ask me?
47476And there''s a quicker way than sleep?...
47476And through the leagues above her She looked aghast, and said:"What is this living ship that comes Where every ship is dead?"
47476And valiant Harrison, Commander of the Christian force?
47476And was the earth a star?
47476And watched the trials which have made Thy human spirit strong?
47476And we sometimes walked together in the pleasant summer weather,--"Please to tell us what his name was?"
47476And we who have toiled for freedom''s law, have we sought for freedom''s soul?
47476And were they right who fought the fight for Texas by his side?
47476And what are these new forces, With long, black, streaming hair?
47476And what were conquerors before to him whose eye Had seen the world a star, and found the star a world?
47476And when our boats all fillèd were With officers and soldiers, With as good troops as England had, To oppose who dare controul us?
47476And where and what was"CRO- A- TÀN"?
47476And where is that band who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion A home and a country should leave us no more?
47476And who will bring white peace That he may sleep upon his hill again?
47476And whose the chartered claim to speak The sacred grief where all have part, Where sorrow saddens every cheek And broods in every aching heart?
47476And why should Titus Hooper die, Ay, die-- without a rope?
47476And within?
47476And ye, who dwell by the golden Peak, Has the subtle whisper glided by?
47476And you, amid the master- race, Who seem so strangely out of place, Know ye who cometh?
47476Angel, or wraith, or woman?"
47476Are all the common ones so grand, And all the titled ones so mean?
47476Are not two millions enough per day?
47476Are the things so strange and marvellous you see or have seen?
47476Are the works, think you, strong?
47476Are these the stern troopers who madly Rode straight at the battery''s hell?
47476Are they men who guard the passes, On our"left"so far away?
47476Are they palsied or asleep?
47476Are they panic- struck and helpless?
47476Are they_ men_ who fought to- day?
47476Are we good for no more than to prance in a ball, When the drums beat the charge and the clarions call?"
47476Are you blowing your fingers because they are cold, Or catching your breath ere you take a hold?
47476Are you here to slay and eat us?
47476Are you ready, men of Maine?"
47476Are you too grand to fight traitors small?
47476Arrested for what?"
47476As they could not get before us, how could they look us in the face?
47476At dawn of day they moored their ship, And dared the breakers''roar: What meant it?
47476BACON''S EPITAPH, MADE BY HIS MAN[ October 1, 1676] Death, why so cruel?
47476BRITANNIA TO COLUMBIA What is the voice I hear On the wind of the Western Sea?
47476Bear of her lash the stroke, And prop her throne?
47476Before us, pillared in the sky, We saw the statue soar Of Washington, serene and high:-- Could traitors view that form, nor fly?
47476Beneath my throne the martyrs cry; I hear their voice, How long?
47476Bold Boyd led on his steady band, With bristling bayonets burnish''d bright: Who could their dauntless charge withstand?
47476Brave Admiral, say but one good word: What shall we do when hope is gone?"
47476Brave Admiral, speak, what shall I say?"
47476Brave Wadsworth boldly kept the field Till their last bullets flew; Then all were prisoners forced to yield, What could the general do?
47476Bright jewels of the mine?
47476But ah, Thaddeus Posset, why Should thy poor soul elope?
47476But hark!--from wood and rock flung back, What sound comes up the Merrimac?
47476But not without-- no, from below it comes: What pulses up from solid earth to wreck A vengeful word on towers and lofty domes?
47476But over them, lying there shattered and mute, What deep echo rolls?
47476But stay, what was the muster?
47476But the Fifes-- can ye not hear their lusty shriek?
47476But the treasures-- how to get them?
47476But to refuse the challenge?
47476But what are the acts which this chief has achieved?
47476But what is that which greets mine eye?
47476But what, my sons, can princes do, No armies to command?
47476But where were his lieutenants?
47476But who cared for dead or for dying?
47476But who shall break the guards that wait Before the awful face of Fate?
47476But who shall declare The_ End_ of the Affair?
47476But why for him vain marbles raise?
47476COLE Now, Simon Kempthorn, what say you to that?
47476CRISPUS ATTUCKS[ March 5, 1770] Where shall we seek for a hero, and where shall we find a story?
47476CUBA TO COLUMBIA[ April, 1896] A voice went over the waters-- A stormy edge of the sea-- Fairest of Freedom''s daughters, Have you no help for me?
47476CUBA[ 1870] Is it naught?
47476Can he strike?
47476Can it be she is thinking of them, Her face is so proud and so still, And her lashes are moistened with tears?
47476Can liberty be priced and sold?
47476Can she forget The million graves her young devotion set, The hands that clasp above, From either side, in sad, returning love?
47476Can the cold sculpture speak his praise?
47476Can the innocent be guilty?
47476Can this be Rain- in- the- Face?
47476Can this be the voice of him Who fought on the Big Horn''s rim?
47476Canst thou hear me?
47476Charred tree- stumps in the moonlight dim, Or paling rude, or leafless limb?
47476Come-- is not this a griper, That while your hopes are danced away,''Tis you must pay the piper?
47476Could he dare Disdain the Paradise of opening joy Which beckons the fresh heart everywhere?
47476Could he outlive the shame?
47476Could it succeed?
47476Could patriots see, nor gladly die For Baltimore?
47476Could such sweetest heads Lie scalped among the slain?
47476Could such tidings be?
47476Could there on our unworthy earth be found Naught to befit his worth?
47476Could traitors trust a traitor?
47476Cruel, haughty, and cold, He ever was strong and bold; Shall he shrink from a wooden stem?
47476Dare the livid leaden rain?
47476Dare they not risk_ one_ shot; To make report grandiloquent Of aid they rendered not?
47476Dare you doubt it?
47476De Soto asked his men;"Shall we, before these traitors, Go backward, baffled, then; Or, sword in hand, attack the foe Who crouches in his den?"
47476Death, why so cruel?
47476Death?
47476Did he bid all the stars in our banner float?
47476Did he die like a craven, Begging those torturing fiends for his life?
47476Did he hear the Voice on his lonely way That Adam heard in the cool of day?
47476Did he preach-- did he pray?
47476Did not our hero fall Gallantly slain?
47476Did nothing predict you should yet behold Our banner come back this way?
47476Did she drift to polar oceans?
47476Did the bolts of heaven blast her?
47476Did the hurricanes o''erwhelm her With her starry banner and her tall masts three?
47476Did we dare, In our agony of prayer, Ask for more than He has done?
47476Did we leave behind The graves of our kin, the comfort and ease Of our English hearths and homes, to find Troublers of Israel such as these?
47476Did you hear that shout?
47476Did"our untried navy lads"obey?
47476Do I know it for a fact, sir?
47476Do n''t you think''tis a scandalous, saucy reflection, That merits the soundest, severest correction?
47476Do they sleep who wait the fray?
47476Do thy dark brows yet crave That swift and angry stave-- Unmeet for this desirous morn-- That I have striven, striven to evade?
47476Do we breathe this breath of Knowledge Purely to enjoy its zest?
47476Do you blanch at their fate?
47476Do you hear the yelping of Blanche and Tray?
47476Do you love it or slavery best?
47476Do you not hear the drum?
47476Do you not hear the rusty chain Clanking about my feet?
47476Do you not know a heavier doom awaits you, If you refuse to plead, than if found guilty?
47476Do you not see them?
47476Does any falter?
47476Does love die, and must honor perish When colors and causes are lost?
47476Does the spectacle furnish you any delight, Jefferson D.?
47476ELLSWORTH[ May 24, 1861] Who is this ye say is slain?
47476ETHIOPIA SALUTING THE COLORS Who are you dusky woman, so ancient hardly human, With your woolly- white and turban''d head, and bare bony feet?
47476Earth''s mightiest deigned to wear it,--why not he?"
47476Ef_ I_ turned mad dogs loose, John, On_ your_ front- parlor stairs, Would it jest meet your views, John, To wait an''sue their heirs?
47476Ellsworth, shall we call in vain On thy name to- day?
47476End in this the prayers and tears, The toil, the strife, the watchings of our younger, better years?
47476FIRSTFRUITS IN 1812[ August 19, 1812]_ What is that a- billowing there Like a thunderhead in air?
47476FREE AMERICA[ 1774] That seat of Science, Athens, And earth''s proud mistress, Rome; Where now are all their glories?
47476Face the shrapnel''s iron hail?
47476Fallen?
47476Fear ye foes who kill for hire?
47476Fear?
47476Firm, my lads; who breaks the line thus?
47476For fifteen miles, they follow''d and pelted us, we scarce had time to pull a trigger; But did you ever know a retreat performed with more vigor?
47476For rock and shallow bar the stream:"O Pilot, can this be the strait that leads to the Eastern Sea?"
47476For shame ye take no care, my boys, How stands the glass around?
47476For the brethren''s sake Daniel Periton dared to ride Full in front of the threatening tide, And what if the dam do yield?
47476Freedom-- have I not earned it, Toiling with blood and tears?
47476From such a perfect text, shall Song aspire To light her faded fire, And into wandering music turn Its virtue, simple, sorrowful, and stern?
47476From such rascals as these may we fear a rebuff?
47476GLOYD(_ coming forward_) Here am I. HATHORNE Tell the Court; Have you not seen the supernatural power Of this old man?
47476Gather the ravens, then, in funeral file For him, life''s morn yet golden in his hair?
47476Girded well with her ocean crags, Little our mother heeds their noise; Her eyes are fixed on crimsoned flags: But you-- do you hear it, Yankee boys?
47476Give thanks, and rob thy own afflicted poor?
47476God, was Thy wrath without pity, To tear the strong heart from our city, And cast it away?
47476HATHORNE And did you not then say That they were overlooked?
47476HATHORNE Did you not On one occasion hide your husband''s saddle To hinder him from coming to the Sessions?
47476HATHORNE Did you not carry once the Devil''s Book To this young woman?
47476HATHORNE Did you not hear it whisper?
47476HATHORNE Did you not say the Devil hindered you?
47476HATHORNE Did you not say the Magistrates were blind?
47476HATHORNE Did you not say your husband told you so?
47476HATHORNE Did you not scourge her with an iron rod?
47476HATHORNE Do you think She is bewitched?
47476HATHORNE Doth he you pray to say that he is God?
47476HATHORNE Goodman Corey, Say, did you tell her?
47476HATHORNE Have you not dealt with a Familiar Spirit?
47476HATHORNE Have you signed it, Or touched it?
47476HATHORNE How did you know the children had been told To note the clothes you wore?
47476HATHORNE Is it not true, that fourteen head of cattle, To you belonging, broke from their enclosure And leaped into the river, and were drowned?
47476HATHORNE Then answer me: When certain persons came To see you yesterday, how did you know Beforehand why they came?
47476HATHORNE Then tell me, Why do you trouble them?
47476HATHORNE What does he say?
47476HATHORNE What does it say to you?
47476HATHORNE What is it?
47476HATHORNE What then was the Book You showed to this young woman, and besought her To write in it?
47476HATHORNE What was the bird that this young woman saw Just now upon your hand?
47476HATHORNE Who hurt her then?
47476HATHORNE Who is your God and Father?
47476HATHORNE Who made these marks Upon her hands?
47476HATHORNE Whom would you pray to?
47476HOW STANDS THE GLASS AROUND?
47476Ha''n''t they made your env''ys w''iz?
47476Ha''n''t they sold your colored seamen?
47476Had Earth no charm to stay the Boy From the martyr- passion?
47476Had they in terror fled?
47476Had winter''s ocean inland rolled An eagre''s deadly spray, That overwhelmed the island''s breadth And swept them all away?
47476Had ye no graves at home Across the briny water, That hither ye must come, Like bullocks to the slaughter?
47476Has Rhineland lost her grape''s perfume, Her waters green and golden?
47476Has Whittier put his yearning wrath away?
47476Has he grown sick of his toils and his tasks?
47476Has he learned through affliction''s teaching what our Crispus Attucks knew-- When Right is stricken, the white and black are counted as one, not two?
47476Has our love all died out?
47476Has the Lord looked upon thee in ire, And willed thou be chastened by fire, Without any ruth?
47476Has the curse come at last which the fathers foretold?
47476Has the old word"Union"no meaning, pray?
47476Has the seed of crime Reached its flowering- time, That it shoots to this audacious height?
47476Hath he made ye alien, my brothers, Day and night?"
47476Hath he the Many''s plaudits found more sweet Than Wisdom?
47476Have I not known thee well, and read Thy mighty purpose long?
47476Have its altars grown cold?
47476Have our soldiers got faint- hearted, and in noiseless haste departed?
47476Have the snowy surfs not struggled Many centuries in vain That their lips might seal the Union?
47476Have they not in the North Sea''s blast Bowed to the waves the straining mast?
47476Have they quailed?
47476Have those scalping Indian devils come to murder us once more?"
47476Have we learned at last that human right is not a part but the whole?
47476Have you any notion, you landsmen, Who have seen a field- fight won, Of canister, grape- shot, and shrapnel Hurled out from a ten- inch gun?
47476Have you but seen a tiger caged And sullen through his barriers glare?
47476Have you never a dash for brave Mordecai Gist, With his heart in his throat, and his blade in his fist?
47476Have you not seen him do Strange feats of strength?
47476Have you not seen my children slain, Whether in cell or street?
47476He has his fame; But that mad dash at death, how name?
47476Hear ye not the singing Of the bugle, wild and free?
47476Hear ye not?
47476Hear ye not?
47476Hear ye the chains of slaves, Now clanking round your graves?
47476Heard ye the trumpet sound?
47476Heard you not the bugle blow?"
47476Her watch- fires beacon the misty height:-- Why are her friends and lovers sleeping?
47476Hewing a highway through greenwood and glen, Foot- free for cattle and heart- free for men?"
47476Hope ye mercy still?
47476How can we bear the dreadful spear, The tomahawk and knife?
47476How could a hundred souls be caught Straight out of life, nor find Device through which to mark their fate, Or leave some hint behind?
47476How could he answer nay?
47476How could poet ever tower, If his passions, hopes, and fears, If his triumphs and his tears, Kept not measure with his people?
47476How could the haze of doubt hang low Upon the road of Rochambeau?
47476How dare you tell a lie in this assembly?
47476How did I get there?
47476How do you think the man was dressed?
47476How fallen?
47476How fallen?
47476How fared it then, who may dare tell?
47476How fought the King?
47476How if it never break?
47476How long must we wait?
47476How long, O sister, how long Shall the fragile thread be spun?
47476How long, how long, Ere thou avenge the blood of Thine Elect?
47476How spake our captain to his comrades then?
47476How the glad tidings of joy should run Which tell of the birth of Washington?
47476How the orders are issued and ready to send For Lee, and the men in his staff- command, To be under arrest,--now the war''s at an end?"
47476How they tossed their years to be Into icy waters of a winter sea That we whom they loved-- that the world which they loved should be free?
47476How was the Union to be reconstructed?
47476How were the people of the South to be regarded?
47476How will the country stand the news?
47476How will the merchants pay their dues?
47476How wondrous is the spell They work upon the manly heart, Who knoweth not full well?
47476I CLOTHO How long, O sister, how long Ere the weary task is done?
47476I hear the church- bells ring, O say, what may it be?"
47476I hear the sound of guns, Oh say, what may it be?"
47476I prithee stand and gaze about the sea: What seest?
47476I see a gleaming light, Oh say, what may it be?"
47476II His oceans call across the land:"How long, how long, fair Panama, Wilt thou the shock of tides withstand, Nor heed us sobbing by the strand?
47476II"An empire to be lost or won?
47476III"An empire to be lost or won?
47476IX But is there hope to save Even this ethereal essence from the grave?
47476If I to- morrow were accused, what further could I plead Than those who died, whom neither judge nor minister would heed?
47476If, amid the din of battle, Nobly you should fall, Far away from those who love you, None to hear you call, Who would whisper words of comfort?
47476In the pause of the thunder rolling low, A rifle''s answer-- who shall know From the wind''s fierce hurl and the rain''s black blow?
47476Is FAME your aspiration?
47476Is GLORY your ambition?
47476Is Neckar''s vale no longer fair, That German hearts are leaving?
47476Is Sumter worth the getting?
47476Is Whitman, the strong spirit, overworn?
47476Is earth too poor to give us Something to live for here that shall outlive us?
47476Is honor more than merchandise?
47476Is it Columbia''s sons I spy?
47476Is it a moment''s cool halt that he asks Under the shade of the trees?
47476Is it cowardice or collusion?
47476Is it death?
47476Is it life?
47476Is it naught That the South- wind brings her wail to our shore, That the spoilers compass our desolate sister?
47476Is it naught?
47476Is it naught?
47476Is it naught?
47476Is it not true, that on a certain night You were impeded strangely in your prayers?
47476Is it peace?
47476Is it possible?
47476Is it possible?
47476Is it strife?
47476Is it that you have never Felt the oppressor''s hand, Fighting, with fond endeavor, To cling to your own sweet land?
47476Is it the gurgle of waters whose flow Ofttime has come to him, borne on the breeze, Memory listens to, lapsing so low, Under the shade of the trees?
47476Is it the wind whose gathering shout is heard With voice of peoples myriad like the leaves?
47476Is it the wind?
47476Is it to shoot red squirrels you have your howitzer planted There on the roof of the church, or is it to shoot red devils?
47476Is it treachery or fear brings you here?"
47476Is it true that COLUMBIANS were barter''d for gold?
47476Is it true that an army so gallant were_ sold_?
47476Is it true that our soldiers were wrongfully us''d?
47476Is it true that they''ve been by their GENERAL abus''d?
47476Is not Thy hand stretched forth Visibly in the heavens, to awe and smite?
47476Is the bowl of agony filled?
47476Is the moon so dazzling bright That our cruisers''battle- gray Melts into the misty light?...
47476Is the mud knee- deep in valley and gorge?
47476Is the whole matter too heavy a charge?
47476Is there a lower yet and another?
47476Is there nothing to show of his glittering hoard?
47476Is this a time for pray''r?
47476Is this a time to worship God?
47476Is this our mission?
47476Is this the end?
47476Is yet no movement made?"
47476It''s a fact o''wich ther''s bushels o''proofs; Fer how could we trample on''t so, I wonder, Ef''t worn''t thet it''s ollers under our hoofs?"
47476It''s you thet''s to decide; Ai n''t_ your_ bonds held by Fate, John, Like all the world''s beside?
47476Italy?
47476JOHN BURNS OF GETTYSBURG Have you heard the story that gossips tell Of Burns of Gettysburg?
47476JUST ONE SIGNAL[ May 1, 1898] The war- path is true and straight, It knoweth no left or right; Why ponder and wonder and vacillate?
47476KING OF THE BELGIANS How spoke the King, in his crucial hour victorious?
47476Keep the ghost of that wife, foully slain, in your view,-- And what could you, what should you, what would you do?
47476Know you not what fate awaits you, Or to whom the future mates you?
47476LEE''S PAROLE"Well, General Grant, have you heard the news?
47476Lashed with her hounds, must we Run down the poor who flee From Slavery''s hell?
47476League after league they hugged the coast, And their Captain never left his post:"O Pilot, see you yet the strait that leads to the Eastern Sea?"
47476Less of flinching, stouter strain, Fiercer combat-- who could ask?
47476Let the great bells toll Till the clashing air is dim, Did we wrong this parted soul?
47476Let''s bear with her humors as well as we can; But why should we bear the abuse of her man?
47476Lives the soldier who ceases to cherish The blood- stains and valor they cost?
47476Look hard in the blindfold visage( He ca n''t look back), and inquire( He has stood there nearly a quarter), If he does n''t begin to tire?
47476Love her?
47476MALVERN HILL[ July 1, 1862] Ye elms that wave on Malvern Hill In prime of morn and May, Recall ye how McClellan''s men Here stood at bay?
47476MARE LIBERUM You dare to say with perjured lips,"We fight to make the ocean free"?
47476MARTHA Where should I have a book?
47476Must Hesper join the wailing ghosts of names?"
47476Must I be humble, then, Now when my heart hath need of pride?
47476Must the globe be always girded Ere we get to Bramah''s priest?
47476Must they die, and die in vain, Like a flock of shambled sheep?
47476Must we obey that voice?
47476Must we say to her,"Strive no more,"With the lips wherewith we loved her and kissed her?
47476Must we wear slavery''s yoke?
47476Must ye see them trample her, and be calm As priests when a virgin is led to slaughter?
47476Must ye wait, Till they ravage her gardens of orange and palm, Till her heart is dust, till her strength is water?
47476Must ye wait?
47476Must ye wait?
47476Must you have a nation to cope withal?
47476NED BRADDOCK[ July 9, 1755] Said the Sword to the Ax,''twixt the whacks and the hacks,"Who''s your bold Berserker, cleaving of tracks?
47476Neighbor and friend and brother Flocked to his side in vain,--"What, can it be that they long for me To ruin their cause again?
47476Never a broadsword to bar him the way?
47476Never a bush where a Huron may hide, Or the shot of a Shawnee spit red on his side?"
47476Never?--what hideous growth Is sprouting through clod and clay?
47476No angry passion shakes the state Whose weary servant seeks for rest, And who could fear that scowling hate Would strike at that unguarded breast?
47476No balm in Gilead?
47476No jewel to deck the rude hilt of his sword-- No trappings-- no horses?--what had he, but now?
47476No more thy hand be laid Upon the sword- hilt smiting sore?
47476No?
47476Not as we hoped; but what are we?
47476Nothing more, did I say?
47476Now Tories all, what can ye say?
47476Now in a fright, he starts upright, Awaked by such a clatter; He rubs both eyes, and boldly cries,"For God''s sake, what''s the matter?"
47476Now must we fight again, John?
47476Now who will bar the foeman''s path, to gain a breathing space, Till Houston and his scattered men shall meet him face to face?
47476Now, good men of the law, who is at fault, The one who begins or resists the assault?
47476Now, who may she be?"
47476Now?
47476O''er Missouri sounds the challenge-- O''er the great lakes and the plain;"Are you ready, Minnesota?
47476O''er what quenched grandeur must our shroud be drawn?
47476ON LAYING THE CORNER- STONE OF THE BUNKER HILL MONUMENT[ June 17, 1825] Oh, is not this a holy spot?
47476ON THE DEFEAT OF HENRY CLAY[ June 8, 1848] Fallen?
47476Off Santiago, when from beleaguer Rushed forth Cervera, daring and eager, Who stood Spain''s onset?
47476Oh, Planter of seed in thought and deed has the year of right revolved, And brought the Negro patriot''s cause with its problem to be solved?
47476Oh, curs''d rebellion, these are thine, Thine all these tales of woe; Shall at thy dire insatiate shrine Blood never cease to flow?
47476Oh, is it not to widen man Stretches the sea?
47476Oh, must the sea- bird''s idle van Alone be free?
47476Oh, the battle!--was there ever better won?
47476Oh, what will Morgan say?"
47476Oh, wherefore, soldiers, would you fight The bayonets of a winter storm?
47476Once more and the signal is flying--"How many the wounded and dead?"
47476One dear little thing, As I kissed her sweet lips, did I dream of the King?-- Of the King or his minions?
47476One only doubt was ours, One only dread we knew,-- Could the day that dawned so well Go down for the Darker Powers?
47476One puffs and sweats, the other mutters why Ca n''t you promove your work so fast as I?
47476One, peering aft, wild- staring, Points through the torches flaring:"Spook of the storm, or human?
47476Or are you waiting to hear the news; To hold up your hands in mute surprise, When France and England shall"recognize"?
47476Or is it the surge from the viewless shore That swells to bear me to my crown?
47476Or shall the Evil triumph, and robber Wrong prevail?
47476Or stand they chance with hunting- shirts, Or hardy veteran feet, sir?
47476Or suppose him worse than you; what then?
47476Our_ boys_ are brave and gentle, And their brows are smooth and white; Have they grown to_ men_, Manassas, In the watches of a night?
47476Out on a crag walked something-- what?
47476Palsy those arms that wield the unerring rifles?
47476Parole they gave and parole they broke, What matters the cowardly cheat, If the captain''s bride was satisfied With the one prize laid at her feet?
47476Peace, peace, he cried, but righteous God, How can there be true peace, When war and tumult stalk at night, And deeds of blood increase?
47476Pity the shorts?
47476Pray, do you think it quite right, Leaving your duties out yonder, to risk your dear self in the fight?"
47476Robe and sceptre and crown-- what are these for holding?
47476SALEM[ A.D. 1692] Soe, Mistress Anne, faire neighboure myne, How rides a witch when night- winds blowe?
47476SAN FRANCISCO Who now dare longer trust thy mother hand?
47476Said the Blade to the Ax,"And shall none say him Nay?
47476Said the Sword to the Ax,"Where''s your Berserker now?
47476Sanchez of Segovia, come and try: What seest?
47476Save them from direful destruction would no men?
47476Saw men ever such a sight?
47476Say, are you guilty?
47476Say:"Will ye harry her in our sight?
47476See you no boats of armed men?
47476See you no boats or vessels yet?
47476Semiramis?
47476Shall I pity them?
47476Shall I spare?
47476Shall Justice, Truth, and Freedom turn the poised and trembling scale?
47476Shall he leave Cavité''s lee, Hunt the Yankee fleet at sea?
47476Shall it be love, or hate, John?
47476Shall not the living God of all the earth, And heaven above, do right?
47476Shall she live, or shall she languish?
47476Shall she sink, or shall she rise?
47476Shall the broad land o''er which our flag in starry splendor waves, Forego through us its freedom, and bear the tread of slaves?
47476Shall the iron arm of science Like a sluggard rest?
47476Shall the mariner forever Double the impending capes, While his longsome and retracing Needless course he shapes?
47476Shall the price be paid and the honor said, and the word of outrage stilled?
47476Shall the shout of your trumpet unleash us too late?
47476Shall we desert them, slain, And proffer them to Spain As alien mendicants,--these martyrs of our Maine?
47476Shall we have more speeches, more reviews?
47476Shall we on with his ashes?
47476Shall we our freedom give away, And all our comfort place, In drinking of outlandish tea, Only to please our taste?
47476Shall we take for a sign this Negro slave with unfamiliar name-- With his poor companions, nameless too, till their lives leaped forth in flame?
47476Shall we to more continuance make pretence?
47476Should a deck so polluted again Ever ring to the tread of our true Northern men?
47476Should not the dove so white Follow the sea- mew''s flight, Why did they leave that night Her nest unguarded?
47476Shrink then that band of freemen, at the onslaught?
47476Sighs the worn spirit for respite or ease?
47476Since we so great a plenty have, Of all that''s for our health, Shall we that blasted herb receive, Impoverishing our wealth?
47476Sir Richard loosed his helm, and stretched Impatient hands abroad:--"Have ye no trust in man?"
47476Sisters, daughters, mothers, think you, Would your heroes now or then, Dying, kiss your pictured faces, Wishing they''d been better men?
47476Six lads hurt!--and the colors there?
47476Slowly the stores of life are spent, Yet hope still battles with despair; Will Heaven not yield when knees are bent?
47476So she resolutely walked up to the wagon old and red;"May I have a dozen apples for a kiss?"
47476Some gorger in the sun?
47476Some more substantial boon Than such as flows and ebbs with Fortune''s fickle moon?
47476Some one must do that work of fear; What man of men would volunteer?
47476Some prowler with the bat?
47476Sons of New England, here and there, Wherever men are still holding by The honor our fathers left so fair,-- Say, do you hear the cowards''cry?
47476Sons of New England, in the fray, Do you hear the clamor behind your back?
47476Speak, Ximena, speak and tell us, who has lost, and who has won?
47476Stay one moment; you''ve heard Of Caldwell, the parson, who once preached the Word Down at Springfield?
47476Still as he fled,''twas Irving''s cry, And his example too,"Run on, my merry men-- for why?
47476Still as the Old World rolls in light, shall ours in shadow turn, A beamless Chaos, cursed of God, through outer darkness borne?
47476Still shall she wave her bloody hand And threatening banners o''er this land, To Britain''s fell disgrace?
47476Still shall this motley, murderous crew Their deep, destructive arts pursue, And general horror spread?
47476Strike him?
47476Strikes chill the breast dread fear?
47476Sweetheart, and all the mongrel pack?
47476TARDY GEORGE[ January, 1862] What are you waiting for, George, I pray?
47476THE CALL TO THE COLORS"Are you ready, O Virginia, Alabama, Tennessee?
47476THE CONSTITUTION''S LAST FIGHT[ February 20, 1815] A Yankee ship and a Yankee crew-- Constitution, where ye bound for?
47476THE DEAD Think you the dead are lonely in that place?
47476THE DOWNFALL OF PIRACY[ November 22, 1718] Will you hear of a bloody Battle, Lately fought upon the Seas?
47476THE EAGLE OF CORINTH[ October 3, 4, 1862] Did you hear of the fight at Corinth, How we whipped out Price and Van Dorn?
47476THE FALL OF TECUMSEH[ October 5, 1813] What heavy- hoofed coursers the wilderness roam, To the war- blast indignantly tramping?
47476THE PILGRIM FATHERS The Pilgrim Fathers,--where are they?
47476THE RETURN Golden through the golden morning, Who is this that comes With the pride of banners lifted, With the roll of drums?
47476THE RIFLEMAN''S SONG AT BENNINGTON Why come ye hither, stranger?
47476THE VARUNA[ Sunk April 24, 1862] Who has not heard of the dauntless Varuna?
47476Talk of thy glorious liberty, and then Bolt hard the captive''s door?
47476Tattnall nods, and we go forward, find a gun no longer fought-- What is peace to us when all its crew lie dead?
47476Tell it?
47476Tell me, ye who scanned The stars, Earth''s elders, still must noblest aims Be traced upon oblivious ocean- sands?
47476Tell us, of your knightly grace, Tell us, left you not some trace Leading to that wellspring true Where old souls their age renew?
47476That his hundred years have earned for him a place in the human van Which others have fought for and thought for since the world of wrong began?
47476That nothing is told while the clinging sin remains part unconfessed?
47476That our torches destroyed what our fathers had raised On that beautiful isle, is it matter of blame?
47476That something hindered you?
47476That the health of the nation is perilled if one man be oppressed?
47476That the houses we dwelt in, the church where they praised The God of our Fathers, we gave to the flame?
47476That we smiled when there lay Smoking ruins next day, And nothing was left of the town but its name?
47476That you would open their eyes?
47476The British captain raged and swore; but then what could he do?
47476The South says,"_ Poor folks down!_"John, An''"_ All men up!_"say we,-- White, yaller, black, an''brown, John: Now which is your idee?
47476The black festoons that stretch for miles, And turn the streets to funeral aisles?
47476The black mouths belch and thunder, and the shrapnel shrieks and flies; Where are the fain and the fearless, the lads with the dauntless eyes?
47476The buck stands still in the timber--"Is''t the patter of nuts that fall?"
47476The cannon''s sudden, sullen boom, The bells that toll of death and doom, The rolling of the drums, The dreadful car that comes?
47476The enemy?
47476The first boat melts; and a second keel Is blent with the foliaged shade-- Their midnight rounds have the rebel officers made?
47476The first that the general saw were the groups Of stragglers, and then the retreating troops; What was done?
47476The flags half- mast that late so high Flaunted at each new victory?
47476The foal of the wild mare whinnies--"Did he hear the Comanche call?"
47476The fratricidal strife begun, when will its end be heard?
47476The ghostly vessels trembled From ruined stern to prow; What was this thing of terror That broke their vigil now?
47476The kindly natives came with gifts Of corn and slaughtered deer; What room for savage treachery Or foul suspicion here?
47476The lily calmly braves the storm, And shall the palm- tree fear?
47476The men that would disrupt the State By such base plots as theirs-- frauds, thefts, and lies-- What code of honor do they recognize?
47476The place was our own; could we hold it?
47476The rebel forts belch fire and death, But what care we for them?
47476The shadows of night fell cold and gray As I rode, with never a break or pause; But what was the use, when my name was Dawes?
47476The solid tramp of infantry, the rumble of the great jolting gun, The sharp, clear order, and the fierce steeds neighing,"Why''s not the fight begun?"
47476The starved and the weak In their hour of woe Are calling, land, on thee; Then why delay in thy dauntless sway?
47476The tale?
47476The two- edged sword, how came it in her hand?
47476Their epitaph!--who reads?
47476Their monument!--where does it stand?
47476Then all was silent, till there smote my ear A movement in the stream that checked my breath: Was it the slow plash of a wading deer?
47476Then did he blench?
47476Then ship and fortress gazed with anxious stare, Until the Cumberland''s cannon, silence breaking, Thundered its guardian challenge,"Who comes there?"
47476Then to the stout sea- captains the sheriff, turning, said,--"Which of ye, worthy seamen, will take this Quaker maid?
47476Then up stept this young hero, John Paulding was his name,"Sir, tell us where you''re going, And, also, whence you came?"
47476Then, as we greet him, what shall be ours to render?
47476Then, cried the traitor, from his sulphurous cell,"Do you surrender?"
47476There at Suez, Europe''s mattock Cuts the briny road with skill, And must Darien bid defiance To the pilot still?
47476There is only one test of contract: is it willing, is it good?
47476There were men with hoary hair Amidst that pilgrim band; Why have they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land?
47476These are around her; but where are her foes?
47476These multitudes of solemn men, Who speak not when they meet, But throng the silent street?
47476They bore him to the surgeon, A busy man was he:"A drummer boy-- what ails him?"
47476They coolly said unto their lords,"Our dresses all are new; What on earth would be the use of going back with you?
47476They kill''d a goose, they kill''d a hen, Three hogs they wounded in a pen-- They dash''d away, and pray what then?
47476They strike at the life of the State: Shall the murder be done?
47476Think ye I made this ball A field of havoc and war, Where tyrants great and tyrants small Might harry the weak and poor?
47476Think you this a cause for marvel?
47476This crown shall crown their struggle and their ruth?
47476Thrice happy people, ne''er shall feel The force of unrelenting steel; What brute would give the ox a stroke Who bends his neck to meet the yoke?
47476Thus a divided duty we Perceive in this hard matter-- Free trade, or sable brothers free?
47476To burnish your buttons, to brighten your guns; Or wait you for May- day and warm spring suns?
47476To feed with our fresh life- blood the Old World''s cast- off crime, Dropped, like some monstrous early birth, from the tired lap of Time?
47476To run anew the evil race the old lost nations ran, And die like them of unbelief of God, and wrong of man?
47476To scour your cross- belts with fresh pipe- clay?
47476Trust her?
47476UNDER THE SHADE OF THE TREES What are the thoughts that are stirring his breast?
47476Up came the reserves to the mellay infernal, Asking where to go in,--through the clearing or pine?
47476V Whither leads the path To ampler fates that leads?
47476VIII Was it for this our fathers kept the law?
47476WASHINGTON Where may the wearied eye repose When gazing on the Great; Where neither guilty glory glows, Nor despicable state?
47476WHAT''S IN A NAME?
47476WHEN THIS CRUEL WAR IS OVER Dearest love, do you remember When we last did meet, How you told me that you loved me, Kneeling at my feet?
47476Wait you for gold and credit to go, Before we shall see your martial show; Till Treasury Notes will not pay to forge?
47476Want a weapon?
47476Want a weapon?
47476Want to tackle_ me_ in, du ye?
47476Want you a thousand more cannon made, To add to the thousand now arrayed?
47476Want you more men, more money to pay?
47476Was I more than these?
47476Was a pirate- fleet her captor?
47476Was dying all they had the skill to do?
47476Was ever a death- march so grand and so solemn?
47476Was ever valor held so cheap in Glory''s mart before In all the days of chivalry, in all the deeds of war?
47476Was fear of hell, or want of faith, Or the brute''s common dread of death The passion that began a chase, Whose goal was ruin and disgrace?
47476Was his ear at fault that brook and breeze Sang in their saddest of minor keys?
47476Was it for this that he had braved The warring storms of mount and sky?
47476Was it he shouted Union from every throat Through the long war''s weary day?
47476Was it like that?
47476Was it moonlight so wondrously flashing?
47476Was it that I might fall most suddenly From honor''s summit to the sink of scandal?
47476Was it war or peace?
47476Was that the tread of many feet, Which downward from the hillside beat?
47476Was the fort by traitors won?
47476Was there a man who in fear held his breath?
47476Was there a soldier who carried the Seven Flinched like a coward or fled from the strife?
47476Was there succor?
47476We begin to think it''s nater To take sarse an''not be riled;-- Who''d expect to see a tater All on eend at bein''biled?
47476We ca n''t never choose him o''course,--thet''s flat; Guess we shell hev to come round,( do n''t you?)
47476We see the foeman''s musketeers Deployed upon his right, And on his left the cavalry Stand, hungry for the fight; But that blank centre-- what?
47476We send up three times to ask If we sha''n''t begin our task?
47476We speak, though low:"That blastful furnace can they thread?"
47476We''ll brook no more delay; Why give the traitors time and means To fortify the way With stolen guns, in ambuscades?
47476Were not those brave old races?
47476Were we on the door- step here, Parting for a day, Would we utter words as though Parting were for aye?
47476Were you not half dismayed, There in the century''s night, Till to your view a sister''s aid Came, like a flash of light?
47476What Briton, undaunted, that pants to be free, But warms at the mention of brave De Launcey?
47476What Terror starts to the day?
47476What all our lives to save thee?
47476What angry booming doth the trembling ear, Glued to the stone wall, hear-- So deep, no air Its weight can bear?
47476What answer do you make to this, Giles Corey?
47476What answer make you?
47476What are you waiting for, tardy George?
47476What are you waiting for, tardy George?
47476What are you waiting for, tardy George?
47476What blazon on her shield, In the clear Century''s light Shines to the world revealed, Declaring nobler triumph, born of Right?
47476What boots the loss of freemen''s blood Beside imperilled gold?
47476What bright dread angel Thou, Dazzling the waves before Thy station great?
47476What brings us thronging these high rites to pay, And seal these hours the noblest of our year, Save that our brothers found this better way?
47476What can I do or say?
47476What cares he?
47476What cares he?
47476What cares he?
47476What cares he?
47476What crown is this, high hung and hard to reach, Whose glory so outshines our laboring speech?
47476What crown of rich words would he set for all time on this day?
47476What devil tempts thee to descend To conquest, robbery and crime?
47476What did the King, in bitter defeat and sorrow?
47476What do you see in your visions at night, Jefferson D., Jefferson D.?
47476What else could she do, with her fair Northern name?
47476What ever''scaped Oblivion''s subtle wrong Save a few clarion names, or golden threads of song?
47476What forms were those which darkly stood Just on the margin of the wood?
47476What glory or honor to gain While the nation is shouting hosannas, Uniting her sons to fight Spain?
47476What gray heads look up at us sadly?
47476What hangs upon the breeze?
47476What hath he said?
47476What have we left?
47476What held they all in their love and pride?
47476What holds he in his hand?
47476What hurried rider, this, With jaded horse and garb amiss, Whose look some woe proclaims, Ere he his mission names?
47476What if conquest, subjugation, Even greater ills become?"
47476What if our men be driven?
47476What is his crown, the noblest of all for wearing?
47476What is it fateful woman, so blear, hardly human?
47476What is it in these who shall now do the storming That makes every Georgian spring to his feet?
47476What is the mystical vision he sees?
47476What is the shame that clothes the skin To the nameless horror that lives within?
47476What is your pride for?
47476What looms upon our starboard bow?
47476What matter if our feet are torn?
47476What matter if our shoes are worn?
47476What mean the gladness of the plain, This joy of eve and morn, The mirth that shakes the beard of grain And yellow locks of corn?
47476What means this dance, this Powow dance?
47476What means this great commotion?
47476What means this pageant, then?
47476What meant the"U. S."upon every cap-- Upon every button, belt, and strap?
47476What men Like you weaklings to- day had durst cope with_ us_ then?
47476What more?
47476What oaths confirm your broken faith?
47476What pleasant song or story Did she love from your lips to hear?"
47476What recked he?
47476What recked those who followed-- Men who had fought ten to one ere that day?
47476What reminder Of one red man in that land?
47476What saith the herald of the Lord?
47476What say you?
47476What sea- worn barks are those which throw The light spray from each rushing prow?
47476What shall be found upon history''s page?
47476What sought they thus afar?
47476What sounds are these But chants and holy hymns?"
47476What speaks he now, in the hour of faith victorious?
47476What splendors crown thy brow?
47476What stay the warriors''matchless might?
47476What tears wash out the stain of death?
47476What then?
47476What though their shot fall round us here, yet thicker than the hail?
47476What though they faced no storm of iron hail That freedom and the right might still prevail?
47476What thought our Admiral then, Looking down on his men?
47476What to him are all our wars, What but death- bemocking folly?
47476What to him is friend or foeman, Rise of moon, or set of sun, Hand of man, or kiss of woman?
47476What tongue the fearful sight may tell?
47476What voice is beseeching thee For the scholar''s lowliest place?
47476What was done Who could know?
47476What was it passed like an ominous breath-- Like a shiver of fear, or a touch of death?
47476What was it the mournful wood- thrush said?
47476What was it?
47476What was the choice he made, that all fear surmounted?
47476What was the gift he won, in the fire that tried him?
47476What was to be done with the three millions of negroes who had been given their freedom?
47476What were our lives without thee?
47476What whispered the pine- trees overhead?
47476What will the bears- at- forty do?
47476What wolf has been prowling My castle within?"
47476What words can drown that bitter cry?
47476What''s the mercy despots feel?
47476What, No?
47476What, sighing?
47476When Gallic hosts, ungrateful men, Our race meant to extermine, Pray did committees save us then, Or Hancock, or such vermin?
47476When God or man''s the choice, Must we postpone Him, who from Sinai spoke?
47476When Lovewell''s men are dying fast, And Paugus''tribe hath felt the rod?
47476When empires must be wound, we bring the shroud, The time- old web of the implacable Three: Is it too coarse for him, the young and proud?
47476When stands it?"
47476When there is Peace?
47476When was ever His right hand Over any time or land Stretched as now beneath the sun?
47476When we have bled at every pore, Shall we still strive for gear and store?
47476When, undismayed amid the shock Of war, like Cerro Gordo''s rock, They stood, or rushed more madly on Than tropic tempest o''er San Juan?
47476Whence come they?
47476Whence comes our symbol?
47476Where I have eaten the bread and drunk the wine So many times at our Lord''s Table with you?
47476Where are the foemen?
47476Where be the youths whose glances, the summer Sabbath through, Turned tenderly and timidly unto thy father''s pew?
47476Where breathes the foe but falls before us, With Freedom''s soil beneath our feet, And Freedom''s banner streaming o''er us?
47476Where for words of hope they listened, the long wail of despair?
47476Where is John Gloyd?
47476Where stood they on that morn?
47476Where the far nations looked for light, a blackness in the air?
47476Where''s Boyd?
47476Where''s my barge?
47476Where''s the widow or maid with a mouth to be kist, When Burr comes a- wooing, that long would resist?
47476Which is prouder, they or we, Thinking of Cavité''s lee?
47476Whispered low the dying soldier, pressed her hand and faintly smiled; Was that pitying face his mother''s?
47476Who against these to the floor led on the Lecomptonite legions?
47476Who are you?
47476Who avert the murderous blade?
47476Who bore what we suffered, our wound and our pain,-- Bore them with patience, and dares them again?
47476Who causes thus the thunder The doom of men to speak?
47476Who could Antietam''s wreath foretell?
47476Who could fail with him?
47476Who dare again to say we trace Our lines to a plebeian race?
47476Who from its bed of primal rock First wrenched thy dark, unshapely block?
47476Who had fired the earliest gun?
47476Who has not heard of the deeds she has done?
47476Who holds his life as less than naught when home and honor call, And counts the guerdon full and fair for liberty to fall?
47476Who is dead?
47476Who is losing?
47476Who is the owner?
47476Who is there willing to offer his life?
47476Who is''t must plead our cause?
47476Who led on to the war the anti- Lecomptonite phalanx?
47476Who made the law thet hurts, John,_ Heads I win-- ditto tails_?
47476Who met and tossed her?
47476Who now must heal those wounds, or stop that blood The Heathen made, and drew into a flood?
47476Who reckon of life or limb?
47476Who shall hold that magic key But the child of destiny, In whose veins has mingled long All the best blood of the strong?
47476Who shall not hear, while the brown Mississippi Rushes along from the snow to the sun?
47476Who shall rejoice With a righteous voice, Far- heard through the ages, if not she?
47476Who shall tell?
47476Who speaks?
47476Who speaks?
47476Who speaks?
47476Who speaks?
47476Who speaks?
47476Who speaks?
47476Who told you of the clothes?
47476Who was their comrade, their brave color- bearer?
47476Who were those men-- their leader who?
47476Who will shield the captive knight?
47476Who will shield the fearless heart?
47476Who would not follow a leader whose blood Has swelled, like our own, the battle''s red flood?
47476Who would recommend submission?
47476Who would soothe your pain?
47476Who, undoubting, worship boldness, And, if baffled, bolder rise, Shall we lag when grandeur beckons To this good emprize?
47476Who, who will ride from Walla- Walla, Four thousand miles for Oregon?
47476Whom have we here-- shrouded in martial manner, Crowned with a martyr''s charm?
47476Whose hand, of curious skill untaught, Thy rude and savage outline wrought?
47476Whose hand?
47476Whose voice answers not again?
47476Whose voice?
47476Whose was the right and the wrong?
47476Why caught each man his blade?
47476Why cling to those moth- eaten banners?
47476Why cross the cold blue ocean?
47476Why does the course Of the mill- stream widen?
47476Why does your spectre haunt and hurt this person?
47476Why drag again into the light of day The errors of an age long passed away?"
47476Why echoed every street With tramp of thronging feet-- All flying to the city''s wall?
47476Why leave, strong men, the Fatherland?
47476Why lulls Britannia''s thunder, That waked the wat''ry war?
47476Why not?
47476Why rising by the roadside here, do you the colors greet?
47476Why should I ask?
47476Why should the dreary pall Round him be flung at all?
47476Why should the white invader spare A dusky heathen band?
47476Why should we seek inglorious rest, Or sink, with thoughtless ease oppress''d, While war insults so near?
47476Why start the listeners?
47476Why stays the gallant Guerrière, Whose streamers waved so fair?
47476Why talk so dreffle big, John, Of honor when it meant You did n''t care a fig, John, But jest for_ ten per cent_?
47476Why the hot haste he made?
47476Why wag your head with turban bound, yellow, red and green?
47476Why was I seated by my prince''s side, Honor''d, caress''d like some first peer of Spain?
47476Why waves there no banner My fortress above?"
47476Why, soldiers, why, Should we be melancholy, boys?
47476Why, soldiers, why?
47476Why?
47476Wich of our onnable body''d be safe?"
47476Will it be heaven?
47476Will it be hell?
47476Will nobody answer those women who cry As the awful warnings thunder by?
47476Will nobody speak?
47476Will the swordfish brave the whale, Doubly girt with boom and chain?
47476Will ye give it up to slaves?
47476Will ye look for greener graves?
47476Will ye to your homes retire?
47476Will you condemn me in this house of God, Where I so long have worshipped with you all?
47476Will you condemn me on such evidence,-- You who have known me for so many years?
47476Will you dance with me?"
47476Will you go?
47476Will you take My life away from me, because this girl, Who is distraught, and not in her right mind, Accuses me of things I blush to name?
47476Willing to march to this music of strife,-- Cannon for drum and torpedo for fife?
47476Wilt thou not put the scorn And instant tragic question from thine eyes?
47476Wilt thou, upon whose loving breast Our noblest chiefs are sleeping, Yield thy dead patriots''place of rest To scornful alien keeping?
47476With a loud speaking- trumpet,"Whence came you?"
47476With fear- paled cheeks?
47476With the lessening smoke and thunder, Our glasses around we aim,-- What is that burning yonder?
47476Wo n''t you move an inch or two-- to keep the stars away from him?
47476Women of France, do you see them pass to the battle in the North?
47476Would we?
47476Would ye have them hear to his words-- The words that may spread like fire?
47476Would you ask for my descent?
47476Would you hear more?
47476Wouldst leap ashore, Heart?
47476Wrapt not in Eastern balms, But with thy fleshless palms Stretched, as if asking alms, Why dost thou haunt me?"
47476Wut shall we du?
47476Wut''s the use o''meetin''-goin''Every Sabbath, wet or dry, Ef it''s right to go amowin''Feller- men like oats an''rye?
47476X Who now shall sneer?
47476Yankee Doodle, Doodle, do, Whither are you flying,"A cocked hat we''ve been licked into, And knocked to Hades,"crying?
47476Ye, that vanquish pain and distance, Ye, enmeshing Time with wire, Court ye patiently forever Yon Antarctic ire?
47476Yea, when the sick world cries, how can he sleep?
47476Yet are red heels and long- laced skirts, For stumps and briars meet, sir?
47476Yet when shall we know Another like this of the Alamo?
47476You said all our paper was not worth a penny:(''Tis nothing but rags, quoth honest Will Tryon: Are rags to discourage the sons of the lion?)
47476You who have bound a girth Of new hope round the Earth, Should its firm bond be loosened here, what were your struggle worth?
47476You wonder why we''re hot, John?
47476Your mind what madness fills?
47476Zenobia?
47476[ May 2, 1863]"Who''ve ye got there?"
47476[ September 12, 1759] How stands the glass around?
47476_ Are_ they beaten?
47476_ Maria!_ Star?
47476_ Retreat!_ Was the word e''er more bitterly said, Saint Leger, Saint Leger, Than when to the North- land your leaguer you led?
47476_ What is that a- billowing there Like a thunderhead in air?
47476_ Would the pale- faces find_, he said,_ Where lurks their fiercest foe?
47476_ Would_ the fleet get through?
47476_ Wut_''ll git your dander riz?
47476_ Wut_''ll make ye act like freemen?
47476_"And am I glad I''m home?
47476_"And were the cooties thick?
47476a day for us to sow The soil of new- gained empire with slavery''s seeds of woe?
47476ai nt it terrible?
47476alas, what choice,-- The lust that shameth, the sword that slayeth?
47476an eagle, that treads yon giddy height?
47476and must I lie still, While that drum and that measured trampling Move from me far down the hill?
47476and that you left This woman here, your wife, kneeling alone Upon the hearth?
47476and what are we?
47476and,"What_ will_ his mother do?"
47476are such as ye The guardians of our liberty?
47476are they far or come they near?
47476are they ghosts or men?
47476are ye cravens?"
47476are ye not Likewise the chosen of the Lord, To do His will and speak His word?
47476art thou fled?
47476asked The treaty- makers from the coast; And him the church with questions tasked, And said,"Why did you leave your post?"
47476at last he cried,--"What to me is this noisy ride?
47476can those British tyrants think, Our fathers cross''d the main, And savage foes, and dangers met, To be enslav''d by them?
47476canst thou see?
47476cries the old woman,"and must I comply?
47476did he think we would run?
47476did she watch beside her child?
47476did thy stars On their courses smite his cars; Blast his arm, and wrest his bars From the heaving tide?
47476did you follow me, Armstrong?
47476do I hear again the roar Of the tides by the Indies sweeping down?
47476do the stormers quail?
47476do they thrill, The brave two hundred scars You got in the River- Wars?
47476do you mean to make war with milk and the water of roses?
47476exultantly he saith!-- Did they falter?
47476hast thou seen In all thy travel round the earth Ever a morn of calmer birth?
47476he cried,"Have ye no faith in God?
47476he shouted long and loud; And"Who wants my potatoes?"
47476held Opinion''s wind for Law?
47476how long Shall heaven look on and not take part With the poor old man and his fluttering heart, Tarred and feathered and carried in a cart?
47476how long Shall such a priesthood barter truth away, And in Thy name, for robbery and wrong At Thy own altars pray?
47476how long will he keep us, To see if he quail or no?
47476is it not The holiest spot of all the earth?
47476is it not enough?
47476is it well To leave the gates unguarded?
47476is that church, which lends Strength to the spoiler, thine?
47476is this the nation whose thundering arms were hurled, Through Europe, Afric, India?
47476lay thy poor head on my knee; Dost thou know the lips that kiss thee?
47476must I come on bended knee?
47476my Dawn?
47476no word, my Sparkling- Water?
47476nor like an owl Thus hoot your doleful humors; What fiend possesses you to howl Such crazy, coward rumors?"
47476or coward paleness Whiten the blanch''d cheek?
47476perhaps some friend May ask, incredulous;"and to what good end?
47476preach, and kidnap men?
47476quoth Pitt,"what the devil''s the matter?
47476says he,"what shall we do?
47476shall it open wide?
47476shall teach us to receive The mystic meaning of our peace and strife?
47476shall that sudden blade Leap out no more?
47476she said;"Why dost thou join our ghostly fleet Arrayed in living red?
47476the Sea- Queen''s isle?
47476the signal lifted; rippling through the fleet it ran; Was there ever deadlier venture?
47476then what followed?
47476they dance the Powow dance, What horrid yells the forest fill?
47476they say-- That gallops so wildly Williamsburg way?
47476to his gods swells a desolate call; Hath his grave not been hollowed, and woven his pall, Since they passed o''er the river?
47476was it the night- wind that rustled the leaves?
47476was n''t that a pity?
47476was there ever bolder plan?
47476we said,"That he from whom we hoped so much, is dead, Most foully murdered ere he met the foe?"
47476what is that we hear?
47476what is this?
47476what matters where A true man''s cross may stand, So Heaven be o''er it here as there In pleasant Norman land?
47476what means that sudden clang From the distant town?
47476what shade art thou Of sorrow or of blame Liftest the lyric leafage from her brow, And pointest a slow finger at her shame?
47476what shall I do?
47476what sounds are these that come Sullenly over the Pacific seas,-- Sounds of ignoble battle, striking dumb The season''s half- awakened ecstasies?
47476what to do?
47476what was that, like a human shriek From the winding valley?
47476whence should they ever arise In our hearts, O my children, the while We can remember the past?
47476where is he?
47476who bragged so bold In the sad war''s early day, Did nothing predict you should ever behold The Old Flag come this way?
47476who is winning?
47476who is winning?
47476whom you hold so dear That you do no harm and give no fear, As you tenderly take them by the gorge-- What are you waiting for, tardy George?
47476whose navy ruled a world?
47476would not grow warm When thoughts like these give cheer?
47476would ye die, my jewel?"
7211And what is death? 7211 And what''s that to you?"
7211And who''s your masther?
7211But why do I talk of death, That Phantom of grizzly bone? 7211 Can you?
7211Did n''t I see you give that gentlewoman a leather for four- pence, this blessed minit?
7211Did you, sir, throw up a black crow?
7211From whose, I pray?
7211Have not,says Quintilion,"our hand''s the power of exciting, of restraining, of beseeching, of testifying approbation, admiration, and shame?
7211His? 7211 Huff,"and"kauff;"and, pardonnez- moi, how you call d- o- u- g- h--"duff,"--eh?
7211I say, whose house is that there here?
7211I want a letter, sir, if you plase,said I"And whom do you want it for?"
7211Is it Squire Egan you dare say goose to?
7211Is it where the feathery palm- trees rise, And the date grows ripe under sunny skies? 7211 Kauff,"eh?
7211Now who be ye, would cross Lochgyle, This dark and stormy water?
7211O Squire Egan''s your masther?
7211Plow"doe"kauff;and one more r- o- u- g- h--what you call General Taylor,--"Rauff and Ready?"
7211Ruff,ha?
7211Sir, did you tell?
7211Then, sir, I fancy, if you please to try These in my hand will better suit your eye?
7211What consarn is that of yours?
7211What price was Ellsworth''s, young and brave? 7211 What reward have I then, for all my labor?"
7211What sort of eyes can you have got?
7211What''s your boy''s name, good wife, And in what good ship sailed he?
7211What''ud I pay''levenpence for?
7211What, he again? 7211 Where is my cabin- door, fast by the wild wood?
7211Where may I find him?
7211Who do you want it for?
7211Who gave you the directions?
7211Who rules the Duke? 7211 Who rules the king?
7211Why is that man expiring?
7211Why wait we longer, mocked, betrayed, By open foes, or those afraid To speed thy coming through my aid? 7211 Why you stupid rascal,"said he,"if you do n''t tell me his name, how can I give you his leather?"
7211Yes,says I;"Have you anything to say agin it?"
7211( Are those torn clothes his best?)
7211-- What would''st thou think of him who thus could drive thy comrade from the door?
7211--"And pray, sir, what was''t?"
7211--"I do n''t know what it is,"Replied his friend.--"No?
7211--"Well come, sir, if you please, Here is another sort; we''ll e''en try these; Still somewhat more they magnify the letter, Now, sir?"
7211--"what is he gone?
7211--Nay, ruler of the rebel deep, What matters wind or wave?
7211--Who says this?
7211A wife, sir, did you say?
7211AM I FOR PEACE?
7211Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword?
7211Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword?
7211Abhor the sword-- stigmatize the sword?
7211About my own boy John?
7211Ah oui; I understand, it is"dauff,"--eh?
7211All this?
7211Ambition?
7211An American no longer?
7211And I ask, What good does anything do?
7211And are gentlemen insensible to their deeds, to the value of them in animating the country in the hour of peril hereafter?
7211And are we prepared to barter these hopes, this sublime moral empire, for conquests by force?
7211And by what definition do you award the name to the creator of an epic, and deny it to the creator of a country?
7211And can he bear, think you, can he bear the sympathizing agonies of a distressed wife?
7211And do we owe all this to the kind succor of the mother- country?
7211And does not Fame speak of me, too?
7211And even if we condescend so far, still can we be justified in taking them, unless we have clear proof that they are criminals?
7211And for what?
7211And hopest thou hence unscathed to go?
7211And how have their fortunes and their power increased, but as the commonwealth has been ruined and impoverished?
7211And how?
7211And if we conquer, what is our policy?
7211And is it possible that neither of these causes, that not all combined, were able to blast this bud of lope?
7211And is the old flag flying still That o''er your fathers flew, With bands of white and rosy light, And field of starry blue?
7211And is there any part of your conduct in which you are, or wish to be, without law to God, and not under the law of Jesus Christ?
7211And is there, amidst this universal wreck, nothing stable, nothing abiding, notating immortal, on which poor, frail, dying man can fasten?
7211And is this all that remains of him?--During a life so transitory, what lasting monument then can our fondest hopes erect?
7211And is this the way, sir, that you are to show yourselves the advocates of order?
7211And murder sullies in Heaven''s sight The sword he draws:-- What can alone ennoble fight?
7211And must I never see thee more, My pretty, pretty, pretty lad?
7211And now what would he do, what would he be if he were here to- day?
7211And now, may I make so bold as to ask whose name I shall enter in my books?
7211And now, my good sir, what may your trouble be?
7211And pray, sir, what in the world is equal to it?
7211And shall we, sir, the pride of our age, the terror of Europe, submit to this humiliating sacrifice of our honor?
7211And since we must fight it through, why not put ourselves in a state to enjoy all the benefits of victory if we gain the victory?
7211And so you ran off, did you?
7211And so you turned sailor to get there?
7211And the thing the farmer uses, how you call him, p- l- o- u- g- h,--"pluff,"is it?
7211And they who founded, in our land, The power that rules from sea to sea, Bled they in vain, or vainly planned To leave their country great and free?
7211And thus the question which had been so often asked, Will the negroes fight?
7211And we who wear thy glorious name, Shall we, like cravens, stand apart, When those whom thou hast trusted, aim The death- blow at thy generous heart?
7211And what does this allusion to the slow coach mean?
7211And what good does that do?
7211And what have we to oppose to them?--Shall we try argument?
7211And what is a conqueror?
7211And what is our country?
7211And what is religion?
7211And what is the amount of this debt?
7211And what is the nature of the times in which we live?
7211And what man, seeing this, And having human feelings, does not blush, And hang his head, to think himself a man?
7211And what were the women of the United States in the struggle of the Revolution?
7211And what would be its termination?
7211And what''s in prayer, but this twofold force,-- To be forestalled, ere we come to fall, Or pardoned being down?
7211And what?
7211And where are the foes who so vauntingly swore That the havoc of war and the battle''s confusion, A home and a country should leave us no more?
7211And where are ye to- day?
7211And where are ye, O fearless men?
7211And where did this seemingly great power go for its support and refuge?
7211And where is the bosom- friend, dearer than all?
7211And who commanded,--and the silence came,--"Here let the billows stiffen, and have rest"?
7211And who, I pray, is to judge of their necessity?
7211And why should I speak low, sailor?
7211And why?
7211And will you preach insurrection to men like these?
7211And will you?
7211And yet, of those lost words is not our whole America one immortal record and reporter?
7211And, if the war must go on, why put off longer the Declaration of Independence?
7211And, sir, is that spirit to be charged here, in this hall where we are sitting, as being"discreditable"to our country''s name?
7211Are despots alone to be reproached for unfeeling indifference to the tears and blood of their subjects?
7211Are men fed with chaff and husks?
7211Are not the streets better paved, houses repaired and beautified?"
7211Are republicans irresponsible?
7211Are they dead that yet act?
7211Are they dead that yet move upon society, and inspire the people with nobler motives and more heroic patriotism?
7211Are they dead that yet speak louder than we can speak, and a more universal language?
7211Are they dead, too?
7211Are they not intended for disorganization in our very midst?
7211Are they not intended to animate our enemies?
7211Are they not intended to destroy our zeal?
7211Are they not intended to dull our weapons?
7211Are we in peace?
7211Are we in war, or under a necessity, as at this time, to enter into a war?
7211Are we not yet revenged?"
7211Are we proposing to disturb it?
7211Are we to resort to the sword when we get defeated at the ballot- box?
7211Are we, then, so much alike?
7211Are women to have no opinions or actions on subjects relating to the general welfare?
7211Are you a native, sir?
7211Are you girded for the fight?
7211Are you good men and true?
7211Are you more stubborn- hard than hammered iron?
7211Are you really prepared to determine, but not to hear, the mighty cause, upon which a Nation''s hopes and fears hang?
7211Are you sick, Hubert?
7211Are your vigilance, your police your common powers of observation, to be extinguished by putting an end to the horrors of war?
7211Arrah, sir, why would I let you be chated, when he was selling them before my face for four- pence a- piece?
7211Ashamed of these tokens and titles, and envious of the flaunting robes of imbecile idleness and vanity?
7211Ashamed to toil, art thou?
7211Ask Him, if your knotted scourges, Matches, blood- extorting screws, Are the means that duty urges Agents of His will to use?
7211Be we men, And suffer such dishonor?--men, and wash not The stain away in blood?
7211Bernard,"quoth Alphonso,"What means this warlike guise?
7211Bought it?
7211Bright jewels of the mine?
7211But I did not call him to order, why?
7211But I have had vat you call e- n- o- u- g- h,--ha?
7211But I would ask, does the recollection of Bunker''s Hill, Saratoga, and Yorktown, afford no pleasure?
7211But if he bar New England out in the cold, what then?
7211But is such to be the fate of Massachusetts,--of New England?
7211But shall you escape the common fate of the instrument of evil?
7211But strew his ashes to the wind Whose sword or voice has served mankind-- And is he dead, whose glorious mind Lifts thine on high?
7211But take the subject in the other way; take it on the grounds stated by the right honorable gentleman over the way, and how does it stand?
7211But the question is asked, Shall we vote money for this purpose?
7211But the right to take ten pounds, implies the right to take a thousand; and what must be the wealth that avarice, aided by power, can not exhaust?
7211But to him, mouldering in his narrow and humble habitation, what are they?
7211But what from traitor''s blood should spring, Save traitor like to thee?
7211But what had we done?
7211But what is politics?
7211But what is this good for?
7211But what need that I exhort you?
7211But what will all their efforts avail?
7211But when shall we be stronger?
7211But where are they?
7211But who are they that our dastardly enemies thus despise?--the consuls, or you, Romans?
7211But will his country receive him?
7211But you take a little more punch after that?
7211But, considered simply as an intellectual production, who will compare the poems of Homer with the Holy Scriptures of the Old and New Testaments?
7211By allowing it to continue even for one hour, do not my right honorable friends weaken-- do they not desert their own arguments of its injustice?
7211By that sin fell the angels: how can man, then, The image of his Maker, hope to win by''t?
7211Ca n''t you be cool like me?
7211Call you that chivalry?
7211Can gentlemen assign any other possible motive for it?
7211Can he endure the formidable presence of scrutinizing, sneering domestics?
7211Can it be that America, under such circumstances, can betray herself?
7211Can it be that she is to be added to the catalogue of republics, the inscription upon whose ruins is: THEY WERE, BUT THEY ARE NOT?
7211Can ministers still presume to expect support in their infatuation?
7211Can not this state of probation be as well undergone without adding to the catalogue of human sufferings?
7211Can parliament be so dead to its dignity and duty, as to give their support to measures thus obtruded and forced upon them?
7211Can sin, can death your worlds obscure?
7211Can they take it upon them to say, that an Indian peace, under these circumstances, will prove firm?
7211Can we cast our votes with their view, and against our own?
7211Can you not come another day?"
7211Can you persuade yourselves that political men and measures are to undergo no review in the judgment to come?
7211Can you say nothing else but money, money, money?
7211Can you, sir, lightly contemplate these consequences?
7211Compassion!--What compassion?
7211Cut off from all hope of royal clemency what are you, what can you be, while the power of England remains, but outlaws?
7211Did I say, better?
7211Did Rolla ever counsel dishonor to his friend?
7211Did he break your head, then?
7211Did it remain their long?
7211Did n''t you pay what he asked?
7211Did not great Julius bleed for justice''sake?
7211Did the battle of Thermopylà ¦ preserve Greece but once?
7211Did the gentleman never hear of the deed of Jael, who slew the dreaded enemy of her country?
7211Did they bring"discredit"on their sex by mingling in politics?
7211Did they never get beaten before?
7211Did you arrive there safely?
7211Did you never hear of Demosthenes, sir, the Athenian orator?
7211Did you say nothing of a crow at all?"
7211Did you take them?
7211Do I love them?
7211Do not men toil?
7211Do the men of England care not, mother, The great men and the high, For the suffering sons of Erin''s isle, Whether they live or die?
7211Do they not, in pointing out places and persons, discharge the duty of adverbs and pronouns?
7211Do we mean to submit to the measures of Parliament, Boston Port Bill and all?
7211Do we mean to submit, and consent that we ourselves shall be ground to powder, and our Country and its rights trodden down in the dust?
7211Do we want a cause, my Lords?
7211Do we want a proof and illustration of all this?
7211Do we want a tribunal?
7211Do ye fear him?
7211Do ye not know his companions?
7211Do ye not know his whole house-- insolent-- impure-- gamesters-- drunkards?
7211Do ye not know this Antony?
7211Do ye not read them, deep cut, defying the tooth of time, on all the marble of our greatness?
7211Do you belong to this house, friend?
7211Do you confess so much?
7211Do you know where Marblehead is?
7211Do you like my voice, James?
7211Do you remind me that we did not return your escaped slaves?
7211Do you reply that in many instances they have violated this compact, and have not been faithful to their engagements?
7211Do you suppose he plans for an imaginary line to divide South Carolina from New York and Massachusetts?
7211Do you think I''ll take a fee for telling you what you know as well as myself?
7211Do you think I''m a fool?"
7211Do you think it wise or humane at this moment to insult them, by sticking up in a pillory the man who dared to stand forth as their advocate?
7211Do you think that single point worth the sacrifice of everything else?
7211Do you think that the benefit they receive should be poisoned by the stings of vengeance?
7211Do you think those yells will be forgotten?
7211Do you want a criminal, my Lords?
7211Does a railroad or canal do good?
7211Does any one ask for the signs of this approaching era?
7211Does anything do any good?
7211Does he not feel that it is as honorable to owe it to these, as to being the accident of an accident?
7211Does he not remember Cornelia, the mother of the Gracchi, who declared that her children were her jewels?
7211Does the honorable gentleman rely on the report of the House of Lords for the foundation of his assertion?
7211Does your resolution fail you for this?
7211Dost thou love thy wife and children?
7211Dr. Ay; pray, sir, are you a glutton?
7211Dr. Do you eat no honey, or jelly, or jam, at breakfast?
7211Dr. Do you take any wine during dinner?
7211Dr. Not above twice a week?
7211Dr. Of course you sleep well and have a good appetite?
7211Dr. Then, perhaps, you are a drunkard?
7211Dr. You are from the West country, I should suppose, sir?
7211Dr. You take a glass of ale and porter with your cheese?
7211Else why so swell the thoughts at your Aspect above?
7211Fear ye foes who kill for hire?
7211First, who think you the most desartless man to be constable?
7211For what is the significance of this prayer?
7211For whither shall he go?
7211From what did it separate his province?
7211Gentlemen, is the happiness of a sensitive and confiding female to be trifled away by such shallow artifices as these?
7211Gentlemen, what does this mean?
7211Give up the Union?
7211Gleams not an eye?
7211HOW''S MY BOY?
7211Had she a brother?
7211Had she a sister?
7211Had you rather CÃ ¦ sar were living, and die all slaves; than that CÃ ¦ sar were dead, to live all freemen?
7211Has Great Britain any enemy in this quarter of the world, to call for all this accumulation of navies and armies?
7211Has He bid you buy and sell us, Speaking from His throne, the sky?
7211Has earth a clod Its Maker meant not should be trod By man, the image of his God, Erect and free, Unscourged by Superstition''s rod To bow the knee?
7211Has he completely done?
7211Has he forgotten Esther, who, by her petition saved her people and her country?
7211Has he forgotten the Spartan mother, who said to her son, when going out to battle,"My son, come back to me with thy shield, or upon thy shield?"
7211Has it not here begun the master- work of man, the creation of a national life?
7211Has it not, in general, contributed to the administering of that government wisely and well since?
7211Has the gentleman done?
7211Has the human race gone mad?
7211Hast thou a charm to stay the morning star In his steep course?
7211Hast thou children?
7211Hast thou, my child, forgot, ere this, A mother''s face, a mother''s tongue?
7211Hath Cassius lived To be but mirth and laughter to his Brutus, When grief and blood ill- tempered, vexeth him?
7211Have any alarms been occasioned by the emancipation of our Catholic brethren?
7211Have not some of these upstarts built private houses and seats, vying with the most sumptuous of our public palaces?
7211Have the principles on which you ground the reproach upon cabinets and kings no practical influence, no binding force?
7211Have we anything new to offer on the subject?
7211Have we disturbed it?
7211Have we gained nothing by the war?
7211Have we suffered a defeat at Blenheim?
7211Have you anything here to repair these damages?
7211Have you considered the resistance, the difficulty, the danger of the attempt?
7211Have you counted up the cost?
7211Have you guarded well the coast?
7211Have you marked and trenched the ground, Where the din of arms must sound, Ere the victor can be crowned?
7211Have you marshalled all your host?
7211Have you not love enough to bear with me, When that rash humor, which my mother gave me, Makes me forgetful?
7211Have you not marked how the human heart bowed to the supremacy of his power, in the undissembled homage of deferential horror?
7211Have you not marked when he entered, how the stormy wave of the multitude retired at his approach?
7211Have you the heart?
7211He has paid his health, his conscience, his liberty for it; and will you envy him his bargain?
7211He hath brought many captives home to Rome, Whose ransoms did the general coffers fill: Did this in CÃ ¦ sar, seem ambitious?
7211He will tell you, did I say?
7211Hear ye yon lion roaring in his den?
7211Hem!--if it''s not an impertinent question, may I ask which way you are travelling?
7211Hope ye mercy still?
7211How came he to die?
7211How came he to the brink of that river?
7211How came this change to pass?
7211How can fleeting words of human praise gild the record of their glory?
7211How can we eat what is not eatable?
7211How could I look to you, mother, How could I look to you, For bread to give to your starving boy, When you were starving too?
7211How could my father sell that which the Great Spirit sent me into the world to live upon?
7211How dare you breathe that air which wafted to the ear of Heaven the groans of those who fell a sacrifice to your accursed ambition?
7211How dared he cross it?
7211How do things go on at home?
7211How from Rebellion''s broken reed We saw his emblem fall, As soon his cursà © d poison- weed Shall drop from Sumter''s wall?
7211How have they deserved it?
7211How have you passed your life?
7211How is each of tile thirty States to defend itself?
7211How long Will he live thus?
7211How long was it before his empire was a dream, his dynasty extinguished in blood, and an enemy on his throne?
7211How many of the richest are reduced, by disease, to a worse condition than this?
7211How shall I define it?
7211How shall I find words to describe its momentous magnificence and its beatific lustre?
7211How shall it be separated?
7211How sinned against you?
7211How so?
7211How the black war- ships came And turned the Beaufort roses''bloom To redder wreaths of flame?
7211How weigh the gift that Lyon gave, Or count the cost of Winthrop''s grave?
7211How will she pay for it?
7211How''s my boy-- my boy?
7211How''s my boy-- my boy?
7211How''s my boy-- my boy?
7211How''s my boy-- my boy?
7211How''s my boy-- my boy?
7211How, if he will not stand?
7211How, if they will not?
7211I am asked, What good will the monument do?
7211I am met with the great objection, What good will the Monument do?
7211I an itching palm?
7211I ask gentlemen, sir, what means this martial array if its purpose be not to force us to submission?
7211I ask why not"traitor,"unqualified by any epithet?
7211I ca n''t approve this hawid waw;-- Why do n''t the parties compromise?
7211I do n''t approve this hawid waw; Those dweadful bannahs hawt my eyes; And guns and drums are such a baw-- Why do n''t the pawties compwamise?
7211I drink a good deal of beer Dr. What quantity of port do you drink?
7211I durst not?
7211I have a bad"cuff,"--eh?
7211I have always insisted that the people of the Northern States were in no manner responsible for slavery in the Southern states; and why?
7211I have likewise sent for a barber, Old F. What, is he to teach you to shave close?
7211I knew the voice of Peace,--"Is there no respite?--no release?-- When shall the hopeless quarrel cease?
7211I must be brief, lest resolution drop Out at mine eyes, in tender womanish tears.-- Can you not read it?
7211I pause for a reply,--- None?
7211I pity the dumb victim at the altar-- But does the robed priest for his pity falter?
7211I thought ten thousand swords must have leaped from their scabbards to avenge even a look that threatened her with insult?
7211I trust it is neither too presumptuous nor too late to ask, Can you put the dearest interest of society at risk, without guilt and without remorse?
7211I''d rack thee, though I knew A thousand lives were perishing in thine-- What were ten thousand to a fame like mine?
7211I''m not their mother-- How''s my boy-- my boy?
7211I''ve dared him oft, before the Paynim spear; Think ye he''s entered at my gate-- has come to seek me here?
7211I-- the child of rank and wealth,-- Am I the wretch who clanks this chain, Bereft of freedom, friends, and health?
7211If I should leave the land of my fathers, whither shall I fly?
7211If I withdraw the charge, will then Your ramrod do the same?"
7211If not-- what matters?
7211If on the ground of injustice it ought to be abolished at last, why ought it not now?
7211If we know him to be a thief, shall we not lay hands on him?
7211If we postpone independence, do we mean to carry on, or to give up, the war?
7211If, sir, freedom of speech is not to remain to us, what is the government worth?
7211In peace, her sails fleck all the seas; Her mills shake every river; And where are scenes so fair as these God and her true hands give her?
7211In the West country it is impossible, I hear to dine without punch?
7211In the name of the immortal gods, what is it, Romans, you would have?
7211In view of our moral, social, and political responsibilities, can we do this?
7211In war, her claim who seek to rob?
7211In what code of honor did you get your authority for that?
7211In what do the struggles in which England has heretofore sympathized, differ from that which is now convulsing America?
7211Inform me, friend, is Alonzo, the Peruvian, confined in this dungeon?
7211Is Sparta dead?
7211Is character valuable?
7211Is his heart still?
7211Is it come to this?
7211Is it dangerous for nations to live in amity with each other?
7211Is it fanaticism for her to believe as your Madison believed, that"slavery is a dreadful calamity?"
7211Is it fanaticism for her to believe with your Henry Clay, that"slavery is a wrong, a grievous wrong, and no contingency can make it right?"
7211Is it humanity?
7211Is it law?
7211Is it my fault that I was Geffrey''s son?
7211Is it not an obligation to the service of God, founded on his authority, and extending to all our relations, personal and social?
7211Is it not fair writ?
7211Is it not so?
7211Is it not the acknowledgment of a wish and object to create political strength, by uniting political opinions geographically?
7211Is it not the science and the exercise of civil rights and civil duties?
7211Is it that insidious smile with which our petition has been lately received?
7211Is it thus we are to understand you?"
7211Is it worth anything?
7211Is knowledge the pearl of price in your estimation?
7211Is life so dear, or peace so sweet as to be purchased at the price of chains and slavery?
7211Is man possessed of talents adequate to the great occasion?
7211Is mere animal life-- feeding, working, and sleeping like an ox-- entitled to be called good?
7211Is mere wealth, as an ultimate end,--gold and silver, without an inquiry as to their use,--are these a good?
7211Is not our own history one witness and one record of what it can do?
7211Is not the city enlarged?
7211Is not this the very essence of local feeling and local regard?
7211Is peace a rash system?
7211Is splendid folly the measure of its inspiration?
7211Is that all they did to you?
7211Is the mischief in you?
7211Is the old Grecian spirit frozen in your veins, that ye do crouch and cower like base- born slaves, beneath your master''s lash?
7211Is there a man who could not desire a participation in the national glory acquired by the war?
7211Is there a right of secession in the separate States, singly or collectively, other than the right of revolution?
7211Is there any good in this, stopping here?
7211Is there no hand on high to shield the brave?
7211Is there no remedy?
7211Is there still the chill of winter and the gloom of night over thee, Fatherland?
7211Is there, as ye sometimes tell us, Is there One who reigns on high?
7211Is this Union a Commonwealth, a State, or is it merely a confederacy or a copartnership?
7211Is this a dagger, which I see before me, The handle toward my hand?
7211Is this fancy, or is it fact?
7211Is this reason?
7211Is this the Flower of Liberty?
7211Is this the part of wise men, engaged in the great and arduous struggle for liberty?
7211Is this visionary?
7211Is this your promise?
7211Is this, then, a time to remove the foundations, when the earth itself is shaken?
7211Is wisdom its base and summit?--that which it recedes from, or tends toward?
7211Is''t Yon churchyard''s bowers?
7211Is''t death to fall for freedom''s right?
7211Is''t possible?
7211John saw Versailles from Marlà ©''s height, And cried, astonished at the sight,"Whose fine estate is that there here?"
7211Let it then be built up again; here, if anywhere, on these shores of a new world, of a new civilization But how, I may be asked, is it broken down?
7211Lives there a man who has confidence enough to deny it?
7211Loop up her tresses Escaped from the comb, Her fair auburn tresses; While wonderment guesses Where was her home?
7211March off from what?
7211March off from whom?
7211May I thy peril share?
7211May it please your highness To hear me speak his good now?
7211May one be pardoned, and retain the offence?
7211Moves not a hand?
7211Mr. H. After what?
7211Mr. H. And why were they over- worked, pray?
7211Mr. H. Did he, faith?
7211Mr. H. Heard of what?
7211Mr. H. How came he to get so much horse- flesh?
7211Mr. H. My father gone too?
7211Must I budge?
7211Must I endure all this?
7211Must I give way and room to your rash choler?
7211Must I observe you?
7211Must I stand and crouch Under your testy humor?
7211Must the feet of slaves Pollute this glorious scene?
7211Must you with hot irons burn out both mine eyes?
7211My Lords, is it a prosecutor you want?
7211My Lords, the Commons will share in every fate with yon?
7211My Lords, what is it that we want here to a great act of national justice?
7211My boy John-- He that went to sea-- What care I for the ship, sailor?
7211My labor never flags; And what are its wages?
7211My wife, sir?
7211Next tripping came a courtly fair, John cried, enchanted with her air,"What lovely wench is that there here?"
7211No treason was in Sancho''s blood-- No stain in mine doth lie: Below the throne what knight will own The coward calumny?
7211No?
7211No?
7211None ever bore a lovelier child: And art thou now forever gone?
7211Now, sir, what human stomach can stand this?
7211Now, sir, what was the conduct of your own allies to Poland?
7211Now, sir, why can not we have peace, I ask, upon the compromise measures of 1850?
7211Now, when shall come peace?
7211O cruel fate, wilt thou never replace me In a mansion of peace, where no perils can chase me?
7211O landsman, art thou false or true?
7211O, that she knew she were!-- She speaks, yet she says nothing: what of that?
7211O, where treads the foot that would falter for thee?
7211Of England who, with disinterested ardor, fought the battle of the Greeks against the Turks?
7211Of England, who has so often raised her voice on behalf of bleeding, crusaded, denationalized Poland?
7211Of cawce, the twoilet has its chawms; But why must all the vulgah crowd Pawsist in spawting uniforms In cullaws so extremely loud?
7211Of what was your lading composed?
7211Old F. How much had I to pay the cooper, the other day, for barreling you up in a large tub, when you resolved to live like Diogenes?
7211Old F. What reputation, what honor, what profit can accrue to you from such conduct as yours?
7211Old F. What, do you mean to read by the foot?
7211Old F. Will you listen, and be silent?
7211On the side of two hundred and fifty thousand traitors and tyrants, or on the side of four millions of slaves?
7211Or brighten your lives with its glory?-- Our women-- O say, shall they shriek in despair, Or embrace us from conquest, with wreaths in their hair?
7211Or the hands to be folded, till triumph is won And the eagle looks proud, as of old, to the sun?
7211Or was there a dearer one Still, and a nearer one Yet, than all other?
7211Or would he conduct this war so feebly that the whole world would smile at us in derision?
7211Or, What good love may I perform for you?
7211Or, are one million of subjects stronger than three millions?
7211Or, as the law says, how can we think what is not thinkable?
7211Or, do you wish to prepare them for the revocation of these improvident concessions?
7211Or, has the stability of the government, or has that of the country been weakened?
7211Or, how can we drink what is not drinkable?
7211Out of this warlike conflict, when shall come peace?
7211Pardon me; this sounds like a dark dream, like the offspring of a hypochondriac imagination; and yet-- have I been unjust in what I have said?
7211Peace, in such a crisis-- the cry of our opponents-- how is it to be attained?
7211Pray let me ask you Can you read at all?"
7211Pray, sir, who is the lady?
7211R- o- u- g- h is"ruff,"and b- o- u- g- h is"buff,"--ha?
7211Roll-- roll!--"Brothers, what do ye here, Slowly and sadly as ye pass along, With your dull march and low funereal song?"
7211Roll-- roll!--"What is it that ye beat?"
7211Rome, republican Rome, whose eagles glanced in the rising and setting sun,--where and what is she?
7211SHALL CALIFORNIA BE RECEIVED?
7211Say, pilot, what this fort may be, Whose sentinels look down From moated wails that show the sea Their deep embrasures''frown?
7211Shall I be frighted when a madman stares?
7211Shall I be paid with counters?
7211Shall I go to the south, and dwell among the graves of the Pequots?
7211Shall a son of yours ever sit upon the throne?
7211Shall he betake himself to the fireside?
7211Shall he dedicate himself to the service of his country?
7211Shall not rather some monster of your blood efface the memory of your virtues, and make Rome, in bitterness of soul, curse the Flavian name?
7211Shall private men respect the boundaries of private property, and shall a man pay no respect to the boundaries of his country''s rights?
7211Shall the American people, then, be divided?
7211Shall the children of the men of Marathon become slaves of Philip?
7211Shall the majesty of the Senate and people of Rome stoop to wear the chains forging by the military executors of the will of Julius CÃ ¦ sar?
7211Shall these once slaves but now freemen be remanded back to bondage?
7211Shall traitors lay that greatness low?
7211Shall we gather strength by irresolution and inaction?
7211Shall we not count the days and hours that are suffered to intervene, and to delay the accomplishment of such a work?
7211Shall we resort to entreaty and humble supplication?
7211Shall we send a flag of truce?
7211Shall we, then, delay to repair these injuries, and to begin rendering justice to Africa?
7211Shall you see a peaceful old age?
7211Should I have answered Caius Cassius so?
7211Sir A. Ay, a wife-- why did I not mention her before?
7211Sir, are they not words of brilliant, polished treason, even in the very Capitol of the Confederacy?
7211Sir, does he suppose it in his power to exhibit a Carolina name so bright as to produce envy in my bosom?
7211Sir, what are the remedies that are proposed for the present condition of things, and what have they been from the beginning?
7211Sir,--How comes this Junius to have broken through the cobwebs of the law, and to range uncontrolled, unpunished, through the land?
7211Sisters and sire, did ye weep for its fall?
7211So soon art thou, like us, brought low?"
7211Soldier, hast thou a wife?
7211Soldier, imagine thou wert doomed to die a cruel death, in a strange land,--what would be thy last request?
7211Some have sneeringly asked,"Are the Americans too poor to pay a few pounds on stamped paper?"
7211Standeth each man at his post?
7211Steward, How are you, my old boy?
7211Still in thought as free as ever, What are England''s rights, I ask, Me from my delights to sever, Me to torture, me to task?
7211Still, what are you, but a robber-- a base dishonest robber?
7211Suppose ye that the loyal people of this country will submit to such injustice?
7211Tell me, politician, how long did this shadow of a colony, on which your conventions and treaties had not smiled, languish on the distant coast?
7211Tell me, ye who make your pious pilgrimage to the shades of Vernon, is Washington indeed shut up in that cold and narrow house?
7211Tell me, ye who tread the sods of yon sacred height, is Warren dead?
7211Tell me, you traitors, Davis, Pickens, Stephens, and Floyd?
7211That''s hallowed ground-- where mourned and missed, The lips repose our love has kissed;-- But where''s their memory''s mansion?
7211The Egyptian smote her; and who now sits on the throne of the Ptolemies?
7211The Syrian smote her; the smiter died in agonies of remorse; and where is his kingdom now?
7211The age that gloried in thy birth, Shall it behold thee overthrown?
7211The blows of the boldest will carry the day,-- Who''s ready?
7211The breakers roar,--how bears the shore?
7211The clause which does away with trial by jury,--what, in the name of Heaven is it, if it is not the establishment of a revolutionary tribunal?
7211The glory acquired by our gallant tars on the sea, by our Jacksons and our Browns on the land is that nothing?
7211The hunters and their families?
7211The question is, Are we to be stricken down by those who, when they can no longer govern, threaten to destroy?
7211The question is, What will satisfy them?
7211The question now arises, How is he to be guided in the right use of his powers of speech in the delivery of a given piece?
7211The sachems and the tribes?
7211The voice, the glance, the heart I sought,--give answer, where are they?
7211The wealth of seas, the spoils of war?
7211Then I''ll look up; My fault is past.--But, O, what form of prayer Can serve my turn?
7211Then pray, sir, what will you have?
7211Then what is man?
7211Then what reason have they?
7211There came a man into his shop one day--"Are you the spectacle contriver, pray?"
7211There were men with hoary hair Amidst that Pilgrim band; Why have they come to wither there, Away from their childhood''s land?
7211These speeches of his, sown broadcast over the land-- what clear, distinct meaning have they?
7211They are already designating the next victim: must we wait until he has fallen?
7211They are forcing slavery upon the Territories: must we wait until they have succeeded?
7211They ceased to live for ideas, and where are they now?
7211They have added Slave States by a coup d''Ã © tat: shall we wait until they have added Cuba and Mexico?
7211They have violated one solemn compact: how many more must they break before we assert our right?
7211Think ye to fly your fate?
7211This day and all which it stands for,--did it not give us these?
7211This day-- shall ye blush for its story?
7211This, you say, is your every day life; but, upon great occasions, you perhaps exceed a little?
7211Thou choicest gift of Heaven, and wanting which Life is as nothing; hast thou then forgot Thy native home?
7211Thy shores are empires, changed in all save thee-- Assyria, Greece, Rome, Carthage, what are they?
7211To be slaves to such as he, to such as these, were it not the fullest measure of misery conjoined with the fullest measure of disgrace?
7211To go from sacred history to profane, does the gentleman there find it"discreditable"for women to take any interest or any part in political affairs?
7211To incantations dost thou trust, And pompous rites in domes august?
7211To look through plate- glass windows, and pity the brown soldiers,--or sneer at the black ones?
7211To put gilt bands on coachmen''s hats?
7211To sweep the foul sidewalks with the heaviest silks which the toiling artisans of France can send us?
7211To the question,"What have the People ever gained but by Revolution?"
7211To what are we to impute these disorders, and to what cause assign the decay of a State so powerful and flourishing in past times?
7211Try what repentance can: what can it not?
7211Très bien,"huff;"and snuff you spell s- n- o- u- p- h?
7211Up from the ground he sprang and gazed,--but who could paint that gaze?
7211Vat you call H- o- u- g- h,--eh?
7211WHO''S READY?
7211Was he?
7211Was it the winter''s storm, beating upon the houseless heads of women and children?
7211Was it to be rich that you grew pale over the midnight lamp, and distilled the sweetness from the Greek and Roman springs?
7211Was it, then, to raise a fortune, that you consumed the sprightly hours of youth in study and retirement?
7211Was that country a desert?
7211Was that done like Cassius?
7211Was there a man dismayed?
7211Was there ever a bolder captain of a more valiant band?
7211Was there ever a greater appearance of prosperity?
7211Was this ambition?
7211We are asked, what have we gained by the war?
7211We have grown rich for what?
7211We have no slaves at home-- then why abroad?
7211Well, Andy, you went to the postoffice, as I ordered you?
7211Well, how did you save my honor, Andy?
7211Well, sir; but how many will there be at table?
7211Well, what did you find?
7211Well, you told him then, did you?
7211Were he a member of this House, what might not be expected from his knowledge, his firmness, and integrity?
7211Were it otherwise, how could millions find it in their lawgiver, friend, and prophet?
7211Were they devoted exclusively to the duties and enjoyments of the fireside?
7211Were you brought up in this place, sir?
7211What States are to secede?
7211What act has been omitted or been done?
7211What am I to be?
7211What answer will you return to this appeal?
7211What are these but the sister families of one greater, better, holier family,--our country?
7211What breaks the heart of the drunkard''s wife?
7211What care I for the men, sailor?
7211What cause, what excuse do disunionists give us for breaking up the best government on which the sun of heaven ever shed its rays?
7211What clogs my heavy breath?
7211What considerate man can enter a school and not reflect with awe, that it is a seminary where immortal minds are training for eternity?
7211What desperate valor climbed the steeps and filled the moats at Badajos?
7211What did your captain do?
7211What do I mean by national glory?
7211What do I say?
7211What do we understand to have been the conduct of this magnanimous hero, with whom, it seems, Bonaparte is not to be compared?
7211What does Mr. Jefferson Davis plan?
7211What evidence do they present of this?
7211What extended Rome, the heart of banditti, into universal empire?
7211What fairer prospect of success could be presented?
7211What fear we then?
7211What flower is this that greets the morn, Its hues from heaven so freshly born?
7211What fold is this the sweet winds kiss, Fair- striped and many- starred, Whose shadow palls these orphaned walls, The twins of Beauregard?
7211What good can passion do?
7211What good cause have they now that has not existed under every administration?
7211What good would that do?
7211What had we done?
7211What had we of the North usurped that belonged to you?
7211What hallows ground where heroes sleep?
7211What has poor Ireland done, mother, What has poor Ireland done, That the world looks on, and sees us starve, Perishing, one by one?
7211What have I done of which you can complain?
7211What have we done?
7211What hill is that, yonder?
7211What if her eyes were there, they in her head?
7211What if this cursà © d hand Were thicker than itself with brother''s blood; Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow?
7211What interest of the South has been invaded?
7211What is gained and what is lost, When the foe your lines have crost?
7211What is genius?
7211What is good?
7211What is it that gentlemen wish?
7211What is it then to hold the Christian world, and that for centuries?
7211What is it to him but a wide- spread prospect of suffering, anguish and death?
7211What is our present situation?
7211What is that glorious recollection, which thrills through his frame and suffuses his eyes?
7211What is the contest in Virginia now?
7211What is then the difference, but that as you were born a king, and I a private man, you have been able to become a mightier robber than I?
7211What is this wondrous world of his residence?
7211What is to be his fate?
7211What is to become of the army?
7211What is to become of the navy?
7211What is to become of the public lands?
7211What is to remain American?
7211What is your present situation there?
7211What justice has been denied?
7211What kind of a dinner do you make?
7211What marvel is it, then, that gentlemen opposite should deal in such vehement protestations?
7211What matters it, that a man be poor, if he carry into his poverty the spirit, energy, reason, and virtues of a man?
7211What matters it, that a man must, for a few years, live on bread and water?
7211What means more adequate to accomplish the sublime end?
7211What means this implacable fury?"
7211What meant the thunder stroke?
7211What more is necessary than for the people to preserve what they have themselves created?
7211What more would Senators have?
7211What motive, then, could have such influence in their bosom?
7211What name?
7211What of that charge?
7211What passion can not Music raise and quell?
7211What passion can not Music raise and quell?
7211What provision of the Federal Constitution had we violated?
7211What provocation more do we propose to wait for?
7211What reason can you give the nations of the earth to justify it?
7211What rests?
7211What right has the North assailed?
7211What sands were colored with his blood?
7211What sign hast thou to show?
7211What sir, have they gained the principles of justice from us?
7211What sought they thus, afar?
7211What tears can widows weep Less bitter than when brave men fall?
7211What terms shall we find which have not been already exhausted?
7211What the land and houses too?
7211What then?
7211What think you is the duty of England in this life- or- death contest between the North and the South?
7211What will convince them?
7211What would he have?
7211What would he have?
7211What would they have?
7211What''s banished, but set free, From daily contact of the things I loathe?
7211What''s hallowed ground?
7211What''s that to you, sir?
7211What''s the matter?
7211What''s the matter?
7211What''s the mercy despots feel?
7211What, are you recruiting here, eh?
7211What, sir, was the conduct of the South during the Revolution?
7211What, the soldier on duty here?
7211What?
7211When can their glory fade?
7211When do you breakfast, and what do you take at it?
7211When have they deserved it?
7211When shall we have one interest, and one common country?
7211When shall we see an end of discord?
7211When the soldiers were destitute of clothing, or sick, or in prison, from whence did relief come?
7211When the traveller pauses on the plains of Marathon, what are the emotions which most strongly agitate his breast?
7211When was there so much iniquity ever laid to the charge of any one?
7211When we asked a three- fifths representation in Congress for our slaves, was it not granted?
7211Whence should come our fighting men if the bugle should blow?
7211Where are the bones of the robber and his host?
7211Where are the villages, and warriors, and youth?
7211Where bound?
7211Where did the gentleman get this principle?
7211Where did you learn this maxim?
7211Where didst thou leave them?
7211Where does he sleep?
7211Where have they deserved it?
7211Where have you been?
7211Where is Concord, and Lexington, and Princeton, and Trenton, and Saratoga, and Bunker Hill, but in the North?
7211Where is it to stop?
7211Where is the cultivated field, in redeeming which from the wilderness, their vigor has not been displayed?
7211Where is the eagle still to tower?
7211Where is the flag of the republic to remain?
7211Where is the good in counting twelve millions, instead of six, of mere feeding, working, sleeping animals?
7211Where is the justice, then, or where is the law, that protects a member of Parliament more than any other man from the punishment due to his crimes?
7211Where is the line to be drawn?
7211Where is the mother that looked on my childhood?
7211Where is the new police?
7211Where shall that land, that spot of earth be found?
7211Where slept thy thunderbolts?
7211Where will you levy your taxes?
7211Where, then, sir, is this war, which is prolific of all these horrors, to be carried?
7211Whereto serves mercy, But to confront the visage of offence?
7211Which is it?
7211Which shall yield?
7211Who are the Northern laborers?
7211Who bade the sun Clothe you with rainbows?
7211Who can blame them?
7211Who can estimate the results produced by the incomparable efforts of a single mind?
7211Who can tell how far and fast they will travel?
7211Who can tell what Greece owes to this first- born of song?
7211Who can tell what will be the character of the next 15th of March?
7211Who could guess If ever more should meet those mutual eyes, Since upon night so sweet such awful morn could rise?
7211Who filled thy countenance with rosy light?
7211Who gave you your invulnerable life, Your strength, your speed, your fury, and your joy Unceasing thunder, and eternal foam?
7211Who has welcomed in her cities, and cherished in her homes, the illustrious patriot Louis Kossuth?
7211Who is Blennerhassett?
7211Who is here so base, that would be a bondman?
7211Who is here so rude, that would not be a Roman?
7211Who is here so vile, that will not love his country?
7211Who is it that causes to blow the loud winds of winter, and that calms them again in summer?
7211Who is it that rears up the shade of those lofty forests, and blasts them with the quick lightning at his pleasure?
7211Who is so foolish, I beg everybody''s pardon, as to expect to see any such thing?
7211Who is to judge concerning the frequency of these demands?
7211Who is to judge whether the money is properly expended?
7211Who made thee parent of perpetual streams?
7211Who made you glorious as the gates of heaven Beneath the keen full moon?
7211Who rules the President?
7211Who rules the rebel States?
7211Who sank thy sunless pillars deep in earth?
7211Who shall put asunder the best affections of the heart, the noblest instincts of our nature?
7211Who sir, I ask, was he?
7211Who was he?
7211Who was her father?
7211Who was her mother?
7211Who will accuse me of wandering out of the subject?
7211Who will hesitate to give his mite to avert such awful results?
7211Who will say that I exaggerate the tendencies of our measures?
7211Who would n''t give it to you?
7211Who''ll prove it, at his peril, on my head?
7211Who''s armed and who''s mounted?
7211Who''s ready?
7211Who''s ready?
7211Who, sir, were these men?
7211Who, then, is Aaron Burr, and what the part which he has borne in this transaction?
7211Who, with living flowers Of loveliest blue, spread garlands at your feet?
7211Whom do you want, sir,--your coachman or your cook?
7211Whose best wishes and earnest prayers have ever attended the efforts in the cause of freedom of Mazzini and Garibaldi?
7211Whose heart hath never within him burned, As home his footsteps he hath turned, From wandering on a foreign strand?
7211Whose were the arms that drove your bayonets at Vimiera through the phalanxes that never reeled to the shock of war before?
7211Why can not we rise to noble conceptions of our destiny?
7211Why caught each man his blade?
7211Why did all- creating Nature Make the plant for which we toil?
7211Why did he pause?
7211Why did it dote on a fast- fading treasure?
7211Why did you ask the question, then?
7211Why disturb them?
7211Why do we hesitate?
7211Why do we not feel, that our work as a nation is to carry freedom, religion, science, and a noble form of human nature over this continent?
7211Why does a man''s heart palpitate when he is on the point of committing an unlawful deed?
7211Why echoed every street With tramp of thronging feet All flying to the city''s wall?
7211Why is injustice to be suffered to remain for a single hour?
7211Why is it necessary now to overturn them?
7211Why is it that our bright waters all stained and our green fields reddened with fraternal blood?
7211Why is it that the heart of loyal America throbs, heavily oppressed with anxiety and gloom, for the future of the country?
7211Why is it that the land resounds with the measured tread of a million of armed men?
7211Why is that other writhing with agony?
7211Why not?
7211Why ought the slave trade to be abolished?
7211Why should''st thou faint?
7211Why stand we here idle?
7211Why then, why then, sir, do we not as soon as possible change this from a civil to a national war?
7211Why trembled wife and maid?
7211Why was it that she was able, in four days from that in which this cry reached her, to add a new glory to the day of Lexington?
7211Why, gentlemen, who does trouble himself about a warming- pan?
7211Why, sir, what does the gentleman understand by"political subjects?"
7211Why, then, should we defer the Declaration?
7211Why, what difference does that make?
7211Why, what would be the result?
7211Will a jury weaken this our nation''s hope?
7211Will any one answer by a sneer, that all this is idle preaching?
7211Will he shrink from armed insurrection?
7211Will his State justify it?
7211Will his children receive instructions from the lips of a disgraced father?
7211Will it be the next week, or the next year?
7211Will it be when we are totally disarmed; and when a British guard shall be stationed in every house?
7211Will its better public opinion allow it?
7211Will she employ in her councils, or in her armies, the man at whom the"slow unmoving finger of scorn"is pointed?
7211Will the Senator yield to rebellion?
7211Will the Tribunes make up your losses to you?
7211Will the last, and worst, prove luckier?
7211Will the trading and moneyed interests, so powerful in the Northern cities, do their duty?
7211Will they by their verdict pronounce to the youth of our country, that character is scarce worth possessing?
7211Will ye give it up to slaves?
7211Will ye look for greener graves?
7211Will ye to your homes retire?
7211Will you deny him this redress?
7211Will you hang your head and blush in his presence, because he outshines you in equipage and show?
7211Will you make this the exception?
7211Will you put out mine eyes?-- These eyes, that never did, nor never shall, So much as frown on you?
7211Will you shrink from such a meeting?
7211Wilt thou never come, O Death?
7211With pure heart, newly stampt from nature''s mint,( Where did he learn that squint?)
7211Without it, what is man?
7211Woman''s weakness shall not shame me-- why should I have tears to shed?
7211Would any one deny that we are bound, and I would hope to good purpose, by the most solemn sanctions of duty for the vote we give?
7211Would you burst the good people you dog?
7211Would you, for instance, be rich?
7211Yankee landlords do not belong to their house''s[ Aloud] You seem young for a landlord: may I ask how old you are?
7211Yes, Jack, the independence I was talking of is by a marriage-- the fortune is saddled with a wife; but I suppose that makes no difference?
7211Yes; of whom?
7211Yet religion has nothing to do with politics?
7211Yet what can it, when one can not repent?
7211Yet, sir, I presume you would not wish me to quit the army?
7211You all did love him once, not without cause: What cause withholds you then to mourn for him?
7211You are?
7211You blockhead, what did he say to that?
7211You come back from sea And not know my John?
7211You got the letter, then, did you?
7211You then, after this slight repast, take some tea and bread and butter?
7211[ Aloud] Did you accept the invitation?
7211[ Aloud] Where were you born, sir?
7211a greater face of plenty?
7211a greedy dog; why, what did he get he liked so well?
7211and Where lies your grief?
7211and again ratified and strengthened in the Fugitive Slave Law of 1850?
7211and cut left!-- For the parry who needs?
7211and how came it set on fire?
7211and tell me what is this?
7211and what claim founded in justice and right has been withheld?
7211and what were they carrying water for?
7211are not your beings pure?
7211are these acquisitions to brag of?
7211art thou the Thracian robber, of whose exploits I have heard so much?
7211caitiffs, do ye fear?
7211comes there, from the pyramids, And from Siberian wastes of snow, And Europe''s hills, a voice that bids The world he awed to mourn him?
7211cowards, have ye left me to meet him here alone?
7211cried the King,"who is guilty of this crime?"
7211do you not feel the goads and stings of conscious guilt pierce through your savage bosoms?
7211durst not tempt him?
7211ere Freedom found a grave, Why slept the sword, omnipotent to save?
7211for the treasure you must have; and what price she may next demand, who shall tell?
7211for what do you throw away these inestimable blessings-- for what would you exchange your share in the advantages and honor of the Union?
7211good does that do?
7211has the bigoted malignity of any individuals been crushed?
7211have I not as good a right to catechize you, as you had to catechize me?
7211have ye flown?
7211he mutters Brokenly now-- that was a difficult breath-- Another?
7211heard you not Port Royal''s doom?
7211how dare you tread upon the earth which has drank in the blood of slaughtered innocents, shed by your wicked hands?
7211how didst thou pass the guard?
7211is it"duff?"
7211is my hour elapsed?
7211is not this a presage of the dawn Of freedom o''er the world?
7211is the fellow providing an entertainment for my lord mayor and the court of aldermen?
7211is war a state of probation?
7211more bad news?
7211must I stay?"
7211must the bowels of Great Britain be torn out her best blood be spilled-- her treasures wasted-- that you may make an experiment?
7211or is he to cower, and shrink, and fall to the ground?
7211said I;"and a bigger letther than this?
7211said he,"tell me, where mean you to move?
7211says I?
7211silent motionless, ye stand?
7211that better land?"
7211the fishing- place disturbed by his saw- mills?
7211the morning now is bright, Though cloudy it begun; Why ca n''t we aim above as if We had called out the sun?"
7211the settlers will remain in security?
7211then it is"ploe,"like"doe?"
7211then"Row and Ready?"
7211to color meerschaums?
7211to dredge our maiden''s hair with gold- dust?
7211to flaunt in laces, and sparkle in diamonds?
7211to float through life, the passive shuttlecocks of fashion, from the avenues to the beaches, and back again from the beaches to the avenues?
7211to reduce the speed of trotting horses a second or two below its old minimum?
7211to the whole North?
7211upon those whose relatives have been slain, to compensate the murderers?
7211upon those whose whole property has been stolen, to reward the thieves?
7211was it disease?
7211was it hard labor and spare meals?
7211was it the tomahawk?
7211what art can teach, What human voice can reach The sacred Organ''s praise?
7211what danger of nature or man not defied?
7211what do you say provoked you to the point where forbearance ceased to be a virtue?
7211what doubt we to incense His utmost ire?
7211what fire?
7211what is that flame, which now bursts on his eye?
7211what is that sound which now larums his ear?
7211what light through yonder window breaks?
7211what mean those yells and cries?
7211what more shall honor claim?
7211what need you be so boisterous rough?
7211what torches?
7211what, weep you when you but behold Our CÃ ¦ sar, vesture wounded?
7211where thy rod, That smote the foes of Sion and of God?
7211whose funeral''s that?"
7211why, what do the people say, pray?
7211will you join in the strife For country, for freedom, for honor, for life?
7211with eyes so fair, What was thy delighted measure?
7211you great blockhead!--If I could, what need Of paying you for any''helps to read?''"
6434By whose authority?
6434Has he proved a coward or a traitor?
6434What can you do?
6434Who is so foolish as to believe that there are people on the other side of the world, walking with their heels upward, and their heads hanging down? 6434 Who run?"
6434''Do I understand you to say that you have struck?''
6434103 What efforts were made to resist the law?
6434111. Who was"Poor Richard"?
6434112. Who were the"Green Mountain Boys"?
6434122. Who succeeded General Schuyler?
6434134. Who is said to have used the words,"A little more grape, Captain Bragg"?
6434150. Who was the"old man eloquent"?
6434154. Who was elected second President?
6434156. Who was the inventor of the cotton- gin?
6434166. Who were the"Silver Greys"?
6434177. Who are the"Mormons"?
6434183. Who were the"Filibusters"?
6434184. Who were the Presidential candidates?
6434195. Who was President in 1812--1832--1846--1850--1861?
6434196. Who was elected fifteenth President?
643420. Who said,"I would rather be right than be President"?
643423 Did Columbus waver?
6434270. Who was elected President?
6434281. Who became President on the death of Lincoln?
643431. Who was President from 1787( the adoption of the Constitution) to 1789?
643431. Who were the Huguenots?
643433. Who said,"I am not worth purchasing, but such as I am the king of England is not rich enough to buy me"?
643439. Who entered New York harbor next after Verrazani?
643442. Who, in a frail canoe, on a stormy night, visited an Indian wigwam to save the lives of his enemies?
643451. Who fired the first gun in the French and Indian war?
643454. Who was called the"Great Pacificator"?
643458. Who was"Rough and Ready"?
643459. Who was the"Sage of Monticello"?
643475. Who drafted the Declaration of Independence?
643475. Who were the Huguenots?
643476. Who secured its adoption in the Convention?
643479. Who was the"bachelor President"?
643489. Who used the expression,"We have met the enemy, and they are ours"?
643493 Commerce?
6434A bill of attainder?
6434A navy?
6434A rain?
6434A stone wall?
6434ARTICLE V. What provisions are made with regard to a trial for capital offences?
6434After this fort had been taken, a British officer entering asked,"Who commands here?"
6434After whom ought this continent to have been named?
6434Alexander Hamilton?
6434Algiers?
6434Amusing story of the longevity of the Indians?
6434An ex- post- facto law?
6434And even if a ship could perchance get around there safely, how could it ever get back?
6434And then, how can a ship get there?
6434Andrew Jackson?
6434Appellate jurisdiction?
6434Appointment of ambassadors?
6434Are earth- works permanent?
6434Are there any remains of this people now existing?
6434Are these stories credible?
6434At the South?
6434At the north?
6434At what date does the history of this country begin?
6434Authors and inventors?
6434Bankruptcies?
6434Before whom did he lay his plan?
6434Bill of attainder?
6434Borrowing money?
6434Boston?
6434By annexation?
6434By conquest?
6434By what battle was each invasion checked?
6434By what coincidence is Georgia linked with Washington?
6434By what event can you recollect it?
6434By what incident or peculiarity can you recollect each one?
6434By what name is it commonly known?
6434By what peculiarity can you recollect it?
6434By what peculiarity can you recollect it?
6434By what peculiarity was it distinguished?
6434By what providential circumstance did the Americans escape?
6434By what route were the goods from the East obtained?
6434By what two battles was the contest at the south closed?
6434By whom and on what occasion were the words used,"Millions for defence, but not one cent for tribute"?
6434By whom and under what circumstances was the expression used,"Give me liberty or give me death"?
6434By whom was the Albemarle colony settled?
6434By whom was the Carteret colony settled?
6434By whose advice?
6434California?
6434Calling forth the militia?
6434Can a Congressman hold another office at the same time?]
6434Can a criminal be forced to witness against himself?
6434Can a criminal or an apprentice escape by fleeing into another state?
6434Can a person be tried twice for the same crime?
6434Can a religious test be exacted?]
6434Can a ship sail up hill?"
6434Can he receive any other emolument from the national or any state government?
6434Can the citizens of one state bring a suit against another state?]
6434Can the salary of a President be changed during his term of office?
6434Can their salary be changed during their term of office?]
6434Captain Pring?
6434Cause of Brook''s assault on Sumner?
6434Cause of Pontiac''s war?
6434Cause of Shays''s rebellion?
6434Cause of it?
6434Cause of the battles of Iuka and Corinth?
6434Cause?
6434Cause?
6434Cause?
6434Cause?
6434Cause?
6434Central America?
6434Champions of each party?
6434Character of the settlers?
6434Coinage of money?
6434Coining money?
6434Col. George, of the Second Minnesota, being asked,"How long can you hold this pass?"
6434Columbus''s idea?
6434Condition of affairs in the border States?
6434Condition of agriculture?
6434Condition of the State?
6434Condition of the army at the south?
6434Condition of the colonies?
6434Condition of the country?
6434Counterfeiting?
6434Daniel Webster?
6434Declaring war?
6434Defines the duties of the President, Name these duties with regard( 1) to Congress,( 2) to ambassadors, and( 3) to United States officers?
6434Did England improve them?
6434Did he discover the main- land?
6434Did he have any idea of God?
6434Did he know that he had found a new continent?
6434Did he make any valuable discoveries?
6434Did he remain true to his party?
6434Did his discoveries antedate those of Columbus?
6434Did the English government support educational interests?
6434Did the Puritans obey it?
6434Did the Puritans tolerate other Churches?
6434Did the king treat him fairly?
6434Did they have any more privileges than the Jamestown colonists?
6434Difficulty with France?
6434Direct tax?
6434Does the enumeration of certain rights in the Constitution have any effect upon those not enumerated?]
6434Dongan?
6434Duration of King William''s war?
6434Duties( taxes on imported or exported articles)?
6434Effect of these fights?
6434Effect of these victories?
6434Effect of these victories?
6434Effect of this campaign?
6434Effect of this event?
6434Effect upon New England?
6434Effect upon the federalist party?
6434Effect?
6434Effects of the French and Indian war?
6434Eight clauses now follow, enumerating the_ powers denied to Congress._ What prohibition was made concerning the slave trade?
6434Ex- post- facto law?
6434Excises( taxes on articles produced in the country)?
6434Exports from any state?
6434Extent of the public lands granted?
6434Fate of Jumonville?
6434Fate of Pontiac?
6434Fate of the colony?
6434Fate of the colony?
6434Feeling at the North?
6434Filling vacancies?]
6434Florida?
6434For how many years have the United States been involved in war?
6434For how many years was the Revolutionary War carried on mainly at the North?
6434For what crimes and in what way may any United States officer be removed from office?]
6434For what did he search?
6434For what did the nation wait?
6434For what incident is it noted?
6434For what is Ethan Allen noted?
6434For what is Faneuil Hall noted?
6434For what is John Brown noted?
6434Freedom of speech and the press?
6434From what States have Presidents been elected?
6434From what continent did the first inhabitants of America probably come?
6434George Washington?
6434Georgia?
6434Give an account of the life of Polk, What war now broke out?
6434Give an account of the principal parties which have arisen since the Constitutional Convention of 1787?
6434Government of the land and naval forces?
6434Had these nations any idea of the extent of the country?
6434His fate?
6434His fate?
6434How are representatives and direct taxes to be apportioned among the states?
6434How are representatives apportioned among the several states?
6434How are vacancies filled?
6434How are vacancies in the House to be filled?
6434How came Carolina to be divided?
6434How came Delaware to be separated from Pennsylvania?
6434How could he, I thought, with so large a family, and in such narrow circumstances, think of incurring so great an expense for me?
6434How could the soldiers endure such misery?
6434How did Clay pacify?
6434How did England treat the colonies?
6434How did General Fraser die?
6434How did General Jackson avenge the massacre of Fort Minims?
6434How did General Joseph E. Johnston thwart General McClellan''s plan?
6434How did Gosnold shorten the voyage across the Atlantic?
6434How did Governor Bradford reply to Canonicus''s threat?
6434How did Harrison gain his popularity?
6434How did Jackson act?
6434How did Jackson receive the name of"Stonewall"?
6434How did New Jersey come to be united to New York?
6434How did Penn come to obtain a grant of this region?
6434How did Penn settle the territory?
6434How did Pennsylvania secure the title to its soil?
6434How did Sherman capture Atlanta?
6434How did Sherman drive him from these positions?
6434How did a half- witted boy once save a fort from capture?
6434How did he escape?
6434How did he find things at Hochelaga?
6434How did he overcome them?
6434How did he pacify the army?
6434How did he settle the boundary lines?
6434How did it compare with English enterprise?
6434How did it end?
6434How did it happen that raw militia defeated English veterans?
6434How did it turn out?
6434How did relief come?
6434How did religious toleration vary in the colonies?
6434How did speculation become rife?
6434How did that happen?
6434How did the British officers treat the colonial officers?
6434How did the French difficulty look during this administration?
6434How did the Indians compare with them?
6434How did the Navigation Act affect Massachusetts?
6434How did the battle of Brandywine occur?
6434How did the battle of Bull Run take place?
6434How did the battle of Camden occur?
6434How did the battle turn on the second day?
6434How did the campaign in Pennsylvania close?
6434How did the campaign open?
6434How did the colonists protect themselves?
6434How did the contest arise in Kansas?
6434How did the naval and the land warfare compare?
6434How did the people travel?
6434How did the plan of working in common succeed?
6434How did the style of living at the south differ from that at the north?
6434How did the war in Virginia open?
6434How did they get here?
6434How did they regard labor?
6434How divided?
6434How had they treated the Boston people?
6434How long did the war last?
6434How long do the judges hold office?
6434How long is the President''s term of office?
6434How long is the term of a representative?
6434How long was he President?
6434How many Presidents have served two terms?
6434How many States were named from their principal rivers?
6434How many States were necessary?
6434How many amendments have been made to the Constitution?
6434How many are there from each state?
6434How many attacks have been made on Quebec?
6434How many colleges?
6434How many colonies voted for it?
6434How many expeditions have been made into Canada?
6434How many inter- colonial wars were there?
6434How many invasions of Kentucky did Bragg make?
6434How many invasions of the North did Lee make?
6434How many kinds of government?
6434How many members were there in the first House of Representatives?
6434How many of our Presidents have been military men?
6434How many of our Presidents were Virginians?
6434How many of our Presidents were poor boys?
6434How many prizes were captured by privateers?
6434How many rebellions have occurred in our history?
6434How many subsequent voyages did Columbus make?
6434How many times did the rain save him?
6434How many times has Fort Ticonderoga been captured?
6434How may this disability be removed?]
6434How much land was granted?
6434How much territory did he claim?
6434How must a fact tried by a jury be re- examined?]
6434How often must the Census be taken?
6434How often, and when, must Congress meet?
6434How soon was the Constitution ratified?
6434How was Bragg''s second expedition stopped?
6434How was Corinth captured?
6434How was Fortress Monroe protected from capture?
6434How was a charter secured?
6434How was each stopped?
6434How was he regarded?
6434How was he relieved of this difficulty?
6434How was it met?
6434How was it received by the colonists?
6434How was it received?
6434How was it received?
6434How was it settled?
6434How was it settled?
6434How was it settled?
6434How was it terminated?
6434How was it terminated?
6434How was it unfitted for a new country?
6434How was the Union advance on Richmond checked?
6434How was the continent named?
6434How was the news of Cornwallis''s surrender received?
6434How was the northwestern boundary question settled?
6434How was the protective tariff received?
6434How was the representative population of the different states to be determined?
6434How was the siege of Fort Schuyler( Stanwix) raised?
6434How was the treaty received in this country?
6434How was the war finally ended?
6434How was this regarded at the North and at the South?
6434How were the British forced to leave Boston?
6434How were the Narraganset Indians kept from joining the Pequods against the whites?
6434How were the difficulties ended?
6434How were the ministers''salaries met?
6434How were they combined into one colony?
6434How were they received?
6434How?
6434I, Sec 2, Clause 3?]
6434If a President should not be chosen by March 4, who would act as President?]
6434If you include the Spanish war?
6434Imports( taxes on imported articles)?
6434Imposts?
6434In Pennsylvania?
6434In case of a vacancy, who would become President?
6434In case there is no choice by the electors, how is the President elected?
6434In what battle did Washington bitterly rebuke the commanding- general, and himself rally the troops to battle?
6434In what battle did Washington show the most brilliant generalship?
6434In what battle did both generals mass their strength on the left wing, expecting to crush the enemy''s right?
6434In what battle did the Continentals gain the victory by falling back and then suddenly facing about upon the enemy?
6434In what battle did the defeated general leave his wooden leg?
6434In what battle was Molly Stark the watchword?
6434In what battle was the left wing, when separated from the main body by a river, attacked by an overwhelming force of the enemy?
6434In what battles had the opposing generals formed the same plan?
6434In what cases does the Supreme Court have original jurisdiction?
6434In what colony was New Jersey formerly embraced?
6434In what does treason consist?
6434In what estimation was he held?
6434In what is the judicial power of the United States vested?
6434In what spirit did Penn treat the colony?
6434In what war was Lincoln a captain and Davis a lieutenant?
6434In what way was the retreat conducted?
6434In what were they skilled?
6434In what year did these successes occur?
6434In what year was it adopted?]
6434In which administrations were none?
6434In which was he successful?
6434In whom is the executive power vested?
6434In whose administration was the largest number of States admitted to the Union?
6434Inferior courts?
6434Is a foreign- born person eligible to the office of representative?
6434Is a person so convicted liable to a trial- at- law for the same offence?]
6434Is every state entitled to representation?
6434Is the"union"one of states or of people?
6434Issuing bills of credit( bills to circulate as money)?
6434Its characteristic idea?
6434Its date?
6434Its effect?
6434Its effect?
6434Its principles?
6434Its result?
6434Its result?
6434Its result?
6434Its result?
6434J. Q. Adams?
6434Jackson''s?
6434John C. Calhoun?
6434Judges of the Supreme Court, etc.?
6434Keeping troops?
6434Laws with regard to drinking?
6434Length of King George''s war?
6434Length of Queen Anne''s war?
6434Length of the French and Indian war?
6434Letters of marque and reprisal?
6434Limits of this epoch?
6434Louisiana?
6434Making any other legal tender than gold or silver?
6434Making peace or war?
6434Manufactures?
6434Maryland?
6434Massachusetts?
6434Meaning of the name?
6434Meaning of the word California in the sixteenth century?
6434Mexico?
6434Michigan?
6434Monroe''s?
6434Naturalization?
6434New Jersey?
6434New Mexico?
6434New York?
6434North Virginia?
6434Number of vessels in the Union navy?
6434Object of the war in the East?
6434Occasions of quarrel?
6434Of Clay''s patriotism?
6434Of General Grant?
6434Of how many members does the Senate of the United States consist?
6434Of the luxurious living?
6434Of their charge on Fort Wagner?
6434Of what President was it said that"if his soul were turned inside out, not a spot could be found upon it"?
6434Of what does Congress consist?
6434Of what general was this said to be always true?
6434Of what statesman was it said that"he was in the public service fifty years, and never attempted to deceive his countrymen"?
6434Of what value were these charters?
6434Of what value were they?
6434Of what value?
6434Of whom was it said that"he touched the dead corpse of public credit, and it sprang upon its feet"?
6434On what conditions were the seceded States finally readmitted to their former position in the Union?
6434On what expedition was Jackson sent?
6434On what issue was Polk elected President?
6434On what mountains have battles been fought?
6434On what plundering tours did Arnold go?
6434Oregon?
6434Organizing the militia?
6434Over what places has Congress exclusive legislation?
6434Payments from the Treasury?
6434Peaceable assembly and petition?
6434Pennsylvania?
6434Peru?
6434Piracies?
6434Post- offices and post- roads?
6434Principal event?
6434Principles of the democratic party?
6434Provision made for public worship?
6434Raising and supporting armies?
6434Rapidity of its growth?
6434Regulating commerce?
6434Reprieves and pardons?
6434Restrictions of the trustees?
6434Result of the war?
6434Result of the war?
6434Result of this clashing between Congress and the President?
6434Result?
6434Result?
6434Result?
6434Results of these explorations?
6434Results of this war?
6434Since these lands became the property of the general government, a most perplexing question has been, Shall they be free?
6434South Carolina?
6434State militia?
6434State of education in New England?
6434State of party feeling?
6434Stephen A. Douglas?
6434Stories told of Taylor?
6434Story told of Governor Nelson?
6434Story told of Jackson?
6434Story told of Raleigh''s smoking?
6434Story told of Washington by Mr. Potts?
6434Successful candidates?
6434Taylor?
6434Tell the story of the old"liberty bell,"How did the campaign near New York occur?
6434The Boston boys?
6434The Indians, feeling this, sent to the agent of the Ohio Company the pertinent query,"Where is the Indian''s land?
6434The Pacific Railroad?
6434The Rocky Mountains?
6434The South?
6434The Stamp Act?
6434The Vice President''s?
6434The Virginia troops under Washington?
6434The chief officers of the different executive departments?
6434The conditions of peace?
6434The consequence of his trip?
6434The democrats?
6434The effect?
6434The first magnetic telegraph?
6434The first steamboat?
6434The impairing of contracts?
6434The making of treaties?
6434The officer asked him"what he was waiting for?"
6434The right wing?
6434The second expedition?
6434The"Anti- Renters"?
6434The"Barnburners"?
6434The"Compromise of 1850"?
6434The"Free Soilers"?
6434The"Hunkers"?
6434The"Know- Nothings"?
6434The"Unionists"?
6434The"Woolly- Heads"?
6434Their views?
6434This, they were sure, was carrying them to destruction, for how could they ever return against it?
6434Thomas Jefferson?
6434Titles of nobility?
6434Titles of nobility?
6434To be made a separate royal province?
6434To what offices are members of Congress ineligible?
6434To what party did Henry Clay belong?
6434To whom did Columbus apply next?
6434Trade between the United States?
6434Union plan of attack?
6434United States office- holder receiving presents from a foreign power?
6434Using tobacco?
6434Views of the federalists?
6434Was Bacon a patriot or a rebel?
6434Was Hudson a Dutchman?
6434Was Monroe a popular man?
6434Was Tyler''s administration successful?
6434Was Washington ever wounded in battle?
6434Was all peril to our liberties over?
6434Was any attempt made by the United States authorities to relieve it?
6434Was civil liberty secured under Andros?
6434Was it based on the principle of self- government?
6434Was it popular?
6434Was it successful?
6434Was it successful?
6434Was money plenty?
6434Was religious toleration granted?
6434Was the English occupation permanent?
6434Was the French aid of great value?
6434Was the country recovering from the effects of the war?
6434Was the discovery of gold profitable?
6434Was the impressment of seamen general?
6434Was this delusion common at that time?
6434Was this permanent?
6434Was this separation total?
6434Was war a necessity?
6434Webster?
6434Were her jewels sold?
6434Were the English or Americans victorious?
6434Were the people pleased with the English rule?
6434Were their discoveries of any value?
6434Were there any blacksmiths, carpenters, etc., among them?
6434Were there many books or papers?
6434Were they a progressive people?
6434Were they successful?
6434Were they united during this epoch?
6434What French navigator was the next to ascend the St. Lawrence?
6434What Indian chiefs befriended Massachusetts and Virginia in their early history?
6434What Indian chiefs formed leagues against the whites?
6434What Indian conflict at the West?
6434What Indian difficulties occurred?
6434What Indian war now arose?
6434What Indians visited them in the spring?
6434What President elect came to Washington in disguise?
6434What President followed Washington-- Taylor-- Jefferson-- Lincoln-- J. Q. Adams-- Pierce?
6434What President had not voted for forty years?
6434What President introduced"rotation in office"?
6434What President vetoed the measures of the party which elected him to office?
6434What President was impeached?
6434What President was once a tailor''s apprentice?
6434What Presidents died in office?
6434What Presidents were not elected to that office by the people?
6434What State was added during this epoch?
6434What State was admitted soon after the close of the Civil War?
6434What State was admitted to the Union first after the original thirteen?
6434What States were named from mountain ranges?
6434What Union general was now sent to this region?
6434What Union general who afterward became celebrated?
6434What Vice- Presidents were afterward elected Presidents?
6434What action did Jackson take concerning the United States bank?
6434What action did it take?
6434What action did the North take?
6434What action did the colonists take?
6434What action did the colonists take?
6434What action was taken?
6434What administrations have been most popular?
6434What advantage did the Maryland charter confer?
6434What are privateers?
6434What are the necessary qualifications for the office of President?
6434What are the necessary qualifications of an elector( or voter) for a representative?
6434What are"State rights"?
6434What army retreated at the moment of victory because the fog was so dense that it did not see how successful it was?
6434What attack by the colonists at the south?
6434What attacks were made by the colonists in return?
6434What attempt was made on Louisburg?
6434What authority has the President over the United States army and navy?
6434What authority is given the Senate with regard to such bills?
6434What authority was granted to the Council of New England?
6434What base offer was made to Washington?
6434What battle did General Gates win?
6434What battle did he lose?
6434What battle ensued?
6434What battle occurred when both armies were marching to make a night attack upon each other?
6434What battle took place in New York State?
6434What battle was fought after peace was declared?
6434What battle was fought and gained without a commanding officer?
6434What battle was fought in Missouri?
6434What battle was preceded by prayer?
6434What battles did Washington win?
6434What battles did he lose?
6434What battles ensued?
6434What battles had Taylor fought?
6434What battles have been decided by an attack in the rear?
6434What battles have been fought in Virginia?
6434What battles have resulted in the destruction or surrender of an entire army?
6434What battles occurred while Washington was falling back?
6434What battles were fought?
6434What became of Burr?
6434What became of General Lee?
6434What became of his companions?
6434What became of the Plymouth Company?
6434What became of the colony sent out the same year by the Plymouth company?
6434What became of them?
6434What beneficial influence did they have on the colony?
6434What bills must originate in the House of Representatives?
6434What body has the sole power of impeachment?]
6434What body has the"power of legislation"?
6434What branches of government are established under the first three articles of the Constitution?
6434What business can a minority transact?
6434What campaign was now planned by the aid of the French?
6434What campaign was undertaken?
6434What candidates for the presidency were nominated in 1873?
6434What caused the battle of Monmouth to happen?
6434What celebrated Indian was killed?
6434What celebrated debate took place?
6434What celebrated philosopher, when a boy, went without meat to buy books?
6434What celebrated statesman was killed in a duel?
6434What change in the government of the colony was made by the second charter?
6434What change now took place in the government?
6434What change was made by the third charter?
6434What characterized the campaign at the north?
6434What checked McClellan''s advance?
6434What cities have undergone a siege?
6434What city did he found?
6434What city now occupies its site?
6434What city now surrendered?
6434What city was now captured?
6434What claim did the Dutch found on this discovery?
6434What class of people generally settled this country?
6434What coincidence between this event and the Revolution?
6434What coincidence?
6434What colonel, when asked if he could take a battery, replied,"I''ll try, sir"?
6434What colonies are named after a king or a queen?
6434What colony was conquered by the British during this year?
6434What colony was established the same year that Hooker went to Hartford?
6434What colony was founded as a home for the poor?
6434What course did Clay take?
6434What course did Washington take?
6434What course did he take with regard to the United States Bank?
6434What course did the Duke of York take when he became King of England?
6434What course did the proprietors take?
6434What cruel act disgraced their victory?
6434What curious fact illustrates the ruling sentiment of Massachusetts and of Virginia at that time?
6434What customs familiar to us are of Dutch origin?
6434What decided it in favor of the English?
6434What decided it in favor of the English?
6434What declaration is made concerning the powers neither delegated to Congress nor forbidden the states?]
6434What departments were established?
6434What did Columbus''s friends do for him?
6434What did Webster say of Hamilton?
6434What did it propose?
6434What did the British do?
6434What did the English now do?
6434What did the French do in the spring?
6434What did the United States gain by the war?
6434What did the armies of the centre and north do?
6434What did the colonists introduce into England on their return?
6434What did their peaceful discharge prove?
6434What difficulties beset the government?
6434What difficulty arose with England?
6434What difficulty arose with England?
6434What difficulty now arose with England and France?
6434What difficulty occurred with Cuba?
6434What disastrous attempt was made by the British at the north?
6434What discoveries did Gosnold make?
6434What discoveries did Sebastian Cabot make?
6434What discoveries did he make?
6434What discoveries?
6434What discovery did Balboa make?
6434What discovery did Sir Francis Drake make?
6434What distinguished generals have been unsuccessful candidates for the Presidency?
6434What division arose among the people?
6434What do the French names in the Mississippi valley indicate?
6434What do the names New York, New England, New Hampshire, Georgia, Carolina, etc., indicate?
6434What do the names San Salvador, Santa Cruz, Vera Cruz, La Trinidad, etc., indicate?
6434What do you mean by"reconstruction"?
6434What do you say of the naval successes?
6434What do you say of the negro troops?
6434What do you say of the number of the Indians?
6434What do you say of the rapidity of its growth?
6434What effect did they have on the English government?
6434What effect was produced?
6434What event closed the Mississippi campaign?
6434What events attended General Burgoyne''s march south?
6434What events deranged Burgoyne''s plans?
6434What ex- Vice- President was tried for treason?
6434What exiles settled Rhode Island?
6434What expedition was undertaken against Canada?
6434What fact illustrates Williams''s generosity?
6434What facts strengthened his view?
6434What famous despatch did Grant send?
6434What famous doctrine advanced by Monroe?
6434What father and son were Presidents?
6434What financial measures were adopted?
6434What five ex- Presidents died in the decade between 1860 and 1870?
6434What followed?
6434What followed?
6434What form of government was finally imposed upon them?
6434What fort was carried by a midnight assault?
6434What four nations explored the territory of the future United States?
6434What four restrictions upon the Congressional powers are made in this section?
6434What gallant exploit was performed by Perry?
6434What general arose from a sick- bed to lead his troops into a battle in which he was killed?
6434What general died at the moment of victory?
6434What general escaped by riding down a steep precipice?
6434What general led the advance?
6434What general rushed into battle without orders and won it?
6434What general was captured by the enemy?
6434What general was captured through his carelessness, and exchanged for another taken in a similar way?
6434What great fires happened in''71 and''72?
6434What guarantee is given with regard to excessive bail or fine and unusual punishment?]
6434What guarantee is given with regard to the right of bearing arms?
6434What guarantees are provided concerning religious freedom?
6434What held the colonies together?
6434What historical memories cluster around Santo Domingo?
6434What important contemporaneous events can you name?
6434What important rights are secured to the accused in case of a criminal prosecution?]
6434What is a charter?
6434What is a senator''s term of office?
6434What is a"protective tariff"?
6434What is a"witch"?
6434What is meant by"Reconstruction"?
6434What is provided with regard to quartering soldiers upon citizens?
6434What is provided with regard to unreasonable searches and warrants?
6434What is said of Calhoun?
6434What is said of Mount Vernon flour?
6434What is said of Osceola?
6434What is said of the claims made upon the land by the heirs of these proprietors?
6434What is squatter sovereignty?
6434What is the American doctrine?
6434What is the Fifteenth Amendment?
6434What is the Fourteenth Amendment?
6434What is the Thirteenth Amendment?
6434What is the climate in the far north along the Mississippi Valley and the Pacific coast?
6434What is the law with regard to keeping and publishing a journal of the proceedings?
6434What is the law with regard to state records, judicial proceedings, etc.?]
6434What is the law with regard to trial by jury?
6434What is the object of this provision?
6434What is"Plymouth Rock"?
6434What is"squatter sovereignty"?
6434What issues depended on this fight?
6434What journey did Champlain make?
6434What kept the interest in America alive?
6434What kind of war did he wage in Virginia?
6434What land did he discover?
6434What leaders on each side?
6434What limit is assigned?]
6434What limit is there to the number of representatives?
6434What line was now held by the Union army?
6434What location did they select?
6434What massacre occurred in Kansas?
6434What measures were taken to check his advance?
6434What movement did Grant make against Vicksburg?
6434What movement was made by General Brown?
6434What movements did they make to break through the Union lines?
6434What mutiny occurred?
6434What name did he give it?
6434What name did they give to the region?
6434What nations settled the different States?
6434What naval commander captured his antagonist as his own vessel was sinking?
6434What naval expeditions were made?
6434What navigator shortened the voyage across the Atlantic?
6434What need was felt?
6434What new change was made in the government?
6434What new railroad is building?
6434What new trouble assailed Columbus?
6434What news came in the spring?
6434What noted events occurred on April 19th?
6434What noted expressions of General Taylor became favorite mottoes?
6434What number is needed to convict?
6434What number of the members is necessary for a quorum( needed to do business)?
6434What object did Penn, Lord Baltimore, and Oglethorpe each have in founding a colony in the new world?
6434What offer did Queen Isabella make?
6434What officer lost his life because he neglected to open a note?
6434What other islands did he discover?
6434What parties arose?
6434What parties now arose?
6434What parties were formed?
6434What party adopted the views of the old federalists on the United States Bank, etc.?
6434What party was arising?
6434What peculiarities in the government of each?
6434What penalties can be inflicted in case of conviction?
6434What persecuted people settled the different colonies?
6434What persons are prohibited from holding any office under the United States?
6434What places captured?
6434What places in Florida were captured?
6434What plan did Lee now adopt?
6434What plan did McClellan form?
6434What plan did Washington now adopt?
6434What poem has been written upon this event?
6434What policy should be pursued toward the Indian?
6434What political changes now took place?
6434What political parties now arose?
6434What portion of the continent did each explore?
6434What power has Congress over the electors?
6434What power has Congress over the state regulations?
6434What power has Congress over the territory and propeity of the United States?]
6434What power has Congress with regard to taxes?
6434What power is finally given to Congress to enable it to enforce its authority?
6434What power is given each House of Congress of making and enforcing rules?
6434What precipitated this issue?
6434What prevented Sherman''s advance into Georgia?
6434What previous battle did it resemble?
6434What principle did he introduce?
6434What privileges has the citizen of one state in all the others?
6434What prohibition was made with regard to treaties?
6434What proof is required?
6434What proof is there of their antiquity?
6434What providential circumstance favored the attack?
6434What provision for the benefit of the smaller states is attached to this article?]
6434What put an end to these fears?
6434What questions agitated the country at that time?
6434What questions agitated the people?
6434What ravages were committed by Admiral Cockburn?
6434What region did Columbus think he had reached?
6434What region did De Soto traverse?
6434What relics of them remain?
6434What religious toleration was granted in the different colonies?
6434What remains of these people are found?
6434What rendered Valley Forge memorable?
6434What reply did Pinckney make to the base offer of the French Directory?
6434What reply was made him?
6434What restriction in this article has now lost all force?
6434What restriction is there upon the time and place of adjournment?]
6434What restrictions are laid upon the states with regard to abridging the rights of citizens?]
6434What reverse happened to a part of General Harrison''s command?
6434What river did he discover?
6434What river was his burial place?
6434What settlement did he found?
6434What settlement did he make?
6434What special privileges are granted to members of Congress?
6434What step did Davis take?
6434What story is told of Andros''s visit?
6434What story is told of Colonel Miller?
6434What story is told of General Reed?
6434What story is told to illustrate their piety?
6434What stratagems did the Indians use?
6434What success did he have?
6434What success did he meet?
6434What success did the English meet in Acadia?
6434What tea party is celebrated in our history?
6434What territory has the United States acquired by purchase?
6434What territory was added to the United States?
6434What territory was gained by treaty?
6434What territory was granted to Lord Clarendon?
6434What three colonies were formed in Connecticut?
6434What three ex- Presidents died on the 4th of July?
6434What town and army were surrendered without firing a shot?
6434What traditions about their having discovered and settled America?
6434What treaties are celebrated in our history?
6434What treaty was made with Spain?
6434What trees are celebrated in our history?
6434What two battles were fought in the"Wilderness"?
6434What two colonies were intimately united to Massachusetts?
6434What two contemporaneous events?
6434What two distinguished generals of the same name served in the Confederate army?
6434What union of the colonies was now formed?
6434What valuable stores were seized?
6434What vessels composed his fleet?
6434What victories induced him to attempt each of these invasions?
6434What was Coligny''s plan?
6434What was Delaware styled?
6434What was Grant''s plan for an expedition against Vicksburg?
6434What was Laconia?
6434What was Schuyler''s conduct?
6434What was South Virginia?
6434What was his favorite idea?
6434What was his theory of founding a colony?
6434What was its character?
6434What was its effect on the colony?
6434What was its effect?
6434What was its object?
6434What was its result?
6434What was meant by saying that"Clay was in the succession"?
6434What was necessary for the adoption of this Constitution?
6434What was now the expectation of the Union army?
6434What was the Ashburton treaty?
6434What was the Compromise of 1850?
6434What was the Confederate line of defence at the West?
6434What was the Credit Mobilier?
6434What was the Gadsden purchase?
6434What was the High Commission?
6434What was the Joint Electoral Commission?
6434What was the Missouri Compromise?
6434What was the Mutiny Act?
6434What was the Navigation Act?
6434What was the Secretary of State formerly called?
6434What was the Wilmot proviso?
6434What was the cause of his sudden death?
6434What was the cause of the"Panic of''73"?
6434What was the character of the Virginia colonists?
6434What was the character of the history of New York under its four Dutch governors?
6434What was the characteristic of his administration?
6434What was the condition of the army?
6434What was the condition of the country?
6434What was the condition of the country?
6434What was the condition of the public finances?
6434What was the conduct of Berkeley?
6434What was the conduct of the assembly?
6434What was the difference between the Puritans and the Pilgrims?
6434What was the direct cause of war?
6434What was the extent of the Spanish possessions in the new world?
6434What was the feeling in Spain?
6434What was the great wish of maritime nations?
6434What was the importance of Roanoke Island?
6434What was the important event of Jefferson''s administration?
6434What was the issue of the next political campaign?
6434What was the most prominent event of Jefferson''s administration?
6434What was the next movement?
6434What was the northeast boundary question?
6434What was the nullification ordinance?
6434What was the object of the"American party"?
6434What was the object?
6434What was the opening event of the war of 1812?
6434What was the peculiarity of the attack on the Port Royal forts?
6434What was the plan of John Cabot?
6434What was the plan of the campaign?
6434What was the popular feeling toward France?
6434What was the popular feeling toward Washington?
6434What was the population of the United States in 1870?
6434What was the principal cause of the easy capture of the fort?
6434What was the problem of that day?
6434What was the question of the elections?
6434What was the reconstruction policy of Congress?
6434What was the reconstruction policy of Johnson?
6434What was the result of the battle?
6434What was the result of the war?
6434What was the result?
6434What was the result?
6434What was the situation at Richmond?
6434What was the situation at the beginning of the year 1863?
6434What was the size of the two armies at the close of the war?
6434What was the state of education in the southern colonies?
6434What was the state of geographical knowledge in Europe in the fifteenth century?
6434What was the tendency of this course of conduct?
6434What was the view of Sir Humphrey Gilbert?
6434What was the"Dred Scott decision"?
6434What was the"Fugitive Slave Law"?
6434What was the"Gadsden purchase"?
6434What was the"Grand Model"?
6434What was the"Great Code"?
6434What was the"Hartford Convention"?
6434What was the"Kansas- Nebraska Bill"?
6434What was the"Missouri Compromise"?
6434What was the"Nullification Act"?
6434What was the"O grab me Act"?
6434What was the"Toleration Act"?
6434What was the"Trent affair"?
6434What was the"Wilmot Proviso"?
6434What was the"swamp angel"?
6434What was their character?
6434What was their success?
6434What were Lawrence''s dying words?
6434What were Personal Liberty bills?
6434What were Writs of Assistance?
6434What were common people called?
6434What were the alien and sedition laws?
6434What were the effects of the Shiloh battle?
6434What were the principles of the whigs?
6434What were the prison ships?
6434What were the relations between the proprietors and settlers?
6434What were the results of French enterprise?
6434What were the"alien and sedition laws"?
6434What were their principles?
6434What"is the Monroe Doctrine"?
6434What"orders, resolutions and votes"must be submitted to the President?
6434What"sole power"does the Senate possess?
6434When and by whom founded?
6434When and how was slavery introduced?
6434When and where was he inaugurated?
6434When and where was the Confederate government formed?
6434When and where was the first blood shed?
6434When and where was the first blood spilled?
6434When and where was the"First Continental Congress"held?
6434When and where was this?
6434When can private property be taken for the public use?]
6434When can the Senate choose a president_ pro tempore_( for the time being)?
6434When did a fog save our army?
6434When did a stone house largely decide a battle?
6434When did the English awake to the importance of American discovery?
6434When did the new government go into operation?
6434When has an unnecessary delay cost a general a victory?
6434When has the question of the public lands threatened the Union?
6434When is the right of jury trial guaranteed?
6434When must Congress protect the states?]
6434When must the yeas and nays be entered on the journal?
6434When only can he vote?
6434When was a general blown up by a magazine, in the moment of victory?
6434When was peace concluded?
6434When was peace signed?
6434When was the Constitution adopted?
6434When was the Declaration of Independence adopted?
6434When was the Erie Canal opened?
6434When was the Mississippi River the western boundary of the United States?
6434When was the first constitution given?
6434When was the first gun of the Civil War fired?
6434When was the first railroad constructed?
6434When was the first settlement made?
6434When was war declared?
6434When were both forts captured?
6434When were slaves introduced into this country?
6434When, to whom, and by whom was the land granted?
6434When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in America?
6434When, where, and by whom was the first permanent French settlement made in Canada?
6434When, where, and by whom was the first town in the United States founded?
6434When?
6434When?
6434When?
6434When?
6434Where and by whom was the first English settlement made?
6434Where and by whom was the first settlement in Delaware made?
6434Where and when is it probable the American continent was discovered?
6434Where did Cornwallis go after the failure of his southern campaign?
6434Where did Hood go?
6434Where did Raleigh plant his first colony?
6434Where did he go?
6434Where do they occur?
6434Where does our land lie?"]
6434Where is Columbus''s tomb?
6434Where is Labrador?
6434Where is the"Cradle of Liberty"?
6434Where may a crime be committed"not within a state"?
6434Where most numerous?
6434Where must such a trial be held?
6434Where was the capital?
6434Where was the first attack?
6434Where was the first legislative body held?
6434Where was the war mainly fought?
6434Where were the Confederates located?
6434Where, when, and by whom was the first English settlement made in the United States?
6434Which centuries were characterized by explorations, and which century by settlements?
6434Which colonies early enjoyed the greatest liberty?
6434Which colony took the Bible as its guide?
6434Which is the longer, the Atlantic Cable or the Pacific Railroad?
6434Which is the second oldest town in the United States?
6434Which nation ultimately secured the whole region?
6434Which party absorbed most of the old federalists?
6434Who adopted his plan?
6434Who are ineligible to the office?
6434Who are required to take an oath or affirmation to support the Constitution of the United States?
6434Who are the presidential electors?
6434Who assumed command of the army of the Potomac?
6434Who choose the representatives?
6434Who chooses the other officers of the Senate?
6434Who claimed this region?
6434Who decides upon the"elections, returns and qualifications"of the representatives and of the senators?
6434Who discovered the River St. Lawrence?
6434Who earned the glory of this victory and who got it?
6434Who elect the officers of the House?
6434Who elect the senators?
6434Who explored the Mississippi valley?
6434Who finally captured it?
6434Who finally captured the fort?
6434Who fired the first gun of this war?
6434Who first settled it?
6434Who fixes and pays the salaries of members of Congress?
6434Who fixes the punishment?
6434Who forced it to surrender?
6434Who founded Salem?
6434Who gained great credit?
6434Who is the president of the Senate?
6434Who led the first expedition?
6434Who made the first attempt to carry out Cabot''s plan?
6434Who made the first voyage along the Pacific coast?
6434Who now took command of the Confederate army?
6434Who now took command of the Union troops?
6434Who now took command?
6434Who obtained a grant of the territory now embraced in Connecticut?
6434Who presides when the President of the United States is impeached?
6434Who settled about Massachusetts Bay?
6434Who settled the different parts?
6434Who succeeded Johnston in command?
6434Who succeeded him?
6434Who succeeded him?
6434Who succeeded them?
6434Who took command of the Union army before Washington?
6434Who used them in battle?
6434Who was chosen?
6434Who was elected eighteenth President?
6434Who was elected eighth President?
6434Who was elected eleventh President?
6434Who was elected fifth President?
6434Who was elected fourteenth President?
6434Who was elected fourth President?
6434Who was elected ninth President?
6434Who was elected seventh President?
6434Who was elected sixteenth President?
6434Who was elected sixth President?
6434Who was elected third President?
6434Who was elected twelfth President?
6434Who was entitled to the prefix Mr.?
6434Who was his opponent?
6434Who was its author?
6434Who was the ablest of them?
6434Who was the commanding general?
6434Who was the first French navigator to reach the continent?
6434Who was the first President of the United States?
6434Who was the founder of Pennsylvania?
6434Who was the hero of the fight?
6434Who was the hero of this exploit?
6434Who were elected President and Vice- President?
6434Who were killed?
6434Who were nominated for the Presidency?
6434Who were nominated for the presidency in''77?
6434Who were the Hessians?
6434Who were the Northmen?
6434Who were the Presidential candidates?
6434Who were the Presidential candidates?
6434Who were the Puritans?
6434Who were the leaders of each?
6434Who were the mound- builders?
6434Who were the"patroons"?
6434Who"ordained and established"this Constitution?
6434Whose dying words were,"Do n''t give up the ship"?
6434Why are these States so named?
6434Why could not sailors have crossed the ocean before as well as then?
6434Why did Cortez explore that region?
6434Why did Lee now march North?
6434Why did Lee send Early into the Shenandoah Valley?
6434Why did Mrs. Hutchinson become obnoxious?
6434Why did Ponce de Leon come to the new world?
6434Why did Smith leave?
6434Why did he retire to Yorktown?
6434Why did he seek assistance?
6434Why did he so name it?
6434Why did he so name it?
6434Why did not Webster and Clay become Presidents?
6434Why did not the Indians disturb them?
6434Why did the Americans fail?
6434Why did the French in Canada extend their explorations westward to the Mississippi rather than southward into New York?
6434Why did the Indians now become hostile?
6434Why did the Pilgrims come to this country?
6434Why did this fail?
6434Why not?
6434Why so called?
6434Why so eagerly read?
6434Why was Genet recalled?
6434Why was Johnson impeached?
6434Why was Maryland so named?
6434Why was Montreal so named?
6434Why was New England spared?
6434Why was Virginia so named?
6434Why was it made?
6434Why was it oppressive?
6434Why was it passed?
6434Why was it so named?
6434Why was not Adams re- elected?
6434Why was not the colony allowed to join the New England Union?
6434Why was the Fugitive Slave law obnoxious?
6434Why was the battle of New Orleans unnecessary?
6434Why was the charter so highly prized?
6434Why was the colony named New York?
6434Why was the island so called?
6434Why was the tea thrown overboard?
6434Why was the war now transferred to the south?
6434Why was this colony popular?
6434Why was this measure warmly opposed?
6434Why was"Stonewall"Jackson so called?
6434Why were Davis''s Strait, Baffin''s Bay, Hudson River, Frobisher''s Strait, etc., so named?
6434Why were books of travel more abundant then?
6434Why were the New Hampshire Grants so called?
6434Why were the River St. Lawrence, Florida, St. Augustine, etc., so named?
6434Why were these claims conflicting?
6434Why were these now awakened?
6434Why were they passed?
6434Why were they so obstinately attacked and defended?
6434Why, in the Missouri Compromise, was 36 degrees 30 minutes taken as the boundary between the slave and the free States?
6434Why?
6434Why?
6434Why?
6434Why?
6434With what battle did it close?
6434With what intent did Lord Baltimore secure a grant of land in America?
6434With what intention was this colony planned?
6434Writ of habeas corpus?
6434Yet, how was he to aid it?
6434[ Footnote: Section 4. Who prescribes the"time, place and manner"of electing representatives and senators?
6434[ Footnote: What debts did the United States assume when the Constitution was adopted?]
6434[ Footnote: What is the supreme law of the land?
6434[ Footnote: What must Congress guarantee to every state?
6434_ Section_ 1. Who are citizens of the United States?
6434_ Section_ 2. Who compose the House of Representatives?
6434and Dec. 21, N.S.?
6434in Tennessee?
6434said Gage,"have your fathers sent you here to exhibit the rebellion they have been teaching you?"
55736''And now, Willis, who is she, this divinest of her sex; and when am I to see her?'' 55736 ''But, father-- Rose?''
55736''_ Harding!_ What Harding is this? 55736 ''_ O caro Duca mio_,''is there an inscription over the door?"
55736A final and decisive answer?
55736A lamb?
55736About laying down my life for her? 55736 Absence,"said Nellie;"are you going then, and wherefore?"
55736Alas!--"You say--?
55736All quite right-- why should n''t one? 55736 All this shows, as you say, that he has no comprehension as yet of the true nature of religion; and shall I tell you why he is so slow to acquire it?
55736And conducts himself well?
55736And do penance at the church door in sackcloth and ashes? 55736 And has no one else been comfortless in death?"
55736And how,he asked,"would you offer a sacrifice, good friend, when you had nothing to offer it with?"
55736And is it to tell me this that Mistress Hewitson is about to honor me with a visit?
55736And now, dear sir,she added gently,"had we not best move onward?
55736And now,continued Henrietta, regardless of the compliment,"can you forgive me, Harry?
55736And tell me, acushla, what is the value of my life to me, if all that made it pleasant to my heart is to be taken from me? 55736 And then?"
55736And this, then, is the fate which your worthy father is preparing for me?
55736And what did you think of it?
55736And what do you think can be done for Chione, my child?
55736And what if mine now budded before you could count ten?
55736And what tells you that she will not yet discover them?
55736And who are you that dare to twit me with apostasy? 55736 And who has permitted you, Mandt, to scrutinize my thoughts?
55736And who is Larry?
55736And why not now?
55736And why, then, could n''t we pray all together?
55736And you think religion has nothing to do with it?
55736And,resumed the emperor, but this time speaking Russian,"have you learned Russian?"
55736Are not our theatres as fine as those of Paris?
55736Are they dead or alive?
55736Are we bound to obey the commandments of the church?
55736Are you a devil,he shrieked,"that you have dared to do this?"
55736Are you not afraid of presumption?
55736Are you steady now-- quite steady?
55736Are you turned against me? 55736 Are you willing to do so now?"
55736Art thou a prophet, that thou darest to speak thus confidently of the future?
55736Art thou a prophet?
55736Baptized?
55736Because we do not dare, my lord--"Do not dare-- what?
55736But are not these the very lands-- a portion of the barony of Murrisk-- which are set down in our certificate?
55736But has magic been used upon her?
55736But if you came straight from the mainland, how is it that I did not meet you in the way?
55736But if you should be again put up in the strings?
55736But is your daughter equal to the effort? 55736 But not Nellie-- not my child?"
55736But the fish,said the laughing and blushing Nellie;"in the meantime, what is to be done with the fish?
55736But when did pride prevent suffering? 55736 But where are the proofs which prove the existence of the soul, and render it palpable to the eyes of the understanding?"
55736But who is the Romish theologian the critic refers to, and how is it he makes so little use of his''vantage- ground''? 55736 But why not go at once with you, my darling?
55736But why should they attack your mistress?
55736But why the change of names?
55736But you are not a Christian, Magas?
55736Call no one; but tell me, is there not a priest and some other outlaws in hiding on the chieftain''s rock?
55736Can the critic have read Cousin''s Lectures on Kant,''thirty or thirty- five years ago''? 55736 Can you ever forgive me for it?"
55736Can you ever forgive me?
55736Certainly,said the baron,"if I saw, I should at once believe; but who ever saw a soul?"
55736Could the gods whom you worship cause them to do so?
55736Dead?
55736Dear Lord, how canst thou say''Tis light, When I behold thee on the way To Calvary''s height, Fainting and falling''neath its heavy weight? 55736 Did she?"
55736Did you ever see one of the trees down yonder blossom at this season?
55736Did you hear that?
55736Do they not tell idle stories of us in Paris, and are they any freer than we?
55736Do they still want me?
55736Do you believe the priest as a man in confession pardons your sins?
55736Do you mean you do not love me?
55736Do you remember the conversation we had years ago?
55736Do you think_ you_ only have a cause for grieving? 55736 Do you, from your heart, forgive her?"
55736Done what, my son?
55736Especially obnoxious? 55736 From whence came these changes?
55736Give a turn to her thoughts?
55736God save you,said I,"what news have you?
55736Had he not died nobly? 55736 Have you a family?"
55736Have you any children, ma''am?
55736Have you ever really seen anything like land in that direction?
55736Have you seen the emperor?
55736He could do neither; and besides, would Mr. Harding allow his daughter to marry the son of James Rellerton? 55736 He looked at her wonderingly, and then said:"''Are you happy?
55736He warned your majesty?
55736Her attendants think-- think-- tell me, noble Dionysius, is it true that Chione was ever a Christian?
55736How can I help it, mother?
55736How can I possibly tell, my son? 55736 How do you know that he brought me hither?"
55736How is Madame----?
55736How is this, corporal? 55736 How long ago?"
55736How long since he entered among the pages?
55736How long?
55736How now, thou''Irish dogg''? 55736 How will he succeed?"
55736How, then, noble sir, do you speak of them as yours?
55736How? 55736 I heard his voice; all night I watched for him; why did he keep away?"
55736I know just how it happened, ma''am,he said;"for did n''t the lawyers tell me?
55736I leave her in good hands; what can I do more?
55736I love you, Florence, and I feel that I am entitled to a little more consideration than that letter shows, Florence, will you be my wife?
55736I wonder is it religion that is making her so ill? 55736 I?
55736I?
55736In Dublin-- and you here?
55736In the kitchen, is it?
55736Is Chione ill?
55736Is he not a remarkably handsome man?
55736Is he then especially obnoxious?
55736Is her present illness connected with her Christianity?
55736Is it Honest?
55736Is it my fault? 55736 Is it possible that I see Lord Netterville, and in such a plight?"
55736Is it possible,said he;"are you really a Christian?"
55736Is not Lorenzo there?
55736Is not the perspective from Newski a superb view?
55736Is she come, dear Hamish?
55736Is that all, my child?
55736Is this Magas? 55736 Is this maiden a prisoner?
55736It is not then an island?
55736It was your brother, then, who robbed the man?
55736Kind Lord, Dost Martha''s love prefer? 55736 Kind Lord, When breaks my heart in agony, Dost ever shed a tear with_ me_?"
55736Knew your father? 55736 Look at that old man, and tell me how is he to retrace his footsteps?
55736Mandt, do you answer for my cure?
55736Mary, did you ever see so beautiful a face? 55736 Merry times?
55736Miss Athern, was not my letter plain enough-- do you not believe me? 55736 Mother, what would you?"
55736My Child, Wilt all things else for me resign? 55736 My daughter, do you know who has stirred up this accusation against you?"
55736My poor, dear child, have you not faith enough? 55736 Nay, Mistress Netterville, remember that I am master here, and that I forbid you to lay hands upon that fish?
55736Now, will you tell me, was Chione ever a Christian?
55736Paul Athern?
55736Poor man, madam?
55736Pray, young man, can you teach and practise humility?
55736Ready to give help? 55736 Residence among these mountains, dost thou say?
55736Rosa, my child, why these sorrowful prayers? 55736 Safe?
55736Send the Irish beggar hence at once then, will you?
55736Shall I read it to you?
55736Shall I send for Mandt?
55736Sire--"Well?
55736Sister Mary,said the feeble tones,"will you bathe my temples?
55736So you really believe that the soul lives for ever?
55736Some flattery, of course? 55736 Sure, who has a better right to go with Mistress Nellie than her own foster- brother?
55736Surely he never uttered any such extraordinary farrago as you have been putting into his mouth?
55736Surely you will leave Nellie with me?
55736Tell me, I conjure you, in the name of God,said Tauler,"how you have succeeded in arriving at the contemplative state?"
55736The English,she rejoined,"have done thee no harm, and wherefore shouldst thou care about our liberty?
55736The colonel? 55736 The eyes of the heart, do they not equal those of the understanding?"
55736The soul, the soul,replied the baron,"what is the soul?
55736Then he was almost dead? 55736 Then you are not angry that Chione is a Christian?"
55736Then you knew the reason of my coming?
55736Then you prefer a happiness which would bring with it the zest of contrast?
55736Then,_ who_ makes winter pass and spring return; the bud burst forth, and the fruit ripen?
55736These are the islands of which the heathen king spoke:--how are we to name him?
55736They are Angles?
55736Think you I could die happy if I left you-- a child-- a girl-- unprotected in this wild city?
55736Think you there was ever before such a battle?
55736This brother is in California?
55736This is just like it, is n''t it?
55736Thou canst?
55736To Martha is the promise given That Lazarus shall rise from sleep; But Mary is the bride of heaven-- With her shall not the bridegroom weep?
55736To die, is it not the best thing I can do? 55736 To pray is to make an offering, is it not?"
55736To save her? 55736 We are not, I trust, the cause of this fresh trouble to you?"
55736We are--?
55736Well, Dougherty, you will be content now, and go to chapel next Sunday, will you not?
55736Well, Pouchkine,said the emperor,"what have you to say of me?"
55736Well, do n''t you know that if you go on as you''re going now, you may come to commit murder one of these days, and be hanged yourself?
55736Well, what?
55736Well, why then, stupid, if you can speak it with your comrades, do you answer me in French when I address you in Russian?
55736Well,said our Lord,"what are your wages?"
55736Well?
55736Well?
55736What ails that animal?
55736What are those shots I hear?
55736What are you going to do?
55736What boots a goodly mansion, if starvation be at its portal? 55736 What can you have to say that could do that?"
55736What can you teach?
55736What could we show him that would astonish him?
55736What country,says St. Jerome,"does not send hither its pilgrims to see Paula, who eclipses us all in humility?
55736What did he say?
55736What do you mean by the power of faith, Magas?
55736What do you mean?
55736What do you mean?
55736What do you say, sire? 55736 What do you say?"
55736What do you see, child, that you look so white and scared?
55736What do you think?
55736What do you want here-- you, the child of her assassin?
55736What do you want?
55736What do you wish, my child?
55736What does the doctor say, ma''am?
55736What does this mean?
55736What is it, Hamish? 55736 What is it, Nellie?"
55736What is it, Paudeen?
55736What is it?
55736What is to be thought of the Russians?
55736What is to become of us? 55736 What joke is this?"
55736What makes you think the Christians have bewitched her?
55736What mean you?
55736What means this altered tone, Magas?
55736What means this unseemly interruption, corporal?
55736What more have I to do with the world? 55736 What opens sorrow''s deep abyss At Mary''s word?
55736What people, Nellie? 55736 What shall I say of her universal charity, which made her love and succor beings she had never even seen?
55736What shall I say of the worldly goods of this noble lady, almost entirely spent on the poor?
55736What she had read? 55736 What should I care for your good opinion?
55736What then?
55736What would you have, child?
55736What would you have? 55736 What would you have?
55736What would you have?
55736What would you with me?
55736What would you?
55736What, part with Black Cromwell? 55736 Whence comest thou?"
55736Where hast thou found God?
55736Where is God?
55736Where is he-- this other prisoner?
55736Where is she?
55736Where is thy kingdom?
55736Where shall I find mercy for my mother?
55736Where shall I find mercy for my mother?
55736Where then does God act without a medium? 55736 Where?"
55736Wherefore?
55736Whither? 55736 Who art thou?"
55736Who can see,cried he,"without grief, this beauteous rose gathered before her time and faded away?
55736Who is Mary?
55736Who took care of the child?
55736Who,says St. Jerome,"can tell without tears how Paula died?"
55736Whoever heard of a Catholic Bible Society multiplying copies of the Bible?
55736Why call it meanness?
55736Why can not the several hundred thousand Catholics in our great city establish a Central Mission House for these little neglected ones of the flock? 55736 Why did he go back?"
55736Why do you ask?
55736Why do you say these things, Hamish?
55736Why even of yourselves judge ye not what is right?
55736Why is not the chieftain with you?
55736Why not I, as well as another?
55736Why not?
55736Why should we not now have a saint after the grand old way?
55736Why would n''t you let them come up here, madam? 55736 Why would you know?"
55736Why, Tamar,exclaimed Miss Lee,"what''s the matter?"
55736Why, how can it be? 55736 Why, what caprice is this?
55736Why, who can have bewitched her?
55736Will God take me home to her? 55736 Will her daughter be in time to see her, think you?"
55736Will you give up and go to chapel next Sunday?
55736Wine? 55736 Wine?"
55736Wo n''t you offer some sacrifice on first sighting the place?
55736Would full uniform be necessary?
55736Would he then have expelled me also?
55736Would you like very much to see your brother?
55736Would you rather have been the angel loosing Peter, or Peter in chains? 55736 You are then recovering at last, Chione?"
55736You believe me proud,answered the general,"are you not a little so yourself?"
55736You believe there is danger?
55736You did not send them there?
55736You do not intend to desert her?
55736You have seen him?
55736You hear from them?
55736You know my grandfather, then?
55736You know my grandfather?
55736You promise?
55736You see, soldier-- you see,moaned the poor wretch upon the floor,"the daughter can not pardon me; why then should God?"
55736You think so? 55736 You think that the dungeon would have no effect?"
55736You want me to write to him?
55736You will not call on it to hear, to help you?
55736You_ hope?_Roger repeated sadly.
55736Your majesty permits me?
55736_ Is that in consonance with Catholic theology? 55736 _ Usquequo, Domine sanctus et verus, non judicas et non vindicas, sanguinem nostrum de iis qui habitant in terrâ?_"{ 657} How long, O Lord!
55736''What''s Hecuba to him, or he to Hecuba?''"
55736----------{ 239} Is it Honest?
55736? norous actions_ toward others, and inexcusable ingratitude to himself."
55736? norous"is illegible.]
55736A certain brother said to Abbot Pastor:"What shall I do, for when I sit in quiet I lose my spirits?"
55736Above all, how can they_ repeat_ them, after the often made and complete demonstration of their falsehood?
55736After all, suppose they were deceived, that the hero of this great drama was only a skilful impostor, what do you really gain by it?
55736After some preliminary remarks to his audience, he proceeds to the question, What is man?
55736And besides, how be Christians and not be willing to suffer for love of a God who has suffered so much for us?
55736And did they extend to the Russian Pacific possessions on the north?
55736And has the Catholic Church by preaching done no better?
55736And how can you say that popes prohibit what you show they approved and sanctioned?
55736And how name they the king of their country?"
55736And if I do not believe, what must I do that I may believe?"
55736And in heaven what have I to desire but thee, my God?
55736And is it allowable to honor relics, crucifixes, and holy pictures?
55736And is not his whole course of the history of philosophy based on this assumption?
55736And may not this failure be attributed to our vague, unpronounced repugnance to having nature out of harmony with itself and ourselves?
55736And may we not, then, poetize our landscapes too, and throw into the face of nature the expression of a human soul?
55736And signalling Kleinmichel from a corner:"Kleinmichel,"said he,"you see this line?"
55736And was it the same with Europeans?
55736And what do they get_ for all this_?
55736And what have we done for their unhappy country?
55736And what if an old tumble- down tower be thrown into the bargain?
55736And what news bring you from Netterville?
55736And what the nature of the radiation which sends to us daily the light and heat which we need?
55736And what was all this confusion, all this violation of law and order, upon the Christian Sabbath for?
55736And what, I pray you, but starvation are they condemned to, who have been sent to make themselves a home among these barren mountains?"
55736And when shall the shackles that bind her be riven?
55736And where are we to feed them, girl?
55736And who among us will dare to say that he can not reproduce in himself some shadow of those beautiful virtues?
55736And who has ever seen one of these webs carried by a hurricane, especially in quantity sufficient to produce such a phenomenon?
55736And why did she not do this now-- why?
55736And why they did not stay at their own home to grow?"
55736And why?
55736And, indeed, why do we love one another with such a true and constant love?
55736Another one is lame, and him you would have walk straight; do you not see that you exact the impossible?
55736Another time, she said to him:"You are not a Christian?"
55736Are there any souls who can read the gospels as they would a common history of an heroic being?
55736Are there several species of men, or does there exist but one, comprising several races?
55736Are they God?
55736Are they born in you and only for you?
55736Are they ever thronged, except at stated hours, when people chiefly congregate to exhibit themselves and criticise each other?
55736Are they less the brothers, or cousins, if you like the term better?
55736Are they not startlingly unfrequented, in spite of their superb richness and beauty?
55736Are they popularly, or even selectly, attractive?
55736Are violent winds and spider- webs both wanting?
55736Are we here making a distinction as frivolous as that"between the southern and south- eastern sides of a hair"?
55736Are we indeed the children of the church?
55736Are we to say, then, that every person worships the image of God or of Jesus Christ which his intellect has formed, and becomes thereby an idolater?
55736Are we wrong?
55736Are you not charmed with these two apostles, who frankly tell us what they have seen with their eyes and heard with their ears?
55736Are you satisfied with your present position?"
55736Are you still in the mind to send Nellie with me?
55736As a method, do you say?
55736As an embryo, a foetus, or as one newly born?
55736As soon as the existence of these spots had been fully ascertained, the questions naturally arose, What is the cause of them, and what their nature?
55736As we went through the village street, Zébédé said,"You have bread?"
55736At a conference held at Windsor, 1547, Cranmer answers to the question,"Can a bishop make a priest?"
55736At one time she seemed to see the ladder of Jacob, and she exclaimed:"But I-- am I pure enough to go up with these angels?
55736Because he can wait, will your presumption know no bounds?
55736Before we could recognize him almost, he asked in a hoarse voice,''Where is Florence-- where, for God''s sake, is my wife?''
55736Black Cromwell, who hath carried me unhurt through more battles than David himself ever fought against the Philistines?"
55736But are these charges true?
55736But dating from this epoch, what was not the ineffable anguish of Madame de La Fayette?
55736But did he find the grain?
55736But did its boundaries extend to the Sabine or the Rio Grande, on the south?
55736But does he mean to teach that the race itself has its epoch of infancy, youth, manhood, old age, and death?
55736But has Cowper had no successor in the peculiar path he so successfully trod?
55736But has Leibnitz, in identifying the notion of substance with that of cause, presented it with justness?
55736But how are we to ascertain the nature of the vapors which produce the black lines we observe?
55736But how is it that these spaces do not fill up immediately?
55736But how knows he that it is not the intellectual old age and decrepitude of the race?
55736But how long is it since Protestants had a Bible Society?
55736But how many profited by this help?
55736But how were we to get there?
55736But in these few pages how can we speak of it?
55736But is he an animal?
55736But is it true, as the tract affirms, that we ask nothing of Mary and the saints in heaven that it would be improper to ask of our fellow- Christian?
55736But is substance nothing more than cause which manifests it?
55736But is there any reason why our Evangelical or High- Church friends should think it necessary or expedient to proceed any further?
55736But is this Magas?
55736But once torn from the bosom of their family, who received children into the world of souls, which they entered astonished?
55736But the funds, the funds?"
55736But the most curious of all his angry attacks was made-- where, think you?
55736But what are all those great conquests compared to these once British colonies, now called North America?
55736But what are the results?
55736But what can all he ever painted, judged as a living fact, amount to when weighed against the startling splendor of this divine campanile?
55736But what does this prove?
55736But what has he to allege against what we asserted, and think we proved?
55736But what if his power and his will unite to make some wonderful change in all this?"
55736But what is all this to the Protestant confessor?
55736But what is it that I am asking?
55736But what is it that produces these spots in the sun?
55736But what is the old white- haired gospeller up to now, I wonder?
55736But what is this reason which operates in these two modes, impersonal and spontaneous in the one, personal and reflective in the other?
55736But what is to be said of those who, on a plea of conscience, sunder the closest bonds of nature, or threaten to do so?
55736But what nation are they of?"
55736But what will King Theodore, the pretended descendant of Solomon, do?
55736But where are the advances of metaphysics?
55736But where is my granddaughter?
55736But whither are you going?"
55736But who dare array himself against her avowed determination to subordinate all things to her purpose?
55736But why do nations grow old and die?
55736But why may they not also meet together for mutual encouragement, instruction, and edification?
55736But why should this be the case with nations?
55736But would it be right to inflict the trial on him?
55736But would nothing else do instead?
55736But yonder is your grandfather watching for you: had we not better go and join him?"
55736C.,''and said to the waiter:"''What carelessness is this?
55736Ca n''t you even say_ no_ in Russian?"
55736Can I regain it?
55736Can a man like you remain without lance or buckler?"
55736Can he not see that the intercession we invoke is a clear confession of the truth he thinks it obscures or obliterates?
55736Can it be that he is the writer of the article criticising us?
55736Can not Maria come back?
55736Can not this book speak better for itself than our good word?
55736Can one give the history of that development without taking notice of religion?
55736Can science gratify its fancy in these investigations with perfect liberty and without limit?
55736Can the reviewer say it is not?
55736Can there be a more pitiable spectacle, than that of a Protestant minister with St. Liguori as his guide in leading the souls of others?
55736Can we not believe in him unless we see the very rivers flow back to their sources?
55736Can we say as much of the stars?
55736Canst thou live without him?
55736Cast out by his own church, and refusing communion with the great Catholic heart, how long will he stand the fury of the storm?
55736Could I help it?
55736Could an angel from heaven portray the character of the pope in any plainer language?
55736Could he express them boldly?
55736Could it possibly be otherwise?
55736Could more be said in so few words?
55736Could they save her from death?
55736Could you not feel that nothing could change my love?"
55736Cur tam bene condita jura, Luctu dolor arguit amens?
55736Curious, is n''t it?
55736Dare you to go to God with a curse upon your lips?
55736Dear friends, what is the matter?
55736Dear sir, can you find one of our Roman Catholic brethren that keeps the commandments?
55736Dear sir, do you not know the reason?
55736Dear sir, do you think any Protestant with one eye, and that half- open, can be made to believe_ such nonsense_?
55736Dear sir, does joining a church make a man Christ- like?
55736Dear sir, what is theology?
55736Dear sir, who can_ change_ the heart of a child or a man?
55736Dear sir, who is this Mother Mary?
55736Deputy?"
55736Did Mr. Hamersley know this when he translated the book?
55736Did Raphael ever see a face that equalled hers of the San Sisto?
55736Did Sister Simplicia, as she knelt at her prayers that night, know the work she had done for her Master that day?
55736Did he not seem peculiarly fitted-- sent, in fact, from heaven, to undertake the conversion of the Irish nation?
55736Did he say so?
55736Did he see the fish?
55736Did not the Church of England do this on several occasions?
55736Did she not know I love truth?
55736Did she not materially alter the prayer- book, leaving out, for example, both the form of absolution, and also the Athanasian Creed?
55736Did she then see the eternal gates opening?
55736Did this name of Peregrina, pilgrim, passenger, allude to her rapid voyage upon the earth, which she hastened to leave?
55736Did you ever learn of one of our Catholic brethren doing the like?
55736Did you not then hear that interior voice which called with yet greater force, Thou shalt see her again?
55736Did you receive it?"
55736Do n''t you think there is a change in the tone of the press already?"
55736Do n''t you wish it was all yours?"
55736Do not hundreds of translations, scattered over all ages and all lands, answer them?
55736Do not this generation and this procession imply action?
55736Do read, also, verse 17:"For the great day of his_ wrath_ is come; and who shall be able to stand?"
55736Do the practices of the people there correspond to the doctrines of the theologians, or have they, as of old time,''bettered the instruction?''
55736Do these magnets draw by dint of their intrinsic beauty?
55736Do they also present marked differences in their appearance?
55736Do they ascribe to her the glory due to Christ, the only name given under heaven among men whereby we may be saved?
55736Do they ask jurisdiction from their own bishops, who, having none, have none to give?
55736Do they drink the_ wine_ and eat the bread, as Christ has commanded?
55736Do they not emanate from a higher, more perfect, and more abundant source, in a word, from God himself?
55736Do they profess faith in her alone for salvation?
55736Do they take it quietly for the most part?
55736Do we say his words?
55736Do you attribute it to a change in the physical condition of the country?
55736Do you believe any one_ can_ be so happy as she looks, I mean any one who leads so self- denying a life?"
55736Do you expect to find the pleasant grazing- lands of Meath on the tops of these barren hills?
55736Do you explain this fact by the change in the climate and the geographical position?
55736Do you forget that God is patient because he is eternal?"
55736Do you get them from yourself?
55736Do you know me?"
55736Do you know to what end our will, strengthened by love, ought to turn?
55736Do you know what we ought to desire?
55736Do you not know that combat-- and what is life but a continual combat?--must precede victory?
55736Do you not know that the priests do not allow the Bible to be read in a Sabbath- school nor in a day- school?
55736Do you not know the importance of the distinction?
55736Do you not see that the only real comfort you could give them would be the allowing them to try at least and comfort you?"
55736Do you not think we had better start at once, and get the voyage over before night- fall?"
55736Do you not violate these laws so far as you are able every day, every hour, and in every way?
55736Do you possess them completely?
55736Do you say, climate and even physical geography change with the lapse of time?
55736Do you think I could break bread or sleep under your roof after what has passed?
55736Do you think I do not feel and appreciate the years of care and tender love I have had from you and Uncle Harry?
55736Do you think that Nicholas does not know how to die?"
55736Do you want to know how divine generation takes place?
55736Do you wish Lotis to accompany you to Chione?"
55736Do you wonder it is a failure-- that Florence never goes there?
55736Does God owe to each one of us a miracle?
55736Does he believe himself to be only inspired?
55736Does he declare himself simply a prophet?
55736Does he desire to take part in these?
55736Does he not maintain, from first to last, that a philosopher''s whole system is in his method?
55736Does he not manifest himself to us at each instant of our lives, on each side of us and in us?
55736Does he not say,"Given a philosopher''s method, we can foretell his whole system"?
55736Does not St. Paul bid us return good for evil?
55736Does not all history answer them?
55736Does not he await us in that blessed abode where there are neither sorrows nor tears, but where reign eternal peace and happiness?
55736Does not this fact present an interesting question for the skilful to contemplate?
55736Does that necessarily interfere with the perfect fulfilment of all her duties toward her family and society?
55736Does that prove he knew intimately Catholic theology?
55736Does the first suffice?
55736Does the reviewer understand us now?
55736Does this kind of satisfaction suffice for your soul?
55736Dost think the wise can be devout When, close beside, an ignorant lout With mouth wide- gaping stands?
55736Dost thou also venture to defend her?"
55736Doth he not provide for thee in all things?
55736Dying?
55736Eclecticism is the absence of all system?
55736Faith or Reason?
55736Fallen as he may be from man''s estate, does he not still afford greater capacities of sociability than those of wild beasts?
55736Finally, how shall he direct his penitents, and by what system form their spiritual character?
55736Florence, darling, need I tell his name?
55736For example, Why is man in this world, and why the world itself?
55736For who can not say that"God pardoneth and absolveth all who are truly penitent"?
55736For whom, and for what, has the omnipotent Redeemer suffered these ignominies, these agonies, this cruel death?
55736Forgive me, Gaetano, my eternal repetitions; but what can I do?
55736Formerly, the poor human head was not subject to such distraction; and why?
55736From what province have they been brought?"
55736God alone can give the strength to do this, and yet if he does it sometimes, as he did for her, why not always?''
55736Had it even succeeded in keeping its own small flock within the fold?
55736Had its efficiency increased in the same proportion?
55736Had not her own pride been perhaps somewhat to blame?
55736Had they not come all this way to bring the everlasting gospel?
55736Hamish, a- bouchal, could n''t you manage to go in, just by accident like, and say something or other to give a turn to her thoughts?"
55736Has Edinburgh so many schools for the instruction of these classes?
55736Has architecture sought to invest stone with the attributes of spiritual and intellectual grace?
55736Has eloquence sought to nerve men for the grand conflicts of life?
55736Has he studied that philosophy?
55736Has man been created for such ends as these?
55736Has music sought to weave her entrancing spells around the ear and heart and soul?
55736Has n''t the woman lost husband and child, to say nothing of the old lord, who was all as one to her as her own father?
55736Has not the American Episcopal Church done it also?
55736Has not this already come to pass?
55736Has poetry sought to please the imaginations of men?
55736Has the witness which lies at the foundation of Christian convictions the wished- for authority?
55736Have not these little animals resolved this problem for centuries?
55736Have painting and sculpture sought to represent objects of refining grace and sublimity?
55736Have they an intelligent and free Creator?
55736Have they ceased to be of the_ same species?_ Certainly not!
55736Have we ever listened to these words of our Saviour,''Inasmuch as ye have not done it unto these my little ones, ye have not done it unto me''?
55736Have we?
55736Have you no such sacrifice in your religion?
55736Have you not always loved God?
55736Have you not yourselves sometimes the same complaint?
55736He asks:"But how in this respect do the people of modern Italy differ from those of ancient and heathen Italy?
55736He commenced by weeping with her over the lost Blesilla, for he said:"While wishing to dry her mother''s tears, am I not weeping myself?"
55736He had an instinctive leaning toward the writer who adopted_ Que sçay- je?_ as his motto, and followed the natural religion of Sébonde.
55736He had been searching in the bottom of the boat for something; but he looked up then with a kindling eye, and said:"Will you be true to the end?"
55736He has done my bidding bravely; why comes he not forward, that I may thank him?"
55736He has made a blunder, but were you not the first cause of it?
55736He said softly,"Chione?"
55736Hope, indeed, aided him on his journey hither, but what hope is left to give him courage to go back?"
55736How Long They Can Remain In The Atmosphere?
55736How admit, in truth, that on two or three threads, and without any other means of support, spiders could weave their true webs?
55736How and for what purpose had Providence permitted this community to be formed, which gave such an impetus to the religious life?
55736How came Americans to''love fair play''?
55736How can it be otherwise?
55736How can philosophy do this, if obliged to support itself on these very beliefs?
55736How can such a flight be explained, for they are already heavier than the air?
55736How can the Catholic Church treat with those who wish to make terms before submitting to her authority, on the basis of a positive untruth?
55736How can they so long brave the winds, the rains, the storms; arrange their webs in emptiness and without apparent means of support?
55736How can they study theology without the Bible, the word of God?
55736How can we analyze a work when one is tempted to quote every paragraph?
55736How can you account for it?
55736How could poor beardless conscripts, mere shadows, fleshless and worn out, endure all this?
55736How could she do less than expose to them the faults and errors of the Protestant translations, and forbid their use by the faithful?
55736How could she refuse?
55736How could she renounce the world?
55736How could their rival claims to endowment be adjusted in such cases?
55736How could they go to sleep themselves, and feel that some poor woman was probably wandering past their doorways, dying from want and exposure?
55736How could they nestle their little ones down to sleep in warm, comfortable beds, and think of God''s little ones freezing under their windows?
55736How determine physiologically or scientifically that the savage is the infant man and not the worn- out man?
55736How did it happen?"
55736How do spiders sustain themselves in the air?
55736How does he come by this marvellous knowledge?
55736How does his brother appear?"
55736How economize the_ reward_ of her labor, which consisted only of a little bread and water?
55736How far could their warnings reach?
55736How goes my lady daughter?
55736How has he accomplished it?"
55736How hast thou dared, thou and thy wench, to cross our path, and so put the life of the Lord''s elect in danger?
55736How hast thou passed the day?
55736How is it that the sun preserves indefinitely so elevated a temperature in spite of the enormous amount of heat which it loses daily?
55736How is it that, ever firm and immovable, thou alone hast survived the vicissitudes of all things and the overthrow of so many thrones?
55736How is it, then, that, on the contrary, it presents to us the appearance of a very deep black?
55736How long does any one believe this would continue?
55736How long wilt thou leave unpunished this martyrdom of a Christian nation, which will soon have lasted an entire century?
55736How many minds of this character can be found?
55736How prevent mothers from pointing out the holy child to their daughters, or the poor from blessing her as she passed?
55736How shall I thank you?"
55736How shall we escape from this inextricable difficulty?
55736How then can it be false to say that the Church prohibits the use of the Holy Scriptures?"
55736How was it possible for her to be what she was?
55736How, then, can it be explained that one little group of men, and only one, remained faithful to the idea of a single God?
55736How, then, can it receive the worship due to God alone?
55736How, then, can they believe those slanders which have, for so many years, been uttered against the church of God in reference to the Scriptures?
55736How, then, is it, maiden, that it was not presented sooner?"
55736How?
55736I gazed for a long while at Catharine, who seemed more beautiful than ever, and the question rose,"Where is Aunt Grédel?
55736I have not seen her; mental agitation may have caused it, and her leaving her religion may have caused that; how can I tell?"
55736I know what he wrote, and it is not necessary to tell him, is it?"
55736I loved him as well or better than them that were sent to me for my own portion?
55736I never broke a promise to man nor woman; and do you think that the Almighty would do the thing that I would scorn to do?"
55736I often say to myself, What, then, will heaven be, if there is so much of beauty on this poor earth, where we are not so much dwellers as pilgrims?
55736I suppose they grow wine in these parts?"
55736I then turned to my guide and asked him:"Does thy brother speak truly?"
55736I wish to be alone for the rest of the day-- do you understand?
55736If Protestants urge that private reason is the supreme judge of Scripture, how can they deny to Catholics the right to use it?
55736If he defers his justice, are you to cease to believe in him?
55736If it aspires to learn truths which transcend experience, and yet takes experience for its only guide?
55736If life is only a pilgrimage for us, is not this particularly true of those who have only passed a few days in this world?
55736If man would only fix his soul on such thoughts, what is there on earth that could discourage him?
55736If nay, then, royalty and aristocracy being repudiated, whither shall we fly for refuge and hope?
55736If the Church had prohibited the use of the Scriptures, how could the Reformers have got a copy of them?
55736If the Protestant falls into a like danger, how shall he find direction, since for him there is no infallible church?
55736If the flames are kindled, and she shrinks from them, will you pass through them in her place?"
55736If the winds carry them, why do they not appear in summer?
55736If theology is chaff, where shall we look for wheat?
55736If they are created, if we have a Father, why, in giving us life, has he made it so bitter and painful?
55736If we believe they themselves give it, why do we ask them to pray him to grant it?
55736If we think the good comes from them, why do we ask them to intercede with Christ to bestow it?
55736If yea, then how is this most precious end to be attained?
55736If"canon law does not oblige in this country,"what becomes of the impediments of matrimony?
55736If, in short, it will only admit and accept the facts that it observes, confirms, and verifies itself?
55736Ill, do you say-- sore stricken?
55736In other words, is it truly divine?
55736In the depths, in the essence of the soul?
55736In this, it seems to me Christian perfection really consists; for what can be more pleasing to God than to see our will always conformed to his?
55736In what part of the world which man could reach has she not planted the cross?
55736In what state would they put man in the world?
55736Indeed, is it not remarkable that religion in the world of antiquity should be so inferior to the other branches of human understanding?
55736Is any more evidence required by any honest mind?
55736Is he awkward?
55736Is he not giving the history of the intellectual development of Europe?
55736Is he restive?
55736Is it God, or is it man?
55736Is it alleged that Mohammedanism has owed its triumphs and progress to the sword?
55736Is it doubtful that these child- like enjoyments dissipate many sorrows, or that they aid to re- establish the harmony of the soul with the body?
55736Is it himself standing there, or is he, too, only some phantom of his own imagination?
55736Is it not Pharisaical to bind burdens upon others, which we touch not with one of our fingers?
55736Is it not he who, while lighting the world, invites the artisan to his shop, the laborer to his field, and the pilot to leave his port?
55736Is it the fault of Christians if the Cross has not advanced by the same weapon?
55736Is it the master that you mean?
55736Is it you, my poor Joseph?"
55736Is it, then, strange that it should be regarded with love, respect, and veneration?
55736Is not all this an infallible proof of his future destiny?
55736Is not he our good Father?
55736Is not this discretion at once, good manners and good taste?
55736Is not this grand?
55736Is not this his house?
55736Is that Catholic theology, or does it indicate much knowledge of Catholic theology, to say it is in consonance with that theology?
55736Is that your meaning?
55736Is the boat quite safe?
55736Is the proportion greater in Germany or in England?
55736Is the real order subverted by this?
55736Is the relation of cause and effect broken because our gardeners derive and propagate from a graft new and innumerable varieties?
55736Is there an institution on earth which, leaving out of regard all its claims, has had the quality of historical continuity for eighteen centuries?
55736Is there any pattern in nature for Giotto''s Campanile?
55736Is there any voice in the woods or seas to suggest the melodies of Kreutzer or the harmonies of Beethoven?
55736Is there anything wrong up there at the castle?
55736Is there on earth an institution which schism, heresy, and political ambition have tried to destroy and have tried in vain?
55736Is this constrained calm to effect no purpose in the decrees of wisdom?
55736Is this decision of no consequence to the Ritualists who pretend to believe in authority and antiquity?
55736Is this enough?
55736Is this equivalent to saying that philosophy is powerless to speak to us about natural problems?
55736Is this not far better than forced relations, coldness and constraint that freeze the heart and poison innumerable lives?
55736Is this what you call material progress?
55736It can not surely be an illness unto death?"
55736It does not seem a hard law either, does it?
55736It has also been briefly but satisfactorily treated in an article on"Is it Honest?"
55736It is in the following words:"Seest thou that grotto cut in the rock?
55736It is no longer men or ministers, it is not a form of government, it is God himself whom they attack?
55736It is the product of our mind, which is finite; how then could human science be anything but the explication of the finite?
55736It makes me giddy only to look down?"
55736It may be said that these are only little miracles; but after all, how do the greatest ones differ from them?
55736It seems to disappear:"Death, where is thy victory?
55736It was as if he had committed a sacrilege; as if he had opened the grave of the dead; for were these not buried long ago?
55736It was very unwillingly that Chione acceded; but what could she do?
55736Its remedy is extremely simple: it simply says to the human race, Why do you seek to know whence you have come and what is your destiny?
55736John Sterling, are you come to this?
55736Look again, and tell me, if you can, whether they are clad like Englishmen, or in the native weeds?"
55736Lotis, why are you here?"
55736Magas, tell me, Magas, can it be?"
55736Major Hewitson--""What of Major Hewitson?"
55736May I tell you, Gaetano, what I have been thinking about our future life?
55736May we then pray to relics and images?
55736Meantime, tell me, can you do anything for Chione?"
55736Might he not be presuming on an act of devotion which, after all, rose from a love that was entirely human?
55736Might not a small quantity act by radiation, while the action would be one of absorption should the mass be greater?
55736Might not the same thing happen with the hydrogen, which produces the brilliant lines of which I have spoken to you?
55736Mistress Hewitson?
55736Mistress Netterville?
55736Mistress Netterville?''
55736Mother, what say you of my Gaetano?
55736Must flowers fall before bearing fruit, and children also die?
55736Must he not go on his weary way of investigation, and is not, by his principles, doubt his normal state?
55736My brother, what has thy body done that thou shouldst scourge it in that fashion?
55736Nay, Mistress Henrietta, what madness has made you fear it?"
55736Nay, Not him who from our hearths so oft drove death away?"
55736Need we wonder that, to so a pure a soul, Christianity was all mercy and all love?
55736Nellie asked;"or is it only that, like all our other priests, he is forced to do his mission secretly?"
55736Nellie sighed-- it almost seemed as if she were making a real choice; and when he playfully repeated,"Have you decided?
55736Nellie was for a moment in despair, and then a bold thought struck her-- why not ride straight for Netterville?
55736Not partickerlerly well- to- do, an''t he?
55736Now is it impossible, that he might have nearly anticipated the exact plan of the heir of his inspiration and partner of his glory?
55736Now that the evil is done, how remedy it?
55736Now, we ask in all candor, what certainty there is, on Protestant grounds, that any of these modern translations is the real word of God?
55736Now, we demand, what is this one substantive reason operating in these two different degrees or modes?
55736Now, what has become of the others?
55736Now, where is the remedy for this?
55736Nowadays we mount distinguished autographs in gold; should this ever pass into public sale, would it not justify unheard- of extravagances?
55736Of course, I went, for who could refuse her?
55736Of what kind of matter is this luminary composed?
55736Of what service to her was her remorse?
55736Of what use is a church, or a minister, on his principles, or, rather, denial of principles?
55736Often, says Dr. Parigot, I have asked on entering,"Where is Mr.----?"
55736Old family he belongs to, eh?
55736On what does an aggrieved clergyman rely for the right of appeal?
55736Once again, what becomes of death in such deaths?
55736Or do they profess to have the whole Catholic Church in their own persons?
55736Or is there blessedness like theirs?"
55736Or what change in the physical conditions of the nation was there when it was falling from what there was when it was rising?
55736Or why have we seen her so grand under Pitt and Wellington, and so little and feeble under Palmerston and Lord Russell?
55736Or why need they smell any sweeter than a stone?"
55736Or, on the contrary, do you wish to attack the gospels?
55736Ought he to suspend for each individual man the eternal laws which govern the universe?
55736Petersburg?"
55736Petersburg?"
55736Prior to that, did they prohibit the use of the Holy Scriptures?
55736Quid turba superstes inepta Plangens ululamina miscet?
55736Read again this funeral service, and if you have a mourning mother among your friends and relatives,( who does not know one?)
55736Religion or Philosophy?
55736Ride back to my father, will you?
55736Roger saw that Ormiston knew more than he liked to tell, and asked in a low voice:"The poor lady, then, is very ill?"
55736Say, is it life or death?"
55736Secondly: Are these supplications only for favor and influence, or are they for the direct gift of blessing and salvation?
55736See you not it is an especial mercy?
55736Several of the tales are taken from the_ Arabian Nights_, and Don Juan Manuel generally modernized them(?)
55736Shall we add to the virtue and intelligence of the community, or to its ignorance and vice?
55736Shall we not go to her at once?"
55736Shall we say that he has succeeded in this impossible task?
55736Sharp lightnings flash, tempestuous thunders roll: I shudder-- and yet wherefore?
55736She found some pious, devoted women in Santiago,( where are they not found?)
55736She looked around; she inquired,"Where am I?
55736Should he destroy the happiness of the son for whom he would have given his life, or run the risk of being recognized by Mr. Harding?
55736Should these two words be placed together?
55736Sir, I conclude from what you say that she is ailing; may I not go to her at once?"
55736Sir, what is a Sabbath- school_ without_ the_ Bible_ to direct us how to teach little children the way of life and salvation?
55736Sister, can a vile wretch ask you to stand near when he is dying?
55736Sister, you who are pure and holy, tell me if God will pardon me?"
55736So long and so faithfully as I have loved you, and do you still talk of_ if?_"he answered, almost reproachfully.
55736Something plain and strong?
55736Sometimes we say to the little ragamuffins who get in here,"Did you ever go to a hanging?"
55736Still it is asked,_ What, then, about these Bible burnings, this actual hinderance, in particular instances, to the use of the Bible?
55736Still the gentle, persuasive voice of the saint sounded in his ears:"What is that, friend, you have in your hand?"
55736Strangers we are, and without a place whereon to lay our heads; what then is to become of us in these deserted mountains?"
55736Suddenly he said:"What could possess Chione to make herself a Christian?"
55736Suppose a Catholic lady wishes to go to Mass, to confession, to devote a part of her time to meditation or charitable works?
55736Surely he wo n''t make any objections to doing what I desire?''
55736Surely, grandfather, we can not have misunderstood or mistaken our instructions?
55736Tamar, do you think my darling father will ever forgive me?''
55736Tauler said to the unknown layman, his adviser:"What shall we do with these people, my son?"
55736Tell me yourselves how I could have done otherwise than I did?
55736That is,"he added, turning and pointedly addressing himself to Nellie,"if sorrow for her mother''s state is the sole cause for all this weeping?"
55736That night, when alone in our room, Florence said,''Mag, was I very, very wrong to let Paul know I was here?
55736That nourish a blind life within the brain, If, knowing God, they lift not hands of prayer Both for themselves and those who call them friend?
55736That''s what you''ll be wanting, is n''t it, a- lannah?
55736The Sisters of Charity or Mercy will surely be ready to take charge of such a house, for where will they find so true a work of charity or mercy?
55736The all- important question to the social economist now recurs: What is the necessary or inevitable mortality of the total population of this city?
55736The bride seemed to entwine her dying fingers in her nuptial wreath and to clasp it convulsively-- but, if it be God''s will?
55736The count continued:"That mouth, those eyes, that hand, they are the same; but where is the soul which animated them?
55736The creeds are referred to, and the( undisputed?)
55736The dog has not injured you, I trust?"
55736The mistress_ is the mistress_ surely; but blood is thicker than water, and are n''t you the child of the man that I suckled on this bosom?
55736The only point really open to discussion is, What constitutes a violation of just and rightful liberty of conscience?
55736The only question for him is, Do we think?
55736The only question, therefore, is, Do these prototypes deserve the honor we intend to pay them?
55736The word we speak of, does it indicate her virginal glory, or was it her name?
55736Then she:"Why, mamma dear, how can that be?
55736Then suddenly,"Who wishes to have my hair?"
55736Then, after a pause:"You''re fond of wine, then, after all, like our own Druids?
55736They affected not to know her motive, which she explained, blushing:"Have I done wrong?
55736They are frozen, are they not?"
55736They asked whether its immense revenues had been employed in preserving and extending the Protestant faith in Ireland?
55736They saved her senses, perhaps-- who knows?
55736They stud the AEgean sea; And where the deep Elysian rest?
55736Think you M. Cousin writes in that fashion?
55736Thorns blooming at Christmas?
55736To What Height Do They Raise Themselves in the Atmosphere?
55736To fall on the stranger and force him to flee?
55736To the question,"Whether in the New Testament be required any consecration of a bishop or priest, or only appointing to the office be sufficient?"
55736To welcome him?"
55736To- day where is the country in which she is not strong and valorous, strong in the blood of her martyrs, valorous in the surety of her victory?
55736Until this time all had gone well, but how were we to get out of the houses?
55736Very respectable rhetoric, but what does it mean?
55736Wait a bit, will you?
55736Was Wordsworth not in one sense a Quietist?
55736Was an artist, by any miracle, ever caught there more than once, save in the capacity of casual saunterer?
55736Was he in time?
55736Was her mother really dead?
55736Was it a presentiment of death?
55736Was it pride, or humility that actuated him?
55736Was it the hand of a betrothed spouse that closed her tomb?
55736Was it, then, in a few commonplace conversations that he had gained so complete an insight into that heart habitually closed?
55736Was not this act of courage alone sufficient honor for a lifetime?
55736Was she affianced like Rosa Ferrucci?
55736Was she less a slave now than before?
55736Was there ever in the flesh a form to rival the Apollo of the Vatican?
55736Was there not between this phenomenon and my preceding observations a secret tie, some mysterious relation?
55736Was your mother Ruth Anderson?"
55736We are willing to grant what they affirm of themselves, but what can be concluded from this?
55736We come, at length, to the last with which we proposed to deal: What is the constituent matter of the sun?
55736We have this exact and sure guide completely within our control; why should we seek adventitious aid and inexplicable revelations?
55736We must have a reply at any cost; who can give it to us?
55736We not only ask, Is he capable?
55736Were the subjects he selected not as passionless as those of his master, and treated with equal thoughtfulness and calm?
55736Were you there, sir?
55736What a chance for an old hand to get a little useful information in a friendly way:"Your master was an easy, comfortable kind of a man, was he?
55736What alleviation, you ask, has been found for this corrosive social evil?
55736What are the elements which enter into the composition of its atmosphere and of the photospheric bed?
55736What are the works that God requires?
55736What associations does it call to mind?
55736What audience more intelligent, more refined, more susceptible of sublime emotions?
55736What book of Herodotus or of Titus Livius carries such an intrinsic evidence of good faith and veracity as the recitals of St. Matthew or of St. John?
55736What can I do for you?
55736What can I do for you?''
55736What can I do?"
55736What can we add to this picture?
55736What can we do with them more than we have done to convince and convert them?"
55736What charity could so directly appeal to our hearts as this?
55736What could be more touching than the friendship uniting the austere old monk and this sweet young maiden?
55736What country in the world could ever boast of such a galaxy of celebrated names?
55736What country on this earth has ever inspired its children with so deep, so passionate, so enduring love?
55736What do these repeated returns to the same attempts, ending in the same result, teach us, unless the eternal inability to make a single advance?
55736What do these"Fathers"among the Episcopalians pretend?
55736What do we think?
55736What do you want with me?"
55736What does he say in exiling and chastising the rebel?
55736What does it prove?
55736What does that mean?
55736What family has not theirs?
55736What good would a sacrifice be from a peasant like me?"
55736What has Magas been doing?"
55736What has come over her?
55736What has he done to attain it?
55736What have I done to draw down Chione''s hatred?"
55736What have they done to reclaim mankind from polytheism and to spread the worship of the true God?
55736What heart does not thrill on hearing the name of Miltiades, of Themistocles, of Cimon, or Aristides?
55736What if he curse you in return?
55736What if he plunge you, for that very word, from this fire, which will pass with time, into that which is eternal and endures for ever?
55736What if she had seen rightly, after all?
55736What impression has such close contact with eternity produced on the mind of the rebel?"
55736What is his plan?
55736What is it?"
55736What is its signification and utility?
55736What is meant by merit of condignity?
55736What is the Bible?
55736What is the chief lesson of the recent gathering at Rome?
55736What is the good of a religion which does not blend with work- a- day life?
55736What is the highest pretension of the defenders of spontaneous generation?
55736What is the reason, do you suppose, why they do n''t''love fair play''in Spain?
55736What is the signification and the utility of these symbols?
55736What is the sun?
55736What just man will say that such a rule is right?
55736What kind of Christianity was this which comforted him, and whence did it derive its evidences?
55736What lets me now from going to my Lord?
55736What lighter burden can there be Than that which Love would lay on thee?"
55736What need, then, to argue further with those who will not see?
55736What of the owner of yonder castle?"
55736What position will he take?
55736What prayer could Nellie say at such a moment?
55736What said Jesus?
55736What saith the Bible, speaking of those that were Christ''s?
55736What say we?
55736What says the holy text?
55736What says the reviewer of Cousin''s doctrine of inspiration and revelation?
55736What shall that word be, Henrietta-- yes or no?"
55736What sick person was not nursed by her?
55736What sort of honors do Roman Catholics pay to them?
55736What sort of honors do the heathen pay to images?
55736What testimony would then be destroyed by them?
55736What then is left to this unfortunate tyrant, resisted at home by numberless insurgents, and threatened by foreign force with destruction?
55736What then?
55736What use for them to grow there all alone?
55736What was he doing?"
55736What was he to do?
55736What was he to do?
55736What was left for Paula but suffering?
55736What was passing at that moment in the superior part of that beautiful soul?
55736What was there, then, to retrench, in her life of extreme privation and severe penance?
55736What will he do?
55736What wise man will say that it is_ politic_?
55736What would Florence be without it?
55736What would they have said if those who left them had appeared upon the bosom of God in a beatitude and glory without end?
55736What, in Heaven''s name, has sent him to us here?"
55736What, then, is it?
55736What, then, is left him, if he will be a religious man at all?
55736What, then, should I fear?
55736What, think you, will the gardener say?
55736When Christ asked Peter and the disciples,"Whom say ye that I am?"
55736When Protestants desert their own platform, on what ground can they logically stand?
55736When at last she went again, the old man recognized her, and asked suddenly, in a trembling voice:"''Are you Rose Harding?''
55736When did he more truly live than on that bed of death?
55736When did she leave your society?"
55736When do you finish your studies?''
55736When he had finished reading, he came to her side, and leaning over her said:"Am I to receive this as your answer?"
55736When the day dawned, a weak voice cried out,"Christopher, Christopher, I give up; what shall I do to get out of this?"
55736When this sympathetic indulgence can no longer be asked of the natural family, where hope for it elsewhere than in the adoptive family?
55736When wilt thou arise and come to judgment?"
55736Whence comes this motion?
55736Whence do they come, and where do they both tend?
55736Whence does this voice come?
55736Whence have thy martyrs derived that courage which made them joyfully bend their heads under the axe of the executioner?
55736Whence is the music?
55736Whence is the music?
55736Whence were they to come?
55736Where am I?
55736Where are the nations which have been added to the Christian fold?
55736Where are the signs of well- developed and intelligent piety in the great Protestant empires of the age?
55736Where are they?"
55736Where are your arms?
55736Where do the religious orders find the charter of their privileges?
55736Where else?
55736Where in all the world will you find yourself likely to be appreciated so well as at Athens?
55736Where is Hamish?"
55736Where is the authority to compel him to fulfil his conscientious obligations of a purely spiritual nature?
55736Where is thy sting?
55736Where then was the help of those who gave her worldly counsels?
55736Where''s Magas?"
55736Which of these two staves would bud the quickest, if they were planted side by side?"
55736Who authorizes them to contradict the express words of Christ?
55736Who can describe her feelings as she entered the church of the Holy Sepulchre?
55736Who can describe the grief of Paula when the news reached Bethlehem of the death of Paulina?
55736Who can doubt this?
55736Who can look upon this blessed emblem unmoved?
55736Who can now say with truth that the pure word of God is read or heard in Protestant churches or families?]
55736Who can regard this mute memento of the Son of God in behalf of fallen man without sentiments of love, respect, and veneration?
55736Who can tell?
55736Who could have dreamed the sharp, sad overthrow Of such a life, so tender, strong, and brave?
55736Who could have told me then, that to this melancholy spot which I was leaving as a child, I should return with you a happy bride?
55736Who could wish to have his soul constantly disturbed and pestered by a jaded and craving body?
55736Who does not bow before the shade of Codrus?
55736Who does not feel that, by his patriotism, his disinterestedness, his heroism, he laid the foundation of his country''s greatness?
55736Who does not glow with rapture at beholding the works of Phidias, of Praxiteles, Apelles?
55736Who feel in the tremendous agony of the passion only the ordinary tide of human emotion in contemplating suffering?
55736Who gave thee the strength to oppose at all times a tranquil front to the masters of the world?
55736Who gave them to the public?
55736Who has given thee such power of persuasion that by its prodigies"from the very stones are raised up children to Abraham"?
55736Who has made them?
55736Who has not heard of the Glastonbury thorn?
55736Who has not read that conversation at Ostia, in which two holy souls, beginning with the love that united them on earth, came at last to touch heaven?
55736Who has seen them?
55736Who has the power to forgive sins?
55736Who is Jesus Christ?
55736Who is this man who says to the unhappy,"Come to me, I will relieve you, I will carry your burdens with you"?
55736Who knows what he means?
55736Who see in the miracles only a temporary relief from natural ailments?
55736Who shall do it-- you or I?"
55736Who taught thee to confound the subtle contradictions of the philosophers, and, with the same hands, to break the chains of the slave?
55736Who understood the best, the purest, and the greatest philosophers?
55736Who was this little Florentiola?
55736Who was worthy to succeed him?
55736Who were his masters and what were his lessons?
55736Who will deny that nations sometimes act the life of individuals?
55736Who will presume to boast that he knows more of the infinite than did Socrates, Aristotle, and Plato?
55736Who, then, has told you?
55736Whose frames do not thrill at the sublime words the anointed Saviour uttered?
55736Whose hearts do not glow with an unearthly warmth at the touching incidents which mark the divine footsteps?
55736Whose loves in higher love endure: What souls possess themselves so pure?
55736Why am I so deeply moved when I hear of some noble action?
55736Why are they permitted to remain in the church?
55736Why are you sad?
55736Why did you choose such a road as that, in which you might have perished a thousand times over?''
55736Why do I weep as I think of the sacrifices they made with such self- devotion and fortitude?
55736Why do all Roman Catholic nations suppress it?
55736Why do you dog my footsteps?
55736Why do you not listen to it?
55736Why does it exist?
55736Why does the pope forbid it in his own dominions?
55736Why had she not been permitted to be near him in the last struggle?
55736Why is it not practicable to bring our sanitary regulations to such perfection as to reduce the mortality of the entire city to near this standard?
55736Why is it that this red glare, shining as it passes, seems to throw a sort of supernatural glare over the platform and the waiting figures?
55736Why is there sin?
55736Why look so pretty if there''s none to see?
55736Why not ask it of them?
55736Why not go at once with you?"
55736Why not have presented yourself openly at the bridge if the matter which has brought you hither will bear investigation?
55736Why should I describe my long illness, my shrieks for water, my almost miraculous escape from what seemed certain death?
55736Why should I not?
55736Why should I not?"
55736Why should he be the only creature that is delivered up, as it were, with his hands and feet bound, to the rigors of the future?
55736Why should not the State of New York help in the good work?
55736Why should this wide difference in the mortality exist in two sections of the same city adjacent to each other?
55736Why suffering and death?
55736Why these cries?
55736Why through the kitchen?
55736Why was England so much weaker under the Stuarts than she had been under the Tudors, or was again under the Protector?
55736Why was not Rome as able to withstand the barbarians, or to drive them back from her frontiers, in the fourth century, as she was in the first?
55736Why with such idle griefs arraign The justice of the Eternal will?
55736Why, father, what is it; are you ill?
55736Why, then, is the humanity of Jesus Christ to be worshipped?
55736Why, then, only in religious matters?
55736Why, therefore, do you ask the question?"
55736Why, therefore, in this enlightened day, write contradictions and talk nonsense?
55736Will I be pardoned if I add some reflections on these letters and this narration?
55736Will our High- Church friends affirm the same, substituting for the elect, consistent members of their own communion?
55736Will the author forgive us, if we hint that he possibly does not very well understand himself, or know precisely what it is that he says?
55736Will the exile, then, be eternal?
55736Will the heart of mankind accept literature as the_ summum bonum_, the guide of life, the antidote of sin, sorrow, and death?
55736Will the reviewer answer the question?
55736Will you and your grandfather be content to share it with me?"
55736Will you be there to see me beg the prayers of the faithful as they pass in to the mysteries from which I am excluded?"
55736Will you charge yourself, then, with the execution of my orders?"
55736Will you trust her to my care?
55736Will?"
55736Wilt others''love for mine forego Wilt find thy joy alone in me?
55736With what face, then, can they find fault with their brethren who exercise their liberty in another direction?
55736Within the tabernacle of his love, The Lord of heaven awaits thee: wilt thou come?
55736Wonder myself that they do n''t sell it and get the good out on it,''stead of hiding it away at the banker''s?
55736Would Mammon have the goodness to aid an enterprise whose spirit rebuked his methods and imperilled his assets?
55736Would it not be better to have the jailer''s wife as well?"
55736Would it not be well for our enterprising publishers in this enlightened country, to employ a proof- reader who has received a passable education?
55736Would not some of these aerial constructions tumble down every day, ruined by their own weight?
55736Would the young lady follow her to the cell?"
55736Yet what if I should meet them?
55736Yet, why weep for her?
55736You are dying; did you know it?"
55736You can not deceive him, and for his power, does not your past illness make you tremble for the future?"
55736You have a servant who does not always display the judgment you require of him; tell me, why do you employ him in any delicate business?
55736You know the purpose for which I need you?"
55736You remember that evening when I returned home so late, that you and my father became alarmed and went out to seek me?
55736You say Anthony has gone up?"
55736You will gain on one side what you lose on the other; and besides, is not the true affection of a devoted heart worth more than a piece of gold?
55736You''d have me belie the thought of my heart with a smiling face?
55736Your spirit walks in halls of light: On earth you breathe its sunnier climes: How can an Irish muse invite Your fancy thus to sorrowing rhymes?
55736[ Footnote 52][ Footnote 52: Sermons in answer to the Tract,_ Is it Honest?_ By Rev.
55736[ Footnote 69] What wonder that the illustrious author of the_ Apologia_ used to look at him with awe when walking in the High Street at Oxford?
55736[ Transcriber''s Note: The word"fa?
55736_ Do_ you think he will like me?
55736_ Does the Catholic Church condemn the Bible and forbid her people to circulate and read it?_ We answer: NO!
55736_ Where_ is thy God?"
55736a friend of yours is the regimental surgeon-- Arthur Hinsdale, do n''t you remember him?"
55736am I at home once more?
55736and did he guess at the petty larceny she had just committed?
55736and is n''t she going, moreover, to be turned out of house and home, and sent adrift upon the wide world?
55736and is this all that them black scum of Saxon robbers left ye when they turned ye out upon the wide world to seek your fortune?"
55736and why, more than all the rest, have you come attended by a person whose very company must needs render you suspect yourself?"
55736and you talk of giving a turn to her thoughts, as if it was the toothache she was troubled with or a wasp that had stung her?"
55736are we all corporals now?"
55736are you about to leave Athens, my son?"
55736asked O''More;"have you any message for me, or is there anything the matter that you have followed us so far?"
55736bowed the emperor, and turning toward me:"How is your mother?"
55736but if all day I have not been able to think of anything but death; if Jesus wishes to take me, must I not be ready?"
55736but themselves?"
55736but we ask, Who is he, and what is he?
55736can it be?"
55736cried Henrietta;"and you have been there already, and have had time to row all this way back?
55736do you not know already?
55736do you not think his love for you is strong enough to live through this trial?"
55736do you think I''m a stick or a stone?"
55736has Larry come?"
55736have n''t I seen him brought back here for a bloody burial in the very flower of his days?
55736have you come hither all this way alone?"
55736have you not been a good and obedient child?"
55736have you not loved the poor?
55736have you the heart to spoil all I''ve been trying to do, and have just about finished?"
55736he asked nervously;"what is it?"
55736how can we give science these injurious contradictions?"
55736how could I doubt you?"
55736how has my darling passed these years that have been so dreary to me?"
55736how is it that lofty minds like yours and Chione''s can ally yourselves with such a drivelling set?"
55736if thou couldst of a sudden become ignorant of all things, even of thy own life, like St. Paul, when he said,''Was I in the body or out of the body?
55736into the heavenly palace to which his father had gone by the rough road of martyrdom?
55736is he not at home?"
55736is it not sublime?
55736is that idolatry?
55736is this Chione?
55736may I go forward?
55736may I join their choirs, I who was preparing for earthly espousals?"
55736no, sir,_ we are seven_,"and in ignoring the power of death to sever or to annihilate?
55736not Him of all others?
55736not strong enough?
55736of a faith which is not felt in daily usage?
55736of a worship which must be kept apart from our pleasures, from our business, from any of our honest pursuits?
55736of those who prevented her from living for Christ?
55736of what use can money be in such wilds as these?"
55736or are they merely a product of blind elements?
55736or in Austria?
55736or in Mexico?
55736or in Rome?
55736or was he not?
55736or what is it all, at all, that brings you down here before the sun has had time to say''Good- morrow''to the tree- tops?"
55736or why do you reproach me with it?"
55736said Avitus,"is it even such darkness as this into which the land is plunged?
55736said Hamish crustily;"give a turn to her thoughts, do you say?
55736said I,''whose little flowers be you, And from whose garden have you run away?
55736said Nellie,"how shall I get there?
55736said a friend to him, one day,"and how far are they implicated with the emperor?"
55736sayest thou?
55736sayest thou?"
55736says Chione to herself,"is not a smile from me reward enough for a barbarian like him?"
55736says the writer we have quoted,"where is thy blush?"
55736shall crime and falsehood triumph?
55736she moaned,"what enemy hath done this?
55736sobbed the girl,"have you not heard?
55736that it has nothing to say to us about our duties, our hopes, our destiny?
55736the cold is injuring her?
55736the cord has broken?"
55736the poor girl could not refrain from once more sobbing,"is it thus that I see you after all?"
55736the same, and yet so changed?
55736this weary bleeding has commenced again-- what shall I do to aid you?"
55736was going to hunt, he met a funeral, and, being fond of asking questions, he approached the coffin and inquired who it was they were going to bury?
55736was that the end of my triumph?
55736what do I hear?"
55736what have I done?
55736what have I done?
55736what is there that does not prove the inconstancy of worldly matters?
55736what news?"
55736what nonsense is this?"
55736what wouldest thou?
55736when I contemplate the greatness of this world''s heroes, and, above all, the greatness of the saints and martyrs?
55736when shall I come and appear before the face of my God?
55736where is he?"
55736where is it?
55736where then?
55736which shall it be-- this old kingdom of Grana Uaille or Tir- na- n''oge?"
55736whither?"
55736who calls me?
55736who can say they may not enter into temptation?
55736who does not see that so many miracles have been wrought by the sole power of that divine love kindled in thee by Jesus Christ?
55736who speaks to me of Kilrush?
55736who will give me the wings of a dove, that I may fly to everlasting rest?"
55736why do I ask, for what_ can_ I do?
55736why these terrors?
55736will you recognize him in that weather- beaten form, coarsely clad, and mien so humble, though an intellectual manliness still sat upon the brow?
55736would you believe it, this is the second time she has given me notice of a snare?
55736{ 103} How do you prove the validity of the idea of obligation?
55736{ 114}"Why fall those voiceless tears In sad reply To her, as if thine ears Heard not her cry?
55736{ 195} And where else have there been so many free and varying activities as in the Catholic Church?
55736{ 222} And how were they to be answered?
55736{ 243}"But I am not willing,"continues the preacher,"that this effrontery[ what effrontery?]
55736{ 247} But the toes of the image have been worn away by the kisses of the worshippers; and do not these kisses prove that Catholics adore the image?
55736{ 301} Is he well versed in the truths of faith himself, and, if you please, what is his own moral character?
55736{ 392} Could she abandon it?
55736{ 399}"What sort of fellow is he?"
55736{ 3} Is it not therefore useful and interesting to study the religious origin of this extraordinary race?
55736{ 456}"What then?"
55736{ 536} What, then, is the effect which the solar matter ought to produce on the radiation of which it is the seat?
55736{ 578} What are the reasons?''
55736{ 581} Have you ever seen a dying sinner try to fight off death?
55736{ 586} But what have Mussulmans seen of Christianity to commend it greatly above their own faith?
55736{ 592}"Have you a handkerchief,"he asked,"or anything of that kind which you could give me for a signal?"
55736{ 61} Say, would you be willing to help her bear her burden?
55736{ 662} Do not thousands of sermons, homilies, and commentaries answer them?
55736{ 670} Does history leave a doubt upon the mind as to the true means of Christian labor?
55736{ 68l} However conducive these civic Edens to municipal health, have not the park police an almost exclusive monopoly of the fresh air and gravel?
55736{ 69}"When one of these questions is proposed, what can we truthfully urge in reply?
55736{ 732} Is he worshipping a picture or a statue?
55736{ 797}"So you believe that the soul lives for ever?"
55736{ 832} Is the guardian distinguished for his sagacity and fidelity in the discharge of his assumed cares?
55736{ 852} What politician, what party, or what partisan newspaper dare oppose the_ political_ system of Papal hierarchy?
55736{ 853} What said St. Paul to Timothy?
40499If it should be the judgment of Congress that it would be most expedient--what can be more explicit than this language?
40499In this case, shall a secure port be stipulated, and the pecuniary and honorary considerations granted?
40499--The question, I apprehend, is whether we will take the petition up for a second reading, and not whether it shall be committed?
40499112; difficult to see where the danger lies, 112; what is meant by responsibility?
40499116; is five thousand dollars in proportion to the services of the Vice President?
40499197; can two parties exist in a well organized government to dispute about property and have no judge?
40499197; is not the want of consideration a good plea?
40499230; plans of the friends of emancipation, 231; negroes are inferior race, 231; slavery is no new thing, 231; does slavery weaken the Southern States?
40499231; is public opinion against slavery?
40499232; this squeamishness is very extraordinary, 232; consequences of emancipation, 233; if importation prohibited, will that species become extinct?
40499233; does slavery vitiate and debase the mind of the owner?
40499233; does toleration of slavery bring reproach on America?
40499233; will the abolition strengthen South Carolina?
40499234; was South Carolina wanting in patriotism?
40499318; peace concluded April, 1783, 318; what was the intention of the parties in this contract?
40499318; what does the law of nations say?
40499318; when did the war end?
40499324; is it expedient to do it?
4049959; what are the objects of Government-- revenue one of the first?
40499647; view of legislative and treaty- making powers, 648; how is the will of the people expressed in the constitution to be understood?
40499676; is it paramount to a law, and can it repeal law, although itself can not be acted upon by the legislative power?
4049989; the power of removal exists somewhere, and where?
40499A Treaty is a bargain between nations binding in good faith; and what makes a bargain?
40499A gentleman has asked, what is meant by responsibility?
40499A gentleman has said, that Parliament interfered, not to violate, but to perfect the contract: but what did Parliament do?
40499A sufficient force must be raised for their defence; and the only question now to be considered is, what that force shall be?
40499AMES.--I wish the committee may consider, with the attention the subject demands, whether the duties are too high or not?
40499AMES.--If we are to go to war, will it not be a prodigious saving of expense to have all matters ready beforehand?
40499After a silence of some minutes, Mr. LIVERMORE asked, what part of the report it was expected that gentlemen should speak to?
40499After all, however, should the unlimited powers he had mentioned( and such powers must always be unlimited) be wantonly abused, was there no remedy?
40499After having thus formed his opinion relative to the Treaty, his next inquiry was, is the Treaty constitutional?
40499After these preliminary observations, Mr. H. proceeded to inquire, not what ought to be, but what was the Constitution of the United States?
40499Again, what may be the result of the precedent relating to the session of Congress?
40499Also, gentlemen declared they would not recede from their former determinations; did they expect that the majority would recede?
40499And On the previous question,"Shall the said main question be now put?"
40499And although the excise may be somewhat unpopular, although money may still be wanted; what is the excise?
40499And are we( said Mr. S.) to stand up here, and tell the world that we dare not perform an act of benevolence?
40499And are we, meanwhile, to remain inactive and irresolute, and make no efforts to repel their intended attacks?
40499And between the Vice President and the Senate?
40499And can an act possibly meet the disapprobation of a single person which does not infringe his rights, and which puts money into his pocket?
40499And can not he infuse his dangerous and specious arguments and information into them as well in the closet, as by a public and official communication?
40499And can we be so unreasonable as to suppose that they would ever consent to a Treaty that had not such terms of reciprocity?
40499And demanded, if, by the purchase, they were divested of that quality?
40499And did the United States pass laws to punish the counterfeiting the notes of that bank?
40499And do not all those nations, as well as every other, come into our ports on the same terms with the British?
40499And do we, in the last case, say to these unfortunate sufferers, commence suits against those who have injured you?
40499And does not the constitution expressly declare that the House solely shall exercise the power of originating revenue bills?
40499And had all their professions been only a veil to hide their love of power?
40499And had the prosecution succeeded, would the Secretary have had an appeal to the public?
40499And have we not the volunteers, sir, in this country to protect our rights?
40499And here he would inquire if the Codorus Creek, which runs through Yorktown into the Susquehanna, was, or could be made navigable?
40499And how can you discriminate such claims from those rising from savage depredations on your frontier settlers?
40499And how would it be relished by them?
40499And if they are given up, how are we to form seamen to man our future navy?
40499And if war had been the consequence, how were we to have recovered the amount of the spoliations committed on the property of our merchants?
40499And if, of right, they can carry these into effect, will they regard the means, though they be expressly pointed out?
40499And if, under these circumstances, abused, would the injury be more tolerable?
40499And is it not a principle that taxation and representation ought to go hand and hand?
40499And is it not strange?
40499And is not the sum now proposed more than either the first or last holder, till within these few days, supposed would be paid him?
40499And is not the sum now proposed, more than either the first or last assignee ever contemplated, till within a few days past, would ever be paid him?
40499And is this indiscriminate charge, without the least respect to characters, a decent or a just return for a conduct like this?
40499And on the previous question,"Shall the main question be now put?"
40499And on the previous question,"Shall the said main question be now put?"
40499And on the question, Shall the main question be now put?
40499And on the question, shall the main question be now put?
40499And pray, sir, what in the world is equal to it?
40499And shall we now hesitate, and tamely suffer them to dictate to us?
40499And the question was then put, Shall this bill be rejected?
40499And then the main question being put, Do the House agree to the said third resolution, as reported by the Committee of the whole House?
40499And then the main question,"That the House do agree to the said resolution?"
40499And to guard herself against such measures, may we not expect she will lay her hand upon all our property on the ocean?
40499And were they not partial ministers of their own acknowledged principles?
40499And were they to judge for the whole Continent?
40499And what might not be the consequence of their awakening from their lethargy?
40499And what must be their astonishment when they hear that some people amongst us think that Great Britain has conferred no favor upon us by doing it?
40499And what was the slender basis on which the presumption was built?
40499And what, sir, would otherwise be the result?
40499And whether certain tracts of land should be reserved by Congress for certain purposes?
40499And whom, sir, do we mean to gratify?
40499And why depend on Portugal?
40499And why, let me ask, shall we go and fix upon the banks of a rapid river, when we can have a more healthful situation?
40499And will the enemy wait till they can be collected?
40499And would gentlemen say that the negotiation had not been attended with beneficial consequences to this country?
40499And would not this be a greater advantage to the United States than if they went up the rivers St. Lawrence or Mississippi, and paid no duty?
40499And, after he had employed an agent to make a contract, with full discretion, and he had in pursuance of his authority made it, was it not binding?
40499And, if we have, are we not to make use of it in judging of the expediency or inexpediency of the Treaty?
40499And, secondly, Were there 60,000 inhabitants in the Territory?
40499And, secondly, will such a construction warrant the establishment of the Bank?
40499Are Republicans irresponsible?
40499Are crimes more frequent in that country than in the other States?
40499Are crimes more frequently committed there?
40499Are despots alone to be reproached for unfeeling indifference to the tears and blood of their subjects?
40499Are gentlemen afraid to leave them to their own unbiased judgment?
40499Are gentlemen apprehensive we shall be led by this officer to adopt plans we should otherwise reject?
40499Are not the annual revenues sufficient?
40499Are not their capitals for trade larger than ours?
40499Are our debts ascertained?
40499Are taxes to be paid exclusively by the rich?
40499Are the PRESIDENT and two- thirds of the Senate Congress?
40499Are the eastern members to dictate in this business, and fix the seat of Government of the United States?
40499Are the posts to remain for ever in the possession of Great Britain?
40499Are the services of the Senate of more importance than those of the Representatives?
40499Are the truths in it applicable to the great object we are about to decide?
40499Are the very clods where we tread entitled to this ardent preference because they are greener?
40499Are there more executions?
40499Are these the men, asked Mr. C., who ought to have all this mass of Congressional odium cast upon them?
40499Are they amenable to the people for their conduct?
40499Are they not a polished people, sensible of the rights of mankind, and actuated by proper sentiments of humanity?
40499Are they not continuing to do so, and is it not in contemplation to sell large quantities of lands in that country, that have never been purchased?
40499Are they the men to swallow their resentments, who so lately were choking with them?
40499Are they the only people whose feelings are to be consulted on this occasion?
40499Are they the only persons who possess religion and morality?
40499Are they to look into another bill for that purpose?
40499Are they, for the stealing of a horse, or some such thing, to cross the line in armed bodies, and act just as they please?
40499Are we afraid that the President and Senate are not sufficiently informed to know their respective duties?
40499Are we never to stand upon a certain and solid foundation?
40499Are we not now sitting, in our sober discretion, a General Government, without the semblance of restraint?
40499Are we not so deeply in debt as to give us reason to believe that it will require many years to emancipate ourselves?
40499Are we not the sole judges; have we not a right to determine for ourselves?
40499Are we sure that it will come back into our possession again?
40499Are we to apply to foreign banks or individuals?
40499Are we to apply to the banks already established in the States for loans?
40499Are we to depend, then, on taxes for commanding money in cases of urgent necessity?
40499Are we to say, we will not be bound by your transfer, we will not treat with your representative, but insist upon a resettlement with you alone?
40499Are we to send a special committee to inform them?
40499Are we to take the circuitous route of impeachment?
40499Are you prepared to do so just now?
40499Are you ready to answer?
40499Are you ready to speak in your defence?
40499As to the flag, how can it require an answer from the Senate?
40499As to the third point, should not his estate be indemnified?
40499BOUDINOT.--The question seems to turn merely on this point, whether the Vice President shall receive a per diem allowance, or an annual salary?
40499Be it so-- what follows?
40499Besides, where will this business of censorship end?
40499But I ask gentlemen, whether Great Britain ever laid such a high duty in the first instance, as we are about to impose?
40499But I would ask if there is any power under heaven which could not be exercised within the extensive limits of this preamble?
40499But a distrust of the States is shown in every movement of Congress-- will not this implant distrust also in the States?
40499But admitting that they would not fight, to what would the argument lead?
40499But am I reduced to the necessity of proving this point?
40499But are not gentlemen who come from the most distant parts of the Union, compelled to relinquish every thing to attend here?
40499But are, he asked, gentlemen serious in these observations?
40499But can public necessity be urged in the present case to justify this kind of political robbery?
40499But did all this put an end to the war?
40499But did they want to bring forward an impeachment?
40499But do gentlemen consider the consequences of throwing all internal defence and distant expeditions upon the militia?
40499But from which of these measures is danger to be apprehended?
40499But gentlemen say,"Have we not as much power as the House of Commons in Great Britain?"
40499But he asked, if such would not be a vain attempt?
40499But he would ask those gentlemen, by whom the Government was to be dissolved?
40499But how do gentlemen handle this question?
40499But how does Congress get this power?
40499But how does it interpose and compel?
40499But how is it they are more concerned in this business than others?
40499But how will you prevent them?
40499But if it be partial or oppressive, are there not many instances in which we have laid taxes of this nature?
40499But if it was politic to lay an impost on cordage, would it not be the same with regard to hemp?
40499But if this were doubtful, where should they look for information?
40499But if you have two hands, both in the fire at once, will you pull out one before the other?
40499But is Congress going to legislate by strength of arm?
40499But is not the Secretary of the Treasury subject to blame?
40499But is there occasion for amendments to the Treaty- making power?
40499But is this the case of the domestic creditor of the United States?
40499But it is asked, if this Treaty be so unfavorable to commerce, why are the merchants so much in favor of it?
40499But it may be demanded, how are the frontiers to be protected, if the army was disbanded?
40499But it might be objected that a power so enormous, and comprehending such essential interests, might be abused, and thence asked, where is the remedy?
40499But let me ask, will not this as effectually destroy some parts, as if the correction had been made by way of incorporation?
40499But on what are a committee to confer?
40499But suppose they decline doing what you require, what is next to be done?
40499But supposing it to be done away, how do the constitutions of the different States stand on this head?
40499But the question is, what is that will, as expressed in the constitution?
40499But was South Carolina, at the commencement of the war, with all her slaves, backward in her resistance to Great Britain?
40499But was there no justice also due to the people of the United States?
40499But was this done by striking out and inserting other words in the great charter?
40499But were there no other ways of cancelling a Treaty?
40499But what are their immediate representatives to do, in case the bill be made perpetual?
40499But what did he do?
40499But what did the gentlemen who have delivered their sentiments say?
40499But what does this signify?
40499But what effect do these men suppose will arise from their exertions?
40499But what funds are to defray the increased expense of maintaining such a force as is now contemplated?
40499But what has been the practice?
40499But what has been the result of the system which has been pursued ever since?
40499But what has the House to do with this; or why should it become the censor and promulgator of the speeches of its own members?
40499But what have been the fruits of it?
40499But what have the citizens of the other States to do with our slaves?
40499But what is a law?
40499But what is the necessity of having a numerous representation?
40499But what is the object of the motion?
40499But what is the objection?
40499But what is this general welfare?
40499But what is this liberty which some appear to be so fond of?
40499But what is to prevent the greatest imposition in this business?
40499But what more can we do than pass a law for the purpose?
40499But what occasion is there for adopting such a resolution?
40499But what was the case?
40499But what would become of the acts of Congress?
40499But what, in this state of things, would restrain their piratical cruisers in the West Indies?
40499But where is the necessity of raising the impost to this degree?
40499But where was the government that had funded its debts under the circumstances of the American debt?
40499But who started this question?
40499But why did the creditors part with their acknowledgment of the debt?
40499But why do these men set themselves up in such a particular manner against slavery?
40499But why is this degree of caution necessary?
40499But why is this desirable?
40499But why should we lose time to examine the theory when it is in our power to resort to experience?
40499But why will gentlemen contend for incorporating amendments into the constitution?
40499But why, Mr. Chairman, should we hasten on this business of funding?
40499But would gentlemen infer from hence, that no alteration ought to take place if the manufactures were well established?
40499But, asked he, are precedents in war to justify violations of private and State rights in a time of peace?
40499But, if the sum voted was too small, what would be the consequence?
40499But, in taking the principle of territory, are the House to calculate on the uninhabited wilderness?
40499But, instead of this, what is proposed?
40499But, let me ask, if the Treaty should not be carried into effect, will that relieve that deserving class of our citizens?
40499But, said Mr. W., let us waive this subject, and inquire if negotiation had failed, whether war would not have been the consequence?
40499But, say those who hide the absurdity under the cover of ambiguous phrases, have we no discretion?
40499But, sir, is the whole morality of the United States confined to the Quakers?
40499But, sir, what is the situation of the people who hold these bills?
40499By applying proper rules of interpretation?
40499By emissions of bills of credit?
40499By loans at home?
40499By taxes?
40499By what magic can it be made to appear it will be more proper at the end of ten years?
40499By what provision of the constitution is the Treaty- making power, agreeably to the construction of the gentlemen, limited?
40499By whom, then, he would ask again, was the Government to be dissolved?
40499Can a market be obtained without the merchant?
40499Can any body of men to be raised in this country tread down the substantial yeomanry?
40499Can any of the Secretary''s plans be called bills?
40499Can any person, who has read our constitution, believe that it is in our power to pass a law without limitation?
40499Can any reason be assigned for making this distinction?
40499Can any solid argument against the resolution on the table arise from a conduct of this kind?
40499Can any thing show more friendly to the Union than adopting the constitution, and sending us here to administer it?
40499Can any thing tend more to make men think themselves mean, or degrade to a lower point their estimation of virtue and their standard of action?
40499Can gentlemen state more serious apprehensions in the former than the latter case?
40499Can it be supposed it would be necessary, said he, to give any member of this House double pay to accept of the office?
40499Can it be supposed that a part will be more desirous of promoting the good of the whole than the whole will of the part?
40499Can it be supposed that such a character as this is influenced by such a motive?
40499Can it be supposed that the name of Senators will render those members superior to their fellow- citizens?
40499Can not his friends introduce it as their own, by making and seconding a motion for that purpose?
40499Can the House listen seriously to such a proposition?
40499Can the advocates of the amendment even affect apprehensions that there is any intention to introduce a foreign nobility as a privileged order?
40499Can the human mind retain, with any great degree of decision, objects so extensive and multifarious upon a mere oral communication?
40499Can there be any foundation for alarm, when Congress expressly declare, that they have no power of interference prior to the year 1808?
40499Can they expect the planters to come in a body, and take off their goods upon their arrival?
40499Can things certain be balanced by things uncertain?
40499Can this Government, said he, protect its officers from the resentment of any one State in the Union?
40499Can this be the inference of common sense?
40499Can this possibly be a true construction of the Treaty- making power?
40499Can this, then, he would ask, be a bill proper to perpetuate, or fit for the restoration of the credit of the United States?
40499Can two parties exist in a well organized Government to dispute about property, and have no judge?
40499Can we desire any thing more ardently than a termination of the Indian war?
40499Can we find that she ever imposed a duty of six cents per gallon on molasses?
40499Can we retribute the sufferings which have been caused by the depreciation of our currency?
40499Can you then recover the money back again?
40499Certainly gentlemen would not pretend to bestow a privilege upon a man which he is incapable of using?
40499Congress having no money to give them, offered something; what?
40499Constituents made no scruple to tell Representatives of their faults, and he saw no reason why Representatives might not tell constituents of theirs?
40499Could any man tell?
40499Could any possible wrong be done to those who hold the domestic debt, by estimating it at its current value?
40499Could he look with affection and veneration to such a country as his parent?
40499Could it be pretended there was a shadow of authority given to the House of Representatives?
40499Could the House, in this case, exercise its discretion, whether or no a Convention should be called?
40499Could this be the fair construction of our so much boasted constitution?
40499Could we say, in such a case, that the tax had been uniform?
40499Did France before this war give us free trade to her colonies?
40499Did Holland, before the present war, open to us all her rich possessions in the East Indies?
40499Did any gentleman think there was sufficient evil in the late Treaty with Great Britain to authorize them in refusing to carry it into effect?
40499Did any member wish at this period to attempt this inquiry?
40499Did gentlemen wish to re- establish a temporary Territorial Government there?
40499Did he imagine that, as it is, they are not kept in a perpetual state of alarm, of exertion, and of danger?
40499Did it authorize a perpetual tax, irrepealable by the whole Legislature, without a breach of faith, according to received doctrine?
40499Did it authorize a plan for supplying former deficiencies, which it is admitted do not exist?
40499Did it authorize an entire provision for the public debt, past, present, and to come?
40499Did it bear a proportion to his services, or was it in proportion to what the members of the Senate and this House were to be allowed?
40499Did it condemn the doctrine of the majority?
40499Did it encourage the hopes of those who wished the establishment of Government upon the principle of equal rights?
40499Did it lead to a discovery of truth?
40499Did it not rivet the chains upon the people of England?
40499Did it render the people of Ireland more respectable in the eyes of the people of the United States?
40499Did not New York dispose of lands within her chartered limits, and from the sales become wealthy, as she has large sums in the funds?
40499Did not duty require a provision for the defence and safety of the United States by_ internal_ resources?
40499Did not this mean something more than the bare discharge of their expenses?
40499Did the General enter into these engagements out of personal regard to individuals, without a view to the public interest?
40499Did the House imagine that their censure, like the wand of a magician, would lay a spell on these people?
40499Did the Secretary apply the money borrowed in Europe agreeably to the legal appropriations and the instructions of the PRESIDENT?
40499Did the Secretary of the Treasury apply the money to other uses than the law directed?
40499Did the soldier accept of this offer?
40499Did these acts originate with the Executive?
40499Did they consider this House as the only branch from which any danger was to be apprehended?
40499Did they contribute to strengthen the country against invasion by staying at home and joining the invader as soon as he was successful?
40499Did they mean to rob the Almighty of what they call his prerogative?
40499Did they mean, that the first event which would put an end to their own authority should be the last act of Government?
40499Did they not refuse to correspond with any society that aided, or in any manner abetted, the insurrection?
40499Did they not, in the most pointed manner, discountenance any such proceeding?
40499Did they suspect the Legislature of doing wrong?
40499Did they turn themselves to industry and useful pursuits?
40499Did they, by their arms or contributions, establish our independence?
40499Did this act of submission render them more respectable in the eyes of the people of England?
40499Did this passage show that the PRESIDENT wanted them to intermeddle?
40499Did we go to the Emperor of Morocco, or to the Dey of Algiers, and challenge a passage for our ships up the Mediterranean?
40499Did we intend to rival the military establishments in Europe?
40499Did we judiciously examine whether the spirit of the law accords with the habits and manners of the people?
40499Do gentlemen conceive that on any occasion instructions would be so general as to proceed from all our constituents?
40499Do gentlemen contemplate to what issue these principles would lead?
40499Do gentlemen foresee the extent of these words?
40499Do gentlemen imagine that State will join the Union?
40499Do gentlemen mean that he shall give it piecemeal, by way of question and answer?
40499Do gentlemen suppose our laws, like those of the Medes and Persians, unchangeable?
40499Do gentlemen, said he, consider the importance of the power they give the officer by the clause?
40499Do the United States avenge these murders?
40499Do these gentlemen require any thing more respecting the powers of Congress, than a description of the ends of government?
40499Do these men expect a general emancipation of slaves by law?
40499Do they believe the capitals of those banks adequate to the exigencies of the nation?
40499Do they demand back the property carried off?
40499Do they leave their State and relinquish their occupations?
40499Do they mean to purchase their freedom?
40499Do they not admit that He is the source of all good, and can they refuse to acknowledge it?
40499Do they not observe that the fate of the Government is deeply involved in the decision?
40499Do they understand the rights of mankind, and the disposition of Providence, better than others?
40499Do we charge bribery or corruption?
40499Do we ever originate any money bill?
40499Do we impeach the Executive?
40499Do you know one Robert Randall?
40499Do you mean to pay the principal and interest now due?
40499Do you think we should pay the tax?
40499Does Portugal open the Brazils?
40499Does Spain open her rich islands in the East and West Indies, and her immense possessions in South America?
40499Does any gentleman expect, while we have a public debt, to prevent speculation in our funds?
40499Does any gentleman imagine that an officer is entitled to his office as to an estate?
40499Does experience sanction such an opinion?
40499Does he infer that the people can, in detached bodies, contravene an act established by the whole people?
40499Does he mean that it shall lie dormant and never be exercised?
40499Does it consist in the exaltation of one man, and the humiliation of the rest?
40499Does it contain any thing which is not true?
40499Does not that new order prohibit, as much as ever, American vessels from carrying provisions to the West India Islands?
40499Does not the British Government wish to deprive us of this branch also?
40499Does she not receive every thing which she could have demanded in relation to that Treaty?
40499Does she, in the Treaty lately made, open even Florida, as Great Britain has Canada?
40499Does the House believe this?
40499Does the dignity of a nation consist in the distance between the first magistrate and his citizens?
40499Does the gentleman conceive that such only are delegated as are expressed?
40499Does the lawyer neglect his client?
40499Does the merchant forego his commerce, or the farmer his agriculture?
40499Does this look like a democracy, when one of the first acts of the two branches of the Legislature is to confer titles?
40499Does this mean a part of the people in a township or district, or does it mean the representatives in the State Legislatures?
40499First, what article shall be the subject of a particular tax, and what shall remain in the common mass liable to an impost_ ad valorem_?
40499For what is the tendency of this counterfeit alarm?
40499For what purpose, then, shall it be committed?
40499For what reason have we made a difference between the President and Vice President?
40499For what rights of a citizen will be deemed inviolable when a State renounces the principles that constitute their security?
40499From whence, he asked, do we acquire the authority to exercise this power?
40499Gentlemen had said, Shall this House not have as much power respecting Treaties as the House of Commons in Great Britain?
40499Gentlemen on the other side had spoken of their feelings; did they suppose, he asked, that those who were in the majority had not feelings?
40499Gentlemen say it will work injustice; but are we not as much bound to repair the injustice done by the United States?
40499Gentlemen say the Secretary of the Treasury is responsible for the information he gives the House-- in what manner does this responsibility act?
40499Gentlemen say-- why provide the money if it be not wanted?
40499Gentlemen talked about impeachment?
40499Government, in the most solemn manner, pledged itself to make compensation to the soldiers, have they done it?
40499Grant it; but can they say that we shall never have a war with any European power?
40499Great Britain obtained no soldiers from her East and West India settlements, were they therefore useless?
40499Had experience proved that the negroes would not make good soldiers?
40499Had it a concurrent right with the States?
40499Had not our neutrality been the occasion of our wealth and prosperity?
40499Had not the managers of our Government kept a watchful eye on our affairs?
40499Had she a claim under the Treaty of 1783, which is forgotten?
40499Had the Executive avowed the plan of the Secretary of War, or his reasoning?
40499Had the public mind been less disturbed on the late Treaty than in 1793?
40499Had they a right to assist in the formation of Treaties in such a manner as that a Treaty would be incomplete without their sanction officially given?
40499Had they done so?
40499Had they not a claim on the House to adopt such means as would enable the citizens in every State to judge of the propriety of public measures?
40499Had this done any good to the cause?
40499Has not the Legislature done so before?
40499Has that been altered since by the incorporation of amendments?
40499Has the constitution made this House a diplomatic body, invested with the powers of negotiation?
40499Have any nations in the present European war, premised their operations by a declaration?
40499Have not express charges, as well as vague rumors, been brought against him at the bar of the public?
40499Have not the public a right to know the sentiments of the House on every question?
40499Have the newspapers reprobated it?
40499Have the principles on which you ground the reproach upon Cabinets and Kings no practical influence-- no binding force?
40499Have there not bills originated in this House which have caused the expenditure of much money to very little purpose?
40499Have these people here( the Democratic societies) any such opportunity?
40499Have they any right to interfere with our internal policy?
40499Have they not pushed conquests into the Indian country north- west of the Ohio?
40499Have they precedent for this assertion?
40499Have we heard any complaints against it?
40499Have we not laid extra duties on various articles, expressly for the purpose of encouraging various branches of our own manufactures?
40499Have we not, said he, been one of the happiest nations upon earth?
40499Have we received a power to exercise in wantonly oppressing those who gave it?
40499Have we, in truth, originated this money bill?
40499Have you any proof to cite that you are not guilty?
40499Have you got any new associates in this city?
40499Having stated these preliminaries, Mr. B. proceeded to inquire what were the powers attempted to be exercised by this bill?
40499Having this advantage, can it be doubted that we have not industry and enterprise to improve it?
40499He adverted to the idea of direct taxation, and inquired, on what principle will gentlemen consent to this mode of raising the necessary supplies?
40499He appealed to the feelings of every honorable man in the committee, whether demands for justice and reparation for injuries were enforced by threats?
40499He asked if any of the States had ever established various rates for their lands?
40499He asked if the Creeks performed a single tittle of the treaty of New York, about which there had been so much parade?
40499He asked if, before the purchase, the certificates were debts due from the United States?
40499He asked if, in the present situation of the country, all dependence was to be placed on commerce?
40499He asked what better time there was than the present for settling the amount of these claims?
40499He asked what would this countervail be?
40499He asked whether this Government was intended for a temporary or a lasting one?
40499He asked whether words could be devised that would place the new Government more precisely in the same relation to the real creditors with the old?
40499He asked, if, in such a case, it was competent to the House rightfully to withhold the means necessary for the performance of the public engagement?
40499He asked, upon parallel principles, what might Congress not do?
40499He asked, what was the authority of the United States?
40499He asked, who would lend us money, if there was such a difficulty in establishing funds to pay the interest of it?
40499He had asked, why, since the PRESIDENT had proclaimed a Treaty as the law of the land, which was not the law of the land, why he was not impeached?
40499He had said, how could they determine whether the Treaty was constitutional or not, or whether an impeachment was necessary, without information?
40499He inquired how the gentleman proposed to get information?
40499He inquired of him whether the House itself went into an investigation of facts in the first instance?
40499He inquired whether the House were to sanction and authorize the reports of the proposed stenographer?
40499He noticed the objection from banks banishing the specie; he said the surplus only would be sent out of the country; but is it given away?
40499He only wanted to ask whether the call for yeas and nays was withdrawn or not?
40499He proceeded to inquire whether this clause gives them the right to make Treaties the supreme law of the land?
40499He said, gentlemen asked who would be offended or hurt by this plan?
40499He then inquired what better time there could be for learning the number and extent of the losses than the present?
40499He then inquired whether, under the existing state of things, the Treaty ought to be rejected?
40499He then inquired, of what right does this incorporation deprive a single citizen?
40499He thought it advisable to guard against abuses; but has this abuse not already taken place?
40499He was next interrogated by the SPEAKER, as follows: Are you guilty, or not guilty?
40499He was then asked, whether the call of yesterday was valid to- day, or if it was necessary for the members to rise over again?
40499He would inquire how they became so?
40499He would inquire what Treaties could be entered into by the PRESIDENT and Senate, without infringing upon the powers placed in Congress?
40499His first inquiry, he said, should be, whether negroes were to be considered as property?
40499How are the judges to determine in the case; are they to be guided in their decisions by the rules of expediency?
40499How are those sentiments reconcilable to the oath we have taken?
40499How are we to form one?
40499How can gentlemen answer for this, who call themselves representatives, on the broad basis of national interest?
40499How can it be such an_ ex post facto_ law as is prescribed by the constitution, when that expression is conjunctive with a bill of attainder?
40499How can the business originate in this House, if we have it reported to us by the Minister of Finance?
40499How can they reconcile their conduct?
40499How can we help it?
40499How could certain members reconcile this proceeding with their former votes and language?
40499How could it then bear a comparison with that House, who were chosen by the whole people every two years?
40499How could they annul a State law, when the State would be able to plead a precedent on the part of Congress?
40499How could they be called freemen, if they were, against their consent, to be expelled from the country?
40499How could they delegate a power to others which they did not possess themselves?
40499How did that appear?
40499How is this to be done?
40499How long could an enlightened people remain in such a state of insensibility and torpor?
40499How many of them are springing up in the Northern States?
40499How many ways of proceeding lie open before us?
40499How retaliate?
40499How then can gentlemen assert that the powers of appointment and removal are incident to the Executive Department of Government?
40499How then do you propose to restrain the Secretary of the Treasury?
40499How then was he to find evidence of his behavior during such a length of time?
40499How was that money applied, and what will now be necessary?
40499How was this done?
40499How was this to settle the principle of excise?
40499How were they to regulate commerce?
40499How were we to act?
40499How will he please both?
40499How will they know the laws, if we do not understand the constitution after it has been in operation for nearly eight years?
40499How will this doctrine operate upon the power of appropriation?
40499How would he embarrass his family and property in such engagements?
40499How, then, can gentlemen from those States contend that the proposed duty is so much too high as to occasion the fatal consequences they foretell?
40499How, then, can gentlemen reconcile their conduct of this day to the liberality they have hitherto shown?
40499How, then, can gentlemen suppose the revenue ought to be perpetual, in order to be commensurate with the object?
40499How, then, is it possible they can continue their trade, when you lop off another part of their capital?
40499I am sensible this Treaty presents itself with an unfavorable aspect, and what is the reason?
40499I ask again, Mr. Chairman, if the people of this country possess less power than the people of that despotic Government?
40499I ask gentlemen, can there be a greater evil than this in any Government?
40499I ask, further, when such attempts have been made, have they not failed of success?
40499I asked those, as I might ask my colleague now, who of our constituents could calculate what he would save by any proposed reduction of our pay?
40499I asked, is not the assignment of certificates confirmed by the motion?
40499I asked, of what is the assignee deprived but of his late sanguine expectations?
40499I asked, where is the injustice of the State''s complying with its engagements made to the first holders of certificates as far as the case admits?
40499I asked, whether the proposition before us does not rather establish confidence in Government than the contrary?
40499I can not, for my part, conceive how any person can be said to acquire a property in another; is it by virtue of conquest?
40499I fear war as much as any man, when a pretext is given; but can it be seriously said a rejection of this Treaty is a cause of war?
40499I resort especially to the convictions of the Western gentlemen, whether, supposing no posts and no Treaty, the settlers will remain in security?
40499I say, would not such reflections, with ruin before our eyes, produce a degree of irritation in the most calm amongst us?
40499I trust it is neither too presumptuous, nor too late to ask, can you put the dearest interest of society at risk without guilt, and without remorse?
40499I will ask the gentleman by what precise authority he borrowed the money in Amsterdam and Antwerp, and paid it in Paris?
40499I will ask, are they more?
40499I will ask, though, is this country ever to be in a settled and quiet state?
40499I will ask, was it ever known in a Treaty, that a stipulation was made to give up property plundered after the peace?
40499I wish, therefore, to be ascertained of one fact, do the army wish a measure of this kind to take place?
40499I wonder where they are going so cheerfully?"
40499I would ask what state we were in then?
40499I would ask, if the other members of the Union are not also to be consulted?
40499I would beg to ask those, then, who are desirous of freeing the negroes, if they have funds sufficient to pay for them?
40499If I receive a favor, what but the sentiment of gratitude ought to direct me in my acknowledgments?
40499If a cargo of nails were to be sent to Carolina, I would be glad to know how we are to purchase it?
40499If a law is the expression of the will, must not an appropriation law be equally so?
40499If a permanent seat is established, why not go to it immediately?
40499If a war should suddenly break out, how is Congress to provide for it?
40499If a wish of Congress can bring them into the Union, why should we decline to express such a wish?
40499If any article is warranted on this account, how much more are we authorized to proceed on this occasion?
40499If authority beyond this is assumed, however trifling the encroachment at first, where will it stop?
40499If by the ill- timed promulgation of this report, we have laid the foundation for the calamity, ought we not to counteract it?
40499If every member is to be bound by instructions how to vote, what are gentlemen from the extremities of the continent to do?
40499If future difficulties should involve that nation still further, what must be the consequence?
40499If he can not be removed, I should suppose he can not be suspended; and what security have the people against the machinations of a bad man in office?
40499If his father had lived a few years longer, would there have arisen any question on this subject?
40499If it be true, then, can the PRESIDENT repeal, as he has by the Treaty, the laws of Congress, although by the constitution he can not negative them?
40499If it is inquired where we are to draw the line of a liberal construction, I will also inquire where the line of restriction is to be drawn?
40499If it is, is the conclusion not obvious, that Congress have power to pass laws for carrying these powers into effect?
40499If merchants can not get insurance, will they send their vessels out?
40499If not, then, 2dly, Whether both, or either, and which of them, ought to be ratified?
40499If our Senate should take any unwarrantable stride towards aristocracy, have we not the power to check them?
40499If sequestration is hostility, as he had heard it called, what, he asked, is condemnation?
40499If so, to what an extent must they go?
40499If so, what was that expense, or what will be the probable increase?
40499If so, will there be any economy in this mode of procedure?
40499If suspicion had so long existed against the integrity of the Secretary, why was not information called for at the beginning of the session?
40499If that was done, the Government would be removed to the Potomac; if not, we should stop short of it; and what would be the consequence?
40499If the House undertake to censure particular classes of men, who can tell where they will stop?
40499If the Indians are to be kept in peace by bribes, why not, in this, as in other similar cases, by presents and pecuniary rewards?
40499If the PRESIDENT and two- thirds of the Senate have a right to make a law, do Congress make all laws?
40499If the Potomac is struck out, are you sure of getting Baltimore?
40499If the Secretary has paid what was due, what then is the complaint?
40499If the Treaty had been the most complete and satisfactory, would it not be necessary to leave something to enforce its execution?
40499If the controlling influence of this House was added, would the power be less?
40499If the country had been plunged into a war, would it be as flourishing as it is?
40499If the member from Virginia( Mr. GILES) had been opposed to the Treaty going into operation, why did he not take the proper mode to prevent it?
40499If the next Legislature were disposed to violate the public honor, would the law now under consideration stand in their way?
40499If the officer misbehaves, he can be removed by impeachment; but in this case is impeachment the only mode of removal?
40499If the power flows from the nature and necessity of the case, it may be demanded, is the renot equal authority for the Bank?
40499If the thing is in itself right, why refuse to vote directly for it?
40499If then the fishermen ask you to restore only their own money, will you deny them?
40499If these facts are established by the committee, would it give equal satisfaction as if they were established by the House?
40499If these were really their sentiments, why did they not abide by them?
40499If they are, will they take them by force?
40499If they come here with badges at their button- holes, can you forbid them?
40499If they do, what is the injury arising from the adoption of the resolution intended to be submitted to the committee?
40499If they had such an abhorrence for slavery, why, said Mr. S., did they not cast us off and reject our alliance?
40499If they intermeddle in the business of sailors, why not in that of manufacturers and farmers?
40499If they will not be content with that, shall it be committed to investigate facts?
40499If this argument was founded in fact, it would put an end to all debates on all the new taxes; but what was this notable discovery?
40499If this doctrine prevails, to what a situation would the Representatives of a free people be reduced?
40499If this is the case, does it not imply a censure by the House on certain characters?
40499If this is the case, is there any person of humanity that would not wish to prevent them?
40499If this is the case, will a revenue law for one or two years bring that relief which is expected?
40499If this is to be adduced as a proof of the popularity of a measure, what are we to say with respect to a tax on tea?
40499If this right was denied them, where would the principle stop?
40499If this system should prevail, were we to receive British productions through other countries?
40499If to continue in session be an evil, why are we here?
40499If we are parties, what would be the decision before a court of justice?
40499If we do not mean to deceive, why not make the provision commensurate to the occasion?
40499If we pay this attention to them, in one instance, what good reason is there for contemning them in another?
40499If we refuse to say that the act itself is a crime, how can we condemn Randall as criminal?
40499If we relinquish this branch of the cod fishery, what is left us?
40499If we should go as far South as Baltimore, why not an equal distance south- west to the Potomac?
40499If what he said was not sufficient to disprove it, he asked where is the evidence to support it?
40499If you do not mean to indemnify, why inquire at all?
40499If, then, they chose to yield one species of property, might they not another?
40499If, therefore, some interpretation of the constitution must be indulged, by what rules is it to be governed?
40499If, therefore, we are forewarned, ought we not to be forearmed?
40499In addition to the loss of this Government, would not every member of the Legislature, he asked, lose his character, credit, and reputation?
40499In case of an army establishment, for example, suppose the PRESIDENT or Senate were to refuse their assent to the repeal of a law establishing it?
40499In cases of a more serious kind, is not sentiment the only prompt and enlightened guide of our conduct?
40499In discussing the question, he inquired, What has Congress already done?
40499In favor of the militia, it may be asked, who fought the battle of Bunker''s Hill?
40499In many cases the Executives are not in particular vested with the power of appointment; and do they exercise that power by virtue of their office?
40499In short, was not this a kind of argument infinitely more tending to the production of prejudice than to the discovery of truth?
40499In spite of this mock solemnity, I demand, if the House will not concur in the measure to execute the Treaty, what other course shall we take?
40499In such case, may not titles do an injury to the Union?
40499In this case a question arises: What is, upon the whole, most just and expedient?
40499In what does the case differ between the depreciated paper and the certificates?
40499In what manner had this trust been carried into execution?
40499In what mode are the memorialists to be informed of our humane dispositions?
40499Instead of Baltimore, is it not probable we may have Susquehanna inserted, perhaps the Delaware?
40499Is Congress vested with power to grant privileges contained in the bill?
40499Is he absolutely bound to perform what he is instructed to do?
40499Is his maxim supported by precedent drawn from the practice of the individual States?
40499Is it a narrow affection for the spot where a man was born?
40499Is it among the archives?
40499Is it because the feelings of the Friends will be hurt to have their affair conducted in the usual course of business?
40499Is it contended to be out of order?
40499Is it expected that a Senator shall eat more, or drink more costly liquors, than a member of the House of Representatives?
40499Is it expected, said Mr. N., that I am to abandon my independence for the sake of the PRESIDENT?
40499Is it for the_ undaunted_ and_ energetic_ countenance of the cause of France, in her struggle for freeing herself from despotic shackles?
40499Is it from such a nation( he asked) that we are to hope for justice?
40499Is it limited by any law past?
40499Is it limited by the provisions with respect to appropriations?
40499Is it necessary to add, that a powerful body of seamen, at some future day, may save us from the vast expense and danger of a standing army?
40499Is it necessary, or was it ever thought so, to make it a stipulation by Treaty?
40499Is it not an established principle amongst all civilized nations, that plundered property shall be given up?
40499Is it not because we have entertained too exalted ideas of our own national importance?
40499Is it not implied by all of them, that certain oaths, residence, and property, make the requisites to form citizenship?
40499Is it not on account of his superior station and his dignity?
40499Is it not our business to inquire into the cause of this strange conduct?
40499Is it not part of our legislative authority?
40499Is it not sufficient that their time and talents are given to the public?
40499Is it not the duty of the House to check this spirit of devastation?
40499Is it our present President?
40499Is it polite, is it generous, to force him to renounce it?
40499Is it politic and wise, then, Mr. Chairman, to exert the power contended for, even if it be authorized by the constitution?
40499Is it possible that any man can be hardy enough to avow them, and their ridiculous consequences?
40499Is it possible that these societies can exist, for any length of time, when they are of no real use to the country?
40499Is it possible to transport the revenue from one end of the continent to the other?
40499Is it pretended that the services and supplies were an inadequate compensation?
40499Is it reasonable to expect that men should sacrifice domestic ease and the interests of their families to serve their country?
40499Is it supposed that all this matter can go off without any noise or combustion?
40499Is it the_ manly_ demand of restitution made of Great Britain for her accumulated injuries that called forth the praise?
40499Is it to rouse again the sleeping apparitions which have disturbed the back country?
40499Is it to show that the mock dangers which they have pretended to dread are real?
40499Is it to them we owe our present happiness?
40499Is it true, that an unwillingness to pay debts hath been the principal cause of opposition to this Treaty?
40499Is it within the powers of this Congress to grant bounties?
40499Is it worthy the attention of Government that the cod fishery should be preserved?
40499Is it written?
40499Is not our public credit totally gone?
40499Is not the assignment of the certificates confirmed by the nation?
40499Is not the present a most favorable opportunity for holding up these people to popular resentment?
40499Is not this House excluded?
40499Is not this, as a principle, as novel, as improper, as that which alarms our opponents?
40499Is not, therefore, eight cents disproportioned to the rates fixed, or intended to be imposed on other articles?
40499Is that nation more debased than others?
40499Is the House to be told that, for the sake of harmony, they must give up their own powers and opinions?
40499Is the House to consider the present, or the expected population?
40499Is the Treaty- making power not a power vested by the constitution in the Government of the United States, or in a department or officer thereof?
40499Is the confidence of the people in the services, and patriotism, and wisdom of the Chief Magistrate diminished?
40499Is the power of establishing an incorporated bank among the powers vested by the constitution in the Legislature of the United States?
40499Is the zeal of gentlemen, who oppose this design, influenced by their despair of removing the seat of Government afterwards?
40499Is the_ habeas corpus_ act, or the statute_ De Tallagio non concedendo_ incorporated in_ magna charta_?
40499Is there a common centre?
40499Is there a man who does not believe that, had the treaty not been ratified, we should have had war?
40499Is there a reciprocal stipulation by Great Britain with respect to the articles unexecuted by her?
40499Is there another point of law and justice for the Government?
40499Is there any difference in effect between lodging general powers in a government, and permitting the exercise of them by subtle constructions?
40499Is there any fair construction by which the bill can be deemed an exercise of the power to borrow money?
40499Is there any impropriety in desiring them to consider a question which they have not yet decided?
40499Is there any impropriety in paying this mark of respect to a man to whom all America owes such indelible obligations?
40499Is there any other head proposed to be on the coin but the President''s?
40499Is there any thing improper or unwise in this determination?
40499Is there any thing wrong in this?
40499Is there any time when the civil list will cease its demand?
40499Is there not more responsibility in one man than in large bodies?
40499Is this House to negotiate the Treaty over again?
40499Is this bill to borrow money?
40499Is this exciting mobs?
40499Is this fair?
40499Is this gratitude or insult?
40499Is this language to be used within the United States?
40499Is this pursuing a liberal system of politics?
40499Is this right, is this just, that all our rights should be thus bartered away under a Treaty- making power?
40499Is this so?
40499Is this the peace gentlemen undertake, with such fearless confidence, to maintain?
40499Is this to be the style of an American Congress?
40499Is this, he asked, consonant to the feelings of the House, and shall they not attempt to counteract its effects in the only constitutional manner?
40499It does not call for any thing to be done, then why a reference?
40499It had been asked if the PRESIDENT was responsible for the contents of this Report from the Secretary of War?
40499It had been asked why the call for information had not been sooner made?
40499It had been asked, what control the House were to have over this officer?
40499It has been asked, Is not the Senate as worthy of the confidence of the citizens of the United States as this House?
40499It has, indeed, been said, it will shorten our sessions; but would this be a benefit?
40499It is more than probable she will, and if she should, what remedy have we?
40499It is not for his gratification; for whose, then, are we to do this?
40499It is only to be inquired, then, whether this was a proper subject of retaliation?
40499It is said we have not done much, and what we have done is merely our duty, for which we receive wages?
40499It is the commercial importance of the city of London which makes it the seat of Government; and what is the consequence?
40499It is true, we may live for two dollars a day; but how?
40499It may be a future question, also, whether he is to be dismissed when the galleries are cleared?
40499It was a payment of our_ bona fide_ debts; what could we do?
40499It was acknowledged by every gentleman that the Treaty of 1783 was broken by the United States; and, if so, what could their negotiator do?
40499It was asked if the Treaty power could receive any check?
40499It was asked, by what means is the Government to administer redress?
40499It was asked, what would be the consequence of refusing to carry the Treaty into effect?
40499It was enough to fix the general principles, viz: Whether there shall be a General Land Officer and two subordinates?
40499It was nothing more or less than, would they or would they not now appropriate moneys to carry the British Treaty into effect?
40499It was true, that a proposition for postponement was made, but what was the extent of that postponement?
40499JACKSON.--Do not gentlemen think there is some danger on the other side?
40499Lastly, did it authorize an extensive increase of the Sinking Fund, which we are informed is one of the principal objects?
40499Let me ask gentlemen, if they, or any of their connections, would accept an appointment under this law, with such an exceptionable clause in it?
40499Let me ask, why there is for ever so much complaint against Great Britain because she does not open all her colonies freely to us?
40499Let us pause for a moment, and ask, Was this possible?
40499Let us, then, inquire, is the constituting a public bank necessary to these important and essential ends of Government?
40499Lewis.--Then it was, he said, that if it was not convenient for Mr. MURRAY to be concerned in a share in land, he might have it in money?
40499Little or nothing: how then could he ascertain who was a proper person to legislate or judge of the laws?
40499Look at the constitution of Great Britain; is that all contained in one instrument?
40499MADISON?)
40499Major Torrey died in September, 1783; shall this body decide against the settled rule of all the law courts?
40499Many exertions had he to make to feed the hungry and cover the naked; were not these for the public good, and shall his private property suffer?
40499May no other place be proposed?
40499May not Congress with equal propriety, undertake to regulate the tobacco, the rice, and indigo trade, as well as that of the fisheries?
40499May we promise ourselves more success in negotiation by laying down our arms, or by retaining them?
40499Might they not say that they were betwixt nations what bargains were betwixt individuals?
40499Mr. AMES then asked, whether it was not competent to put the previous question, viz: Shall this call be now taken?
40499Mr. BALDWIN asked if the Government of the United States of America was four or five times worse to be administered than the Governments in Europe?
40499Mr. BENSON wished the committee to consider what he judged to be a previous question, namely, how many departments there should be established?
40499Mr. BOUDINOT asked what assurance we have that Britain will not play the same game over again that she has done already?
40499Mr. CLARK would be very glad to hear the gentleman from Pennsylvania( Mr. FINDLAY) specify, upon what subject he was willing to pay a tax?
40499Mr. DAYTON rose and asked,"Who shall decide, when doctors disagree?"
40499Mr. DEXTER interrupted Mr. HARTLEY to inquire whether, by the laws of this State, the property of an insurgent is forfeited for his crime?
40499Mr. GERRY observed, that some gentleman had said the Speaker is not an officer; but if he is not an officer, what is he?
40499Mr. GILES said this subject had struck him in two points of view: whether Congress are not precluded from exercising any discretion on the subject?
40499Mr. GOODHUE wished to ask Mr. CLAIBORNE one question,"Whether he found himself growing rich?"
40499Mr. JACKSON said, in reply to the inquiry of Mr. SEDGWICK--"Why have we made a difference between the President and the Vice President?"
40499Mr. LAWRENCE would inquire for what purpose the cession, mentioned in the constitution, was required?
40499Mr. LIVINGSTON then proposed a question, Whether any of the shares had been left unappropriated by your associates and you?
40499Mr. MADISON asked if the quantity of rum so exported was very considerable?
40499Mr. NICHOLAS inquired if there was any law on this head?
40499Mr. PARKER wanted to know what was the object of gentlemen in the appointment of a Committee of Conference?
40499Mr. S. asked him, whether in the Senate?
40499Mr. S. asked, what, then, were they?
40499Mr. SMITH was asked whether the offer was that they were to be granted at an inferior rate?
40499Mr. STONE asked the gentleman last up, how he meant to have the amendments incorporated?
40499Mr. T. said, this is all the length which we mean to go, and can any body object to this?
40499Mr. Tilghman asked what Mr. MURRAY expressed to Randall when it was proposed to him to engage in the land scheme?
40499Mr. Tilghman asked, whether Mr. MURRAY did not, to get the man''s whole secret from him, go beyond his views to draw him on?
40499Mr. Tilghman then, through the SPEAKER, asked Mr. MURRAY whether he understood he was to pay for his share of land as the other associates or not?
40499Mr. W. SMITH then asked Randall, whether it was not true, that he spoke to Mr. SAMUEL SMITH before he spoke to himself?
40499Mr. W. asked, was this not done?
40499Mr. WHITNEY was next asked at what time he would be ready to proceed with his defence?
40499Must every transaction that took place, during the course of the last war, be ripped up?
40499Must they pay their expenses too?
40499My colleague says that he is not a man of fortune; but, has he not a profession by which he can make more than by his attendance on this House?
40499Need I say that we fly in the face of that resolution when we pretend that the acts of that power are not valid until we have concurred in them?
40499Negroes, it was said, would not fight; but he would ask whether it was owing to their being black or to their being slaves?
40499Ninety thousand dollars was all the money at stake; but what has since been seen?
40499No, sir; and is it in the contemplation of gentlemen to lay duties so high as to produce this equality?
40499No; but we solicited, and pay dear for that passage; or did we go to the King of Spain, and demand a free navigation of the Mississippi?
40499Now he would be glad to know if the distilleries and fisheries would not be precisely in the same situation, let which would take place?
40499Now will you urge in argument for taxing the poor, that they already practise that temperance which you desire to bring universally about?
40499Now, I ask gentlemen, whether the professed design of those duties was to raise a revenue, or to prevent the importation of those articles?
40499Now, he wished to know, what principle of justice authorized the committee to lay a duty of six cents on molasses?
40499Now, he would ask, if gentlemen could expect that the northern people would incline to go so far south?
40499Now, if these people were to petition Congress to pass a law prohibiting matrimony, would gentlemen agree to refer such a petition?
40499Now, in this case, what would you do?
40499Now, is it intended to determine a centre from these three centres?
40499Now, said he, do we think of refusing this privilege to all heretics in respect to political doctrines?
40499Now, what is meant by reporting plans?
40499Now, what more than this is required by the clause?
40499Now, will any Government take such measures in gathering in its harvest, as to ruin the soil?
40499Of individuals?
40499Of the Treasury Department, too, which is considered in other countries as possessing and exercising the means of corruption?
40499Of what use, then, was it to establish principles which could not govern the conduct of the House?
40499Of what?
40499On a division, shall the committee now rise?
40499On motion for the previous question, to wit: Shall the question be now put on the following preliminary resolutions?
40499On the first of June, the British were to give up the Western posts; if money was not appropriated, would they not be deceived?
40499On the other hand, were not a Greene and a Mifflin furnished from the Society of the Quakers?
40499On the other hand, whether it was not the most effectual mean of preserving his popularity, and of keeping him in office?
40499On their Representatives?
40499On what ground could this assumption have been made?
40499On what principle can this distinction then be contended for?
40499On what principle did he accept it?
40499On what then do the people depend for checking encroachments, or preventing abuses?
40499Once, however, he did see him; the first question of Mr. SEDGWICK was, from what State did he come?
40499Or does it speak the same language now, as it did at the time it was obtained?
40499Or does the Legislature establish them for the convenience of an individual?
40499Or how can they say it is more expensive to establish it in this way than in another?
40499Or is it wise to stand by and depend upon such a resource?
40499Or is the Speaker to write them a letter, or the Sergeant- at- Arms with the mace to wait on them?
40499Or rather, as my colleague has proposed, if they are incapable to pay both, will they not prefer a composition?
40499Or shall we send across the sea for loans?
40499Or shall we, by a candid and liberal construction of the powers expressed in the constitution, promote the great and important objects thereof?
40499Or should we drive all printers from us who take notes, for the inaccuracies of some?
40499Or the ruin of thousands and thousands by our delays of payment, and the consequent depreciation of our securities?
40499Or was it true, that this power was competent to treat with every government on earth but that of Great Britain?
40499Or was there any use for it but that the sentiments of every member might be known?
40499Or where is the justice of doing more for the assignee than he, or his assignor, expected could or would be done?
40499Or whether it restrained the States from exercising that power?
40499Or whether there was any authority given to the Union, with which the exercise of this right by any State would be inconsistent?
40499Or, if his life should not be invaded, what would its enjoyments be in a country odious to the eyes of strangers and dishonored in his own?
40499Or, will the Government of the United States support the claim of the injured against her own Executive?
40499Or, will you say that Congress might issue paper money?
40499Ought they, from their remoteness, to be kept in the dark, or to be furnished with such light as would only mislead?
40499Ought we to have at once acceded to hers?
40499Our understandings have been addressed, it is true, and with ability and effect; but, I demand, has any corner of the heart been left unexplored?
40499Perhaps I may be asked, Did not the States depend chiefly upon their own exertion for the defence of the frontiers under the old Congress?
40499Pray, let me ask, if Great Britain have not equally tied their hands?
40499Pray, would it not be a proper bar to the recovery of damages in a court of law to say Government has paid you?
40499Provisions had been made by this House to carry Indian Treaties into effect; but why?
40499SCOTT.--Has not this Government a right to restrain every wild- goose excursion into the woods?
40499SEDGWICK.--Has it not been said that there was a party in the United States, not only for aristocracy, but even for monarchy?
40499SWIFT) that, by paying these claims in the first instance, you are cutting the sinews of civil process?
40499Shall a Treaty repeal a law or a law a Treaty?
40499Shall his family be reduced to beggary, be stripped of their all, to discharge what the United States are in honor and in justice bound to pay?
40499Shall it be said, that the House have a discretion as to appropriations, and yet they must make them as directed by a Treaty?
40499Shall the House take no further measures on the subject, and receive the answer of the PRESIDENT as obligatory with regard to the question?
40499Shall the Senate, because they may think it in one case trifling, or conceive the power ought to be placed in them, assume it?
40499Shall the United States stipulate solemnly to guarantee the new boundary which may be arranged?
40499Shall they not declare their own and their constituents''confidence undiminished in that officer of the Government?
40499Shall they take the Lake of the Woods on one side, and the Missouri on the other, and find a geographical centre?
40499Shall we hazard an entire loss of this revenue?
40499Shall we intrust the conduct of that matter to the very persons who it has been alleged are often the aggressors?
40499Shall we leave it to the fisherman, to be determined by his oath?
40499Shall we make it an excuse for refusing to pass this vote, that we establish the principle of thanking nobody?
40499Shall we never have done with the settlement and liquidation of our accounts?
40499Shall we not let them see the end of their burthen in the law itself?
40499Shall we put our hands into the pockets of our constituents, and appropriate moneys for uses we are undetermined of?
40499Shall we say that man ought to have been made otherwise?
40499Shall we say that the evidence carries on its face fraud and deception?
40499Shall we sit still and bear it?
40499Shall we then give up to a body, who has already a superiority over us, those superior powers which we possess relative to revenue?
40499Shall we then proceed without them?
40499Shall we then restrain a man from having an agency in the disposal of his own money?
40499Shall we, dreading to become the blind instruments of power, yield ourselves the blinder dupes of mere sounds of imposture?
40499Should Government, said Mr. V., come forward and show their imbecility by censuring what we can not punish?
40499Should any thing be done at this time in the way of commercial regulations towards vindicating and advancing our national interests?
40499Should that credit be destroyed( he asked) by destroying the confidence of foreigners in our faith?
40499Should these fifty dollars fall to the Government, or to me?
40499Should they then pass the law in such a manner as almost to warrant the people in resisting it?
40499Should this bill pass, what can it be denominated but a delusion, a deception, sanctioned by Congress itself?
40499Should those of our citizens who furnished the supplies, or loaned their money, be the only class who are injured?
40499Since the bounty is to cease by this bill, what advantage in striking it out?
40499Sir, did we fight for this?
40499Suppose a person in office, not possessing the talents he was judged to have at the time of the appointment, is the error not to be corrected?
40499Suppose he dislikes them, and will not have them, he is guilty of a breach of the law, is it intended by the House to impeach him for it?
40499Suppose he refuses, will his vote be the less valid, or the community be disengaged from that obedience which is due to the laws of the Union?
40499Suppose that all the Indians were driven over the Mississippi to- morrow, to whom would the lands which they now possess belong?
40499Suppose that authority were in this way to grant millions upon millions, must the House, at all events, be compelled to provide for their payment?
40499Suppose that, on the arrival of the definitive treaty, Congress had not agreed to the terms, would the war have then been considered as at an end?
40499Suppose the revenue should fall short of his estimate, is he responsible for the balance?
40499Suppose they instruct a representative, by his vote, to violate the constitution; is he at liberty to obey such instructions?
40499Suppose, however, that it were omitted, and our country invaded, would a decision in Congress against raising armies be safer than the affirmative?
40499Suppose, then, a vessel of thirty tons obtains, in a season, six hundred quintals of fish?
40499Surely the substance ought not to pay at this rate-- then what good reason can be offered for the measure?
40499Take all these together, is it not to be doubted that twelve hundred and fifty- six dollars will remain of the forty- four thousand in the Treasury?
40499That gentleman wished to know to what point this information was to apply?
40499That is not the question; but whether, organized as we are, under the constitution, we have a right to make such a grant?
40499That it has been contrived with a view to lead them on by degrees to that kind of government which they have thrown off with abhorrence?
40499The British Parliament has now no pay; but have they been as independent as their countrymen wished them under the British Government?
40499The British had gone past them, and what was to hinder the Algerines, or such a man as Mr. Cooper, from getting past them?
40499The French wished to be paid here, and it being no loss, but rather a profit, to comply with their wish, where was the harm in so doing?
40499The House asked a question; the PRESIDENT answered in the negative-- for what purpose refer the answer?
40499The House divided on the question,"Shall the delegate take an oath as a member?"
40499The PRESIDENT asserts it; in the Address reported, the Senate assent; a motion is made to strike out; is it because the truth of it is doubted?
40499The Romans and Greeks had slaves, and are not their glorious achievements held up as excitements to great and magnanimous actions?
40499The SPEAKER asked what time he wanted?
40499The SPEAKER then interrogated the prisoner, whether these charges were true or false?
40499The SPEAKER then said, Is this the prisoner?
40499The Treaty makes war indispensable, as the only redress of injuries, and how will war from the United States reach Great Britain?
40499The United States owe the value they received, which they acknowledge, and which they have promised to pay: what is that value?
40499The bill says it shall cease; and have gentlemen any objection to the bounty''s ceasing?
40499The bill was then read the third time; and on the question, Shall the bill pass?
40499The call for the question being now very general, it was put, shall the words"to be removable by the President,"be struck out?
40499The debt is the price of our liberties, and can not be diminished a farthing, the gentleman from Virginia says; and why?
40499The first of these was, whether the Algerines acted from their own impulse in this matter?
40499The first question is, how much does Government receive by the duty on the salt used in curing the fish which is exported?
40499The first question then was, is Congress vested with a power to grant the privileges contained in the bill?
40499The first questions that offer themselves, are: Was the money in question appropriated to special and distinct purposes?
40499The gentleman from Connecticut wished to know why he had brought this resolution before the House?
40499The gentleman from New Hampshire asked, what do the PRESIDENT and two- thirds of the Senate operate upon?
40499The gentleman says further, that the people have the right of instructing their representatives; if so, why not declare it?
40499The government of that territory is a corporation; and who will deny that Congress may lawfully establish a bank beyond the Ohio?
40499The grand question now is, did the State, by acceding to the confederation, give up her right of legislation?
40499The law is to supply the necessary means of executing the principle laid down; for how can it be carried into effect in any other manner?
40499The member asked, if the House were to close their understandings, and refuse all information from that quarter?
40499The merit of the amendment depends on its adaptedness to the end proposed by the bill, and what is that?
40499The next inquiry is, what rights will this company enjoy in this new character, that they do not enjoy independent of it?
40499The next question is, to what amount the public are at present indebted?
40499The only constant agents in political affairs are the passions of men-- shall we complain of our nature?
40499The only question now is, whether this be a direct bounty, or simply a commutation of the allowance already granted by Congress?
40499The only question, therefore, which appears to be before the committee is, whether we shall give this power to the President alone?
40499The point to be settled is whether it shall be done by an oral communication, or transmitted in writing?
40499The previous question being insisted upon, was put--"Shall the main question be now put?"
40499The previous question thereon was called for by five members, to wit:"Shall the main question, to agree to the said resolution, be now put?"
40499The previous question was called for by five members, to wit:"Shall the main question, to agree to the said resolution, be now put?"
40499The previous question was now called for, by five members, viz:"Shall the main question to agree to the said resolution, be now put?"
40499The previous question was then demanded by five members: Shall the main question be now put?
40499The previous question,"Shall the main question now be put?"
40499The principal inquiry is, will the institution facilitate the management of the finances?
40499The question before the committee was, have the United States taken away any claim which the purchasers of these lands had?
40499The question is, did he continue in service to the end of the war?
40499The question is, what shall be the duty on any particular article?
40499The question now to be determined, he conceived, was this-- is an addition to the present amount of the revenue necessary?
40499The question then is, by whom?
40499The question then is, whether the highest sum can be collected?
40499The question then recurred, what Treaties were made under the authority of the United States?
40499The question was called for, and put by the Chairman, Shall the committee now rise, and report progress?
40499The question was taken,"Whether the President of the United States shall be addressed by the title of_ His Excellency_?"
40499The question was then put by the SPEAKER, Shall the committee have leave to sit again?
40499The question was then put, Shall the committee now rise and report progress?
40499The question was then stated, to wit:"Shall the said bill be rejected?"
40499The question was then taken, do the House agree to the amendment?
40499The question was whether they were in a situation in which they could claim to be a State?
40499The question was, had the Secretary violated a law?
40499The question will only be, what powers has the constitution given, and to what departments have the same been distributed?
40499The question, then, is reduced to its expediency, whether it is good policy to exercise the power or not?
40499The remainder, viz:"If not, shall a temporary boundary be marked, making the Oconee the line, and the other parts of the treaty be concluded?"
40499The right of Congress to regulate trade is adduced as an argument in favor of this of creating a corporation; but what has this bill to do with trade?
40499The second, what the sum is that is proper for the article we select?
40499Their present inexperience will soon be done away by a proper mode of discipline, and why may not these troops be soon instructed?
40499Then they deemed war nearly inevitable, and would not this adjustment have been considered at that day as a happy escape from the calamity?
40499Then was it proper, he asked, that the Executive should be requested to make a second answer, and nearly in the same words?
40499Then why all this abuse of this particular sect, without discrimination?
40499Then why disturb the tranquillity of the people?
40499Then why not, for the sake of conciliation, grant it?
40499Then why should the poor of Massachusetts be taxed for the beverage they use of spruce, molasses and water?
40499Then you are bound, by this precedent, to indemnify him; and how can you distinguish what was the real motive to that outrage?
40499There appeared to him only two things as necessary to be inquired into: First, Was the new Government Republican?
40499There is a river, it is said, which runs two hundred miles into the country as far as the Allegany mountains; what advantage can this be to Congress?
40499There is no doubt, sir, but it will; but does this tend to show that the constituent has no right to instruct?
40499There is to be but one head; but does not our Government consist of three parts?
40499Therefore, why involve in this indiscriminate censure men who have deserved so well of their country?
40499These are the commercial acquisitions we have obtained by the Treaty; and let me ask, what have we given to Britain in return for them?
40499They must come in ballast: and will the mere transportation of our crop be a sufficient inducement to engage them to come here?
40499They, indeed, afford an exception to the cases above mentioned; but how far were they successful?
40499This being the fact, he inquired, what could be done with the Southern produce, in case of the exclusion of foreign bottoms?
40499This was a pleasing situation; but what was the situation of the British debtors?
40499This was true, he believed; but how would it apply in the sense the gentleman wished?
40499To others I will urge, can any circumstance mark upon a people more turpitude and debasement?
40499To such a nation was it proper to trust a latitude of that extent?
40499To the first of these I ask, against whom is the suit to commence?
40499To what purpose then to sound the alarm, and to ring the tocsin from Georgia to New Hampshire?
40499To what should they compare Treaties?
40499To what, he asked, would a contrary doctrine lead?
40499To what?
40499To whom was the care of our prisoners in Philadelphia committed?
40499True, it might be asked, why say negroes or other property?
40499Under all circumstances, should not his estate be indemnified?
40499Under it money may be borrowed, as well as commerce regulated; and why not money appropriated?
40499Under these circumstances, do gentlemen contend that an indiscriminate conduct is due to Great Britain and to Holland?
40499Under these circumstances, what was to be expected but complaints from the people, and a consequent repeal of the bill?
40499Under those circumstances what could we have done?
40499Upon what ground, then, do gentlemen stand?
40499VINING.--Why do gentlemen say that such an office is unnecessary, when they are forced to admit that all the duties are essential?
40499Was Government to be burdened with them, and derive no compensation?
40499Was he the author of the Funding System?
40499Was he the author of the plan for establishing the National Bank?
40499Was he the author of the report on the fisheries?
40499Was he to be both judge and executioner in his own case?
40499Was he to manufacture it himself, or in what way could he better obtain it than from the Heads of the Departments?
40499Was it a sufficient reason for exempting a district from public burdens to say that the people are poor?
40499Was it any unusual thing to call for the yeas and nays?
40499Was it consistent with the warmth which had been discovered, to say that all this discussion, all this length of time, had been consumed upon nothing?
40499Was it for this the soldier watched his numerous nights, and braved the inclemency of the seasons?
40499Was it in the opposition to the minority of the Senate and the general voice of the people against the treaty that that_ firmness_ was displayed?
40499Was it intended to have the constitution republished, and the alterations inserted in their proper places?
40499Was it not already settled in the constitution and by existing laws?
40499Was it not better to fill up the old corps, than to put ourselves to the inconvenience of raising a new one?
40499Was it not necessary for them to consult, and fix upon a proper place?
40499Was it not the ecclesiastical corporations and perpetual monopolies of England and Scotland?
40499Was it not then urged by members of that House that the British nation refused to negotiate with them?
40499Was it not to substantiate the truth of them by a vote?
40499Was it right that when a man had led our armies to victory, and returned, that he should be immediately stripped of his commission?
40499Was it they who formed the constitution?
40499Was it to be wondered at, if this swarm should raise a buzz about him?
40499Was it to remain as a pledge for the performance of the other?
40499Was it wantonly to throw away a privilege and natural right?
40499Was merit, then, to be the less regarded, because it was modest?
40499Was not peace the most to be desired, especially in our present situation?
40499Was not the good of the public his principal object?
40499Was not this representation true, he asked; could it be controverted?
40499Was not this returning good for evil?
40499Was not this true of all the great and essential powers of government?
40499Was one branch to be judges of discretion for another?
40499Was the Executive to trust the defence of a country to a militia formed under such a law?
40499Was the Message then alone referred as it is now proposed by some gentlemen?
40499Was the money, he asked, to have remained in the hands of the banker in Europe?
40499Was the property less changed by the law of a sovereign and independent State, than by the proclamation of a British commander?
40499Was there any other country which could give us the same supplies we wanted?
40499Was there no security against a wanton abuse of these enormous powers?
40499Was there no security in the watchful guardianship of such a character?
40499Was this depreciated paper freely accepted?
40499Was this insinuation pointed at Congress or the Executive?
40499Was this paper equal in value to gold or silver?
40499Was this the case?
40499Was this the object of the reference to the Secretary?
40499Was this, he asked, an exposition of the meaning of the constitution?
40499We have no doubt been cruelly treated; but we have made proper application for redress, and received an answer?
40499We refer, said he, to the wisdom of the Senate; but how is this superior wisdom to be discerned?
40499Were dollars, he asked, to be balanced by absolute appropriations?
40499Were not hundreds of Presbyterians, Episcopalians, and almost of every other denomination, among our enemies?
40499Were not the archives, records, deeds,& c., which had also fallen into the hands of the enemy, their property?
40499Were not the latter as necessary as the former?
40499Were our citizens in a state of organization as militia?
40499Were our magazines and arsenals properly supplied?
40499Were our ports and harbors in any tolerable state of defence?
40499Were the Committee of the Whole to turn authors and write a dissertation on part of the constitution?
40499Were the Senate so chosen?
40499Were the advocates of this doctrine aware of its consequences, when they advanced it?
40499Were the citizens of the Northern and Eastern States to dictate to Congress on a measure in which the Southern States were so deeply interested?
40499Were the people jealous of this House, and not of the other branches?
40499Were there any petitions on the subject excepting that from the Pennsylvania Society and a few Quakers?
40499Were they called upon to give an opinion?
40499Were they to propose such a plan as this to us, would it not be received with indignation?
40499Were we not bound to take as much care of our own interest, as of that of other people?
40499Were we to demand satisfaction?
40499Were women and fatherless children to be regarded as traitors?
40499What are the emigrant nobility to renounce?
40499What are the rights of conquest?
40499What are these powers?
40499What are they to bring back in return?
40499What are they to do if they are discharged?
40499What are you?
40499What authority has this House to explain the law?
40499What clause is it that gives this power in express terms?
40499What could be more immoral than war?
40499What could he know of the Government the moment he landed?
40499What could induce this grant?
40499What denominations formed the thousands of new levies, that endeavored to deluge our country in blood?
40499What did the House meet for at all?
40499What did they want to do with it?
40499What difference, he asked, was there on that occasion and the present, when the French just adopted and organized a new government?
40499What does it import?
40499What effect would this doctrine, if admitted, have upon the State governments?
40499What equivalent do we receive for this sacrifice?
40499What evidence have we that the demand will stop there?
40499What good did his renunciation of title do, excepting that it afforded him a short opportunity of deceiving his fellow- citizens?
40499What good end could have been answered by a war?
40499What had been our situation ever since the negotiation?
40499What had been the custom of the House heretofore?
40499What has been the conduct of Great Britain, in relation to her funds?
40499What has carried the credit of that kingdom to a superior eminence, but the attention she has paid to public credit?
40499What has he left her to ask, what has he not surrendered?
40499What have Congress to do with the acts of States?
40499What if he refuses to answer at all?
40499What is a law?
40499What is now his answer?
40499What is now our prospect?
40499What is patriotism?
40499What is the PRESIDENT and two- thirds of the Senate?
40499What is the centre of wealth, population, and territory?
40499What is the charge?
40499What is the object for which men enter into society, but to secure their lives and property?
40499What is the object of the address before us?
40499What is the present case?
40499What is the present situation of our commerce?
40499What is the purport of the memorial?
40499What is the situation of Florence in consequence of this event?
40499What is the situation of those who are implicated in the causes of the failure?
40499What is the usual means of acquiring property between man and man?
40499What is there in the Treaty that could humble us so low?
40499What is there to discharge the Government from the payment?
40499What is to be done for compensation?
40499What is to be done while the impeachment is depending?
40499What is your name?
40499What is your usual place of residence?
40499What justifies these harsh epithets?
40499What kind of a business would this be?
40499What kind of reasoning was this, or how did the gentleman propose to reconcile it?
40499What man is there here that can be wicked enough to involve his country in such incalculable miseries?
40499What may Great Britain expect, if we will not settle our differences by negotiation?
40499What may be the consequence of binding a man to vote in all cases according to the will of others?
40499What may we expect will be the conduct of our own citizens?
40499What must have passed, he asked, between the soldier, the militiaman, or farmer, and the purchaser?
40499What occasion, then, can there be for them?
40499What reason could be adduced for acting?
40499What reason could the purchaser assign for offering £10 for a paper which specified an obligation to pay £100?
40499What reason is there for any such supposition?
40499What right had the House to say to a particular class of people, you shall not have that kind of property which other people have?
40499What security can there be for a commerce thus precariously conducted, in which your rivals are your judge?
40499What then are we called upon to do?
40499What then is the officer to be responsible for, which should induce the House to vest in him such extraordinary powers?
40499What then remains of your constitution, except its mode of organization?
40499What then should we have done?
40499What then will be the case?
40499What was it drove our forefathers to this country?
40499What was the allegiance, as a citizen of South Carolina, he owed to the King of Great Britain?
40499What was the case in the present instance?
40499What was the conduct of gentlemen?
40499What was the conduct of this society when the first news of the late insurrection reached them?
40499What was the effect of the embargo in 1794?
40499What was the event?
40499What was the present measure?
40499What was the representation to do?
40499What was the situation of the people of America, when the dissolution of their allegiance took place by the declaration of independence?
40499What was their interest, then?
40499What was this consideration?
40499What weapons have we which can reach her?
40499What were the powers and privileges of the House on the subject?
40499What were the steps then taken in that parallel case?
40499What will the assignee lose by the measure?
40499What will their constituents think of them?
40499What will this comprehend, or, rather, what will it not comprehend?
40499What would be the consequence, said Mr. B., of refusing at this time, and under these circumstances, to receive this State into the Union?
40499What would be the effect of a contrary doctrine?
40499What would be the effect of such an act of Parliament?
40499What would follow from this?
40499What( he asked) was their situation, and what had they to fear in case of an open rupture with Great Britain?
40499What, he asked, could be the end of all these things but war?
40499What, he asked, were these?
40499What, he further asked, would become of our produce, in the event contemplated?
40499What, let me inquire, will be the pernicious consequences resulting from the establishment of this doctrine?
40499What, said he, are we about to do?
40499What, said he, is its object?
40499What, said he, would be the consequence of such construction?
40499What, sir, is the intention of this business?
40499What, then, becomes of its strength?
40499What, then, permit me to inquire, can the power of treating effect?
40499When Britain has been at the trouble of stipulating a peace for Portugal, will she suffer that nation to assist us?
40499When a million of dollars had been expended, were the House to give them fifteen or twenty thousand dollars more?
40499When an exasperated militia went out, what were we to expect, but that the first man with a red skin whom they met would be shot?
40499When did their citizenship commence?
40499When it was laid before them, it was then contended that the House had a right to interfere in the Treaty, or why ask for it?
40499When you first cut a man''s throat, and thereafter call him a rascal, do you suppose that your accusation will affect the man''s reputation?
40499Whence arises, then, the opposition?
40499Where are they to be formed?
40499Where could be the pretence for any thing of this sort?
40499Where did these gentlemen find that definition of treason?
40499Where does the conciliating temper of Great Britain manifest itself?
40499Where has that power been placed?
40499Where is it?
40499Where is that will to be found?
40499Where is the breach of faith in Government, if it paid its whole debt with justice, blended with mercy?
40499Where is the denomination amongst us, that did not furnish opposers to our glorious Revolution?
40499Where is the difference between this case and that of indemnifying the losses at sea by the British?
40499Where is the justice of doing more for the assignee than he or his assignor expected could or would be done?
40499Where is the man among us who has the presumption and vanity to expect it?
40499Where is the propriety of branding a measure of this nature with epithets of infamy?
40499Where must they look in the United States for the sovereign power?
40499Where should they find that power in Great Britain?
40499Where then is it to be found?
40499Where then?
40499Where was the money to come from?
40499Where were the benefits of peace, if they were still to keep up our War Establishments?
40499Where, he asked, is the proof of this allegation?
40499Where, then, are the real profits anticipated?
40499Where, then, is the danger of expressing a general approbation?
40499Wherefore was it provided that no duty should be laid on exports?
40499Whether a like conciliatory conduct has not been observed by the advocates of manufactures?
40499Whether it was to be a fleeting vision, or to continue for ages?
40499Whether the public opinion was four or five times more unfavorable to such an administration?
40499Whether they shall be under the direction of Commissioners?
40499Which of these alternatives have they elected to do?
40499While the British had acted with so much liberality, did it become Americans to stick at the paltry sum of seventeen thousand dollars?
40499Who are benefited by the revolution?
40499Who are those that say to us, Germantown is the most proper spot that can be selected?
40499Who constituted this class of citizens?
40499Who did not believe that such an event was not only possible, but in some degree probable?
40499Who fought the battles of Georgia, under Clark and Twiggs?
40499Who fought the battles of New Jersey?
40499Who fought the battles of South Carolina, under the command of an honorable member now present?
40499Who had been the cause of the posts being so long kept from the United States?
40499Who had the most produce to sell?
40499Who has firmness enough to meet so foul a deed?
40499Who has not heard of the rebellion of_ Shays_, where a great deal of property was destroyed?
40499Who have fought the Indians so often with success, under Generals Wilkinson, Scott, Sevier, and others?
40499Who marched in 1776 under General Rutherford, through the Cherokee nation, laid waste their country, and forced them to peace?
40499Who shall declare what is the law, when the learned gentlemen of the bar are so directly opposed to each other?
40499Who suffers by this use of our authority?
40499Who were the purchasers?
40499Who were to be the losers, under these circumstances?
40499Who will accuse me of wandering out of the subject?
40499Who will hereafter admit an excise officer into his house, if that house may, with impunity, be burned about his ears?
40499Who will say that I exaggerate the tendencies of our measures?
40499Who will suffer most?
40499Who will trace these inferences, and pretend that we may have no share, according to the argument, in the Treaty- making power?
40499Who, under mere motives of friendship, would have done so?
40499Why a reference?
40499Why all this particular deviation from the common line of business to pass random votes of censure?
40499Why are they called upon to say, yea or nay, if they are obliged to say yea?
40499Why borrow money?
40499Why did the United States contract with the State, if she had no right?
40499Why did they not leave that, which they call God''s work, to be managed by himself?
40499Why do n''t you indemnify British depredations out of the British property that is within your grasp?"
40499Why is it necessary to fix upon Philadelphia for ten years?
40499Why is this penalty imposed on the United States?
40499Why lay a duty on foreign nails, when they can not rival you if you make them as good and as cheap?
40499Why leave a phantom of discretion, an unreal mockery of power, in the hands of the Legislature?
40499Why leave it only to be implied?
40499Why not also fix the principles of Government?
40499Why not choose the Speaker of this House?
40499Why not come forward, and demand of us the power of Legislation, and say, give us up your privileges, and we will govern you?
40499Why not protect this property as well?
40499Why not tell them at once, and in plain English, you must renounce your titles before you can have the privileges of an American citizen?
40499Why not?
40499Why shall we liquidate a debt which is established upon a complete and final settlement?
40499Why should a man take a dangerous and a doubtful path, when a safe one presents itself?
40499Why should we interfere with the concerns of our sister States who have not yet joined the new Government?
40499Why so little jealousy of the Executive Department, separated by the constitution with so much care from us?
40499Why so?
40499Why then provide for it a second time?
40499Why then should we interfere in the business?
40499Why this harsh language?
40499Why use so hackneyed a word?
40499Why was the call delayed till the session was within a few weeks of its termination?
40499Why was the subject mentioned?
40499Why were the resolutions brought before the House?
40499Why were these rights ever maintained and so scrupulously attended to by the people of those countries?
40499Why were we afraid to intrust the PRESIDENT with the power of raising ten thousand men?
40499Why were you so long in presenting your petition?
40499Why will these people, then, make use of arguments to induce the slave to turn his hand against his master?
40499Why, especially, he asked, should they give rise to invidious comparisons between themselves and the other branch?
40499Why, let me ask gentlemen, shall we commit an infraction of the constitution for fear the Senate or President should not comply with its directions?
40499Why, only that this was his opinion; but is that authority here?
40499Why, said Mr. L., communicate the instructions to the Ministers?
40499Why, said Mr. S., will not the Eastern members indulge us in this trifle?
40499Why, then fix the price as if the whole Army was to be kept there?
40499Why, then, are we called upon to propose amendments subversive of the principles of the constitution, which were never desired?
40499Why, then, call for them?
40499Why, then, did he suffer the bill to pass the committee in silence?
40499Why, then, embarrass themselves by making a larger appropriation than was necessary?
40499Why, then, expend so much precious time unnecessarily?
40499Why, then, hazard words that infer it?
40499Why, then, is a period of ten years to expire, previous to going there?
40499Why, then, make this rant about the British?
40499Why, then, shall we be told that the negative is the safe side?
40499Why, then, should such particular attention be paid to them, for bringing forward a business of questionable policy?
40499Why, then, should the House search for a meaning, to make the constitution inconsistent with itself, when a more rational one is at hand?
40499Why, then, will gentlemen advocate a doctrine so obnoxious to the principles of the constitution, when a more favorable construction is at hand?
40499Why, therefore, all this extraneous argument about a point of so easy decision?
40499Why_ firmness_?
40499Will Virginia set all her negroes free?
40499Will a duty of ten dollars diminish the importation?
40499Will any one answer by a sneer, that all this is idle preaching?
40499Will any one deny that we are bound-- and I would hope to good purpose-- by the most solemn sanctions of duty for the vote we give?
40499Will gentlemen say it is"We the people"in this case?
40499Will gentlemen then say, that to gratify a thoughtless regard for economy, they will risk the most invaluable part of the Government?
40499Will gentlemen, said he, blast this prospect by rejecting the bill?
40499Will gentlemen, then, comply with the one, and neglect the other?
40499Will he live in a more expensive style than the former Presidents of Congress, or will he live nearly in the same?
40499Will he not feel some dread that a change of system will reverse the scene?
40499Will he submit, after having gained his point at the expense of property and the loss of constitution, to have those sentiments established?
40499Will it be said that we are unable to do it?
40499Will it be whispered that the Treaty has made me a new champion for the protection of the frontiers?
40499Will it materially affect the price of rice or tobacco?
40499Will it not alarm our fellow- citizens?
40499Will it not be subversive of every principle on which public contracts are founded?
40499Will it not give them just cause of alarm?
40499Will it not have probably a contrary effect, and be the means of increasing the evil tenfold more than it exists at present?
40499Will it restore value to the evidences of that debt held by our creditors?
40499Will not gentlemen weigh well that vote, that may possibly increase the number of mourning widows and helpless orphans?
40499Will not precluding them look like a wish to smother all further inquiry into the matter?
40499Will not the administration of public affairs be conducted in future by representatives as good as ourselves?
40499Will not their traders continue their old acquaintanceship with them in spite of us?
40499Will not these people who suffered by the Tories in the last war come next, with open mouths, and demand indemnity?
40499Will she make her countervail oppressive and unjust?
40499Will she not expect that we shall resort to more violent measures-- such as reprisal, sequestration, or stopping of intercourse?
40499Will such a scheme increase it?
40499Will the Senate refuse to make an acknowledgment of that kind?
40499Will the strength and riches of the country be to the north or to the south of the Susquehanna?
40499Will the tendency to Indian hostilities be contrasted by any one?
40499Will the treatment be better than usual?
40499Will they be reported in such a form even?
40499Will they contribute any thing by consuming imported spirits?
40499Will they do it against the State of North Carolina?
40499Will they expose themselves to be preyed upon by these men?
40499Will they give up the money they cost them, and to whom?
40499Will they have less wisdom or virtue, to discover and pursue the good of their fellow- citizens than we have?
40499Will they make the representation of the several States the rule by which it shall be apportioned?
40499Will they not have to pay taxes from the time they settle amongst us?
40499Will they not say, that they have been deceived by the convention that framed the constitution?
40499Will they rack- rent their tenants in such a manner as to deprive them of the means of improving the estate?
40499Will they refuse to sell us their manufactures?
40499Will they submit to an excise?
40499Will they tamely submit to be robbed of their property, when they lose all hope of aid or protection from the Government?
40499Will this prevent an increase of the public debt?
40499Will this reconcile the minds of our people to the General Government?
40499Will you adopt a charge against him, which is in its nature an imputation that however lightly and wickedly made, will implicate perhaps innocent men?
40499Will you gain by this contest?
40499Will you restrain him from having access to the members out of doors?
40499Will you return to every other person exporting dutied goods the money he has paid, and will you refuse the poor fisherman?
40499Will you shelter yourself under the plea of necessity?
40499Will you then raise a force to drive them off?
40499Will you, he observed, permit, nay, invite him, whom you arraign at the bar of this House, to be a public accuser?
40499With respect to the more absolute government of France, where has this power been lodged?
40499With what degree of consistency can the House be called on for a vote if, as some members contend, they can not have an opinion?
40499Woodfall, a celebrated printer, took down debates from memory: could we prevent this being done here?
40499Work for a living?
40499Would Congress have had the power to naturalize, if it had not been expressly given?
40499Would any body say that French liberty was better secured by naming a harbor_ Havre de Marat_?
40499Would any jury in this country say, that the matter of fact and the principles of law were not in favor of the petition?
40499Would any legislature endeavor to introduce into a former act a subsequent amendment, and let them stand so connected?
40499Would any man call this a communication from the Executive?
40499Would any man risk the feelings and character of his friend by an attempt to force a vote of thanks by a bare majority through the House?
40499Would any man say that the sole object of self- created societies has been the publication of political doctrines?
40499Would any one doubt that Congress may lend money, that they may buy their debt in the market, or redeem their captives from Algiers?
40499Would any plain man suppose that this bill had any thing to do with trade?
40499Would arguments of this kind satisfy our constituents, if they should find themselves suddenly plunged into an expensive and ruinous war?
40499Would even the citizens of the other States, which did not possess this property, desire to have all the slaves let loose upon them?
40499Would gentlemen narrow the operation of the constitution in this manner, and render it impossible to be executed?
40499Would he have pledged his honor, his reputation, had he been interested?
40499Would he not, though absent, have acquired, according to the petitioner''s own positions, a right of citizenship?
40499Would it add to his fame to be called after the petty and insignificant princes of Europe?
40499Would it be proper to give an approbation that can not be appropriate, and that has no definite meaning?
40499Would it be prudent to trust a foreigner, perhaps a rival, if not an enemy, with your supply of what has emphatically been called the sinews of war?
40499Would it have been best to have traded with them upon sufferance, and so to have maintained a precarious kind of commerce?
40499Would it not expose us to exorbitant demands, and often a refusal?
40499Would not Congress have been in the same situation as before the signing of the provisional articles?
40499Would not a Treaty made under it be clearly the law of England?
40499Would not such a step be injurious even to the slaves themselves?
40499Would not the end of impeachment be defeated by this means?
40499Would not the measures have been reprobated with one voice, and the Treaty considered as a nullity?
40499Would our foreign creditors believe we were scrupulously fulfilling our engagements with them?
40499Would styling him His Serene Highness, His Grace, or Mightiness, add one tittle to the solid properties he possessed?
40499Would the citizens of that country tamely suffer their property to be torn from them?
40499Would the makers of shoes be content to go there and retail them?
40499Would they not say, a vote of thanks has been rejected?
40499Would twelve of this House, or would any jury in the country say that the war continued longer than hostilities?
40499Yes, said he, we have still a constitution, but where is it to be found?
40499Yet are they not thought to be justified by national policy?
40499You declare yourself not guilty?
40499_ Executive Departments._--Resolution respecting, 85; debate thereon, 85; how many departments shall be established?
40499_ Treasury Department._--Debate, 90; shall this important department be in the hands of a single officer or in a Board of Commissioners?
40499_ ad valorem_, paid, as it were, in an exclusive manner, by the State of Massachusetts, be equal?
40499a pretence to cover their ambition?
40499and did we assure ourselves of the full execution of the law?
40499and if we make them such grants every year, do we not in fact become tributary to them?
40499and that the hope of the justice we now ask for has delayed the sale of all the rest, to satisfy his creditors-- his Southern creditors?
40499and was not the member from Virginia( Mr. MADISON) of this opinion, as I have before stated?
40499and was not this merely because the Indians were unable to pay for themselves?
40499and whether, if they are not, it is expedient for them to exercise this discretion at this time?
40499and would not all acts of Parliament, prior and repugnant to it, be repealed by it?
40499and, had not his colleague( Mr. LIVINGSTON) quoted the secret Journals of the House?
40499duty, with freight and shipping charges, be sufficient encouragement?
40499if not, what proportion?"
40499interest should be paid on it, 196; if the Government is one party and the individual the other, who is the judge?
40499on his capital; and that capital tenfold?
40499on his capital?
40499or the plundering of the high seas legalized under the name of privateering?
40499or to whom?
40499or using such harsh expressions as have issued like a torrent from a gentleman on the other side of the House?
40499or whether we shall tamely supplicate for justice, and suffer the most effectual means of compulsion to elude our grasp?
40499or will posterity have a more favorable opinion of the original, because it has been amended by distinct acts?
40499that Mr. Rutledge has prevented executions from taking the Georgia estate by his personal interference?
40499that all the estates in Rhode Island and New Jersey are sold?
40499then is it wrong to express their confidence?
40499what can the committee report?
40499what is money, when put in competition with the lives of our friends and brethren?
40499what would be gained by it?
40499whether repugnance to a compliance with such demands was not created by such means?
40499why adopted?
40499would not carry away slaves at that time in possession of Americans?
40851Is there any alternative,says this printer,"between an abandonment of the constitution and resistance?"
40851What other form of government, indeed, can so well deserve our esteem and love? 40851 relying with perfect confidence in the Executive"--is this the language of the constitution, as it respects any man?
40851218; amendment will defeat the bill, 218; shall the territory remain defenceless?
40851453; all the evidence necessary should be obtained, 453; extraordinary resolution-- was the President clerk of the court?
40851679; what evidence that the Intendant is not authorized by the Spanish or French Government?
40851681; what is the state of things?
4085169; this country not equal to support a navy, 69; how can such a navy, be manned?
40851A question was then taken in the following words: Does the matter so communicated require secrecy?
40851Admitting it, I asked then, and I ask now, with what propriety it could be used, even in that sense, in the resolution referred to?
40851Admitting there was such a law, what could the House do?
40851Admitting they could hold it, what security would they have for their commerce?
40851After knowing these facts, will gentlemen have the hardihood to call this a hasty measure?
40851Again, if such a Navy were created, how was it to be manned?
40851Against whom they were to be employed?
40851Against whom, then, are we to arm?
40851Although they may differ in political opinion, as many of us do, is that any reason we should attempt to destroy their reputation?
40851Although this all might be mere matter of opinion, would it not come within the meaning of the law in question?
40851Am I so to consider it?
40851And are gentlemen to be here accused for exercising the constitutional right of election according to the conviction of their own judgments?
40851And are not the emigrations composed of such as require the prompt assistance of the law, to preserve among them regularity?
40851And are not these men property?
40851And are the maxims of experience to become false, when applied to our fate?
40851And are the people to be told that this is a trifling question?
40851And are they pledged for the payment of the public debt?
40851And are they, therefore, in this House to be confounded with each other?
40851And are we not in war?
40851And are we to be told from the house- tops, that the only use of elections is to promote, not public good, but public mischief?
40851And can it be justifiable in the eyes of men, who believe there is nothing so precious or important as national honor?
40851And can there be a greater, a more patriotic purpose than this?
40851And could a potent State be alarmed by the unfounded claim of a single person?
40851And do the citizens of the United States, he asked, wish their First Magistrate to be placed in this situation?
40851And does not the doctrine of our opponents prove that, at every change of administration, the number of your judges are probably to be doubled?
40851And during the time that Holland was separated from the dominion of Spain, was war declared in consequence of any nation trading with Holland?
40851And has England gained nothing by the war?
40851And here, sir, let it be asked, why should a Government that means well, or is confident in its uprightness and ability, ever fear the press?
40851And here, sir, let me ask, are not these privileges all that are necessary?
40851And how can the truth of things which can not be proved by evidence, be determined by evidence?
40851And how has he proved this?
40851And how is it to be effected?
40851And if granted, why not grant it without assigning reasons, as well as with assigning them?
40851And if so, could any thing afford a more lasting cause for war than an act of this kind?
40851And if the money is to be raised by taxes, to what objects can we turn our attention?
40851And if they are, does that committee mean to impose upon this House, as upon the people of some parts of the Union?
40851And if they can hear in them, can not the stenographers also?
40851And if they could delegate the power of raising an army to the PRESIDENT, why not do the same with respect to the power of raising taxes?
40851And if they have no objection, why go into a Committee of the Whole; which, if gone into, must be with closed doors?
40851And if they violate the law, where can we apply for redress but to our courts of justice?
40851And if this be important in the general course of things, is it not, under present circumstances, indispensable?
40851And if to either sum, can we with propriety dispense with the internal taxes?
40851And in these circumstances, said he, are the people of the United States to be led on from step to step, until they are irrevocably involved in war?
40851And is not the tenure as completely impaired thereby, as if the other had been taken away also?
40851And is not this most proper?
40851And is the irritation consequent upon the laying of taxes worn off?
40851And may they not, instead of giving their judges two thousand dollars a year, give them two hundred thousand?
40851And must the Executive in every such case make a new appointment?
40851And now that we have gained it, shall we fall from our honor?
40851And on the question on the second division, to wit: Whether so much as provides that the third article shall be expunged, shall stand?
40851And ought a man to be permitted to slander the Government and not an individual?
40851And ought his descendants to be more hardly dealt with because their father had the generosity and magnanimity not to make the demand?
40851And shall not we, as a nation, thank him for keeping us from a state of war?
40851And shall not we, with our great and increasing resources, and the peculiar advantages of our situation, be able to effect still more?
40851And shall we hesitate?
40851And shall we now, when there is no right reason for it, lay hold of the public Treasury, and lavish away$ 14,000?
40851And shall we, for this reason, monopolize a revenue upon it?
40851And then, Is there a Seminary so near the spot contemplated, as to make it hostile in this House to encourage this University?
40851And though we were a commercial Republic, was it not necessary to take care of the agricultural interest?
40851And upon what terms are we to cope with the powers of Europe with respect to any navy?
40851And was Rigaud punished by France for thus exercising his power or not?
40851And was it to be considered, he asked, that they enjoyed the powers committed to them in their own right, as barons of empire, as sovereign despots?
40851And was that salary, he asked, near so valuable now as it was when fixed?
40851And was this, he asked, a subject of regret?
40851And what are these cases?
40851And what courts?
40851And what have they got to do?
40851And what have they said?
40851And what object or consideration more pleasing than this can be presented to the human mind?
40851And what objection could there be to the inquiry?
40851And what was all this power that so much alarmed the gentleman from Massachusetts?
40851And what was the object?
40851And what will be the result of this?
40851And what would be the remedy if he should refuse to comply?
40851And what, he asked, did these expenses amount to?
40851And what, in either case, would become of this boasted protection of the people against themselves?
40851And when we all agree in this, whence the necessity of calling up the animosities of party?
40851And whether help can be extended by law to the one, and consistently refused to the other?
40851And whether it had not been in the contemplation of that gentleman, as well as others, to pay as much as they could yearly?
40851And whether none of them in the Legislature never voted for the resolutions about the western land, nor about post- offices and post- roads?
40851And whether the Executive is not hastening it?
40851And who are the judges?
40851And why is all this to be done?
40851And why shall our judges not ride the circuits?
40851And why were they told this?
40851And will gentlemen act upon this as a sufficient reason for their conduct?
40851And would any gentleman say it was not right to defend our vessels against pirates?
40851And would any one say that it would be proper to rise without providing a military defence for the country?
40851And would it not be extraordinary, he asked, if, before they received these statements, they were to appoint a committee of inquiry?
40851And would not the opening of intercourse with such a place, by relieving the distresses of France, defeat the original intention of the law?
40851And would this, he asked, be doing honor to the Republican Government?
40851And would you take up arms with a millstone hanging around your neck?
40851And yet, after being told of these designs, shall we sit with our arms folded, and make no defence?
40851And, because Congress had a right to enact such a law, would gentlemen say it was for the benefit of trade?
40851And, if Mr. Gerry had powers to treat, how could it be criminal to say that he might treat?
40851And, on motion to agree thereto, a motion was made for the previous question, to wit:"Shall the main question be now put?"
40851And, on the question on the first division, to wit: Whether so much as provides that the second article shall be expunged, shall stand?
40851And, on the question on the fourth division, to wit: Whether that part shall stand which provides a limitation of time to its duration?
40851And, on the question on the third division, to wit: Whether that part shall stand which restrains it from operating against former treaties?
40851And, on the question,"Shall these words stand?"
40851And, on the question,"Will the Senate advise and consent to the adoption of this article?"
40851And, said Mr. G., do we really rely upon this?
40851And, whether to deny it, in this instance, would not be to interfere with that provision of the constitution?
40851Any thing to ruin the country?
40851Are a majority of this House so degraded, so mean, so destitute of honor or morality, as to act at the nod of a President?
40851Are gentlemen disposed to wage war in support of this principle?
40851Are gentlemen then afraid to trust to the discretion of the President?
40851Are gentlemen unwilling to indemnify for such losses?
40851Are gentlemen unwilling to trust themselves, lest their own consciences should compel them to an act of justice?
40851Are gentlemen''s opinions and language thus to be circumscribed?
40851Are honorable gentlemen prepared to accept peace on such terms?
40851Are not its members acting under a responsibility to public opinion, which can and will check their aberrations from duty?
40851Are not the jurisdictions of those courts separate and distinct?
40851Are not those who voted against it fairly to be considered as enemies to the law?
40851Are not, said Mr. G., these papers important to the House?
40851Are not, said Mr. O., the galleries constructed for the express purpose of hearing?
40851Are our arguments to fly from the mouths of our cannon?
40851Are our means equal to hers?
40851Are there any words in that instrument which give the President expressly the power of removing any officer at pleasure?
40851Are there words in the English language more explicit?
40851Are these approaches to revolution and Jacobinic domination, to be observed with the eye of meek submission?
40851Are they apprehensive lest he should communicate that which is improper?
40851Are they not intended for the good people of the United States?
40851Are they paid exclusively by the wealthy and the luxurious part of the community?
40851Are they prepared to repeal the act to which I now refer?
40851Are they willing to let it rest, and lose it?
40851Are we bound hand and foot that we must be witnesses of these deadly thrusts at our liberty?
40851Are we never to be clear of these alarms?
40851Are we then to resort to the ultimate reason of kings?
40851Are we to be the unresisting spectators of these exertions to destroy all that we hold dear?
40851Are we to be told by the gentleman from Virginia, there is no occasion for this call; that we have information enough?
40851Are we to form an exception to the general principles of nature, and to all the examples of history?
40851Are we to legislate for succeeding ages?
40851Are we to see all these acts practised against the repose of our country, and remain passive?
40851Are we to suppose he is unwilling to inform us what they are?
40851Are we to suppose the Executive has not been vigilant in ascertaining the circumstances attending this event?
40851Are we valiant?
40851Are we wise?
40851Are you certain that they will wait the end of negotiation?
40851As to the State which he represented, he would ask if the first blood that had been spilled after that shed at Boston was not in North Carolina?
40851At a time when the enemy''s vessels are within our own jurisdiction, are we to withhold the necessary instructions to the commanders of our vessels?
40851At that day, did we hastily go to war?
40851Attacked and insulted as we had been, do we now, asked Mr. D., call for war?
40851Because they have been once injured with impunity, shall we turn our backs upon them for ever?
40851Because, as our opponents would fain have it believed, we are insensible to the vast interest affected by the obstruction of the Mississippi?
40851Besides, has he the power to do so, in the manner then suggested by the gentleman from Virginia by taking possession of New Orleans?
40851Besides, said Mr. B., were the rates of compensation, when first established, established upon this principle?
40851Besides, said Mr. G., could it be expected that six or ten frigates could convoy all our vessels?
40851Besides, what is the population of the Southern States?
40851Bound to obey what law?
40851Brought to this dilemma, said he, which side will you take?
40851But I ask gentlemen to be candid, and tell me whether they are at this time equally divided?
40851But an extreme case is put; a bill of attainder is passed; are the judges to support the constitution or the law?
40851But are printers at liberty to tell lies about our transactions?
40851But are we always to act by precedent?
40851But are you not the guardians of the public treasure?
40851But by what energy is the constitution to be destroyed?
40851But can it be necessary to give this Senate any other assurance than my word?
40851But can liberty, such as we understand and enjoy, exist in societies where the few only have property, and the many are both ignorant and licentious?
40851But can you examine each distinct case?
40851But could America lay up her ships, and say she would open her ports to all nations?
40851But did the framers of the constitution stop here?
40851But did the gentleman suppose that a war with France could be flattering to pride or ambition?
40851But does this bill, said Mr. S., contemplate any such thing?
40851But gentlemen say, where are your expenses?
40851But had Spain a right to make this cession without our consent?
40851But he would ask if this were the case, if it would not lead directly to war?
40851But how are these objects effected?
40851But how did the case really stand?
40851But how did we vote on the motion for agreeing to the following clause?
40851But how is that gentleman to have foundation for his reflections until a bill is drawn?
40851But how shall we account for the exception which is now exhibited to this hitherto received maxim?
40851But how was this law adopted?
40851But how?
40851But how?
40851But if the evidence was not reported, how could he say that all the witnesses might not again be called before the House?
40851But if the gentleman insisted opinions could not be false, how would he get rid of the conclusion?
40851But if, on the contrary, they coolly looked into the petition, and reported thereon, would it not stop the mouths of these people?
40851But if, sir, they have offended against the constitution or laws of the country, why are they not impeached?
40851But is it unconstitutional to assign new duties to officers already existing?
40851But is this Legislative power in Great Britain usurped by construction?
40851But is this the peace which we ought to seek?
40851But no, said the gentlemen,"We will not have it examined into, because it will make us out to be as_ black_ as the petitioners themselves?"
40851But of what avail will this be, when Congress may take it away at any moment?
40851But ought this to be said of the subject under consideration?
40851But should we persist under such a possibility of mistake, what do we risk?
40851But suppose it was now in possession of a foreign power, would Georgia attempt to drive them from it?
40851But suppose, said Mr. S., this independence were to take place, would all the danger to this country actually take place which has been stated?
40851But suppose, sir, you agree to divide these States, where is the boundary to be?
40851But supposing there are yet a number of them, what better use can our public armed vessels be put to than to go after them?
40851But the gentleman from South Carolina says, this is the cheapest mode of defence; but does the gentleman prove this?
40851But the question arises, whether a violation of the treaties on the part of France is, of itself, sufficient for setting them aside?
40851But this settlement is now objected to, and what is to be done?
40851But was it necessary these persons should at once become entitled to take a part in the concerns of our Government?
40851But was this the sense of the country?
40851But were they always to expect to have a PRESIDENT who would give his services to his country?
40851But what have we to do with their domestic broils?
40851But what inducement will there be to moneyed men to lend money, except a permanent revenue be made the security?
40851But what is the fact?
40851But what security have we for the truth of the declaration?
40851But what was all this to the United States?
40851But what was now to be done?
40851But what was the issue of this negotiation?
40851But what was the issue of this proposition?
40851But what was the result of experience?
40851But what were the terms upon which they proposed to cede it?
40851But what, said Mr. G., is the language of this section?
40851But what, sir, did the gentleman mean by his X, Y, Z?
40851But when?
40851But where did that gentleman learn that Holland has no navy?
40851But where is the evil complained of?
40851But where was the blame, if any could attach?
40851But where was the crime, the offence, or the impropriety, of the conduct ascribed to the Executive, if it had been adopted?
40851But wherefore this exhibition of a zeal so inordinate as to arrogate to itself all sensibility to the national welfare?
40851But who will say that the crew of a British frigate on the high seas, are within the peace of the United States?
40851But why have they trusted to the imaginary collision of sentiment between the Governor and Intendant of New Orleans?
40851But why is she in that situation?
40851But why speak of British inhumanity, if not to embarrass this bill?
40851But why was the army mentioned on this occasion, unless to fore- warn us of the fate which awaits them, and to tell us that their days are numbered?
40851But why, he asked, do these men come here in a body?
40851But why, say gentlemen, fix precisely one Supreme Court, and leave the rest to Legislative discretion?
40851But why?
40851But will it be pretended that a person can commit misprision of treason who can not commit treason itself?
40851But will the House thus be acted upon?
40851But will the gentleman say, that whenever we ask information, we conclude upon measures?
40851But will this alter the justness of my position?
40851But would this have been right?
40851But would this have done?
40851But, as this is not the case, as we are only asked to permit its encouragement, by allowing these people to receive benefactions, how can we refuse?
40851But, he asked if the gentleman from Virginia knew the reason why this amount to France appeared so large?
40851But, he asked if the loss we sustained for the want of a naval power could be estimated?
40851But, he would ask them, if, independent of land with its improvements, they possessed any other species of property which could not be eluded?
40851But, in any view, are the sins of the former judges to be fastened upon the new Judicial system?
40851But, it is said, will you suffer a printer to abuse his fellow- citizens with impunity, ascribing his conduct to the very worst of motives?
40851But, said he, shall we fear that we shall be called upon to pay a few more just debts?
40851But, say gentlemen, where will you find revenue?
40851But, sir, are the Secretaries unworthy of confidence?
40851But, sir, are we not as deeply interested in the true exposition of the constitution, as the judges can be?
40851But, supposing the law constitutional, is the crime an infamous one?
40851But, taking things as they are, what course, on this point, is most fair and tolerant?
40851But, to return, was there any thing criminal in that paragraph?
40851But, upon what ground, said Mr. G., do the advocates of this report prove that 11 is not three- fourths of 14?
40851But, what was the fact?
40851But, why had it been so?
40851But, why two, Mr. B. queried, rather than three?
40851By the laws of what nation would the contract be governed?
40851By what are those armies to be opposed?
40851By what authority can any court render such a judgment?
40851By what inspiration could the gentleman form a judgment now?
40851By what law then would such a contract be governed?
40851By what means was this to be accomplished?
40851By whom has this outrage been offered?
40851Can I, said Mr. J., represent as effectually Massachusetts, or Vermont, as Pennsylvania?
40851Can any other meaning be applied to the words"from time to time?"
40851Can any thing essential, any thing more than mere ornament and decoration, be added to this by robes and diamonds?
40851Can gentlemen hear these things and lie quietly on their pillows?
40851Can he commit and imprison without a trial?
40851Can he prove that £10,000,000 sterling is only the third part of the expense of defence, as he says?
40851Can he then be trusted with the government of others?
40851Can it be any thing more than the right of uttering and doing what is not injurious to others?
40851Can it be done without power?
40851Can it be expected that any country will be peopled as fast, from a nation at the distance of three thousand miles, as our Western country has been?
40851Can it be possible, sir, that the gentleman was really serious when he talked about an injury to women and children?
40851Can it be shown, or even said, that the judgment of the court was a false construction of the constitution?
40851Can it be, that an act, which, if perpetrated by an individual, would be robbery, can be justifiable in a nation?
40851Can it have this effect?
40851Can it mean that an office may exist, although its duties are extinct?
40851Can it mean, in short, that the shadow, to wit, the judge, can remain, when the substance, to wit, the office, is removed?
40851Can it mean, that his tenure should be limited by behaving well in an office which did not exist?
40851Can not the logical talents of the gentleman from Massachusetts( Mr. BACON) distinguish between information and measures?
40851Can stones show gratitude?
40851Can the honorable gentleman be serious in all this?
40851Can the usefulness or convenience of any acquisition justify us in taking from another by force what we have no sort of right to?
40851Can this admission make us responsible for the conduct of men we do not know, and over whom we have no control?
40851Can we expect any thing from their justice, or, rather, have we not every thing to expect from their vengeance, if not prepared to meet it?
40851Can we expect this, said Mr. N.?
40851Can you impair its force by impeaching the motives of any member who voted for it?
40851Could any gentleman conceive that these were not too great powers to be intrusted to any State whatever?
40851Could any gentleman pretend to say that no inference might be drawn from this source and the concomitant facts?
40851Could any man desire to place the citizens of the District in such a state?
40851Could any office be at the same time in the possession of two persons?
40851Could any possible inconvenience accrue from allowing him to obtain the information he desired?
40851Could gentlemen be serious in making this objection?
40851Could gentlemen hear it and not shudder?
40851Could he say we were at peace with them now?
40851Could he use the public force to redress our wrongs?
40851Could his successor, on the receipt of his commission, exercise the functions of judge, prior to the resignation of the former incumbent?
40851Could it be necessary then to_ increase_ courts when suits were_ decreasing_?
40851Could it be necessary to multiply judges, when their duties were diminishing?
40851Could it then be supposed these gentlemen could, in this instance, so change their opinion?
40851Could it, then, with any reason be called premature to act upon such information?
40851Could the President proceed further, even if he thought more vigorous measures proper and expedient?
40851Could the Speaker desire this?
40851Could the framers of the constitution intend to guarantee, as a sacred principle, the liberty of lying against the Government?
40851Could they alone go to war with France and Spain?
40851Could they declare a law of North Carolina null and void?
40851Could they fear injustice when opposed to a feeble individual?
40851Could they hold Orleans, were they to take possession of it, without the aid of the United States?
40851Could this be correct?
40851Could this be liberty?
40851Could this give offence, because we feel pleasure in being at peace?
40851Could we refuse a tribute of respect to a man who had served his country so much?
40851Could, then, gentlemen talk of moral obligation, and say that this was a just debt?
40851Dangerous to Europe and to the world, what will be the effect of a great increase of that power?
40851Did a nation ever make a declaration that it was not at war?
40851Did any thing appear in the conduct of the French Directory to show that our Ministers were not possessed of ample powers?
40851Did gentlemen mean that if we should make use of force against lawless violence, it is war?
40851Did gentlemen want an age to express an opinion which every member feels-- which the whole nation feels?
40851Did he carry his purpose into effect?
40851Did he mean to set all slaves at liberty, or receive petitions from all?
40851Did he not embark his all for this country?
40851Did he then ask any thing which was unreasonable or improper?
40851Did his constituents, he asked, wish this?
40851Did not he know that the doctrine applied to the Senate as well as to that House?
40851Did not our situation, and the circumstances in which we stand, compel us to turn our attention to this object?
40851Did not the United States trade with all the nations of the earth?
40851Did not the gentleman know that the most solemn decision had taken place last session on this subject, by a large majority?
40851Did not the gentleman''s friends immediately state the impropriety of passing those resolutions?
40851Did not the insolvent laws of the Southern States hold out the same allurements to fraud as the general bankrupt law?
40851Did not the members of the convention know that a great quantity of public treasure would be drawn together into this place?
40851Did not the silence of the bill on this point show the ignorance of gentlemen?
40851Did not this go to sanction a report which was as false and malignant as even jacobinism could invent?
40851Did the acts of cession by the States, and of acceptance by Congress, take away the jurisdiction of those States, and vest it in Congress?
40851Did the city afford the Government a defence?
40851Did the gentleman mean to insinuate, that this war was invited by the United States?
40851Did the gentleman suppose that the number would be so great as to make a demand on their seats?
40851Did the military send its aid?
40851Did the people of America vest all power in the Legislature?
40851Did the people?
40851Did the petition go any farther than this?
40851Did they attempt to counteract the Executive?
40851Did they imagine that, without the expression of a murmur by them, the mover would himself rise and oppose his own motion?
40851Did they know how far we would reduce the Army, the Navy, or the Judiciary?
40851Did they not consider the number of persons attached to the Government worthy of the special regard of the national Legislature?
40851Did they not hold them under the Spanish Government?
40851Did they rest here the most important branch of our Government?
40851Did they risk on these grammatical niceties the fate of America?
40851Did those gentlemen consider what it was to deprive the country of a rich mine of ship timber?
40851Did we drive them to the measures that made such immense expenditures of the public money necessary?
40851Did we object to a syllable contained in this part of the resolution?
40851Did we refuse our assent?
40851Did we then hesitate?
40851Did we then make war?
40851Did we then wait for foreign alliance?
40851Do gentlemen appeal to our fears, rather than to our understanding?
40851Do gentlemen mean to decide at once thus precipitately against all indemnity whatever?
40851Do gentlemen say opinions can be false which do not contain matter of fact?
40851Do gentlemen themselves think that the persons, whom I see around me, ought to be trusted with such powers?
40851Do not gentlemen know that our Government is in possession of testimony, demonstrating beyond all kind of doubt, that this is not the fact?
40851Do not gentlemen know that peace or war is not in our power?
40851Do not the people in this territory hold them as such?
40851Do not we know that we may safely rely upon them?
40851Do they imagine that any particular place can be assigned to which they can ensure a profound silence, and from which every person can be withheld?
40851Do they mean to prevent the publication of their sentiments to their constituents and to the world?
40851Do we not every day call upon particular officers to perform duties not previously assigned to, or required of them?
40851Do we not hear of depredatory threats, and the mischiefs she has the power of doing us, urged as reasons why we should submit to her?
40851Do we not know, said Mr. B., that he is among the persons proscribed by France?
40851Do we not see the nation with whom we are at variance find quarrels with every country who is not strong enough to resist her?
40851Do you not tremble when you look at it?
40851Do you prefer peace to independence?
40851Does any body expect any thing from the terrible generosity of the Great Nation?
40851Does any gentleman on this floor know who confined him, or by order of what government?
40851Does he mean to say that Congress did wrong in funding the public debt?
40851Does he mean to say that the price of our liberty and independence ought not to have been paid?
40851Does he remember when we passed this law?
40851Does he wish unreasonable concessions to be made?
40851Does it affect the case?
40851Does it alter the fact?
40851Does it embrace any point of fact on which a committee is to make inquiry?
40851Does it follow, that a law is bad because all those who concurred in it can not give good reasons for their votes?
40851Does it not rather appear as if they intended to alienate the affections of the people from their Government, in order to effect their own views?
40851Does it not say that the agents must be under the Government of France?
40851Does it result that we have a right to pass a law beforehand to contemplate such an event?
40851Does not the President refer to them as important to enlighten us?
40851Does not the power that cedes give up all right whatever to that which accepts?
40851Does not the selection of the best objects to which to appropriate it devolve on you?
40851Does not this look as though the United States are to patronize and support the establishment?
40851Does not this manifest precipitation?
40851Does not this show that the gentlemen themselves have not confided in the estimate of the artist?
40851Does she not injure us on every side?
40851Does such a commission empower one to exercise the functions of the whole in opposition to the opinions of his colleagues?
40851Does the gentleman by this mean to give the lie to the Executive?
40851Does the gentleman from Connecticut recollect the words of that decree?
40851Does the gentleman say opinions can not be false?
40851Does the gentleman wish to suppress the history of the political events of 1776?
40851Does this mean, said he, that there are a majority of members in this House who must always be in the right, and a minority always in the wrong?
40851Does this question involve an inquiry either into matter of expediency or of fact?
40851Else why was the provision for exclusive jurisdiction made?
40851Establish thus the dependence of the Judiciary Department, who will resort to them for protection against you?
40851For by what rule of evidence could he discover and know what was really the writer''s belief?
40851For fear of_ offending_ foreign nations we are not to ask or know what is our relative situation with such nations?
40851For what do we ask?
40851For what purpose was this great mass to be raised?
40851For what purpose, said he, should they be finished, unless it were intended to man them?
40851For what, sir, are elections held, if it be not that the people should change their representatives when they do not like them?
40851For what?
40851For when the powers and duties are taken away, what, let me ask, is left but a salary?
40851From whence do they derive their authority?
40851From whence, said Mr. V., is this reasoning drawn?
40851From whom is a corrupt decision most to be feared?
40851Gentlemen asked whether war is not approaching?
40851Gentlemen catch at this; but what is it but an attempt to arrest the arm of the Government of this country, just when it was about to strike a blow?
40851Gentlemen say, we are happier than though we were at war; are we at peace?
40851Had Congress, then, a right to do any thing to bind the sovereignties of the independent States?
40851Had any objection been made to the old Congress under the Confederation, that was federally organized, for the want of talents or integrity?
40851Had not the citizens lived happily for a hundred years under the State Governments?
40851Had she no navy in the American war, when with great gallantry, though with unequal success, she fought the English at sea?
40851Had the public affairs been conducted with less ability than they are at present?
40851Had they not an equal right to be heard with other petitioners?
40851Has a great man reason to fear from a poor one?
40851Has a nation a right to put these States in a dangerous situation?
40851Has he any documents or proof to render the suspicion colorable?
40851Has he heard of no commercial distresses, when violations so unprecedented have of late occurred?
40851Has it been passed in a manner which wounded your pride, or aroused your resentment?
40851Has it been the practice of this Government heretofore to break lances on the spot with any nation who injured or insulted her?
40851Has the King of Spain, has the First Consul of France, no means of making such communication to the President of the United States?
40851Have not the judges, in the same manner, been deprived of one of their offices?
40851Have the French Government expressed any inclination to settle the differences subsisting between them and us?
40851Have the Senate any authority to advise him as to the faithful execution of the laws?
40851Have they not been wholly maritime?
40851Have they not seen the letter of the Governor of New Orleans to the Governor of the Mississippi Territory?
40851Have we a better prospect than that nation?
40851Have we given our vote that we would not defend the free navigation of the Mississippi?
40851Have we heretofore been considered as responsible?
40851Have we not been ready to unite in adopting those measures which the infraction of treaties and our violated rights demand?
40851Have we not heard this doctrine supported in the memorable case of the mandamus, lately before the Supreme Court?
40851Have we not passed a variety of bills which gentlemen have declared amount to war?
40851Have we not seen sedition laws?
40851Have we not uniformly adhered to the principle that those who exercise power_ de facto_ are the only persons that we are bound to recognize?
40851Have we not within these few days passed a law to prevent the importation of certain dangerous characters?
40851Have we one common language, and are we united under one head?
40851Have we such evidence as should incline us to rely upon it?
40851Have you a judiciary system extending over this immense country, matured by the wisdom of your ablest and best men?
40851Have you any thing to say in excuse or extenuation for said publication?
40851Have you here the opportunities for valuable information which might be had elsewhere?
40851Have you not done more?
40851Have you not then established a new office by the destruction of the old one?
40851Have you taxes which have been laid since the commencement of the Government?
40851Have you, said Mr. L., no greater objects to engage your attention than whether this man or that man shall go out of your bar, or remain within it?
40851He again asked, have we the means?
40851He asked if our Government did not know that nothing was to be obtained here without money?
40851He asked the decision of the question, whether, previously to offering his resolutions, the doors ought not to be closed?
40851He asked those gentlemen whether the PRESIDENT had not a right to man the frigates, and if so, whether they should not be_ obliged_ to find the money?
40851He asked whether any gentlemen in this House, who are so frequently called disorganizers, had ever broached a doctrine like this?
40851He asked whether gentlemen did not believe the Executive had taken measures which would lead to war?
40851He asked whether the United States might not as well lose revenue in the first instance, as put money into the people''s pockets to pay it with?
40851He asked whether this was consonant to the principles of the constitution?
40851He asked whether, where men wanted every thing, and were in proportion of 29 to 1, it was possible they could be trusted with power?
40851He asked, what necessity for the exercise of power by Congress?
40851He called upon gentlemen to say whether a temper of revolt was not more perceptible in that quarter?
40851He himself saw it with concern; but where was the difference in crime between the French Republic and the Emperor?
40851He should be glad to know where he saw the signature to know it?
40851He then asked if this was not the very state in which we now were?
40851He wished also to know whether it was intended that the Senate should declare that the publication was a breach of privilege?
40851He wished he could see the breasts of gentlemen now glow with the patriotism which then animated them; but, instead of this, what do we see?
40851He wished to know how a distinction was to be made on this subject?
40851He wished to know what difficulty there would have been in defining the time here referred to in this bill?
40851He wished to know what was meant?
40851He wished to know whence he derived his information?
40851He wished to know whether the House had not jurisdiction over this matter?
40851He wished to know whether the people have not a right to say, if they choose, that the administration of justice is corrupt?
40851He wished, therefore, to know what these unusual severities were which, upon our own ideas of Government, we could retaliate?
40851He would appeal to the gentleman whether it was more honorable to desert his duty and fly a vote, than to act as he had done?
40851He would ask the gentleman just up whether he knew any thing about the expense of a mausoleum?
40851He would ask the gentleman whether that act of ours should have any influence on our situation with France?
40851He would ask whether, in countries over which the Government had complete jurisdiction, worse things had not happened?
40851He would ask, Was there any thing in the name of Government, if it operated in this manner?
40851He would ask, could not an appropriation be made for the use of the Military Establishment in general terms?
40851He would ask, how, under these circumstances, a jury could be struck in a federal court in that State agreeably to law?
40851He would not deny that frauds were committed, but for this should the honest debtor be eternally fettered with his debts?
40851He would wish to know what advantage there could be in giving this legislative agency to those States?
40851Hence arises the advantages from public contributions; and would that House, he asked, refuse their assistance?
40851Here Mr. C. was called to order by Mr. BINGHAM, of Pennsylvania, who inquired what the liberty of the press had to do on a question of postponement?
40851How can the retrocession be made?
40851How could any thing, then, be due to them?
40851How could he know what part would awaken that idea of disrespect?
40851How could it be fairly argued, because gentlemen desired to limit the duration of this law, that they were unwilling to defend their country?
40851How could that little island( England) command such influence in foreign dominions?
40851How could that share be estimated?
40851How could the motion be necessary-- how be useful?
40851How could they be collected?
40851How could this be, when they had no right to be deprived of?
40851How could this be?
40851How could we say what our relation is, except we determine what is our relation with respect to the treaties subsisting between the two countries?
40851How did the bankrupt law operate upon the planter?
40851How did the gentleman mean to go, and how take peaceable possession?
40851How did the matter stand?
40851How does that honorable gentleman get his information?
40851How does the gentleman from Virginia know what light this information may throw on the subject?
40851How does the matter now stand?
40851How is a naval force to guard us, which Great Britain can destroy, whenever she pleases, even in time of war?
40851How is it to operate?
40851How is that to be formed?
40851How is the independence of the judge more affected by the one act than by the other?
40851How is this question to be decided?
40851How is this to be done?
40851How long can we expect to maintain the other distinctive qualities of the magistracy of the two countries, when this sameness is established?
40851How long is it since we have discovered the malignant qualities which are now ascribed to this law?
40851How must they, then, get support?
40851How progressing?
40851How so?
40851How then can this House meddle with that part of our property?
40851How then can we commiserate with it as an unfortunate country?
40851How then can we deliberate on this subject, unless we know the degree of probability there is, that it will be carried into effect?
40851How then could it be expected that, at such a period, even the semblance of justice could be done to the subject?
40851How then could the gentleman from Pennsylvania say that Holland has no navy?
40851How was it terminated?
40851How was this to be ascertained but by inquiry?
40851How was this to be done?
40851How was this to be done?
40851How would this resolution then stand?
40851How would you bear up, not only against the force of the enemy, but against the irresistible current of public opinion?
40851How, he asked, would this operate?
40851How, he would ask gentlemen, could this be granted, and yet retained?
40851How, then, can the gentleman with truth say that we have deviated from the law of nations?
40851How, then, could the respective States of Virginia and Maryland a moment longer possess the jurisdiction?
40851How, then, he asked, could they make their observations on it as they had done?
40851How, then, he asks, can we expect to protect our commerce by a navy?
40851How, then, is the nomination of a Minister to be understood?
40851How, then, was it possible to do without accredited agents to attend to our concerns in foreign countries?
40851I ask gentlemen, what is there in the constitution to prove their signification to this end alone?
40851I ask him how he would remedy this evil as he calls it?
40851I ask you, Mr. Chairman, if any system could be devised more likely to produce vexation and delay?
40851I ask, gentlemen, is it not unfriendly and wrongful?
40851I ask, if you do not, by such treatment, put the Government entirely into their hands?
40851I ask, was this a public treaty?
40851I say, sir, these were her motives in agreeing to that measure; and did she not evince a magnanimous spirit by doing it?
40851I wish to know if the establishment of this principle requires facts?
40851If Congress can derive no solid benefit from the exercise of this power, why keep the people in this degraded situation?
40851If Congress exercise exclusive legislation, does it not follow that no other body can exercise any legislation whatever?
40851If Congress had not power to legislate on the African trade, then why did they say it was with a committee?
40851If a man is to be subject to a prosecution for his opinions, what will be the consequence?
40851If all these parties are agreed to revoke their act, I wish to know who is to dissent to it, or what obstacle can prevent its being rescinded?
40851If an opinion upon a fact be expressed, and that opinion is false, scandalous, and malicious, ought it not to be subject to prosecution?
40851If as a constitutional organ of the Government, where is the power given to the Senate?
40851If from the cabinet, are we, the representatives of the people, to obtain it from him?
40851If gentlemen are against finishing these frigates, why do they not come forward and declare it?
40851If gentlemen were then wrong, is that a reason why they should continue to act wrong?
40851If it was desirable, who could undertake it, who encourage it, like this House?
40851If it were, why pass such a bill at this time, when it could not go into operation?
40851If not, how could it be improper for us to seize the only moment which was left for the then majority to do what they deemed a necessary act?
40851If not, what did all that had been said amount to?
40851If nothing was intended but a mere incorporation, why not apply to the State that could incorporate such a body?
40851If one person in particular has the sale of his debates to this House, will it not destroy the advantages any other can derive from it?
40851If receded, what would be the situation of the Territory?
40851If the House decide that the Government is bound to relieve in one case, are they not bound to afford relief in all similar cases?
40851If the Intendant is to be controlled by the Minister, would he have taken a step so important without his advice?
40851If the United States were to become underwriters to the whole Union, where must the line be drawn when their assistance might be claimed?
40851If the debtor States were not to pay their balances, why settle the accounts?
40851If the doors shall be closed, can not we still agree to the resolution?
40851If the expense is to be provided for, how is it to be done?
40851If the gentleman from Delaware, or other gentlemen thought so, why not combat a decision at the time?
40851If the permission were once granted to one, would it not be necessary to extend it to all?
40851If the sentiments were agreeable to the minds of the House, why waste our time to alter mere expressions while the sentiment is preserved?
40851If the spirit which last session gave existence to sixteen new judges continued, who could say by what number they would be limited?
40851If there was nothing improper, why should they fear to trust the Senate with it?
40851If these expenses were to be incurred for five thousand men, what would be the expense of an Army of thirty thousand men?
40851If these sentiments were true, why not express them?
40851If they had not a right to permit it, whether they are not bound to prohibit it?
40851If they had power, where was the impropriety of referring, at least that part which could be considered?
40851If they have the right to punish libels, or false, or malicious attacks, why include them in this act?
40851If they were to pay at this rate for overlooking the timber for one ship, what might they expect would be the expense of a navy yard?
40851If they were, the only difference between us now is, what are the proper means to obtain this great end?
40851If they will not say this, must they not allow that the constitution is positive in prohibiting any change in this respect?
40851If they, then, were compelled to protect commerce, he asked if there was any other way of doing it than by a Navy?
40851If this diversity of sentiment exists, ought not the evils under the judiciary law to be very great before we touch it?
40851If this exercise were to be allowed in any case, why could it not be allowed in the present?
40851If this is the case, and the House knew it, why not say so, and make preparations accordingly?
40851If this reasoning is correct, can you repeal a law establishing an inferior court, under the constitution?
40851If this were not the intention, why resist the amendment?
40851If we agree to the resolution, do we not pledge ourselves to increase this force?
40851If we are bound by the acts of the old Congress, are we not equally bound by those of the last session?
40851If we thus give away the people''s money, said he, shall we not be charged with rapaciously putting our hands into their pockets?
40851If you destroy all law and government, can the few oppress the many, or will the many oppress the few?
40851If, said he, you incorporate men to build a University, are you not pledging yourselves to make up any deficiency?
40851In a Republic, what species of knowledge can be equally important?
40851In a court from which no one had an appeal and to whom it belonged to establish the leading principles of national jurisprudence?
40851In a court, the judges of which are appointed by the PRESIDENT, by a jury selected by an officer holding his office at the will of the PRESIDENT?
40851In making treaties he wished to know what was meant by two- thirds of the members of the Senate present?
40851In short, does it appear that even Spain herself thought it an object of any importance?
40851In what part of the constitution is it declared to be adopted?
40851In what part of the constitution is such power delegated to this House?
40851Indeed, can it, in the nature of things, be one of the rights of freemen to do injury?
40851Instead of inducing them to behave better to us, had it not been with a knowledge of this that they have offered us fresh insult and indignity?
40851Institutions for promoting it grow up, supported by the public purse; and to what object can it be dedicated with greater propriety?
40851Is America, said he, arrived at this melancholy state?
40851Is American character worth nothing, that we should thus, in my judgment, improperly, attempt to destroy it on this floor?
40851Is a law that has received the varied assent required by the constitution, and is clothed with all the needful formalities, thereby invalidated?
40851Is he a strict common lawyer, or a special pleader?
40851Is he acquainted with chancery law?
40851Is he bold enough to denounce this measure as one of the Federal victims marked for destruction?
40851Is he prepared to say it will throw no light on this subject?
40851Is it a license to injure others or the Government, by calumnies, with impunity?
40851Is it a strange thing, I would ask gentlemen, for a State to grant charters?
40851Is it at present for the public convenience?
40851Is it because the Legislature may, at pleasure, set aside a treaty?
40851Is it less expensive for individuals, or for the public, than it would be in some of your commercial cities?
40851Is it necessary, when the whole nation is alive, to be moderate in the expression of our ideas?
40851Is it not because popular opinion was called on to decide every thing, until those who wore bayonets decided for all the rest?
40851Is it not before us?
40851Is it not natural for the people to ask why Congress do not call for this information?
40851Is it not rather a degraded state?
40851Is it not reasonable, then, that an institution of this kind should be established in that place?
40851Is it not time to gain information?
40851Is it not well known that those debts were part of the price of our Revolution?
40851Is it not your great duty to promote the public good; and can that be more completely promoted in any other way?
40851Is it possible for any man to read the constitution with attention, and then suppose that such could have been its design?
40851Is it possible that twelve thousand dollars can be necessary for the two Houses?
40851Is it proper, Mr. N. asked, for legislators to be placed on this ground?
40851Is it safe?
40851Is it the design to tell us that its day has not yet come, but is approaching; and that the funding system is to add to the pile of Federal ruins?
40851Is it the law of England, at any particular period, which is adopted?
40851Is it then for this House to say they will not attend to the petitions of our citizens?
40851Is it to be a river, or a line of marked trees?
40851Is it too much to say of such a calculation, that it is a paltry calculation, unworthy of a statesman, and befitting only a schoolboy?
40851Is murder prohibited, and may you shut a man up, and deprive him of sustenance, till he dies, and this not be denominated murder?
40851Is no punishment to be inflicted on such a person?
40851Is not this a strange situation?
40851Is not this, said Mr. N., an acknowledgment of the effect which this law will have?
40851Is our present situation calculated to produce this effect?
40851Is such a thing possible?
40851Is that a Government of laws which leaves us no security but in the confidence we have in the moderation and patriotism of one man?
40851Is that a measure of general defence which has diminished confidence in the Government and produced disunion among the States and among the people?
40851Is that formed by the constitution?
40851Is that wonderful man who presides over the destinies of France, ignorant or unmindful of these forms?
40851Is the creation of judicial officers the only thing committed to their discretion?
40851Is the gentleman really in earnest in his inquiries at this time?
40851Is the idea of a separation of these States so light and trifling an affair, as to be uttered with calmness in this deliberate assembly?
40851Is the power claimed proper for Congress to possess?
40851Is there a State in the Union which has not adopted it, and in which it is not in force?
40851Is there an offensive sentence either to the Court of Spain or the Republic of France?
40851Is there any condition annexed to the judge''s tenure of office, other than good behavior?
40851Is there any doubt that we shall not stand in need of information when we come to discuss points connected with this subject?
40851Is there no instance of a similar situation to be found in history?
40851Is there not reason to believe gentlemen hope to conceal the full extent of their principles, by bringing them into operation only by degrees?
40851Is there then nothing more?
40851Is there, then, I ask you, any other mode for perpetuating the memory of such transcendent virtues so strong, so impressive as that which we propose?
40851Is this House free from it?
40851Is this a desirable state of things?
40851Is this all our boasted acquisition, in return for the struggle we have made for our country?
40851Is this an Address or an insult?
40851Is this conciliation?
40851Is this equitable?
40851Is this fair, sir?
40851Is this not calumny of the darkest hue?
40851Is this not war?
40851Is this system so very vicious, that it deserves nothing but abhorrence and destruction?
40851Is this the case?
40851Is this the language of irritation?
40851Is this the mark of respect we ought to show to the first man in the nation?
40851Is this the way in which six hundred thousand men are to be stigmatized?
40851Is this to control succeeding rulers in their wild, their mad career?
40851Is this wise?
40851Is this, said he, a desirable state for the Legislature to be placed in?
40851It is not want of respect that should prevent us, but are we provided to go into all the consequences attending a new negotiation?
40851It is true, this place may be settled by foreigners; but can we suppose that any native citizen, who values his political rights, will come here?
40851It may be said that you print your journals; but who reads them?
40851It was a Judicial question, and the House ought not to pretend to determine the point; why, then, should they take up time upon it?
40851Let me ask if this was not a vicious construction of a court of the highest authority and greatest importance in the nation?
40851Let me ask, is there any thing in this calculated to gratify the courtly delicacy of a Castilian?
40851Let me ask, sir, what could the judges do?
40851Let me now ask, if the compensation allowed to these judges is extravagant?
40851Let the gentleman from New York classify the claims as he pleases, can he tell the extent of the demands?
40851Let the inquiry be made, of whom do the judges hold?
40851May not equal oppression be imposed upon the people by giving your judges exorbitant salaries as by increasing their numbers?
40851May not the same corrupt and unprincipled motive which would lead men to the raising of an army of judges lead them to squander the public money?
40851May they not amount to five million or ten million of dollars?
40851Might not sixty as well as sixteen, with salaries of twenty thousand, instead of two thousand dollars, be provided for in this way?
40851Might there not be other applications?
40851Mr. B. asked, would these gentlemen admit that Nash was guilty of the dreadful murders committed on board the British frigate?
40851Mr. B. said, he would inquire whether the present salaries were a reasonable and just compensation for the services performed?
40851Mr. B. wished to know to whom they are to be attached?
40851Mr. BAYARD asked for information whether it was in order for him to state that he withdrew his resolution?
40851Mr. BUCK asked if, when on the question on the resolution,( if, adopted,) a separate vote could be given?
40851Mr. COIT wished to know whether it was necessary for the United States to intermeddle with this?
40851Mr. DANA thought this a most extraordinary resolution indeed?
40851Mr. DAWSON asked if these resolutions were not necessarily connected with a subject which the House had determined should be discussed in private?
40851Mr. DAWSON inquired if the same rules that applied to the House, did not also apply to Committees of the Whole?
40851Mr. GALLATIN asked whether he understood the SPEAKER rightly, that a motion for a reference to a committee superseded a motion for postponement?
40851Mr. GALLATIN inquired from what document Mr. SMITH took his calculations?
40851Mr. GORDON wished to know what part of the resolution the gentleman from Virginia was not ready to act upon?
40851Mr. H. asked on which branch of this rule could the arguments of gentlemen be predicated?
40851Mr. HARPER asked, if the report of the committee should not be agreed to, whether the resolution might not then be agreed to?
40851Mr. HARPER had yesterday said that the impressments were few; but how were we to be certain of that?
40851Mr. HARPER inquired of the SPEAKER whether that was the usual mode of proceeding?
40851Mr. LIVINGSTON desired to know wherein he had attempted to ridicule the resources of this country?
40851Mr. MURRAY inquired when the fire happened at Lexington?
40851Mr. N. asked whether this bill did not go to the abridgment of the freedom of speech and of the press?
40851Mr. N. asked whether we could ever hope to succeed in a plan of this kind?
40851Mr. NICHOLAS asked whether it had heretofore been usual, in the case of a new House, to swear the members before the choice of a Speaker?
40851Mr. NICHOLAS asked whether it was in order to abuse any class of citizens in this manner, and particularly since no motion was before the committee?
40851Mr. NICHOLAS asked whether it would not then be in order to postpone the consideration of the subject?
40851Mr. O. inquired if the House was ready to do the first?
40851Mr. President, are we then to understand that opposition to the majority in the two Houses of Congress, is improper, is indecent?
40851Mr. R. WILLIAMS wished to know whether the new census proposed to be taken was to affect the representation as well as the tax?
40851Mr. R. said, if he had not, how was he to know whether it was good or bad?
40851Mr. RANDOLPH said he would ask the gentleman from Delaware, whether he had seen any indisposition in that House to discuss the subject?
40851Mr. S. SMITH asked if this were not the precise motion decided yesterday by the House?
40851Mr. S. asked if this mode was not perfectly just and fair?
40851Mr. SMILIE would ask whether the Supreme Court in such a case as this could be denominated an impartial tribunal?
40851Mr. SPRIGGS said it had been inquired why the Legislature of Maryland could not have granted the commissioners what they now pray for?
40851Mr. SWANWICK asked the gentleman what security there was in a peace with Algiers?
40851Mr. SWANWICK considered the question to be to this effect: whether the debates be under the sanction of the House or not?
40851Mr. W. LYMAN said, the question was, whether the House would incur the expense of$ 1,600 to supply the members with copies or not?
40851Must it be acknowledged as the prerogative of that State to impose a Chief Magistrate on the Union?
40851Must they hire a man for this purpose?
40851Must we not judge of it by its intrinsic merit?
40851Must you resort to Maryland for protection, and wait on her measures?
40851No, said he, you have not: what is your answer?
40851Now of what do courts consist?
40851Now the question is whether, if the offices are abolished, those who filled them before they were abolished are entitled to salaries?
40851Now what has the information desired by gentlemen to do with any such negotiation?
40851Now when there were no services to be performed, what salary could there be allowed, or what retribution demanded?
40851Now, sir, is it not our duty to consult our country''s interest, before we take this rash step, which we can not recall?
40851Now, suppose in the French Treaty there were the same provisions as in the British Treaty, would this have produced payment?
40851Now, what could possibly be in possession of that Department?
40851Of any resignations of the office of judge of the circuit court, in order"that a salutary system might take effect?"
40851Of what nature should these be?
40851Of what use, Mr. G. asked, had been the reference of a set of resolutions made some days ago by Mr. SITGREAVES?
40851Of whom shall your judges be independent?
40851On the other hand, what do you see?
40851On the passage of the law of last session, did we hear any protest against its unconstitutionality from the Supreme or district courts?
40851On the question whether the Senate would advise and consent to the ratification of the third article of the convention?
40851On the question, Shall this bill pass as amended?
40851On the question, Shall this bill pass?
40851On the question, whether the Senate would advise and consent to the ratification of the third article?
40851On the question, whether the Senate would advise and consent to the said additional article, as amended?
40851On the question,"Will the Senate advise and consent to the adoption of this article?"
40851Once take that step, and what obligation was there in Congress to remain here?
40851Or could they say that no part of the 80,000 militia, ordered to be held in readiness, would not be called into service?
40851Or does he believe that these events will be handed down in association with the bloody buoy, and Porcupine''s works?
40851Or had the PRESIDENT set a bad example, by living in a style of extravagance and splendor?
40851Or has he had time to examine whether that decree is really in force, or not?
40851Or has not the invariable course been to seek reparation in the first place by negotiation?
40851Or have we found angels in the form of kings to govern him?
40851Or is it abridged by a law to restrain lying?
40851Or is the judgment of this House so feeble, that it may not be trusted?
40851Or was he the very leader of the band that broke down these constitutional ramparts?
40851Or was the power placed in them to be exercised like other duties, according to justice and propriety?
40851Or was there a difference of right, because Virginia, with its extent and population, could make more clamor than any other State?
40851Or would it be proper to sit down, satisfied that our enemy will not invade us, though they see we are not prepared to meet them?
40851Or would they be ready to forfeit the revenue arising from it?
40851Or would you be bound to retain them, lest it should infringe a private right?
40851Or, if they could, can they find time to hear and decide causes?
40851Or, that there were in that case no measures adopted?
40851Or, will gentlemen say it was their intention to place themselves in this situation?
40851Ought it to be rejected on the ground of jurisdiction?
40851Ought not the House to be possessed of all the important information in the power of the Executive to give?
40851Ought not this person to perform the object, although the particular mode of using the means has not been prescribed?
40851Ought our country to remain in such cases dependent on foreign supply, precarious, because liable to be interrupted?
40851Ought they not, then, he asked, to devise some species of tax by which to draw some part of the revenue from the inhabitants of the back country?
40851Ought they, then, to support the doctrine which hereafter may be practised on to the full extent?
40851Ought we not to aim at harmonizing, instead of dividing our citizens?
40851Ought we not, therefore, on such a subject, to take immediate means to gain information?
40851Our trade became so insecure, that it was necessary to do-- what?
40851Patriotism could not be purchased, and should they despair of getting a man to fill the office of PRESIDENT without they increased the salary?
40851Perhaps he has formed from his own mind a proper selection for our children, and is against the press handing down any thing else?
40851Perhaps he might be asked, if we were, then, to be left without protection?
40851Put the case to its consequences, and what becomes of the check?
40851Questions arise whether both descriptions of sufferers ought not to be provided for?
40851Returning to the question of foreign political intercourse: Was it proper to bring it back to what it was eighteen months ago?
40851Shall he, and he only, have the public ear?
40851Shall it be confided to men immediately responsible to the people, or to those who are irresponsible?
40851Shall oppressed humanity find no asylum on this globe?
40851Shall the Speaker have the discretion of saying what debates shall be taken and what shall not?
40851Shall then a mistaken spirit of economy, and a still more mistaken jealousy arrest us?
40851Shall they obey God or Mammon?
40851Shall we abandon our duty?
40851Shall we repress truth?
40851Shall we sacrifice the interests of our constituents to a sense of politeness to these gentlemen?
40851Shall we send a Minister hampered by such a resolution?
40851Shall we shut the door against individual benevolence?
40851Shall we sit down contented under the imputation of lukewarmness in this cause?
40851Shall we thereby invite her aggressions?
40851Shall we, said Mr. D., because our seamen have been first injured by Great Britain, when France uses them still worse, abandon them?
40851Shall we, said he, treat the citizens of Savannah with more disrespect than the people of St. Domingo?
40851Should I be doing right, said Mr. G., to say that I believe that this section of the bill is an effect of that negotiation?
40851Should he, from unavoidable accidents, be cast into prison, and his family reduced to misery and distress?
40851Should we now say they should be at our direction, and that we would not grant money without?
40851Since our treaties were always made by special Envoys, what advantage could it be to have numerous Ministers Plenipotentiary in Europe?
40851Sir, after a declaration of this kind, can you retract?
40851Sir, said Mr. R., whom does this infraction of the treaty and the natural rights of this country most intimately affect?
40851So we are told!--But if there be blame, on whom does it fall?
40851Still, if the gentlemen would not agree with him as to the unconstitutionality of the measure proposed, he would ask, was it expedient?
40851Suppose Georgia had a title to this territory, had not the United States the power of depriving Georgia of it?
40851Suppose a libel were written against the PRESIDENT, where is it most probable that such an offence would receive an impartial trial?
40851Suppose a majority of_ one_ was obtained on the report, what end would be produced?
40851Suppose such an alliance was formed, would it not be said that Congress are bound to carry it into effect?
40851Suppose the PRESIDENT should, after this, appoint officers to enlist men for the frigates, how could the House refuse to pay them?
40851Suppose the persons deny your power-- how are your committee to enforce their mandates?
40851Suppose these taxes are removed, are not the products of the country increasing?
40851Suppose this power is doubted?
40851Suppose we go into a Committee of the Whole, what light can we expect from their deliberation?
40851Suppose we pass a law which calls upon the PRESIDENT to act, what ought the PRESIDENT to do?
40851Suppose you had no law at all, could the rich oppress the poor?
40851Suppose your courts of law claim cognizance as a case of libel, are you to have two prosecutions and two trials for the same offence?
40851Suppose your reliance had been altogether on this broken staff, and not on the elective principle?
40851Suppose, as the gentlemen wish, we say we will indemnify, does that pay the claims?
40851Suppose, said Mr. H., we were to give thirty thousand dollars towards this loss, what would it be when divided among the whole Union?
40851Suppose, said he, persons should claim to be Electors, who had never been_ properly_ appointed, should their vote be received?
40851Surely it would not; and is it not the duty of every good citizen to heal, as far as possible, the wounds of society?
40851That he would be punishable for concealing a treason who could not be punished for plotting it?
40851That the moment they throw off the French yoke, they will receive all the assistance from this country which a free commerce can give them?
40851The CHAIRMAN asked what Message?
40851The SPEAKER asked, whether it was the pleasure of the House that the Sergeant- at- arms should be sent for Mr. LYON?
40851The SPEAKER said the question was, whether it should be committed or not?
40851The SPEAKER said, then you do accordingly agree to this proposition?
40851The United States intend to exercise jurisdiction over that Territory, and was there any more reason for excepting this jurisdiction than any other?
40851The bill having been determined to be read a third time, the usual question was put by the SPEAKER,"For what day shall it be made the order?"
40851The charge is easily made, but has the gentleman the means of supporting it?
40851The fires at New York, Baltimore, and Charleston, had been mentioned; but what were the means of Savannah when compared with New York?
40851The first inquiry was, whether the law of nations permitted the merchant vessels of neutral nations to arm?
40851The first question was, then, whether that Administration had been marked with wisdom, firmness, and patriotism?
40851The first thing he should ask was, Is such a thing desirable?
40851The following question was then put,"Shall this bill pass?"
40851The gentleman from Connecticut had said, why send a Minister Plenipotentiary to London or Paris, any more than the other Courts?
40851The gentleman from Georgia had objected to the reference because the petition contained a system of facts which_ he said_ was not true?
40851The gentleman from New York has asked, triumphantly asked, what power exists in our courts to deliver up an individual to a foreign Government?
40851The law for authorizing the building of the three frigates?
40851The only question is, How it shall be performed?
40851The only question is, whether it will promote the taking of French privateers?
40851The only question, said he, is, if your property is unjustly attacked, will you defend it?
40851The previous question was then put in this form:"Shall the main question( viz: the resolution for reprimanding the offending members) now be put?"
40851The previous question was then put,"Shall the main question be now put?"
40851The question arises, by what tenure?
40851The question before the House was not, Will we resent it?
40851The question being,"Shall this bill pass?"
40851The question is, what power is thus to be limited and checked?
40851The question was put,"Is the decision of the Chair right?"
40851The question was then put, shall the bill pass?
40851The question was, whether the papers before them afforded reason to believe that legal evidence of the title did exist?
40851The question was, whether they were to go over the same ground every four or eight years of furnishing the house of a new PRESIDENT?
40851The second is, if further provisions are necessary, must they be made by amendment to the constitution?
40851The simple question was, which of the two grounds the House would take?
40851The true question is, were there courts enough under the old system, to do the business of the nation?
40851The truth of these despatches admitted, what was your Government to do?
40851The words are general,"all treasons, felonies,& c."Why are they confined in construction to British subjects?
40851The yeas and nays were taken on the question,"Shall this bill be postponed till the first Monday in December next?"
40851Then gentlemen get up and ask what we are to do with three frigates?
40851Then why postpone it?
40851Then, how could any gentleman say this was a trifling question, and one with which the House had nothing at all to do?
40851These are my objects; do they not entitle us to the information asked?
40851They certainly will not; for who would consent to sit here, or of what use would it be, under such conditions?
40851They could appoint Commissioners to settle the accounts, but could they impose the debts upon the States?
40851They might do, sir, for a tribe of starving Indians; but is this the rank that we are to hold among the nations of the world?
40851This being established, the inquiry was, to what department was the power in question allotted?
40851This being the case, he asked gentlemen which they would choose?
40851This is, Shall the amendment be received or not?
40851This was novel, and what result did it lead to?
40851To calm those irritations which disturb its repose?
40851To deprive them of the common right of participating in the passage of laws which all the citizens enjoyed?
40851To remove all things which may alarm, torment, or exacerbate?
40851To take a fair view of the resolutions, what did they amount to?
40851To the Judiciary: What is the language applied to them?
40851To what point, therefore, could these discussions lead?
40851To what source, then, shall we resort for a knowledge of what constitutes this thing, called misbehavior in office?
40851To what will not this dangerous doctrine lead?
40851To whom are these appearances to be made?
40851To whom are these services to be rendered?
40851To whom were they pledged, and for what?
40851Under all these grievances, what, said he, are we called upon to do?
40851Under these circumstances, Mr. S. wished to know why their petitions should not be taken into consideration?
40851Upon this subject, so very important, are they to be kept in the dark?
40851Upon what ground could he found such charges?
40851Upon what ground does the member from Vermont stand?
40851Wanting wisdom and morals, how would they use it?
40851Was a loan of money accomplished?
40851Was any gentleman in the House bound to be satisfied, with the gentleman from New York, that all the facts necessary to be known were furnished?
40851Was any gentleman prepared to say how many would be made?
40851Was contempt the way to recommend attachment to the Government?
40851Was every gentleman in the House bound to confine himself solely to the resolutions before the House?
40851Was he forgetful of his duty?
40851Was he to determine the point whether France has authorized hostilities against the United States?
40851Was he to send forward to the seat of Government to be instructed what to do?
40851Was he to stand still without making any attempt to avert the danger?
40851Was it a circumstance which must ever be remembered with mortification, and which therefore will never be forgiven?
40851Was it a desirable object to do away a great evil?
40851Was it adopted by the courts?
40851Was it announced to the President of the United States, in the usual forms of civility between nations who duly respect each other?
40851Was it by the constitution?
40851Was it conceivable that to her the place could be of any importance?
40851Was it criminal to say that the Executive is supported by a party?
40851Was it erroneous or criminal to say that debts and taxes were the ruinous consequences of war?
40851Was it in his power to repel and punish the indignity put upon the nation?
40851Was it intended by this resolution to charge the committee with inquiring into a breach of privilege as it respected the majority of this body?
40851Was it not an order to bring France to terms by distressing her islands?
40851Was it not as well to decide on this resolution in this committee as in any other committee?
40851Was it not clear to every one that the country was going fast into a state of war, and( in the words of Mr. SITGREAVES) was it not to be expected?
40851Was it not probable then, he would ask, that the PRESIDENT would proceed to complete those frigates, according to the power given him?
40851Was it not to be supposed that contracts were entered into for that purpose?
40851Was it not true?
40851Was it not, therefore, prudent to keep a watchful eye in this respect?
40851Was it possible, he asked, for a Government to exist, when this confidence was refused to one of its branches?
40851Was it proper for this country, he asked, to turn its attention towards marine strength?
40851Was it that the members of Congress were assembled on the banks of the Potomac, with Virginia in view on the other side?
40851Was it the opinion of those gentlemen that the record was to be found in the charge of murder against that illustrious character?
40851Was it the sense of that House?
40851Was it warranted by any act of Congress, or by the practice of the State?
40851Was it when three- fourths or four- fifths of a town was destroyed, or what other proportion?
40851Was it, that one of the candidates was a Virginian?
40851Was not every advance, on our part, for an adjustment of differences, met with new injuries and new insults?
40851Was not such an opinion of things, he asked, calculated to induce France to believe that she might make her own terms with us?
40851Was not this, he said, encouragement to put a period to that man''s existence?
40851Was not, then, this spot become the permanent seat of the Government of the Union?
40851Was official notice of it given to the Government of this country?
40851Was that opinion then correct, and now false, in the estimation of gentlemen?
40851Was the President of the United States the clerk of the court, to keep the records of it?
40851Was the argument not in point; or was it the declaration of his own opinion, as he went along, that was out of order?
40851Was the gentleman serious when he made this remark?
40851Was the gentleman, sir, acquainted with the fact when he made this statement?
40851Was the intention of the committee to have reference to the taking of free negroes and selling them as slaves, or the taking slaves to make them free?
40851Was the memory of that great man to be perpetuated by a heap of large inanimate objects?
40851Was then, he asked, a question of war a card of politeness?
40851Was there any reason since to alter our opinion?
40851Was there any thing in these men, he asked, that should prevent every kind of assistance being bestowed on them?
40851Was there not cause for anxiety, when a nation, contending for the right of self- government, was thus attacked?
40851Was there nothing, Mr. R. asked, to admonish us to take a measure of this kind?
40851Was there nothing, he asked, which called for a declaration of the kind proposed?
40851Was this decent or indecent?
40851Was this defensive?
40851Was this indecent in them?
40851Was this indecent?
40851Was this, he asked, the state of society?
40851We are asked by the gentleman from Virginia if the people want judges to protect them?
40851We are asked, why relinquish these balances before we are solicited by the States?
40851We are averse to take up the motion of the gentleman from Connecticut, and wherefore?
40851We asked if cards of hospitality were in the mean time necessary?
40851We asked what had led to our present conversation?
40851We have been asked, if we are afraid of having an army of judges?
40851We may tell him of his wisdom and his firmness, but what of all that unless we connect it with his Administration?
40851Were his nerves unstrung?
40851Were not gentlemen any longer to express their difference of opinion?
40851Were not the Detroit, and several other forts within our territory, held ten or a dozen years by Great Britain, in direct violation of a treaty?
40851Were not the different departments, Executive, Legislative, and Judicial, assembled, according to the constitution, in this District?
40851Were there none of these judges ready to plunge their swords in the American heart?
40851Were there not great doubts existing throughout the United States?
40851Were they asleep on their post?
40851Were they not, then, to be called upon for money to man the frigates?
40851Were they so at present?
40851Were they then to act as if the law had been repealed?
40851Were they to go to war to avenge this partition?
40851Were troops ever raised in a different manner?
40851Were we to give up our commerce?
40851Were we to suppose that the President had already taken measures to_ revenge_ the injuries of the United States?
40851What advantage, he asked, was derived to this country from giving aliens eligibility to office?
40851What an affecting spectacle had we the other day of sixty of these unfortunate men returning from Algerine slavery?
40851What an influence can she command over our commerce?
40851What are the reasons urged by the gentlemen to induce a different proceeding, an immediate appeal to arms?
40851What are their duties?
40851What are they given for?
40851What are we to understand by this remark of the gentleman?
40851What are we to understand by this right, given by God and nature?
40851What avail our toasts-- our boasted recollections of him, and regret at his fate-- if we take not every opportunity to alleviate that distress?
40851What but this compact-- what but this specific part of it, can save us from ruin?
40851What circle would gentlemen fix the committee in to amend this Address, if they are not to give scope to these sentiments?
40851What connection had we with the French Government?
40851What could be more easy?
40851What could have been the reason why Congress was to assume this exclusive legislation?
40851What did the gentleman mean by avoiding the general principle?
40851What disguise?
40851What do gentlemen understand by"the freedom of speech and of the press?"
40851What do the gentlemen tell us?
40851What do we know respecting the cession?
40851What does all this mean, sir?
40851What does the constitution say?
40851What does the resolution call for?
40851What effect could a discussion have, but to show the world that there were_ parties_ in the House, and to raise a rancorous disposition?
40851What fact?
40851What had the President to do with the proceedings of that court?
40851What had the States to dread?
40851What has been our progress since the year 1763, in settling our Western country?
40851What has the fact been?
40851What have we to fear, suppose we interfere with that sensibility?
40851What is his character as a lawyer?
40851What is his offer to our Government?
40851What is it that has drained the wealth of Europe itself into the coffers of two or three of its principal commercial powers, but a marine?
40851What is it, that has drawn to Europe the superfluous riches of the three other quarters of the globe, but a marine?
40851What is its nature?
40851What is its purport?
40851What is liberty of conscience?
40851What is that crime?
40851What is the abstract question?
40851What is the ancient system?
40851What is the consequence of one sovereign transferring all jurisdiction to another sovereign?
40851What is the consequence?
40851What is the fact?
40851What is the implication of this doctrine?
40851What is the inevitable deduction to be drawn from this fact?
40851What is the inference?
40851What is the internal and external state of this country?
40851What is the object of the gentleman from Delaware?
40851What is the practice?
40851What is the present system?
40851What is the probable result?
40851What is the situation of the powers that remain?
40851What is the state of things?
40851What is the true and undisguised state of facts?
40851What is there here that implicates the character of Spain?
40851What is there then exhibited from the earliest period of our history?
40851What is this encouragement?
40851What is this population?
40851What manifestation was there of the public will relative to the late election of a President of the United States?
40851What may we then expect?
40851What might be the consequence?
40851What more does the gentleman wish?
40851What more, then, can you do, than decide the principle which shall be applied to them?
40851What objections could there be to this?
40851What ought the government to have done?
40851What power does a court possess to seize any individual and determine that he shall be adjudged by a foreign tribunal?
40851What provision have they made to fulfil that intention?
40851What right had they to exclusive seats?
40851What saving, then, does he mean to make by opposing the establishment of this office?
40851What should be thought of this, as taken in connection with the fate of the act and pendency of the Presidential election?
40851What temper accompanied the progress of the bill in the other House I know not, or, if I did know, would it be proper for me here to say?
40851What then was the difference of right between them?
40851What then was to be done with them?
40851What then, I ask, is the amount of this savage conduct?
40851What then?
40851What use can it be to take a step from which no benefit can be derived?
40851What was meant here?
40851What was more easy than for letters and instructions to be sent by post?
40851What was the General to do?
40851What was the consequence of this spirited conduct?
40851What was the effect of this provision in the constitution?
40851What was the engine now brought out against this freedom-- an engine possessed of all the powers necessary to ensure its success?
40851What was the fact at Philadelphia?
40851What was the fact?
40851What was the language of the amendment?
40851What was the language of the present appropriation?
40851What was the object of the bill?
40851What was the objection to this mode of proceeding?
40851What was then the conduct of the French Government?
40851What was to be done?
40851What was to be the course of their proceeding?
40851What were the arguments in favor of the warm tone?
40851What were the committee to do?
40851What were the consequences of our late negotiation?
40851What were the embarrassments likely to arise therein?
40851What were the people of the United States, and abroad, to think of this?
40851What were they about to ask?
40851What were we to substitute as complimentary to him in its place?
40851What will be the effect if we have it told at our wharves that we object to man them, because we have peace with Algiers?
40851What will be the effect of the desired repeal?
40851What will be the effect on the Southern States?
40851What will be the good of this?
40851What will hinder them from arriving in the Floridas, and what can guard the approach from thence to our Southern frontier?
40851What will you say to this?
40851What would be the effect of this law on the inhabitants of the Territory?
40851What would be the language, what would be the feelings of gentlemen in this House, were such an indignity offered on the Atlantic coast?
40851What would become, in such a state of things, of the national debt, and all the banks in the United States?
40851What would gentlemen have had the Government to do?
40851What would they say if the Chesapeake, the Delaware, or the Bay of New York were shut up, and all egress prohibited by a foreign power?
40851What, Mr. S. asked, would be the consequence of refusing this appropriation?
40851What, asked Mr. P., was the ground taken at the last session, and acted upon at this?
40851What, he asked, could be obtained by a vote on this subject?
40851What, he asked, is the situation of the West Indies?
40851What, he asked, was intended to be done with these armed vessels?
40851What, he asked, was the letter which the gentleman read from his book?
40851What, he asked, were to be the instructions given to the commanders of these vessels?
40851What, he asked, would the world think of such a versatility of conduct?
40851What, indeed, could such committee report?
40851What, said Mr. B., is this present?
40851What, said Mr. C., is the nature of the injuries which we have received from France?
40851What, said Mr. G., are the inconveniences which would arise from a measure of this kind?
40851What, said Mr. G., would be the degree of proof necessary to carry into effect this law?
40851What, said Mr. R., would be the conduct of France, if in our situation?
40851What, said Mr. S., is to be feared from the residence of aliens amongst us?
40851What, said he, have they said to our Minister-- or rather to the person who was formerly our Minister, but who then had no power?
40851What, said he, is most prudent to do?
40851What, said he, is our external situation?
40851What, said he, is the nature of the crime now proposed to be punished by the expulsion of the member from Vermont?
40851What, said he, is the situation of the North- western Territory at this time?
40851What, said he, is the situation of those countries which have gone into the establishment of large navies?
40851What, said he, is to prevent Victor Hugues sending over two or three frigates?
40851What, sir, has been done?
40851What, sir, was the policy of America, from the commencement of the Revolution?
40851What, then, Mr. Chairman, is the instruction which we may draw from this example?
40851What, then, is substantially the nature of this appellate jurisdiction?
40851What, then, is the nature of the amendment?
40851What, then, is the rational, the honest, the constitutional idea of freedom of language or of conduct?
40851What, then, is their aim?
40851What, then, said Mr. D., are our hopes relative to France?
40851When did the right of the President to recommend modifications of the Judiciary system cease?
40851When gentlemen ask, What is the question?
40851When it goes up to the Senate, may they not say they will not vote to finish, except it be to man them?
40851When that very power from which we had detached ourselves, refused to carry her treaty into execution, did we then go to war?
40851When the Indians were upon them, what could the Governor do?
40851When the subject is sent to the committee with that instruction, can it be conceived that committee is forced to report a bill?
40851When the term approached, the inquiry was, what judge are we to have?
40851When was this jurisdiction to commence but at the period when the General Government should occupy it?
40851When we reflect on a Treaty entered into on this principle with Great Britain, should France complain?
40851When, too, the opinions of other gentlemen on fundamental points coincided with your own?
40851When?
40851Whence did he collect this information?
40851Whence is it that the United States may abrogate the treaties with France?
40851Whence now this change of spirit?
40851Whence, then, the necessity of such appointment?
40851Whenever we supposed the constitution violated, did we talk of civil war?
40851Where could they be carried?
40851Where is Italy, Switzerland, Flanders, and all Germany west of the Rhine?
40851Where is the liberty of the press, which is secured to the citizens of the Union against Federal usurpation?
40851Where is the man, exclaimed he, who will not defend his country and his fellow- citizens against such a decree?
40851Where is the nation that will respect another that is passive under such humiliating degradation and disgrace?
40851Where is the nation, ancient or modern, that has borne such treatment without resentment of resistance?
40851Where was Hercules, that he did not crush this den of robbers that broke into the sanctuary of the constitution?
40851Where was the gentleman from New York, who has, on this debate, made such a noble stand in favor of a violated constitution?
40851Where was the_ Ajax Telamon_ of his party, or, to use his own more correct expression, the_ faction_ to which he belonged?
40851Where was their security if the acts of these Representatives of the people could be to- morrow revoked by a power deriving authority from elsewhere?
40851Where were these guardians of the constitution-- these vigilant sentinels of our rights and liberties, when this law passed?
40851Where will you find men of nerve that will risk certain ruin?
40851Where, he asked, is the difference between depending upon the French or British nation?
40851Where, said he, are your sailors?
40851Wherein have we differed from the compact made with France by our treaty made with that country?
40851Whether he is in any way connected with the British Government, or not?
40851Whether his ideas go to independence or not?
40851Whether it is consistent with the nature of our Government, that a single branch, without check or control, should become judges in their own case?
40851Whether so much as provides that the second article shall be expunged, shall stand?
40851Whether so much as provides that the third article be expunged, shall stand?
40851Whether that part shall stand which provides a limitation of time to its duration?
40851Whether that part shall stand which restrains it from operating against former treaties?
40851Whether the abilities of Government would be competent to meet all possible claims of this nature?
40851Whether the constitution had not delegated the power of making treaties to other branches of the Government?
40851Whether they would suffer themselves to come under the power of the French nation, or repel force by force?
40851Which situation is it most for the interest of the United States that they should be in?
40851Who are its enemies?
40851Who are to decide between the constitution and the acts of Congress?
40851Who are to judge?
40851Who are to pronounce on the laws?
40851Who can prevent that?
40851Who can say that Mr. Gerry has power to treat alone, or that the French Government is willing to treat with him on fair and honorable terms?
40851Who can show me in what other manner the same good can be effected by so small a sum?
40851Who gave them the power to vest in any other authority than in Congress the right of declaring war?
40851Who is so ignorant as not to know, that the imposition of a tax would create a hundred enemies for one friend?
40851Who is to judge of the necessity or utility of these services?
40851Who knows but the power in whose custody he is may expect America to interest herself in his favor?
40851Who said this?
40851Who shall fix the boundaries of these new empires, when the fatal separation shall take place?
40851Who was it, that, in England, destroyed the Representative Government, and concentrated all its powers in his own hands?
40851Who will confide in, who will be bound by their decrees?
40851Who will declare whether they be unconstitutional?
40851Who will venture on it; because, where will you draw the line?
40851Who would withhold a few dollars from his purse to facilitate it?
40851Who, said he, is the man who has this proof?
40851Who, sir, I would ask the gentleman, are my coadjutors?
40851Who, sir, proved fatal to the liberties of Rome?
40851Who, then, are, in reality, the advocates of a limited authority, and who are the champions of a dangerous and uncontrollable power?
40851Why are we told of the inconsistency of our means?
40851Why can not they obtain this power which is asked of us of the State where it is wanted?
40851Why combine it with considerations connected with negotiation?
40851Why did they commit spoliations upon our commerce long before the British Treaty was ever dreamt of?
40851Why do gentlemen tell the House of the danger of irritating France?
40851Why do not gentlemen give away that which they have some authority or right to bestow?
40851Why do not these"express acts of Parliament"change the law as to others than"British subjects?"
40851Why do we hear of such things on this floor?
40851Why do we want information, but that we may have a more clear view of the general subject?
40851Why does the PRESIDENT communicate these things to us, if we are not allowed to express any sentiments about them?
40851Why give one a privilege more than another?
40851Why has he first learnt this offensive act from those who suffer by it?
40851Why has this document been so sedulously kept from the public eye?
40851Why insinuate that the Government had been wrong?
40851Why is he thus held up to contempt and derision?
40851Why is it now deemed requisite to abrogate the treaties by which this country has been connected with France?
40851Why is it refused to the Federal Constitution?
40851Why is the gentleman from Pennsylvania so very anxious on the subject?
40851Why is this practice, hitherto unopposed, now to be broken in upon?
40851Why lock him up there?
40851Why not decide its other proportions?
40851Why not furnish the American people at once with the real and the whole project of himself and his friends?
40851Why not seize then what is so essential to us as a nation?
40851Why not then restore the people to their former condition?
40851Why object then, in a case where there was a difference of opinion, to refer the decision to an impartial tribunal?
40851Why pass acts fitted for a state of war, without declaring that that is the state of the country?
40851Why postpone it?
40851Why prevent his being able to support his family?
40851Why send him to jail?
40851Why should a heavy fine and imprisonment be made the penalty for carrying on a trade so advantageous?
40851Why should it not be sent there, and a profitable return be made?
40851Why should the House trouble itself to sanction any particular work?
40851Why should the individual members of either branch, or either branch itself, have more privileges than him?
40851Why silent on the Legislature?
40851Why such declamation?
40851Why take it to a select committee?
40851Why then divide it into little detached parts?
40851Why then do gentlemen, who on those occasions approved of these measures, now despair of negotiation?
40851Why then go into a committee?
40851Why then put off the decision of a claim in his opinion just, and to which the House ought not to shut their ears?
40851Why this provision?
40851Why was that State to be selected out from all others?
40851Why was the boundary of the United States always fixed at 31?
40851Why were they silent till within a few weeks before the election of our President?
40851Why, asked Mr. N., was this law originally passed?
40851Why, he asked, did foreigners seek a residence in this country?
40851Why, is there any crime in printing a minute of our transactions?
40851Why, said he, shall we, who are a Confederacy of the Democratic Republicans, everlastingly keep our eyes upon the pageantry of Eastern Courts?
40851Why, then, ask for it?
40851Why, then, do gentlemen complain?
40851Why, then, endeavor to stir up the feelings of the public against it by alleging it to be just cause of complaint?
40851Why, then, mask his proposition?
40851Why, then, refer this resolution calling for information to a committee?
40851Why, then, rise for the purpose of referring it to a secret committee?
40851Why, then, shall we proceed to measures which must inevitably involve the country in war?
40851Why, then, should we hazard the being involved in European broils?
40851Why?
40851Why?
40851Why?
40851Will any gentleman say it is for our personal convenience that the seat of Government is now at this place?
40851Will any man undertake to say, that the privilege of the Parliament of Great Britain ought to be that of the Congress of this country?
40851Will any one say that a man who does not keep the laws ought to be allowed to make them?
40851Will gentlemen look back to the histories of other countries, and then tell us the people here have nothing to apprehend from themselves?
40851Will gentlemen say it is to be found in the force of this wise precedent?
40851Will gentlemen say that the same liberty of writing and speaking did not exist then that now exists?
40851Will gentlemen say they will pay all demands before they know any thing of their nature or amount?
40851Will gentlemen sit here and shut their eyes to the state and condition of their country?
40851Will he deny that this was a measure to which we had been urged for years by our adversaries, because they foresaw in it the ruin of Federal power?
40851Will he say that premises and conclusions are the same thing?
40851Will it be contended that such great trusts ought to be reposed in feeble or incapable hands?
40851Will it be expected, that I should quote Sidney, De Lolme, Montesquieu, and a host of elementary writers, to prove this assertion?
40851Will it be made a question whether it is proper to ask for information?
40851Will it be said that there is a security to the freedom of mankind from the moderation with which this enormous power is to be exercised?
40851Will it be said, that although you can not remove the judge from office, yet you can remove his office from him?
40851Will it not be a declaration to the remaining judges that they hold their offices subject to your will and pleasure?
40851Will it not manifest more magnanimity, more rationality, to abide by it until we try it; instead of taking up a pen and dashing it out of existence?
40851Will the adoption of these resolutions give us a single ship or gun?
40851Will the gentleman say, that the direct tax was laid in order to enlarge the bounds of patronage?
40851Will the gentlemen say that these judges are ambassadors, other public ministers or consuls, or that they are a state?
40851Will the judges rudely declare that you have violated the constitution, unmindful of your duty, and regardless of your oath?
40851Will the present repeal of the internal taxes interfere with the doing substantial justice to our merchants?
40851Will the same navy be more efficacious in our case, than in the case of Holland, or Spain, or Portugal?
40851Will these resolutions, then, said he, if adopted, tend to this point?
40851Will they not say the President has done his duty in stating the fact?
40851Will they remedy the evil by excluding the stenographers from places within the bar?
40851Will this Government not be chargeable with having assisted in detaching such a colony from its Government?
40851Will this satisfy the just expectation of our country?
40851Will we not be classed with the robbers and destroyers of mankind?
40851Will you call the militia from the North to assist their Southern brethren?
40851Will you give up commerce, or build a Navy to protect it?
40851Will you not, then, be obliged to make a general provision that all claims, so circumstanced, shall be allowed?
40851Will you remember, sir, that they held the power of life and death, without appeal?
40851Will you secure their seasonable aid, bring them early to the fields they are ordered to defend?
40851Will you then confine the President, in relation to these powers, to a Peace Establishment?
40851Will, then, Mr. Chairman, any gentleman hesitate a moment to pronounce the rule of apportionment which was adopted unjust, unequal, and erroneous?
40851With all the deference to their talents, is not Congress as capable of forming a correct opinion as they are?
40851With respect to the motion, Mr. L. asked, to whom was application to be made?
40851With respect to the price of salt at Fort Pitt, as a gentleman had observed, it might be high, but was this occasioned by a duty?
40851With that meek and peaceful spirit now so strongly recommended, we submitted to this insult, and what followed?
40851With this knowledge, so plainly derivable from the policy pursued by the Legislature, what was the Secretary of the Navy to do?
40851Without meeting?
40851Wonderful indeed is this sudden disposition to confidence?
40851Would any gentleman say that it was policy not to legislate about 700,000 enemies in the very body of the United States?
40851Would any man, said Mr. H., who shall read this passage, say that the system of these gentlemen is a peace system?
40851Would any person deny that, through the agency of the Executive, constitutionally exercised, the injury was redressed?
40851Would calmness be consistent if entering wedges were prepared to ruin the property of whole estates?
40851Would conduct like this comport with the gentleman''s ideas of national honor, about which we have heard so much in the course of this debate?
40851Would gentlemen feel calm if measures were taken to destroy most of their property?
40851Would gentlemen say that the Executive ought to appoint persons to office who professed an opinion contrary to its own?
40851Would he have had the people of the United States relinquish without a struggle those liberties which had cost so much blood and treasure?
40851Would he march at the head of the_ posse comitatus_?
40851Would he place the memory of WASHINGTON on a footing with that of a rich man''s mistress?
40851Would it be more respectful that an answer should be sent by this House, which, for want of time, had not been sufficiently considered?
40851Would it have been a proper return for the unanimity with which your committee was chosen?
40851Would it have tended to conciliate?
40851Would it not be absurd still to say, that the removed judge held his office during good behavior?
40851Would it not involve an inconsistency, that ought not certainly to be chargeable upon the framers of the constitution?
40851Would it not place the Territory in the situation of a conquered country?
40851Would not public opinion be as ready to sanction the one as the other of these detestable acts?
40851Would not such a procedure subject us to the just censure of the world, and to the strongest jealousy of those who have possessions near to us?
40851Would not the French say, if they were applied to for redress,"You knew these were pirates; why did you not defend yourselves against them?"
40851Would not the House have contravened the constitution, by taking from the President the power which by it is placed in him?
40851Would not the people of this country think it their duty to destroy a power which could not be trusted; and would not foreigners despise it?
40851Would not these two give to the legislature a majority?
40851Would not this be a most extraordinary doctrine?
40851Would not this be to acknowledge that there our regulation pinched her?
40851Would not this be to impair the tenure of the office which was abolished, or to which another officer might have been appointed by a new regulation?
40851Would such a procedure meet the approbation of even our own citizens, whose lives and fortunes would be risked in the conflict?
40851Would the civil jurisdiction of the town have repelled the bayonet?
40851Would the committee be willing that Savannah should be erased from the revenue?
40851Would the decree stop the importation of British goods?
40851Would the gentleman yet wish to leave the District without laws, and merely lest it should take away their suffrage?
40851Would the gentleman, then, inform the House what point he wished to ascertain, or in what he expected additional proof?
40851Would there be a power in Virginia and Maryland, if receded, to prevent a resumption?
40851Would they admit that he falsely made the claim?
40851Would they discard the property of that class of citizens who depended upon it for their support and their wealth?
40851Would they not laugh at you when you told them their term of office was out?
40851Would they not say, in the language of the gentleman from New York, though the law that creates us is temporary, we are in by the constitution?
40851Would they not say, we belong to inferior courts?
40851Would this be the way to keep the Government together, or to preserve harmony in the country?
40851Would you annihilate a system because some men under part of it had acted wrong?
40851Would you know the sentiment of England?
40851Would your national honor be free from imputation by a conduct of such inconsistency and duplicity?
40851Yes, he would answer; else how could an appropriation in general terms have been made for the intercourse with foreign nations?
40851Yes, sir, we wish for peace; but how is that blessing to be preserved?
40851Yet, what superior advantage have they in the Government generally?
40851You are to inquire how he became possessed of a certain bill which he published; what kind of an inquiry is this?
40851Your press might have been enchained till doomsday, your citizens incarcerated for life, and where is your remedy?
40851[ Mr. ALLEN exclaimed, who said it?]
40851[ Mr. HARPER asked if there was any question before the committee?]
40851[ Mr. OTIS asked who were to be the judges?]
40851[ Mr. RUTLEDGE asked whether this had been done?
40851and are not our resources increasing with our population?
40851and asking those whose duty it was to inquire, is there no sedition here?
40851and did he not see that that would be a check upon the abuse of it in either House, since it was a weapon which both could use?
40851and have we not done all we can conveniently do for the defence of our commerce?
40851and if the effect of his resolution should be to show that the stipulations are injurious to our rights, would he know how to act?
40851and in what cases they were to defend themselves?
40851and of course are we not prohibited from establishing one system in one place, and a different system in another?
40851and that however flagrant that abuse of power, it is remediless, and must be submitted to?
40851and whether, if they do say so, the fact ought not to be inquired into?
40851and will you punish every man who shall repeat, print, or publish what is made public on this floor?
40851and, if Congress had that cognizance before that time, have those amendments taken it away?
40851asked, could be placed in a nation which one day makes a treaty, and the next violates it?
40851but I do not think it is any evil; would he have these people turned out in the United States to ravage, murder, and commit every species of crime?
40851conquer France?
40851did the Government say it?
40851for money from the poor without law?
40851is it no crime to publish a bill while before this House?
40851is it possible that I have heard such a sentiment in this body?
40851on the duties which he now pays?
40851on what did this claim rest?
40851or a murder committed on board such a frigate, against the peace of any other than the British Government?
40851or in a court independent of any influence whatever?
40851or what connection had we with, any other, besides commercial?
40851or, Thirdly, whether they can be made by law?
40851said Mr. S., would it be to carry humility in his front to say,"I come to place you on the same footing with the most favored nation?"
40851said he, can it be supposed that three frigates would give us that ridiculous kind of spirit which would induce us at any rate to go to war?
40851to collect it; but what was twenty- five compared with three hundred per cent.?
40851was it not enough to submit to injury; shall we not only receive the stripes, but kiss the rod that inflicts them?
40851with restrictions, perhaps, to guard against the fraudulent usurpation of our flag?
59553!_ Was that_ style_?
59553''Shall we receive good at the hand of God, and shall we not receive evil,''my father? 59553 ''Who led the first company?''
59553''_ Menial capacity?_''echoed the other member.
59553''_ Menial capacity?_''said one member of Congress.
59553A party? 59553 Ah Kate,"said Tony,"you know how long and how ardently I have loved you; may I not, one day, drop that epithet of Cousin?"
59553Ai nt it? 59553 Am I in fairy land?--or tell me, pray, To what love lighted bower I''ve found my way?
59553Am I in fairy land?--or tell me, pray, To what love- lighted bower I''ve found my way? 59553 And Spuræna, and Caius Mutius, who wrote three epics in a year-- could Horace do that, or Virgil either?"
59553And are there no_ Doctors_( perhaps you exclaim) Distinguished by talents and virtues and merit?
59553And did you dance after supper?
59553And do you ever go without him?
59553And do you think these are the people who write to me? 59553 And does Monsieur travel then alone?"
59553And dost thou not despair?
59553And for no longer? 59553 And has it kissed you back, my dear?"
59553And how do you rate its value so high?
59553And on the piano and the guitar, Madame?
59553And so, my dear Mrs. Lawrence, you have not been five miles from L----, since my journey to Boston last August?
59553And this will go the round of the whole kingdom?
59553And were none of his friendsI inquired,"at his side during his last illness?"
59553And what is that?
59553And what is the name of this beautiful stream, that flows between us, and the highlands?
59553And what reward has he for my friend and ally?
59553And when was that?
59553And where did you get this, Nichols?
59553And who,said I,"remains to give consolation to the poor and forlorn Mary?"
59553And why, Lucille?
59553And you have heard nothing of a caricature?
59553And you really have not heard?
59553Any thing more?
59553Any thing more?
59553Are there no quarrels or strifes among you?
59553Are they in truth so delicious?
59553Are you a native of this town?
59553Are you acquainted with any of the gentlemen of the press?
59553Are you the sister,I inquired,"of Mr. Henry Pilton, now at William and Mary?"
59553Art thou afraid, Alderete?
59553Betty,said she,"are they all broke?"
59553But come with me to yonder village? 59553 But now,"said she,"suppose we were both to fall into the sea, which should you first try to save?"
59553But the children?
59553But what can we do for them, my dear husband? 59553 But what missiles shall we use?--have you thought of that,_ Mon Général_?"
59553But why not purchase the sheepskin, now that you_ have_ added the moments together?
59553But you have parents,I replied,"who will take you to their home, and gladly receive you in their arms?"
59553But, mother, suppose I should think of courting some young body?
59553Can Mr. Wilberforce forgive and forget one who has injured him much? 59553 Can that be one of my cousins?"
59553Can they deceive us? 59553 Can we not see her?"
59553Cleaveland,said I,"will you join me in a scheme which I have been revolving since we left that infernal barber''s?"
59553Cousin Kate,said Tony,"Did you ever feel as if you would choke when you attempted to speak?"
59553Did I not read the proof of it in the public papers?
59553Did I?
59553Did Miss---- accompany her, or did she remain?
59553Did n''t I see you on it just now?
59553Did not her own letter assure me of it?
59553Did not intend to assert--"_ My_ soul is-- hiccup!--peculiarly qualified for-- hiccup!--a"--"What, sir?"
59553Did you desire to have the old house painted, Tim? 59553 Did you ever hear of any body that did not?"
59553Did you hear Mr. Wilberforce was courting?
59553Did you never see him again?
59553Did you say she was Athenian?
59553Do they, Sir Fop?
59553Do you not also know Gregory Griffith?
59553Do you think you would know him again, if you were to see him?
59553Early, do you call it? 59553 Eh?"
59553For what should we contend? 59553 For what, dearest?
59553Had we not better go in?
59553Have you entirely given up the practice of the law?
59553Have you never seen Jones since?
59553Have you the audacity,said I,"to demand such a sum for a daub like this?"
59553Have you, sir, considered the risk in taking a wife in this strange way? 59553 Hear me?"
59553Hey dey,said he, as we made our appearance--"what mischief is in the wind now?"
59553Hiccup!--e- h?
59553His father, his_ mother_,she added, with an emphasis on the last word,"are they not with him?"
59553How came you to break them?
59553How happened that? 59553 How has the affair between Leger and Allan terminated?"
59553How mean you, Sallust?
59553How so?
59553How? 59553 How_ can_ you?--how--_can_--you?"
59553I do not know that you are?
59553I have been thinking whether it would not be better to have our old house painted?
59553I hear carriage- wheels; who can be passing this way? 59553 I know it, Horace, yet how can I help it?
59553I must go, sir,said the servant;"what message to my mistress?"
59553In the name of common sense,said the old lady,"good people what do you mean?"
59553Is it true?
59553Is it?
59553Is not the tomb still standing?
59553Is that all? 59553 Is there no way in which this nuisance can be prevented?
59553It is all right?
59553It may with propriety be inquired, if Willis could not select a more extended field of fame? 59553 Just five, dear Eugene shall I read to you?
59553Love those that love you--is not that the rule?
59553Mary,said I,"do you not know me?
59553Miss Mary? 59553 My dear Horace,"said the greatly agitated Mrs. Lawrence,"what will Alpheus and Anna do?--what_ can_ they do?"
59553My dear son,said she,"what in the world has got into you?
59553No, not I; what should I do there? 59553 Nurse Bevey has promised to come and take care of them during our absence?"
59553O, my dear friend, how can I ever be sufficiently grateful for your kindness? 59553 Of us?
59553Oh ho, is that the project? 59553 Oh, why do you weep?
59553On what account?
59553One request more-- O Rosalie, reflect that my life depends upon your acquiescence-- should I succeed, will you marry me in spite of your uncle?
59553Pray how does she look, and what did she say? 59553 Pray, Master Pertinax,"said Fenella,"how have you employed your time since I last saw you?
59553Pray, Mr. Heywood, are you acquainted with Mr.----, and do you consider yourself employed by him or me?
59553Quid rides? 59553 Shall we find our brother?
59553Should I not contradict it?
59553Sir,said he, in the silver tones of a lackey,"will you allow me to inquire your name?"
59553Teach a dog what you may,rejoined his friend,"can you alter his nature, so that the brute shall not predominate?"
59553Tell us if he did get in, and how he contrived to?
59553The young lord of the manor''s,answered the driver,"Did you see the lady in it?"
59553Then why would not you have me brood over mine?
59553Then-- hic- cup!--pray-- sir-- what-- what is it?
59553To woman what does nature give? 59553 To- day was the first of the sitting of the superior court for this term, I believe, Heywood; were you there?"
59553Undoubtedly you can; but why not pay some attention to fashion and elegance, both about your house and dress? 59553 Very true!--what is very true?--how came you here?"
59553Was Miss Wilford there?
59553Was Miss Wilford within?
59553Was he any thing like me?
59553Well, sir, and how are you to conduct the negotiation with your native bashfulness? 59553 Well, uncle Harry, what do you want?"
59553Well, what_ is_ the matter then?
59553Were you ever at Rome?
59553What aileth thee, old man?
59553What can be better than these?
59553What can be the meaning of this?
59553What can be worse policy,said Clodius, sententiously,"than to interfere with the manly amusements of the people?"
59553What difference between one room and another can there be to me? 59553 What do I think of_ whom_?"
59553What do you mean?
59553What do you think of Epicurus?--what do you think of-- hiccup!--Epicurus?
59553What do you think of a-- hiccup!--physician?
59553What do you think of it?
59553What has been the course of your moral and religious instruction? 59553 What is Julie to me?"
59553What is it child?
59553What is it you are disputing about?
59553What is the design?
59553What of that?
59553What says the king of Castile? 59553 What stronger proof do we want,"says the journalist,"of that confusion of thought and mysticism with which he has been charged?"
59553What think you of this new sect, which I am told has even a few proselytes in Pompeii, these followers of the Hebrew God-- Christus?
59553What words are they? 59553 What, my son?"
59553What, my young friend?
59553What, not breakfasted yet?
59553What,said Tim to himself, as he walked to the candle,"does my Mary want?"
59553What?
59553When is our next wild- beast fight?
59553When would she return?
59553Whence is it that we so frequently see this pernicious physical treatment, and its natural fruits? 59553 Where is he?
59553Where?
59553Wherefore do the wicked live, become old-- yea, are mighty in power? 59553 Whither so_ fast_, my good lad?"
59553Who calleth thee, my darling boy? 59553 Who was that letter from, Tim?"
59553Who was that?
59553Who''s at the door, my son?
59553Who''s here?
59553Whom shall we get for him to eat?
59553Whose is that?
59553Why do n''t you join yonder group,asked Hope,"and partake in their gaiety, my pretty little girl?"
59553Why do you know who it is, my dear, that is coming to see us at this late hour?
59553Why that soft languish,--why that drawling tone? 59553 Why will you thus grieve, my dear Ellen?"
59553Why, Mass Ned, what mek you all let them Demmy Cats sarve you so? 59553 Why, yes,"said Grayson,"did not you bet at loo, father?"
59553Why,exclaimed Theodore,"why do not letters enlarge the soul, while they expand the mind?
59553Why?
59553Why?
59553Why_ affectation_,--why this mock grimace? 59553 Will it succeed?"
59553Will you answer me when I write to you?
59553Will you keep your hand for me for a year?
59553Will you marry me?
59553Will you not be avenged on your ill- fortune of yesterday? 59553 Will you receive me?"
59553Will you remember me, Rosalie?
59553Will you take the trouble, my dear friend,said Mr. North,"to look in occasionally upon nurse, and see that she neglects not her duty?"
59553Will you tell me what that resolution is?
59553Without you, what would have become to them, and this now free, brave and happy nation? 59553 You have perhaps heard,"said her comforter,"of the fair Jane of Naples, who was taken prisoner and strangled?"
59553You know I am a woman now,rejoined Rosalie, hanging her head,"and-- and-- will you lead off the next dance with me?"
59553You will bet?
59553You would know, sir,he exclaimed, eyeing fiercely the hero of the British capital,"what is gouging?
59553Your cook is of course from Sicily?
59553_ Must we sacrifice home and comfort, and real enjoyment, in order to_ sacrifice_ also to this heathen block[4] which sits upon the top of the dome? 59553 _ Your_ soul, Monsieur Bon- Bon?"
59553& c."''Vous n''avez pas lu le Solitaire?''
59553''"Is this possible?
59553''A thousand pounds?''
59553''And can you tell me''--he asked--''what is the meaning of a nose?''
59553''And what, Thomas''--he continued--''is Nosology?''
59553''Are you resolved on this?''
59553''Betty,''says he,''what has been gaun on the day-- a''s right, I houp?''
59553''But what,''said she, disfiguring the muslin folds with her awkward fingers,''what is the use of all these fandangles of lace?
59553''Here then is a card''--she said--''shall I say you will be there?''
59553''I want for nothing,''said I;''why does not Bathmendi present himself?''
59553''Mary, must I go alone?''
59553''Mother,''said she, in faltering accents,''are you here?''
59553''My son''--said he--''what is the chief end of your existence?''
59553''Nose and all?''
59553''Oh George, George,''she murmured, clasping my neck with her arms, and sobbing bitterly,''how could you jest so cruelly with me?
59553''Oh, who would blame me?''
59553''Tis to him that these honors are paid, And his dust must be guarded-- from whom?
59553''Verra weel, sir,''says I. Sae what could I do, but gang up stairs to the rest of the company, an''sit doun among them?
59553''Verra weel, sir,''says I; for what cou''d I say?
59553''Verra weel, sir,''says I; for what could I do?
59553''What does my father mean?''
59553''What will you take for it?''
59553''Who can paint like nature?''
59553''Will you go to Almacks, pretty creature?''
59553''Yes, child: are you better?''
59553''_ What_ can he be?''
59553''_ Where_ can he be?''
59553''_ Who_ can he be?''
59553( A sort of man- woman,) and how did she look?
59553*****"Well, sir, what do you think of our daffodils?"
59553*****"Where are the poets of this land?
59553-- Would not the above paragraph read equally as well thus:"Will no lapse of time wear away this abhorred image from your memory?
59553--"You were saying, Timothy, that you were about to tell me something?"
59553--And what were the subjects of these several species of poetry?
595531834. Who reads an American book?
59553A little finger look lonely when in company with three fingers and a thumb?
59553A plain story, told just as we should have told it ourselves?
59553A shorter one conveys the same idea, in eloquent language:"I acted like a wretch, of course; how could I do otherwise?
59553A volunteer, bolder than the rest, went so far as to ask the captain,"If he had forgot what they had heard from the Declaration?"
59553Again,"which do you like best, M. de Talleyrand,"said a lady,"Madame de---- or myself?"
59553Age is a sad destroyer of good looks, is it not?
59553All thy labor unrequited?
59553Am not I the man?"
59553Among all the young ladies in the city, residents or visiters, Miss---- was the only one who could at all manage a steed-- but what of that?
59553Among such is one victory an assured pledge of future and_ bloodless_ victory to the end of time?
59553Among the advocates of phrenology, have not some names, remarkable for ability and inquiry, been numbered?
59553Amy broke the seal mechanically, blushed deeply, and bent her eyes on the ground.--"Amy,"said Hugh,"why do you not read my mother''s letter?"
59553An hour passed on;--what cry was that, Which thrilled that city so?
59553And amid their busy struggles, did they ever recur to the friend who was absent, with the same deep feeling that dwelt in his heart for them?
59553And are the guardians of public education alone''halting between two opinions?''
59553And can it be?
59553And did she love?
59553And does it not class emulations with"idolatry, witchcraft, hatred, variance, wrath, strife, seditions, heresies, envyings,"& c.?
59553And has not his_ own_ experience taught him the advantage which a questionable title, or the folly of a ruler may give his subjects?
59553And have we not reason to believe that here as in other cases, custom renders one indifferent to that which at first would make him miserable?
59553And how can this be between two tribes of nearly equal force?
59553And how does my aunt like all this?
59553And if I grant, also, that the slave is happier than the free laborer, does it follow that his master may lawfully hold him as such?
59553And if slavery, then, was unlawful in its origin, must it not be so now, and continue to be so forever?
59553And is it for this, I exclaimed within myself, that hundreds and thousands toil up craggy precipices and swelter under August suns?
59553And is it_ here_ that the Hero lies, Whose name has shaken the earth with dread?
59553And is not literary immortality-- the mind set forth in visible, enchanting, and enduring forms-- far more desirable, than political?
59553And is there a feeling more desolate still?
59553And is there any thing so very ridiculous in this?
59553And is there aught beneath the sun Can wean my constant heart from thee, Thou lovely and beloved one?
59553And is there no cause to mitigate our anger when contemplating such scenes?
59553And is there nothing-- nothing at all-- to which it may be properly applied?
59553And is_ this_ all that the earth supplies?
59553And mounting in blood on the steps of a throne-- Had he murdered his thousands to aggrandize one?
59553And must not that, then, which is against this law in one age, be equally against it in another, and in every succeeding age, to the end of time?
59553And now, I ask, whence may we draw richer supplies of this than from the pages of ancient writers?
59553And shall each betray that they have been practised but to deceive?
59553And that a light, more beautiful than ours, Lends richer glories to expiring day?
59553And the echoes of the chamber answered me"what was it?"
59553And thou shalt mark his farewell beams O''er lov''d familiar objects play; But will they rouse the fairy dreams That once endear''d the close of day?
59553And was not this much?
59553And was she not happy that_ he_ wanted so constant an attendance?
59553And was thine own, thy native land, less dear?
59553And what are the great, the ultimate purposes to be achieved after reaching these higher schools-- the colleges and universities of the land?
59553And what is it that gives weight to counsel, if it be not the adviser''s learning and reputation?
59553And what is there, then, that is so very"dangerous"in the Governor''s reasoning?
59553And what matters it under what part of that vast tablet, every where emblazoned with his glory, his bones repose?
59553And what of that?
59553And what shall be said of that which is not even middling?
59553And what, think you, was her employment?
59553And when humanity with fettered hands Uplifted cries, who now will nerve the arm?
59553And when shall we proceed to business?"
59553And when, days afterward, humbly and sadly he re- urged a former suit, did Lucille shut her heart to its prayer?
59553And whence the mighty change?
59553And where does he get this idea from again?
59553And where was I?
59553And which from the artist came?"
59553And who is she that has the art To chain my sympathies?
59553And who was this tender, kind, consoling wife, in the hour of death?
59553And who will deny that nature hath not a voice and eloquence that rightly speak to the bosoms of men?
59553And who would deny but the south has genius which would do honor to the_ whole_ country in any walk?
59553And whose kind, unwearied hand smoothed my lonely pillow, and held my aching brow?
59553And why does he attempt this?
59553And why should I fly?
59553And why?
59553And wilt thou sometimes think of me, When thy thoughts from this stormy world are free?
59553And with a sweeter, more entrancing tone, The thrilling strains of love and glory swell?
59553And, by the way, do you know that I go to Boston, with Alpheus, in a fortnight?
59553Anne, my foolish fancy''s o''er, And I can not love you more-- Nay, sweet girl, why knit your brow?
59553Are gorgeous eloquence and nature fit comates?
59553Are not the affections the offerings that please him best?
59553Are not these feelings impressed in the bosom of every human being?
59553Are not these suppositions effectually silenced by an appeal to the well- determined moral and intellectual qualities of those advocates?
59553Are not these the sources of most of the''wars and fightings''among mankind?
59553Are the people mad here, as well as on the road?
59553Are the poor girls to blame for all this?
59553Are the terrified nations afraid Lest he yet should arise from the curse of his doom, And bursting its cerements, escape from the tomb?
59553Are these the limits of glory''s reign?
59553Are they appreciated?
59553Are they favorable or not to domestic happiness?
59553Are they forever silent?
59553Are they not written in the record of the Most High?
59553Are they to be supposed to have but_ one_ mind among them, as the Sirens had but one tooth?
59553Are those times passed forever?
59553Are we to doubt the truth of this illustration?
59553Are you forever to love that man?"
59553Are you madly bent on bringing down misery on your head?
59553Art sick?
59553As an historical novel, in excellent keeping, written with great fluency and richness of diction, we know of( nothing?)
59553At last he went to his mother and said:"Mamma, wo n''t you teach me to do like papa?
59553Autumn, how should that languid air That smoothed thy brow erewhile, Be( though a frown thou dost not wear) Mistaken for a smile?
59553Because he was able to sustain the violated rights of property, would he have been also able to destroy them?
59553Believ''st thou Nature smiled at such beginning?
59553Besides, the savage that runs upon four legs is so inferior in performance to him that walks upon two?
59553Besides, what can a woman gain by her opposition or her differences?
59553Besides-- has he not had his full share of the blessings of mortality?
59553Breathes not the soul of mystery in this?"
59553Bryant?"
59553But Simon, how is cousin Mary?
59553But Thou who didst on Calvary die, Flows not thy mercy wide and free?
59553But are food and raiment the wages to which labor is every where stinted?
59553But are there not various modes of manifesting, more or less appropriately, the inward emotions of our hearts?
59553But can we, then, plead a defect of theirs which is the consequence of our own act, to justify that act, in this way?
59553But can_ any_ principles, I ask, do this?
59553But for this labor, does not the mother receive a rich reward?
59553But hath Columbia no gratitude?
59553But how can the literary mind be thus stimulated, when the general feeling of society is diametrically opposite to its interests?
59553But how is this most dangerous of evils to be guarded against?
59553But how meanwhile had that year passed for Lucille?
59553But how shall I make known the persons of whom I wish to speak?
59553But how stands the fact?
59553But how, you may ask, did she manage to answer his letters, when she was unable to write?
59553But if the net- work was separated from the hoop to admit this passage, what was to sustain the car in the meantime?
59553But is it the less crushing, because it is enforced by one from whose power there is no escape?
59553But is this a fair representation of the Governor''s reasoning?
59553But may not we, the sovereign citizens of these states, abuse power too?
59553But say that it is not so; and grant, if you please, for the sake of argument, that it is all"a specious fallacy"indeed; what then?
59553But she will not turn us out supperless, I hope, such a night as this?
59553But the little boy, my dear Anna!--Are you not anxious to see him?"
59553But what are the objects which now fill men''s minds with admiration and astonishment?
59553But what could we do, when our heart was full of the very sentiment which Scott has expressed so much better than we could?
59553But what do they do?
59553But what heightened or adequate terms of censure can be found for the New York rule, which displaces every judge at sixty?
59553But what is its true use?
59553But what is that?
59553But what is the fact?
59553But what is the general character of this branch of the press?
59553But what need had Hercules of Homer?
59553But what reason have we for supposing this interference with the freedom of election?
59553But what shall I say in reply to your request to write something for its columns?
59553But what shall we say of the contents of the present number?--shall we say nothing, least peradventure we may say too much?
59553But what should we say to a Gospel after the manner of Mr. Adams, or even of Mr. Everett?
59553But what was easier than a recommendation which it would be perhaps best to conform to?
59553But when she ceas''d, with serious air The other made reply,"Shall he not also be my care?
59553But when will it be otherwise than important and profitable to study the process by which Washington became what he was?
59553But whence arises this actual superiority?
59553But where is the check on such abuse of power?
59553But who compose this working class?
59553But who is Ione?"
59553But who reads it?
59553But who shall describe the varied and terrific music of the steam engine?
59553But who, with energy divine, May tread that undiscover''d maze, Where Nature, in her curtain''d shrine, The strange and new- born Thought arrays?
59553But why amplify our illustrations?
59553But why descend to particulars which intercept the thread of our narrative?
59553But why does it not even settle the question?
59553But why enumerate-- why speak of her varied and almost numberless acquirements?
59553But why may we not be content to witness this delineation of national characteristics upon our theatrical boards?
59553But why not he as well as another?
59553But would they come?
59553But you are not laboring for Virginia alone: it is for the south-- the_ whole_ south; and might I not add, for the whole country?
59553But you inquire,--is she who breathes such fragrance around, forever to be immured in this sequestered{ 82} valley?
59553But you may ask what Mr. Simson has to do with the loves of George and Isabella?
59553But"who ever thought of blaming La Fayette?"
59553But, alas my child, what hope is there for me?''
59553But, because this is most evidently the case, are we to think of blaming Mrs. Sigourney?
59553By what other term can we characterize the usual school appliances, to the chief of which I beg leave to invite your special attention?
59553By what_ bizzarrerie_ does it happen that Sardanapalus is discovered in Greek literature under the name of Tenos Concoleros?
59553Ca n''t I do as you did with them?
59553Came there a group past mem''ry''s straining eye To teach the_ brave_ how hard it was to die?
59553Can Mr. Blackstone tell us which of the savage African chiefs began the game?]
59553Can a discerning public withhold encouragement, especially when the benefits will be mutual?
59553Can he wonder that his reader will not consent to be so led?
59553Can it be possible that Marian Lindsay''s_ load- stars_ failed in attraction?"
59553Can it exist under a despotism?
59553Can it not sooth the heart to rest As it hath done before?
59553Can not something like this be done in Virginia?
59553Can such a cast of mind do otherwise than open new fields for high action?
59553Can such an influence develope the real beauty and sublimity of mind?
59553Can such mum''ries move?
59553Can the paltry consideration of a few thousand dollars expense, outweigh the magnificent advantages which are likely to result?
59553Can they be proved?
59553Can we be favored by our correspondent"C"with another copy?
59553Can we believe, in the face of these facts, that the loyalty of Virginia ever wavered?
59553Can we not continue friends?
59553Can you forbear smiling my friend?
59553Can you object to the practice of law?
59553Can you wonder that your neighbor(_ contemporary_ I believe is the word in fashion,) thought his letter but"_ so so_?"
59553Can, then, our colleges maintain their high, original standing?
59553Canst thou deny it?
59553Canst thou forget, amidst the gay and heartless, One far away whom thou hast vowed to love?
59553Child!--in tender weakness turning To thy heaven- appointed guide, Doth a lava- poison burning, Tinge with gall, affection''s tide?
59553Cold, cold in death are the hearts which throbb''d To view thy rising glory-- Are we their sons, who have basely robb''d What Time had left so hoary?
59553Come, Patrick, clear up the storm on your brow, You were kind to me once,--will you frown on me now?
59553Comest thou to warn me from this life of pain?
59553Corrupt the source, and what will be the effect of its streams?
59553Could F----''s throbbing bosom beat Victims on victims to ensnare: Point to the lovers at her feet, And proudly count the captives there?
59553Could I ask a keener reproach?
59553Could I demand a better proof of the purity and delicacy of his affection?
59553Could she be happy and I feel miserable?
59553Could the spirit which tumbled his son from the throne, have prepared itself for explosion during her vigilant and energetic reign?
59553Could_ they_, without dishonor, have been hearty in favor of the new order of things?
59553Country!--on thy sons depending, Strong in manhood, bright in bloom, Hast thou seen thy pride descending Shrouded,--to th''unhonor''d tomb?
59553Cui flavam religas comam, Simplex munditiis?
59553D''ye take me for a fool?
59553Did AUSTRIA shed no remorseful tear, When ENGLAND''S FAITH, and thine HONOR, FRANCE, And thy FRIENDSHIP, RUSSIA, were blasted_ here_?
59553Did I feel the sacredness of the obligation he revealed?
59553Did I venerate the sanctity of his motives, and admit their authority?
59553Did PRUSSIA cast no repentant glance?
59553Did any one ever dream that Kentucky had given cause of offence to her sister States, by erecting an asylum for the poor mutes?
59553Did not good wife Keech, the butcher''s wife, come in then, and call me gossip Quickly?
59553Did not her own name uttered by that voice, seem to her even sweeter than the music?
59553Did not you know it was wrong to bet?"
59553Did she talk like a book?
59553Did they arouse the mind of Homer, the immortal bard of antiquity?
59553Did they grow to their full power and greatness under the influence of{ 392} monarchical institutions?
59553Did you not expect it?"
59553Did_ each_ beauty but tarry the while We met-- love, by moonlight alone?
59553Didst thou regret that her resplendent skies Should smile on men as slaves content to live?
59553Didst thou, when straying in her cities fair, Or in her groves of bloom, regret that here No perfumes mingle with the passing air?
59553Discarding nature, and not sufficiently wedded to art,--what becomes of her witchery?
59553Do actors generally exercise their profession to please themselves and gratify their own especial delight in self- exhibition?
59553Do audiences, on the other hand, use to come in crowds to play- houses to see indifferent performers?
59553Do n''t this prove what I said in my extompere address,''_ that their heads can not work without you_?''"
59553Do not these inconsistent objections neutralize each other, like opposite quantities in Algebra, or opposite simples in Chemistry?
59553Do such minds as Johnson and Addison, spread beauty and interest through their columns?
59553Do these facts explain the cause of the difference above alluded to?
59553Do they acknowledge the_ authority_ of parliament or protector?
59553Do they awaken the fancy?
59553Do they clothe human thoughts in radiant and brilliant robes?
59553Do they create pure and soaring eloquence?
59553Do they encourage the universal growth of mind?
59553Do they hold out a common inducement to eloquent and lofty effort?
59553Do they not know that the odious tyranny, the folly, the weakness, and the cowardice of John gave birth to_ magna charta_?
59553Do they promote mental research?
59553Do they think that in fact, and for practical purposes, the truth of christianity is still a debateable question?
59553Do we ask why, in this temper, they gained so little from William?
59553Do we behold such an aspect under despotic institutions?
59553Do we desire a glorious immortality?
59553Do we not all know that there is something much more devotional in the love of woman than man-- a something much more nearly allied to religion?
59553Do we not know that this same weakness and consequent dependence, makes woman more confiding, more trusting, more submissive than man?
59553Do we really hope to improve by it, those qualities, moral, intellectual or physical, with which the bounty of nature has distinctively gifted us?
59553Do you further inquire what is the secret of their happiness?
59553Do you know that for a month past, I have been dreading the approach of this week?"
59553Do you know the D''Israeli in America?"
59553Do you mean to ruin yourself, Tim?"
59553Do you not carry your scrupulosity too far?"
59553Do you not dread the mystery of that number, which made your grandfather a premature dotard?
59553Do you not now perceive what a folly I should have been guilty of, had I suffered you to dangle, as you wished, at my apron string?"
59553Do you not see?
59553Do you not_ see_ the figure which EVERY_ one_ of you cuts?!
59553Do you take a gentleman of my size and respectability into a room not larger than a closet?
59553Do you then wonder at the pain I have suffered from this malignant endeavor of Mc----''s to render me ridiculous?"
59553Do you think I am worthy of you?
59553Do you think that beings superior to the laws of humanity have ever appeared to mortals or conversed with them?"
59553Do you think this requiring too much?
59553Do you think to marry my niece?"
59553Does any man doubt such truths?
59553Does any one doubt this fact?
59553Does he believe that the revolution so"cheering and refreshing"to his spirit, would have taken place, had Henri IV occupied the throne of Louis XVI?
59553Does he mean that a larger proportion could not be obtained if the public expense were proffered for their education and subsistence?
59553Does he mean, at page six, to intimate that the"boldness of truth"was ONLY"_ not_ WHOLLY_ uncongenial_"to the character of La Fayette?
59553Does he see no beauty, no merit, no poetry, in the"Song of the Seasons?"
59553Does he think the reform now going on in England would have commenced under Elizabeth or her grandfather Henry VII?
59553Does he, when you are housekeeper, invite company without informing you of it, or bring home with him a friend?
59553Does it consist in that sort of declamation which is meant to"split the ears of the groundlings?"
59553Does it follow that slavery_ as it exists in our state_, was just and lawful_ in its origin_?
59553Does it thereby sustain any loss?
59553Does music there, with power to us unknown, Breathe o''er the heart a far diviner spell?
59553Does not Mary look beautiful?
59553Does not the eye pass from an unpleasant object to a pleasant in a very moment?"
59553Does not this conduct of the assembly show that they anticipated the restoration of one whose right they had always maintained?
59553Does she need_ but one_ firm principle of action?
59553Does she remember him whose follies and vices removed him from her and happiness?
59553Does she still remember my wild pranks?"
59553Does that which would be unjust as the act of ninety- nine, become just, as being the act of an hundred?
59553Does the Christian love his cross?
59553Does the Miser love his dross?
59553Does the question of right depend simply, or at all, upon the degree of happiness which the laborer enjoys?
59553Does the tuft of long hair by which Houri hands are to draw the faithful into Paradise, differ from the unshorn locks of those around him?
59553Does this look like a recognition of Cromwell and his parliament, or the reverse?
59553Dost thou forget, or do thy blue eyes brighten Only with thoughts of his return to thee?
59553Dost thou remember the boy we met when we first set out together, who was weeping on his way to school, and sighing to be a man?"
59553Dost thou the pains of absence seek to lighten, In scenes like this of mirth and revelry?
59553Doth not the virtuous soul still find in both a friend?"
59553Dryden says,"why should we imagine the soul of man more heavy than his senses?
59553Enable whom?
59553Even at Naples, even in this all- lovely land,''fit haunt for gods,''has it not been with me as it has been elsewhere?
59553Even my aunt''s coolness was a grateful tribute to my self- love-- for was it not occasioned by my transcendency over her less gifted daughters?
59553Even so my dear, for what is there on the face of the earth( that depends not on_ soil_ or_ climate_) which may not be found in this bustling capital?
59553Every body knew it; their parents knew it, and sanctioned it-- and why should they not?
59553Every few moments the interrogatory,"How far are we now?"
59553Every glorious promise lost?
59553Father, were they yours?
59553Father, what was you doing?
59553Feeling so doubly lone, Tim would again seek a partner to sympathize in his sorrows, and to whom could he go?
59553Fixing his eye on the others, he said, with an energy of tone which we thought had forsaken him,--_"Will ye thus be divided, at the last day?
59553For if it be asked, how long should this state of things be kept up?
59553For want of gratitude?
59553For want of love?
59553For what is it that she would challenge the affections?
59553For who doubts but that the Messenger is destined to call into active exertion the genius of the south?
59553For who, let me ask, ever heard of a balloon entirely manufactured of dirty newspapers?
59553Forget?
59553Forget?
59553Friendship?
59553From a nation, one of whose causes of quarrel with those masters, is their refusal to deal any more in that inhuman traffic?
59553God of heaven!--is it possible?
59553Good heavens, said I internally-- what can this mean?
59553Goodnews?"
59553Granted, but what is_ dignity_?
59553Grayson said:"And an''t you religious too, papa?"
59553Ha''e ye ony objection to be a wife, Betty?''
59553Had Heywood fulfilled the promise of his early youth, and climbed with vigorous step"The hill, where fame''s proud temple shines afar?"
59553Had her son perished?
59553Had not this been extorted from him, could it have been wrung from the stern grasp of the first or third Edward?
59553Had the perseverance of Drayton won for him wealth and respectability in his profession?
59553Hang all the world thought Tim-- shall I never have an opportunity of telling the old lady?
59553Has he disappointed you in something you expected, whether of ornament, or furniture, or of any conveniency?
59553Has he the tender sensibility, the warm hearted sympathy that is ever alive in a female''s bosom?
59553Has it been both by precept and example, or by the first only; and what rank have your teachers assigned to such studies, in the scale of importance?"
59553Has it one single attribute of true poetry?
59553Has not Omnipotence itself the pow''r To bring repentance in the final hour?
59553Has she no art to foil him, And turn his scythe aside?
59553Has she no attendant, John?"
59553Has the Governor written any thing which fairly suggests such a singular query?
59553Has the grim savage rushed again from the distant wilderness?
59553Has the heat of these waters any connection with volcanic phenomena?
59553Has your husband staid out longer than you expected?
59553Hast read the Poem, Ma''am?
59553Hate?
59553Have not the Romans sworn never to obey a king?
59553Have oceans of blood and an age of strife, A thousand battles, been all in vain?
59553Have these glorious scenes poured no inspirings into hearts worthy to behold and praise their beauty?
59553Have these things been lost on Mr. Adams himself?
59553Have you ever seen a lady setting her cap for a beau?
59553He binds up the broken heart; will he not then console ours?"
59553He clothes the lilies of the field, and will he not clothe us?
59553He the hors- pleader?
59553He who heard the guilty, may he not hear the guiltless?
59553He would not go in"the way to the pit"the night previous-- and now could he go to hell?
59553He''hears the young ravens when they cry,''and will he not give his children food?
59553His biographer thus described his first interview with Washington:"''What do you seek here?''
59553Honor?
59553How awful I felt while a spectator of the solemn scene; and how strange, is it not?
59553How can she shun his power?
59553How can thy Destiny but happy be?
59553How can we reconcile these matters?
59553How could it be otherwise, when all that is beautiful in the heart, and sunshine in the intellect, is debased and destroyed?
59553How could it happen that contumely and disrespect were cast upon us from parties who were strangers, having no connexion with each other?
59553How has the greatness and grandeur of all antiquity, been perpetuated?
59553How is he to be drawn over to her side?
59553How is it that from Beauty I have derived a type of unloveliness?--from the covenant of Peace a simile of sorrow?
59553How is it to be effected?
59553How many breasts shall wildly throb for thee?
59553How many ever think of the necessity of entitling their pleadings?
59553How many have been urged to the extremity of human depravity by the too rigid decree of a father''s or a guardian''s justice?
59553How many know how to take advantage of this defect, even when it occurs to them?
59553How many noble, ardent and ambitious youths, have thus been driven to the night of woe and mental desolation?
59553How many of those who witnessed it, went home with hearts oppressed by a consciousness of something wrong?
59553How many times a week or month have you received lessons on them?
59553How many wives and maidens was he represented as seducing by the most unfair means?
59553How many, for example, will remember where to stop the defence, in drawing a plea in abatement, or to the jurisdiction of the court?
59553How often was the speaker of the house of commons so chosen in England?
59553How shall our love continue to pursue, and cling to that, of whose very form and essence we have no abiding assurance?
59553How should he?
59553How should he?
59553How very liable you may be to gross imposition?
59553How ward his withering blow?
59553How?
59553Husband!--o''er thy hope a mourner, Of thy chosen friend asham''d, Hast thou to her burial borne her, Unrepentant,--unreclaimed?
59553I blush for public crimes and rage; For brothers too: what have we, hardened age, Eschewed?
59553I dreamed-- I speak my dream; and canst thou read it me?
59553I exclaimed aloud,"that Heywood?"
59553I exclaimed,"was there no man present whose humanity prompted him to interpose for the prevention of so murderous a deed?"
59553I had done a deed-- what was it?
59553I inquired, is Devotion never encumbered, or impeded by the splendor that surrounds her?
59553I languish here-- Where is my own sweet friend?
59553I met a friend on the_ pave_ last week, who said,"Will you come to our party to- morrow night?"
59553I met thee by moonlight alone, My heart trusting wholly to thee: Was it prudent?
59553I miss those social_ winter_ hours With her I used to spend, Now cheerless are my_ summer bowers_-- Where is my own lov''d friend?
59553I replied fiercely,"do you take me for a strolling mendicant?
59553I shall be wretched-- I shall deserve to be so; for shall I not think, Julie, that I have imbittered our life with your ill- fated love?
59553I wonder what the_ wind_ did in the meantime?
59553If I went to sleep as I proposed, how could the atmosphere in the chamber be regenerated in the interim?
59553If any doubt it, let them inquire as impartially as they can, what manner of men those are in general who constitute the educated class?
59553If any one gives my husband the common salutation of how d''ye do?
59553If nothing has been read specially on these all- important topics, what has been the manner in which they have been recommended to your attention?
59553If the birds delight the grove, Can I hear thee, and not love?
59553If the doctrines be untrue, how are these results ascertained by them to be accounted for?
59553If the monstrous increase be not checked, what purse can buy, what head can read( much less remember,) nay what room can hold them, a century hence?
59553If you wish it, my son"--"madam?"
59553In displaying anxiety for the breath of which he was at present so willing to get rid, might I not lay myself open to the exactions of his avarice?
59553In the heart of Venice could I have erected a better?
59553In the name of all that is singular, said he, who can that be, and whither is he posting with such rapidity?
59553In the name of all the vrows and devils in Rotterdam, what could it possibly portend?
59553In the race for political or professional distinction, who is influenced by such timid suggestions?
59553In what part of the Report?
59553In what way, let us ask, is this annual appropriation which the Governor recommends, to be expended?
59553Involuntarily, my heart said,--_"Shall not this be a family in Heaven?
59553Is any monument to Washington so appropriate as that reared by his genius, his toils and his virtues,--HIS COUNTRY?
59553Is he a legislator?
59553Is he not the God of love?
59553Is it a fountain from which flows the pure streams of knowledge?
59553Is it a friend to literature, or the efforts of original and powerful mind?
59553Is it a messenger of eloquent and exalted thoughts?
59553Is it asked why scientific individuals have not universally ranged themselves under the banners of this science?
59553Is it for want of reverence for his memory?
59553Is it in the power of numbers to alter the nature of things, and to justify oppression, though it should fall on the head of only one victim?
59553Is it less interesting because the prompting impulse of the hero is virtuous, not criminal?
59553Is it made up of"gun, drum, trumpet, blunderbuss and thunder,"and images placed by the speaker''s side to be apostrophized?
59553Is it my brain that reels-- or was it indeed the finger of the enshrouded dead that stirred in the white cerement that bound it?
59553Is it not rather a gross caricature of it?
59553Is it not so?
59553Is it not the very reverse?
59553Is it possible to acquire this wonderful talent?
59553Is it possible, cried I, that so small a stick can be worth so much?
59553Is it the moon---- That comes more near to us than she was wo nt, And makes men mad?
59553Is it the result of nature?
59553Is it true?
59553Is it wonderful that despotic governments never attain a high degree of intellectual eminence?
59553Is it wonderful that its literature is unequalled?
59553Is it_ stage effect_?
59553Is moral and religious acquirement ever made a pre- requisite?
59553Is moral and religious conduct always rendered indispensable?
59553Is not Berkeley in of his old commission?
59553Is not here an_ hiatus valde deflendus_?
59553Is not his letter a specimen of"the carpings of illiberal and puerile criticism?"
59553Is not such silence the most expressive praise; the silence imposed by a common sentiment, which all are conscious is felt by all?
59553Is not the law of nature, like its author, immutable, and eternal?
59553Is not the_ capitol itself_ too small?
59553Is not the_ thing itself_ worthier than the symbol?
59553Is not this at once evading and altering, as it were, the counsel of the Creator of all?
59553Is not this the reason why legislative encroachment so much disposes men to acquiesce in executive usurpation?
59553Is such the moral of human life?
59553Is the capacity of man naturally greater than that of woman?
59553Is the principle of both laws the same, or entirely different?
59553Is the tale of him, who sleeps in that grave still known?"
59553Is there any human production which can be said to be perfect?
59553Is there any thing wonderful in that?
59553Is there no reward for the righteous?
59553Is there not something, besides politics, worth living for?
59553Is there not such proof in this instance?
59553Is there nothing similar to the preceding quotation in this?
59553Is there nothing which the Legislature ought not to meddle with?
59553Is this a fair inference?
59553Is this a relative-- a brother of the"forgotten genius,"who has at last come to pay a tribute to his long neglected memory?
59553Is this an assertion of the supremacy of the assembly?
59553Is this your friendship?"
59553Is thy pure spirit to thy Maker flown?
59553Is virtue then, nought but a name?
59553Is''nt this horrible?
59553Is_ he_ not in possession of all his faculties, mental and corporeal?
59553It may acquire me fame as well as fortune; and then I may marry Rosalie?"
59553It was against orders, but I never had shot at an Indian, and how could I stand it?
59553It was but yesterday I happened to say, my dear how is the pain in your back?
59553It was twelve months from the time I took out license, that I was touched on the arm by a stranger, who asked me if I was not Owen the lawyer?
59553Its place of rest is not within this aching breast;-- Where does it dwell?
59553John hesitated and grinned.--"What the devil is the fellow laughing at?
59553July 24, 1834._ And you will positively"excommunicate"me if I do not send you"some_ first impressions_"of Yankee- land?
59553Kindheart?"
59553Know what?
59553Lawrence?"
59553Let me ask too, whether, should neither of the fatal effects ensue, you would like me better in my mangled or mutilated condition, than you do now?
59553Little rambling, coaxing sprite, Tenant and comrade of this clay, Into what distant regions say Pale, naked, cold, wingst thou thy flight?
59553Mamma, what are the papers with the hearts on?"
59553Man of God, will you come to him?"
59553May I have some?
59553May I never forget the deep debt of gratitude I owe to my Father in heaven?"
59553May I not correctly show to others a way, which it is not convenient or agreeable for me to travel myself?
59553May not I his pleasures share?
59553May not this very extent be prejudicial to the cause of American letters?
59553May we not expect a continuance of their favors?
59553May we not hope then, young gentlemen, when so much is trusted to your magnanimity, that the dependence will not fail us?
59553Might not this be the case with Mr. Windenough?
59553Might you not take a hint from this consideration?
59553More dreary and heart- breaking even than this?
59553Mr. Wilberforce, you must forget me; and oh, can you not attribute my strange conduct to my youth?
59553Must I proceed?
59553Must she, who conquers others, To him yield up her pride?
59553Must we be altogether silent, in order that our patrons may judge for themselves, unbiassed by our own humble opinion?
59553My brother-- does a hope thy breast inflame, To clasp those dear loved objects to thy heart?
59553My brother-- does thy heart in transport hear The name of friends, of country, and of home?
59553My brother-- does thy soul these things revere, As once in early days untaught to roam?
59553My good friend, were you in such a situation, what would you do?
59553N''est il pas juste qu''elle cultive l''un et l''autre?"
59553Nay for a whole night, whom have I danced with, but you?
59553Nay, Julie, nay-- why that look?
59553Need Memory e''er with Hope contend?
59553No fire either to warm my limbs in the chilly night air of these mountains?
59553No want of food, for beast or man, There met his eager gaze; Find better bacon!--greens!--who can?
59553Nor let pleasures of the table in this intellectual age be despised?
59553North?"
59553Now this seems to me to be pretty good logic; and how then does the Annotator answer it?
59553Now this, too, I have heretofore taken for very sound logic; and why is it not perfectly so?
59553Now what does it all amount to in the end?
59553Now what says the reader to the following extract from a memorial on behalf of the trade of Virginia, laid before Cromwell in 1656?
59553Now where is this MORE AMPLE DECLARATION, concerning their idea of such a commission as they might DUTIFULLY submit to?
59553Now, Bon- Bon, do you behold the thoughts-- the thoughts, I say-- the ideas-- the reflections-- engendering in her pericranium?
59553O''er the fam''d seat of science and of arms, What dire disaster spreads such wild alarms?
59553Of a blood loving tyrant-- ferocious-- whose sway Was supported by rapine, while earth was his prey?
59553Of all the Chieftains whose thrones he reared, Were there none whom kindness or faith could bind?
59553Of all the Monarchs whose crowns he spared, Had none one spark of his Roman mind?
59553Of what complexion could the other seven have been?
59553Of whom may we seek succor but of thee, Oh Lord!--who for our sins art justly displeased?
59553Oh, is there not a sympathy of all- controling power The mother and her brood between-- old earth, weak man, frail flower?
59553Oh, what doth he ask in return for this, The light of his love, and such draughts of bliss?
59553Oh, what was the life of the first, That in death they have left him thus lone?-- Was the crown of the Tyrant his thirst?
59553On what authority?
59553Once again I breathed with perfect freedom and ease-- and indeed why should I not?
59553Or didst thou turn where proudly in the breeze America''s star- spangled flag was flying?
59553Or do we hope by"an artificial show, an elaborate appearance, a false pretence,"to obtain credit with others for attributes which do not belong to us?
59553Or does her eye more eloquently speak, Or with a softer grace her form expand?
59553Or the eloquence and moral sublimity of Cicero?
59553Or the unrivalled philosophy of Socrates?
59553Or was the Reviewer himself dreaming when he wrote?
59553Or was the lion quiet in his heart?
59553Or what right can your assignee have to hold the prisoner under your assignment, one moment after your right itself has run out?
59553Or where''s the Æolian song thou wouldst wake When some sporting zephyr''s breath would shake Thy rustling leaves?
59553Or, can the mere lapse of time make it lawful?
59553Or, is the maxim itself utterly and absolutely false, to all intents and purposes whatever?
59553Our fathers did the same before us, and"be we wiser or better than they?"
59553Our fathers spirit boils along Impetuous through our veins; We ask to know, where are the strong, To bind us in their chains?
59553Our sweetest joys, like flowers may rise, And all their fragrance lend, Yet my sick heart within me dies-- Where is my own sweet friend?
59553Pardon me,"said Mrs. North,"but can domestic concerns_ ever_ be interesting?"
59553Perhaps you''d laugh at me?
59553Poison the fountain, and who can drink of its waters without death-- death, both in a figurative and literal sense?
59553Pray, sir, what is the soul?"
59553Publicanes?
59553Quid brevi fortes jaculamur oevo Multa?
59553Quis multâ gracilis te puer in rosâ Perfusus liquidis urget odoribus Grato, Pyrrha, sub antro?
59553Quo nunc abibis in loco Pallidula, rigida, nudula?
59553Reader, dost thou expect me to give thee in black and white my hero''s courtship?
59553Relaxed in body and in mind?
59553Say is it true, in green unfading bowers, That there the wild bird sings her sweetest lay?
59553Say, fellow citizens, what dreadful thought now swells your heaving bosoms?
59553Say, is McCarthy dead?"
59553Say, little caged flutterer, say, Why mournful waves thy drooping wing?
59553Say, shall that wreath, with its sunny bloom, E''er fade like thee?
59553Say, where''s that gush of melody Thy sylvan minstrels pour''d for thee In thy summer bowers?
59553Say, wouldst thou build a lasting seat, Secure from Fortune''s rage; A quiet and a safe retreat, To rest thy weary age?
59553Says Hal,"This Miss A----''s a charming young_ belle_, But has she a_ beau_, my dear Will, can you tell?"
59553Secondly, may not these advantages be gained by researches into our own literature?
59553See ye not, that while she is suffered to approach them, there is no salvation for either mother or children?
59553Shall I be forgiven for such minuteness of detail?
59553Shall I tell you?
59553Shall I then say that I long''d with an earnest and consuming desire for the moment of Morella''s decease?
59553Shall Time''s chill mildew on it light, Or sorrow breathe its_ autumn_ blight Upon its flowers?
59553Shall he attempt again to mend his broken fortunes and rise once more in the world''s thought?
59553Shall he turn to those whom the world once called his friends?
59553Shall it be said that the empire of literature has no geographical boundaries, and that local jealousies ought not to disturb its harmony?
59553Shall she hope to engage interest for the subject of her conversation, when full not of it but of herself?
59553Shall she hope to speak to the heart in tones which come not from the heart?
59553Shall the present generation fold its arms in supineness, and leave every thing to be done by posterity?
59553Shall the storm settle_ here_, when it from Heaven departs, And the cold from without find the way to our hearts?
59553Shall we turn for example to the boasted polytheistical religion of Greece and Rome?
59553She asked the carpenter what he was about?
59553She asked the painter what he meant by all this preparation?
59553She did''nt ask Tim, who he was to marry?
59553She inquired of the bricklayer what he was doing?
59553Sister of Rome!--old mistress of a world-- Wilt thou from thy high state be hurled?
59553So far as regards the unfortunate mute, the only inquiry is, where can he be best taught?
59553So soon as he could get his father''s attention, he said:"O father, what were those pretty things you had in your hand last night?
59553So_ you''re changing your colors_, I see, master White, But say now d''ye think it is perfectly right?
59553Some readers will say,"what difference would it make if aunt Tabby was present?"
59553Speak out!--but what?
59553Stevens, the Puck of commentators, asks"What has truth or nature to do with sonnets?"
59553Still that orphan- burden bearing, Darker than the grave can show, Dost thou bow thee down despairing, To a heritage of woe?
59553Stuart once asked a painter, who had met with a painter''s difficulties,"how he got on in the world?"
59553Such was the_ person_ of Lavinia: but who can paint the endowments of her heart and mind?
59553Take for example, these lines in Comus:"Was I deceived, or did a sable cloud Turn forth her silver lining on the night?
59553Tell me if thou in thought didst dearer prize Thy home, than all that Italy could give?
59553Tell me, said I, how is my uncle?
59553Tell the old lady the whole matter?
59553Tell{ 358} me, for old acquaintance sake, how much will the party cost?"
59553That it might agonize and bleed At every suffering pore, The soft affections why decreed To centre in its core?
59553That mans his breast in danger''s fearful path?
59553That nerves his arm to grasp the gory steel, Despising toil and hardship, wounds and death?
59553That orators his fame have spoke, That bards his deeds have sung?
59553That over Moscow''s battlements, His flag- folds he shook out-- That e''en the lofty pyramids Rang with his charging shout?
59553That was not the horse that ran away with you when a boy?
59553The Commodore replied by asking what were the Pasha''s views in declaring war, and on what principles he expected to make peace?
59553The Moon-- were her silver rays gone?
59553The Roman Catholic takes out four, And no man asks him, why?
59553The answer is simply, he_ loved!_ and would not love inspire him with stronger and more powerful motives for exertion and success?
59553The attorney has but to ask himself,"how shall I frame the declaration or plea?"
59553The first was, whether he should pay a debt of$ 60 incurred in gambling?
59553The great transition who can tell?
59553The hapless bard who sings her praise, Now worships at the shrine of Anna?
59553The horses here stopped and drew back, when the Indian cried in an angry tone,"why do n''t you ride in?"
59553The moment he reached his hostess, she demanded, with a look of indescribable indignation,"how he dared to insult a lady in her house?"
59553The mother''s deep felt agony was there: My only hope, Louisa, art thou gone?
59553The next question was, what should he do respecting the$ 9,000, which he found by estimate he had lost at different times?
59553The only inquiry of the benevolent ought to be, where can he be so taught at the least cost?
59553The parliament''s?
59553The protector''s?
59553The ridiculous prints, eh?
59553The second question is, what are the means to be employed in order to succeed in speaking extempore?
59553The soul that once inhabited there, that looked through those mild eyes, the heart that beat beneath that modest vest; are they fled and cold?
59553The spirit of the departed is in_ high communion_[ does this mean_ high mass_?]
59553The winding brooks, like distant lute, Their murmuring whispers send; The echoes of my soul are mute-- Where is my own dear_ friend_?
59553The women look''d so passing fair, How shall their charms be told?
59553Their names are unknown to a majority of the various classes of society?
59553Then how can it be so overwhelming and convincing?
59553Then how is he feeble in ornament?
59553Then wherefore not?
59553Then, is he to select the part which he is to act?
59553Then, what was to be done?
59553They are not studied; and who, without studying, can master the real, pure meaning of a fine thought?
59553They come to us in pomp of war-- The tyrant in his gold; Our arms are few-- they''re stronger far, But who will say as bold?
59553This engraving was taken from these lines in this poem: The bird that sings in lady''s bower, To- morrow will she think of him?
59553This fact is worthy of remark, when it is recollected that the taunting query,"Who reads an American book?"
59553This is better than fashion-- is it not?
59553This, his condition, is compulsory and inevitable; and compulsory toil for food and raiment,--what is it but slavery?
59553Tho''fickle fortune frown, And wealth withhold her store, What is a jewelled crown?
59553Thou''dst ask me, why this quiet shade Which late a paradise I deem''d, Though still in verdant sweets array''d, A melancholy prison seemed?
59553Thou, who didst rend of_ death_ the tie, Is_ Nature''s_ seal too strong for thee?
59553Three thousand six hundred dollars thought Griffith-- and"how much had he to begin with?"
59553Through the mask of this assumed garb what eye can detect the original Mussulman?
59553Through this door also, my entrance was at last effected; for what obstacle may not perseverance overcome?
59553Thus he asks,"did any one ever dream that Kentucky had given cause of offence to her sister states by erecting an asylum for the poor deaf mutes?
59553Tim asked his mother if she was dissatisfied with the match?
59553Tim had seen his mother watching his countenance while he was reading: so putting on a smile,"Is that all?
59553Tim indeed could cry out in the agony of woe,"Have I not had my brain sear''d, heart riven, Hopes sapp''d, name blighted, life''s life lied away?"
59553To bid me hope we soon shall meet again?
59553To make this plainer still to your understandings, which is very good,--suppose a man was to abuse you and call you hard names?
59553To see the eye, once so brilliant, sunken, heavy, and dull; and the lips, once so ruby, now thin and pallid?
59553To the tread of the devouring foe!-- But ere thou art laid low, Shall not one last avenging blow Be struck?
59553To whom did I play the suitor from that day?
59553To witness the being so beloved, so cherished, the victim of slow, but unerring disease, not constitutional, but brought on by neglect, by fashion?
59553To wreck the peace of half mankind, Who let thy arts ensnare them?
59553Touch us with pity, or inspire with love?
59553Up sprung the lover then, and said,"Will you be Mrs. Popkins-- Miss Julia Jane Amelia Ann Matilda Polly Hopkins?
59553Virginia roused herself one day And took her picture down; And as she gazed, was heard to say-- Am I thus hideous grown?
59553WHERE IS MY HEART?
59553WHERE SHALL THE STUDENT REST?
59553Walking directly up to them, he calmly asked, which of them had thus addressed him?
59553Was ever woman so beset?
59553Was he ignorant?
59553Was it a dream?
59553Was it not Socrates who said that the statuary_ found his statue in the block of marble_?
59553Was it not because our local situation removed us far from war, and the entanglements of foreign politics?
59553Was it not probable that these symptoms would increase indefinitely, or at least until terminated by death itself?
59553Was it proper even to glance at such a martial topic in the amicable columns of the_ Literary_ Messenger?
59553Was it without his mighty Maker''s will?
59553Was she grave as a judge?
59553Was she not happy in gazing on a face to whose melancholy aspect her voice instantly summoned the smile?
59553Was she not happy when the music ceased, and St. Amand called"Lucille?"
59553Was the judge prejudiced_ against you_?
59553We approve of the moral, as a matter of course-- who will not?
59553We must afford them all the assistance and consolation in our power?"
59553We pause to inquire why these primeval fragments of the world have remained so long unnoticed?
59553We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons?
59553We wildly stare about, and with amazement, ask,_ who spread this ruin round us?_ Has haughty France or cruel Spain, sent forth her myrmidons?
59553We would ask, do they cause a full development of the mental powers?
59553We would ask, if there is no necessity of a change?
59553Well what then is the remedy?
59553Well, well, said I, interrupting him, Simon let us be off; what have you brought for me to ride?
59553Well-- what of that?
59553Were these men imposed on by the fallacies of the science, or did they wish to impose a fallacy upon the credulity of others?
59553Were they still among the living?
59553Wert thou ever upon Hoecake Ridge?
59553What am I?
59553What aphoristic dogs have had their day, And of their hopes been suddenly despoiled?
59553What are his reasons?
59553What are the means to be employed in order to succeed in speaking extemporaneously?
59553What are the preliminary acquirements of a good_ improvvisatore_?
59553What are they?
59553What better spot could there be for the education of genius?
59553What books have you read, or have been read to you on these subjects?
59553What boots it now to know?
59553What boots it that his own proud name In foreign lands has rung?
59553What boots it that the hills of Spain Shook''neath his lordly tread-- That with the blood of her best sons, Her vallies''streams ran red?
59553What can be expected from eulogy in such a case?
59553What care we for ragouts and fricassee''s, and olla podrida''s, and all the foreign flummery that fashion and folly have brought into use?
59553What charm can sooth-- or what a balm impart?
59553What contingency could happen?
59553What could come of all this; what did come of it, but failure?
59553What could it be?
59553What could the breath of man add to his glory?
59553What did Theodore think of fortune now?
59553What do I not owe to Lucille?
59553What do you know of the principles of Ethics and Christianity?
59553What do you say, Miss Neville, do you like the titled Bard?"
59553What do you think of her being passed fifty, and yet not appearing as old as twenty- five?
59553What elevated Milton, he would ask, to an equality with the gods?
59553What exile from his native home Has left himself behind?
59553What gave to Newton a comprehension of the mysteries of the universe, and to Franklin a power over the elements?
59553What hand was so rashly daring?
59553What has most deeply interested the American mind?
59553What if some of his finest romances have been criticised?
59553What intelligent Virginian is there who does not feel inclined to co- operate in the attainment of so much good?
59553What is man worth in sorrow?
59553What is that infant to become?
59553What is the aptitude of the means to the great purposes which parents should aim to accomplish?
59553What is the cause?
59553What is the fair inference from such facts?
59553What is the freeman''s equivalent?
59553What is the gross sum that I owe thee?
59553What is the history of eloquence?
59553What is the matter?"
59553What is the nature of free institutions?
59553What is the reason?
59553What is the thought that prompts his studious zeal?
59553What is there in the history of human nature, so grand, so majestic, so elevating to the heart and hopes of man?
59553What is this world?
59553What is to be his destiny?
59553What is to become of them?
59553What is_ effect_?
59553What leaves were these so rudely torn away?
59553What matters it at this day, whether we believe that Cæsar killed Brutus, or Brutus Cæsar?
59553What means the white rose in my hair?
59553What monstrous perversion can prompt us to turn the latter out of doors, and hug to our bosoms so vile an intruder?
59553What more could Providence bestow To yield CONTENT an added blessing?
59553What more do we?
59553What more do we?
59553What need has La Fayette that one should tell his fellow of him?
59553What new trick is to be played now?
59553What occasion could that give for philosophy?
59553What periods in the history of mankind, are most distinguished for mental superiority?
59553What preserves, in its original strength and grandeur, the rich and massy arch of German literature?
59553What prompted me then to disturb the memory of the buried dead?
59553What requiem sad is chanted o''er that bier?
59553What right have we to worry other people thus with our maladies?
59553What roused the madman from his trance, and left His heart a waste-- of love-- of joy bereft?
59553What say you?"
59553What says the king of Castile_ now_?"
59553What scene is here?
59553What security that they will be content with these?
59553What shall I call her?
59553What she was like?
59553What singular emotions fill Their bosoms who have been induced to roam, With fluttering doubts if all be well or ill?"
59553What the rôle which he is to play in the great drama of life?
59553What then is her resource?
59553What then is the difference in physical organization?
59553What then shall we take as the highest effort of Dutch genius?
59553What then?
59553What think you"--said he, turning abruptly as he spoke--"what think you of this Madonna della Pietà?"
59553What think you, for instance, of the game at football?
59553What thinks Philoclea of the pristine Earth?
59553What voice is in thine ear?"
59553What was I to do?
59553What was I to do?
59553What was I to do?
59553What was the subject which it doomed to Fame?
59553What will it be, when it becomes"a living landscape of groves and corn- fields, and the abodes of men?"
59553What will it concern posterity whether the glory of the field of Waterloo belongs to Wellington or Blucher?
59553What woke the foolish one?--unmanned his heart?
59553What would be her confusion?
59553What would be her grief?
59553What would have been the transmutation for which the alchemist of former days consumed so many anxious days and sleepless nights, compared with these?
59553What would our college mates say to it?
59553What would she say, if she knew what passes in me?
59553What would you have done?
59553What you call''em?
59553What''s come of the rest of the fry?"
59553What, but the most inordinate selfishness and vanity can be the fruit of such training?
59553What, for instance, do you mean by all that humbug about the soul?
59553What, in a just man''s practice, so softens down to our feelings all necessary roughnesses, as a secret veneration for himself?
59553What, said I, is he at that still?
59553What_ does_ the world say to it?
59553Whatever the sacrifice,_ must_ I not render it?
59553Whatever you might have thought_ then_, can you believe_ now_, that it was merely a playful child that could so have engrossed me?
59553What{ 589} commission?
59553When did Grecian literature assume its brightest charms?
59553When have our youth restrained Their hands through fear of Heav''n?
59553When in their household circle, he seemed visibly more at ease; but did his eyes fasten upon her who had opened them to the day?
59553When men are numerous and"strong enough to set their duties at defiance, do they cease to be duties any longer?"
59553When there were parties there, whom did I sit beside, but you?
59553When we are told that it is"the system of rules of civil conduct, which the state has ordained for itself,"the first inquiry is,"what is the state?"
59553When will the great of Virginia deign this magnanimous descent?
59553Whence comes this tendency among them to imbibe this simple and saving faith, unless it be from the peculiarities of their education?
59553Whence drew I being?
59553Whence the wild wail of agonizing woe That heaves each breast, and bids each eye o''erflow?
59553Whence, my vet''ran Colonel, Comes it, that you, whose scarred body bears The outward proofs of inward loyalty, Do entertain for rebels such regard?
59553Where are the poets of this land?
59553Where are they now?
59553Where are ye now?
59553Where can it be but in the enlightened sense of justice and right in the constituent body?
59553Where gone the grief that with o''erwhelming load Press''d down the heart and crush''d it on its road?
59553Where is its matchless excellence inapplicable?
59553Where is my friend?
59553Where is my heart?
59553Where is my heart?
59553Where is my heart?
59553Where is my heart?
59553Where is the balm to Israel blest, That Gilead gave of yore?
59553Where is the man who could not be eloquent, were his mind provided with expressions worthy of his thoughts?
59553Where now the cold and soul revolting gloom That hung its shadows o''er the yawning tomb?
59553Where shall the student rest Whom the fates destine Old law- books to digest, That baffle all digesting?
59553Where shall the_ lawyer_ rest?
59553Where the young lady lived?
59553Where then is the security that such things will not be done?
59553Where was she?
59553Where was the oath which thy soldiers swore?
59553Where was the passion of his words?
59553Where would you place the monument?
59553Where?
59553Wherein then was the innovation?
59553Whether she had a fortune or not?
59553Which of these is the main impelling cause with woman?
59553Which of us opening a letter book, which should exhibit his whole correspondence, would not be tempted to leave out something?
59553Which of us, commencing a diary, would feel sure that he might not do something to- morrow that he would not choose to set down?
59553Whither should they fly?"
59553Who are delighted with the brilliant imagery, and chaste conceptions of_ Cooper_ and_ Irving_?
59553Who are the new comers?
59553Who break the silken bands of pleasure, spurn Ancestral pride, the pomp of courts, and sweet Domestic love, and bare his bosom in The generous strife?
59553Who can be insensible to the fact, that our universal mind has already assumed a political character?
59553Who can conceive any thing more thrilling and overwhelming than his orations against Cataline?
59553Who can count the sighs of anguish which{ 472} these moments of joy now repayed?
59553Who can measure the depth of his joy?
59553Who do you think could have thus intruded and taken such a liberty, other than cousin Tony?
59553Who ever heard of infanticide by a slave?
59553Who feels it necessary to answer it?
59553Who feels it necessary to utter his praise, even in this simple question?
59553Who had inhabited the edifices I trampled under my feet?
59553Who has not felt that the thought of a month''s separation from one we love, though conscious of its short duration, sickens the heart?
59553Who has not heard of the astonishing oratorical powers of Mirabeau, Maury, Barnave and Vergniaud the pride of the Gironde?
59553Who has not lamented over the severe fate of modern genius?
59553Who has written more quaintly and obscurely than Ben Johnson or Cowley; or to come nearer to our own time, than Wordsworth or Coleridge?
59553Who indeed would think of compassionating a shadow?
59553Who is a Yankee poet that he should be honoured?
59553Who may tell the gladness of her heart, when the infant cherub first articulates her name?
59553Who now, when suffering justice pleads, will hear?
59553Who prepared it, think you?
59553Who read the classic and eloquent orations of Webster and Everett, full of deep principles and splendid thoughts?
59553Who reads not this in every day''s experience?
59553Who reasons more wittily?
59553Who shall fill his place?
59553Who then shall call thy conduct into question?
59553Who was it asked me would I not look upon the corpse?
59553Who will compare the action of the mind thus stimulated with that of the mind, whose only stimulus is present selfish enjoyment?
59553Who will compare the fame of Homer, the mirror- mind of the ancient world, with the most distinguished politician of antiquity?
59553Who will deny, that this political spirit is now, in many instances, the great stimulus of the American student?
59553Who would have dreamed a few years since, that a vein of precious gold, which, for two centuries, had escaped observation, actually enriched our soil?
59553Who would have thought it?
59553Who writes a keener epigram?
59553Who, in that undecipher''d scroll The mystic characters may see, Save Him who reads the secret soul, And holds of life and death the key?
59553Whom are we to blame in this particular, the author, or the printer?
59553Whom did I stand behind at the piano forte, but you?
59553Whom do we know like old Ormond and his wife?
59553Whom like his noble son and his charming countess?
59553Whom or what does man rebuke?
59553Whose immortality thus roughly foiled?
59553Whose knife or scissors did that doom reverse?
59553Whose leaf was this?
59553Whose?
59553Why are you passing the house?"
59553Why bid me live, since riper years must pay Their long arrears to that lamented day?
59553Why cheer my drooping and unsheltered head, When to the skies her gentle spirit fled?
59553Why daring aim beyond our span, Through distant years at many a plan When life so brief we find?
59553Why did I weep?
59553Why did our fathers hope that the experiment of free government might succeed with us, though it had failed every where else?
59553Why do they not make men generous and honest?
59553Why do we see so many over- fed, gormandizing, ill- humored, selfish and self- willed children?
59553Why does he not at once take rank with the HALLECKS, the BRYANTS and PERCIVALS, of a colder clime?
59553Why does he not seize the lyre at once, and pour forth a song which shall add to his country''s honor, and insure for himself a chaplet of renown?
59553Why does it come to us, sweetened with the language of panegyric, from those who love us not, and who habitually scoff at and deride us?
59553Why does not the writer prove the plagiarism?"
59553Why droop the ensigns of our sister state, As though they mourn''d a fallen nation''s fate?
59553Why else is the eloquence of a lovely woman so persuasive?
59553Why hast thou deserted me?"
59553Why have Ohio and Kentucky been guilty of the similar folly of founding institutions themselves?
59553Why is it that men are so easily awakened to the liveliest interest in distant objects, and yet neglect those which are nearer and more accessible?
59553Why is none erected?
59553Why is not every literary man an illustration of Juvenal''s axiom?"
59553Why is the brimming cup of bliss dashed down just as it touches the opening lips?
59553Why is''nt there A----, now, whom you know as well as I?
59553Why long''neath other suns to roam?
59553Why look for rest on earth?
59553Why proclaim to the world what all the world already knows?
59553Why should mysterious Heaven bestow A warm and feeling heart-- Yet doom it naught but pain to know, And rankle in its smart?
59553Why should they?
59553Why should we take them from their appropriate sphere, and introduce them to the frivolous and undignified imitation of the polite and refined?
59553Why silent sit, the live- long day?
59553Why streams the silent, sympathetic tear?
59553Why tell posterity what posterity can never forget, until man has lost the records of the history of man?
59553Why then do we so rarely meet with any narrative of facts which engages our feelings so deeply as a well wrought fiction?
59553Why then does he ask the question?
59553Why then should we doubt their success among ourselves?
59553Why then, may it not be equally true in relation to the mind?
59553Why was it that the most eloquent of Grecians struggled for years to remove the defects of a faulty bearing, if no valuable end was to be attained?
59553Why waste those powers, by heav''n design''d To win true hearts and wear them?
59553Why will they not have resolution enough to discard these seducing and destructive allurements; why not enjoy life soberly, discreetly, prudently?
59553Why, man of morals, tell me why?"
59553Why, my friends, why let me most earnestly demand of you, should not we Virginians,"go and do likewise?"
59553Why?
59553Why?
59553Why_ should_ that lady blush?
59553Wife!--with agony unspoken, Shrinking from affliction''s rod, Is thy prop,--thine idol broken,-- Fondly trusted,--next to God?
59553Will any one deny the happy consequences of an urbane and modest deportment, in man''s intercourse with his fellows?
59553Will it be,"_ live and let live_,"or"_ live for self alone_?"
59553Will it compensate for the lowering of that proud self- esteem, which is the bright reward of truth, and the best security of virtue?
59553Will not all such things rather be insupportably irksome, if not actually disgusting?
59553Will that satisfy your squeamishness?"
59553Will the mind whose only stimulant are the smiles and pecuniary emoluments of kings, exhibit its native strength and grandeur?
59553Will this practice be guided by the social or the selfish principle?
59553Will you ask me what is that preparation?
59553Will you give me your heart?"
59553Will you give yourself to me?
59553Will you marry me, Rosalie?"
59553Will you marry me?
59553Will you promise me this?"
59553Will you sit upon my knee again, and let me call you wife?"
59553Wilt thou see me perish without pity, O son of my people?
59553With such a being, every thing becomes a matter of calculation, down even to the responses to the ordinary questions of"how do you do?"
59553With tremulous lips, Mrs. North returned the kiss, and emphatically whispered--"O dear friend, may I{ 295} never forget the impressions of this hour?
59553With what bribes does she corrupt the loyalty of her fair advocates?
59553With what store of"quips and quirks, and wreathed smiles?"
59553Without fuel, of what use would be to us the metallic ores?
59553Wooed by Italian airs, does woman''s cheek With purer color glow, than in our land?
59553Would she flourish in the empire of the heart, that bright dominion of her sex?
59553Would she, by her look, manner and words, inspire respect, confidence and love?
59553Would the Annotator think it exactly right to have such a principle carried home to himself?
59553Would you degrade the seat to which you aspire?
59553Would you dim the lustre of that honor, which is to be the brightest reward of a life spent in the labors of your profession?
59553Would''nt you tell him, certain, and thankee to boot, sir?
59553Yet CHRISTIAN!--come nearer and read, For conjecture hath led us astray-- Hast thou heard of one, false to his creed?
59553Yet I own, on reflection, it is not so wrong, And the reason, I think, is sufficiently strong: Give it up?
59553Yet he asks,"Does he mean that a larger number could not be obtained if the public expense were proffered for their education and subsistence?"
59553Yet how, let me ask, are these momentous duties generally fulfilled, even by the best scholars, unless they are also moral and religious men?
59553Yet mayst thou not, in mimic lay, Such lofty arts of verse essay?
59553Yet why do I talk of Demosthenes?
59553You are not disposed, I presume, to be an humble imitator of any man?
59553You ask me B----ty, why I mourn, Yet dry''st the tearful eye?
59553You ask me why I look with scorn, And check the heaving sigh?
59553You understand me?"
59553You who pretend to fathom the profundity of human motives and to ascribe proper causes for every action, will you unriddle this enigma?
59553You will receive them here when they arrive?
59553You''member my four greys?
59553You''re a foe to all slavery, Harriet, you say; Then why do you talk in so charming a way?
59553You''re vowed to CHLORIS-- a''nt it true?
59553[ 1] Love?
59553[ Footnote 1: Since this sentence was penned, we have noticed the advertisement of a new( satirical?)
59553_ In_ the capitol?
59553_ Is it worth eight dollars per week to partake of this"villainous compound?
59553_ They_ who, had they remained, would have fought and fallen with Montrose?
59553_ They_ whose principles had driven them into exile?
59553again at your pen Leontine?"
59553and didst thou not kiss me, and bid me fetch thee thirty shillings?
59553and does it not give a dreamy melancholy-- an incoherent imagining to thy young, thy cold, thy uncorrupted heart?"
59553and dropt a few natural tears-- tears of weakness, rather than of grief: for what do I leave behind me worthy one emotion of regret?
59553and even now as it arrests your gaze, does it not tell thee of futurity?
59553and what the bay- wreath''d name Which here its glowing fancies did rehearse?
59553and what though the child''s mediator was his mother, can even a mother love her child more tenderly than I love Eugene?
59553and when the wisdom or the passions of maturity I found hourly gleaming from its full and speculative eye?
59553and where will he not come?
59553and whether she who has been so eagerly sought through the wide world, has chosen this for her favorite residence?
59553and why?
59553and"how have you been?"
59553art sleepy?
59553at midnight hours Wilt thou not smile upon those things that bloom All wild, all heedlessly above my tomb?
59553because our monarch is elective, not hereditary; a man and not a child?
59553but to whom is the English Bulwer unknown?
59553can I dream otherwise?
59553can this work be thine, Or are these sounds, these forms, indeed, divine?
59553can you tell, Gazing in the crystal well, Who it is that madly dreams Of thine eye''s bewildering beams?
59553cicatricum et sceleris pudet, Fratrumque: quid nos dura refugimus Ætas?
59553could I act otherwise?
59553dear Rosalie!--will you never let me take you on my knee and call you wife again?"
59553did I not see a sly wink?
59553did the sky cease to smile?
59553did they not wander at every interval with a too eloquent admiration to the blushing and radiant face of the exulting Julie?
59553do n''t you see that the buffalo have already got the scent of you and have started?"
59553do you mean to say_ I_ would commit a fraud, sir?"
59553do you not know E----, the friend of your brother?"
59553does the Bee Love the rose''s purity?
59553does the boy Kiss his sister''s cheek with joy When they meet in after years, Having parted once in tears?
59553does the sky Seem all beauteous to thine eye, When the stars with silver rays Brightly beam before thy gaze?
59553does the tar Love to dream of scenes afar, When the mildly sighing gale Fills the proudly swelling sail?
59553exclaimed Theodore;"we seem to be moving, and yet do not advance an inch?"
59553here?"
59553how could I forget Its causes were around me yet?
59553how could it be redeemed?
59553how knowest thou this?''
59553how produced, and for what end?
59553how_ do_ you manage?"
59553in what way?
59553is inanimate nature, alone, here''telling the glories of God?''
59553is the bird, In the spring, with pleasure heard, When the melody of song{ 668} Leaps the listening boughs among?
59553is there no God that judgeth in the earth?"
59553is there no punishment for the workers of iniquity?
59553it were too sweet to die With mind so richly fraught: And who is she for whom my heart, My feelings, harmonize?
59553let me see, it is only six o''clock, only six, you are sure?"
59553love, why"With cypress branches hast thou wreathed thy bowers?"
59553may I take a glass of wine with you, sir?"
59553mother, whither do they lead This wretched form, this drooping frame?
59553my mother?
59553no-- but with all your nose?''
59553obeys the warning?
59553of Aboulfakir the camel, having a taste for solitude and snorting at the sight of a dwelling, and Cafour''s predilection for pestilence?
59553of Milton, with that of Cromwell?
59553or are they born with equal natural endowments in this respect?
59553or insure to superior genius an enduring fame?
59553or is it the result of education in that enlarged sense which I have already explained in my first number?
59553or produce other than wonderful and glorious results?
59553or tune the lyre of poesy to notes celestial?
59553or will the Muse that sings to please the whims and caprices of a court, soar on eagle wings and to mountain heights?
59553patriæ quis exul Se quoque fugit?
59553quibus Pepercit aris?
59553quid intactum nefasti Liquimus?
59553quid terras alio calentes Sole mutamus?
59553replied Ormond,"what could your lordship dream of me?"
59553said Bekir,"is genius thus rewarded?"
59553said Mr. Neville, pointing to them exultingly,"are they not enough to inspire a poet?"
59553said Mr. Neville,"but who have we here?"
59553said he;"what mad freak could induce her to go alone?"
59553said one;"Did you know Miss Catherine was engaged?"
59553said the stranger,"I thank thee for thy sympathy: but tell me?
59553shall we be less free than your ancestors?
59553she exclaimed;"is he dead?
59553tell me why?
59553the boast, the charm of Englishwomen?
59553the destroyer came and went, and the victim-- where was she?
59553then where is truth?"
59553then, since this is Nature''s style, Still changing from her birth, Why trust her false, deceitful smile?
59553thought she;"is not God still in heaven?
59553thundered the monk:"will ye suffer the woman to steal two precious souls from heaven?
59553to live a wretched wanderer, with the brand of Cain on my forehead, and a character stamped with infamy?''
59553to man-- cold calculating man?
59553to what period tend?
59553two members from our community?
59553unde manum juventus Metu Deorum continuit?
59553vous?
59553was I not always with you?
59553was he dull?
59553was he inattentive?
59553was it weal to leave me?
59553was it weal to leave me?
59553was it weal to leave me?
59553was she not happy that she was ever of use?
59553was the salutation which Theodore received when he entered the parlor;"and pray what brings you here?"
59553was this the glorious hymn that Shakspeare hallowed to your praise?
59553what a morning?
59553what also more probable in the course of events?
59553what altars spared?
59553what delicacy hast thou in store for us now, my Glaucus?"
59553what did I not suffer-- what have I not suffered, from this one source?
59553what do you mean?"
59553what in the devil does she mean?"
59553what vice untried disdained?
59553what were they?
59553what''s the matter?"
59553when, shall darkness flee, From the rosy Isles of the sunny sea?
59553where that play and light of countenance which her step,_ her_ voice could formerly call forth?
59553where the ardor of his tone?
59553where the scene of love and harmony he has not attempted to break up and destroy?
59553where?"
59553who of all that surrounded her, could deem she had a_ heart_ to_ break_?
59553why not?
59553will you be afraid to take a turn with me in the garden?"
59553will you let me act towards you as one friend should act towards another?"
59553would nothing but a scripture name satisfy thee?
59553{ 14} What is the gaudy casket, when The priceless jewel''s gone?
59553{ 590} If then Bennett was, as we conjecture, recommended to the assembly by the parliamentary commissioners, what induced them to choose him?
59553{ 667} Heardst thou that shriek?
59553|Swear to love those that love you!--a''nt it just?
6080-In the reports of judicial decisions, writings of eminent lawyers,& c. 59. Who can alter these laws?
60801. Who became Governor on the death of Governor Eden?
60801. Who had been selected to take Colonel Harvey''s place?
60801. Who infested the coast during Governor Johnston''s term?
60801. Who is liable to militia duty?
60801. Who is the first literary man known to North Carolina?
60801. Who made the Constitution?
60801. Who succeeded Governor Drummond as Governor of Albemarle?
60801. Who succeeded Samuel Stephens as Governor?
60801. Who tools the oath of office of Governor in 1754?
60801. Who was President of the United States at this period?
60801. Who was sent from England to succeed John Culpepper as Governor of Carolina?
60801. Who were the original inhabitants of the country now known as North Carolina?
608010. Who are excluded from the count?
608010. Who became Governor after Governor Burke''s capture?
608010. Who succeeded Judge Henderson?
608010. Who was sent against the Indians?
608010. Who was sent to London in the interest of the Presbyterians?
608010. Who were sent to South Carolina?
6080107. Who have the power of removal?
608011 How did the state receive the news of this Federal failure?
608011. Who decides whether acts are constitutional and binding or not?
608011. Who presides when the Governor is impeached?
608011. Who was George Durant?
608012. Who succeeded Governor Nash, and what is said of him?
608012. Who were the men arrested by order of the Governor?
608013. Who must be declared elected?
608016. Who provides for the election of Trustees of the University?
608018. Who has power to provide for the maintenance and management of the University?
60802. Who accompanied Governor Tryon?
60802. Who are exempt?
60802. Who became Governor in 1681?
60802. Who became Governor in 1713?
60802. Who chooses this property?
60802. Who constitute the Executive Department?
60802. Who had made settlements on the American continent a century before the English?
60802. Who was Governor in 1818?
60802. Who was North Carolinas most able representative in Congress?
60802. Who was appointed the first Governor of Albemarle?
60802. Who was chosen Governor in 1862?
60802. Who was the leader of the other great political party?
60802. Who were accused as the murderers of Stephens?
608021. Who constitute the State Board of Education?
608022. Who are its officers?
608026. Who can suspend laws?
608026. Who fixes the times of meeting of the Board?
608028. Who chooses the Speaker and other officers of the House of Representatives?
608028. Who provides for the contingent expenses of the Board?
608029. Who is commander- in- chief of the militia?
608029. Who presides in the Senate ordinarily?
60803. Who chooses these officers?
60803. Who was Governor Vance''s opponent?
60803. Who was Queen of England, and what was the condition of her kingdom?
60803. Who was put in command of the North Carolina troops?
60803. Who was sent over by the Lords Proprietors in 1724 as Governor?
60803. Who were the representative men in the House?
608031, What power has the Senate, independent of the House of Representatives?
608033, What is the style of the acts of Assembly?
608038. Who signs these bills and resolutions?
60804. Who had incited the Indians to the proposed attack on Old Fort?
60804. Who is Commander- in- Chief of the militia?
60804. Who next took charge of Carolina?
60804. Who succeeded Governor Graham in 1849?
60804. Who succeeded Queen Elizabeth?
60804. Who was sent to aid the people of South Carolina?
60804. Who were the Tuscaroras?
608040. Who succeeds the Lieutenant- Governor, and under what circumstances?
608042. Who prescribes the duties of the officers of the Executive Department?
608045. Who constitute the Council of State?
608047. Who is the legal adviser of the Executive Department?
608048. Who establishes the compensation of these officers?
608049. Who appoints the Clerk of the Supreme Court?
60805. Who became Governor after the death of Governor Rice?
60805. Who commanded the Tories?
60805. Who constitutes a court of impeachment in North Carolina, and what vote does it take to convict?
60805. Who has the right to regulate the State government?
60805. Who is Clerk of the Board of Commissioners?
60805. Who selects the homestead?
60805. Who succeeded Governor Vance?
60805. Who succeeded James K. Polk as President of the United States?
60805. Who was Edward, Earl of Clarendon?
60805. Who was Governor in 1696?
60805. Who were chosen to represent North Carolina in that body?
60805. Who were elected?
608051. Who has charge of it?
60806. Who arrived from England, and for what purpose?
60806. Who became military Governor of North Carolina?
60806. Who presided at the trial of Governor Holden?
60806. Who succeeded Governor Caswell?
60806. Who was Lord Ashley?
60806. Who was chosen President of the Convention?
60807. Who had succeeded Governor Davie as Chief- Magistrate?
60807. Who was at the head of the Episcopal Church?
60807. Who was put in command of the Southern forces?
60807. Who was the young man, and what did the queen think of him?
608070. Who elects the Solicitors of the Judicial Districts?
608076. Who elects Constables?
608078. Who have the powers not delegated in the Constitution?
608079. Who may fill vacancies in the offices of Sheriff, Coroner and Constable?
60808. Who can exempt from capitation tax, and for what reason?
60808. Who composed the Committee of Correspondence?
60808. Who next visited the ships?
60808. Who was sent to capture the pirate?
60808. Who was the first Governor of North Carolina under the constitution?
60808. Who were the most eminent Presbyterian divines?
608080. Who fills vacancies in offices created under this Article not specially provided for?
60809. Who became Governor in 1792?
60809. Who constituted the Board of Trustees of the Township by the Constitution, and by whom and when were they to be chosen?
60809. Who was Burrington''s successor?
608090. Who has power to regulate the fines and imprisonments?
608098. Who fills vacancies in the office of Justice of the Peace?
608099. Who fills vacancies in the office of the Superior Court Clerk?
6080?
6080?
6080?
6080?
6080?
6080?
6080?
6080?
6080?
6080About fines and punishment?
6080After death of the owner is the homestead exempt any longer?
6080All moneys, stocks, bonds, and other property, belonging to a county school fund; also, the net proceeds from the sale of?
6080And the General Assembly may give to Justice of the Peace jurisdiction of other civil actions wherein the value of the property in controversy does?
6080Are all slavery and involuntary servitude abolished?
6080Are standing armies allowed?
6080Are the people under any restrictions in changing the form of government?
6080Are they allowed?
6080Are they called Judges?
6080Are they necessarily elected by all the voters of the State?
6080Are they proper?
6080Are"mixed schools"allowed?
6080At what place were the Americans attacked?
6080At what point on the North Carolina coast were fortifications specially needed?
6080At what times and places are the elections held?
6080At whose house did the Legislature meet?
6080Before whom are they opened and published?
6080Before whom taken?
6080By what name are most of the bonds mentioned in the answer to question 17 known?
6080By what name have the Charlotte resolutions always been known?
6080By what name is this institution now known?
6080By what vote must the proposed change pass the General Assembly?
6080By what was it followed?
6080By whom must conviction be made?
6080By whom was his army reinforced?
6080By whom was his command thwarted?
6080By whom were the poor farmers being oppressed?
6080Can a Justice of the Peace call on the Solicitor for legal advice?
6080Can a convention so called to alter the Constitution?
6080Can a less number than thirty- four Senators convict on impeachment?
6080Can a lot in a city,& c., be set apart?
6080Can all convicts be farmed out?
6080Can charters of corporations granted under this section be amended or repealed?
6080Can convicts be hired( or farmed) out to individuals or corporations?
6080Can convicts be made to labor on public works,& c.?
6080Can corporations sue and be sued like natural persons?
6080Can he pardon before the offender is convicted?
6080Can he pardon one impeached?
6080Can her husband signify such assent"by word of mouth"?
6080Can idiots be educated?
6080Can it be changed in any other way?
6080Can it be changed?
6080Can it extend to corruption of blood?
6080Can not such property be made to pay the husband''s debts?
6080Can one House by itself adjourn to any future day, or other place?
6080Can she give her property away by will?
6080Can she sell or give away her property before her death?
6080Can such a debt be collected in our courts?
6080Can tax money raised for one purpose be used for another?
6080Can the Clerks of the Courts inferior to the Supreme Court appeal?
6080Can the Constitution be altered without calling a Convention?
6080Can the Court issue execution against the State?
6080Can the General Assembly abolish capital punishment?
6080Can the General Assembly change the number of districts?
6080Can the General Assembly change this?
6080Can the General Assembly deprive the Judicial Department of its rightful powers,& c?
6080Can the General Assembly enact"compulsory education"?
6080Can the General Assembly establish any courts?
6080Can the General Assembly give jurisdiction to Justices of the Peace over any other matters whatever?
6080Can the General Assembly or a Convention of the people release us from our primary allegiance to the United States?
6080Can the General Assembly regulate appeals?
6080Can the General Assembly take stock in a corporation and pay for the same by bonds of the State accepted at par?
6080Can the Governor or Judges suspend laws?
6080Can the State pay a debt incurred in rebellion against the United States?
6080Can the State pay for emancipated slaves?
6080Can the husband insure his life for the benefit of his wife and children and pay for the policy out of his own money, rather than pay his creditors?
6080Can the income of a farmer from his lands be taxed?
6080Can the militia ever pass out of his authority?
6080Can the owner of the homestead sell it?
6080Can the practice of carrying concealed weapons be prohibited, and how?
6080Can the press be lawfully used for libelous and immoral publications?
6080Can the punishment be made to extend to forfeiture of land or goods?
6080Can these funds be used for any other purpose?
6080Can they ever serve two terms in succession?
6080Can this vote be taken at a special election?
6080Can those accused of petty misdemeanors be utterly deprived of right of trial by jury?
6080Can those hiring convicts punish them as they please?
6080Can you describe the capture of Plymouth by General R. F. Hoke''s command?
6080Can you describe the memorable"Battle of Alamance"?
6080Can you describe the passage of the"Railroad Bill"through the Legislature?
6080Can you give some traits of his character?
6080Can you go to the map and trace the course of this famous retreat?
6080Can you locate it on the map?
6080Can you mention the North Carolina troops sent to Mexico, and their commanders?
6080Can you mention the case of Edward Cooper?
6080Can you mention the legislation at this period affecting school matters?
6080Can you name some of the Judges, of the Superior Court?
6080Can you name some of the exports?
6080Can you name the principal ones?
6080Can you point out this place on the map?
6080Can you repeat the Ordinance of Secession?
6080Can you state something of his life?
6080Can you state the substance of this memorable declaration of independence?
6080Can you tell anything of this valuable production?
6080Can you tell of Burnside''s attack?
6080Can you tell of the surprise at Kinston?
6080Can you tell something of Governor Burrington''s past life?
6080Can you tell something of Major Craig?
6080Can you tell something of his life?
6080Can you tell something of the acts of Herman Husbands in the province?
6080Can you tell something of the condition of society?
6080Can you tell something of the fight at Bentonsville?
6080Can you tell something of the gifted women of the State?
6080Can you tell something of the growth and trade of Wilmington?
6080Can you tell something of the judicial system in that period?
6080Can you tell something of the rights of married women previous to this time?
6080Can you tell something of"Bacon''s Rebellion"?
6080Can you tell the result of the vote upon this question?
6080Can you tell what difficulties had previously existed?
6080Can you tell what is said about protection of the liberties of the people?
6080Can you trace the route of these railroads on the map?
6080Croatan?
6080Describe the Legislature and Congress?
6080Describe the condition of affairs?
6080Describe the engagement on Blackwater River?
6080Did Governor White go to this place to seek his people?
6080Did all charters,& c., relating to municipal corporations, become of no effect on the adoption of this Article?
6080Did he at once go back to relieve the colonists?
6080Did the people claim this when we achieved our independence of Great Britain?
6080Do the Judges preside always in the same district?
6080Do the old forms of actions and suits remain?
6080Does it require a majority of all the qualified voters to pass it?
6080Does it require a majority of all the qualified voters to sanction such loan?
6080Does mere disbelief in an Almighty God disqualify, if such disbelief be not expressed?
6080Does the Declaration of Rights enumerate all the rights possessed by the people?
6080Does the impeachment for a crime indictable in the courts prevent prosecution in the courts?
6080Does the mere commission of an infamous crime disqualify?
6080Does this mean three- fifths of all the members of each House?
6080Does this power extend to the Supreme Court?
6080Does this prohibition apply to past as well as future debts?
6080For what blessings is gratitude to God expressed?
6080For what can Clerks of Courts be removed?
6080For what can they be punished by the proper officer?
6080For what good is government instituted?
6080For what had North Carolina cause to be grateful?
6080For what length of time?
6080For what may Judges be removed?
6080For what may he call them out?
6080For what may houses of correction be provided?
6080For what may houses of refuge be established?
6080For what offences can the punishment of death be inflicted?
6080For what purpose are these restrictions?
6080For what purpose is this declaration made?
6080For what purpose was it made?
6080For what purposes may the people assemble together?
6080For what was the Convention of 1868 held?
6080From what countries had the South expected aid?
6080From what great historical document is this section taken?
6080Give an account of Kirke''s exploits in these counties?
6080Give an account of the Raleigh institute for colored people?
6080Give an account of the attack on this stronghold?
6080Give an account of the battle of Eutaw Springs?
6080Give an account of the duel?
6080Give some account of the battle of Guilford Court House?
6080Has the Constitution of 1868 been amended?
6080Has the State the right to secede from the Union?
6080Has the change been made?
6080Has this section been changed since 1876?
6080How and by whom was the Cape Fear region now being settled?
6080How are Judges of the Superior Courts elected?
6080How are Sheriffs and Coroners chosen?
6080How are householders protected from quartering of soldiers?
6080How are the Senate districts formed?
6080How are the doings of the Ku- Klux considered?
6080How are the events of this period considered?
6080How are the members of the House of Representatives chosen?
6080How are they chiefly represented?
6080How are vacancies in the General Assembly filled?
6080How can the General Assembly pass private laws other than those mentioned in sections 10 and 11?
6080How chosen?
6080How did Burrington''s administration terminate?
6080How did Captain Howe answer him?
6080How did Carey receive Governor Hyde''s demand?
6080How did Caswell consider these things?
6080How did Congress treat him?
6080How did General Gates act?
6080How did General Nash and his troops suffer on this occasion?
6080How did Governor Johnston conduct affairs?
6080How did Governor Lane occupy himself?
6080How did Governor Lane prevent it?
6080How did Governor Martin act concerning the Legislature?
6080How did Governor Martin regard this matter?
6080How did Governor Spottswood, of Virginia, act during this trouble?
6080How did Governor Vance and the people consider these measures?
6080How did Governor Vance supply the wants of the people?
6080How did Governor White become engaged in this conflict?
6080How did Grenville continue English claims to Roanoke?
6080How did Lane regard this story?
6080How did North Carolina respond to the call?
6080How did Thomas Carey become Governor of Albemarle?
6080How did he act concerning Johnston''s surrender?
6080How did he become Governor of North Carolina?
6080How did he disappoint the people who elected him?
6080How did he dispose of the forces?
6080How did he find matters?
6080How did he fulfill the trust?
6080How did he obtain the place?
6080How did he shrink from becoming a member of his league?
6080How did his feelings toward the South undergo a change?
6080How did it affect Raleigh?
6080How did it affect many people?
6080How did it affect the Southern cause?
6080How did it benefit that section?
6080How did our people enjoy peace?
6080How did our people take the many changes in State polity?
6080How did our people view the question of slavery?
6080How did sailors of that period regard the Atlantic Ocean?
6080How did some of the prominent members view the question?
6080How did the Confederate government propose to obtain funds for carrying on the war?
6080How did the North Carolinians consider their departure from the Union?
6080How did the North legislate against this law of Congress?
6080How did the Tryon family become very influential?
6080How did the battle result?
6080How did the circulation of news in 1775 differ from the present?
6080How did the condition of the colonists differ from ours?
6080How did the effort of North Carolina to aid the Virginians terminate?
6080How did the engagement result?
6080How did the engagement result?
6080How did the engagement terminate?
6080How did the men of the South feel concerning the laws of Congress?
6080How did the men of the two sections view the question of representation?
6080How did the new Governor manage affairs?
6080How did the news of this event affect the whole world?
6080How did the offer succeed?
6080How did the people feel towards Colonel Moore and other commanding officers?
6080How did the people invest nearly all their means?
6080How did the people of England receive the news of Sir Humphrey Gilbert''s death?
6080How did the people receive the orders from Governor Stephens?
6080How did the rise in the river benefit the Americans?
6080How did the settlers suffer in consequence?
6080How did the siege terminate?
6080How did the trial terminate?
6080How did the trials at court terminate?
6080How did the victory affect Cornwallis?
6080How did the whole matter end?
6080How did these charges affect the Governor?
6080How did these engagements affect Cornwallis?
6080How did these officers conduct themselves in Edenton?
6080How did they cultivate the soil?
6080How did they live?
6080How did they perform their duty?
6080How did they receive the news of freedom?
6080How did they settle the matter?
6080How did they view the probable election of Mr. Lincoln?
6080How did this Indian''s wife treat the white men?
6080How did this affect North Carolina and the South?
6080How did this appointment affect the Virginians, and why?
6080How did this visit impress the Indians?
6080How do members of the General Assembly vote in elections of officers?
6080How do the people vote for Senators and members of the House?
6080How do the people vote?
6080How does the General Assembly elect officers?
6080How does the State consider the unconstitutional debts?
6080How far had the settlement extended?
6080How far west were the railroads reaching?
6080How had General Grant acted towards the Southern Commonwealth?
6080How had Governor Eden been instructed by the Lords Proprietors?
6080How had Governor Tryon been affected by the resistance of the people to the Stamp Act?
6080How had Great Britain kept the treaty of Paris?
6080How had the Northern States acted in regard to slavery?
6080How had the United States proposed to conduct the campaign?
6080How had the intent of this clause been carried out?
6080How had the slaves acted during the war?
6080How had these men always felt toward their province?
6080How has section 6 been changed?
6080How has the University been benefited by its new management?
6080How has the navigation of the Cape Fear River been improved?
6080How have the agricultural pursuits of the State been benefited?
6080How have they been aided in their efforts?
6080How is Governor Drummond''s name commemorated in the State?
6080How is Governor Martin compared with some of his predecessors?
6080How is he said to have mastered the rudiments of education?
6080How is her name still honored in this State?
6080How is his name commemorated in the State?
6080How is the Clerk of a Superior Court appointed?
6080How is the Superintendent of Public Instruction to know about these county funds?
6080How is the apportionment of Representatives made?
6080How is the fact at issue tried?
6080How is the independence of the Judges secured?
6080How is the influence of lawyers always felt in a community?
6080How is the legislative authority vested?
6080How is the question of slavery further considered?
6080How is their independence secured?
6080How is this Constitution now known?
6080How is this by act of 1876-''77, chapter 141?
6080How is this changed by act of 1876-''77: chapter 141?
6080How long did Governor Drummond stay in North Carolina?
6080How long do Judges,& c., so appointed, hold office?
6080How long do they serve?
6080How long do they serve?
6080How long does the officer so appointed hold his office?
6080How long has it been since this scheme was impressed upon the public?
6080How long must the schools be maintained?
6080How long was Governor Burrington in office, and who succeeded him?
6080How long was Governor White away from Roanoke?
6080How many English vessels did he capture?
6080How many Senators must be present?
6080How many Senators?
6080How many Southern soldiers were lost on this occasion?
6080How many counties were in North Carolina in 1815?
6080How many kinds of minerals are located in this State?
6080How many members required in order to proceed to public business?
6080How many men were landed upon Roanoke Island?
6080How many miles had Greene been pursued by Cornwallis?
6080How many necessary for the transaction of business?
6080How many people composed the colony?
6080How many regiments had the State furnished up to this time?
6080How may the mountains of North Carolina be classed?
6080How may the physical characteristics of the State be easily understood?
6080How much personal property is exempted from execution?
6080How must entails be regulated?
6080How must property be taxed?
6080How must the structure and superintendence of penal institutions,& c., be arranged?
6080How must they provide such schools?
6080How often and when does the election take place?
6080How often can a Judge preside in the same district?
6080How often chosen?
6080How often in each county must the Superior Court be held?
6080How often must bills be read before becoming laws?
6080How shall debts of corporations be secured?
6080How shall justice be administered?
6080How shall the counties he divided for school purposes?
6080How should Governor Holden have viewed the situation?
6080How should the people of North Carolina ever think of Sir Walter Raleigh?
6080How was Albemarle divided?
6080How was Colonel Moore preparing to meet these men from Cross Creek?
6080How was Francis Corbin treated, and why?
6080How was Governor Burke treated?
6080How was Governor Martin affected by Harvey''s success?
6080How was Governor Worth removed from office, and who was put in his place?
6080How was North Carolina feeling the general impulse of improvement?
6080How was a compromise effected in 1879?
6080How was a fleet of pirates received by the Cape Fear men in 1748?
6080How was each of them affected by the visit?
6080How was he beloved in the State?
6080How was he everywhere received by the people?
6080How was he prevented from joining General Braddock?
6080How was his nomination announced?
6080How was it affecting the people?
6080How was it to be reinforced?
6080How was salt obtained?
6080How was that tradition beginning to be fulfilled?
6080How was the General Congress greatly embarrassed?
6080How was the Legislature received by the Governor?
6080How was the Presidential contest of 1860 viewed?
6080How was the South affected by these troubles?
6080How was the South affected by"Squatter Sovereignty"?
6080How was the South compelled to act?
6080How was the State being agitated upon the question of internal improvements?
6080How was the State excited in 1876?
6080How was the colony preparing for war?
6080How was the condition becoming better?
6080How was the election of President, Pierce considered?
6080How was the fund further increased?
6080How was the manner of electing judges changed?
6080How was the new Constitution to be submitted to the people?
6080How was the new county of Rowan becoming settled?
6080How was the news of secession received?
6080How was the news received in North Carolina?
6080How was the port of Wilmington specially important to the Confederacy?
6080How was the question of slavery affecting some of the religious denominations?
6080How was the question of slavery viewed?
6080How was the suggestion received?
6080How was the value of lands increasing?
6080How was theirs a hard lot?
6080How was this colony better prepared for permanent settlement than any of its predecessors?
6080How was this matter considered by General Washington and others?
6080How was this received by the people?
6080How were Eastchurch and Miller rewarded for their betrayal?
6080How were agricultural matters progressing?
6080How were his labors rewarded?
6080How were some men disposed to view the new plan of government?
6080How were the Baptists, Presbyterians and other Christian bodies extending their fields of usefulness?
6080How were the Continental troops benefited by an order of Sir William Howe?
6080How were the French preparing for hostilities?
6080How were the Indians affected by the roar of the artillery?
6080How were the Regulators affected by this"mock judgment"?
6080How were the Tuscaroras acting during this public trouble?
6080How were the colonies considering the question of peace and independence?
6080How were the effects of American freedom felt in Europe?
6080How were the farms conducted?
6080How were the middle and western sections of North Carolina being peopled at this period?
6080How were the ministers of the gospel faithfully performing their duties?
6080How were the people disappointed in Governor Glover?
6080How were the people enduring mental and bodily suffering?
6080How were the people excited by the English Parliament?
6080How were the people of Albemarle occupying themselves during these troublesome times?
6080How were the people of the State divided upon this great question?
6080How were the soldiers''families suffering?
6080How were the works of celebrated French writers affecting the people of America?
6080How were these old suits to be- heard and determined?
6080How were these things affecting the people?
6080How were they taxed?
6080I called and said,"What is the matter, Eddie?"
6080If acquitted, does he pay the costs of his own witnesses,& c.?
6080If not, why not?
6080If so, what?
6080If work is done on a homestead, is such homestead exempt from the mechanic''s or laborer''s lien?
6080In Eighth District?
6080In Fifth District?
6080In Fourth District?
6080In Ninth District?
6080In Second District?
6080In Seventh District?
6080In Sixth District?
6080In Third District?
6080In law suits about property, what kind of a trial is declared best?
6080In such case how do the Houses vote?
6080In what branch of the army were they serving?
6080In what case can the Governor grant pardons,& c.?
6080In what case may they be created by special act?
6080In what characteristics do the American people stand high?
6080In what condition was public sentiment when the Congress met?
6080In what condition was the South in 1863?
6080In what condition was the University?
6080In what condition was the question now seen?
6080In what condition were public affairs when the Congress met?
6080In what condition were public affairs?
6080In what condition were railroads at this time?
6080In what condition were religious matters?
6080In what condition were the institutions of learning at this period?
6080In what condition were the political parties of the country?
6080In what condition were the railroads?
6080In what courts is the judicial power vested?
6080In what did the government consist at that time?
6080In what manner are commissions to officers,& c., authenticated?
6080In what manner must a convention of the people be called?
6080In what mode are county taxes to be levied?
6080In what modes can traitors be convicted?
6080In what name are grants of lands,& c., issued, and how are they authenticated?
6080In what new scheme do we find Governor Berkeley taking part?
6080In what part of North Carolina were the Tuscaroras found?
6080In what part of the State is this settlement?
6080In what respect was this an important victory?
6080In what scheme was Governor Martin found engaged?
6080In what things were the people of the interior and west becoming specially interested?
6080In what way did trade matters begin to improve at the capital?
6080In what way may corporations be formed?
6080In whom is political power vested?
6080In whom is the supreme executive power?
6080In whose honor was Carolina named?
6080Into how many districts is the State divided by the Constitution?
6080Into how many natural divisions is the State formed?
6080Into what precincts and counties was North Carolina divided?
6080Into what trouble did Husbands next fall?
6080Is appeal allowed in criminal cases also?
6080Is every widow entitled to such privileges?
6080Is he a Senator?
6080Is her husband''s assent necessary to such sale,& c.?
6080Is her husband''s assent necessary to the validity of her will?
6080Is it any offence against the laws of North Carolina for its citizens to fight in another State?
6080Is it exempt from execution only?
6080Is it lawful to have the schools for one race superior to those of the other?
6080Is it liable for any other debt besides taxes?
6080Is not this provision for a jury of six violating Article I, section 19?
6080Is our allegiance first due to the United States or to North Carolina?
6080Is section 10 obsolete?
6080Is section 11 obsolete?
6080Is section 26 obsolete?
6080Is section 33 obsolete?
6080Is such legislation final?
6080Is the American Union a confederacy of States, or a nation of the people of the States?
6080Is the Constitution of North Carolina higher than the Acts passed by the General Assembly?
6080Is the Constitution of North Carolina the highest law?
6080Is the General Assembly bound to carry out the decision of the Court?
6080Is the General Assembly bound to levy such tax?
6080Is the challenged party, who accepts the challenge, disqualified if no fight occurs?
6080Is the challenger disqualified if the other party declines to fight?
6080Is the homestead liable for taxes?
6080Is the person who carries the challenge disqualified if no fight occurs?
6080Is the right to bear arms secured?
6080Is the special tax to be levied when the bonds of the State are at par?
6080Is there any exception to this?
6080Is there exception to this?
6080Is there further amendment?
6080Is there no exception to this?
6080Is there recognition of God in it?
6080Is this State bound to prevent other States from seceding from the Union?
6080Mention some circumstances of the trial of Husbands?
6080Mention some laws which were passed concerning the Congress?
6080Mention the political opinions to be found in the State upon these questions?
6080Must a man own property in order to vote or hold office?
6080Must the Justice write down the proceedings?
6080Must the names of the members voting be entered on the journal when these laws are passed?
6080Of fogs, snow and ice?
6080Of gold and iron?
6080Of precious gems?
6080Of railroads?
6080Of the Fundamental Constitutions?
6080Of the Piedmont?
6080Of the Tidewater?
6080Of the rainfall?
6080Of towns and factories?
6080Of what State was President Polk a native?
6080Of what body did Raleigh soon become a member?
6080Of what criminal matters have they jurisdiction?
6080Of what did the English commander complain?
6080Of what does this chapter treat?
6080Of what does this chapter treat?
6080Of what does this chapter treat?
6080Of what does this lesson treat?
6080Of what extortions did the people complain?
6080Of what had Governor Eden been charged?
6080Of what was it built?
6080Of whom did Governor Dinwiddie ask aid?
6080On what battle field did the North Carolina troops specially distinguish themselves on October 4th?
6080On whom did the government next devolve?
6080On whom is the duty of organizing cities, towns and incorporated villages?
6080On whom must it be levied?
6080Over what ages would this compulsory education extend?
6080Over what courts has it control?
6080Over what section of country did Governor Berkeley have no authority?
6080Pamlico Sound?
6080S. What was the further result of this affair?
6080Section 20 62. Who appoints the Justices of the Supreme Court?
6080Section 9 32. Who nominates officers not otherwise provided for in the Constitution?
6080Section?
6080Should he have a speedy trial?
6080Should the penal and charitable institutions be made self- supporting?
6080Suppose an issue of fact is joined before a justice, can he decide it?
6080Suppose either party demands a jury?
6080Suppose no election is held for such offices?
6080Suppose she acquires property after marriage, does she or her husband own it?
6080Suppose successors do not qualify?
6080Suppose the General Assembly should attempt to change either of these sections?
6080Suppose the action is not founded on contract, where is it to be tried?
6080Suppose the title to land is in question?
6080Suppose those elected refuse to qualify?
6080Supposing indictments to be pending at the adoption of the Constitution, what is the rule in regard to their punishments?
6080Supposing the General Assembly to establish other courts, who chooses the Judges and other officers?
6080Supposing the Governor desires information regarding the duties of officers of the Executive Department, what can he require?
6080Supposing the bonds are not at par, in what cases are the special taxes not required?
6080Supposing the county desires to exceed this limit for a special purpose?
6080Supposing the owner dies leaving a widow, but no children-- from what is the homestead exempt, and how long?
6080Supposing two- thirds of one House, and a majority not two- thirds of the other House, vote for removal, what is the result?
6080The Governor shall have power, on extraordinary occasions, by and with the advice of the Council of State, to convene the General Assembly?
6080The Nottoways?
6080The educational?
6080Through what inlet did vessels enter the sound?
6080Through whose efforts was the Supreme Court established?
6080Through whose instrumentality was the appropriation made for the Insane Asylum?
6080To what State did he go?
6080To what amount must it be equal?
6080To what body are the nominations sent?
6080To what class do the rocks of the Eastern section belong?
6080To what does the Board of Education succeed?
6080To what extent did North Carolina sympathize with the general government?
6080To what extent did the province prepare resistance?
6080To what judge did the people next go for protection?
6080To what locality was the name"Virginia"then confined?
6080To what office was W. W. Holden appointed?
6080To what period had the people of North Carolina been looking forward since the close of the war?
6080To what place did the Tuscaroras emigrate in 1802?
6080To what place was Colonel Ferguson sent?
6080To what place was General Howe then transferred?
6080To what point was attention next directed?
6080To what post- office?
6080To what profession did he devote himself?
6080To what purpose must the capitation tax be applied?
6080To whom are all the returns of election sent?
6080To whom did he communicate his plans?
6080To whom did he go for aid, and with what success?
6080To whom did the people apply for aid?
6080To whom were most of the Southern people giving support?
6080Under what circumstances can an extra session of the General Assembly be called?
6080Under what circumstances can the people change the form of government?
6080Under what circumstances did the news reach the Governor?
6080Under what circumstances does the Lieutenant- Governor assume the powers,& c., of the Governor?
6080Under whose order was the election for delegates held?
6080Under whose supervision,& c., are these convicts?
6080Upon what did General Lee resolve after the victory?
6080Upon what ground was this denied?
6080Upon what was the Legislature determined?
6080Was any settlement on Roanoke at this time?
6080Was there not a Constitution adopted in 1866?
6080Was this prohibition in the Constitution of 1876?
6080Were any further efforts made to plant a colony at Roanoke?
6080Were there any settlements in North Carolina before this time?
6080What British forces were in North Carolina after the departure of Cornwallis?
6080What Confederate soldier was slain?
6080What Governor was elected in 1844?
6080What Governors had served in North Carolina during the years just considered?
6080What North Carolina naval officer was distinguishing himself?
6080What North Carolina troops captured General Hancock''s position?
6080What North Carolinians are mentioned as having risen to prominence?
6080What North Carolinians are named among the slain?
6080What Southern cities were blockaded?
6080What State officer died at this period?
6080What State refused to recognize the legality of slave property?
6080What States were added to the Union?
6080What about the issue of money?
6080What account did the mariners give of the new country?
6080What account of the western country was given by Dr, Brickell on his return?
6080What act was passed by the North Carolina Legislature?
6080What act was passed concerning taxes?
6080What action was taken by the Convention of 1835 in regard to free negroes?
6080What acts had somewhat prevented the arrival of this state of affairs?
6080What addition to the School Fund did North Carolina receive in 1837?
6080What additional piece of land was given to the Lords Proprietors in 1665?
6080What advantage has Raleigh derived from the Cotton Exchange?
6080What advice did the Governor seek?
6080What aid came from South Carolina?
6080What announcement was made by Carey at the meeting of the Assembly?
6080What appropriations from Congress has North Carolina received through efforts of her Senators?
6080What are bills called after such signatures?
6080What are ex- post facto laws?
6080What are its eastern and western boundaries?
6080What are some of North Carolina''s commercial advantages?
6080What are some of the productions of the Mountain section?
6080What are some of these writs called?
6080What are the concluding reflections upon this great national calamity?
6080What are the duties of the County Commissioners by the Constitution?
6080What are the duties of this Board?
6080What are the most important employments in a State?
6080What are the objects of punishment?
6080What are the punishments lawful in North Carolina?
6080What are the qualifications for the offices of Governor and Lieutenant- Governor?
6080What are the qualifications of a Senator?
6080What are the reflections upon this matter?
6080What are the school ages?
6080What are the soils of this division?
6080What are the thoughts upon this period?
6080What are their duties?
6080What are their terms of office?
6080What are"general warrants"?
6080What authority can make exemptions from militia duty?
6080What authority determines the places of voting?
6080What authority directs the manner of submission to the people?
6080What authority has the right to prescribe rules for so securing corporation dues?
6080What authority lays down the rule for restoration to rights of citizenship?
6080What authority prescribes the day of meeting?
6080What authority prescribes the rules in regard to farming out convicts?
6080What authority provides rules for registration?
6080What battle was fought on September 11th, 1777?
6080What became of Miller and Culpepper?
6080What became of the small supply of cotton?
6080What became of the"Spanish Armada"?
6080What became of this colony?
6080What becomes of the property of a woman marrying?
6080What befell Baron de Graffenreid and John Lawson?
6080What befell Governor Vance?
6080What befell Sothel on his way to Carolina?
6080What befell the command on the route?
6080What benefit was derived from it?
6080What benefit was derived from their labors?
6080What better future prosperity is yet to be attained by the State?
6080What calamity befell the colony?
6080What calamity befell the country on July 2d, 1881?
6080What call was made upon North Carolina by Mr. Lincoln?
6080What can you tell of Mrs. Sarah Drummond?
6080What can you tell of the Stamp Act?
6080What can you tell of the various cotton factories?
6080What canal had been completed?
6080What changes did Governor Holden make in the Supreme Court?
6080What changes had been made in 1876 in North Carolina public officers?
6080What changes had taken place in the English government?
6080What changes in the government of the State are now mentioned?
6080What changes were made in the Confederate States Senate?
6080What changes were made in the Constitution?
6080What changes were made in the Supreme Court?
6080What changes were noticed in North Carolina in 1836?
6080What changes were noticed in the colony?
6080What charge shall be made for tuition?
6080What charitable institution had been opened by the Masons?
6080What charitable institutions were provided for at this session?
6080What checked the liberal spirit of the South concerning slavery?
6080What chief town or towns in First District?
6080What classes may be provided for at the expense of the State?
6080What clause was in the first State Constitution?
6080What colony did he form in 1665?
6080What colony entered Hampton Roads in 1607?
6080What compensation do members receive, and how long?
6080What complaint was made by the Baptists and Quakers?
6080What composed General Branch''s command?
6080What contest would generally arise at meetings of the Assembly?
6080What convention met in Hillsboro in 1788?
6080What convention was to meet in 1787?
6080What convicts can not be farmed out?
6080What county officers are to be elected?
6080What course had Governor Vance pursued?
6080What credit is due La Fayette?
6080What deaths of prominent men occurred about this period?
6080What debts are counties,& c., forbidden to pay, or levy taxes for?
6080What debts are forbidden to be paid or assumed in any way unless by a vote of the people?
6080What declaration was made by him?
6080What denominational schools were founded about this time?
6080What department besides those heretofore named must be established by the General Assembly?
6080What departments in connection with the University must the General Assembly establish?
6080What devotion did Miss Dix give to this subject?
6080What did Clinton do after the capitulation?
6080What did General Greene do three days later?
6080What did General Greene find it necessary to do to cover his retreat?
6080What did General Jackson and his party advocate?
6080What did Governor Graham say of the North Carolina troops at Chancellorsville?
6080What did Governor Lane find to be the condition of affairs upon his return to the settlement?
6080What did Governor White do in a few weeks after his arrival at Roanoke?
6080What did Governor White find?
6080What did Judge Brooks do?
6080What did Miller do in the meantime?
6080What did Mr. Lincoln learn from these battles?
6080What did Queen Elizabeth think of the description?
6080What did Sir Walter Raleigh next do?
6080What did Willie Jones consider necessary for the people?
6080What did daylight reveal?
6080What did he determine to do?
6080What did he find on his return?
6080What did he find upon his arrival at Wilmington?
6080What did he incur thereby?
6080What did it involve?
6080What did some of the Southern States intend to do?
6080What did the Convention do with the Constitution?
6080What did the Council of Safety do?
6080What did the Governor do concerning the Assembly?
6080What did the Governor do on January 6th?
6080What did the Governor say of these things?
6080What did the Indians think of this treatment?
6080What did the colonists resolve to do?
6080What did the expeditions cost him?
6080What did the people do?
6080What did the queen grant to these two men?
6080What did the ships carry back to Europe?
6080What did they call their colony?
6080What did they name their city?
6080What did they name this place?
6080What different opinion was held by other leading men?
6080What disaster befell the expedition?
6080What disposition was made of the captives?
6080What distinguished British officer entered the Cape Fear?
6080What distinguished Frenchman visited North Carolina in the year 1825?
6080What distinguished person have we now under consideration?
6080What divisions had rung up between the eastern and western men of the State?
6080What do our rivers afford?
6080What do the events of this lesson teach us?
6080What do the presiding officers receive?
6080What do you mean by the"privileges of the writ of Habeas Corpus"?
6080What doctors had charge of the hospitals?
6080What does the knowledge of the geology of a State afford?
6080What duties has he to perform in regard to the General Assembly?
6080What duties has the General Assembly in regard to militia?
6080What duty had the colonists entrusted to Eastchurch?
6080What duty has the General Assembly in regard to courts for citie and towns?
6080What duty has the Lieutenant- Governor in regard to the Senate?
6080What duty, did the Commissioners of 1868 have?
6080What educational institutions are mentioned?
6080What educational progress was being made?
6080What educational progress was being made?
6080What effect had his administration upon every portion of the world?
6080What effect has the finding of the Judge in such case upon the facts?
6080What effects were seen from the growth of the churches?
6080What effort did Raleigh make to find these people?
6080What efforts was Dr. Joseph Caldwell putting forth for the advancement of the State?
6080What else is afforded by geology?
6080What else is said of North Carolina''s commercial prospects?
6080What else must be read three times?
6080What enemy was besieging them?
6080What event is mentioned?
6080What events were occurring in the West?
6080What excellent varieties of grape are natives of North Carolina?
6080What exception to the general rule?
6080What exception to the general rule?
6080What exception to this rule?
6080What excitement was created in the west by this donation?
6080What exemptions are allowed, and to what extent?
6080What exemptions are required?
6080What expedition came to Carolina in 1663?
6080What expedition was coming to Wilmington?
6080What expedition was sent out at this time?
6080What fact has been proven concerning fish?
6080What famous pirate was ravaging the coast about this time?
6080What fatal accident befell Dr. Elisha Mitchell in 1857?
6080What favorite trunk- line has long been desired?
6080What female school is now mentioned?
6080What female schools are mentioned?
6080What female seminaries are now mentioned?
6080What fierce battle was fought on May 2d and 3d?
6080What followed the seating of Governor Hayes as President?
6080What force was sent to Virginia?
6080What force was sent to defend Albermarle Sound?
6080What forces were removed from Fort Fisher?
6080What formal ceremony did Amadas and Barlowe conduct?
6080What fort was next surrendered?
6080What fundamental truths are declared?
6080What funds are set apart for support of the schools?
6080What funds do the counties have charge of for school purposes?
6080What further account is given of his treatment?
6080What further is said of Mrs. Drummond?
6080What further is said of de Graffenreid?
6080What further is said of this affair?
6080What further is said of this particular branch of North Carolina''s wealth?
6080What further prosperity is noticed?
6080What generals were put in command?
6080What good influence was exerted by his opinion?
6080What good resulted to the whole country from this victory?
6080What great congregations were found in various places during the summer?
6080What great event occurred at Charlotte?
6080What great forces were marching against Johnston?
6080What great general was in command of all this force?
6080What great grief came upon the nation at this period?
6080What great leaders disappeared from North Carolina''s councils at this time?
6080What great preacher came to North Carolina in 1765?
6080What great resources does North Carolina possess?
6080What great territory was purchased?
6080What great trouble did General Greene foresee?
6080What great victory was gained in America at this period?
6080What growth was noticed in the Union during the years just considered?
6080What growth was seen among the Methodist churches?
6080What had Congress done concerning martial law?
6080What had North Carolina gained by the war?
6080What had become of the various educational funds?
6080What had been provided for in the Halifax Constitution?
6080What had been the annual profit to the Proprietors from the colony?
6080What had been the disposition of the insane before this?
6080What had been the hope of many of our people?
6080What had been the increase of population in North Carolina?
6080What had been the production in North Carolina?
6080What had the Governor begun to realize?
6080What had the Northern States done with their slaves?
6080What had the expedition cost Raleigh?
6080What happened to General Greene at Salisbury?
6080What has been the general condition of literary matters in the State?
6080What has been the result of their labors?
6080What has retarded the State''s progress?
6080What has the General Assembly power to tax without being compelled to do so?
6080What have been the causes of the rapid growth of the towns in the state?
6080What have been the labors of this institution?
6080What have been the peculiar successes of the Bingham School?
6080What have been the results of the hatchery?
6080What help arrived from England?
6080What honors were conferred upon Governor Davie?
6080What important branches of industry are mentioned?
6080What important news was received?
6080What important railway is now mentioned?
6080What important step was suggesting itself to the people?
6080What important thing was accomplished under this administration?
6080What inconsistencies were observed in the management of affairs at Washington?
6080What increased the grief of Colonel Tew''s people?
6080What indignities were offered to the American people?
6080What inducements were offered to the English to go to Carolina and settle?
6080What interesting circumstance is relayed of the queen?
6080What is a Constitution?
6080What is a"restricted convention"?
6080What is allowable for the General Assembly to do?
6080What is another name for"capitation tax"?
6080What is declared about freedom of the press?
6080What is done if the Lieutenant- Governor loses the office of Governor during the recess of the General Assembly?
6080What is done in case of a tie?
6080What is done in case of a vacancy?
6080What is done in regard to distinctions between actions at law and suits in equity?
6080What is done when the Lieutenant- Governor can not preside in the Senate?
6080What is done with feigned issues?
6080What is done with the decisions of the Court in such cases?
6080What is done with the money when he dies?
6080What is done with their proceedings?
6080What is done with these reports?
6080What is his compensation?
6080What is his term of office?
6080What is known of him after this?
6080What is necessary before the General Assembly can give or lend the credit of the State to individuals or corporations?
6080What is necessary in order to levy and collect taxes more than for necessary expenses?
6080What is necessary to enable a county or other municipal corporation to contract debts, pledge its faith, or loan its credit?
6080What is necessary to enable money to be drawn from county or township treasuries?
6080What is necessary to enable money to be drawn from the Treasury of the State?
6080What is necessary to preserve the blessings of liberty?
6080What is necessary to the validity of the deed?
6080What is one of the first duties of a civilized State?
6080What is said about trial by jury in controversies about property?
6080What is said of Bishop Ravenscroft?
6080What is said of General Brown''s past record?
6080What is said of General Washington?
6080What is said of Governor Holden?
6080What is said of Governor John Branch?
6080What is said of Governor Pollock?
6080What is said of Governor Worth?
6080What is said of Grant''s campaign?
6080What is said of Jefferson''s rule?
6080What is said of Judge Thomas Ruffin?
6080What is said of Lee''s army?
6080What is said of Lord Cornwallis?
6080What is said of Major Engelhard?
6080What is said of Manteo?
6080What is said of North Carolina''s hopes?
6080What is said of North Carolina''s mineral wealth?
6080What is said of President Andrew Johnson?
6080What is said of President Madison''s administration?
6080What is said of President Polk?
6080What is said of Queen Elizabeth as a ruler?
6080What is said of Raleigh as a trade centre?
6080What is said of Robeson county, and Henry Berry Lowery and his"Swamp Angels"?
6080What is said of Samuel Swan and Edward Moseley?
6080What is said of Sir John Yeamans?
6080What is said of St. Mary''s School?
6080What is said of Trinity College and its work?
6080What is said of Wilmington and its defences?
6080What is said of affairs on the seas?
6080What is said of corundum and mica?
6080What is said of cotton and slave property?
6080What is said of educational matters at this period?
6080What is said of educational matters?
6080What is said of ex- Governor Bragg?
6080What is said of him as a commander?
6080What is said of him?
6080What is said of him?
6080What is said of immigration to North Carolina?
6080What is said of industrial pursuits in North Carolina?
6080What is said of internal improvements?
6080What is said of its commercial interests?
6080What is said of little Virginia Dare?
6080What is said of mining?
6080What is said of musical compositions?
6080What is said of other colleges?
6080What is said of other schools?
6080What is said of our water power?
6080What is said of political animosities and the general prosperity of the State?
6080What is said of political animosities?
6080What is said of prominent lawyers?
6080What is said of secret societies?
6080What is said of the Ad- Vance?
6080What is said of the Atlantic coast during this period?
6080What is said of the Bar at this period?
6080What is said of the British victory?
6080What is said of the Catawba grape?
6080What is said of the Convention and elections of 1868?
6080What is said of the Eastern or''Tidewater''section?
6080What is said of the Grand Assembly?
6080What is said of the Halifax declaration?
6080What is said of the Israelites?
6080What is said of the Ku- Klux?
6080What is said of the Orphan Asylum?
6080What is said of the Presidential campaign of 1852?
6080What is said of the Presidential contest of 1876?
6080What is said of the St. Augustine Normal School?
6080What is said of the State at this period?
6080What is said of the Superior Courts and the Judges?
6080What is said of the Tories?
6080What is said of the University?
6080What is said of the Western Convention of 1823?
6080What is said of the accomplishment of these improvements?
6080What is said of the agricultural interest of the State?
6080What is said of the approaching election?
6080What is said of the arrest of Mason and Slidell?
6080What is said of the attainments of Dr. Hugh Williamson?
6080What is said of the attempted settlement upon Roanoke Island?
6080What is said of the centennial celebration at Charlotte?
6080What is said of the climate of North Carolina?
6080What is said of the close of Governor Dobbs''life?
6080What is said of the conclusion of this matter?
6080What is said of the correspondence of that day?
6080What is said of the cultivation of flax?
6080What is said of the depreciation of the Confederate currency?
6080What is said of the efforts of the colored people to secure education?
6080What is said of the end of the war of 1812?
6080What is said of the events at this period?
6080What is said of the events of the past few years?
6080What is said of the extension of the Raleigh& Gaston Railroad?
6080What is said of the extraordinary rise in the price of cotton?
6080What is said of the fall of New Bern?
6080What is said of the fourth Provincial Congress?
6080What is said of the freedom of the slaves?
6080What is said of the gallant charge of the Fifth Regiment at Williamsburg?
6080What is said of the graded schools?
6080What is said of the grapes of North Carolina?
6080What is said of the great General Lee?
6080What is said of the improvement in the means of catching fish?
6080What is said of the law?
6080What is said of the literary efforts of Colonel Wheeler and Dr Wiley?
6080What is said of the memorable convention of 1835?
6080What is said of the men who composed the Congress?
6080What is said of the mountain gaps?
6080What is said of the new land?
6080What is said of the ode to Carolina and its author?
6080What is said of the period now reached?
6080What is said of the place?
6080What is said of the plants and trees?
6080What is said of the population?
6080What is said of the port of Wilmington?
6080What is said of the present means of travel?
6080What is said of the production of peanuts?
6080What is said of the production of turpentine and tar?
6080What is said of the prosperity of the city of Charlotte?
6080What is said of the railway charters?
6080What is said of the re- election of Governor Vance in 1864?
6080What is said of the representation in the General Assembly?
6080What is said of the schools at Charlotte and Davidson?
6080What is said of the seasons?
6080What is said of the sixteenth century of the world''s history?
6080What is said of the soil?
6080What is said of the soils of the secondary formation?
6080What is said of the success of Wake Forest College?
6080What is said of the surrender of Cornwallis?
6080What is said of the terrible struggle of the women and children?
6080What is said of the tobacco peddlers?
6080What is said of the two ladies?
6080What is said of the victory at Moore''s Creek?
6080What is said of the western fruit growers?
6080What is said of the"Federalists"?
6080What is said of the"Special Tax Bonds"?
6080What is said of the"Wilmot Proviso"and"Fugitive Slave Law"?
6080What is said of the"old- field schools"?
6080What is said of these internal improvements?
6080What is said of these men?
6080What is said of these troublesome years?
6080What is said of this Legislature?
6080What is said of this Provincial congress?
6080What is said of this attempt to found a colony?
6080What is said of this battle?
6080What is said of this campaign?
6080What is said of this class of our population?
6080What is said of this condition of affairs?
6080What is said of this election?
6080What is said of this event?
6080What is said of this great trial?
6080What is said of this institution during the years of reconstruction?
6080What is said of this new party?
6080What is said of this section?
6080What is said or North Carolina''s forces in the wars?
6080What is said, of his visit to the University?
6080What is section 13?
6080What is section 7?
6080What is section 9?
6080What is supposed to have been the meaning of the word"Croatan"?
6080What is the Governor''s duty in regard to pardons,& c., after granted?
6080What is the court for trial of impeachments?
6080What is the duty of the General Assembly in regard to a penitentiary?
6080What is the duty of the General Assembly in regard to education at the University?
6080What is the duty of the General Assembly in regard to public schools?
6080What is the general provision in regard to terms of office?
6080What is the general rule as to qualifications for holding office?
6080What is the greatest duty of the Governor?
6080What is the history of this colony?
6080What is the jurisdiction of this Court on appeals?
6080What is the least in the House of Representatives?
6080What is the least number which can possibly convict?
6080What is the least vote by which it could pass in the Senate?
6080What is the limit of county taxation, for general purposes?
6080What is the limit?
6080What is the maximum amount which can be applied to the support of the poor?
6080What is the maximum capitation tax under this section?
6080What is the maximum property tax?
6080What is the meaning of the term"corporation"as used in this Article?
6080What is the name of the actions prosecuted by the State for a public offence?
6080What is the name of the districts so formed?
6080What is the name of the form of actions in use?
6080What is the number of votes necessary in the Senate?
6080What is the object of the"equation of taxes"?
6080What is the present name of that great territory?
6080What is the provision about divorce and alimony?
6080What is the rule as to counties not having a hundred- and- twentieth part of the population?
6080What is the rule in regard to double office?
6080What is the rule in regard to dueling?
6080What is the rule of taxation in county and other municipal corporations?
6080What is the seal of the State called?
6080What is the sincere desire of every true North Carolina patriot?
6080What is the subject of this chapter?
6080What is the subject of this lesson?
6080What is the subject of this lesson?
6080What is the term of office?
6080What is the term of office?
6080What is the term of office?
6080What is their duty in regard to escheats, unclaimed dividends and distributive shares?
6080What is their term of office?
6080What is their term of office?
6080What is their term of office?
6080What is this chapter about?
6080What is this lesson about?
6080What is this lesson about?
6080What is this period called in the history of North Carolina?
6080What is this proceeding termed?
6080What is treason against the State?
6080What is vested in these Trustees?
6080What island was discovered?
6080What joyful news was received on June 13th, 1766?
6080What jurisdiction have Justices of the Peace over civil actions?
6080What jurisdiction over issues and questions of fact?
6080What kind of a man was George, Duke of Albemarle?
6080What kind of a man was Governor Stephens?
6080What kind of a man was King James I.?
6080What kind of man was General Gates?
6080What kind of man was Governor Rowan?
6080What kind of man was Governor Sothel?
6080What kind of man was he?
6080What kind of man was he?
6080What kind of people were the Indians?
6080What kind of property so belongs to the wife?
6080What kind of trade was carried on between Carolina and New England?
6080What land frauds were perpetrated in 1795?
6080What land is exempt, and of what value?
6080What large purchase was made in 1729?
6080What law was enacted concerning a convention?
6080What law was enacted concerning marriage?
6080What law was passed by the Assembly?
6080What law was passed by the Legislature in favor of the inventor of the cotton gin?
6080What law was passed?
6080What laws has been enacted concert concerning education?
6080What laws must be enacted?
6080What laws must be read three times in each House, on three separate days?
6080What laws of North Carolina are in force?
6080What legislation is mentioned favoring the colored people?
6080What legislation is prohibited to the General Assembly?
6080What letters were received during the session?
6080What losses had North Carolina sustained in the battle of Sharpsburg?
6080What majority must be had to sanction such payment or assumption?
6080What man from Albemarle?
6080What man was put in charge of the state troops?
6080What marriages are prohibited?
6080What matters occupied the attention of the people in North Carolina after the Revolution?
6080What measures were being advocated by Mr. Holden and his followers?
6080What members of the Bar have produced legal works of great value?
6080What memorable event occurred in 1749?
6080What memorable law was passed by Parliament?
6080What men had advocated the provisions of the Constitution?
6080What men met General Sherman''s army in behalf of the city of Raleigh?
6080What mention is made of Chief- Justice Taylor?
6080What mention is made of Fayetteville, Asheville and Statesville?
6080What mention is made of religious matters?
6080What mention is made of the Bingham school?
6080What mention is made of the candidates for Governor?
6080What mention is made of the manufacture of stronger liquors?
6080What mention is made of the public charities?
6080What mention is made of the sounds?
6080What mention is made of the"Atticus Letter?"
6080What mileage?
6080What military movements were made in Virginia?
6080What military preparations were made in North Carolina?
6080What modes of prosecution are prescribed?
6080What move did Cornwallis make?
6080What movement did General Johnston attempt after the surrender of General Lee?
6080What must be done about contested elections?
6080What must be done with the account of receipts and expenditures?
6080What must be done with the journals of each House?
6080What must be observed in levying tax acts, i.e.,"Revenue Acts"?
6080What must he do with the record?
6080What must the General Assembly do for destitute orphans?
6080What must the General Assembly do in regard to idiots?
6080What must the General Assembly do to carry out this duty?
6080What must then be done with the proposed amendment?
6080What name did she give to the new country, and why?
6080What name is given to this majority?
6080What name was given to the new State, and why?
6080What name was given to the territory now granted?
6080What new enterprise was inaugurated in 1878?
6080What new grant of this territory was made in 1663?
6080What new party was organized in Massachusetts?
6080What new trouble came upon Raleigh?
6080What noble woman is mentioned, and what is said of her?
6080What not abolished?
6080What noted man in England had charge of American affairs?
6080What noted man is now mentioned?
6080What noted man was Speaker of the House?
6080What notice must Clerks have of proceedings against them?
6080What notice must be given?
6080What number in the House of Representatives?
6080What number of troops did General Nash raise toward the defence North Carolina?
6080What oath does the Governor take?
6080What oath does the officer take?
6080What oath is necessary to registration?
6080What oath or affirmation must each member take?
6080What occurred at Colonel Alston''s house?
6080What occurred at Elizabethtown?
6080What occurred at Fort Johnston?
6080What occurred at Kinston?
6080What occurred at Petersburg?
6080What occurred at Savannah on December 29th, 1778?
6080What occurred at Sherrill''s Ford?
6080What occurred at Washington City?
6080What occurred at Winchester?
6080What occurred at Yanceyville on May 21st?
6080What occurred before the inauguration of Mr. Lincoln?
6080What occurred during the night while the two armies were encamped on opposite sides of the river?
6080What occurred in 1583?
6080What occurred in 1715?
6080What occurred in 1740?
6080What occurred in Alamance county?
6080What occurred in England on the return of the ships?
6080What occurred on August 15th, 1780?
6080What occurred on December 25th, 1864?
6080What occurred on February 20th?
6080What occurred on January 28th, 1776?
6080What occurred on June 9th?
6080What occurred on March 15th, 1781?
6080What occurred on her arrival?
6080What occurred on the 13th?
6080What occurred on the second day after their arrival?
6080What of members of the House?
6080What officer has charge of these funds?
6080What officer was in command?
6080What officer was sent to take the place of General Gates in the South?
6080What officer went to attack Fanning?
6080What officers constitute the Supreme Court?
6080What officers report to the Governor?
6080What old law was revived?
6080What orders did the Governor receive from Washington?
6080What orders were brought by Porter?
6080What original jurisdiction has the Supreme Court?
6080What other State in the Union originated in this way?
6080What other States also failed to ratify?
6080What other duty has the General Assembly in regard to the militia?
6080What other great disaster happened at this time?
6080What other great industry is now considered?
6080What other historians are mentioned, and what is said of them?
6080What other historical writers are mentioned who have contributed to the State valuable series of school books?
6080What other important law was enacted at this session?
6080What other industry is described?
6080What other military movements were mentioned?
6080What other occurrence is mentioned?
6080What other officers are spoken of?
6080What other officers were to be elected in the townships?
6080What other party was formed?
6080What other schools are mentioned?
6080What other schools are mentioned?
6080What other seaman was distinguishing himself for his bravery?
6080What other seaport city is now mentioned?
6080What other species of trade is found in the eastern counties?
6080What other traits of character did she possess?
6080What other unfortunates are classed with idiots?
6080What others are mentioned in this connection?
6080What part did Governor Drummond take, and what was the result?
6080What party came into power in 1800?
6080What party next originated?
6080What party was led by Henry Clay?
6080What party was victor in the great struggle?
6080What people laid claim to the American continent, and why?
6080What period have we now reached in our history?
6080What period have we now reached?
6080What persecutions were common in Virginia?
6080What persons are disqualified?
6080What plan was adopted towards paying off the soldiers?
6080What plot was discovered?
6080What political changes were seen at Washington City?
6080What political changes were seen in the Presidential campaign of 1872?
6080What political opinions were expressed by the people in their votes?
6080What portion of the State do they water?
6080What portion of this debt was considered an honorable burden?
6080What position did Colonel Sevier afterwards occupy?
6080What position did his native ability give him?
6080What positions were taken by Presidents Lincoln and Davis?
6080What power has the General Assembly in regard to methods of proceedings?
6080What power of legislation has the Board?
6080What powers did they have, and for what purpose?
6080What powers has each House by itself?
6080What powers should the General Assembly restrict?
6080What preparations for war were made by the State, even before its secession?
6080What preparations were made for a fight at Lindley''s Mill?
6080What preparations were made towards attacking Ferguson?
6080What previous settlement had been made in this same vicinity?
6080What private schools were in operation, and where were they?
6080What privileges does the widow enjoy, and how long?
6080What privileges were denied the slaves?
6080What proclamation did the Governor send to Samuel Johnston?
6080What proclamation was issued by Governor Caswell?
6080What produced an improvement in literary affairs early in the present century?
6080What prominent editors has the State furnished?
6080What prominent man died in North Carolina at this time?
6080What property does the General Assembly have power to exempt to an unlimited extent?
6080What property the General Assembly can not tax?
6080What property to a limited amount only?
6080What proportion of negro blood comes within the prohibition?
6080What proposition had certain members of the Confederate Congress communicated to Governor Vance, and how had he received them?
6080What proposition was agitating the people?
6080What proposition was made to the British by the Governor of South Carolina?
6080What protection to mechanics and laborers must be given?
6080What provision about bail?
6080What provision about compensation during extra session?
6080What provision about education?
6080What provision about election?
6080What provision about imprisonment for debt?
6080What provision about the State boundaries?
6080What provision about the courts?
6080What provision about the writ of Habeas Corpus?
6080What provision in regard to exclusive emoluments and privileges?
6080What provision in regard to hereditary privileges,& c.?
6080What provision in regard to male and female prisoners?
6080What provision in regard to the legislative, executive and judicial branches?
6080What provision of this Article can the General Assembly change or abrogate?
6080What provision securing religions liberty?
6080What provisions in regard to contracting new debts?
6080What public building was burned on June 21st, 1831?
6080What public man is now mentioned, and what is said of his abilities?
6080What punishment do the Commissioners incur by failing to comply with this?
6080What question was exciting the people of North Carolina at this period?
6080What question was greatly agitating the people?
6080What questions did Governor Spaight find agitating the people when he came into office?
6080What raid was driven back by General Ransom?
6080What reason is given why the people should have this right?
6080What recruits were raised, and who was put in command?
6080What redress for injuries?
6080What reflections are made upon this era?
6080What regiments are specially mentioned as participants at Winchester and Seven Pines?
6080What relics of the Indians are still to be found in the State?
6080What religious convention had been formed in 1730?
6080What religious persecutions were seen in most of the American colonies?
6080What reply was returned?
6080What reservation was given to the Indians?
6080What results were produced by the violent assertions of these opinions?
6080What retrospective laws are forbidden?
6080What return did the Indian make for the kindness of the white men?
6080What return did the sale of their crops bring them?
6080What right has the Legislature in regard to petty misdemeanors?
6080What rights has one restrained of his liberty?
6080What rights has one who is charged with a crime?
6080What river was crossed on February 13th, 1781?
6080What river was next crossed?
6080What road was specially important to the Confederate government?
6080What roads are mentioned as having been recently completed?
6080What sacrifices had the colonists made, and why?
6080What sad news next thrilled North Carolina?
6080What safe anchorage had Governor Lane discovered?
6080What safeguard against improper taxation?
6080What secret organization was formed at this time?
6080What seizures were made by North Carolina authorities?
6080What sentence can the Senate inflict?
6080What sentiment animates the people of North Carolina?
6080What settlement was made by Roger Green, and when?
6080What ships had been sent over to relieve the colony?
6080What signal aid was rendered by Colonel Charles F. Fisher?
6080What signs were observed after the first Provincial Congress?
6080What society was organized?
6080What special act of bravery is related?
6080What spectre of the past reappears?
6080What step is requisite preliminary to voting?
6080What steps were taken by Governor Tryon towards crushing the Regulators?
6080What supplies were brought in by the Ad- Vance?
6080What tax was to be paid to them?
6080What tends greatly to the physical improvement of the State?
6080What terrible sickness visited Carolina in 1712?
6080What then were fast rising to influence?
6080What three classes of society existed in North Carolina in 1842?
6080What time is designated in the Constitution for holding the election of members?
6080What title was then conferred upon him, and why?
6080What took place at Appomattox?
6080What town was settled in Virginia, and by whom?
6080What towns are now mentioned, and what is said of their growth?
6080What towns had special privileges?
6080What trade did he forbid?
6080What tradition existed among the Indians?
6080What tribes were found in the western portion of the State?
6080What tribute is made to Judge Brooks?
6080What tribute is paid to General Robert E. Lee?
6080What troops did North Carolina furnish?
6080What troops occupied the post of special danger?
6080What trouble befell the Viper?
6080What trouble came to Governor Stephens?
6080What trouble did the Governor have with the Legislature?
6080What troubles arose in national matters on the election of James K. Polk?
6080What troubles did Mr. Adams find?
6080What troubles were seen in North Carolina?
6080What two Governors are next mentioned?
6080What two Indians were taken on a visit to England?
6080What two North Carolina officers were winning distinction under General Winfield Scott?
6080What two candidates were before the people in 1836?
6080What two celebrated Englishmen prepared a form of government for Carolina?
6080What two great men were leaders in making those settlements?
6080What two important matters were settled at this period?
6080What two men from Carolina did he find in England and what was their mission?
6080What two men were distinguished in the United States Senate?
6080What two political parties then existed?
6080What two religious sects had emigrated to this section?
6080What two religious sects were strongest opposers of the act?
6080What valiant officer was with General Taylor at Buena Vista?
6080What vas the result of the Governor''s plan?
6080What vessels conducted the trade?
6080What victory was gained by the Americans on the Hudson River?
6080What view was taken of the Governor''s flight?
6080What views did Mr. Jefferson hold?
6080What views were held by Governor Johnston?
6080What views were held by each party?
6080What violent act was done by Miller?
6080What visit was made by Governor Dobbs?
6080What vote is necessary?
6080What war was declared in 1812?
6080What was Colonel Sevier''s opinion of the matter?
6080What was General Greene''s military ability?
6080What was Governor Berkeley''s character?
6080What was Governor Holden''s next step?
6080What was Governor Tryon''s conduct after the battle?
6080What was Mr. Hamilton''s policy?
6080What was Queen Elizabeth''s trouble with the Pope of Rome?
6080What was Raleigh''s greatest loss?
6080What was Raleigh''s next attempt at settlement?
6080What was a principle crop in North Carolina before the cotton gin was invented?
6080What was advocated by him?
6080What was apprehended in North Carolina after the fall of Savannah, and why?
6080What was deemed necessary?
6080What was determined by the Lords Proprietors?
6080What was done by General Morgan?
6080What was done by General Rutherford upon his exchange?
6080What was done by Governor Martin?
6080What was done by John Harvey?
6080What was done by Johnston after learning of Lee''s surrender?
6080What was done by Virginia and Kentucky?
6080What was done by the Congress?
6080What was done by the Continental Congress on May 4th?
6080What was done by the Federal and Confederate commanders after this battle?
6080What was done by the Governor in regard to the Ku- Klux?
6080What was done by the House of Representatives?
6080What was done by the Legislature of 1784?
6080What was done by the people?
6080What was done in 1785?
6080What was done in June, 1774?
6080What was done on December 17th?
6080What was done on February 11, 1775?
6080What was done on the fourth day of the session?
6080What was done to Miller?
6080What was done with actions and suits pending when the Constitution went into effect?
6080What was done with the University?
6080What was done with the proposition?
6080What was done with the spoils?
6080What was furnished to him on his arrival in England?
6080What was given?
6080What was his character?
6080What was his first military movement?
6080What was his first military movement?
6080What was his first official act?
6080What was indicated by these acts of the State?
6080What was lost with the building?
6080What was necessary for North Carolina to do?
6080What was next done by the Governor?
6080What was observed towards the latter days of the eighteenth century?
6080What was one of his last official acts?
6080What was promptly done by North Carolina?
6080What was proposed by General James Wellborn to the Legislature of 1805?
6080What was provided for in the statute?
6080What was resolved by the colonists concerning the Grand Model?
6080What was said of Colonel Dickson and his regiment?
6080What was said of him by Lord Rochester?
6080What was said to have dictated this course?
6080What was seen to be the next necessary step after the action of the Halifax Congress?
6080What was specially feared by the people?
6080What was stated by Governor Dinwiddie''s messenger?
6080What was the South beginning to realize?
6080What was the Work of the Convention?
6080What was the almost constant struggle of the people of Carolina?
6080What was the attitude of the American people at this time?
6080What was the authority for this and other high- handed measures?
6080What was the cause of sectional prejudices continuing to exist?
6080What was the cause of the fire?
6080What was the cause of the great depreciation in the value of money?
6080What was the character of Walter Raleigh?
6080What was the chief regret?
6080What was the conclusion of the attack?
6080What was the conclusion of the engagement?
6080What was the conclusion of this affair?
6080What was the condition of North Carolina after the war of 1812?
6080What was the condition of North Carolina''s defences?
6080What was the condition of Washington''s army?
6080What was the condition of affairs in Alamance and Caswell counties?
6080What was the condition of affairs in the colony under these Governors?
6080What was the condition of affairs throughout the United States at this period?
6080What was the condition of affairs?
6080What was the condition of civil affairs in North Carolina?
6080What was the condition of free education?
6080What was the condition of religious matters?
6080What was the condition of the State after the departure of Federal troops?
6080What was the condition of the colony at this period?
6080What was the condition of the colony?
6080What was the condition of the slaves?
6080What was the condition of the war in 1863?
6080What was the condition of the"new world"?
6080What was the condition of this sectional feeling during the late Presidential campaign?
6080What was the conduct of Eastchurch while on his way to Carolina?
6080What was the determination of the London authorities?
6080What was the effect of the election of John Quincy Adams?
6080What was the effect of the fall of Fort Fisher?
6080What was the effect of the"Alien and Sedition Laws"?
6080What was the effect of this blockade?
6080What was the effect of this change?
6080What was the effect of this treatment?
6080What was the effect on the State?
6080What was the effect, in England, of the news of Cornwallis''s Surrender?
6080What was the ending of this sad case?
6080What was the extent of Judge Iredell''s literary efforts?
6080What was the fate of his settlers?
6080What was the feeling concerning the victories around Richmond?
6080What was the feeling in North Carolina after the State had joined the Union?
6080What was the feeling of the Indians toward the white people?
6080What was the feeling of the Tories in North Carolina after the disaster at Charleston?
6080What was the financial condition of the government at this period?
6080What was the financial condition of the people at the close of the war?
6080What was the financial condition?
6080What was the first act of George I. in the government of North Carolina?
6080What was the first trouble?
6080What was the general condition of the State?
6080What was the general effect produced by the Federal troops?
6080What was the general position of the people since the close of the war?
6080What was the great issue?
6080What was the intent of the Halifax Constitution concerning the University?
6080What was the intent of the Navigation Act?
6080What was the issue?
6080What was the main policy of the"Know- Nothings"?
6080What was the majority of the votes given to the amendments?
6080What was the memorable exploit of Fanning On September 12th, 1781?
6080What was the nature of these frauds?
6080What was the new government called?
6080What was the next step taken by Governor Holden?
6080What was the object of Yeamans''visit?
6080What was the only means by which North Carolina could meet the expenses of the State government?
6080What was the opinion of Samuel Johnston?
6080What was the pay of Confederate soldiers?
6080What was the punishment?
6080What was the real issue between the Democrats and Republicans?
6080What was the religious condition of the country?
6080What was the result of Governor Tyron''s visit to Hillsboro?
6080What was the result of the election of 1870?
6080What was the result of the election?
6080What was the result of the expedition against Fort Du Quesne?
6080What was the result of the fall of Hatteras?
6080What was the result of the invasion?
6080What was the result of this election?
6080What was the result?
6080What was the result?
6080What was the result?
6080What was the route of the fleet?
6080What was the sad result?
6080What was the sentiment in North Carolina?
6080What was the situation in Wilmington in 1776?
6080What was the size of General Johnston''s army?
6080What was the state of affairs in North Carolina during the spring and summer of 1862?
6080What was the strength of the command?
6080What was the success of General Jackson''s expedition?
6080What was the success of the mission to London?
6080What was the termination of this affair?
6080What was the trouble?
6080What was the verdict of the court- martial?
6080What was the"Fugitive Slave Law"?
6080What was this period called?
6080What was this system called?
6080What was thought of the Confederation?
6080What was to be its extent?
6080What was to be the conclusion of all these troubles?
6080What were some of the Whig principles?
6080What were some of the views in regard to popular education?
6080What were some of their traits in war?
6080What were the British losses?
6080What were the English and French trying to accomplish in America at this period?
6080What were the effects of this victory?
6080What were the movements of Cornwallis and Ferguson?
6080What were the provisions of the new law?
6080What were the relations existing between these two tribes?
6080What were the resolutions of 1798- 99?
6080What were their habits?
6080What were their habits?
6080What were they called, and what powers did they propose to give to the general government?
6080What wonderful story was told Lane by the Indians?
6080What would have been the proper course to pursue towards North Carolina?
6080What would probably have been the final result in North Carolina?
6080What writers of similar gifts are named?
6080What writs may it issue to effectuate this control?
6080What year of the war have we now reached?
6080When and where did General Johnston surrender?
6080When and where did North Carolina ratify the Constitution and become a member of the united government?
6080When and where did the first Provincial Congress of North Carolina meet?
6080When and where did the third Provincial Congress meet?
6080When and where did they land?
6080When and where was the treaty of peace signed?
6080When are the Superior Courts open?
6080When can a county be divided in forming a Senatorial district?
6080When can a member have the reasons of his dissent entered on the journal?
6080When did Colonel Vance enter upon the duties of Chief- Magistrate?
6080When did Eastchurch arrive at Carolina?
6080When did Governor Tryon leave North Carolina, and for what purpose?
6080When did North Carolina leave the Union?
6080When did President Garfield die?
6080When did Sherman''s army reach Raleigh?
6080When did it occur?
6080When did the Congress meet?
6080When did the Diligence arrive?
6080When did the Legislature of 1868 meet, and of whom was it composed?
6080When did the battle begin?
6080When did the new government go into operation?
6080When did the tidings reach Mecklenburg?
6080When did they reach the coast of North Carolina?
6080When did this fleet leave England?
6080When did this occur?
6080When do the terms of office begin?
6080When does the Senate choose a Speaker?
6080When does the voting take place?
6080When does their term of office begin?
6080When has the Lieutenant- Governor the right to vote?
6080When is the election?
6080When is their regular meeting?
6080When must be take this oath or affirmation?
6080When must the names of the members be entered on the journal?
6080When these two bodies meet according to law what is their joint name?
6080When this became known to the people what did many of them do?
6080When was Raleigh selected as the capital?
6080When was a new Constitution adopted?
6080When was it again amended?
6080When was it first amended?
6080When was it re- established?
6080When was its seat selected, and where?
6080When was the Constitution thus framed submitted to the people?
6080When was the Federal attack made?
6080When was the University regularly opened?
6080When was the battle of Bentonsville fought?
6080When was the cornerstone of the East Building laid?
6080When was the first Constitution of North Carolina adopted?
6080When was the first expedition started, and with what result?
6080When were the courts of North Carolina fully established?
6080Where are other excellent schools for the colored people to be found?
6080Where are other fine schools for boys to be found?
6080Where are the Catawba and Yadkin Rivers?
6080Where are the primitive rocks found?
6080Where are the terms of the Supreme Court held?
6080Where did Cornwallis carry his army?
6080Where did Cornwallis next go?
6080Where did General Foster go?
6080Where did Governor Dobbs endeavor to have the capital of North Carolina located?
6080Where did Governor Martin first meet the Assembly?
6080Where did he live?
6080Where did he then go?
6080Where did the General Assembly usually meet?
6080Where did the Lords Proprietors live?
6080Where did the next Assembly meet, and what was done with it?
6080Where did they find the Enemy?
6080Where did they land?
6080Where did this action occur?
6080Where do the minerals abound?
6080Where do the rocks of the secondary formation appear?
6080Where do they empty?
6080Where had White been ordered to make settlement?
6080Where is Camden?
6080Where is Fort Mason?
6080Where is marl found and what is said of it?
6080Where is"Croatan"?
6080Where may these laws be found?
6080Where must the Governor reside?
6080Where must the verdict be rendered?
6080Where shall be the residence of the Judge?
6080Where shall be the seat of government?
6080Where was Colonel Davie?
6080Where was Colonel Davie?
6080Where was General Grant placing fresh troops?
6080Where was Kirke from, and what was his character?
6080Where was President Andrew Johnson born?
6080Where was it held?
6080Where was it located?
6080Where was the Federal army confronting General Lee on December 1st?
6080Where was the first conflict between these armies?
6080Where was the first town incorporated in the State?
6080Where was the home of the Meherrin Indians?
6080Where was the new capitol built?
6080Where was the principal fighting in the spring of 1864?
6080Where were Kirke''s prisoners taken?
6080Where were North Carolina troops next engaged in battle?
6080Where were the North Carolina soldiers at that time?
6080Where were the North Carolina soldiers in 1780?
6080Where were the North Carolina troops at this time?
6080Where were the Tories assembling?
6080Where were the leading male schools, and what is said of the usefulness?
6080Where were the prisoners then carried?
6080Where were these troops carried?
6080Which is the most, two- thirds or three- fifths?
6080Which of the Lords Proprietors reserved his right?
6080Which of the roads was obtaining most travel?
6080Which should be superior, the civil or military power?
6080Who assumed control of the Executive Department?
6080Who assumed the government?
6080Who became Governor?
6080Who became Supreme Court Judges?
6080Who commanded the expedition?
6080Who commanded the first regiment?
6080Who commanded this detachment?
6080Who composed the Supreme Court in 1833?
6080Who constituted the faculty?
6080Who delivered the address?
6080Who followed Governor Harvey in office?
6080Who followed Governor Rice?
6080Who had charge of all the settlements?
6080Who is put in command of the troops, and why?
6080Who officiated?
6080Who succeeded Dr. Charles E. Johnson as Surgeon General of the State?
6080Who succeeded Governor Ellis?
6080Who succeeded Governor Hyde?
6080Who succeeded James Hasell?
6080Who was Governor at the beginning of the year 1812?
6080Who was Moderator?
6080Who was Seth Sothel, and why was he selected?
6080Who was appointed Governor?
6080Who was appointed Governor?
6080Who was author of the"Atticus Letter?"
6080Who was chosen first President of the United States?
6080Who was chosen to preside?
6080Who was elected as Carey''s successor?
6080Who was first to receive the news of Lexington?
6080Who was in command at Wilmington?
6080Who was in command at this place?
6080Who was in command?
6080Who was in command?
6080Who was left in command of the British?
6080Who was one of the political leaders?
6080Who was one of the victims?
6080Who was placed at the head of the provisional government?
6080Who was put in charge?
6080Who was put in command of the brigades under General John Ashe?
6080Who was sent to attack them?
6080Who was the first Governor elected by the people?
6080Who was the first student to enter?
6080Who was the inventor?
6080Who was the last Governor selected by the Legislature?
6080Who was the leader of the people?
6080Who was the western leader of Governor Caswell''s cause?
6080Who was this work by?
6080Who were Governors at this time?
6080Who were chosen as delegates to the Continental Congress?
6080Who were his brigade commanders?
6080Who were the Justices?
6080Who were the candidates; and what were their platforms?
6080Who were the guilty persons?
6080Who were the literary men of that period?
6080Whom did he next send out to the new world?
6080Whom had General Greene appointed to watch the enemy?
6080Whose agent was Governor Daniel?
6080Why did Governor Carteret go to England?
6080Why did he land at Roanoke Island?
6080Why did not Governor White immediately return to his suffering people?
6080Why did the production of cotton so rapidly take the place of flax?
6080Why had incorporation been refused to the"Queen''s Museum"?
6080Why have not our people entered more largely into this class of industry?
6080Why have so few professional authors been seen?
6080Why not?
6080Why should all sectional animosities be speedily removed?
6080Why should elections be often held?
6080Why should schools,& c., be encouraged?
6080Why should the 12th day of April, 1776, ever be remembered?
6080Why should they not be allowed?
6080Why was Governor Caswell not re- elected?
6080Why was it deserted?
6080Why was locating the capital of great good to the State?
6080Why was this a very valuable and timely gift to the government?
6080Why was this now necessary?
6080Why was this surrender disastrous to North Carolina?
6080Why was"religious freedom"an inducement for them to leave their comfortable homes and settle in a savage country?
6080Why?
6080Will a majority of those actually voting be always sufficient?
6080With what do the sounds and rivers abound?
6080With what result?
6080With what result?
6080With what result?
6080With what result?
6080Wocoken?
6080estrays?
6080into?
6080list?
6080of Governor Drummond?
6080was chosen to succeed Governor Holden?
6080what is done?
46228!_"I think you the most profligate and dissipated family in London and Westminster.... Come nearer the fire?
46228''Gentle and low, an excellent thing in women''--or parrots-- what you referred to just now...."What''s''The Epidermis''? 46228 ''He was only bringing the news of the little girl''s death''... you were saying?..."
46228''I think it is good- morrow, is it not?''
46228''Odsbodikins, dearest, why-- why-- why? 46228 ''Sposin''I''d only had a wooden leg?
46228''Tin''t night?
46228A bad accident?
46228A flirt?
46228A man would know...."Know his own wife''s hand? 46228 About Lizarann''s health?"
46228About her Daddy?
46228About the Pilot?
46228About what?
46228Ah!--and I lay, now and again o''nights, she''ll sweat like to sop a flannel shirt through, like a spoonge?
46228Ah!--and what said the Post?
46228Ah!--but how do you know? 46228 Ah!--but t''other side-- who come?"
46228Ah!--easy a minute till I catch holt... have that cord ready.... Got him?
46228Ai n''t I tellin''of yer?
46228Am I a bad sight, master? 46228 Am I going too quick for you?"
46228Am I to see Marianne, or am I not?
46228Am I to send the letter or not?
46228Am I to tell her so, sir?
46228And Shakespeare''s trade discountenanced? 46228 And bring his crutches to come upstairs with?"
46228And fish for sprawns just the same?
46228And happen she''s thinned doon a bit?--happen she has n''t...?
46228And have you answered the question?
46228And how about those kisses I''m to take to my own little girls?
46228And how came she to cut in? 46228 And how did she know the name Verrall?"
46228And if I say to him now,''Lizarann is dying, but you can not be beside her when she dies''--why-- will not that be quite the worst thing of all? 46228 And if you had, do you think Marianne would n''t have found you out?
46228And low water?
46228And not incoherently?
46228And not tear a hole in the drugget?
46228And saying you believe it does n''t? 46228 And she agreed with me, I''m sure?"
46228And that letter determined you to give up the drama?
46228And then did she and Mrs. Ostrich go home separately?
46228And then go home to my Daddy where Mrs. Forks is?
46228And then she told Bess?
46228And was this Mrs. Ostrich-- or whatever her name is-- satisfied?
46228And what did Lady Arkroyd say to the Bishop?
46228And what did you say, Ellen?
46228And what good''s your schoolin''done you? 46228 And what should you sye?"
46228And when they''ve gone to school and no one''s on the beach to see, will there be high water?
46228And when you had put Miss Arkroyd out, what happened?
46228And where was Bridgetticks?
46228And where were you?
46228And who come to the door?
46228And why not?
46228And you''re not going to cry-- that''s about it, is n''t it?
46228And, after all,she said,"what does it all come to?
46228Any more railway accidents?
46228Anything else than what?
46228Anything wrong, officer?
46228Are n''t you going to bed, Teacher?
46228Are not you, when you say that, allowing a disbelief in the Bill''s passing to influence you?
46228Are not you...?
46228Are they on the scoast?
46228Are they sweet, or are they not?
46228Are we not her parents? 46228 Are we not late for dinner?"
46228Are we peaceful at the Hall?
46228Are you burned?
46228Are you real?
46228Are you sure it is n''t in''The Epidermis''?
46228Are you sure? 46228 Are you sure?"
46228Are you the little girl?
46228Are you... being attended to?
46228Are_ we_ on the scoast?
46228As for Sibyl...."Do you mean Judith?
46228As for instance?...
46228As if_ what_ was entirely out of the question?
46228At least, are you? 46228 Attractions are feminine?"
46228Back to lunch, or_ what_?
46228Brownrigg?
46228But I_ shall_ go?
46228But anything particular?
46228But before?
46228But could n''t he be got away, too?
46228But did you hear no more?
46228But how came we not to meet you?
46228But how can I tell till I know? 46228 But how did I know, you mean?
46228But how do you know? 46228 But is it?"
46228But short of swearing to them... you''ve an impression?
46228But there are other considerations, apart from that...."What considerations?
46228But upstairs or down? 46228 But was Daddy being carried on a chair?"
46228But what harm did that do? 46228 But what''s her game?
46228But whatever did you do?
46228But why did n''t you say so?
46228But you do the gentleman?
46228But you told him that odd thing... you know?
46228But, dear old goose, what did it all come to? 46228 But, my dearest girl,"said he,"what have I to forgive?"
46228But_ what_ do you understand? 46228 But_ why_ the motor- car at all?"
46228But_ you_ believe it?
46228By committing something himself? 46228 By- the- bye, should_ you_ have said the little person looked delicate-- that little Lizarann, I mean?"
46228C''à © tait la faute de ce sacrà © aveugle-- qui m''y trouvera à   redire-- moi? 46228 Ca n''t I hunt about for the chessmen till I find them?"
46228Ca n''t help what?
46228Ca n''t it go no furver?
46228Ca n''t we turn?...
46228Ca n''t you stop stopping, Charlotte, and go_ on_?
46228Can one?... 46228 Can you be sure she wo n''t talk about her conf... about her husband, I mean?"
46228Can you bear to be lifted, Jim?... 46228 Can you hear what I say, darling?"
46228Can you name a case in which no substitute for the mother existed, and the father was not at liberty to provide one? 46228 Challis puts his wife''s resentment down_ entirely_ to this matter of the opening of the letter?"
46228Chaps?
46228Charlotte!--_what_ did you say? 46228 Come, Addie, what could she do more?"
46228Could I take her up to see her safely, do you think?
46228Could n''t I what?
46228Could n''t a rich aunt settle something on them, or someone place a fund at their disposal? 46228 Could n''t one of those places in the roof be converted?"
46228Could n''t you give Estrild a little Visigoth_ ingà © nue_--I mean Ostrogoth-- to wait upon her?
46228Could n''t you have made up your mind to go-- just this once? 46228 Could n''t you raise the premium, so as to cover all possible cases?
46228Could n''t you see that what this dear good woman will want, when she gets tired, will be a golden bridge to come back across? 46228 Could n''t you-- Marianne dear-- couldn''t you...?"
46228Could you mention any responsible householder who would tell me what I am accused of? 46228 Did he ask for me?"
46228Did he give offence over the-- the Deceased Wife''s Sister question?
46228Did he say anything about Judith?
46228Did he say nothing else?
46228Did it go on just like that? 46228 Did n''t Charlotte say anything else?"
46228Did n''t the mistress say Tulse Hill, Harmood?
46228Did n''t they agree about anything else?
46228Did n''t they sound famished?
46228Did n''t you see them when they came in?
46228Did she say I was in love with Challis?
46228Did she tell him anything of Judith at the inquest-- and all-- and all the share she had in it, you know?
46228Did she tell you_ I_ was supposed to be the heroine of the romance?
46228Did she?
46228Did the Bishop say gentleman?
46228Did they part when they found it out?
46228Did they talk about him? 46228 Did what?
46228Did you find your mother well?
46228Did you not see him again?
46228Did you say so to your mother?
46228Did you think her performance good?
46228Did you-- you say you had come yesterday?
46228Did you? 46228 Do n''t I see what?"
46228Do n''t go on with it, that is?
46228Do n''t she want to it, Daddy?
46228Do n''t you remember, my dear? 46228 Do they keep cases of this sort so long?"
46228Do you mean Mamma''s?
46228Do you mean Steptoe?
46228Do you mean to say, Charlotte, that because Titus goes away for a week to a country- house...?
46228Do you recollect, Jane, those very last words she said?
46228Do you remember,said she,"how I called you Scroop, and how funny it made you look?
46228Do you see a great deal of theatrical people?
46228Do you see any prospect of answering it?
46228Do you suppose I am taken in by this story?
46228Do you suppose I regard you as a responsible agent?
46228Do you think so? 46228 Do you want me to tell you anything about them, or not?
46228Do you, or do you not, think a parent is bound to supply a child with a religious faith? 46228 Do you_ want_ Judith to marry this man, Therèse?"
46228Doctor''s been, then?
46228Does it hurt, Daddy?
46228Does it matter? 46228 Does n''t Aunt Stingy come to see to you, Daddy?"
46228Does not that,he said,"assume the existence of some counter- power, able to diminish and repress?"
46228Does one, altogether?
46228Does what hurt, lassie?
46228Eh?
46228Fathers goes down Bladen Street holdin''on to nuffin'', and ai n''t they rich, neither? 46228 Foolish man, how can you tell?...
46228For to step it afut? 46228 Give the child some for me,"says Judith; and then, being free to give attention to her sister, goes on with,"Yes, what is it?
46228Give you a case?
46228Got it right now?
46228H''m!--have there been other times?
46228H''m-- why poor fellow?
46228Had Lady Challis far to come?
46228Had been what?
46228Handsome Judith?
46228Has Mr. Challis a cab?
46228Has he got Uncle Bob?
46228Have I no eyesight, Judith? 46228 Have I not a foretaste of its horrors?"
46228Have n''t you been up at the house? 46228 Have we any business with Mr. and Mrs. Challis''s private affairs?"
46228Have you not acknowledged the illegitimacy of yours?
46228Have you seen my green parroquets?
46228He says looks_ too_, does n''t he?
46228He wass bloke ze hackross,and then finished naturally with,"Que diable allait il faire au milieu de la rue?"
46228He wept, did n''t he, and sheltered himself behind mademoiselle?
46228He''ll be all right, wo n''t he? 46228 Her manner?...
46228High water? 46228 How about the little wench?
46228How came Lady Arkroyd to know?
46228How came you to remember my name?
46228How can I tell? 46228 How can I tell?
46228How can you act upon it, to the extent of marrying another woman, without acknowledging it?
46228How dare you speak to your mother so-- eh? 46228 How did you know your mother meant her?
46228How did you know?
46228How did you like my little maid?
46228How do they like Sussex Terrace?
46228How do ye make that out, lass?
46228How do you know I thought it was n''t anything?
46228How do you know she went in the motor?
46228How do you know? 46228 How do you know?"
46228How do you know?
46228How do you mean''what happened''?
46228How do you mean, aunty?
46228How does it act as a check?
46228How does she account for Mrs. Steptoe knowing the name of these Hallock people?
46228How far has what gone?
46228How far is it to Daddy? 46228 How have I behaved to my wife?"
46228How is the little girl?
46228How many words are there in a book?
46228How much is a sequin?
46228How on earth did I get here?
46228How would he be the better?
46228How''s our poor friend blind Samson and his small daughter?
46228How_ dare_ you speak so to your mother? 46228 How_ is_ Miss Arkroyd?"
46228However will you get on with his opinions? 46228 Hullo!--nothing bad, I hope?"
46228I say, Lotty, when''s Miss Fossijaw''s letter a- going?
46228I should n''t have time for a warm bath, should I?
46228I suppose I ought to read Uncle Remus?
46228I suppose that means that I''m a man?
46228I suppose they know?
46228I suppose you can be prosecuted for taking another man''s title?
46228I suppose you dine at home?
46228I suppose you know Mr. Challis is going away to- morrow?
46228I suppose you know it''s all settled about Frank and Sibyl?
46228I suppose you lit your pipe with it? 46228 I suppose you talked it all over with your dear mother, Marianne?"
46228I suppose, though, he must have been still alive when you last saw him?
46228I thought she was his sister?
46228I thought you knew about it?
46228I thought you never saw the back of the last sheet? 46228 I thought you said the other day-- I mean last April-- that he was a worse heathen than myself?"
46228I want to know, are you going to tell the_ madre_ about it or not?
46228I wonder where I am?
46228If I were not under compulsion to acknowledge it, should I ever have thought of marrying the other woman? 46228 If I were to ask to see her letter, should you be offended?"
46228If you must prowl, Marianne,said she,"ca n''t you go and prowl somewhere else?"
46228In what way?
46228Is Aunt Stingy''s new gownd pide for?
46228Is Sir Alfred Challis conscious?
46228Is a man never to be forgiven,it said,"because he is momentarily overtaken by passion for a lady under exceptional circumstances?"
46228Is he_ killed_?
46228Is it Challis?
46228Is it all settled about her going on the stage?... 46228 Is it anything I can do?"
46228Is it possible she means a_ beggar_?
46228Is it possible you do not remember this room-- the room the German Baroness saw the ghost in?
46228Is it so very surprising? 46228 Is my wife still there?"
46228Is n''t it only the wash of the water melting it off? 46228 Is n''t it very likely all nonsense about infection?"
46228Is n''t she what?
46228Is n''t that Mr. Taylor? 46228 Is n''t the child strong?
46228Is n''t the post very late?
46228Is she beautiful? 46228 Is she?"
46228Is that Teacher?
46228Is that any concern of mine?
46228Is that quite all?
46228Is that you coughing, Lizarann?
46228Is there another cup left, dear?
46228Is where Aunt Stingy''s gone where Mr. Winkleson lives?
46228It amounted to the question,''Is Life most full of bitter things or sweet?'' 46228 It was not I myself that wanted to read the letter again just then....""Who had read it before?"
46228It was simply this.... By- the- bye, I dare say you heard how he set me on fire-- that night we had the dance?... 46228 Jim, ca n''t you hear, you fool?
46228Judith must have met him on her way to Thanes.... Where did he join her-- this morning, I mean?
46228Judith!--do you think I am blind, or do you take me for a fool?
46228Judith?
46228Just plain hair- colour-- is that it?
46228Last house on the right, is n''t it?
46228Learns all what? 46228 Let me see!--what are we talking about?"
46228Let me see-- what_ was_ the question? 46228 Like when my Daddy went sea- viyages?"
46228Look here, my dear, where''s the box of matches-- the lucifer matches? 46228 Louderer and louderer?
46228Make anything of them?
46228Maten''t I go to see Daddy to- day, Teacher?
46228May I leave you alone for a few moments, Lady Challis?
46228May I write to you?
46228May n''t we hear more about Miss Hicks''s family?
46228May the catechism stop, if I tell you?
46228Mean to say you do n''t know?
46228Miss Fossett? 46228 Mrs. Challis never said, sir,"was her brief testimony in reply to"Where was your mistress going?"
46228Must n''t I be took to my Daddy in free dyes, by the rilewye?
46228Must n''t I go and see Daddy where Mrs. Forks is?
46228Must n''t I only send a kiss to Daddy, Teacher?
46228My dear Lady Arkroyd, what''s this about our friend Challis and his wife?
46228My dear sir,said Challis to the Rector, standing by his bed,"you say,''Do n''t I know you?''
46228My dear!--is it likely? 46228 My little Cintilla said Sir Alfred Challis had spoken, Miss O''Connor, but that you could n''t make out what he said?"
46228My little maid, d''ye see?
46228My old mother at the cottage? 46228 My tale?
46228My wife? 46228 News of th''Master, belike, Jarge?"
46228Not if I ought to?
46228Not since that one time?
46228Not to what?
46228Nothing further, I lay?
46228Nothing there?...
46228Now listen to me, if you please, Mrs.... what''s your name? 46228 Now where''s that little maid?"
46228Now which of you women was this man''s wife?
46228Now who might you be, master? 46228 Now, do tell me, what shall you do?"
46228Now, what have you and my affectionate brother been talking about all the way here?
46228Now, you know, if you blow that match out, there''ll be a red spark, wo n''t there?... 46228 Now_ you''re_ going to be a good little girl, ai n''t you, and not make a shine?"
46228Nuffint elst no more than Moses?
46228Of course you did n''t see her?
46228Oh dear!--What_ are_ you shouting down in the kitchen for? 46228 Oh dear!--man that talks metaphysics....""Brownrigg?"
46228Oh dear!--were they ladies?
46228Oh no!--might my wife come? 46228 Oh no, Yorick, no!--it''s_ quite_ a different thing....""Before and after an Act of Parliament, is that it?"
46228Oh!--mustn''t I do that? 46228 Oh, I?"
46228Oh, Jim-- Jim Coupland-- who has done this?
46228Oh, Polly Anne, Polly Anne!--don''t think-- don''t believe?...
46228Oh, Yorick!--is it-- is it.... Oh, I do hope..._ is_ it the one I''ve thought of?
46228Oh, Yorick, how can you? 46228 Oh, is she?
46228Oh, my dear Yorick? 46228 Oh, my dear, what_ is_ to be done?
46228Oh, the Deceased Wife''s Sister rubbish?
46228Oh-- Charlotte? 46228 Oho!--_that''s_ where we are, is it?"
46228Only is n''t Miss Fossett...?
46228Or have you?
46228Or is n''t it?... 46228 Ou-- avez-- vous-- vu-- dernièrement-- cet homme?"
46228Ought I to tell her to say''My lady,''or not?
46228Ought n''t it to be read''weeks,''perhaps? 46228 Perhaps I do wrong when I use the only words I can find when I say that I long for Marianne back again to help me against_ you_?
46228Perhaps I had better tell you the story?
46228Perhaps I ought to go?
46228Perhaps that''s why you liked it so much? 46228 Please, ma''am, do n''t you?"
46228Please, where''s Aunt Stingy?
46228Put a salve to the wound?
46228Put your sister down, you young ruffian-- do you hear?
46228Quite strong-- the lassie? 46228 Really what?
46228Run all the way from Putney, have you? 46228 Same as''two''s company and three''s none,''I suppose?
46228Say anything about how grieved I am-- painful circumstances-- hope to hear misunderstanding completely removed-- anything of that sort?
46228Seal of confession, I suppose?
46228See what?
46228Seeing Challis?
46228Sha n''t you?
46228Shall I tell you what me and Cat...."What_ who_?
46228Shall the children go on digging and spaddle in the water, just the same like now?
46228Shall you?
46228She paused in her walk with a sort of''what- next- I- wonder?'' 46228 She really gave it?
46228She''s new, is n''t she? 46228 She''s very clever?"
46228Shocked me?--when?
46228Should I be here at all,it said,"if Marianne were...?"
46228Should I ever have been offended at anything you did, dear love?
46228Sibyl, you are a thoroughly selfish woman... did you say_ why_? 46228 Sippy- oh-- was that it?"
46228So she might n''t get it?
46228So your little maid''s gone to the seaside?
46228Stupid girl!--don''t you see? 46228 Suppose Titus had married this girl already, I mean, and the Bill passes, which of us would be his wife?
46228Suppose she laid claim to having annulled her marriage, while she still had a legal right to do so?
46228Sure there''s nothing more about that girl?
46228Talk about what, Polly Anne?
46228Talk like what, dear?
46228That Mr. Challis did n''t go? 46228 That little maid of yowern, she has a bit o''cough o''nights?"
46228That''s quite all, is it? 46228 The Reverend Athelstan?
46228The Young Varmint?
46228The children you mean? 46228 The crops?
46228The long gentleman?
46228The master''s coming back-- the gentleman?
46228The master_ be_ coming back, though, missis...?
46228The mistress and the young ladies and nurse, sir?
46228The other leg?
46228The same name as the author?
46228Then Daddy''s gone to the Hospital? 46228 Then about the matches and the fire?"
46228Then suppose he_ does_ believe some of it, is he to jump up and down? 46228 There''s a thing you wo n''t mind my asking?..."
46228There, now, Master Titus, is n''t that exactly what I said to Lotty? 46228 There_ was_ a row, then... well-- a warm discussion, suppose we say?
46228Think-- oh, think!--what rights could I ever have in you? 46228 Those are ships?"
46228Titus Scroopalways had such interesting titles.... What?
46228To her?
46228To remain here? 46228 To...?"
46228Understand what?
46228Unless you mind?
46228Very much''how?'' 46228 Very well, then!--you see them cross- pieces for the''ands?...
46228Was he impressed?
46228Was he talking to you, or talking to himself, Lizarann?
46228Was he writing all the while?
46228Was it Eliza Ann Coupland? 46228 Was it a sort of private hotel, or boarding- house?"
46228Was it all right about the flannels?
46228Was it an accident, or did he tumble down of himself?
46228Was it too swell?
46228Was n''t that the day before yesterday?
46228Was she going to Thanes at all?
46228Was she up?
46228Was that Bob, and the two little girls...? 46228 Was that all?"
46228Was that what your brother was talking about to your sister--in this exact context"Sibyl"would hardly have worked in--"last night?
46228Was there not a man killed?
46228Well what?
46228Well!--and how are they?
46228Well!--plenty of use as far as my good- will to feel with you is concerned? 46228 Well!--wasn''t I right?"
46228Well!--what''s the matter?
46228Well, Master Bob, where have you been? 46228 Well, and what does that mean?"
46228Well, he said,''Qu''ai- je pu faire, moi, contre mademoiselle? 46228 Well, then, does n''t she feel very strongly on the Deceased Wife''s Sister question?"
46228Well, what would you have me say? 46228 Well-- well-- perhaps it was only natural... of course, I am forgetting....""Perhaps what was only natural?...
46228Well?
46228Were they dining by moonlight at Royd last night?
46228What I want to hear is-- how did Sib know this was going on?
46228What about the other one?
46228What about? 46228 What about?"
46228What about?
46228What am I to say, then?
46228What are those children fighting about?
46228What are we to do about Phoebe and Joan?
46228What are_ their_ ideas? 46228 What at, Addie?"
46228What attitude does Professor Graubosch adopt towards the Religions of the world?
46228What can she read on''em, little lass?
46228What can the unintelligible child mean by that?
46228What child?
46228What did Charlotte Eldridge say? 46228 What did Peter say?"
46228What did he have to do?... 46228 What did he say?"
46228What did he say?
46228What did he say?
46228What did it costited?
46228What did it mean?
46228What did the doctor say again, master?
46228What did ye make out they came for, lassie?
46228What did you say to him over that, little lass?
46228What did you say, darling?
46228What did you say?
46228What did your daddy say he''d done to his leg? 46228 What did your mistress say?
46228What did_ he_ say?
46228What do I mean by enough? 46228 What do I want with her?
46228What do you make of_ him_, Rector?
46228What do you mean to imply?
46228What do you prefer me to talk about?
46228What do you suppose was the matter?
46228What do you suppose you will do about the play?
46228What do you want with her?
46228What do you want with ivorycarvers?
46228What do_ you_ think?
46228What does she suppose her motive to be?
46228What does that mean!--a very good case?
46228What does the good- looking one do?
46228What does your father do, my dear? 46228 What else can you call it?"
46228What else was he a- saying? 46228 What exactly is going to be done at the Factory?
46228What excuse does she give for backing out?
46228What for? 46228 What good would it do?"
46228What good?
46228What has it been?
46228What has made the children so late? 46228 What has what been?"
46228What have I to do,said he wearily,"with all these wretched nostrums of legislation and religion, that would dictate the terms of Love?
46228What have you done about your own boy?
46228What houses?
46228What if it was?
46228What is my name, and who am I?
46228What is n''t?
46228What is that about a man killed?
46228What is the matter?
46228What is''Amaris''? 46228 What is, Jim?"
46228What lawyer ever told you such rubbish?
46228What leads you to suppose she will never forgive you? 46228 What legend of this bridge and what convict?"
46228What made my disorder break out again?
46228What makes you think that?
46228What might your tale be, Master David?
46228What my young friend Bob calls''make a great ass of himself''?
46228What o''clock might you make it?
46228What on earth does the child mean? 46228 What on earth is the girl going to do with herself?
46228What party?
46228What right had Marianne to imagine infidelities for me?... 46228 What sort of party is she, then?"
46228What sort?
46228What story?
46228What the Hell, do you think I do n''t_ know_? 46228 What was Charlotte''s idea?"
46228What was it... oh, do n''t you know? 46228 What was that young varmint a- saying?"
46228What was the name of the short one the tall gentleman called him by?
46228What was there about''Tamarisk''in the book?
46228What was there in the letter?
46228What was there in the letter?
46228What were they talking about? 46228 What were they?
46228What were you saying about them-- just now? 46228 What were you waiting for?"
46228What would that have to do with it?
46228What would?
46228What!--and train the little Rankshire beauty to the part? 46228 What!--not only just one, in the breakfast- room, with the door shut?"
46228What''ll you stand,said he,"for to be told my name, and no lies?"
46228What''s a scrutch?
46228What''s all that noise about, children?
46228What''s gone amiss, Scip?
46228What''s her colour of hair-- black colour?--yaller colour?
46228What''s her eyes?
46228What''s it all_ about_, Charlotte?
46228What''s that child been after outside of the room? 46228 What''s that out of?"
46228What''s that you say? 46228 What''s that you''re a- sayin''?
46228What''s that, Jim?... 46228 What''s the Great Idea?
46228What''s the question?
46228What''s the something, Sibyl?
46228What''s the use of askin''me, when you know yourself? 46228 What''s this story my boy has, Mrs. Steptoe, about your seeing his mother and me at Ramsgate?"
46228What''s to- day? 46228 What''s your nime?"
46228What''s''hullo,''Challis?
46228What, Jim? 46228 What, offspring?"
46228What, then?
46228What-- the button? 46228 What?"
46228What_ does_ he think? 46228 What_ does_''not mincing matters''mean?
46228What_ has_ come of it?
46228What_ has_ her social position got to do with it?
46228What_ is_ Matter?
46228What_ is_ a Cure?
46228What_ is_ it? 46228 What_ is_ the position?"
46228What_ was_ the very nice message?
46228What_ what_ is, Marianne dear?
46228Whatever are you fancyin'', Robert?
46228Whatever is it?... 46228 When did Uncle Remus come out first?"
46228When did he tell you this?
46228When did you come?
46228When do they?... 46228 When do you expect the detestable contrivance-- I make no disguises, you see-- to arrive?
46228When do you suppose old Margy will be back?
46228When he had stuttered through his remonstrance or reprimand, or whatever he meant it for? 46228 When shall you go to bed?"
46228When was that Bill to go into Committee-- the Deceased Wife''s Sister-- you know?
46228When''s that lady coming that gave me my skates at Christmas, and the''Lives of the Buccaneers''?
46228Where did she say they came from?
46228Where did you go when you were out?
46228Where have you got her?
46228Where is Marianne?
46228Where is she now actually?
46228Where is''here''?
46228Where was I?... 46228 Where was your last place, then?"
46228Where''s Frank?
46228Where''s Wimbledon, Honey?
46228Where''s the end of it? 46228 Where''s the flesh you was going to put on, the doctor said?
46228Where''s the note?... 46228 Where_ have_ you been?"
46228Which did ye like best, little lass-- which gentleman?
46228Which do you mean?
46228Which does''easy''mean?
46228Which hand?
46228Which is the one that slums?
46228Which is the one you know?
46228Which sort?
46228Which to? 46228 Which tooth was it?"
46228Which two?
46228Which was she, Sib?
46228Which was...?
46228Who are you lecterin''to? 46228 Who do yer call the worse by that?
46228Who ever said a word, or thought a thought, about love- making?...
46228Who said you warn''t, lassie?
46228Who shall you give the skisses to, to tike to Daddy?
46228Who toldited anything about the country?
46228Who was that in your cab last night?... 46228 Who was that?...
46228Who were you talking to, Doctor?
46228Who''s a- going to tight me?
46228Who''s dear Charlotte, I wonder?
46228Who''s planning or scheming? 46228 Who''s to know you ai n''t lying?
46228Who?
46228Whose envelope?
46228Why are you glad?
46228Why ca n''t she come when other people are here?
46228Why ca n''t you answer when I speak? 46228 Why can not she?"
46228Why could n''t you tell us that straight off, Lord Felixthorpe?
46228Why did the lady ran away from the water?
46228Why did you hesitate?
46228Why do n''t you open it and see?
46228Why does this sort of young woman not meet more actresses and actors in the society she lives in? 46228 Why must you talk to John?"
46228Why need I be in it at all? 46228 Why next spring?
46228Why not ask that party?
46228Why not put them in-- well!--if not in the roof, why not in that room beyond the Art- needlework schools?
46228Why not?
46228Why not?
46228Why not?
46228Why should he die?
46228Why should we do anything? 46228 Why the good lady, Jim?"
46228Why well?
46228Why''s his real nime Pordage?
46228Why''stress on Sibyl''?
46228Why, child, do n''t ye go along to''ards meetin''him? 46228 Why, master, the good lady she says to me, she says, did I know where to look for soomat or other?
46228Why-- about the Reverend Athelstan, of course, and Elizabeth Caldecott...."Elizabeth who?
46228Why-- don''t you understand? 46228 Why?
46228Why?
46228Will the Challises ever know Marianne was his wife all along?
46228Will you have the goodness to wait till I have done with this_ gurl_?
46228Will you have the goodness, Charlotte, to tell me what you mean, and not beat about the bush? 46228 Will you tell the poor woman, from me, that I had no choice but to go?
46228Will you_ go on_?
46228Wo n''t Sibyl Limited get it somewhere else?
46228Wo n''t he think you''re bringing her with you? 46228 Wo n''t it be rather like... snuffing poor Mrs. Challis out, if I do n''t end up somehow?"
46228Wo n''t that be what Mr. Tomes calls_ suppressio veri_?
46228Wo n''t they give you a clean bill, Master David?
46228Wo n''t you make it up a shillin'', Captain? 46228 Would he be minded to tell me himself, if I made bold to ask him?"
46228Would you mind talking to Bess about it? 46228 Would you object to my seeing it?"
46228Would you?
46228Ye think so, master? 46228 Yes, but, dearest!--I must call you so, or call you something with some heart in it; pardon me!--can I tell the reason?
46228Yes, dear child, what? 46228 Yes-- but I was n''t thinking about that.... Do n''t you see?..."
46228Yes-- but what is Jim Coupland... compared to...?
46228Yes-- but_ where_?
46228Yes-- unless...."Unless what?
46228Yes; why not? 46228 Yes?"
46228You and the great Yorick-- isn''t that what his friend Miss Foster calls him?--haven''t been talking of Graubosch all that time?
46228You are going there yourself?
46228You are not coming down to lunch?
46228You did n''t like Ziz, I suppose?
46228You do n''t mean that Miss Judith is in town?
46228You do n''t mean they found out their mistake?
46228You do n''t object to my lookin''round to speak about it, Master Titus?
46228You knew I had written?
46228You know I do n''t agree, Yorick?
46228You know he married his deceased wife''s sister?
46228You know, I suppose, that I spoke to mamma about that Steptoe nonsense-- the photograph?
46228You know, Scroop, that this_ is_ good- bye?
46228You know, do n''t you, dear, that Jim would have been told before if I had had my way?
46228You mean chilly?
46228You mean if the Bill passes?
46228You mean there is some hope, then?
46228You mean when you mentioned her just now-- just before we came to Jim? 46228 You must keep the disbelievers out-- is that it?"
46228You remember what he said in September-- that Graubosch meant to retain the Personal Devil until the new System had had time to settle down? 46228 You said her sister was?"
46228You saw that man Challis...?
46228You see I''m right?
46228You see that point, Challis?
46228You should have thought of all that when you...."Made a fool of myself?
46228You want him not to care so much about this girl? 46228 You was so good as to mention, master....""Your little girl?
46228You were alone, then?
46228You wish him to remain here, Sir Murgatroyd?
46228You would give a good deal,said Challis, when the pipe was well alight,"to know what I think about the religious education of children?
46228You would... like it, though-- wouldn''t you?
46228You''ll think of what I was saying to you, Jim?
46228You''re Lizarann Coupland, then; Lady Arkroyd''s friend?
46228You''re little Billy Lathrop, young man, I take it?
46228You''re not to begin again, the minute they''re out of sight, Joan.... What business, dear?
46228You''re the School- lady''s brother, belike?
46228You''re very good-- but what am I being kept here for? 46228 You_ do_ see, do n''t you, that Dr. Pordage_ was_ right?"
46228Your brother seems a universal genius, too?
46228Your brother?
46228Your cab''s there?
46228Your sister, Marianne.... Why, how?
46228Your wife''s name was...?
46228_ Ca n''t_ you tell me where they''ve took your father_ to_, instead of vexin''me? 46228 _ Do_ you mind my speaking to my husband for a moment first?"
46228_ Do_ you suppose I do n''t understand that, my dear?
46228_ May_ I see him? 46228 _ The_ inquest!--Why inquest?
46228_ What''s_ that about Royd in Rankshire?
46228_ What_ about my friend Miss Arkroyd, Polly Anne dear?... 46228 _ What_ is Mr. Challis going to do if we all forsake him?"
46228_ Who_ is it?... 46228 _ Who_ must have been?"
46228''But why do you suppose the Apostles did not model their lives on Our Lord''s?
46228''Must be thankful she suffers so little''?"
46228''What do you mean?''
46228''Why should I not marry him, when this woman is not his wife?''
46228''had the good fortune to sustain no injury,''do you mean?
46228***** Has all this incident of Bob''s phonograph been worth recording?
46228***** Is the gap above large enough to include an inspection of a market- cross, a pump, a camp, and a village church?
46228***** Was ever a blanker home- coming?
46228*****"Do you know anything of all this?"
46228*****"How far must n''t we go to the Sospital?"
46228*****"How long had he been here?"
46228*****"How long will it take you to get to Wimbledon?"
46228*****"How would he be the better if we did send him?"
46228*****"What did you say was the name of that gentleman you met at Royd, Yorick?--the amusing one?..."
46228*****"You are quite certain nothing can be done?"
46228--meaning, why did you begin and stop?
46228... Where do they come from, did you say?
46228... oh yes!--_you_ know-- the woman whose husband was drowned in the lock-- the_ delirium tremens_ man....""_ Delirium tremens_ man?"
46228... that way, is he?
46228... what the dickens was it?...
46228... what would you do then, please?"
46228..._ what?_ You_ must_ come near and speak louder....
46228A fine_ nuance_ of ashamedness-- it could hardly be called shame-- affected his mind, surely?
46228A great swinging stride unlike any other man''s in those parts-- how mistake it?
46228A little brandy- and- water?"
46228A little-- little thing?"
46228A moment after Grandmamma, rousing herself wrathfully, exclaimed,"What is all this horrible noise about?
46228A more frank nature than Marianne''s would have said to him when he pocketed his unopened letters,"What!--not read her letter?
46228A widower at large, with a doubtful record?
46228A young doctor was in the ward, who said,"Is this the gentleman?"
46228About Dr. Side-- Dr. Side....""Dr. Sidrophel?
46228About the servants?"
46228After a pause of silence he said:"Do you remember how we walked here-- more than a year ago-- and you told me you had given up the idea of Estrild?"
46228After all, what does the whole thing amount to?..."
46228After all, what was there in the text of the letter that it would be a hanging matter for Judith to read?
46228All civility, do n''t you know?
46228All set up and hearty, hay?"
46228All the same, Judith thought to herself:"Why could n''t he leave her in peace, on the hearthrug or the hob?"
46228Also that when the visitor said,"Is she always like that?"
46228And I''m not to be there-- that''s it, is n''t it?"
46228And Marianne read:"''All sorts of upnesses- to- date, doing things her grandmothers would have thought_ infra dig_....''What does that mean?"
46228And are all the hands to be ladies?
46228And as for cabs, they would n''t set foot outside of the yard, because where was the use?
46228And as the chit and the counterchit tore themselves apart till morning, the latter said to the former,"What was all the fun?
46228And as to why I did not tell you, how could I, when I did not know myself?
46228And did n''t her getting up from her tea show what an honourable intent she had been acting under?
46228And dined off of nourishin''food the same evening, and rezoomed work on the Monday?"
46228And he was only bringing the news of her death.... What did you say?..."
46228And his little lass, she come and kissed him, for to cheer him up-- hay, lassie?
46228And how on earth did you manage?..."
46228And how was she to tell Phoebe and Joan?
46228And if she called him"Scroop,"as she had done almost throughout, and_ still_ he did not recognize her, how then?
46228And if so, had this one acquired a low moral tone by contact with fried fish, or had his parent''s humble walk in life resulted from his depravity?
46228And is the room at the back of the house?"
46228And she tore it up and sent it back?"
46228And she was his affectionate wife Marianne.... Have_ you_ been flattering Mr. Titus Scroop, Sibyl dear?"
46228And that poor baby....""Is there a baby?"
46228And the boy added:"Why do n''t yer''ook it along down to the Rilewye, to see for yourself?
46228And the children are away?"
46228And the fatal sudden light of a fire that blazed out, and her cry of terror:"Oh, Jim, man, what have you done to your eyes?"...
46228And the follerin''night?
46228And the little girl, you was a- sayin'', is better?"
46228And then Challis thought to himself, through the fog of all his soul- torture and perplexity,"How comes she to be so ready to go home to the mark?
46228And then Judith, who had risen from the tree- root to watch the vanishing bird, turned to Challis, and resumed:"Shall we go on?...
46228And then Mrs. Hallock she says:''Whatever could possess us, Edwin, not to make more certain about the ceremony?''
46228And then another that arose from it naturally, What was_ what_ all about?
46228And then it blowed a gale?"
46228And then what did the gentleman say?"
46228And then, with a complete perplexity:"How could that be?"
46228And then,''If she is his wife, how dares she deprive him of his children?
46228And then,''If she is his wife, how dares she refuse to live with him?''
46228And warn''t he right?
46228And was she not assured that Daddy was having the same, only heaps more?
46228And we agreed that the sooner you knew the better....""And why?"
46228And we think we''re going to be told, do we?"
46228And what was the title?...
46228And what would happen if this confounded Deceased Wife''s Sister bill were to become law?
46228And where d''you think he''s gone?...
46228And where was the relevance of measles, and Challis''s thought to himself that it was best to have them young?
46228And whereabout was Bridgetticks the whilst?"
46228And who could say that the evil plausibilities of a subtle human aunt might not persuade her to turn against her_ protà © gà © e_, and rend her?
46228And whom did she mean by"they"when she said,"Oh dear!--how trying they are!"?
46228And why did n''t you tell us?"
46228And yet, had she known, would she have thought it other than right?
46228And yet-- may not this be a question as hard for us to answer as poor, slow, middle- class, muddle- headed Marianne?
46228And you said she called him Alfred, and said she would marry him?"
46228Another thing he would have liked, quite inexplicably, was,"Well!--how''s the fascinating Judith?"
46228Another?...
46228Any more questions?"
46228Anyone hurt?
46228Anything up?"
46228Anything wanted?"
46228Are they loose in the garden?"
46228Are they?"
46228Are we not human?
46228Are you a''Orsekeeper?"
46228Are you sure?
46228Are you there?"
46228Are you, if you are a lady, prepared to deny this last item?
46228Arriving at the door of the ward, Mr. Taylor turned and said:"This is a man, is it not-- this patient-- I think you said?"
46228As for Titus, did she not know him well enough to know he would be mere wax in the hands of a designing woman like that?
46228As his memory was playing such tricks, might not his present style and title be strange to him?
46228As it was, the door- handle had a relapse, and its manipulator said rather sharply:"Thought it was what?"
46228As long as she kept silence, surely he was bound to do so?
46228Ask your neighbours....""Mrs. Charlotte Eldridge?"
46228At last he says:"And then he wrote to you-- when?
46228At least, why need both his eyes go?
46228At what age of the world has man, the strong, scrupled to catch at legal pretexts to secure the betrayal and confusion of woman, the weak?
46228At what stage of the labyrinth of reciprocities were Mr. and Mrs. Challis left when the gentleman laid down his pipe?
46228Athelstan''s mind said:"Deuce take the woman!--can''t she hold her tongue?"
46228Attack the position at once?
46228Aunt Stingy?"
46228Badly?"
46228Barham...?"
46228Barham?..."
46228Beautiful unworldly characters manage their affairs unselfishly only because....""Because they think Providence will act as their agent?
46228Because, do n''t you see, sweetheart?..."
46228Besides, Mr. What''s- his- name is coming... what_ is_ his name?"...
46228Besides, no one in his senses could ascribe any abnormal culture to.... Never you mind!--what on earth had_ she_ to do with it?
46228Besides, what did it matter?
46228Besides, what on earth_ is_ the use of making scenes, when I''ve made up my mind?
46228Besides, who was it you said was coming to this party?
46228Besides....""Besides- what?"
46228Bob warms to his subject:"Is n''t it awfully jolly?
46228Botheration take that old woman gathering sticks!--did she matter?
46228Brides.... Never mind-- you''ll find out.... What is it, my good woman?"
46228But I always have thought, and always shall think, that men ca n''t help themselves....""What for?
46228But I do know that I wo n''t talk to mamma again, neither about this or anything else, unless....""Unless what?"
46228But I do n''t quite like....""What?"
46228But I do n''t see that there can be any marrying now-- not till this Sir Alfred gets a divorce...._ Can_ he?"
46228But I never got on the subject on which he is really interesting, the inner life of the Feudal System....""Which is...?"
46228But I suppose there''s nothing to be done that I ca n''t do?"
46228But I thought it was a row in a house, and furniture getting broke, do n''t you know?"
46228But I thought they had quarrelled this morning?"
46228But Titus always sided with the girl, and that made it so difficult.... What was it this time?...
46228But all I can say is, if Titus wants to go away to his Judith, let him go?
46228But are we under any obligation to sup full of horrors on a day like this?"
46228But did Marianne do so?
46228But did n''t they never say where they come from, nor what they wanted?"
46228But did the Reverend speak of Broadribb-- Brownrigg?"
46228But did the little incident leave the two performers exactly where it found them?
46228But did you always write?"
46228But do tell me-- only it''s hardly fair to ask-- did you mean that_ she_ put the arsenic in Julia''s coffee, or the negress?"
46228But expect what?"
46228But for now, was there nothing?
46228But for the sake of the children, do n''t you see?
46228But go back to him?
46228But has he''approached the subject''?
46228But having admitted failure, why hold so tightly to the photo- album?
46228But he could not leave that"Why_ even then_?"
46228But he fought shy of the sequel their presence suggested-- what word ought his fancy to supply as the tree''s imaginary speech about themselves?
46228But he loses the thread of the conversation; for, just as he is going to speak, the sister says to Scipio,"What did you say''er''for?"
46228But he was grateful to the Post for being so coercive and superseding and cancelling all considerations of-- of what?
46228But he was there when Mrs. Steptoe was looking at the photographs, and he spoke of it to me.... What did he speak of?
46228But he would make another suggestion:"Why not ask Addie what_ she_ thinks?
46228But his speech was not absolutely consistent, for he added,"Pourquoi diable ne put- il s''abriter sous la haie?"
46228But how about the darkness of the night, that he had learned to know only by the loneliness and the silence?
46228But how about the winter?
46228But how about those stoppered bottles?
46228But how about those who are neither foes nor strangers, yet must be more than friends, and dare not be lovers?
46228But how came you to come by East Putney?"
46228But how came you to know?"
46228But how did it happen?"
46228But how would such an interpretation of retrospective action affect me and Judith?"
46228But how_ was_ it done?
46228But if the parson were to fail in his appointment, was it certain that the delinquent would be brought to the scratch a second time?
46228But is it necessary to synchronize the events of the story so closely?
46228But is it to be a long job?"
46228But maturer reflection showed Sibyl, whose sisterly feelings run high....""They do n''t hit it off?"
46228But might she look at the plan?
46228But no delirium?"
46228But perhaps Hallock?...
46228But perhaps they were immortal?
46228But perhaps, Mr. Challis, your own views on this subject are... a... well defined?
46228But she kept her self- command, and replied with a voice under control:"Scroop-- do you not know me?
46228But she said nothing, and he continued:"There was a row, I suppose?
46228But she spoiled whatever there was of graceful in a grudging concession by adding,"Perhaps that will satisfy you?"
46228But should I have done you any service?
46228But suppose I were, have you asked yourself what course would be open to us?...
46228But suppose instead she were to say,"Just one minute, till I''ve done with Harmood, and I shall be able to listen to you.... Now, what is it?"
46228But suppose this Act would, but for me, have conferred legitimacy retrospectively....""How''but for you''?"
46228But surely he loved Judith?--or what is the vocabulary of the Poets worth?
46228But take the story''s word for it that he said"Elizabeth Barclay?"
46228But that''ll be a while back?"
46228But the nurse forgot herself the moment after, saying:"I must sow this biby to my daddy, tomollow-- maten''t I?"
46228But then!--what might not have happened to that poor little kid, asleep in there?
46228But then, can you understand me?--how could I know it was_ you_?"
46228But then, how did Nonconformity afar manage to do it so exactly like?
46228But then-- it occurred to her presently-- would that count?
46228But this seemed ill- grounded when she added,"What does spremises mean, daddy?"
46228But was he ever told about her?
46228But was it reasonable in not doing so?
46228But what can one do?
46228But what did she read?"
46228But what did she say, I should like to know?"
46228But what did she say?
46228But what did that matter when there was cake?
46228But what did you mean he says?"
46228But what did you mean to say?"
46228But what do you know about Mr. Challis?
46228But what is meant by cakes and ale?
46228But what is three months, after all, when you come to name it?"
46228But what use will it be?"
46228But what was that pipe to the pipes he would smoke when his little lass was back, to make all this caution in lighting them needless?
46228But what was the accident, and how much was Daddy hurt?
46228But when Aunt Bessy and Phoebe reached that gate-- where were Lizarann and Joan?
46228But when they''re alone...?"
46228But when will he be"about again"?
46228But where are we to send?"
46228But where was the use of answering the question now?
46228But who ever gave a thought to the winter days in Tallack Street?
46228But who was the blind beggar?"
46228But why French?"
46228But why does n''t he?"
46228But why had widowhood come suddenly on the tapis?
46228But why should n''t it?...
46228But why think of it at all, yet awhile?
46228But why was this worse than the other telling would have been?
46228But why''even then''?
46228But why?
46228But will they?
46228But would it die?
46228But you got what you went for?
46228But you remember the two little girls?"
46228But you will ask Addie?
46228But, may she not have known falsely?
46228But, then, how about anthropoid apes?
46228But-- where was the Deceased Wife''s Sister?
46228But... did ye never see the sea, mother?"
46228Ca n''t we give you a lift?"
46228Ca n''t you get it now, and burn it for me to see?
46228Ca n''t you hear them?"
46228Ca n''t you introduce her to Mr. Magnus, and let them settle it between them?"
46228Ca n''t you leave alone?"
46228Ca n''t you tell me what you mean?
46228Ca n''t you_ say_ what you mean?"
46228Can I be of any service?"
46228Can a woman ever succeed in doing so, except by hating him?
46228Can not that fool John be made to throw a light on the mystery?
46228Can she be lying?
46228Can she not be got?
46228Can the reason be told?...
46228Can we blame a lady of her style for refusing to mix?
46228Can we not sympathize with her?
46228Can you believe me, in the face of what I have said to you?"
46228Can you not, after all, forget this foolish infatuation for my sake?
46228Can you tell us?"
46228Can you wait two minutes while I put on walking- boots?"
46228Can you wonder that I, thinking as I do of these legalities, should choose the last?"
46228Candles that have never been blown out give a much better light than restarted ones-- who can say why?
46228Cat and I, then... what we call her, when we''re alone?"
46228Certainly Louis Rossier-- who else?
46228Challis left his hand in Jim''s, while he said,"But where''s the kid?"
46228Challis said interrogatively:"Because...?"
46228Challis thrust what he had overheard, when eavesdropping, into the background of his mind:"About the stage, I suppose?
46228Challis was enjoying the cigar too much to ask--"Why CÃ ¦ sar''s wife?"
46228Challis''s mishap he did not distress himself about; he would be all right presently-- had he not spoken?
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Challis?"
46228Charlotte Eldridge and I have talked it all over....""Oh!--you''ve talked it all over?"
46228Cold hot water is detestable...._ Yes_, Sibyl?"
46228Completing it, Miss Fossett again spoke:"Where did you say you were in service, Mrs. Steptoe?
46228Consider this too; what right have you to take for granted that she will ever be forgiven by her family?
46228Could he even obtain a Special Licence at Doctors''Commons?
46228Could he have trusted himself not to emphasize its pressure unduly?
46228Could he never touch the damask cheek of his enchantress of to- day without an intrusion into his mind of-- Marianne''s mole?
46228Could he not feel for the poor soul on the iceberg, bear though she was, without that?
46228Could he possibly be within an hour of the day that was to bring him Lizarann?
46228Could it matter, either way?
46228Could n''t exactly say why?"
46228Could n''t she leave it to_ him_ to instruct Marianne-- who was much too slow to find out anything for herself-- on this point?
46228Could n''t she say his name with Mister?
46228Could n''t you find what he says about her figure?
46228Could n''t you have the sense to ask and find?
46228Could n''t you manage a little Heathenism for once, and be jolly?
46228Could n''t you think them up a little?"
46228Could not the last keep still?
46228Could the solemn rite be refused to him if he brought the ring in his pocket to the scaffold, and the Registrar was in attendance?
46228Curtis''s?"
46228Deaf and dumb people that can read the Scriptures aloud automatically and never be any the wiser, do n''t you know?"
46228Decision on that point scarcely rests with ignorance though; who shall say that even Alcoholism can efface a soul?
46228Desultory chat, in which the question,"Whose move is it?"
46228Did Challis ever say to himself, to put a finishing- touch on the oddity of his position,"What would it matter?
46228Did Charlotte know how miserable she was making her?
46228Did Jim know that voice?
46228Did Judith love him?
46228Did Mr. Challis use a Fountain Pen?
46228Did all this mean that in the end he would have to give up associating with the outer world, and restrict himself to John Eldridge and Lewis Smithson?
46228Did he adore her, or how?
46228Did he not himself, when he came round after_ his_ mishap, ask whether"the trout"had been taken, meaning the fox?
46228Did he not know of old how often he had deceived himself?
46228Did it strike you that I made light of subjects usually held sacred?"
46228Did n''t Addie sometimes look on the worst side of things?
46228Did n''t I tell you I never succeeded?
46228Did n''t Sally count up to five?
46228Did n''t the boy tell?
46228Did n''t you want to kiss her?"
46228Did not she say she had been at Charlotte''s in the morning?
46228Did not the story note, a page ago, that she had altogether missed a sheet of the paper?
46228Did she ask herself any questions?
46228Did she leave no message?"
46228Did she name any time?"
46228Did the New Police scrub underneath the beds, clear the flues of sut, scour out the sink, and so on?
46228Did this astronomer catch that fly, or did the fly get away?
46228Did you ever have the ill- luck to be the seeker after a possible casualty in a railway accident?
46228Did you ever hear of a disorder"terminating fatally"in a workhouse?
46228Did you find the politics bored you?...
46228Did you get your letter?"
46228Did you give that little boy the farthing cake?"
46228Did you go nowhere else?"
46228Did you make out?"
46228Did you make out?"
46228Did you say peritonitis?
46228Did you see any?"
46228Did you send to the address I gave?"
46228Did you tell him?"
46228Did you think I doubted it?"
46228Did you, who read this, ever have to kill anything larger than an insect you could flatten out in a trice to a mere blot?
46228Did your sentimentalism make you feel sick, till the last last kick left it collapsed and cooling?
46228Do I know Mr. Challis is going away to- morrow?
46228Do n''t we know the sort of thing?
46228Do n''t we now, Polly Anne?"
46228Do n''t you know Judith?"
46228Do n''t you see how entirely different the cases are?
46228Do n''t you see how much better it will be yourself?"
46228Do n''t you see the interpretation that might be put-- I do n''t say your Titus_ would_ put it, but he_ might_--on''Why ca n''t we agree, et cetera?''
46228Do n''t you see, dear"--this very gently, not to tax her hearer overmuch--"don''t you see that_ then_ no divorce would have been necessary?"
46228Do n''t you think it is so?
46228Do n''t you understand?..."
46228Do n''t you?"
46228Do n''t you?"
46228Do you believe me?
46228Do you expect me to believe that you two rode all that way and never spoke?"
46228Do you feel that you wish to plaster, Will?"
46228Do you find her inexplicable?
46228Do you mean that they all led celibate lives?''
46228Do you mean_ her_ when you say_ they_?
46228Do you mind my calling you Scroop now and then, by accident?"
46228Do you not believe me?
46228Do you not know me?"
46228Do you not remember?"
46228Do you remember Challis''s first appearance in this story, and how we spoke of him as perceptive?
46228Do you remember when we played chess?...
46228Do you remember?
46228Do you see?...
46228Do you suppose-- can you suppose-- that_ any_ member of your family would approve of what is going on, if they knew it?"
46228Do you suppose...?"
46228Do you want a large bucket of water?"
46228Do you want to know all the rest of the important letter?
46228Do you, or do n''t you?"
46228Do_ you_ know?"
46228Do_ you_ think_ I_ do n''t know that it''s_ you_ that''s in behind it all?
46228Does Graubosch ascribe intelligence, in our sense of the word, to this Antecedent?"
46228Does Mr. Challis mention their figures?
46228Does he say where the sofa was?"
46228Does it mean that what Mr. Magnus has heard of what you can do_ is n''t_ enough?
46228Does n''t an element of hopefulness come in?"
46228Does n''t do to count one''s coronets before they''re hatched-- eh, Addie?"
46228Dr. Sidrophel, when appealed to, said:"Hurt you to go to the open window?
46228Dramatist?...
46228Eh, Rector?"
46228Eldridge!--Did you_ tell_ her your mistress was n''t here?"
46228Eldridge?"
46228Elphinstone?"
46228Else why did that restless, nervous hand skim it over, from side to side, then press the closed eyelids below as though to squeeze a pain out?
46228Especially the latter, because why should he think confessions or apologies necessary?
46228Failing the parent, is it the duty of the guardian-- of the State?
46228Father goes out to work?
46228Faugh!--where was the sense of such an imbecile speculation, or the need for it?
46228For Challis to reply:"What care I how much I scratch myself, if it is on your account?"
46228For had n''t she-- or had she-- foregone wedlock and babes of her own for the sake of her sister''s and his?
46228For had she not detected his thought about them, when his eyes looked for them and found them not?
46228For had she not honourably resolved not to show it, and even gone the length of locking it into a drawer to prove her resolution?
46228For instance, in the appearance of the bed?
46228For was it conceivable that a law that quashed his paternity of his own children could indict him for his marriage with their mother?
46228For, after a moment''s consideration, she says:"If there was no need for a divorce, why drag Titus in?
46228For, was it not Daddy?
46228GLENVAIRLOCH TO LET"Will Mrs. Challis be back to lunch, sir?"
46228Getting no immediate reply, his wife repeated,"Well!--what sort?"
46228Give it up and go back?--is that the only course open to us?
46228Got the right time?"
46228Grundy?"
46228HAD THE DEVIL GOT UNCLE BOB?
46228HAD THE DEVIL GOT UNCLE BOB?
46228HOW CONFESS, AND TO WHAT?
46228HOW CONFESS, AND TO WHAT?
46228Had I said anything wrong?"
46228Had Marianne been sharp enough to see it?
46228Had he been in danger?
46228Had he not often to wait for an idea, to get a start with?
46228Had he not read lately somewhere how Hadrian had married two Persian Princesses-- real ones!--two at once!--as cool as a cucumber?
46228Had he not spoken confidently of the"ship''s doctor"making a square job of his leg?
46228Had he touched a sore subject?
46228Had it done so, of necessity?
46228Had n''t I better bring it up, while you have tea?"
46228Had n''t got a little girl, had n''t he?...
46228Had n''t you better ask him?"
46228Had she been imposed upon?
46228Had she gone too far?
46228Had she not helped her,_ lubens et ex animo_, when the improper study of mankind seemed good to their hours of leisure?
46228Had she recoiled too abruptly from the precipice?
46228Had she, perhaps, despised her a little too roundly when her first whispers were audible?
46228Had the latter any complaint to make?
46228Had the man he had talked with given his name?
46228Hallock?"
46228Happen you might see her again?"
46228Has he spoken to you about it?...
46228Has he taken legal advice?"
46228Has it laid too much stress on the hard side of this girl''s character-- its vanity and love of power?
46228Has it to do with...?"
46228Has she been ill?"
46228Have I disguised anything?
46228Have I not told you plainly-- have I not told you repeatedly-- that this Miss Judith Arkroyd is what is complained of?
46228Have the husbands been convicted of retrospective bigamy?
46228Have you anything further to say?"
46228Have you had anything performed yet?
46228Have you seen him?"
46228Have you seen it?"
46228Having made out a good case for Conscience, why weaken it?
46228Hay, little lass?"
46228He accepted the name, to escape discussion, saying:"If Simpson''s is favourable, and the medecine''s nice, what more can a lassie want?
46228He and Bishop Barham would have to fight that out between them.... Oh dear!--what_ has_ Saladin got?
46228He and the Baronet look the inquiry at one another,"Ought we not to follow?"
46228He answered, as cheerfully as he dared-- that is, not to seem to ignore the conditions:"You''ll go to bed just the same, of course?"
46228He begged it awfully, it seemed; but why?
46228He contends that the ideal of Feudalism....""What''s that?"
46228He continued:"What''s she like to look at, by way of describing of her now?"
46228He continues to throw his voice back over his head to her:"What was the name of the queer kid that said her father was''an Asker''?
46228He could hear Jim''s little dog bark in answer to his own, but he was still some minutes''walk from the road.... What was that cry?
46228He could recall cases in point.... What had that to do with the matter, by- the- bye?
46228He felt it coming before he could define it: what was it going to be?
46228He felt quite nettled with Marianne for saying,"Oh, have n''t you done it?"
46228He has a laugh ready for it, as he adds:"You thought the lady would be unhappy when she found she''d been talking to a blind man about his eyesight?
46228He hesitated a moment, before adding,"You have kept it from him, I suppose, for the present?"
46228He kept his eyes still on her with a puzzled look, adding immediately after,"Could you not tell me of something to remind me?"
46228He said to her:''But the man in the road-- Blind Jim-- was he hurt?''
46228He said,''What letter?''
46228He stopped suddenly, yet asked himself-- why stop?
46228He then come crassin''over-- this was Mrs. Groves''s experience-- and queer he looked, causing Lizarann to ask,"Ai n''t my daddy there?"
46228He then stood over the object of his visit, whatever it was, to ask, as an entirely new idea,"How are you yourself, Master Titus?"
46228He told me all about it-- how he had said to her:''What for, Polly Anne?
46228He took the three letters to her, and said,"Now, Polly Anne, which is it to be?
46228He tried to think-- what next?
46228He was able to answer that he had looked in to tea at the Ponsonby- Smiths'', or whatever the name was; and what did Polly Anne think?
46228He''d be martal sorry to hear the lassie was ill. What do ye make out the young ladies said?"
46228He''ll know what castrametation means, and things....""Mr.''Titus Scroop''?
46228He''s best to himself, and he''s had all what liquor there was.... Ca n''t you answer?...
46228He''s gone to his aunts Jane and Mary''s for the holidays because they''re infectious....""Which-- the holidays or the aunts?
46228Her husband encouraged revelation by saying"Well?"
46228Her husband, averse to reserves, and noting this one, said,"What were you going to say, Therèse?"
46228Her knowledge that it was Robert Verrall Challis was perhaps what made her say,"What?--what''s that?--did you say Verrall?"
46228Her ladyship supposes it''s the usual thing; need we know anything about it?
46228Her sister says nothing, and he resumes:"You remember the story of the_ asker_?"
46228Her uncle had been drinking, and his behaviour had frightened her.... What''s that?"
46228Here a pause, following a question from Mrs. Eldridge,"Have you stirred it?"
46228Here we are, I suppose?"
46228Hey, lassie?
46228Him I heard cough?"
46228Him or her?"
46228His father, who understood Master Bob down to the ground, attached the right meaning to"What are you?"
46228His fortitude was great to utter no sound-- or, was he injured to death, and half insensible?
46228How about Estrild''s little handmaiden?--a good name for her?--something ending in_ illa_?
46228How about that Steptoe story, not an hour''s walk from here?
46228How about that other story?
46228How about the Great Idea?
46228How and when had the change come over things?
46228How are John and Charlotte Eldridge?"
46228How are the kids?"
46228How came he to be so positive?
46228How can a thing so small give such a cry?
46228How can it exist otherwise?"
46228How can it struggle so, either, as it is caught and picked up by a pair of strong arms, and wrapped in the bosom of a big overcoat?
46228How can you be so tiresome, Ju?
46228How can you talk such stuff?"
46228How can you tell?"
46228How can you_ expect_ them to be any better when they have such wretched homes?
46228How could I, without flying in Sir Rhyscombe''s face?"
46228How could he make such a speech now?
46228How could he tell?
46228How could she have come so quick to Royd?
46228How could she remedy it?
46228How could she turn on him and say,"You''re not to come in this time"?
46228How could the news have reached Marianne?
46228How could the truth be softened to her father, if it came to that?
46228How could they be reconciled with a husband''s legal right to confiscate a White- Eyed Musical Kaffir, or any record, for that matter?
46228How describe it?
46228How did Daddy hurt his leg?"
46228How did Steptoe know the name of the coal- merchant?"
46228How did he take it?"
46228How did you know of her?"
46228How did you know she did n''t mean the new cook?"
46228How did you?''
46228How did_ I_ come to know about the letter he sent her?
46228How do you know he answered it?"
46228How do you know her name''s Judith?
46228How do you know that?
46228How do you know?"
46228How does the woman answer, Challis?"
46228How far can they be legitimately discussed-- by us who know the lady?
46228How far do you make it out to the Park Gate?"
46228How far is it?"
46228How if that grave where Dolly lay could not be found?
46228How if_ she_ gave way, too?
46228How is it possible Lotty should be mistaken, when Mrs. Challis is actually living at her mother''s at Tulse Hill?
46228How long was it to take with the motor?"
46228How many ideals are as nearly attained in this imperfect world?
46228How many legal pretexts are there in the whole of them that a woman can catch at to her own advantage?
46228How many policeman was there, lassie?"
46228How might you suppose he come there?"
46228How much nearer are we-- how much nearer to plain sailing?
46228How old do you make him?"
46228How old is she?--sixteen?..."
46228How on earth did Napoleon Bonaparte contrive to exist?
46228How on earth did you get here?"
46228How on earth should he set about it?
46228How shall we console her?"
46228How should I seem then to the girl who is ready to throw all away for me now?
46228How should_ I_ know anything about them?"
46228How then?"
46228How was it possible for your father and me to allow it to go on?
46228How was it possible, for instance, to say to him,"Do Chobbles and Mumps never ask after their Pappy?"
46228How was it?"
46228How was she to interpret its being packed away out of her sight in this way?
46228How would Zero do?"
46228How would he know his little lass?
46228How would he?
46228How would_ pseudoeschynomorphism_ serve the turn?
46228How''s Miss Caldecott?...
46228How''s Mrs. Steptoe getting on with her soups?"
46228How''s she coming on?
46228How''s the children?"
46228How''s the family?
46228How''s the patient?"
46228How?
46228How_ can_ you be absurd, Polly Anne?
46228How_ could_ it be anyone else?"
46228However, Miss Arkroyd had certainly spoken about a walk to the Roman Camp; so naturally he would cast her for the part, do n''t you see?
46228However, as long as no project involved a new separation from Daddy, what did Lizarann care?
46228However, she comes out presently to say,"The question is, was it Mr. Challis?
46228Hullo!--what was the meaning of this?
46228I believe we are clear next Thursday-- will that do?"
46228I ca n''t remember you, but I suppose you were there?"
46228I did not then know with any certainty the sentiments entertained towards myself by....""By?..."
46228I do n''t say he_ does_, but suppose he does, what does it all amount to?...
46228I had a motive-- perhaps not a wise one-- but I think....""What?"
46228I heard him after ask a friend,''How did_ you_ will''?
46228I hope he has n''t strained your hand?"
46228I hope you made her understand she must be quiet about it?"
46228I mean what was the name of the club?"
46228I mean your father got his type- writing?"
46228I mean, what do you know that I do n''t?"
46228I mean, why do you go on raking up?
46228I mention this in case....""In case any of us should plaster unexpectedly?
46228I must say I admired her self- possession when she heard what a precipice she had been on the edge of....""What did she say?"
46228I never have any doubt what I mean by the word....""What, for instance?"
46228I never thought....""Never thought what?"
46228I only know what Mrs. Barham said the Bishop said....""What did His Holiness say?"
46228I say, though, is n''t it a pity?
46228I say-- are you quite sure you can hear up here?
46228I shall always grieve that I could not keep your friendship... yes-- you see my meaning?
46228I shall find Lady Arkroyd downstairs.... Oh, by- the- bye, Miss Arkroyd, what did your mother say was the name of the big parson-- Reverend what?"
46228I shall tell her all about it at the proper time....""Meanwhile, hold my tongue, you mean?
46228I shall tell the girl flatly that I think she''s doing wrong....""But why-- but why?
46228I should be sorry to... to....""To give offence?
46228I should say-- which is the little girl whose dad''s hurt his leg and gone to the Hospital?...
46228I suppose I should be right in getting Sir Murgatroyd''s money used that way?"
46228I suppose Judith would have come back here and said nothing about it?"
46228I suppose she''s going on somewhere-- that''s it, is n''t it?"
46228I suppose she''s taken the child with her-- her maid, I mean?"
46228I suppose the_ Times_ has come?"
46228I suppose they said it was n''t a trade-- the Great Idea?"
46228I suppose you ca n''t get any breakfast for her yet awhile?...
46228I tell you-- I must tell you-- that the thought of you is with me every hour of the day, and what have I to help me to fight against it?
46228I was speaking of Jim Coupland-- the blind man, who was killed-- is it possible you do not know that he died?"
46228I wish she would have seen me when I went....""You did go?"
46228I wonder who that can be?"
46228IS MY HUSBAND DYING?
46228IS MY HUSBAND DYING?
46228If Challis married Judith, his first wife being still alive, with the reservation that the latter was n''t his wife at all, how then?
46228If Judith said,"Not at home,"was it any wonder?
46228If Mr. Challis had a grown- up daughter, she asked, would he let her go on the stage, if she wished it very much, and had a turn for it?
46228If Mrs. Steptoe could be educated, why not retain Mrs. Steptoe?
46228If a rigid economy was compulsory, how could extravagance be possible?
46228If all had gone well....""Why did Sir Alfred Challis come to meet you?"
46228If he had known that he was incurring it, would he have committed the offence at all?
46228If he was insensible again and did not hear her, what did it matter?
46228If her jealous ladyship was n''t secure against me and poor good, honourable Stephen, where is married bliss to find security?
46228If it did put a barrier between me and Judith, would it not give me back my old home and the kids?"
46228If it were a legal one....""How do you mean?"
46228If she and Bridgetticks were shouting defiances to them-- now this moment, through the snow-- would it make her cough?
46228If she had not come back to the Rectory yesterday, as he hoped, was she up now and out on the beach?...
46228If so, by what name?
46228If the household had made up its mind not to admit him, what could he do?
46228If there was no divorce, why select a co- respondent?
46228If they intended to ignore Marianne and defy public opinion, why not do so at once?
46228If we get married in a mad hurry, under pressure, just to avoid this legislative Bill business....""Cutting the ground from under our feet?
46228If you were in her place?"
46228If_ she_ does not, why should_ we_?
46228Ignore your marriage, under the false warranty of a law we both disallow, and make a sort of Gretna Green business of it next spring?..."
46228In at this door, is it?
46228In its solitude was it not now and again almost his resolve to die, and not await another day?
46228In perhaps five he woke again with a start and said:"Have ye been here long, master?"
46228In this case, even when Marianne said point- blank,"But what_ would_ you do?"
46228Is Lady Arkroyd downstairs?"
46228Is Marianne your wife or not?"
46228Is anything amiss?"
46228Is he gone to the Station, or the Hospital?"
46228Is he supposed to want to marry her?"
46228Is it Sibyl?--or the Bart?--or the_ madre_?"
46228Is it any use...?"
46228Is it certain that Elizabeth''s entry into that castle would have left Adeline''s world so much less empty and chill?
46228Is it certain that Miss Arkroyd paid as much attention to her hostess as you and I might have thought the circumstances demanded?
46228Is it creditable that the New Act will tie you together again, willy- nilly?"
46228Is it worth putting it down, if dissension in the wind is pointing to a short interview?
46228Is n''t that it?"
46228Is n''t that it?"
46228Is n''t that just like you now?
46228Is n''t that my cab?"
46228Is n''t that somebody calling me?...
46228Is n''t that the difference between us, Rector?"
46228Is n''t that the doctor?"
46228Is n''t there a bird called a Termagant?
46228Is she coming?"
46228Is she not here?
46228Is that it?
46228Is that so?"
46228Is that the child coughing?"
46228Is that the market- cross?"
46228Is that what you were going to say?"
46228Is the story wrong in its estimate of her?
46228Is the whole world to be nothing but skates-- skates-- skates?
46228Is there a trace of cheerful reassurance in the Rector''s voice?
46228Is there any objection?"
46228Is there slight concession, just to accommodate a working equilibrium, in her last words?
46228Is there something you wish I should say?"
46228It crossed his mind now, and kept him silent until Judith repeated:"What use will it be?"
46228It has leaked out in conversation what I should have said to you if I had thought you would take my advice....""Which would have been...?"
46228It is n''t that.... Do n''t you see how disagreeable it would be for Bessy?"
46228It just made him say"What?"
46228It may even be false from beginning to end...._ Ask_ her, did you say?
46228It met with the comment:"I suppose that''s what you grunted at, the first time?"
46228It seems that that sister of his-- the Steptoe woman, you know?
46228It was her idea, was n''t it?"
46228It was not the authorship, but the marriage, or marriages rather; for if we considered Marianne null and void, what should we call her residuum?
46228It was too bad!--what had he done that she should be so secretive and mistrustful?
46228It was where they meet for the first time at the oculist''s at Vienna, in the waiting- room....""Is that the kissing scene?"
46228It was you said, how did I know he answered it?
46228It wawsn''t mine one bit,"and a male reply, with the climax of human contentment in every syllable,"I''m jolly glad-- it lasted so much longer?"
46228It''s not time yet for either.... Why must n''t you have no medicine?...
46228It''s only your silliness and inexperience makes you say these things....""What is it you do care about, then?"
46228Jim paused a few seconds to enjoy Lizarann''s imagined hilarity, then added:"Ye''ll keep it snug about my fut, master?
46228John!--where are you?
46228Judith''s father never saw any fault to be found with his daughter''s conduct; so why should the story?
46228Judith''s-- who''s Judith?"
46228Just a drain?..."
46228Lady Arkroyd answers:"Yes, dear, what?"
46228Let him see!--didn''t_ aischune_ in Greek mean disgrace, or guilt?
46228Let him see, where was he?
46228Let it proceed:"Do_ you_ think Sir Alfred''s last book is so much worse than his others, Yorick?"
46228Let me see, now, how did it run?
46228Lewis Smithson heard it... oh dear!--what_ was_ the name of the club now?
46228Lizarann had a question to ask:"Did it went on just like that when my Daddy went viyages aboardship?"
46228Lord and Lady Who?"
46228Marianne expostulated,"_ can_ it matter?
46228Marianne then said, as she surrendered the cup:"You saw him before he went out?"
46228Marianne thought to herself, should she get up and go across the rug to her husband and kiss him?
46228Marianne''s voice is changing a little as she repeats:"It burned your fingers, and you threw it on the ground?"
46228Marianne?"
46228Master Bob immediately left off pulling his father''s hair and rushed to the door, shouting loud enough for the Universe to hear,"Did n''t she, Cat?"
46228May Mr. Elphinstone speak to her ladyship?
46228May there not have been some other cause?
46228Mean to say you do n''t?"
46228Mental unsoundness seems to have been denied; but, then, surely someone must have affirmed it?
46228Might it not be your duty to the children?...
46228Might not all this be self- delusion, too?
46228Might not he see her again within the hour?
46228Might she take away the tea- things?
46228Miss Arkroyd under the wing of a live Countess, safe of an escort to the paternal mansion, what more could be asked?
46228Miss Fossett, who in the previous twenty- four hours had twice said to the Rector,"What_ is_ the matter with Bess?
46228Miss Harmood, who had not been explicit enough, now testified to Mr. Eldridge; whereupon Challis asked her why she could n''t say so at first?
46228Mr.... what''s his name?--the politician....""Mr. Ramsey Tomes?"
46228Mrs. Eldridge elevates her eyebrows, and perhaps her shoulders, slightly, as though asking space what next?
46228Mrs. Eldridge interjects,"What am I trying to make out?"
46228Mrs. Eldridge looks her despair, for was not Ellen Sayce a girl who wept on the stairs instead of doing them down, and had to return to her parents?
46228Mrs. Eldridge struck in:"Where was the sofa?
46228Mrs. Steptoe advanced a cautious suggestion:"You do n''t take to liver, ma''am?"
46228Mrs. Steptoe found voice enough to say:"Ai n''t they at Tulse Hill, sir?"
46228Mrs. Steptoe must have appreciated the difficulty, for she threw in,"Did you know the house, miss?"
46228Must n''t she go, Teacher?
46228Must one?..."
46228My wife Polly Anne?"
46228Need it be said that Challis''s observation is followed in all this?
46228Next day?"
46228No doubt she felt furious, thought Sibyl; and how was she to know she did n''t show it?
46228No immediate answer coming, the speaker throws a light,"Perhaps she''s a vegetarian, or antivivisects?"
46228No!--don''t sit there; I ca n''t see you.... Was n''t it ridiculous of me to do this-- just now of all times in the year?"
46228No!--would you?
46228No, he had not-- had she written?
46228No?"
46228No?--then what?"
46228No?...
46228Not decided on?
46228Not the whole!--that was impossible; what could his father have told him?
46228Nothin''comes of it....""What was her idea?"
46228Now I want you just to touch your father''s hand with it... oh, he''s your uncle, is he?...
46228Now do n''t you?"
46228Now tell-- what is the false idea?
46228Now, who was this chap going to be?
46228Now, why could n''t she have said honestly to him at breakfast,"Recollect, to- night''s the Acropolis dinner"?
46228Now, why is it no new strap ever has a hole in the right place?"
46228Of course, they were not on terms-- her ladyship says this-- but is that our concern?
46228Of course; but which servant?
46228Oh dear!--now suppose the Honourable Diamonds had not"encouraged"her-- how then?
46228Oh dear!--why_ can not_ people be ordinary and reasonable?
46228Oh dear!--would nothing come of it, after all?
46228Oh yes!--there was a man in the road-- what did M. Louis know?
46228Oh, Scroop, Scroop, do you think women have no eyes?"
46228Oh, Yorick, what_ can_ it matter?"
46228Oh, what was I talking about?
46228On the dressing- table, then?
46228Once you two were face to face-- just think of it!--do you suppose old times would n''t come to the rescue?"
46228One young man said,''How?''
46228Only I wish he''d....""Wish he''d what?"
46228Only it''s not the chief part... a... but you know, of course?"
46228Only, as you was sayin'', such a many years after.... Is that Mrs. Challis coming?"
46228Only, of course, it does n''t do to call the Wisdom of Providence in question....""What might that be, missis-- lady, I should say?"
46228Only, when it comes to that, is it conversation any longer?
46228Or an evil fire Jim was hard at work to crawl away from, but could not, seeing that it could follow him on wheels?
46228Or any question at all, for that matter?
46228Or did n''t I?"
46228Or how?"
46228Or if that theatrical nonsense had not let witchcraft loose on an easy victim; easy because unsuspicious?
46228Or is it a survival of some ancestral fire- worship?
46228Or not?"
46228Or perhaps insolvents die-- was one ever known to succumb?
46228Or something of that sort?...
46228Or was Challis just a shade priggish to show a stony front to such a very meek little reminiscence?
46228Or was it a wild beast, that kept the ship''s crew from going ashore?
46228Or was it that he wanted time to settle down after the recent_ Ã © meute_?
46228Or were they, after all, talking of something else all the while?...
46228Or what does he suppose them to have been?"
46228Or would it be like the anà ¦ sthetic that multiplies suffering tenfold, and leaves its victim inexpressive-- just mere adamant?
46228Or, stop a minute!--might she not have been a half- sister?
46228Or, was she not rather relieved at the turn things had taken?
46228Or, were those eyelids lenient towards his personal self?
46228Otherwise, why seek confirmatory evidence, as his hearers seemed to do?
46228Ought I not to say to help me against myself?
46228Ought he not to check this revelation?
46228Ought her response, thought Judith, to show pique at her quarry''s independence-- at his contentment to be away from her society?
46228Ought not Mrs. Challis, or Lady Challis, whichever she is, to be communicated with?
46228Ought she not to have written more explicitly to the Rectory about the child''s state?
46228P''raps it was only Guy''s or''Tholomoo''s?"
46228Pain enough!--ah, to be sure!--and what might you expect?
46228Perhaps I misunderstood?"
46228Perhaps I ought to have told you?"
46228Perhaps it was The Boys?
46228Perhaps it was Uncle Bob?
46228Perhaps it was the healthy, bracing influence of Aunt Stingy that she missed, and the occasional stimulus, when Jim was afar, of a strap or a slipper?
46228Perhaps she knew how beautiful-- who can say?
46228Perhaps there''s someone?..."
46228Perhaps you''ve seen the people?
46228Presently she said, to relieve the monotony,"Shall I put your cup down?"
46228Presently the lady addressed her again:"What does he ask for, little stuffy?
46228Q. E. D. So what was Kate?"
46228Qu''est ce qu''on aurait voulu de plus?"
46228Que pouvez- vous faire, messieurs, vous- mêmes?''
46228Que voulez- vous?
46228Ramsgate?"
46228Ready for your other cup?"
46228Remember this, Scroop-- that the bond that holds you to her is thrice as strong as it would be if....""If what?"
46228Rouse the servants?
46228Said Yorick then, laughing:"What''s the rumpus?"
46228Saturday?
46228Say I have had a slight accident-- that is it, I suppose?..."
46228Say it all over again, or try a variation,"You see before you a guilty_ et cetera_,"or something of that sort?
46228See?"
46228Send whom?
46228Sha n''t I get something?
46228Shall I come and go down on my knees to her?
46228Shall I tell yer a little thing I know?
46228Shall I tell yer something I know?
46228Shall we go in, or over on the lawn, where they are dancing?"
46228She begins again:"Why is n''t Titus to speak to a lady without a preach about it?"
46228She closed the window gently, and went back to the bed, to hear...."Why ca n''t you hear the waves?
46228She could n''t say; why?
46228She hopes it''s all right?
46228She is not an Abstract Idea; would not the butcher''s bill diminish in that case?
46228She may have more than once asked herself the question,"Do I possibly love this man?"
46228She may have provoked it; but did that matter?
46228She must have had_ some_ experience to convince her?"
46228She puts her hand up to her head restlessly, causing her friend to ask,"Headache?"
46228She said, with a disagreeable shrewdness:''But you noticed my absence?''
46228She saw its marked effect on Jim, and, though she felt about for some reassuring phrase that would not suggest the question,"Why reassure?"
46228She spoke:"It comes to good- bye, then?"
46228She turned from the window and looked her friend full in the face, in return for"What if it was?"
46228She was judicious, no doubt-- woman of the world, and so on-- but was it necessary to carry it so far?
46228She was just as wrong in building false constructions on no grounds at all....""On no grounds at all?
46228She was referring to the old woman, who most likely neither saw nor heard, or if she did, only harked back to eighty years ago, and thought,"Why not?"
46228She was shocked at the venturesome impiety of the question she half- asked herself:--Could she not trust God for that?
46228She went so far once as to say so to Dr. Pordage-- that_ was_ his real name!--who replied,"Oh ah, that''s it, is it?
46228She_ said_ nothing, certainly; but surely it was a case in which a stony silence was ungraceful?
46228Should Harmood make the tea?
46228Should he ever see Mumps and Chobbles again?
46228Should he examine him where he lay, or try at once to move him off the road?
46228Should he say,"Miss Sibyl''s"?
46228Should it be"Sibyl''s"or"Your sister''s"?
46228Should not the bed, by rights, be"turned down,"and be yawning, as it were, for its occupant?
46228Should she open the window to let a little air in?
46228Should she speak to him by name?
46228Should we not have been told on principle?"
46228Should we not have felt more sorrow for her after that, when his returning speech showed how completely she had, for the moment, passed from his mind?
46228Shrewd discriminative subtlety was on Aunt Stingy''s face as she said,"Why not the fowl to- day, ma''am, and stand the joint over for a day or two?
46228Sir Alfred Challis?...
46228So I says to him,''What did old Sam Nuttall say ten days a- gone?''"
46228So I was glad when the child came running up to say it was you, and should n''t she catch you?"
46228So he spun out his approach as much as possible, and then pounced with,"Why are n''t you two at school, hey?"
46228So loud, in fact, that Harmood came, and said,"Did you call, sir?"
46228So says the Baronet, but when his wife says"Why?"
46228So vivid was the impression that the words were on his lips:"Mumps and Chobbles, do n''t you know me?"
46228So what can I say now?
46228So where are we?"
46228Sometimes it travelled slowly-- came to a hill, perhaps?
46228Steptoe?"
46228Steptoe?"
46228Stop a bit!--what''s that?"
46228Suppose he were to meet them years hence, lengthened and completed, at Girton, perhaps-- even engaged; who can tell?--would they know him again?
46228Suppose it passes, what shall you do then?"
46228Suppose that Bill were to pass next session-- or next whatever it is-- while we are arranging this escapade?
46228Suppose you were me, what would you do?
46228Sure you have n''t put it on some other little lass?"
46228Surely Marianne in the background safeguarded the situation?
46228Surely it deserved better recognition than,"And why could n''t the child tell me all this before?
46228Surely it would!--or, would it?
46228Taylor?"
46228Taylor?"
46228That might be Polly Anne?
46228That was all right, but had no one else come to the Rectory?
46228That''s it, is n''t it?"
46228The Confirmed Christian Scientist''s face fell, and he asked dejectedly, What conclusion did Graubosch draw?
46228The big gentleman?...
46228The bony one with the nostril ajar, and the front teeth, that called you a cure?"
46228The counterpane?--it''s too heavy?
46228The eyes are fine in themselves, and remind me of... oh dear!--what was that girl''s name, now, in Somersetshire?
46228The manner of it made him end with,"Why-- do you know anything?"
46228The question is, where am I to go to find a really good plain cook for Marianne?"
46228The railway was out of the question....""Why?"
46228The sound of a child crying, surely?
46228The study, that is, of man and womankind in braces, selected by the student?
46228The thought just reaches the Rector''s mind, and leaves it as she repeats, in answer to his question,"What more, indeed?
46228The usual thing, I suppose?"
46228The weather?"
46228The_ point_ is, did you speak, or did n''t you?"
46228Then Aunt Bessy kissed her twice on each side, and the two children, coming into the room from the garden, off an excursion, said,"What''s this faw?"
46228Then Challis said, as though still thinking over recent words:"Why''as profanely as I liked''?
46228Then Judith said to him, as though she had but just recollected it:"You found my letter, I suppose?"
46228Then Judith stopped and said:"I suppose you are angry with me?"
46228Then a distasteful thought struck him:--should he ever make the same journey again?
46228Then both Jim''s hearers heard what came quite distinctly from his lips:"What''s got the lassie, Master, my lassie?
46228Then both asked a mixed question, equivalent to-- If not ivorycarvers, why not anything?
46228Then he raised his voice, but never looked round:"Jim!--why ca n''t you shut up that da- da- damned d- d- door and come inside?"
46228Then he said,"Do you mean that you doubt the reality of my-- of my love for Judith?"
46228Then he thought to himself, would not a plunge into that black gulf, then and there, have been, after all, the best thing for him?
46228Then he was able to say,"Let''s see!--what were we talking about?
46228Then his wife said:"What were you going to say?"
46228Then if his Governor was stopping on a week at this beastly little place-- Heaven knows why!--why should n''t_ he_?
46228Then it burst forth in almost a shout--"WHY couldn''t- you- do- as- I- told- you- and- say- your- orders- were...?"
46228Then officially:"Did Mrs. Challis leave no message, Harmood?"
46228Then she had heard the voice of the doctor- gentleman:"Which of you youngsters is his little girl?...
46228Then she qualified her words:"Oh, well, of course, one feels all that I suppose one ought to feel, but....""What what?"
46228Then she said suddenly, rather as one who turns to an offered relief:"What were you and Steptoe saying about my sister when I came in?"
46228Then she turned to the girl and said,"Have_ you_ heard what the doctor said?"
46228Then speech got a turn again, on a revised line,"Why- can''t- you- do- as- you''re- TOLD?"
46228Then touch and hearing would be gone too, and he and Dolly alike forgotten in the black void of the time to come.... What did_ he_ matter?
46228Then, were you not glad?
46228Then, what did the Rector himself really think?
46228There now!--where do ye find th''hospital pa''atient in that?
46228There!--you need n''t fly out...."Was it any wonder that Judith then lost her temper?
46228They have n''t cut the little lass''s tongue out amongst''em?"
46228They might be raised from the dead; may not Lazarus have had a niece?
46228Things of what sort, do you ask?
46228This anxiety that she should go to Royd-- what was it worth?
46228This baby out in the snow again?
46228This one''s too young, and might be unsuitable from other points of view-- eh, Scip?"
46228This seemed mercenary; but then, had not Lizarann herself surrendered hers for a deal?
46228This was concession, for had she not flounced her intention of sending it in Mrs. Eldridge''s face half- an- hour ago?
46228This was in answer to what was evidently the beginning of a question:"Why was the knowledge of this plan to be kept from_ us_?"
46228This was mainly thinking aloud, for how could Charlotte know anything about his letter?
46228Tillingfleet?"
46228Tomes?"
46228Tulse Hill?
46228Unless....""Unless what?"
46228Very likely; but the point was, was she wrong?
46228Vice and Virtue could shake hands over it-- a Coalition Ministry, do n''t you know?"
46228WHAT ABOUT BOB?
46228WHAT ABOUT BOB?
46228WHAT HAD IT ALL BEEN, THIS DREAM?
46228WHAT HAD IT ALL BEEN, THIS DREAM?
46228WHAT HAS BECOME OF YOUR MISTRESS?
46228WHAT HAS BECOME OF YOUR MISTRESS?
46228WHERE WAS THAT SOFA?
46228WHERE WAS THAT SOFA?
46228WHO KNOWS WHAT JUDITH WAS?
46228WHO KNOWS WHAT JUDITH WAS?
46228WHO WAS TO PAY?
46228WHO WAS TO PAY?
46228WHY FIGHT AGAINST INFLICTED LIBERTY?
46228WHY FIGHT AGAINST INFLICTED LIBERTY?
46228Was Calypso saying to herself:"Now, can I trust this man to break his promise?"
46228Was Challis asking himself, did she mean him to keep it?
46228Was Challis, as a man of genius, worth practising on?
46228Was Judith''s thirst for wedlock intense enough to run such a risk?
46228Was he a_ dignus vindice nodus_?
46228Was he bound to say anything?
46228Was he in danger?
46228Was he not himself one, and the author of a pamphlet called"The Higher Socialism: An Essay towards a Better Understanding of the Feudal System"?
46228Was he right, after all?
46228Was he sure it was cold?
46228Was he there?
46228Was he?
46228Was it a release for them also?--for Judith?
46228Was it because four corresponding chits, at least, had hushed down and become self- absorbed and absent?
46228Was it because no certainty existed that Challis''s marriage was invalid?
46228Was it desperation?
46228Was it his fault-- the whole thing?
46228Was it his last sleep there before he should hear his little lassie''s voice again?
46228Was it honourable to overhear what those two girls were discussing in the moonlight?
46228Was it likely she would say,"Of course, Titus calls her Judith, when they''re alone"?
46228Was it not a chance that even now she was on her way, coming----coming?...
46228Was it not as well that last night''s folly or delirium should rank as a dream?--was it not best?
46228Was it not like eavesdropping to listen to it?
46228Was it not, rather, common prudence to wait for the rejection of the Bill, and have a cool year to turn the matter over?
46228Was it right-- was it fair-- to leave her so?
46228Was it so or not?
46228Was it true?
46228Was it you told me there was a Curate who preached a Sermon on the New Atheism in its relation to Socialism?...
46228Was n''t he begging already, and was n''t she alms- giving?
46228Was n''t she speaking now?
46228Was n''t that John''s knock?"
46228Was n''t that it?"
46228Was n''t the old title printed anywhere on the old sheets?"
46228Was n''t three plenty?
46228Was n''t_ she_ in it, little lass?"
46228Was not each day''s evil sufficient for it, and something over?
46228Was not that rather the way men sometimes talk, throwing dust in the eyes that want to distinguish right from wrong?
46228Was not the last chance gone of passing the barrier that held them apart?
46228Was she asked because it was so clear the invitation would never be accepted, or because she was wanted to cover the position?
46228Was she likely to be back before twelve?
46228Was she saying to herself that this was tit- for- tat; a_ riposte_ for his"Sibyl"of their talk in the morning?
46228Was she sometimes rash?
46228Was she there at all, technically?
46228Was she, for instance, the underdressed one with the mole, or the rawboned giggler?
46228Was that actually six o''clock?
46228Was that what you meant?"
46228Was that your idea, Yorick?
46228Was there an accident?"
46228Was there no possible Tunis?
46228Was there none?
46228Was there nothing that would give him a clue at once?
46228Was this chap convicted?"
46228Was this coincidence- lady a widow?"
46228Was this tiresome person going to give it, or be choked by it?
46228We can go round the coppice.... What was I saying?
46228We heard the rumble of his rounded periods afar"--will she understand that?
46228Well!--am I to tell Elizabeth Barclay, or am I not?"
46228Well!--we can all sympathize, ca n''t we?
46228Well!--what could you do?
46228Well!--what did he say to your man?"
46228Well!--what were we saying?...
46228Well, Grandmamma, I suppose you would n''t expect me to cry my eyes out if....""If''handsome Judith''got her beauty spoiled-- is that it?"
46228Well, darling, you know we all have to take medicine when the doctor says so....""Did the doctor said I was ill?"
46228Well-- suppose in this case we were to say,"without a handshake"?
46228Well-- what was your impression?
46228Were all boys nefarious whose mothers sold fried eels and winkles?
46228Were not those his little lass''s lips that had just touched his cheek?
46228Were other men all like that?
46228Were_ you_ also-- you yourself-- a nonentity some of the others were thinking of as a Person- at- a- Party,_ et prà ¦ terea nihil_?
46228What I mean is, when he takes more pleasure in her society than he does in....""In his wife''s?
46228What about her?
46228What about him?"
46228What about''em?
46228What am I to forgive you for?''
46228What are Graubosch''s views about Good and Evil?
46228What are the chances of happiness for a couple so assorted?
46228What are they to me, or I to them, that they should come into my life, and make hay of a working contentment I have never dreamed of questioning?"
46228What are you going to do?"
46228What business has a little wench to be getting on capitally?
46228What but an unknown unit of a crowded slum to Mr. Yorick?
46228What can I say?"
46228What can a human father do more, in the name of respectability?"
46228What can it matter what I should or should n''t do?"
46228What claim have you to ask such a sacrifice of her as the surrender of her relations with her parents and all the associations of her childhood?
46228What could Judith do?
46228What could be clearer?
46228What could it have been?..."
46228What could she do more?
46228What did Aunt Lotty do?"
46228What did Charlotte Eldridge say?"
46228What did Sir Alfred want with a map unless they were going a long distance?
46228What did he know about it?
46228What did it matter how indistinct an idea she had of what she meant by the word_ sacred_, or anything else?
46228What did it matter to her?
46228What did it matter?
46228What did she say?"
46228What did she say?"
46228What did that matter?
46228What did they want to be shunting trucks for, with the train just due?
46228What did you say her name was?
46228What did you say?"
46228What did you think yourself, lassie?"
46228What do you make of this, my minimum?
46228What do you mean by it?"
46228What do you mean by''enough''?"
46228What do you suppose I have guessed?"
46228What do you suppose she thinks?"
46228What do you suppose?"
46228What does Daddy do for his living?"
46228What does Miss Fanshawe''s own letter say?"
46228What does father go out to work at?"
46228What does he ask for, child?"
46228What does he learn?"
46228What does it matter?
46228What does it matter?
46228What does your mother think?"
46228What else is there?"
46228What ever do you suppose God gave you your tongue for?--to set with your mouth wide open?
46228What form did it take?"
46228What had he done to deserve forgiveness?
46228What had she been protesting against?
46228What had you to say to Marianne?"
46228What is it we can get for her?
46228What is it, Samuel?"
46228What is it?
46228What is it?"
46228What is it?"
46228What is that Marianne is saying?
46228What is that she''s saying now?
46228What is that, Elphinstone?
46228What is the use of pretending?"
46228What is the use of talking if you always twist what I say round?"
46228What is this ambulance case saying?
46228What letter?"
46228What made Challis, with all his impatience with what he called the"performing classes,"accept a knighthood?
46228What makes you ask in such an interested way?"
46228What makes you suppose I''m not?
46228What man?"
46228What more could the most exacting ask?
46228What next?"
46228What o''clock is it?"
46228What of that?...
46228What of the bed?
46228What right had he to infer, from a tone of Judith''s voice, that she spoke about him?
46228What right has Marianne to condemn me to a loveless and lonely life...?"
46228What set the child off on her, she asks?
46228What shall you say to Judith?"
46228What she said was,"To wait for Mrs. Challis, sir?"
46228What she said was-- quite clearly--''But who''s a- going to tell my Daddy?''"
46228What she says?"
46228What should he-- what could he-- say to Bob hereafter, if...?
46228What the devil did you do it for?
46228What the dickens possessed Judith-- not Miss Arkroyd, please!--to use that unfortunate expression,"keep so much in the background"?
46228What then?
46228What things?
46228What took you to Wimbledon?"
46228What topic were we giving our powerful brains to?
46228What usual thing?"
46228What was I saying?
46228What was I saying?"
46228What was all this that had happened?
46228What was her name?
46228What was his game this time, master?"
46228What was it all about?
46228What was it he said to Lady Arkroyd?"
46228What was it he told you?"
46228What was it last night?"
46228What was it she said to the coroner?"
46228What was it this time?
46228What was it ye said?"
46228What was it you did n''t say?"
46228What was it you were going to say?"
46228What was that Mr. Brownrigg was saying?
46228What was that Mr. Tomes was saying?
46228What was that nauseous saying male man was so fond of?
46228What was that policeman doing in front of the last house on the right?
46228What was that?
46228What was the impossible Mrs. Challis like to live with, she wondered?
46228What was the other play?"
46228What was their name?"
46228What was you kindly going to say about Lizarann?"
46228What were the others?"
46228What were the two of''em doing again down in Tallack Street?"
46228What were they now?...
46228What were those cries, rather-- cries of panic or of warning, with a woman''s shriek above them?
46228What were we saying?"
46228What were we talking about?"
46228What would Judith?"
46228What would Marianne say if she saw it?
46228What would be left for him if that solace were withdrawn?
46228What would be left for_ her_?
46228What would the wife, who now hears of her husband''s death months ago, have gained by the knowledge of her widowhood, had the news come sooner?
46228What would you have?
46228What''ll your doctors ma''ak of that?"
46228What''s Marianne''s cook''s little game?
46228What''s been the matter with John?"
46228What''s he done now?"
46228What''s she been a- takin''shares in?
46228What''s the other choice?"
46228What''s the story now?
46228What''s your idea?"
46228What?"
46228What?"
46228What?"
46228What?"
46228What?"
46228What?"
46228What_ about_?"
46228What_ could_ those children have to say that they could mind his hearing?
46228What_ did_ he say to the nurse?"
46228What_ is_ the use of being unpopular?"
46228What_ was_ an allowance?
46228What_ was_ their name now?"
46228Whatever was the name she called the gentleman, lass?
46228When Sir Alfred comes to himself, he will tell us.... Is he not speaking again?..."
46228When could he look forward to seeing Challis without danger of his hurting himself by talking?
46228When did Dr. Ferris say he would be at the Hospital?
46228When did Mr. Tillingfleet make this precious statement?"
46228When did she go?
46228When did the change come about?--when?--when?
46228When did the change come over Marianne?
46228When do you suppose her niece''s baby intends to be born?"
46228When on earth did you come in?"
46228When poor Jim''s speech was so brave of how the day was bound to go by and he would bide it out, was his whole heart in his utterance?
46228When shall I tell my sister to lay a place for you?
46228When she did begin, Jim cut her short:"Are ye keeping something back from me, lady?"
46228When was his next book coming out?...
46228When will envelope- makers have compassion for their customers''correspondents?
46228When would it be?
46228When you are quiet once more, perhaps you will kindly tell me_ what_ he says?"
46228When you have seen premises that are the very thing, what does it matter how you get home?
46228When''s he coming?"
46228Where are the children?
46228Where are they?
46228Where could she have gone?
46228Where did she keep them?
46228Where do you expect to go to?
46228Where else could she go?
46228Where else was there to go?
46228Where is the difference?"
46228Where is the fault in you that you are what you are?
46228Where is the gain of trying to guess how much was shell and how much was self?
46228Where is your daughter?
46228Where is your mistress, and the children?"
46228Where on earth are you all?
46228Where shall we be next?"
46228Where should I have said I was going?
46228Where should we be if I could n''t bide to hear a word about my own bad luck?
46228Where was Mr. Challis''s wife all this time?...
46228Where was it?
46228Where was that coat, by the way?
46228Where were_ you_?
46228Where will you come?"
46228Where would have been the use of pleading, before that Awful Throne, that she was"only Kate''s half- sister"?
46228Where would the happiness be in all that, and for whom?"
46228Where''s Bob''s Record?"
46228Where''s Bullett?"
46228Where''s Lizarann?
46228Where''s Marianne?"
46228Where''s Marianne?"
46228Where''s Marianne?"
46228Where''s she been selling her dripping to?
46228Where''s the police, hay?"
46228Where''ud I be, in half the time, at that rate?"
46228Where?"
46228Whereupon each of the young men looked at the other, and said:"Did we speak, or did n''t we?"
46228Whereupon the former said, unreasonably:"What_ do n''t_ you see?"
46228Whether the authoress of this novel was talking wisely or not, who shall say?
46228Which door should he choose, to knock at?
46228Which is it?--mother-- father?--sister?...
46228Which of the two Jim heard, who can say?
46228Which of them was to be the baby''s papa?
46228Which photograph book is it?...
46228Which speech of the two would come best from the lips of Estrild?
46228Which was the kid?
46228Who can say?
46228Who does not know how the consciousness of affliction awaiting us will drag us awake, however much we may strive to remain in dreamland?
46228Who else was there when she saw the letter?"
46228Who had said anything?
46228Who had told Lady Challis that story?
46228Who is there that I can talk to about it if not to you?"
46228Who might you have been talking to?"
46228Who says tobacco can not be enjoyed in the dark?
46228Who shall escape calumny?
46228Who shall say that any chance person who does not know how to pull and grill now was incompetent to pull and grill ten or fifteen years ago?
46228Who was he that he was to eat his sister out of house and home?
46228Who was helping him?"
46228Who was that went away in the motor five minutes ago?"
46228Who was that with her?
46228Who was the man who caused the car to swerve, and was he hurt?
46228Who was what?"
46228Who would dare to say his affection for Marianne was not what it had always been?
46228Who''s at it now?"
46228Who''s it by?
46228Who''s makin''any offer to stop me?"
46228Who''s the party?
46228Who''s to do it, Addie?
46228Who''s to know he ai n''t in at the Robin Hood?
46228Who''s to know what you''re askin''for, exceptin''you speak?"
46228Whose letter did you say you put in?
46228Why are country- houses any different from town- houses?
46228Why be prigs?
46228Why bring Judith''s image back, when all the strength of his case lay in revival of the days gone by?
46228Why ca n''t you come up?"
46228Why can not ladies have some sort of little smooth tie, just at that point, in case?
46228Why condemn him?
46228Why could he not keep to his artillery?
46228Why could n''t Challis let it alone, instead of at once discerning an opportunity of delivering Judith''s message?
46228Why could n''t she leave the funeral alone?
46228Why could n''t you say so at once?"
46228Why could she not be angry with Charlotte?
46228Why could she not frankly ask him for an explanation?
46228Why could the man not shake hands and go, without more ado?
46228Why did n''t Jim spot that before?
46228Why did n''t you go to bed?
46228Why did n''t you stay to find out?"
46228Why did n''t you tell me?"
46228Why did you go out again?
46228Why did you want me?"
46228Why did you want to read the rest again?
46228Why do we call Mr. Alfred Challis_ unpractical_?
46228Why do you ask?"
46228Why do you not tell her-- set her mind at ease?"
46228Why does Lizarann-- our Lizarann!--prefer to lie still and converse with the good woman who has charge of her?
46228Why does n''t one know more of them?"
46228Why does one look at the directions on other people''s letters?
46228Why feel shocked because, after Kate had ceased, her sister had taken over her inheritance so thoroughly?
46228Why give him ups and downs of anxiety?
46228Why had she not told him?
46228Why had that lady not had tea?
46228Why is it too much?
46228Why is the Great Idea to be capitalized with thousands?..."
46228Why need so many things appeal to be forgotten; each one a bygone to itself; a faint spark, surely, but craving a separate extinction?
46228Why need the former catch and trip, and clip or magnify her words?
46228Why need the memory of it all come on him now, of all times?
46228Why need well- brought- up young women to be so quarrelsome-- without the excuse of Alcoholism?
46228Why need you leave your native waters uncompelled?"
46228Why not be jolly?''"
46228Why not everything?
46228Why not go straight to the point?
46228Why not have gone on raining a little longer?
46228Why not many things?
46228Why not no jewelery?--no art needlework?--no hammered metal or wood carving?
46228Why not now?
46228Why not simply tell all she knew?
46228Why not write to Judith, leaving the envelope open, and let Master Bob put the typed copy in and post it?
46228Why not, indeed?
46228Why not?
46228Why not?
46228Why not?"
46228Why on earth need Charlotte Eldridge come bothering in when Marianne was away?
46228Why resist?
46228Why rise, indeed, and maybe miss a dream of a bygone day?
46228Why send his troops into the enemy''s country, bristling with ambuscades?
46228Why should Challis feel something akin to pique because that carriage and pair took him at his word and went on, all right?
46228Why should I be?
46228Why should I get angry?
46228Why should I?
46228Why should I?"
46228Why should any author try to disturb or unsettle beliefs that he can not replace-- even by a Metaphysical Check?
46228Why should he hesitate to ask of them what he would have given so freely to any one of them himself-- to any one of them left in the dark?
46228Why should he not show the letter, and have done with it?
46228Why should he not?
46228Why should he, then, from this young woman, to whom he and his ways were quite a novelty?
46228Why should n''t I send it when I mean it?
46228Why should n''t she cough if she chose?
46228Why should n''t''Polly Anne''be all right?"
46228Why should not he point out, and venture to call your attention to, like other people?
46228Why should she not try, if she chooses to run the risk?"
46228Why should the trade in tortoises flourish in South London?
46228Why should they?
46228Why should we not speak plain?
46228Why should we not...?"
46228Why spoil it?
46228Why the( described) Hell ca n''t you speak up?
46228Why think about it?
46228Why this of a sudden, out of the blue?"
46228Why tortoises at all?
46228Why was all the selfishness and meanness to belong to one sex alone?
46228Why was that stopped, and why was Lizarann so ready to surrender, and even to remain in bed till the day got warm and she could go out?
46228Why was the gentleman going to the Park, not the Rectory?
46228Why was_ he_ to go to Broadstairs?
46228Why were things always relegated to Limbos, and why was nothing ever sent to Limbos except by relegation?
46228Why were you talking about her?"
46228Why will emotions never be logical?
46228Why would she not?
46228Why!--haven''t I known her since she was a little tot, and sat on my knee?...
46228Why!--what else could it be, unless it was no consarn of his, anyhow?
46228Why, I''m not the only ma''an with a tale to tell about they doctors?"
46228Why, in Heaven''s name, else, need his first instinct be to turn and run?
46228Why, my dear fellow, ca n''t you remember how we talked of Orion last Autumn, and he was hardly visible even then?"
46228Why, then, could n''t she leave Judith till breakfast to- morrow?
46228Why, when we were driving down to the station, how was I to know I should n''t find you burned to a cinder?
46228Why-- what on earth has the woman to complain of?"
46228Why?"
46228Why?...
46228Why_ do_ you take a pleasure in mystifying me?
46228Why_ should_ she have done anything but hold her tongue?
46228Will I tell you what I mean?
46228Wo n''t you take nothing?
46228Wo n''t you, Lizarann?"
46228Wo n''t you?"
46228Would Brownrigg''s substitute be as effectual?"
46228Would Miss Fossett entrust those kisses to Dr. Ferris to give to Daddy?
46228Would Titus be alive on her arrival?
46228Would a love those two young folks brought back memories of, hour by hour, do the like?
46228Would an honest belief in extinction fight to preserve a life that is a pain to itself and a curse to its neighbours?
46228Would he be able to walk at all?
46228Would he never slacken down at that bend in the road?
46228Would he, in short, be in trim to persuade his little lass that he was on the whole rather better off than before his accident?
46228Would her dear Titus make me understand that she was too much wanted at home to come away just now?
46228Would his message need to be given now?
46228Would it be one wooden leg or two wooden legs?
46228Would it be reinforced or weakened, I wonder, by a perusal of the Statutes at Large?
46228Would it have been a fair one?
46228Would n''t she?
46228Would n''t ye have him know?
46228Would not those very loves be as garments to shelter the new- born soul in the world beyond, whether the date of its arrival was now or hereafter?
46228Would not you, woman, who are reading this, have taken the hand of the man if you loved him?
46228Would she be able to say, perjured and forsworn and betrayer, and hence!--ere she did some correct thing or other?
46228Would she have been one scrap more miserable than she was, for knowing it?
46228Would that be like reminding Marianne of her homeliness, though?
46228Would you have been offended?"
46228Would you not think me a hypocrite if I were to profess to be heart- broken about this-- this wretched blind cripple, who was the cause of it all?"
46228Would you ring?"
46228Would you?"
46228Write to this girl, and just refuse the invitation?"
46228Ye see?...
46228Yes-- but how long after?
46228Yes-- what do you mean by''enough''?
46228Yes-- why was the gentleman not going to the Rectory?
46228You ca n''t possibly send this:''Why ca n''t we agree each to go our own way?
46228You have n''t twopence in coppers, have you, dear?"
46228You know as well as I do what share this man had in frustrating an object I had at heart; and at least you can not expect me to be grateful to him?''"
46228You know he took all those photos for''Ten Years of Slum Growth''--my cousin''s book?"
46228You know how one feels_ caught_, when a reflection in a glass suddenly transfixes one?
46228You know how that''s done?
46228You know how they do?"
46228You know she''s coming?"
46228You know what I mean?"
46228You know what you''re trying to make out, so where is the use of pretending?"
46228You know?"
46228You may depend on it that Mr. Challis is only doing it for a blind, because Harmood''s pretty....""Doing what for a blind?"
46228You may recall Stony Stratford, and the way some person suffered from insect- bites there?
46228You mean when I saw her yesterday?
46228You might well ha''thowt yower little maiden''s just a gay trifle.... What said th''doctor?"
46228You must have passed him as you returned?"
46228You really are a disciple of Mr. Brownrigg''s Groschenbauer-- what''s his name?
46228You recollect the fellah?"
46228You remember Mr. Challis, Mr. Taylor?
46228You see what Addie thinks?"
46228You see, Athel?
46228You see?"
46228You see?"
46228You show me where Uncle Bob is, wo n''t you?
46228You think that too strange?
46228You told him?"
46228You''ll back me up in that, doctor?"
46228You''ll tell me I''m sneering, I know-- but I''m not-- if I say....""What?"
46228You''re a good little girl, are n''t you?"
46228You''re a nice lot of_ confidantes_...."Something in Judith''s look checks his joking tone as he glances round at her, and he says,"What?"
46228You''re coffee, I suppose, Ju?..."
46228You''re really sure you can hear, though?
46228You''re sure it''s the same case?"
46228Your mother''s?"
46228_ Do_ you think you could keep hold of him, just for a few seconds, while I throw it out of his reach?"
46228_ Eh bien!_--and what says Sir Oracle?...
46228_ I_ do n''t want to keep him, against his will.... What are those children at, in there?"
46228_ Is n''t_ it a nuisance?"
46228_ Now_ do you appreciate the position, Rector?"
46228_ Now_ do you see?"
46228_ What_ about the other one?
46228_ What_ inquest?"
46228_ Who_ is it''s a- coming back, hey?"
46228_ Whose_ fault was n''t it?
46228_ Why_ does she suppose she has qualifications?
46228_ Why_ even then?
46228_ Why_ was there not a word more about the girl?
46228_ Will_ you stop?"
46228_ Would_ Mrs. Challis and the young ladies be back to lunch?
46228all right, are they?
46228and he replies:"What?
46228and then would shudder at its own brutality, for never asking what of Judith, in that case?
46228and then, looking up at the speaker, illogically asks,"What was the rest of the story?
46228and what the foetid interpretations he felt no shame to put upon it?
46228but evidently had no share in the question she replied to him with, and stopped in the middle of,"And what was it then made you?..."
46228ca n''t you see?
46228do you_ hear_?...
46228even a Duke''s; but who can cite a case in point?
46228exclaimed Challis; and nearly added,"Why did n''t you tell me?"
46228handsome Judith?"
46228in response to,"Well?"
46228left- hand chiffonier?...
46228no!--never mind Aunt What''s- her- name?...
46228no?--right- hand... top shelf?...
46228not till the spring?...
46228oh!--metaphysics, was it?
46228painful?..."
46228said he, earnestly,"can you not read in your own words how well you know that you are acting under panic?
46228six times, and ended with,"What''s she been had up for?"
46228so he could hear?..."
46228surely...?"
46228till pressed to take her turn first; then said:"Was n''t that the blind beggar and the little girl-- the same family, I mean?"
46228to him, and to the Rector,"Would you excuse me one moment?...
46228to say?"
46228try to apologize her away?"
46228well!--I do n''t understand....""What does n''t my papa understand?"
46228well!--and then... shut the door after you and go to bed, for God''s sake, and get warm.... What?
46228what on earth would he do then with the position?
46228what would her answer have been?
46228what''s that?"
46228what?"
46228what?"
46228what?"
46228what?...
46228what?..."
46228when are they?...
46228when will it?...
46228where are we at that?"
46228where?
46228who was it?
46228why should n''t they?..."
46228with so harsh an enquiry,"What''s that you''re saying, sir?
46228would you... would you?..."
46228yes, now right up in the corner.... Something there?"...
3252''How mosh does he bay you by der veeks?'' 3252 ''Might not some other cause,''said I,''produce this concurrence?
3252''On which side?'' 3252 A bit of the wing, Roxy, or of the-- under limb?"
3252A good many books, has n''t he?
3252A long ride to- day?
3252A young person,he said to himself,--"why a young person?
3252About what?
3252Afraid of them?
3252Afraid? 3252 Ah, Mr. Gridley,"he said,"you are not studying the civil law, are you?"
3252An''to be sure ai n''t I tellin''you, Mr. Gridley, jist as fast as my breath will let me? 3252 And Silas Peckham?"
3252And do you take real pleasure in the din of all those screeching and banging and growling instruments?
3252And how does Mr. Dudley Veneer take all this?
3252And how have you all been at the mansion house?
3252And now,he said,"what do you think of her companion?"
3252And so you advise me to make love to the English girl, do you?
3252And this is what you have been working at so long,--is it, Clement?
3252And what are your pursuits, Jack? 3252 And what becomes of all those that he drops into the basket?"
3252And what do you say to these others?
3252And what have you found, my dear?
3252And what was that?
3252And who and what is that,he said,--"sitting a little apart there,--that strange, wild- looking girl?"
3252And who was that, pray?
3252And why not your English maiden?
3252And why the New Portfolio, I would ask?
3252And worth a great deal of money?
3252And you did not speak to her?
3252Anything ketchin''about it?
3252Anything new in the city?
3252Are a dozen additional spasms worth living for?
3252Are there not some special inconveniences connected with what is called celebrity? 3252 Are we dead?"
3252Are we like to be alone and undisturbed?
3252Are you crazy?
3252Are you going to open a correspondence with Mr. Maurice Kirkwood, Lurida? 3252 Are you not a little overstating his peculiarity?
3252Are you sure you can depend on Kitty?
3252Are you the literary critic of that well- known journal, or do you manage the political column?
3252Believe it, Euthymia? 3252 Board and lodging for ten days, Mr. Peckham,--whose board and lodging, pray?"
3252Busy, grandpapa?
3252But is there nothing in thy track To bid thee fondly stay, While the swift seasons hurry back To find the wished- for day?
3252But surely, Sophy, you a''n''t afraid to have Dick marry her, if she would have him for any reason, are you? 3252 But what if it were a case of''How happy could I be with either''?
3252But when we come to inquire Whence is matter? 3252 But, as I said above, what could I do?
3252But,said be,"suppose that I had been offered such a place; do you think I ought to accept it and leave Arrowhead Village?
3252By the way, Doctor, have you seen anything of a little plaid- pattern match- box?
3252Ca n''t find out anything about him, you said, did n-''t you? 3252 Can he answer these questions?
3252Can you repeat it to us?
3252Canst thou by searching find out God? 3252 Children of the natural method[ his own method of classification of skin diseases,] are you all here?"
3252Cynthia Badlam Fund Hopkins,said the good woman triumphantly,--"is that what you mean?"
3252DO YOU WANT TO BE REMEMBERED AFTER THE CONTINENTS HAVE GONE UNDER, AND COME UP AGAIN, AND DRIED, AND BRED NEW RACES? 3252 Dead, is he?
3252Dear mother,cried the boy,"why wo n''t you listen to reason?
3252Did Number Five go to meet you in your laboratory, as she talked of doing?
3252Did any of you notice any remarkable sounds last night,he said,--"or this morning?
3252Did ever passion heat words to incandescence as it did those of Sappho?
3252Did he talk with you on the way?
3252Did n''t he say to Cain,''Where is Abel, thy brother?''
3252Did n''t you tell me once, Clement, that you were attempting a bust of Innocence? 3252 Did she look at you?"
3252Did the party give you possession of these documents without making any effort to retain them?
3252Did y''bring home somethin''from the party? 3252 Did you ever see a genuine Yankee?"
3252Did you happen to notice anything about it, Kitty?
3252Did you remark Elsie''s ways this forenoon?
3252Did you see the paper that he showed her before he fastened it up with the others, Kitty?
3252Did you talk about books at all with the old man?
3252Did you write the letter from Rome, published a few weeks ago?
3252Did, you ever see a case of epilepsy cured by nitrate of silver?
3252Do n''t you know who he was nor what he was?
3252Do n''t you speak about my client? 3252 Do n''t you think he worries himself about the souls of young women rather more than for those of old ones, Myrtle?"
3252Do n''t you think she''s vuiry good- lookin''?
3252Do not dull people bore you?
3252Do you go to those musical hullabaloos?
3252Do you know anything of Captain H. of the Massachusetts Twentieth?
3252Do you know much about the Veneer family?
3252Do you know what I think?
3252Do you mean to say that every man is not absolutely free to choose his beliefs?
3252Do you notice how many people you meet with their mouths stretched wide open?
3252Do you really think Dick means mischief to anybody, that he has such dangerous- looking things?
3252Do you really think of studying medicine?
3252Do you recollect giving some of them to Mr. Bradshaw to look over?
3252Do you see that?
3252Do you seriously think of becoming a practitioner of medicine?
3252Do you suppose I am going to answer such questions as you are putting me because you repeat them over, Mr. Gridley? 3252 Do you think her father has treated her judiciously?"
3252Do you understand it? 3252 Do you want money?"
3252Do?
3252Doctor,the physician began, as from a sudden suggestion,"you wo n''t quarrel with me, if I tell you some of my real thoughts, will you?"
3252Does Mr. Clement Lindsay live here?
3252Does Mr. William Murray Bradshaw know anything about any papers, such as I am referring to, that may have been sent to the office?
3252Dolus an virtus quis in hoste requirat?
3252Elsie there? 3252 FISH AND DANDIES ONLY KEEP ON ICE.--Who will take?
3252Far off his coming--shall I say"shone,"and finish the Miltonic phrase, or leave the verb to the happy conjectures of my audience?
3252For whom this gift?
3252Four hands all round?
3252Greatly interested in the souls of his people, is n''t he?
3252Had n''t you better let me write it for you, dear?
3252Has n''t he some curiosities,--old figures, old jewelry, old coins, or things of that sort?
3252Has she left no letter,--no explanation of her leaving in this way?
3252Has that young gentleman ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping?
3252Has there not been some understanding between you that he should become the approved suitor of Miss Myrtle Hazard?
3252Have some of these shell- oysters?
3252Have they a billiard- room in the upper story?
3252Have you ever talked with her about studying medicine?
3252Have you found it well furnished with the books you most want?
3252Have you heard anything against him?
3252Have you heerd anything yet, Kitty Fagan?
3252Have you kept your eye on her steadily?
3252Have you received any papers from any of the family since the settlement of the estate?
3252Have you seen his room? 3252 Have you stay, my friend?"
3252Have you watched him pretty close for the last few days?
3252He does look warm, does n''t he?
3252He? 3252 How are you, Boy?"
3252How are you, Dad?
3252How are you, my fortunate friend?
3252How can he be reached?
3252How can the man who has learned but one art procure all the conveniences of life honestly? 3252 How can we manage to get an impartial judgment?"
3252How can you ask that, Mr. Gridley? 3252 How do I know, Jeff?"
3252How do you like the books I see you reading?
3252How do you like the look of these oranges?
3252How is Mr. Kirkwood, to- day?
3252How is this?
3252How long ago did her mother die?
3252How long since your return to this country, may I ask?
3252How long were you gone?
3252How many horses does your papa keep?
3252How many times,I kept saying to myself,"is that wicked old moon coming up to stare at me?"
3252How many words do you think I shall want?
3252How many?
3252How much do you pay for your winter- strained?
3252How much is it now?
3252How much should you call about right for the picter an''figgerin''?
3252How much, should you say?
3252How much?
3252How old is Elsie?
3252I could n''t help comin'',said Nurse Byloe,"we do so love our babies,--how can we help it, Miss Badlam?"
3252I hope I should be equal to that emergency,answered the young Doctor;"but I trust you are not suffering from any such accident?"
3252I wonder if he would examine some old coins of mine?
3252I wonder if the old man reads other novelists.--Do tell me, Deacon, if you have read Thackeray''s last story?
3252If any of those papers were of importance, should you think your junior partner ought to keep them from your knowledge?
3252If this is not genuine pathos, where will you find it, I should like to know? 3252 In what literary occupation have you been engaged, if you will pardon my inquiry?
3252Is Helen come?
3252Is Miss Badlam in?
3252Is all this from real life?
3252Is it as I thought?
3252Is it probable that time and circumstances will alter a habit of nervous interactions so long established? 3252 Is n''t it a leetle rash to give him the use of his hands?
3252Is n''t it so? 3252 Is not poetry the natural language of lovers?"
3252Is she a good scholar?
3252Is she violent in her delirium?
3252Is the boy still awake?
3252Is the last word to be spelt with one or two s''s?
3252Is the person you are seeking a niece or other relative of yours?
3252Is there a young person here, a stranger?
3252Is there nobody that I can trust, or is everybody hunting me like a bird?
3252Is there nobody that will venture his life to save a brother like that?
3252Is this only your own suggestion?
3252Is this the mighty ocean?--is this all?
3252Is this very rare and valuable? 3252 Is your appetite as good as usual?"
3252It''s apoplexy,--I told you so,--don''t you see how red he is in the face?
3252Jawin''abaout? 3252 Judge, will you take Mrs. Sprowle in to supper?"
3252Just out of the village,--that''s all.--There''s a kink in her mane,--pull it out, will you?
3252Keep what, Kitty? 3252 Know of what, Cyprian?"
3252Knows how to shut a fellow up pretty well for a young one, does n''t he?
3252Lecture to students of your sex? 3252 Let Ol''Sophy set at''th''foot o''th''bed, if th''young missis sets by th''piller,--won''y'', darlin''?
3252Lived in Rome once?
3252Madam, do you remember you have your party tonight?
3252Marry a man because she hates him, Sophy? 3252 May I ask how long you lived in Rome?"
3252May I ask when, where, and of whom you obtained these papers, Miss Badlam?
3252May I ask where you picked up the coin you are showing me?
3252May I ask who the person or persons may be on whose account you wish to look at papers belonging to my late relative, Malachi Withers?
3252May I not be Clement, dearest? 3252 Miss Hazard, will you allow me to present to you my friend, Mr. Clement Lindsay?"
3252Mr. Gridley? 3252 My return?
3252Myrtle is very lovely,Bathsheba answered,"but is n''t she a little too-- flighty-- for one like your brother?
3252Naow get up, will ye?
3252Nervous? 3252 Never observed it?
3252Nothing very serious, I hope?
3252Nuss Byloe, is that you? 3252 O Mr. Gridley, you are too bad,--what do I care for governors and presidents?
3252Odd, is n''t it, father, the old man''s asking me to come and see him? 3252 Oh!--And the pink one, three seats from her?
3252Oh, Doctor dear, what I''m thinkin''of a''n''t true, is it?
3252Oh, how''s your haalth, Miss Darley?
3252Oh, is n''t''Pickwick''nice?
3252Oh, what is Heaven but the fellowship Of minds that each can stand against the world By its own meek and incorruptible will?
3252One more gallop, Juan?
3252Physician art thou, one all eyes; Philosopher, a fingering slave, One that would peep and botanize Upon his mother''s grave?
3252Places you have been to, and people you have known?
3252Quite warm, is n''t it, this evening?
3252Rip Van Myrtle, you call that handsome girl, do you, Miss Clara? 3252 Scorn trifles"comes from Aunt Mary Moody Emerson, and reappears in her nephew, Ralph Waldo.--"What right have you, Sir, to your virtue?
3252Sell you them things to make a colation out of?
3252Shall I read you some of the rhymed pieces first, or some of the blank- verse poems, sir?
3252Shall I seek a deeper slumber at the bottom of the lake I love than I have ever found when drifting idly over its surface? 3252 Shall I tell you the secret of the true scholar?
3252Shall I try the other publishers?
3252Shall we judge a country by the majority, or by the minority? 3252 Sick, my child?"
3252Signor? 3252 So Mr. Clement Lindsay has been saving a life, has he, and got some hard knocks doing it, hey, Susan Posey?
3252So you admire conceited people, do you?
3252Sounds like Coleridge, hey? 3252 Surely you are not afraid?"
3252Susan Posey, child, what is your trouble?
3252THE SUPREME SELF- INDULGENCE IS TO SURRENDER THE WILL TO A SPIRITUAL DIRECTOR.--Protestantism gave up a great luxury.--Did it though? 3252 Tell me, Sophy,"she said,"was Elsie always as shy as she seems to be now, in talking with those to whom she is friendly?"
3252Tell me, darlin'',--don''you love somebody?--don''you love? 3252 Tell me, my dear, would you be willing to give up meeting this man alone, and gratify my friend, and avoid all occasion of reproach?"
3252Tell me,said Gifted,"what are these papers, and who is he that looks upon them and drops them into the basket?"
3252Thackeray''s story? 3252 The first thing?
3252The regular correspondent from where?
3252Them?
3252Think about it?
3252Think well of him? 3252 To be sure you are,"answered the Tutor,"and what of it?
3252To be, or not to be: that is the question Whether''t is nobl----"William, shall we have pudding to- day, or flapjacks?"
3252W''at''s in a name?
3252WHY DO YOU COMPLAIN OF YOUR ORGANIZATION? 3252 Was that all that happened?"
3252Was there ever anything like it?
3252Was there ever such a senseless, stupid creature as I am? 3252 Was"--?
3252Well, Doctor,the Counsellor began,"how are stocks in the measles market about these times?
3252Well, Kitty, how are things going on up at The Poplars? 3252 Well, Stebbins,"said Mr. Dudley Veneer,"have you brought any special message from the Doctor?"
3252Well, how has Elsie seemed of late?
3252Well, if you say so; but why that P., Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 Well, then, Mrs. Hopkins, what shall be the boy''s name?"
3252Well, there is some truth in that; but did you think the old- fashioned family doctor was extinct, a fossil like the megatherium?
3252Well, what does she say to it?
3252Well, what has been the trouble, Nurse?
3252Well?
3252Well?
3252Whar he''s gone? 3252 What I''seen''bout Dick Veneer?"
3252What I''ve got? 3252 What State do you come from?"
3252What are their amusements?
3252What are your favorites among his writings, Deacon? 3252 What building is that?"
3252What can I do better,he said to himself,"than have a dance with Rosa Milburn?"
3252What can I do with such a creature as this?
3252What can have brought Dudley out to- night?
3252What color was your mantle?
3252What did you do before you became a soldier?
3252What did you tell me, Miss Vincent, was this fellow''s particular antipathy?
3252What disposition had you thought of making of them?
3252What do you mean by asking me these questions, Mr. Gridley? 3252 What do you mean to do when you get back?"
3252What do you say to my taking your question as the subject of a paper to be read before the Society? 3252 What do you say to the love poetry of women?"
3252What do you say, uncle?
3252What do you think of the young man over there at the Veneers''?
3252What do you want of me, Elsie Venner?
3252What do you want to know?
3252What does all this mean? 3252 What has the public to do with my private affairs?"
3252What if we change Isosceles to Theodore, Mrs. Hopkins? 3252 What is it, Doctor?
3252What is it, Helen? 3252 What is it?"
3252What is it?
3252What is like to be the further history of the case? 3252 What is that you have seen about Mr. Richard Veneer that gives you such a spite against him, Sophy?"
3252What is the first book you would put in a student''s hands, doctor?
3252What is the first thing you would do?
3252What is the matter, Cousin Elsie? 3252 What is the matter, my darling?"
3252What is the meaning of all this? 3252 What is the meaning of all this?"
3252What is the remedy? 3252 What is this great stone pillar here for?"
3252What made you ask me about him? 3252 What makes you think I care more for her than for her American friend?"
3252What may her figure be?
3252What now, Susan Posey, my dear?
3252What o''clock is it?
3252What paper has had anything about it, Lurida? 3252 What part of Georgia?"
3252What shall we sing this evening?
3252What the d--- is the reason I ca n''t see Myrtle, Cynthia?
3252What then?
3252What thinkest thou, Luke, of the maid we have been visiting?
3252What time is''t?
3252What were you whispering?
3252What would Amanda think of a suitor who courted her with a rhyming dictionary in his pocket to help him make love?
3252What would I do about it? 3252 What''r''you jawin''abaout?"
3252What''s fetched y''daown here so all- fired airly?
3252What''s the matter with Elsie Venner?
3252What''s the matter with your shoulder, Venner?
3252What''s the matter, do you suppose? 3252 What''s the meaning of all this, Cynthia?
3252What''s the meaning of that, Kitty? 3252 What, Mr. Gridley?
3252What,he answered,"the man that paddles a birch canoe, and rides all the wild horses of the neighborhood?
3252What?
3252When Adam delved and Eve span, Who was then the gentleman?
3252When a fellah goes out huntin''and shoots a squirrel, do you think he''s go''n''to let another fellah pick him up and kerry him off? 3252 Where am I?
3252Where are our broomsticks?
3252Where did our friends pick up all these fine ecstatic airs?
3252Where did you get that flower, Elsie?
3252Where did you go to church when you were at home?
3252Where did you go?
3252Where did you meet her?
3252Where is the boat I was in?
3252Where is the first volume of this Medical Cyclopaedia?
3252Where is the light to come from that is to do as much for our poor human lives?
3252Where is your uneasiness, Myrtle?
3252Where shall I send your trunk after you from your uncle''s?
3252Where''s all the oranges gone to?
3252Which is the image of your protector, Myrtle? 3252 Which of the men do you wish would take himself off?"
3252Which one shall it be?
3252Who are those?
3252Who are you, giants, whence and why?
3252Who are you?
3252Who can doubt that in this passage of his story he is picturing his own visions, one of the fairest of which was destined to become reality? 3252 Who do you think is coming, Mr. Gridley?
3252Who fought?
3252Who gave this cup?
3252Who has a part with**** at this next exhibition?
3252Who is she, I should like to know?
3252Who is that girl in ringlets,--the fourth in the third row on the right?
3252Who is that in the canoe over there?
3252Who is that pretty girl my young doctor has got there?
3252Who is that?
3252Who is this Clement Lindsay, Bathsheba?
3252Who might that favored person be?
3252Who tol''you Elsie was a woman, Doctor?
3252Who was at the wedding?
3252Who was the general on the American side?
3252Who was the person you sentenced?
3252Who''s hurt? 3252 Who''s took care o''them things that was on the hoss?"
3252Who''shurt? 3252 Why call him_ the Post_?"
3252Why did n''t we all have a chance to help erect that statue?
3252Why did not Miss Darley go to the party last evening?
3252Why did you ask me for myself, when you could have claimed me?
3252Why do n''t they take her away from the school, if she is in such a strange, excitable state?
3252Why do n''t you tell the man he is wasting that water? 3252 Why does he keep out of sight as he does?"
3252Why is it,she said,"that there is so common and so intense a desire for poetical reputation?
3252Why should n''t you go to see a brother as well as a sister, I should like to know? 3252 Why strikest not?
3252Why then goest thou as some Boswell or literary worshipper to this saint or to that? 3252 Why, Cynthy Badlam, what do y''mean?"
3252Why, Kitty,he said,"what mischief do you think is going on, and who is to be harmed?"
3252Why, Mr. Peckham,she said,"do you mean this?
3252Why, bless me, is that my young friend Miss Myrtle Hazard?
3252Why, have n''t I met you walking with her, and did n''t you both seem greatly interested in the subject you were discussing? 3252 Why, how do you know without tasting them?"
3252Why, my dear friend, how can you think of such a thing? 3252 Why, my dear little soul,"said Mr. Bernard,"what are you worried about?
3252Why, sister, do n''t you know that Myrtle Hazard is missing,--gone!--gone nobody knows where, and that we are looking in all directions to find her?
3252Why, then, Master, didst thou give her of thy medicine, seeing that her ail is unto death?
3252Why, what is there to be interviewed in him? 3252 Why, what''s the matter, my dear?"
3252Why,said the Doctor, sharply,--"have you ever seen him with any such weapon about him?"
3252Why?
3252Wicked to live, my dear? 3252 Will you allow me to take that envelope containing papers, Miss Badlam?"
3252Will you go with me to the doctor''s, and let him read it in our presence? 3252 Will you state, if you please-- I beg your pardon-- may I ask who is your own favorite author?"
3252Will you tell me,she said,"where you have found any account of the bands and lines in the spectrum of dream- nitrogen?
3252Will you walk towards my home with me today?
3252Winter- strained?
3252Would you kindly write your autograph in my note- book, with that pen? 3252 Y''do n''t think anything dreadful has come o''that child''s wild nater, do ye?"
3252Y''ha''n''t heerd nothin''abaout it, Squire, d''ye mean t''say?
3252Yes; but you surely would not consider it inspiration of the same kind as that of the writers of the Old Testament?
3252Yes?
3252Yes?
3252You do n''t know the notion that people commonly have about that tree, Sophy?
3252You do n''t know? 3252 You do n''t mean that she has any mark about her, except-- you know-- under the necklace?"
3252You find great changes in London, of course, I suppose?
3252You have heard the news, Mr. Gridley, I suppose?
3252You know Sir Walter Raleigh''s''History of the World,''of course?
3252You know all about it, Olive?
3252You know nothing about her, then?
3252You know something about that nephew of yours, during these last years, I suppose?
3252You made the pulse about ninety,--a little hard,--did n''t you; as I did? 3252 You never noticed the colors and patterns of her dresses?
3252You read this lecture, do n''t you, Professor?
3252You receive a good many volumes of verse, do you not?
3252You remember my son, Cortland Saunders, whom I brought to see you once in Boston?
3252You say she has had some of her old nervous whims,--has the doctor been to see her?
3252You spoke of Newspapers,she said, without any change of tone or manner:"do you not frequently write for them yourself?"
3252You want to get out of the new church into the old one, do n''t you?
3252You would n''t act so, if you were dancing with Mr. Langdon,--would you, Elsie?
3252You would n''t trust a woman even if she was dead, hey, Nurse?
3252Your partner must have known about it yesterday?
3252Your whole quarter''s allowance, I bullieve,--ain''t it?
3252_ It is easy enough to get up if you are dragged up, but how will it be to come down such a declivity? 3252 ''How long?'' 3252 ''Some things can be done as well as others,''can they? 3252 ''Then why not invent them?'' 3252 ''What is this truth you seek? 3252 ''What personalities?'' 3252 ''What will you do, then?'' 3252 ''Why, that is a kind of title of nobility, is n''t it? 3252 ''sseventy exclusive cases as he from the three cases in the ward of the Dublin Hospital?
3252( 3) Yes, we''re boys,--always playing with tongue or with pen,--And I sometimes have asked,--Shall we ever be men?
3252( Born in a house with a gambrel- roof,-- Standing still, if you must have proof.--"Gambrel?--Gambrel?"
3252( Why did not she ask if the girl was his daughter?
3252( commonly pronounced haalth)--instead of, How do you do?
3252***** What was the errand on which he visited our earth,--the message with which he came commissioned from the Infinite source of all life?
3252*****"Let us then ponder his words:--''Wilt thou not ope thy heart to know What rainbows teach and sunsets show?
3252--"About those conditions?"
3252--"And is there nothing yet unsaid Before the change appears?
3252--"Guess he''s been through the mill,--don''t look so green, anyhow, hey?
3252--And how did the Lady receive these valuable and useful gifts?
3252--And the Evening Transcript?
3252--And the calipers said I.--What are the calipers?
3252--And this is all the friend you have to love?
3252--And thou?
3252--And whence thy sadness in a world of bliss Where never parting comes, nor mourner''s tear?
3252--And where is my cat?
3252--Anything you like,--he answered,--what difference does it make how you christen a foundling?
3252--Bonfire?--shrieked the little man.--The bonfire when Robert Calef''s book was burned?
3252--Can a man love his own soul too well?
3252--Did I not say to you a little while ago that the universe swam in an ocean of similitudes and analogies?
3252--Do I remember Byron''s line about"striking the electric chain"?
3252--Do men fly yet?
3252--Do you mean to say the pun- question is not clearly settled in your minds?
3252--Do you mean you can always see the sources from which a man fills his mind,--his feeders, as you call them?
3252--Do you receive many visitors,--I mean vertebrates, not articulates?
3252--Do you think they mean business?
3252--Do you want an image of the human will, or the self- determining principle, as compared with its prearranged and impassable restrictions?
3252--Funny, wasn''it?
3252--Has the planet met with any accident of importance?
3252--Has the universal language come into use?
3252--Have I ever acted in private theatricals?
3252--He said, as I returned it to him, You have heard military men say that such a person had an eye for country, have n''t you?
3252--How can a man help writing poetry in such a place?
3252--How do I know that?
3252--How does she go to work to help you?
3252--How general is the republican form of government?
3252--I am afraid I did,--I said,--but was n''t I colored myself so as to look ridiculous?
3252--I wonder if anybody ever finds fault with anything I say at this table when it is repeated?
3252--I wonder if you know the TERRIBLE SMILE?
3252--If Iris does not love this Little Gentleman, what does love look like when one sees it?
3252--If a fellow attacked my opinions in print would I reply?
3252--Is that the same piece of money as the other one?
3252--Is the Daily Advertiser still published?
3252--Is the euthanasia a recognized branch of medical science?
3252--Is the oldest inhabitant still living?
3252--Is there a new fuel since the English coal- mines have given out?
3252--May I venture to ask,--I said, a little awed by his statement and manner,--what is your special province of study?
3252--Next month!--said I.---Why, what election do you mean?
3252--No doubt, no doubt, if you meet him once; but what are you going to do with him if you meet him every day?
3252--Of these three questions, What is matter?
3252--Oh, indeed,--said I,--and may I venture to ask on what particular point you are engaged just at present?
3252--Oh, you could n''t mistake those dried leaves for an insect, hey?
3252--Should you like to hear what moderate wishes life brings one to at last?
3252--The Doctor put his hand to his forehead and drew a long breath.--"What is there you notice out of the way about Elsie Venner?"
3252--The divinity- student wished to know what I thought of affinities, as well as of antipathies; did I believe in love at first sight?
3252--Then to the Doctor,--"Anybody get sick at Sprowles''s?
3252--Well, then, how did the little beast which is peculiar to that special complaint intrude himself into the Order of Things?
3252--What are the great faults of conversation?
3252--What do you think I question everything for, the Master replied,--if I never get any answers?
3252--What do you think the parson found, When he got up and stared around?
3252--What do you think, Sir,--said the divinity- student,--opens the souls of poets most fully?
3252--What if, instead of talking this morning, I should read you a copy of verses, with critical remarks by the author?
3252--What in the world can have become of That Boy and his popgun while all this somewhat extended sermonizing was going on?
3252--What is the prevalent religious creed of civilization?
3252--What is the saddle of a thought?
3252--What should decide one, in choosing a summer residence?
3252--When the Lord sends out a batch of human beings, say a hundred-- Did you ever read my book, the new edition of it, I mean?
3252--Where have I been for the last three or four days?
3252--Where is the election held?
3252--Who knows it not,--this dead recoil Of weary fibres stretched with toil, The pulse that flutters faint and low When Summer''s seething breezes blow?
3252--Who was that person that was so abused some time since for saying that in the conflict of two races our sympathies naturally go with the higher?
3252--Will you read them very good- naturedly?
3252--Would I be so good as to specify any particular example?--Oh,--an example?
3252--Yes,--said I,--but why should n''t we always set a man talking about the thing he knows best?
3252--You do n''t know what I mean by the GREEN STATE?
3252--You do n''t know what I mean, indignant and not unintelligent country- practitioner?
3252--You do n''t know what plague has fallen on the practitioners of theology?
3252--You do n''t know what your thoughts are going to be beforehand?
3252--You do n''t mean to say you have studied insects as well as solar systems and the order of things generally?
3252--You do n''t suppose that my remarks made at this table are like so many postage- stamps, do you,--each to be only once uttered?
3252--You have a laugh together sometimes, do you?
3252--You have n''t heard about my friend the Professor''s first experiment in the use of anaesthetics, have you?
3252--You remember the old story of the tender- hearted man, who placed a frozen viper in his bosom, and was stung by it when it became thawed?
3252--said I.--Have you seen the Declaration of Independence photographed in a surface that a fly''s foot would cover?
3252-And how is your father and your mother?
3252-Oh, the Governor and the Head Centre?
3252-Terrible fact?
3252-Wouldn''t do?--said I,--why not?
3252-Yes, yes; did you ever see how they will poke those wonderful little fingers of theirs into every fold and crack and crevice they can get at?
3252.............. What have I rescued from the shelf?
3252..._ But will they come when you do call for them?_"The most formidable thing about a London party is getting away from it.
32521.--Whether a lady was ever known to write a letter covering only a single page?
325216 correctly the first time?)
32522.--What constitutes a man a gentleman?
32523.--Whether face or figure is most attractive in the female sex?
3252A PERSON at table asked me whether I"went in for rum as a steady drink?"
3252A Prologue?
3252A West Minkville?]
3252A fellow is n''t all battery, is he?
3252A hundred and forty?"
3252A little while afterwards he asked of his fellow- traveller, Professor Thayer,"How much did I weigh?
3252A man that had been saying all his fine things to Miss Susan Posey, too, had he, before he had bestowed his attentions on her?
3252A return of the natural instincts of girlhood with returning health?
3252A temple such as Athens might have been proud to rear upon her Acropolis?
3252A visitor, indigenous to the region, looking pensively at the figure, asked the lady of the house"if that was a statoo of her deceased infant?"
3252A voice whispers, What next?
3252A work of art, is it, Miss Myrtle Hazard?"
3252A young girl''s caprice?
3252A''n''t it fun to hear him blow off his steam?
3252A''n''t much of a loser, I guess, by acceptin''his propositions?"
3252Advertise for a bronzed living horse-- Lyceum invitations and engagements-- bronze versus brass.---What''s the use in being frightened?
3252After all, what was your Chevy Chace to stir blood with like a trumpet?
3252After reading what Emerson says about"the masses,"one is tempted to ask whether a philosopher can ever have"a constituency"and be elected to Congress?
3252Again, what was the influence this girl had seemingly exerted, under which the venomous creature had collapsed in such a sudden way?
3252Ah, Lord of life, though spectres pale Fill with their threats the shadowy vale, With Thee my faltering steps to aid, How can I dare to be afraid?
3252Ah, said I to myself; does that young girl understand French?
3252Ah, wilt thou yet return, Bearing thy rose- hued torch, and bid thine altar burn?
3252Ahead?
3252Ai n''t they nice children?
3252Ai n''t you telling me stories?
3252All at once he jumped up and said,-- Do n''t you want to hear what I just read to the boys?
3252All here, then, perhaps; all where, now?
3252All these have left their work and not their names, Why should I murmur at a fate like theirs?
3252All up for a year or more,--hey?"
3252All your wisdom is to him like the lady''s virtue in Raleigh''s song:"If she seem not chaste to me, What care I how chaste she be?"
3252Alumin.(?)
3252Am I not gentle?
3252Am I not harmless?
3252Am I not kind?
3252Am I not mirrored in those eyes of yours?
3252Amid our slender group we see; With him we still remained"The Class,"without his presence what are we?
3252An effect of an influx from another sphere of being?
3252An impression produced by her dream?
3252An obelisk such as Thebes might have pointed out with pride to the strangers who found admission through her hundred gates?
3252An old campaigner came up.--"Can these fellows get well?"
3252An''she ha''n''got the same kind o''feelin''s as other women.--Do you know that young gen''l''m''n up at the school, Doctor?"
3252And Mary said,--as one who, tried too long, Tells all her grief and half her sense of wrong,"What is this thoughtless thing which thou hast done?
3252And Number Five and her young friend the Tutor,--have they kept on in their dangerous intimacy?
3252And are you, and is your husband, and Paolo,--good Paolo,--are you all as well and happy as you have been and as you ought to be?
3252And can we smile when thou art dead?
3252And can you tell me why you like candy?
3252And did n''t I grin when I saw the pieces fly?
3252And having a chance every day, too, how could you expect her to stand it?"
3252And how could prose go on all- fours more unmetrically than this?
3252And how did you like his looks?"
3252And how does our young lady seem to be of late?"
3252And how does the law apply to this?
3252And if boys may have this additional ornament to their vertebral columns, why not men?
3252And if men, why not giants?
3252And if once the blacks had leave to run, how many whites would have to stay at home to guard their dissolving property?
3252And in the first place, will you allow me to ask what led you to this particular place?
3252And in the same person, do n''t you know the same two shades in different parts of the character that you find in the wing and thigh of a partridge?
3252And is it not appalling to think of the''large constitution of this man,''when you reflect on the acres of canvas which he has covered?
3252And is not the sky that covers us one roof, which makes us all one family?
3252And is this the pen you write with?
3252And of deception too-- do you see how nearly those dried leaves resemble an insect?
3252And so it was all as plain sailing for Number Five and the young Tutor as it had been for Delilah and the young Doctor, was it?
3252And so of the people you know; ca n''t you pick out the full- flavored, coarse- fibred characters from the delicate, fine- fibred ones?
3252And so you think you would like to become an octogenarian?
3252And wants you to come and talk religion with him in his study, Susan Posey, does he?
3252And was he noted in his day?
3252And what brings my young friend out in such good season this morning?
3252And what is your whole human family but a parenthesis in a single page of my history?
3252And what more natural than that one should be inquiring about what another has accepted and ceased to have any doubts concerning?
3252And what shall we do with Pope''s"Essay on Man,"which has furnished more familiar lines than"Paradise Lost"and"Paradise Regained"both together?
3252And what would literature or art be without such associations?
3252And who is the new- comer?
3252And who might he be, forsooth?
3252And whom do you know so well as your friends?
3252And will you agree to abide by his opinion, if it coincides with mine?"
3252And will you believe it?
3252And will you stop in England, and bring home the author of"Counterparts"with you?
3252And your family, are they as discreet as yourself?"
3252And-- and-- my son, do you remember Major Gideon Withers?"
3252Any corner in bronchitis?
3252Any strange cases among the scholars?"
3252Any syndicate in the vaccination business?"
3252Any young men teach in the school?"
3252Anybody tell you he sick?"
3252Are angels more true?
3252Are horses subject to the Morbus Addisonii?
3252Are ministers composed of finer clay than the rest of mankind, that entitles them to this preeminence?
3252Are my friends bent on killing me with kindness?
3252Are not Erard and Broadwood and Chickering the true humanizers of our time?
3252Are not almost all brains a little wanting in bilateral symmetry?
3252Are not most of us a little crazy, doctor,--just a little?
3252Are the English taller, stouter, lustier, ruddier, healthier, than our New England people?
3252Are the laity an inferior order of beings, fit only to be slaves and to be governed?
3252Are there never any worms in the leaves after they get old and yellow, Miss Cynthia?"
3252Are there not fruits, which, while unripe, are not to be tasted or endured, which mature into the richest taste and fragrance?
3252Are there not moods in which it seems to you that they are disposed to see all things out of plumb and in false relations with each other?
3252Are there not rough buds that open into sweet flowers?
3252Are there not some subjects in looking at which it seems to you impossible that they should ever see straight?
3252Are we any wiser than those great men?
3252Are we less earthly than the chosen race?
3252Are we not fresh and blooming?
3252Are we not glad that the responsibility of the decision did not rest on us?
3252Are we not the centre of something?
3252Are we not there ourselves?
3252Are we not whole years short of that interesting period of life when Mr. Balzac says that a man, etc., etc., etc.?
3252Are we not young?
3252Are we to spend twelve hundred millions, and raise six hundred thousand soldiers, in order to protect slavery?
3252Are you in the tune for pork?
3252Are you not ready to recognize in me a friend, an equal, a sister, who can speak to you as if she had been reared under the same roof?
3252Are you quite sure that you wish to live to be threescore and twenty years old?
3252Are you true to me, dearest Clement,--true as when we promised each other that we would love while life lasted?
3252Are you willing to give it to me?
3252Art thou, too, dreaming of a mortal''s kiss Amid the seraphs of the heavenly sphere?
3252As for his wound, how could it do otherwise than well under such hands?
3252At five or ten or fifteen years old they put their hands up to their foreheads and ask, What are they strapping down my brains in this way for?
3252At last I got out the question,--Will you take the long path with me?
3252At last the Scarabee creaked out very slowly,"Did I understand you to ask the following question, to wit?"
3252At last: Do you know the story of Andromeda?
3252At twoscore, threescore, is he then full grown?
3252Author writing, jacks?"
3252Ay, said a doubting bystander, but how many made vows of gifts and were shipwrecked notwithstanding?
3252Because Cleopatra swallowed a pearl?"
3252Because bread is good and wholesome and necessary and nourishing, shall you thrust a crumb into my windpipe while I am talking?
3252Because if they are not, what could hinder a witch from crossing the line that separates Wilmington from Andover, I should like to know?
3252Because time softens its outlines and rounds the sharp angles of its cornices, shall a fellow take a pickaxe to help time?
3252Besides, what business has a mere boarder to be talking about such things at a breakfast- table?
3252Born in Injy,--that''s it, ai n''t it?
3252Bradshaw?"
3252Bradshaw?"
3252Bradshaw?"
3252Bradshaw?"
3252Breathes there such a being, O Ceruleo- Nasal?
3252Bridshaw?"
3252Burn up?
3252But after all, what could I do?
3252But am I not glad, for my own sake, that I went?
3252But are there any trustworthy friends to the Union among the slaveholders?
3252But can it be astronomy alone that does it?
3252But come, now, why should not a giant have a tail as well as a dragon?
3252But confound the make- believe women we have turned loose in our streets!--where do they come from?
3252But did n''t it make you nervous, reading about so many people possessed with such strange notions?"
3252But do you think that I can forget them?
3252But how could any conceivable antipathy be so comprehensive as to keep a young man aloof from all the world, and make a hermit of him?
3252But how do you think practice would be?
3252But how in respect of those who were not asked?
3252But how long would it take to turn that circle into a polygon, unless some mighty counteracting force should prevent it?
3252But how to let one''s self down from the high level of such a character to one''s own poor standard?
3252But how was it in Salem, according to Mr. Upham''s own statement?
3252But if not, was the baptismal name Francis or Franklin?
3252But in the first place, what do we mean by an antipathy?
3252But is n''t there some truth in it, Doctor?
3252But is there not something of rest, of calm, in the thought of gently and gradually fading away out of human remembrance?
3252But there must be others,--I am afraid many others,--who will exclaim:"He has had his day, and why ca n''t he be content?
3252But what are you going to do when you find John Keats an apprentice to a surgeon or apothecary?
3252But what could she do?
3252But what if I should lay down the rule, Be cheerful; take all the troubles and trials of life with perfect equanimity and a smiling countenance?
3252But what if one does say the same things,--of course in a little different form each time,--over her?
3252But what if the joy of the summer is past, And winter''s wild herald is blowing his blast?
3252But what if this so- called antipathy were only a fear, a terror, which borrowed the less unmanly name?
3252But what if your oldest boy had been stolen from his cradle and bred in a North- Street cellar?
3252But what is half a century to a place like Stonehenge?
3252But what is the gift of a mourning ring to the bequest of a perpetual annuity?
3252But what is this?
3252But what right have I to say it can not be so?
3252But what shall I do now?
3252But what shall we say to the"Ars Poetica"of Horace?
3252But what should I do with Number Five?
3252But what was the use of a young man''s pretending to know anything in the presence of an old owl?
3252But what was this new light which seemed to have kindled in her eyes?
3252But what would youth be without its extravagances,--its preterpluperfect in the shape of adjectives, its unmeasured and unstinted admiration?
3252But what''s the use of good looks if they scare away folks?
3252But what, even then, could she have done?
3252But where are those contemporaries?
3252But where did them black eyes come from?
3252But where to look for what I wanted?
3252But who else was there?
3252But who is that other one that has been lengthening his stride from the first, and now shows close up to the front?
3252But who shall tune the pitch- pipe?
3252But why does n''t he come to our meetings?
3252But why should I illustrate further what it seems almost a breach of confidence to speak of?
3252By and by, perhaps, we can work you into our series of poets; but the best pears ripen slowly, and so with genius.--Where shall I send the volumes?"
3252By digging in calomel freely about their roots?
3252By watering them with Fowler''s solution?
3252Ca n''t you get your friends to unite with you in committing those odious instruments of debauchery to the flames in which you have consumed your own?
3252Ca n''t you lend it to me for a while?
3252Came from where?
3252Can I bind the sweet influences of Pleiades, or loose the bands of Orion?
3252Can I hear any more the voice of singing men and singing women?
3252Can I help you, my brother''?
3252Can I see this young person?"
3252Can Number Five be masquerading in verse?
3252Can any ear reconcile itself to the last of these three lines of Emerson''s?
3252Can any of you tell what those two words are?
3252Can he dispose of them?
3252Can he have furnished the model I saw at the sculptor''s?
3252Can it be possible that her prediction is not far from its realization?
3252Can it be that the curse is passing away, and my daughter is to be restored to me,--such as her mother would have had her,--such as her mother was?"
3252Can it be that this imparts a religious character to the article?
3252Can she tell me anything?
3252Can such peculiarities-- be transmitted by inheritance?
3252Can that ever be?
3252Can thy servant taste what I eat or what I drink?
3252Can we find any trace of this idea elsewhere?
3252Can we make a safe and honorable peace as the quarrel now stands?
3252Can you describe in intelligible language the smell of a rose as compared with that of a violet?
3252Can you find no lesson in this?
3252Can you help any soul_?
3252Can you help me to get sight of any of these papers not to be found at the Registry of Deeds or the Probate Office?"
3252Can you not imagine the tones in which those words,''Peace, be still,''were spoken?
3252Can you obtain what you wish?
3252Can you see tendency in your life?
3252Can you suggest what should be done to dispel the existing prejudice?"
3252Can you tell how much money there is in a safe, which also has thick double walls, by kneading its knobs with your fingers?
3252Can you tell me just how high they are?
3252Canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?"
3252Casts and drawings of A. are multiplied, and the bump does not lose in the act of copying.--I did not say it gained.--What do you look so for?
3252Cognati, queis te salvo est opus?
3252Colts grew horses, beards turned gray, Deacon and deaconess dropped away, Children and grand- children-- where were they?
3252Come here, Youngster, will you?
3252Come to go to bed, little dears?
3252Come, now,--he said,--what''s the use of these comparisons?
3252Consulting daily with Cynthia Badlam, was he?
3252Could I make an appointment with you for either of those days?
3252Could a brother of this young lady have written it?
3252Could he not confer that immortality so dear to the human heart?
3252Could it be so?
3252Could it be that--?
3252Could it be the roar of the thousand wheels and the ten thousand footsteps jarring and trampling along the stones of the neighboring city?
3252Could n''t be anything in such a violent supposition as that, and yet such a crafty fellow as that Bradshaw,--what trick was he not up to?
3252Could she be an heiress in disguise?
3252Could she call him at will by looking at him?
3252Could she have stayed to meet the schoolmaster?
3252Could that be a copy of"Thoughts on the Universe"?
3252Could that have anything to do with his pursuit of Myrtle Hazard today?"
3252Could the cures have been real ones, produced by the principle of ANIMAL MAGNETISM?
3252Could they help recalling Romeo and Juliet?
3252Cuprum,(?)
3252Curious entities, or non- entities, space and tithe?
3252Cyprian Eveleth was the one she thought most of; but Cyprian was as true as his sister Olive, and who else was there?
3252D''d y''ever see Ed''in Forrest play Metamora?
3252D''you remember how handsome she looked in the tableau, when the fair was held for the Dorcas Society?
3252DO YOU MEAN TO SAY JEAN CHAUVIN, THAT''HEAVEN LIES ABOUT US IN OUR INFANCY''?
3252Darwinii( we can keep A. D. you see) 1872?
3252Did I not see his eyes turn toward her as the silvery notes rippled from her throat?
3252Did Sir Isaac think what he was saying when he made HIS speech about the ocean,--the child and the pebbles, you know?
3252Did he ever see the Siamese twins, or any pair like them?
3252Did he mean to speak slightingly of a pebble?
3252Did he possess a hitherto unexercised personal power, which put the key of this young girl''s nervous system into his hands?
3252Did he tell her he loved her?
3252Did he think she hated every kind of goodness and loved every kind of evil?
3252Did he think she was hateful to the Being who made her?
3252Did it not seem as if Death had spared them for Love, and that Love should lead them together through life''s long journey to the gates of Death?
3252Did it occur to you that he could not see you clearly enough to know you from any other son or daughter of Adam?
3252Did n''t I hear this gentleman saying, the other day, that every American owns all America?
3252Did n''t one of my teachers split a Gunter''s scale into three pieces over the palm of my hand?
3252Did n''t somebody say he was very handsome?
3252Did n''t you ever think she would have to give in to Murray Bradshaw at last?
3252Did n''t you have to finish it, Deacon, after you had once begun?"
3252Did not C. buy nuts and gingerbread, when a boy, with the money he stole?
3252Did not my own consciousness migrate, or seem, at least, to transfer itself into this brilliant life history, as I traced its glowing record?
3252Did not worthy Mr. Higginson say that a breath of New England''s air is better than a sup of Old England''s ale?
3252Did she go only to get out of his, her cousin''s, reach?
3252Did she not remember the difference of their position?
3252Did the tenants of the fatal ledge recognize some mysterious affinity which made them tributary to the cold glitter of her diamond eyes?
3252Did they ever die?
3252Did they not follow her in her movements, as she turned her tread this or that way?
3252Did we talk of graveyards and epitaphs?
3252Did y''ever look at those eyes of his, M''randy?
3252Did y''ever mind that cut over his left eyebrow?"
3252Did y''ever watch her at meetin''playing with posies and looking round all the time of the long prayer?
3252Did you ever happen to see that most soft- spoken and velvet- handed steam- engine at the Mint?
3252Did you ever hear Olive play''Songs without Words''?
3252Did you ever hear of a man''s growing lean by the reading of"Romeo and Juliet,"or blowing his brains out because Desdemona was maligned?
3252Did you ever hear of a poet who did not talk about them?
3252Did you ever hear of the Capsulae, Suprarenales?
3252Did you ever read old Daddy Gilpin?
3252Did you ever read the oldest of medical documents,--the Oath of Hippocrates?"
3252Did you ever see a bear- trap?
3252Did you ever see a case of catalepsy?
3252Did you ever see an oyster opened?
3252Did you ever see her before?"
3252Did you ever see one of those Japanese figures with the points for acupuncture marked upon it?
3252Did you ever think of that?
3252Did you ever watch a baby''s fingers?
3252Did you get them together by accident or according to some preconceived plan?
3252Did you happen to remember that though he does not allow that he is deaf, he will not deny that he does not hear quite so well as he used to?
3252Did you pull me out of the water?"
3252Did you think I did n''t know anything about the human body?"
3252Didst thou not mark that he stayed his roaring when I did press hard over the lesser bowels?
3252Do I see her afar in the distance?
3252Do I understand that you are an author?"
3252Do all the women have bad noses and bad mouths?
3252Do n''t keep that boy waiting,--how do we know what messages he has got to carry?
3252Do n''t spiders have their mates as well as other folks?
3252Do n''t they say that Theophrastus lived to his hundred and seventh year, and did n''t he complain of the shortness of life?
3252Do n''t you ever feel a longing to send your thoughts forth in verse, Cyprian?"
3252Do n''t you hate me, dying as I am?"
3252Do n''t you know how hard it is for some people to get out of a room after their visit is really over?
3252Do n''t you know that he''ll have you and all of us in his paper?
3252Do n''t you know that nothing is safe where one of those fellows gets in with his note- book and pencil?
3252Do n''t you perceive the sonorousness of these old dead Latin phrases?
3252Do n''t you remember the quiet brown colt ASTEROID, with the star in his forehead?
3252Do n''t you see how small Conscientiousness is?
3252Do n''t you see that a student in his library is a caddice- worm in his case?
3252Do n''t you see that all this is just as true of a poem?
3252Do n''t you see why?
3252Do n''t you see why?
3252Do n''t you think I shall ever learn to know what is nice from what is n''t?
3252Do n''t you think he would find another to make him happy?
3252Do n''t you think it will be safer-- for the women- folks-- jest to wait till mornin'', afore you put that j''int into the socket?"
3252Do n''t you think the''inspiration of the Almighty''gave Newton and Cuvier''understanding''?"
3252Do n''t you think they would like to hear it?"
3252Do n''t you think you and I should be apt to do just so, if we were in the critical line?
3252Do n''t you think you can say which is the dark- meat and which is the white- meat poet?
3252Do n''t you think, on the whole, you have pretty good reason to trust me?
3252Do n''t you want some more items of village news?
3252Do n''t you want to wait here, jest a little while, till I come back?
3252Do n''t your clients call you their lawyer?
3252Do not these muscles of mine represent a hundred loaves of bread?
3252Do not you all wonder and admire to see and behold and hear?
3252Do these young folks suppose that all vanity dies out of the natures of old men and old women?
3252Do they not name their children after you very frequently?
3252Do they really think those little thin legs can do anything in such a slashing sweepstakes as is coming off in these next forty years?
3252Do they see what this amounts to?
3252Do we not use more emphatic words than these in our self- depreciation?
3252Do we understand the intricate machinery of the Universe?
3252Do you care to know about the Archduke Ferdinand Maximilian, that shall be King hereafter of Mexico( if L. N. has his way)?
3252Do you come with any authority to make inquiries?"
3252Do you cry at those great musical smashes?
3252Do you eat a cheese before you buy it?"
3252Do you feel the rocks tremble as my huge billows crash against them?
3252Do you find it an easy and pleasant exercise to make rhymes?"
3252Do you find yourself disposed to take a special interest in Elsie,--to fall in love with her, in a word?
3252Do you forget Helen, and the fair women who made mischief and set nations by the ears before Helen was born?
3252Do you forget the angels who lost heaven for the daughters of men?
3252Do you go armed?"
3252Do you know a good article of brown sagas when you see it?"
3252Do you know anything about him, Bathsheba?
3252Do you know anything particular about him?"
3252Do you know how Art brings all ages together?
3252Do you know how important good jockeying is to authors?
3252Do you know how people hate to have their names misspelled?
3252Do you know that I met him this morning, and had a good look at him, full in the face?"
3252Do you know that every man has a religious belief peculiar to himself?
3252Do you know that you feel a little superior to every man who makes you laugh, whether by making faces or verses?
3252Do you know the charm of melancholy?
3252Do you know two native trees called pitch pine and white pine respectively?
3252Do you know what his name is?
3252Do you know what it all means?"
3252Do you know what to do about it?
3252Do you know what would have happened if that liquid had been clouded, and we had found life in the sealed flask?
3252Do you know, I believe I could solve the riddle of the''Arrowhead Village Sphinx,''as the paper called him, if he would only stay here long enough?"
3252Do you know, I can make her laugh and cry, reading my poor stories?
3252Do you know, my dear, I think there is a blank at the Sheriff''s office, with a place for his name in it?"
3252Do you know, too, that the majority of men look upon all who challenge their attention,--for a while, at least,--as beggars, and nuisances?
3252Do you mean to say that the upper Me, the Me of the true thinking- marrow, the convolutions of the brain, does not know better?
3252Do you not find in persons whom you love, whom you esteem, and even admire, some marks of obliquity in mental vision?
3252Do you not remember soliloquies something like this?
3252Do you not think there may be a crime which is not a sin?
3252Do you notice how, while everything else has gone to smash, that wheel remains sound and fit for service?
3252Do you really want to know"whether oatmeal is preferable to pie as an American national food"?
3252Do you recognize the fact that we are living in a new time?
3252Do you remember about that woman in Scriptur''out of whom the Lord cast seven devils?
3252Do you remember how the angel of the Lord appeared to Joseph and told him to flee into Egypt?
3252Do you remember that chap the sheriff come and took away when we kep''tahvern?
3252Do you remember what I used to say in my lectures?--or were you asleep just then, or cutting your initials on the rail?
3252Do you say that old age is unfeeling?
3252Do you see any cloudiness in it?
3252Do you see equally well with both eyes, and hear equally well with both ears?
3252Do you see my foaming lips?
3252Do you see that Hedericus?
3252Do you suppose he does n''t enjoy the quiet of that resting- place?
3252Do you suppose if there is anything in the evil eye it would go through glass?
3252Do you suppose our dear didascalos over there ever read Poli Synopsis, or consulted Castelli Lexicon, while he was growing up to their stature?
3252Do you suppose she left that poison to rankle in the tender soul of her darling?
3252Do you suppose that I shall cease to follow the love( or the loves; which do you think is the true word, the singular or the plural?)
3252Do you take any idea from it?
3252Do you think I do n''t understand what my friend, the Professor, long ago called THE HYDROSTATIC PARADOX OF CONTROVERSY?
3252Do you think I was necessarily a greater fool and coward than another?
3252Do you think blue eye- glasses would be better than common ones?
3252Do you think he would be willing to let this friend of mine share in the privileges of spiritual intercourse which you enjoy?"
3252Do you think it really the larva of meloe?
3252Do you think it would be wrong in me to do it?
3252Do you think men of true genius are apt to indulge in the use of inebriating fluids?
3252Do you think she did not see the ridiculous element in a silly speech, or the absurdity of an outrageously extravagant assertion?
3252Do you think she has any special fancy for anybody else in the school besides Miss Darley?"
3252Do you think so?
3252Do you think there is anything so very odd about this idea?
3252Do you think you can make your heroes and heroines,--nay, even your scrappy supernumeraries,--out of refuse material, as you made your scarecrow?
3252Do you want me to describe more branches of the sciatic and crural nerves?
3252Do you want to know what I think he is?
3252Do you want to know why that name is given to the men who do most for the world''s progress?
3252Do you want to make him kill me?
3252Do you wonder that my thoughts took the poetical form, in the contemplation of these changes and their melancholy consequences?
3252Do?
3252Does God hate me so?"
3252Does Hahnemann himself represent Homoeopathy as it now exists?
3252Does He behold with smile serene The shows of that unending scene, Where sleepless, hopeless anguish lies, And, ever dying, never dies?
3252Does a license to preach transform a man into a higher order of beings and endow him with a natural quality to govern?
3252Does all this seem strange and incredible to the reader of my manuscript?
3252Does he become unconscious, too?
3252Does he hope to secure a hearing from those who have come into the reading world since his coevals?
3252Does he really believe that everybody remembers all of his, writer''s, words he may happen to have read?
3252Does he suppose we want to be known and talked about in public as"Teacups"?
3252Does he write and publish for those of his own time of life?
3252Does it please their thin ghosts thus to be dragged to the light of day?
3252Does n''t Cyprian want some more every- day kind of girl to keep him straight?
3252Does n''t Elsie look savage?
3252Does n''t Sydney Smith say that a public man in England never gets over a false quantity uttered in early life?
3252Does n''t he look handsome, though?"
3252Does n''t it seem as if there was a kind of Injin look to''em?
3252Does n''t it seem as if there was a vein of satire as well as of fun that ran through the solemn manifestations of creative wisdom?
3252Does n''t she carry a lump of opium in her pocket?
3252Does n''t your baker, does n''t your butcher, speak of the families he supplies as his families?"
3252Does not Mr. Bryant say, that Truth gets well if she is run over by a locomotive, while Error dies of lockjaw if she scratches her finger?
3252Does not Myrtle look more in her place by the side of Murray Bradshaw than she would with Gifted hitched on her arm?"
3252Does not a single star seem very lonely to you up there?
3252Does not her face recall to you one that you remember, as never before?"
3252Does not your heart throb, in the presence of budding or blooming womanhood, sometimes as if it"were ready to crack"with its own excess of strain?
3252Does she ever listen about to hear what people are saying?"
3252Does she remind you of him?"
3252Does she tell you all her plans and projects?"
3252Does the Bunker- Hill Monument bend in the blast like a blade of grass?
3252Does the bird know why its feathers grow more brilliant and its voice becomes musical in the pairing season?
3252Does the ocean share your grief?
3252Does the river listen to your sighs?
3252Does the simpleton really think that everybody has read all he has written?
3252Does this girl like to have her own way pretty well, like the rest of the family?"
3252Does this sound wild and extravagant?
3252Doubt it, do you?
3252Down at the Island, deer- shooting.--How many did I bag?
3252Down flat,--five,--six,--how many?
3252Dr. Kittredge, is there any ketchin''complaint goin''about in the village?"
3252Dropped?
3252Earn his money, hey, Master Gridley?"
3252Endless doubt and unrest here below; wondering, admiring, adoring certainty above.--Am I not right?
3252Errors excepted.--Did I hear some gentleman say,"Doubted?"
3252Est- elle bien gentille, cette petite?
3252Euthymia said,"or has some one been putting the idea into your head?"
3252Everything else being equal, which is best for an American to marry, an American or an English girl?
3252Everything right?
3252Festive,--hey?
3252Fish''s way of reproducing the expression without the insinuation which called it forth is a practical misstatement which does Mr. Motley great wrong?
3252Folks had read letters laid ag''in''the pits o''their stomachs,''n''why should n''t they see out o''the backs o''their heads?
3252For art thou not the Palladium of our Troy?
3252For talking at its best being an inspiration, it wants a corresponding divine quality of receptiveness; and where will you find this but in woman?
3252For what do we understand by that word?
3252From what cliff was it broken?
3252Genius has given you the freedom of the universe, why then come within any walls?
3252Gifted Hopkins?
3252Got his witch grandmother mummied in it?
3252Great on Paul''s Epistles,--don''t you think so?"
3252Gridley?"
3252Gridley?"
3252Gridley?"
3252Gridley?"
3252Habet?]
3252Had I ever perused McFingal?
3252Had a message for him,--could she see him in his study?
3252Had any young fellow been on the train within a day or two, who had attracted his notice?
3252Had he not discovered a, new tabanus?
3252Had he sense and spirit enough to deal with such people?
3252Had not he as good right to ask questions as Abraham?
3252Had she never worn that painted robe before?
3252Had she some such love- token on her neck as the old Don''s revolver had left on his?
3252Had she, after all, some human tenderness in her heart?
3252Haow''s your haalth?"
3252Has Mr. Bradshaw been following after her lately?
3252Has Mr. William Murray Bradshaw ever delivered into your hands any papers relating to the affairs of the late Malachi Withers, for your safe keeping?"
3252Has anybody a brandy flask about him?"
3252Has anybody counted the spoons?
3252Has it not A claim for some remembrance in the book That fills its pages with the idle words Spoken of men?
3252Has n''t he got any sisters or nieces or anybody to see to his things, if he should be took away?
3252Has nobody got thirteen cents?
3252Has not a man a right to ask this question in the here or in the hereafter,--in this world or in any world in which he may find himself?
3252Has she not exhausted this lean soil of the elements her growing nature requires?
3252Has the young Doctor''s crown yet received the seal which is Nature''s warrant of wisdom and proof of professional competency?
3252Has there any old fellow got mixed with the boys?
3252Has your aunt Silence promised to bear your expenses while you are in the city?
3252Has"Stultus"forgiven the indignity of being thus characterized?
3252Have n''t I found the true story of this strange visitor?
3252Have n''t I guessed right, now, tell me, my dear?"
3252Have n''t I solved the riddle of the Sphinx?
3252Have n''t any of you seen the wonderful fat man exhibitin''down in Hanover Street?
3252Have they any of those uneasy people called reformers?"
3252Have they fired cannon?
3252Have they looked in the woods everywhere?
3252Have you a grief that gnaws at your heart- strings?
3252Have you any commands for the city?"
3252Have you any personal experience as to the power of fascination said to be exercised by certain animals?
3252Have you ever heard the Lady-- the one that I sit next to at the table-- say anything about me?
3252Have you ever met with any cases which admitted of a solution like that which I have mentioned?
3252Have you ever read Spenser''s Faery Queen?"
3252Have you ever read the little book called"The Stars and the Earth?"
3252Have you eyes to find the five Which five hundred did survive?"
3252Have you got any handsome pictures in your house?"
3252Have you read Sampson Reed''s"Growth of the Mind"?
3252Have you seen how large it is?
3252Have you seen them galloping about together?
3252Have you the means to pay for your journey and your stay at a city hotel?"
3252Hawthorne says in a letter to Longfellow,"Why do n''t you come over, being now a man of leisure and with nothing to keep you in America?
3252Hazard?
3252Hazard?
3252He began, after an awkward pause,"You would not have me stay in a communion which I feel to be alien to the true church, would you?"
3252He cut you dead, you say?
3252He had been a widower long enough,"--nigh twenty year, wa''n''t it?
3252He knows forty times as much about heaven as that Stoker man does, or ever''s like to,--why do n''t they run after him, I should like to know?
3252He looked at it for a moment, and put his hands to his eyes as if moved.--I was thinking,--he said indistinctly----How?
3252He made a figure, it is true, in Dryden''s great Ode, but what kind of a figure?
3252He may perhaps be a widower before a great while.--Does he know that you are working those slippers for him?"
3252He must live for this child''s sake, at any rate; and yet,--oh, yet, who could tell with what thoughts he looked upon her?
3252He never looked so happy,--could anything fill his cup fuller?
3252He said he was very glad to hear it, did he, when you told him that your beloved grandmother had just deceased?
3252He saw she was in suffering, and said presently,"You have pain somewhere; where is it?"
3252He took as his text,"Shall not the Judge of all the earth do right?"
3252He was a serviceable kind of body on occasion, after all, was he not, hey, Mr. Byles Gridley?
3252He was silent,--and sat looking at his handsome left hand with the red stone ring upon it.--Is he going to fall in love with Iris?
3252He was under the effect of opiates,--why not( if his case was desperate, as it seemed to be considered) stop his sufferings with chloroform?
3252Helen''s eyes glistened as she interrupted him,--"What do you mean?
3252Her father, I believe, is sensible enough;--what sort of a woman was her mother, Doctor?--I suppose, of course, you remember all about her?"
3252Here are the mills that grind food for its hunger, and"is not the life more than meat, and the body than raiment?"
3252Here is another chance for you,--I said.--What do you want nicer than such a young lady as Iris?
3252His home!--the Western giant smiles, And twirls the spotty globe to find it;-- This little speck the British Isles?
3252His tired old eyes glistened as he asked about them,--could it be that their little romance recalled some early vision of his own?
3252Hope the Squire treated you hahnsomely,--liberal pecooniary compensation,--hey?
3252Hope you do.-- Born there?
3252Hoped his uncle was well, and his charming cousin,--was she as original as ever?
3252Hopkins?
3252Hopkins?"
3252Hopkins?"
3252How about the miserable Indians?
3252How can I do what all these letters ask me to?
3252How can he tell the exhaustion produced by his evacuants from the collapse belonging to the disease they were meant to remove?
3252How can it be made grand and dignified enough to be equal to the office assigned it?
3252How can one explain its significance to those whose musical faculties are in a rudimentary state of development, or who have never had them trained?
3252How can one tell the story of the finish in cold- blooded preterites?
3252How can we give it the distinction we demand for it?
3252How can you cry when you do n''t know what it is all about?
3252How can you expect anything interesting from such a human cocoon?
3252How can you fail to see the resemblance?
3252How can you tell that anything is poetry, I should like to know, if there is neither a regular line with just so many syllables, nor a rhyme?
3252How could I ever judge Margaret fairly after such a crushing discovery of her superiority?
3252How could I look at the Bodleian Library, or wander beneath its roof, without recalling the lines from"The Vanity of Human Wishes"?
3252How could he ever come to fancy such a quadroon- looking thing as that, she should like to know?
3252How could he help admiring Byron and falling into more or less unconscious imitation of his moods if not of his special affectations?
3252How could he resist the dictate of humanity which called him to make his visits more frequent, that her intervals of rest might be more numerous?
3252How could he resist the temptation?
3252How could it be otherwise?
3252How could it be otherwise?--Did you speak, Madam?
3252How could one be otherwise?"
3252How could the man in whose thought such a meteoric expression suddenly announced itself fail to recognize it as divine?
3252How could they expire if they did n''t breathe?
3252How could they have got on together?
3252How d''ye do?
3252How d''ye do?
3252How d''ye know she has n''t fell into the river?
3252How did Dr. Jackson gain the position which all conceded to him?
3252How did they get their model of the pyramid?
3252How did you get me into dry clothes so quick?"
3252How do I know that I shall feel like opening it?
3252How do I know that I shall have a chance to open it again?
3252How do I know that anybody will want it to be opened a second time?
3252How do we know that a rapid pulse is not a normal adjustment of nature to the condition it accompanies?
3252How do you feel now you are awake?"
3252How do you know that he will not send it to one of the gossiping journals like the''Household Inquisitor''?
3252How do you know that posterity may not resuscitate these seemingly dead poems, and give their author the immortality for which he longed and labored?
3252How do you know that this stranger will not show your letter to anybody or everybody?
3252How do you know there''s anything to find?
3252How do you suppose this change was brought about?
3252How does Dr. Meigs know that the patients he bled in puerperal fever would not have all got well if he had not bled them?
3252How does a footpath across a field establish itself?
3252How does your knowledge stand to- day?
3252How far did that atmosphere extend, and through what channel did it act?
3252How have I managed to keep so long out of the idiot asylum?
3252How have you been since our correspondence on Fascination and other curious scientific questions?"
3252How is a physician to distinguish the irritation produced by his blister from that caused by the inflammation it was meant to cure?
3252How is it possible that I can keep up my freedom of intercourse with you all if you insist on bellowing my"asides"through a speaking- trumpet?
3252How long is Mr. William Murray Bradshaw like to be away?"
3252How long will school- keeping take to kill you?
3252How long would it have taken small doses of calomel and rhubarb to save as many children?
3252How many more generations will pass before Milton''s alarming prophecy will find itself realized in the belief of civilized mankind?"
3252How many of us ever read or ever will read Drayton''s"Poly- Olbion?"
3252How many of you who are before me are familiarly acquainted with the name of Broussais, or even with that of Andral?
3252How many would find it out if one should say over in the same words that which he said in the last decade?
3252How much do you weigh?"
3252How much dress and how much light can a woman bear?
3252How much nearer have we come to the secret of force than Lully and Geber and the whole crew of juggling alchemists?
3252How much snow could you melt in an hour, if you were planted in a hogshead of it?
3252How often is he mentioned except as a warning?
3252How old was Floyer when he died, Fordyce?
3252How old was I, The Dictator, once known by another equally audacious title,--I, the recipient of all these favors and honors?
3252How pleasant do you think it is to have an arm offered to you when you are walking on a level surface, where there is no chance to trip?
3252How safe would anybody feel to live with her?
3252How shall I describe the conflicts of those dreamy, bewildering, dreadful years?
3252How shall we characterize the doctrine of endless torture as the destiny of most of those who have lived, and are living, on this planet?
3252How should he ever live through the long months of November and December?
3252How should she forget it?
3252How was it likely she would look on such an extraordinary proposition?
3252How would you like being called up to ride ten miles in a midnight snow- storm, just when one of your raging headaches was racking you?"
3252How''s the Deacon, Miss Withers?"
3252How''s your folks?"
3252How''s your haalth, Colonel Sprowle?"
3252How, then, did nitrate of silver come to be given for epilepsy?
3252How, then, is he to blame mankind for inheriting"sinfulness"from their first parents?
3252Hullo, You- sir, joo know th''wuz gon- to be a race to- morrah?
3252Hush,--said I,--what will the divinity- student say?
3252I am fair to the poets,--don''t you agree that I am?
3252I am in the power of a dreadful man--""You mean Mr. William Murray Bradshaw?"
3252I appropriated it to my own use; what can one do better than this, when one has a friend that tells him anything worth remembering?
3252I asked the first of those two old New- Yorkers the following question:"Who, on the whole, seemed to you the most considerable person you ever met?"
3252I began abruptly:--Do you know that you are a rich young person?
3252I brought home one buck shot.--The Island is where?
3252I did not say that you and I do n''t know, but how many people do know anything about it?
3252I do n''t believe you have exercised enough;--don''t you think it''s confinement in the school has made you nervous?"
3252I do n''t know what there is about Elsie''s,--but do you know, my dear, I find myself curiously influenced by them?
3252I do n''t think anything of such objects, you know; but what should he have it in his chamber for?
3252I do n''t want to speak too slightingly of these verbal critics;--how can I, who am so fond of talking about errors and vulgarisms of speech?
3252I from my clinging babe was rudely torn; His tender lips a loveless bosom pressed Can I forget him in my life new born?
3252I hear that a newspaper correspondent has visited him so as to make a report to his paper,--do you know what he found out?"
3252I heard him distinctly whispering to the young fellow who brought him to dinner, SHALL I TELL IT?
3252I hope he will carry that faculty of an honest laugh with him wherever he goes,--why should n''t he?
3252I hope you are invited to Miss Eveleth''s to- morrow evening?"
3252I know my danger,--does not Lord Byron say,"I have even been accused of writing puffs for Warren''s blacking"?
3252I never saw or heard of anything like it, in prose at least;--do you remember much of Coleridge''s Poems, Doctor?"
3252I no like his looks these las''days.--Is that a very pooty gen''l''m''n up at the schoolhouse, Doctor?"
3252I reasoned with myself: Why should I not have outgrown that idle apprehension which had been the nightmare of my earlier years?
3252I recollect his regretting the splendid guardsmen of the old Empire,--for what?
3252I said nothing, but looked the question, What are you laughing at?
3252I said to myself, Why should not I overcome this dread of woman as Peter the Great fought down his dread of wheels rolling over a bridge?
3252I said,''Did you begin, Dear Queen?''
3252I say,"Boys, who was this man Shakespeare, people talk so much about?"
3252I should like to know if all story- tellers do not do this?
3252I suppose all of you have had the pocket- book fever when you were little?--What do I mean?
3252I suppose you do a little of what we teachers used to call"cramming"now and then?
3252I suppose you do n''t care about going, Elsie?"
3252I suppose you will have some fine horses, and who would n''t be glad to?
3252I was there, of course?
3252I wonder if anybody will be curious enough to look further along to find out what it was before she reads the next paragraph?
3252I wonder if she remembers how very lovely and agreeable she was?
3252I wonder if you ever thought of the single mark of supremacy which distinguishes this tree from all our other forest- trees?
3252IV What is a country village without its mysterious personage?
3252If I like Broadway better than Washington Street, what then?
3252If I were Florence Smythe, I''d try it, and begin now,--eh, Clara?"
3252If a man picks your pocket, do you not consider him thereby disqualified to pronounce any authoritative opinion on matters of ethics?
3252If a person who is born with it looks at you, you die, or something happens-- awful-- is n''t it?
3252If all she did was hateful to God, what was the meaning of the approving or else the disapproving conscience, when she had done"right"or"wrong"?
3252If any of you really believe in a working Utopia, why not join the Shakers, and convert the world to this mode of life?
3252If any, born of kindlier blood, Should ask, What maiden lies below?
3252If he has not seen so much of women, where could he study all that is best in womanhood as he can in his own wife?
3252If he is not authority on the subject of his own doctrines, who is?
3252If he writes the same word twice in succession, by accident, he always erases the one that stands second; has not the first- comer the prior right?
3252If my little sister comes to Boston next June, will you let me bring her to see you?
3252If neither of those days should suit you, could you kindly suggest another day?
3252If so, when does he come to his consciousness?
3252If that ai n''t what y''mean, what do y''mean?
3252If the girl had only inherited that property-- whew?
3252If the magnolia can bloom in northern New England, why should not a poet or a painter come to his full growth here just as well?
3252If the men were so wicked, I''ll ask my papa How he dared to propose to my darling mamma; Was he like the rest of them?
3252If the son of that boy''s father could not be trusted, what boy in Christendom could?
3252If this is to be a child, what is it to be a woman?
3252If we ca n''t understand them, because we have n''t taken a medical degree, what the Father of Lies do they ask us to sign them for?
3252If we could make a peace without dishonor, could we make one that would be safe and lasting?
3252If we understand them, why ca n''t we discuss them?
3252If what my Rabbi tells me is the truth, Why did the choir of angels sing for joy?
3252If you have really got more brains in Boston than other folks, as you seem to think, who hates you for it, except a pack of scribbling fools?
3252If your ship springs a leak, what would you do?
3252In love, Philip?
3252In one of these, after looking round as usual, I asked aloud,"Any Massachusetts men here?"
3252In that case, where would he, Dick, be?
3252Inspector general?"
3252Interpellandi locus hic erat; Est tibi mater?
3252Is a young man in the habit of writing verses?
3252Is anybody trying it softly?
3252Is he in the house now?"
3252Is he known to have changed his opinion as to the approaching disastrous event?
3252Is he not a POET that painted us?
3252Is it frut- cake?
3252Is it good policy for mankind to subject themselves to such degrading vassalage and abject submission?
3252Is it impossible for an archangel to smile?
3252Is it likely that some other attraction may come into disturb the existing relation?
3252Is it not a relief that I am abstaining from description of what everybody has heard described?
3252Is it not evident that Lord Clarendon suggested the idea which Mr. Motley repelled as implying an insidious mode of action?
3252Is it not true that the young man of average ability will find it as much as he can do to fit himself for these simple duties?
3252Is it nuts and oranges and apples?
3252Is it possible that the books which have been for me what Morhof was for Dr. Johnson can look like that to the student of the year 1990?
3252Is it possible the poor thing works with her needle, too?
3252Is it so?
3252Is it taking too great a liberty to ask how early you began to write in verse?
3252Is it the God that walked in Eden''s grove In the cool hour to seek our guilty sire?
3252Is it too late now?
3252Is n''t he a fust- rate- lookin''watch- dog, an''a rig''ler rat- hound?"
3252Is n''t her cologne- bottle replenished oftener than its legitimate use would require?
3252Is n''t it a giant putting his tongue out?
3252Is n''t it a pretty thought?
3252Is n''t that a picture of the poet''s hungry and hurried feast at the banquet of life?
3252Is n''t that high enough?
3252Is n''t there an odd sort of fascination about her?
3252Is n''t there any old whisper which will tarnish that wearisome aureole of saintly perfection?
3252Is n''t this book enough to scare any of you?
3252Is not a Creator bound to guard his children against the ruin which inherited ignorance might entail on them?
3252Is not freethinker a term of reproach in England?
3252Is not the inaudible, inward laughter of Emerson more refreshing than the explosions of our noisiest humorists?
3252Is not this a manifest case of insanity, in the form known as melancholia?
3252Is not this a pleasing programme?
3252Is not this to make vain the gift of God?
3252Is not this to turn back the hand on the dial?"
3252Is such a phenomenon as a laugh never heard except in our little sinful corner of the universe?
3252Is that a stem or a straw?
3252Is that done?"
3252Is that fellow making love to Myrtle?"
3252Is the door fast?
3252Is the sick man moved?
3252Is there a world of blank despair, And dwells the Omnipresent there?
3252Is there an inner apartment that I have not seen?
3252Is there any book you would like to have out of my library?
3252Is there any ketchin''fevers-- bilious, or nervous, or typus, or whatever you call''em-- now goin''round this village?
3252Is there any story of crime, or anything else to spice a column or so, or even a few paragraphs, with?
3252Is there any trick that love and their own fancies do not play them?
3252Is there anything to countenance the stories, long and widely current, about the"evil eye"?
3252Is there method in your consciousness?
3252Is there no progress, then, but do we return to the same beliefs and practices which our forefathers wore out and threw away?
3252Is there no such thing, then, as hydrophobia?
3252Is there not danger in introducing discussions or allusions relating to matters of religion into common discourse?
3252Is there not in this as great an exception to all the hitherto received laws of nature as in the miracle of the loaves and fishes?
3252Is this prejudice not due largely to the religious instruction that is given by the church acid Sunday- school?
3252Is this the condition of affairs between Number Five and the Tutor?
3252Is this the desk at which you write?
3252Is this the way that genius is welcomed to the world of letters?"
3252Is this typical of the creative force on the two sides of the ocean, or not?
3252Is venesection done with forever?
3252Is virtue piecemeal?
3252Is''t not like That devil- spider that devours her mate Scarce freed from her embraces?"
3252It is an honorable term,--I replied.--But why Little Boston, in a place where most are Bostonians?
3252It is so much less known to the public at large than many other resorts that we naturally ask, What brings this or that new visitor among us?
3252It is true that my waters exhale and are renewed from one season to another; but are your features the same, absolutely the same, from year to year?
3252It is,--said I.--But would you have the kindness to tell me if you know anything about this deformed person?
3252It shows a little more distinctly than in the first photograph, does n''t it?''
3252It was n''t nice a bit, was it?
3252It was, Do you, Miss So and So, take this GENTLEMAN?
3252It wo n''t be my fault if one visit is not enough.--You do n''t suppose Myrtle is in love with this fellow?"
3252It would be a very interesting question, what was the intellectual character of those persons most conspicuous in behalf of the Perkinistic delusion?
3252It''s the young Missis, Doctor,--it''s our Elsie,--it''s the baby, as we use''t''call her,--don''you remember, Doctor?
3252Joseph Bellamy Stoker and his young proselyte, Miss Myrtle Hazard?"
3252Joseph Bellamy Stoker has called upon you, Susan Posey, has he?
3252Joseph Bellamy Stoker?"
3252Just clear up these two children for me, will you, my dear?
3252K.?"
3252Ketched ye''ith a slippernoose, hey?
3252Kindness?
3252Kirkwood?"
3252Kitty departed, communing with herself in this wise:--"Ockipied, is it?
3252Know old Cambridge?
3252Langdon?"
3252Leduc?
3252Leduc?
3252Lindsay?"
3252Lindsay?"
3252Lindsay?"
3252Listen to him; he is reading aloud in impassioned tones: And have I coined my soul in words for naught?
3252Listen to poor old Barzillai, and hear him piping:"I am this day fourscore years old; and can I discern between good and evil?
3252Liver- complaint one of''em?
3252Liver- tissue brings sugar out of the blood, or out of its own substance;--why?
3252Lives there one De Sauty extant now among you, Whispering Boanerges, son of silent thunder, Holding talk with nations?
3252Look here,--you young philosopher over there,--do you like candy?
3252Look!--said he,--is it clear or cloudy?
3252Looks bright; anything in her?"
3252Lord, what are we, and what are our children, but a Generation of Vipers?"
3252MADNESS?
3252MR. BRADSHAW CALLS ON MISS BADLAM"Is Miss Hazard in, Kitty?"
3252Mahser Maurice asleep an''all this racket going on?
3252May I ask why you do not try the experiment yourself?
3252May I take the liberty to ask your-- profession?"
3252May I venture to contrast youth and experience in medical practice, something in the way the man painted the lion, that is, the lion under?
3252May not the serpent have bitten Eve before the birth of Cain, her first- born?
3252May we not hope for your presence at the meeting, which is to take place next Wednesday evening?
3252Mr. Bernard heard the answer, but presently stared about and asked again,"Who''s hurt?
3252Mr. Bradshaw asked, in a rather excited way,"Is it possible, Miss Withers, that your niece has quitted you to go to a city school?"
3252Mr. Gridley, is that you?
3252Mr. Langdon, has anything happened to you?"
3252Mr. Peckham, would you be so polite as to pass me a glass of srub?"
3252Mr. Stoker''s sermon had touched her hard heart?
3252Mr. Stoker; and when the women run after a minister or a doctor, what do the men signify?
3252Mulier, Latin for woman; why apply that name to one of the gentle but occasionally obstinate sex?
3252My beauty have anything ugly?
3252My reader might be a little puzzled when he read that Number Five did or said such or such a thing, and ask,"Whom do you mean by that title?
3252Myrtle ought, according to the common rules of conversation, to have asked, What other?
3252Myrtle turned to Master Byles Gridley, and said,"You have been my friend and protector so far, will you continue to be so hereafter?"
3252Nay, what was that which obscured its outline, in shape like a human figure?
3252Never heard of her?
3252Never?
3252Never?
3252Ninety- odd, was n''t it?
3252No leading hotel kept by any Hazard, was there?
3252No newspaper of note edited by anybody called Hazard, was there?
3252No second self to say her evening prayer for?
3252No sleep since twelve o''clock last night, you say?"
3252Nobody sick up at the school, I hope?"
3252Noisy little good- for- nothing tike,--ain''t you, Fret?"
3252None of the boats missing?
3252Nothing going wrong up at our ancient mansion, The Poplars, I trust?"
3252Nothing?
3252Now what have we come to in our own day?
3252Now, said the Professor, you do n''t mean to tell me that I have got to that yet?
3252Now, what did I expect when I began these papers, and what is it that has begun to frighten me?
3252Of course the Algonquin kept gaining, but could it possibly gain enough?
3252Of course the Professor acquires his information solely through his cranial inspections and manipulations.--What are you laughing at?
3252Of what use is he going to be in my record of what I have seen and heard at the breakfast- table?
3252Of what use was it to offer books like the"Saint''s Rest"to a child whose idea of happiness was in perpetual activity?
3252Of what use were they to me without general indexes?
3252Oh, you never read his Naufragium, or"Shipwreck,"did you?
3252Old Sophy would say,--"don''you hear th''crackin''''n''th''snappin''up in Th''Mountain,''n''th''rollin''o''th''big stones?
3252Old fellow?--said I,--whom do you mean?
3252On what beach rolled by the waves of what ocean?
3252One was tempted to ask:"What forlorn hope have you led?
3252Or a living product of galvanic action, Like the status bred in Crosses flint- solution?
3252Or did these girls lay their heads together, and send the poem we had at our last sitting to puzzle the company?
3252Or did----write the novels and send them to London, as I fancied when I read them?
3252Or have you forgotten one who will never cease to remember that she was once your own Susan?"
3252Or is he a mythus,--ancient word for"humbug,"--Such as Livy told about the wolf that wet- nursed Romulus and Remus?
3252Or is it a passion?
3252Or is it that the explosion would derange her costume?
3252Or is one of the two Annexes the make believe lover?
3252Or to that of which Addison and Steele formed the centre, and which gave us the Spectator?
3252Or to that where Johnson, and Goldsmith, and Burke, and Reynolds, and Beauclerk, and Boswell, most admiring among all admirers, met together?
3252Or was he one of those men who are always making blunders for other people to correct?
3252Or, to mention one out of many questionable remedies, shall you give Veratrum Viride in fevers and inflammations?
3252Others might have wealth and beauty, he thought to himself, but what were these to the gift of genius?
3252Ought I not to regret having undertaken to report the doings and sayings of the members of the circle which you have known as The Teacups?
3252Ought I not to tell him so?
3252Peckham?"
3252Penhallow?"
3252Penhallow?"
3252Perhaps I shall deliver the lecture in your city: you will come and hear it, and bring him, wo n''t you, dearest?
3252Perhaps he does not receive six hundred letters every day, but if he gets anything like half that number daily, what can he do with them?
3252Perhaps you have been there yourself?"
3252Perhaps you would be good enough to tell me what it is you like about them?
3252Philip, do you know the pathos there is in the eyes of unsought women, oppressed with the burden of an inner life unshared?
3252Please tell me, who taught her to play with it?
3252Possibilities, Sir?--said the divinity- student; ca n''t a man who says Haow?
3252Pray, do you happen to remember Wordsworth''s"Boy of Windermere"?
3252Pray, what part of Maryland did you come from, and how shall I call you?
3252Pray, what set you to asking me this?
3252Predestined, I venture my guess, to one or the other, but to which?
3252Presently the young man asked his pupil:--Do you know what the constellation directly over our heads is?
3252Presently,"Why, Bernard, my dear friend, my brother, it can not be that you are in danger?
3252Presently,-- Do you,--Beloved, I am afraid you are not old enough,--but do you remember the days of the tin tinder- box, the flint, and steel?
3252Professor Byles Gridley,--author of''Thoughts on the Universe''?"
3252Professor come home this very blessed morning with a story of one of her old black women?
3252Professor,--said he, one day,--don''t you think your brain will run dry before a year''s out, if you do n''t get the pump to help the cow?
3252Professor.--Do you mean to say that you have known me so long as that?
3252Professor.--What message do people generally send back when you first call on them?
3252Professor.--Where?
3252Published by the American Tract Society?"
3252Put it well, did n''t she?
3252Qu''est ce qu''il a fait?
3252Query, a bump?
3252Questioning all things: Why her Lord had sent her?
3252Read, flattered, honored?
3252Rest, and low diet for a day or two, and all will be right, wo n''t it?"
3252Robinson?"
3252Roe replied by asking, When charity was like a top?
3252Say, does He hear the sufferer''s groan, And is that child of wrath his own?
3252Says"Yes?"
3252Self- determining he may be, if you will, but who determines the self which is the proximate source of the determination?
3252Seventeen year ago,''n''her poor mother cryin''for her,--''Where is she?
3252Sha''n''t I write him a letter this very day and tell him all?
3252Shall I call on you this evening and tell you about them?"
3252Shall I die forgiven?
3252Shall I ever meet any one of them again, in these pages or in any other?
3252Shall I go instead of you?"
3252Shall I read you the poems referred to in the one you have just heard, sir?"
3252Shall I say anything of Austria,--what can I say that would interest you?
3252Shall I tell you some things the Professor said the other day?
3252Shall I tell you what that experience was?"
3252Shall a man who in his younger days has written poetry, or what passed for it, continue to attempt it in his later years?
3252Shall mouldering page or fading scroll Outface the charter of the soul?
3252Shall priesthood''s palsied arm protect The wrong our human hearts reject, And smite the lips whose shuddering cry Proclaims a cruel creed a lie?
3252Shall the minister be given to understand that you will see him hereafter in her company?"
3252Shall there be no more dew on those leaves thereafter?
3252Shall they ever live again in the memory of those who loved them here below?
3252Shall they give expression to this secondary mental state, or not?
3252Shall we always be youthful and laughing and gay, Till the last dear companion drops smiling away?
3252Shall we not bid him come, and be Poet and Teacher of a most scattered flock wanting a shepherd?
3252Shall we rank Emerson among the great poets or not?
3252Shall we walk down the street together?
3252She blushed as she thought of the comments that might be made; but what were such considerations in a matter of life and death?
3252She certainly looks innocent enough; but what does a blush prove, and what does its absence prove, on one of these innocent faces?
3252She does not seem to be a safe neighbor to very inflammable bodies?"
3252She grew still paler, as she asked,"Is he dead?"
3252She had been so lonely since he was away?
3252She has a woman''s heart; and what talent of mine is to be named by the love a true woman can offer in exchange for these divided and cold affections?
3252She is getting a strange influence over my fellow- teacher, a young lady,--you know Miss Helen Darley, perhaps?
3252She is the best of friends, they say, but can she love anybody, as so many other women do, or seem to?
3252She knows that as well as we do; and her first question after you have been talking your soul into her consciousness is, Did I please?
3252She longed, and knew not wherefore Had the world nothing she might live to care for?
3252She saw Mr. Gridley yesterday, I know; why wo n''t she see me to- day?"
3252She told the whole story;-shall I repeat it?
3252She was genteel enough for him, and-- let''s see, haow old was she?
3252Shoot him?
3252Should I send this poem to the publishers, or not?
3252Should he challenge her lover?
3252Should he fly?
3252Should we lose many Kentuckians and Virginians who are now with us, if we boldly confiscated the slaves of all rebels?
3252Should you expect him to turn out a Mozart or a Beethoven?
3252Should you feel afraid to have him look at you?
3252Should you like to hear them?
3252Some explanation must take place between them, and how was it possible that it should be without emotion?
3252Somebody must have''em,--why should n''t you?
3252Somebody.--Who is it?
3252Something like this, was n''t it?
3252Something was hanging from it,--an old garment, was it?
3252Sometimes a sunlit sphere comes rolling by, And then we softly whisper,--can it be?
3252Speak I not truly, Master, that she will be well speedily?"
3252Sprowle?"
3252Such a simple thing?
3252Sulphur, Mang.(?)
3252Suppose I should try what I can do by visiting Miss Myrtle Hazard?
3252Suppose a minister were to undertake to express opinions on medical subjects, for instance, would you not think he was going beyond his province?
3252Suppose he had never been trephined, when would his consciousness have returned?
3252Suppose the blow is hard enough to spoil the brain and stop the play of the organs, what happens them?
3252Suppose the youth were Maurice; what then?
3252Suppose, for instance, I wanted to use the double star to illustrate anything, say the relation of two human souls to each other, what would I-- do?
3252Supposing it came to the worst, what could be done then?
3252Symbol?
3252THERE ARE PATIENT SPIRITS THAT HAVE WAITED FROM ETERNITY, AND NEVER FOUND PARENTS FIT TO BE BORN OF.--How do you know anything about all that?
3252Talk about your megatherium and your megalosaurus,--what are these to the bacterium and the vibrio?
3252Tell him the whole truth, and send him a ticket of admission to the Institution for Idiots and Feeble- minded Youth?
3252Tell me now, you are not in earnest, are you, but only trying a little sentiment on me?"
3252Tell me, Mr. Bradshaw, who is there that I shall meet if I go?
3252Tell me, Sophy, what do you think would happen, if he should chance to fall in love with Elsie, and she with him, and he should marry her?"
3252Tell me, oh, tell me, what is it?
3252That buried passions wake and pass In beaded drops of fiery dew?
3252That fellow''s the Speaker,( 3)--the one on the right; Mr. Mayor,( 4) my young one, how are you to- night?
3252That is all, is n''t it?
3252That is the reason people become so attached to these servants with Southern sunlight in their natures?
3252That sounds like the nineteenth century, but what shall we say to this?
3252That was it.--But what had he been doing to get his head into such a state?--had he really committed an excess?
3252That was it; what else could it be?
3252That will do for the Houyhnhnm Gazette.--Do you ever wonder why poets talk so much about flowers?
3252That would be picturesque and pleasant, now, would n''t it?
3252That would be pleasant, would n''t it?
3252The God who dealt with Abraham as the sons Of that old patriarch deal with other men?
3252The Man of Letters(?).
3252The Tutor and Number Five were both quiet, thoughtful: he, evidently captivated; she, what was the meaning of her manner to him?
3252The Widow knew everybody, of course: who was there in Rockland she did not know?
3252The Young Astronomer shook his head, smiling a little at the question.--Was there any meet''n''-houses?
3252The ancient Romans had theirs, the English and the French have theirs as well,--why should not we Americans have ours?
3252The beauties of my recollections-- where are they?
3252The brazen head of Roger Bacon is mute; but is not"Planchette"uttering her responses in a hundred houses of this city?
3252The breeze says to us in its own language, How d''ye do?
3252The cheering smile, the voice of mirth And laughter''s gay surprise That please the children born of earth, Why deem that Heaven denies?
3252The clouds are rich and dark, the air serene,_ So like the soul of me, what if''t were me_?"
3252The compliment was not ungrateful, and the Colonel acknowledged it by smiling and saying,"I should think the''was a trifle?
3252The cries, if possible, were still louder and more persistent; they must have a speech and they would have a speech, and what could I do about it?
3252The earth shook at your nativity, did it?
3252The editor, who sells it to the public-- By the way, the papers have been very civil have n''t they?--to the-- the what d''ye call it?
3252The eye does not bring landscapes into the world on its retina,--why should the brain bring thoughts?
3252The following is an exact transcript of the lines he showed me, and which I took down on the spot:"Are you in the vein for cider?
3252The jealous God of Moses, one who feels An image as an insult, and is wroth With him who made it and his child unborn?
3252The magic of her new talisman?
3252The man a''n''t hurt,--don''t you see him stirring?
3252The minute draws near,--but her watch may go wrong; My heart will be asking, What keeps her so long?
3252The modern version would be,"How came you at Mrs. Billion''s ball not having a dress on your back which came from Paris?"
3252The native female turns her nose up at the idea of"living out;"does she think herself so much superior to the women of other nationalities?
3252The old gentleman opposite all at once asked me if I ever read anything better than Pope''s"Essay on Man"?
3252The only"chaffing"I heard was the question from one of the galleries,"Did he come in the One- Hoss Shay?"
3252The paper you burned was not the original,--it was a copy substituted for it--""And did the old man outwit me after all?"
3252The poems he drops into the basket are those rejected as of no account""But does he not read the poems before he rejects them?"
3252The question is distinctly proposed to us, Shall Slavery die, or the great Republic?
3252The question is: Who manages her, and how can you get at that person or those persons?
3252The sky grows dark,--Was that the roll of thunder?
3252The translations excited me much, and who can estimate the value of a good thought?
3252The trees look down from the hill- sides and ask each other, as they stand on tiptoe,--"What are these people about?"
3252The village people have the strangest stories about her; you know what they call her?"
3252The working of Master Byles Gridley''s emphatic warning?
3252The"Rhodora,"another brief poem, finds itself foreshadowed in the inquiry,"What is Beauty?"
3252Then he asked,"Were you dressed as you are now?"
3252Then she whispered, almost inaudibly,--for her voice appeared to fail her,"What did her mother die of, Sophy?"
3252Then she would let me see the inside of it?
3252Theodore Parker, is it?"
3252There are a good many other strange things about her: did you ever notice how she dresses?"
3252There is another question which must force itself on the thoughts of many among you:"How am I to obtain patients and to keep their confidence?"
3252There may be some among those whom I address who are disposed to ask the question, What course are we to follow in relation to this matter?
3252There seemed to be remarks and questionings going on, which he supposed to be something like the following:-- Which is it?
3252There was a book of hymns; it had her name in it, and looked as if it might have been often read;--what the diablo had Elsie to do with hymns?
3252There''s no harm in that, is there?
3252These two questions are like those famous household puzzles,--Where do the flies come from?
3252They all urged upon Dudley Veneer to go with them: if there was danger, why should he remain to risk it, when he sent away the others?
3252They did n''t mean to shoot Myrtle Hazard, did they?
3252They go only by the bumps.--What do you keep laughing so for?
3252They kept at arm''s length those detestable men; What an era of virtue she lived in!--But stay Were the men all such rogues in Aunt Tabitha''s day?
3252They said the doctors would want my skeleton when I was dead.--You are my friend, if you are a doctor,--a''n''t you?
3252They seemed to me to betray the richest invention, so rich as almost to say, why draw any line since you can draw all?
3252They tell me there is something in my eyes that draws people to me and makes them faint: Look into them, will you?"
3252They were perfectly fair game; what better use could I put them to?
3252Think the lines you mention are by far the best I ever wrote, hey?
3252This immaculate woman,--why could n''t she have a fault or two?
3252This or That, take this LADY?!
3252This, that is rhyming, must have been found out very early,"''Where are you, Adam?''
3252Thomas Scott, author of the Commentary?"
3252Though I never owned a horse, have I not been the proprietor of six equine females, of which one was the prettiest little"Morgin"that ever stepped?
3252Thought not mortal, or not thought mortal,--which was it?
3252Thus, at a marriage ceremony, once, of two very excellent persons who had been at service, instead of, Do you take this man, etc.?
3252Thus,"How''s your health?"
3252Thy name is at least once more spoken by living men;--is it a pleasure to thee?
3252To be sure, their scales differ, but have they not the same freezing and the same boiling point?
3252To look through plate- glass windows, and pity the brown soldiers,--or sneer at the black ones?
3252To put gilt bands on coachmen''s hats?
3252To sweep the foul sidewalks with the heaviest silks which the toiling artisans of France can send us?
3252To whom should she go in her vague misery?
3252Too young for love?
3252Too young for love?
3252Too young for love?
3252Too young for love?
3252Too young?
3252Too young?
3252Too young?
3252Too young?
3252Transcendentalism has its occasional vagaries( what school has not?
3252Trust my poems, some of which are unpublished, to the post- office?
3252Turned off by the girl they say he means to marry by and by?
3252V What am I but the creature Thou hast made?
3252Vain?
3252Venerable figure- heads, what would our platforms be without you?
3252Very good, Sir,--he answered.--When have there been most people killed and wounded in the course of this century?
3252Very well; but are they separated by running water?
3252Wan''to hear another?
3252Want my autograph, do you?
3252Was Number Five forgetful, too?
3252Was Parson Young''s own heart such a hideous spectacle to himself?
3252Was he a sound observer, who had made other observations and predictions which had proved accurate?
3252Was he born of woman, this alleged De Sauty?
3252Was he going to kneel to her?
3252Was he thinking of his relations with Carlyle?
3252Was it a dread of blue sky and open air, of the smell of flowers, or some electrical impression to which he was unnaturally sensitive?
3252Was it a fortnight, as we now reckon duration, or only a week?
3252Was it a graduate who had felt the"icy dagger,"or only a candidate for graduation who was afraid of it?
3252Was it grief at parting from the place where her strange friendship had grown up with the Little Gentleman?
3252Was it not an intoxicating vision of gold and glory?
3252Was it not, on the contrary, invariably, under all conditions, in all companies, by the whole household, spoken of as the baby?
3252Was it possible that he was going to take a fancy to her?
3252Was it possible that my Captain could be lying on the straw in one of these places?
3252Was it possible, in any way, to exasperate her irritable nature against him, and in this way to render her more accessible to his own advances?
3252Was it snowing I spoke of?
3252Was it strange that I felt a momentary pang?
3252Was it the feeling of sympathy, or was it the pride of superior sagacity, that changed the look of the old man''s wrinkled features?
3252Was it the first time that these strings of wampum had ever rattled upon her neck and arms?
3252Was it the light reflected from the glossy leaves of the poison sumach which overhung the path that made his cheek look so pale?
3252Was it wicked in me to live?"
3252Was n''t that a pretty neck to slip a hangman''s noose over?
3252Was she indeed writing to this unknown gentleman?
3252Was she not rather becoming more and more involved in the toils of this plotting Yankee?
3252Was that a hundred years ago?--But you''ve got some new pictures and things, have n''t you?
3252Was the Scarabee crushed, as so many of his namesakes are crushed, under the heel of this trampling omniscient?
3252Was the illness dangerous?
3252Was there any great harm in the fact that the Irvings and Paulding wrote in company?
3252Was there any live creatures to be seen on the moon?
3252Was there any strange, mysterious affinity between the master and the dark girl who sat by herself?
3252Was there enough capital of humanity in his somewhat limited nature to furnish sympathy and unshrinking service for his friends in an emergency?
3252Was there ever any such water as that which we used to draw from the deep, cold well, in"the old oaken bucket"?
3252Was there ever anything in Italy, I should like to know, like a Boston sunset?
3252Was there ever anything more miraculous, so far as our common observation goes, than the coming and the going of these creatures?
3252Was there ever anything more stinging, more concentrated, more vigorous, more just?
3252Was there ever anything wholesome that was not poison to somebody?
3252Was there ever such innocence in a creature so full of life?
3252Was there nothing but this forbidding house- front to make the place alive with some breathing memory?
3252We are naturally led to the question, What is the nature of force?
3252We do n''t visit Papa Job quite so early as this without some special cause,--do we, Miss Keren- Happuch?"
3252We do not want his fragments to be made wholes,--if we did, what hand could be found equal to the task?
3252We had fast horses,--did not"Old Blue"trot a mile in three minutes?
3252We have grown rich for what?
3252We have learned a great deal about the how, what have we learned about the why?
3252Wealth''s wasteful tricks I will not learn, Nor ape the glittering upstart fool;-- Shall not carved tables serve my turn, But ALL must be of buhl?
3252Well, did these two ladies dance as if it was hard work to them?
3252Well, how can you mistake that insect for dried leaves?
3252Well, how do you suppose your lower limbs are held to your body?
3252Well, should n''t you like to see me put my foot into one?
3252Well, what then?
3252Well, you have noticed how quietly and rapidly the cars kept on, just as if the locomotive were drawing them?
3252Were not these good and sufficient reasons for her decision?
3252Were schoolboys ever half so wild?
3252Were they anything but planetary foundlings?
3252Were they really christened by that name, any of these numerous Franks?
3252Were we melancholy?
3252Were we not too young to know each other''s hearts when we promised each other that we would love as long as we lived?
3252Whar''s the man gone th''t brought the critter?"
3252What a picture?
3252What about Elsie?"
3252What am I?
3252What are Olympiads and Consulates to these neighboring systems of being?
3252What are all the strongest epithets of our dictionary to us now?
3252What are men to do when they get to heaven, after having exhausted their vocabulary of admiration on earth?
3252What are the names of ministers''sons which most readily occur to our memory as illustrating these advantages?
3252What are the questions we should ask him?
3252What are we to do with them,--we who teach that the soul of a child is an unstained white tablet?"
3252What better provision can be made for a mortal man than such as our own Boston can afford its wealthy children?
3252What business had I to be trying experiments on this forlorn old soul?
3252What business had Sarmatia to be fighting for liberty with a fifteen- foot pole between her and the breasts of her enemies?
3252What business had he to be laying his hand on your shoulder?
3252What business has he to die, I should like to know?
3252What business was it of his?
3252What can I do with him?
3252What can I say to that?
3252What can I say to you of cis- Atlantic things?
3252What can justify one in addressing himself to the general public as if it were his private correspondent?
3252What can promise more than an Essay by Emerson on"Immortality"?
3252What can you do with chrome or loam or gnome or tome?
3252What can you expect of children that come from heathens and savages?
3252What cares a witch for a hangman''s noose?
3252What color are your carriage- horses?"
3252What could I do?
3252What could account so entirely for his ways and actions as that strange poisoning which produces the state they call Tarantism?
3252What could be broad enough to cover the facts of the case?
3252What could be more natural than that love should find its way among the young people who helped to make up the circle gathered around the table?
3252What could have been in her head when she worked out such a fantasy?
3252What could he do about it?
3252What could life be to her but a perpetual anguish, and to those about her but an ever- present terror?
3252What could she do?
3252What could the Hebrew expect when a Christian preacher could use such language about a petition breathing the very soul of humanity?
3252What did he hide that paper for, a year ago and more?
3252What did he mean by saying that his dream had become a vision?
3252What did he mean?
3252What did it mean?
3252What did our two Annexes say to this unexpected turn of events?
3252What did she always wear a necklace for?
3252What did she do?
3252What did that mean?
3252What did you hand me that schoolbook for?
3252What dignifies a province like a university?
3252What do I care, if Dick Venner die?
3252What do I mean by graduates?
3252What do I say to smoking?
3252What do YOU think of these verses my friends?--Is that piece an impromptu?
3252What do the dear old things look like?"
3252What do they know or care about this last revelation of the omnipresent spirit of the material universe?
3252What do those mean?
3252What do we do with ailing vegetables?
3252What do we know of the mysteries of Nature?
3252What do you care for O''m?
3252What do you do when you build a house on a damp soil, and there are damp soils pretty much everywhere?
3252What do you mean by calling certain families yours?"
3252What do you mean in particular?
3252What do you read such things for, my dear?
3252What do you say to my voice now?
3252What do you say to that?
3252What do you say to that?
3252What do you say to this copy of Joannes de Ketam, Venice, 1522?
3252What do you say to this line of Homer as a piece of poetical full- band music?
3252What do you say to this?
3252What do you stop for?"
3252What do you suppose are the sentiments entertained by the Thompsons with a p towards those who address them in writing as Thomson?
3252What do you suppose is an interviewer''s business?
3252What do you think an admiring friend said the other day to one that was talking good things,--good enough to print?
3252What do you think he employs himself about?
3252What do you think it was?
3252What do you think of the Tarantula business?
3252What do you think was kept under that lock?
3252What do you think?
3252What do you think?
3252What do you think?
3252What do you?
3252What doctrines and practice were these colonists likely to bring, with them?
3252What does Byles Gridley want of you, did you say?"
3252What does Rome know of rat and lizard?
3252What does all this sudden concentration upon the girl mean?
3252What does he believe?
3252What does it know about miracles?
3252What does man do in a similar case of need?
3252What does she come to this school for?
3252What does the reader suppose was the source of the most ominous thought which forced itself upon my mind, as I walked the decks of the mighty vessel?
3252What else can it be?
3252What envoy will ever dare to speak with vigor if he is not sustained by the government at home?
3252What feeling have I for you?
3252What glorifies a town like a cathedral?
3252What great discovery have you made?
3252What had happened?
3252What had he to do with your lioness?
3252What harm doth it?"
3252What has Emerson to tell us of"Inspiration?"
3252What has been going on here lately, Deacon?"
3252What has he done?
3252What has his antipathy to do with his staying away?
3252What have I got to say about temperance, the use of animal food, and so forth?
3252What have I save the blessings Thou hast lent?
3252What have they full- dressed you, or rather half- dressed you for, do you think?
3252What have you done?
3252What have you gained as a permanent possession?
3252What have you got there, Jake?"
3252What heathenism has ever approached the horrors of this conception of human destiny?
3252What heroic task of any kind have you performed?"
3252What hope I but Thy mercy and Thy love?
3252What if I should content myself with a single report of what was said and done over our teacups?
3252What if I should sometimes write to please myself?
3252What if I should tell my last, my very recent experience with the other sex?
3252What if Number Five should take off the"rose"that sprinkles her affections on so many, and pour them all on one?
3252What if he is?"
3252What if instead of throbbing it should falter, flutter, and stop as if never to beat again?
3252What if nature has lent him a master key?
3252What if one shall go round and dry up with soft napkins all the dew that falls of a June evening on the leaves of his garden?
3252What if this were the trouble with Maurice Kirkwood?
3252What if you or I had inherited all the tendencies that were born with his cousin Elsie?"
3252What illuminates a country like its scholarship, and what is the nest that hatches scholars but a library?
3252What immortal book have you written?
3252What is Beauty?
3252What is a Prologue?
3252What is a farm but a mute gospel?"
3252What is it that makes common salt crystallize in the form of cubes, and saltpetre in the shape of six- sided prisms?
3252What is it that makes the reputation of Sydenham, as the chief of English physicians?
3252What is it that sets you laughing so?
3252What is it to him that you can localize and name by some uncouth term the disease which you could not prevent and which you can not cure?
3252What is it, Elixir Vitae or Aurum potabile?
3252What is it?
3252What is it?
3252What is love, Sophy?"
3252What is that book he is holding?
3252What is that look of paternity and of maternity which observing and experienced mothers and old nurses know so well in men and in women?)
3252What is that old gentleman crying about?
3252What is that saying of mine about I squinting brains?"
3252What is that to the glorious self- renunciation of a martyr in pearls and diamonds?
3252What is the condition of things in the growing intimacy of Number Five and the Tutor?
3252What is the date of it?
3252What is the definite belief of Emerson as expressed in this discourse,--what does it mean?
3252What is the head of it, and where does it lie?
3252What is the meaning of these perpetual changes and conflicts of medical opinion and practice, from an early antiquity to our own time?
3252What is the meaning of this change which has come over her features, and her voice, her temper, her whole being?
3252What is the meaning of this rush into rhyming of such a multitude of people, of all ages, from the infant phenomenon to the oldest inhabitant?
3252What is the use of going about and setting up a flag of negation?''"
3252What is the use of my saying what some of these opinions are?
3252What is the use, I say?
3252What is there that you can tell me to which I can not respond with sympathy?
3252What is there that youth will not endure and triumph over?
3252What is this beauty?''
3252What is this life without the poor accidents which made it our own, and by which we identify ourselves?
3252What is this"genial atmosphere"but the very spirit of Christianity?
3252What is to be the fate of Lurida?
3252What is''t the chap''s been a- doin''on?
3252What kills anybody quickest, Doctor?"
3252What kind of a constituency is this which is to look to you as its authorized champions in the struggle of life against its numerous enemies?
3252What line have we written that was on a level with our conceptions?
3252What made Myrtle nervous and restless?
3252What madness could impel So rum a flat to face so prime a swell?"
3252What makes you think she''s in love with him?
3252What man could speak more fitly, with more authority of"Character,"than Emerson?
3252What man was he who would lay his hand familiarly upon his shoulder and call him Waldo?
3252What more can be asked to prove their honesty and sincerity?
3252What more could I ask to assure me of the Captain''s safety?
3252What more could this poor, dear Helen say?
3252What more natural than that it should be used again when the subject of appealing to chance came up in conversation?
3252What must she do but buy a small copper breast- pin and put it under"Schoolma''am''s"plate that morning, at breakfast?
3252What must you expect to forget?
3252What noble principle, what deathless interest, was there at stake?
3252What nobler tasks has the poet than to exalt the idea of manhood, and to make the world we live in more beautiful?
3252What of all this shall I remember longest?
3252What others could there be?
3252What page of ours that does not betray some weakness we would fain have left unrecorded?
3252What prospect have I of ever being rid of this long and deep- seated infirmity?
3252What remains for you yet to learn?
3252What reported conversation can stand a captious criticism like this?
3252What saddest note in your spiritual dirges which will not find its chord in mine?
3252What shall I do about it?
3252What shall I do?
3252What shall I do?"
3252What shall I say in this presence of the duties of a Librarian?
3252What shall I say of the personal habits you must form if you wish for success?
3252What shall a man do, when a woman makes such a demand, involving such an avowal?
3252What shall it be?
3252What shall we say to the doctrine of the fall of man as the ground of inflicting endless misery on the human race?
3252What should I be afraid of?
3252What should he do about it, if it turned out so?
3252What should he do?
3252What should she do about it?
3252What should you think of the probable musical genius of a young man who was particularly fond of jingling a set of sleigh- bells?
3252What sort of a man do you find my old friend the Deacon?"
3252What strange early impression was it which led a certain lady always to shriek aloud if she ventured to enter a church, as it is recorded?
3252What the d''d''didos are y''abaout with them great huffs o''yourn?"
3252What the deuse is that odd noise in his chamber?
3252What then?
3252What then?
3252What then?
3252What though the rose leaves fall?
3252What was I saying,--I, who would not for the world have pained our unfortunate little boarder by an allusion?
3252What was coming next,--a declaration, or an accusation of murder?
3252What was he going to tell us?
3252What was he good for?
3252What was it he wanted her to keep?"
3252What was she crying for?
3252What was that for?
3252What was that medicine which so frequently occurs in the printed letters under the name of"rubila"?
3252What was the end to be attained by accepting the gage of battle?
3252What was the matter with her eyes, that they sucked your life out of you in that strange way?
3252What was the meaning of this slip of paper coming to light at this time, after reposing undisturbed so long?
3252What was the slight peculiarity of her enunciation, when she read?
3252What was the use of trying to enforce social intercourse under such conditions?
3252What was there to distract him or disturb him?
3252What was this unexplained something which came between her soul and that of every other human being with whom she was in relations?
3252What was this wonderful substance which so astonished kings, princes, dukes, knights, and doctors?
3252What were cold conventionalities at such a moment?
3252What were these torturing gifts, and wherefore lent her?
3252What were they thinking of?
3252What will happen, though, if he makes love to her?
3252What will prevent that?
3252What will your hatter say about the two sides of the head?
3252What wizard fills the maddening glass What soil the enchanted clusters grew?
3252What would a steam- engine be without a crank?
3252What would a young girl be who never mingled her voice with the songs and prayers that rose all around her with every returning day of rest?
3252What would be the consequence if all this property came into the possession of Silence Withers?
3252What would be the state of the highways of life, if we did not drive our THOUGHT- SPRINKLERS through them with the valves open, sometimes?
3252What would it avail to tell you anecdotes of a sweet and wonderful boy, such as we solace and sadden ourselves with at home every morning and evening?
3252What would our civilization be without the piano?
3252What would she do it for?
3252What y''been dreamin''abaout?
3252What you think she do,''f anybody else tech it?"
3252What''n thunder''r''y''abaout, y''darned Portagee?"
3252What''n thunder''s that''ere raoun''y''r neck?
3252What''r''y''dreamin''abaout?"
3252What''s happened?"
3252What''s happened?"
3252What''s happened?"
3252What''s that''ere stickin''aout o''y''r boot?"
3252What''s the name of the alley, and which bell?"
3252What''s the use?
3252When did you ever hear such tones?
3252When gratitude is a bankrupt, love only can pay his debts; and if Maurice gave his heart to Euthymia, would not she receive it as payment in full?
3252When he had got through, the Doctor looked him in the face steadily, as if he were saying, Is that all?
3252When his breath ceased and his heart stopped beating?
3252When we come to the application, in the same Essay, almost on the same page, what can we make of such discourse as this?
3252When we look for them the next morning, do we not find them withered leaves?"
3252When your friends give out, who is left for you?
3252Whence is it?
3252Where are the cemeteries of the dead ones, or do they die at all except when we kill them?
3252Where are the cradles of the young flies?
3252Where can that latch be that rattles so?
3252Where can you find a happier child?
3252Where could it have been?
3252Where did he get those expressions"A 1"and"prime"and so on?
3252Where did she learn French?
3252Where did the anti- republican, anti- democratic passion for swelling names come from, and how long has it been naturalized among us?
3252Where did this"frightful idea"come from?
3252Where does all this ambition for names without realities come from?
3252Where does she get those books she is reading so often?
3252Where is my Beranger?
3252Where is this monument?
3252Where is your hat, doctor?
3252Where now is the fame of Bouillaud, Professor and Deputy, the Sangrado of his time?
3252Where shall it next flame at the head of the long procession?
3252Where should we go next?
3252Where then did Goethe find his lovers?
3252Where to?
3252Where was all his legacy of knowledge when Norfolk was decimated?
3252Where will you find a sympathy like mine in your hours of sadness?
3252Where would Maryland, Kentucky, Missouri, Tennessee,--saved, or looking to be saved, even as it is, as by fire,--have been in the day of trial?
3252Where would she come from?
3252Where''s the Doctor?--let the Doctor get to him, ca n''t ye?"
3252Where''s the skins of''em?
3252Where''s the young master?
3252Wherefore, then, should thy servant be yet a burden unto my lord the king?"
3252Wherever one looked taller and fuller than the rest, I asked myself,--"Is this it?"
3252Whether a hundred or a thousand years old, who knows?
3252Which has most to suffer, and which has most endurance and vitality?
3252Which is it?--Why, that one, there,--that young fellow,--don''t you see?--What young fellow are you two looking at?
3252Which of these did he most favor?
3252Which of these two girls would be the safest choice for a young man?
3252Which style do you like best?
3252While in my simple gospel creed That"God is Love"so plain I read, Shall dreams of heathen birth affright My pathway through the coming night?
3252Who among us has taught better than Nathan Smith, better than Elisha Bartlett?
3252Who are the persons that use this argument?
3252Who are the"quality,"--said the Model, etc., in a community like ours?
3252Who are they that practice Homoeopathy, and say this of a man with the Materia Medica of Hahnemann lying before him?
3252Who are you that build your palaces on my margin?
3252Who blows out the gas instead of shutting it off?
3252Who but myself shall cloud my soul with fear?
3252Who can fail to see one common spirit in the radical ecclesiastic and the reforming court- physician?
3252Who can give better counsels on"Culture"than Emerson?
3252Who can tell what we owe to the Mutual Admiration Society of which Shakspeare, and Ben Jonson, and Beaumont and Fletcher were members?
3252Who can this man be but the boy of that story?
3252Who cares how many stamens or pistils that little brown flower, which comes out before the leaf, may have to classify it by?
3252Who could blame her?
3252Who could know all these things, except the few people of the household?
3252Who could say?
3252Who could say?
3252Who did not do just the same thing, and does not often do it still, now that the first flush of the fever is over?
3252Who did you say was sick and wanted to see me, Fordyce?"
3252Who do you think is coming?"
3252Who does not remember odious images that can never be washed out from the consciousness which they have stained?
3252Who forged in roaring flames the ponderous stone, And shaped the moulded metal to his need?
3252Who forgets the great muster- day, and the collision of the classic with the democratic forces?
3252Who found the seeds of fire and made them shoot, Fed by his breath, in buds and flowers of flame?
3252Who furnished your parlors?"
3252Who gave the dragging car its rolling wheel, And tamed the steed that whirls its circling round?
3252Who is ahead?
3252Who is he, The one ye name and tell us that ye serve, Whom ye would call me from my lonely tower To worship with the many- headed throng?
3252Who is he?
3252Who is it?
3252Who is the city correspondent of this place?"
3252Who is the owner?
3252Who is there here that I can have any true society with, but you?
3252Who is there of English descent among us that does not feel with Cowper,"England, with all thy faults, I love thee still"?
3252Who is this Number Five, so fascinating, so wise, so full of knowledge, and so ready to learn?
3252Who knows And what shall I say if a wretch should propose?
3252Who knows a woman''s wild caprice?
3252Who knows?
3252Who knows?
3252Who or what set you to reading that, I should like to know?"
3252Who puts the key in the desk and fastens it tight with the spring lock?
3252Who said he was a man?
3252Who says we are more?
3252Who shall say?
3252Who that has ever been at the old Anchor Tavern forgets Miranda''s"A little of this fricassee?-it is ver- y nice;"or"Some of these cakes?
3252Who was she?
3252Who will I tell him wants to ask him about old coin?"
3252Who wishes to destroy the Union?
3252Who would dare to marry Elsie?
3252Who would have expected to meet my maternal uncle in the guise of a schoolboy?
3252Who would have looked for it under the Italian word cantare?
3252Who would have thought that the saucy question,"Does your mother know you''re out?"
3252Who would it be?
3252Who would not pray that my last gleam of light and hope may be that of dawn and not of departing day?
3252Who would not rather wear his decorations beneath his uniform than on it?
3252Who would not wish that he were wrong in such a suspicion?
3252Who would not, will not, if he can, Bathe in the breezes of fair Cape Ann, Rest in the bowers her bays enfold, Loved by the sachems and squaws of old?
3252Who wrote that"I Like You and I Love You,"which we found in the sugar- bowl the other day?
3252Who''s gon- to run,''n''wher''s''t gon- to be?
3252Who''s that you call old,--not Byles Gridley, hey?
3252Who, on the whole, constitute the nobler class of human beings?
3252Who?"
3252Whom do we trust and serve?
3252Whose hand protect me from myself but Thine?
3252Whose works was I going to question him about, do you ask me?
3252Why are we not all in love with Number Five?
3252Why ca n''t somebody give us a list of things that everybody thinks and nobody says, and another list of things that everybody says and nobody thinks?
3252Why ca n''t you go over to the shop and make''em trot her out?"
3252Why ca n''t you make her acquaintance and be civil to her?
3252Why ca n''t you pick me out a couple of what you think are the best of''em?
3252Why could not she have done something to prevent it?
3252Why did n''t I tell him he had nothing to do with it, yet awhile?
3252Why did n''t I warn him about love and all that nonsense?
3252Why did n''t Job ask where the flies come from and where they go to?
3252Why did not you think of a railway- station, where the cars stop five minutes for refreshments?
3252Why do n''t I describe her person?
3252Why do n''t they now?
3252Why do n''t they now?
3252Why do n''t they wear a ring in it?
3252Why do n''t those talking ladies take a spider as their emblem?
3252Why do n''t you get that lady off from Battle Monument and plant a terrapin in her place?
3252Why do n''t you interview this mysterious personage?
3252Why do n''t you put a canvas- back- duck on the top of the Washington column?
3252Why do n''t you send your manuscript by mail?"
3252Why does iron rust, while gold remains untarnished, and gold amalgamate, while iron refuses the alliance of mercury?
3252Why does n''t a man always strike out the first of the two words, to gratify his diabolical love of injustice?
3252Why does not somebody come and carry off this noble woman, waiting here all ready to make a man happy?
3252Why doubt for a moment?
3252Why had she quitted the city so abruptly, and fled to her old home, leaving all the gayeties behind her which had so attracted and dazzled her?
3252Why has she never been in love with any one of her suitors?
3252Why has that excellent old phrase gone out of use?
3252Why have you not told me that we thought alike?
3252Why may not some one of the lady Teacups have played the part of a masculine lover?
3252Why mourn that we, the favored few Whom grasping Time so long has spared Life''s sweet illusions to pursue, The common lot of age have shared?
3252Why no, of course not; had not he made all proper inquiries about that when Susan came to town?
3252Why not apply Mr. Galton''s process, and get thirty- eight stories all in one?
3252Why not as well die in the attempt to break up a wretched servitude to a perverted nervous movement as in any other way?
3252Why not say a boy, if it was a boy?
3252Why not, I should like to know?
3252Why not?
3252Why not?
3252Why question?
3252Why should Hannah think herself so much better than Bridget?
3252Why should I any longer be the slave of a foolish fancy that has grown into a half insane habit of mind?
3252Why should I call her"poor little Helen"?
3252Why should I consider it worth while to say that we went there at all?
3252Why should I cumber myself with regrets that the receiver is not capacious?
3252Why should I go mousing about the place?
3252Why should I go over the old house again, having already described it more than ten years ago?
3252Why should I hope or fear when I send out my book?
3252Why should I provoke a catastrophe which appears inevitable if I invite it by exposing myself to its too well ascertained cause?
3252Why should her fleeting day- dreams fade unspoken, Like daffodils that die with sheaths unbroken?
3252Why should it be?
3252Why should n''t he make up to the Jedge''s daughter?
3252Why should n''t they, I should like to know?
3252Why should n''t we get a romance out of all this, hey?
3252Why should n''t you want to revisit your old home sometimes?"
3252Why should not Maurice-- you both tell me to call him so-- take the diplomatic office which has been offered him?
3252Why should not he be writing a novel?
3252Why should not human nature be the same in Arrowhead Village as elsewhere?
3252Why should not the Counsellor fall in love and write verses?
3252Why should not the coming question announce itself by stirring in the pulses and thrilling in the nerves of the descendant of all these grandmothers?
3252Why should not the rising tide of life have drowned out the feeble growths that infested the shallows of childhood?
3252Why should not this happen, when we know that a sudden mental shock may be the cause of insanity?
3252Why should not we also enjoy an original relation to the universe?
3252Why should not we have a poetry and philosophy of insight and not of tradition, and a religion by revelation to us, and not the history of theirs?"
3252Why should that be his real name?
3252Why should we be more shy of repeating ourselves than the spring be tired of blossoms or the night of stars?
3252Why should you renounce your right to traverse the starlit deserts of truth, for the premature comforts of an acre, house, and barn?
3252Why the diavolo did n''t he break it off, then?
3252Why tremble?
3252Why two baths?"
3252Why was it that no one of them had the look and bearing of that young man she had seen but a moment the other evening?
3252Why was the A self like his good uncle in bodily aspect and mental and moral qualities, and the B self like the bad uncle in look and character?
3252Why will you ask for other glories when you have soft crabs?
3252Why you ask?
3252Why you floor the cellar with cement, do n''t you?
3252Why, did n''t President Wheelock say to a young man who consulted him, that some persons might be true Christians without suspecting it?
3252Why, what did she do?
3252Why, what did the great Richard Baxter say in his book on Infant Baptism?
3252Why?
3252Why?"
3252Will Elsie be easily taken with such a fellow?
3252Will he be duly grateful for the correction?]
3252Will he die?
3252Will it be enough?"
3252Will no_ Angel_ body himself out of that; no stalwart Yankee_ man_, with color in the cheeks of him and a coat on his back?"
3252Will nobody block those wheels, uncouple that pinion, cut the string that holds those weights, blow up the infernal machine with gunpowder?
3252Will not the rays strike through to his brain at last, and send him to a narrower cell than this egg- shell dome which is his workshop and his prison?
3252Will she come by the hillside or round through the wood?
3252Will she come?
3252Will she pass through it unharmed, or wander from her path, and fall over one of those fearful precipices which lie before her?
3252Will she wear her brown dress or her mantle and hood?
3252Will the Man be of the Indian type, as President Samuel Stanhope Smith and others have supposed the transplanted European will become by and by?
3252Will the needle swing back from the east or the west?
3252Will the ring- dove return to her nest?
3252Will you ask a portrait- painter how many of those who sit to hint have both sides of their faces exactly alike?
3252Will you be so good as to come at once to the facts on which you found your suspicions, and which lead you to put these questions to me?"
3252Will you believe that I saw Number Five, with a sweet, approving smile on her face all the time, brush her cheek with her hand- kerchief?
3252Will you do this at once, or will you compel me to show you the absolute necessity of your doing it, at the expense of pain to both of us?
3252Will you go over to his house with me at noon, when he comes back after his morning visits, and have a talk over the whole matter with him?
3252Will you let me know what keeps you so busy when you ought to be asleep, or taking your ease and comfort in some way or other?"
3252Will you look at the paper I hold?"
3252Will you not indulge me in telling you something of my own story?
3252Will you show me the double star you said I should see?
3252Will you take the offered gift?"
3252Will you take the trouble to ask your tailor how many persons have their two shoulders of the same height?
3252Will you tell me how it is you seem to be acquainted with everybody you are introduced to, though he evidently considers you an entire stranger?
3252Will you trust your life and happiness with one who can offer you so little beside his love?
3252William-- writing once more-- after an exclamation in strong English of the older pattern,--"Whether''t is nobler-- nobler-- nobler--"To do what?
3252Willing?
3252Without thee, what were life?
3252Wonder if angels breathe like mortals?
3252Wordsworth''s"Ode"is a noble and beautiful dream; is it anything more?
3252Would he not call at Hyacinth Cottage, and let her thank him again there?
3252Would he or I be the listener, if we were side by side?
3252Would it be a surprise to you, if he had carried his acuteness in some particular case like the one I am to mention beyond the prescribed limits?"
3252Would it be fair for a parent to put into a child''s hands the title- deeds to all its future possessions, and a bunch of matches?
3252Would it be one of the great Ex- Presidents whose names were known to, all the world?
3252Would it be the silver- tongued orator of Kentucky or the"God- like"champion of the Constitution, our New- England Jupiter Capitolinus?
3252Would it ever be bridged over?
3252Would it wake her from her trance?
3252Would n''t he forgive me for telling him he was free?
3252Would n''t it be fun to look down at the bores and the duns?
3252Would one take no especial precautions if his wife, about to become a mother, had been bitten by a rabid animal, because so many escape?
3252Would you have any objection to showing your case to the Societies of Medical Improvement and Medical Observation?
3252Would you lecture to us; if you were a professor in one of the great medical schools?"
3252Would you venture to take charge of the case?"
3252Would you, then, banish all allusions to matters of this nature from the society of people who come together habitually?
3252Y''ha''n''t heerd noth''n''abaout it?"
3252Yes, where are our cats?"
3252Yes?
3252Yet why with coward lips complain That this must lean and that must fall?
3252You ai n''t such a fool as to think that is new,--are you?
3252You are clear, I suppose, that the Omniscient spoke through Solomon, but that Shakespeare wrote without his help?"
3252You are familiar with Vasari, of course?"
3252You are in independent circumstances, perhaps?
3252You are quite welcome to the lines"To the Rhodora;"but I think they need the superscription["Lines on being asked''Whence is the Flower?''"].
3252You are specialist enough to take care of a sprained ankle, I suppose, are you not?"
3252You believe, do you not?
3252You believe, do you not?
3252You broke down in your great speech, did you?
3252You did n''t think he was my''Literary Celebrity,''did you?"
3252You do n''t believe in presentiments, do you?"
3252You do n''t suppose Adam had the cutaneous unpleasantness politely called psora, do you?
3252You do n''t suppose there was a special act of creation for the express purpose of bestowing that little wretch on humanity, do you?
3252You do n''t think I should expect any woman to listen to such a sentence as that long one, without giving her a chance to put in a word?
3252You do n''t think the idea adds to the sublimity and associations of the cataract?
3252You do not know who she is, then?"
3252You don''think I care for Dick?
3252You found it accurate, I hope, in its descriptions?"
3252You have heard of Alphonse Karr?''
3252You have not forgotten the double star,--the two that shone for each other and made a little world by themselves?
3252You have sometimes been in a train on the railroad when the engine was detached a long way from the station you were approaching?
3252You know about the caddice- worm?
3252You know that young lady, doctor?"
3252You know the Esquimaux kayak,( if that is the name of it,) do n''t you?
3252You know who the Fire- hang- bird is, do n''t you?
3252You know your Horace and Virgil well, I take it for granted?"
3252You know, I suppose,--he said,--what is meant by complementary colors?
3252You may call the story of Ulysses and the Sirens a fable, but what will you say to Mario and the poor lady who followed him?
3252You may read in the parable,"Friend, how camest thou in hither not having a wedding garment?"
3252You mean she''s gone an''run off with some good- for- nothin''man or other?
3252You modelled this piece on the style of a famous living English poet, did you not?"
3252You never remarked anything curious about her ornaments?
3252You never wrote in verse, did you, Cyprian?"
3252You read your Bible, Doctor, do n''t you?
3252You reject my offer unconditionally?"
3252You remember Myrtle Hazard?
3252You remember Rachel, my first wife,--don''t you, Fordyce?"
3252You remember Thomas Prince''s"Chronological History of New England,"I suppose?
3252You remember how she won us the boat- race?"
3252You remember that dear friend of ours who left us not long since?
3252You remember the boat- race?
3252You remember those beautiful lines out of our newspaper I sent you?
3252You remember, perhaps, in some papers published awhile ago, an odd poem written by an old Latin tutor?
3252You settled the estate of the late Malachi Withers, did you not?"
3252You smile,--I said.--Perhaps life seems to you a little bundle of great things?
3252You will be indulgent to my mistakes and shortcomings,--and who can expect to avoid them?
3252You wish to correct an error in my Broomstick poem, do you?
3252You would not attack a church dogma-- say Total Depravity-- in a lyceum- lecture, for instance?
3252You would not leave us for another school, would you?"
3252You''ll confess to a rhyming dictionary anyhow, wo n''t you?
3252You''ll see to it,--won''t you, Abel?"
3252You''re equal to that, are n''t you?"
3252You''re pious?
3252You''ve heard about her going to school at that place,--the''Institoot,''as those people call it?
3252You''ve heard, no doubt, of PARSON TURELL?
3252You''ve seen a blind man with a stick, feeling his way along?
3252["Depind on Kitty, is it?
3252[--Now is n''t this the drollest world to live in that one could imagine, short of being in a fit of delirium tremens?
3252_ New England Reformers_.--Would any one venture to guess how Emerson would treat this subject?
3252a thousand times, no!--Yet what is this which has been shaping itself in my soul?--Is it a thought?--is it a dream?
3252against all human and divine authority?
3252and Mrs. Hopkins, and Gifted, and Susan, and everybody?
3252and President Buchanan?
3252and Whereto?
3252and in what do all emotions shared by a young man with such a young girl as this tend to find their last expression?
3252and is not my thought the abstract of ten thousand of these crumbs of truth with which you would choke off my speech?
3252and that the American eagle screams with delight to see three drachms of calomel given at a single mouthful?
3252and the Boston State- House?
3252and the financial question, WHO PAID FOR IT?
3252and the old lady by him, and the three girls, what are they all covering their eyes for?
3252and to what could it be owing, but to an innate organic tendency?
3252and we have already taken our hats off and are answering it with our own How d''ye do?
3252and what are the qualifications?
3252and what''s all this noise about?"
3252and would she see me in the flush of my stolen triumph, and hate and despise me ever after?
3252and, Do you take this woman?
3252and, Where do the pins go to?
3252are the southern curtains drawn?
3252arrive at distinction?
3252as your Dr. Rabelais has it,--answers the iconoclast,--"what is that to me and my colic, to me and my strangury?
3252cast away the flower I took in the bud because it does not show as I hoped it would when it opened?
3252complimentary to our party?
3252did you never read any novels?"
3252do you ask me?
3252do you hear anything now?"
3252do you know what has got hold of you?
3252do you think it''s safe to put that cold stuff into your stomick?"
3252fill a fresh bumper,--for why should we go While the[ nectar][ logwood] still reddens our cups as they flow?
3252ha''n''t I tol''y''a dozen times?"
3252has he come yet?
3252has my stove and pepper- pot a false bottom?
3252he asked, curiously.--Why, the parenthesis, said I.--Parenthesis?
3252he called out,"what have you got there?
3252he said to himself;"what are you about making phrases, when you have got a piece of work like this in hand?"
3252he said, talking to himself in his usual way,"is n''t that good?
3252heard I not that ringing strain, That clear celestial tone?
3252here?"
3252how do you do?
3252how do you think the officiating clergyman put the questions?
3252how many remember anything they read but once, and so long ago as that?
3252how-- do-- you-- do Johnny?!
3252hush!--that whisper,-"Where is Mary''s boy?"
3252it was too horrible, was that the face which had been so close to hers but yesterday?
3252look at me, my child; do n''t you know your old friend Byles Gridley?"
3252of Number Five and the young Tutor who is so constantly found in her company?
3252or any unpardonable cabal in the literary union of Verplanck and Bryant and Sands, and as many more as they chose to associate with them?
3252or do you want to make me kill myself?"
3252or is he going to be late, with the other great folks?"
3252or is it a mere fancy that such a power belongs to any human being?
3252or"Come, naow, a''n''t ye''shamed?"
3252or"Out of what great picture have these pieces been cut?"
3252or, How are you?
3252or, worse than any body, is----?
3252presents!--said I.--What tickets, what presents has he had the impertinence to be offering to that young lady?
3252said Miss Matilda,--"what''s that rumblin''?"
3252said the Doctor, with a pleasant, friendly look,--"have you stay?
3252said the Doctor,--"catching?
3252said the fellow,--but softly, so that Saint Christopher should not hear him,--''do you think I''m in earnest?
3252said the good minister,"is this you?"
3252said the old Doctor, one morning,"after you''ve harnessed Caustic, come into the study a few minutes, will you?"
3252should n''t she be real happy to see him?
3252supper and all?"
3252the old mystery remains, If I am I; thou, thou, or thou art I?"
3252this is the game, is it?
3252to color meerschaums?
3252to dredge our maidens''hair with gold- dust?
3252to flaunt in laces, and sparkle in diamonds?
3252to float through life, the passive shuttlecocks of fashion, from the avenues to the beaches, and back again from the beaches to the avenues?
3252to reduce the speed of trotting horses a second or two below its old minimum?
3252was the very same that Horace addressed to the bore who attacked him in the Via Sacra?
3252what is it?
3252what is life while thou''rt away?
3252what is this my frenzy hears?
3252where is she?
3252who cares?
3252who teaches better than some of our living contemporaries who divide their time between city and country schools?
3252who will be my pupils in a Course,--Poetry taught in twelve lessons?
3252you know,--oh, tell me, darlin'', don''you love to see the gen''l''man that keeps up at the school where you go?
11615''T is true, the ancients we may rob with ease; But who with that mean shift himself can please?
11615''_ Blue- eyed, strange- voiced, sharp- beaked, ill- omened_ fowl, What art thou?'' 11615 ''_ Wanderer_,| whither| wouldst thou| roam?
11615A merchant at sea asked the skipper what death his father died? 11615 A_ mother''s accusing her son_,& c.,_ were circumstances_,"& c.?
11615After what is said, will it be thought refining too much to suggest, that the different orders are qualified for different purposes?
11615Against heaven''s endless mercies pour''d, how_ dar''st_ thou_ to_ rebel?
11615Am I being instructed?
11615Am I one chaste, one last embrace deny''d? 11615 Am I to set my life upon a throw, Because a bear is rude and surly?
11615Am_ I_ not an_ apostle_? 11615 Among all Things in the Universe, direct your Worship to the Greatest; And which is that?
11615An Interrogative Pronoun is one that is used in asking a question; as,''_ who_ is he, and_ what_ does he want?''
11615An adverb may be generally known, by its answering to the question, How? 11615 An interrogation(?
11615And are not the countries so overflown still situate between the tropics?
11615And canst thou expect to behold the resplendent glory of the Creator? 11615 And dost thou open thine eyes upon such an one, and bringest me into judgement with thee?"
11615And every beast of their''s, be our''s?
11615And i heard, but i understood not: then said i, o my Lord, what shall be the end of these things?
11615And is it not a pity that the Quakers have no better authority to substantiate their principles than the testimony of them old Pharisees?
11615And is it not a pity that the Quakers have no better authority to substantiate their principles, than the testimony of_ those_ old Pharisees?
11615And is the ignorance of these peasants a reason for others to remain ignorant; or to render the subject a less becoming inquiry?
11615And is there a heart of parent or of child, that does not beat and burn within them?
11615And the governor asked him, saying, Art thou the King of the Jews?
11615And there is something in your very strange story, that resembles-- Does Mr. Bevil know your history particularly?
11615And they said,''What is_ that_[194][ matter] to us? 11615 And what can be better than him that made it?"
11615And what is reason? 11615 And when I say, Two men_ walk_, is it not equally apparent, that_ walk_ is plural, because it expresses_ two_ actions?"
11615And who is he that will harm you, if ye be followers of that which is good?
11615And who was Enoch''s Saviour, and the Prophets?
11615And_ I_ heard, but_ I_ understood not; then said_ I, O_ my Lord, what shall be the end of these things?
11615And_ what have become_ of my resolutions to return to God?
11615Another man now would have given plump into this foolish story; but I? 11615 Are either the subject or the predicate in the second sentence modified?"
11615Are not health and strength of body desirable for their own sakes?
11615Are not these schools of the highest importance? 11615 Are some verbs used, both transitively and intransitively?"
11615Are there any adjectives which form the degrees of comparison peculiar to themselves?
11615Are there any nouns you can not see, hear, or feel, but only think of? 11615 Are these the houses you were speaking of?
11615Are they men worthy of confidence and support?
11615Are they not written in the book of the Chronicles of the kings of Israel?
11615Are they not written in the book of the Chronicles of the_ Kings_ of Israel?
11615Are they not written in the book of the acts of Solomon?
11615Are they not written in the book of the chronicles of the kings of Judah?
11615Are they not written in the book of the_ Acts_ of Solomon?
11615Are we not lazy in our duties, or make a Christ of them?
11615Are we to welcome the loathsome harlot, and introduce it to our children?
11615Are you not ashamed to have no other thoughts than that of amassing wealth, and of acquiring glory, credit, and dignities?
11615Art not thou and you ashamed to affirm, that the best works of the Spirit of Christ in his saints are as filthy rags?
11615Art thou a penitent? 11615 Art thou proud yet?
11615Art thou so bare and full of wretchedness, And fears to die? 11615 Art thou that art_ to comynge_, ether abiden we another?"
11615Art thou the man of God that camest from Judah?
11615Art_ not thou_ a seer?
11615Art_ thou Elias_?
11615Art_ thou_ a_ king_ then?
11615Art_ thou_ that traitor_ angel_? 11615 As for Modesty and Good Faith, Truth and Justice, they have left this wicked World and retired to Heaven: And now what is it that can keep you here?"
11615Asking questions with a principal verb-- as,_ Teach I? 11615 Be thou, or do thou be writing?
11615But I say, again, What signifies words?
11615But I would inquire at him, what an office is?
11615But how can_ you_ a_ soul_, still either hunger or thirst?
11615But if I say''Will_ a_ man be able to carry this burden?'' 11615 But if a solemn and familiar pronunciation really exists in our language, is it not the business of a grammarian to mark both?"
11615But if you ca n''t help it, who do you complain of?
11615But may it not be retorted, that its being a gratification is that which excites our resentment?
11615But what has disease, deformity, and filth, upon which the thoughts can be allured to dwell?
11615But what is to be said when presumption pushes itself into the front ranks of elocution, and thoughtless friends undertake to support it? 11615 But what saith the Scriptures as to respect of persons among Christians?"
11615But what think ye? 11615 But where shall wisdom be found?
11615But whom say ye that I am?
11615But wil our sage writers on law forever think by tradition?
11615But,_ admitting_ that two or three of these offend less in their morals than in their writings, must poverty make nonsense sacred?
11615But_ some_ man will say, How are the dead raised up? 11615 But_ what!_ is thy servant a dog, that he should do this great thing?"
11615Called_ Crotchets_by whom?
11615Can I make men live, whether they will or no?
11615Can a mere buckling on a military weapon infuse courage?
11615Can any thing show your holiness how unworthy you treat mankind?
11615Can honour set to a leg? 11615 Can our Solicitude alter the course, or unravel the intricacy, of human events?"
11615Can the Ethiopian change his skin, or the leopard his spots? 11615 Can the fig- tree, my brethren, bear olive berries?
11615Canst thou by searching find out_ God_?
11615Canst thou grow sad, thou sayest, as earth grows bright?
11615Canst thou, by searching, find out God; Canst thou find out the Almighty to perfection; It is high as heaven, what canst thou do? 11615 Canst thou, by searching, find out the Lord?"
11615Cry, By your Priesthood tell me what you are?
11615Dare he assume the name of a popular magistrate?
11615Dare he deny but there are some of his fraternity guilty?
11615Dare you speak lightly of the law, or move that, in a criminal trial, judges should advance one step beyond_ what_ it permits them_ to go_?
11615Dear gentle youth, is''t none but thee?
11615Did ever man struggle more earnestly in a cause where both his honour and life are concerned?
11615Did ever_ Proteus, Merlin_, any_ witch_, Transform_ themselves_ so strangely as the rich?
11615Did he not fear the Lord, and besought the Lord, and the Lord repented him of the evil which he had pronounced?
11615Did n''t ye hear it? 11615 Did not great Julius bleed for justice sake?"
11615Did not great Julius bleed for justice''s sake?
11615Did not great Julius bleed for_ justice''_ sake?
11615Did they ever bear a testimony against writing books?
11615Did they not_ take hold of_ your fathers?
11615Did you conceive( of) him to be me?
11615Did you never bear false witness against thy neighbour?
11615Did_ not Israel_ know?
11615Do not the eyes discover humility, pride; cruelty, compassion; reflection, dissipation; kindness, resentment?
11615Do not those same poor peasants use the Lever and the Wedge, and many other instruments?
11615Do not those same poor peasants use the_ lever_, and the_ wedge_, and many other instruments?
11615Do we for this the gods and conscience brave, That one may rule and make the rest a slave?
11615Do you remember speaking on this subject in school?
11615Do_ not they_ blaspheme that worthy name?
11615Does Bridget paint still, Pompey? 11615 Does continuity and connexion create sympathy and relation in the parts of the body?"
11615Does he mean that theism is capable of nothing else except being opposed to polytheism or atheism?
11615Does not all proceed from the law, which regulates the whole departments of the state?
11615Does not all proceed from the law, which regulates_ all the_ departments of the state?
11615Does the Conjunction join Words together? 11615 Does the present accident hinder your being honest and brave?"
11615Does_ not-- or,_ Do n''t_ your cousin intend to visit you?
11615Dost_ thou_ mourn Philander''s fate? 11615 Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and goeth into the mountains, and seeketh that which is gone astray?"
11615Doth he not leave the ninety and nine, and_ go_ into the mountains, and_ seek_ that which is gone astray?
11615Doth not the Scripture, which can not lie, give none of the saints this testimony?
11615Doth_ the hawk_ fly by thy wisdom, and stretch_ her_ wings toward the south? 11615 Established use?"
11615For between which two links could speech makers draw the division line?
11615For instance, when we say''_ the house is building_,''the advocates of the new theory ask,''building_ what_?'' 11615 For is not this to set nature a work?"
11615For what else is a_ red- hot_ iron than fire? 11615 For what had he_ to do to chide_ at me?"
11615For where does beauty and high wit But in your constellation meet?
11615Gentle and| lovely form, What didst| thou here, When the fierce| battle storm Bore down| the spear? 11615 Gentlemen: will you always speak as you mean?"
11615God is not a man, that he should lie; neither the son of man, that he should repent: hath he said, and shall he not do it? 11615 Grammatica quid est?
11615Ha ha ha; some wine eh?
11615Has he not taught,_ beseeched_, and shed abroad the Spirit unconfined?
11615Has this word which represents an action an object after it, and on which it terminates?
11615Hath a nation changed their gods, which are yet no gods?
11615Hath the Lord said it, and shall he not do it? 11615 Have the greater men always been the most popular?
11615Have they ascertained the person who gave the information?
11615Have we not power to lead about a sister, a wife, as well as other apostles?
11615Have you no more manners than to rail at Hocus, that has saved that clod- pated, numskull''d ninnyhammer of yours from ruin, and all his family?
11615Have_ they not_ heard?
11615He says he was glad that he had Baptized so few; And asks them, Were ye Baptised in the Name of Paul?
11615He that chastiseth the heathen, shall not he correct? 11615 He that planted the ear, shall he not hear?
11615Here,_ John_ is the actor; and is known to be the nominative, by its answering to the question,''Who struck Richard?''
11615How do you account for IN, OUT, ON, OFF, and AT?
11615How do you know that_ love_ is the first person? 11615 How do you parse''letter''in the sentence,''James writes a_ letter''?
11615How does this man''s definitions stand affected?
11615How far do you call_ it_ to such a place?
11615How his eyes languish? 11615 How is the agent of a passive, and the object of an active verb often left?"
11615How is the gender and number of the relative known?
11615How little reason to wonder, that a perfect and accomplished orator, should be one of the characters that is most rarely found?
11615How long was you going? 11615 How many cases?
11615How many numbers do nouns appear to have? 11615 How many numbers have pronouns?
11615How many of your own church members were never heard pray?
11615How many persons? 11615 How many right angles has an acute angled triangle?"
11615How many_ Sorts_ of Participles are there? 11615 How many_ ss_ would goodness then end with?
11615How many_ ss_ would goodness then end with? 11615 How much is seven times nine?"
11615How shall I curse[_ him_ or_ them_] whom God hath not cursed?
11615How shall the people know who to entrust with their property and their liberties?
11615How shall we distinguish between the friends and enemies of the government?
11615How therefore is it that they approach nearly to Non- Entity''s?
11615How_ could_ he_ see to do_ them?
11615I am their mother, who shall bar me from them?
11615I hope, you have, upon no account, promoted sternutation by hellebore?
11615I pr''ythee,_ whom_ doth he trot_ withal_?
11615If David then call him Lord, how is he his son?
11615If I_ will_ that he_ tarry_ till I_ come_, what is that to thee? 11615 If a Yearly Meeting should undertake to alter its fundamental doctrines, is there any power in the society to prevent their doing so?"
11615If he dare not say they are, as I know he dare not, how must I then distinguish?
11615If he_ cut_ off, and_ shut_ up, or_ gather_ together, then who can hinder him?
11615If it be asked, why a pause should any more be necessary to emphasis than to an accent? 11615 If love| make me| forsworn,| how shall| I swear| to love?
11615If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what is become of decency and virtue?
11615If the crew rail at the master of the vessel, who will they mind?
11615If the prophet had commanded thee to do some great thing, would you have refused?
11615If the whole body_ were_ an eye, where_ were_ the hearing?
11615If to accommodate man and beast, heaven and earth-- if this be beyond me,''tis not possible.--What consequence then follows? 11615 In life, can love be bought with gold?
11615In the sentence,''this is the pen which John made,''what_ word_ do I say John made?
11615In what other[ language,] consistent with reason and common sense, can you go about to explain it to him?
11615Interrogation(? 11615 Is endless life and happiness despis''d?
11615Is genius yours? 11615 Is it I or he whom you requested to go?"
11615Is it lawful for_ us to give_ tribute to CÃ ¦ sar?
11615Is it meant that theism is capable of nothing else besides being opposed to polytheism, or atheism?
11615Is it not charging God foolishly, when we give these dark colourings to human nature?
11615Is it such a fast that I have chosen, that a man should afflict his soul for a day, and to bow down his head like a bulrush?
11615Is it_ her_ or_ his_ honour that is tarnished? 11615 Is not Mr. Murray''s octavo grammar more worthy the dignified title of a''Philosophical Grammar?''"
11615Is not life a_ greater_ gift_ than_ food?
11615Is not the bare fact of God being the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon?
11615Is not this using one measure for our neighbours, and another for ourselves?
11615Is that ornament in a good taste?
11615Is there any Scripture speaks of the light''s being inward?
11615Is there any Scripture_ which_ speaks of the_ light_ as being inward?
11615Is there any other doctrine_ whose_ followers are punished?
11615Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow? 11615 Is there not rain enough in the sweet heavens To wash it white as snow?
11615Is this he that I am seeking of, or no?
11615Is this your son,_ who_ ye say_ was born_ blind?
11615Is''t not drown''d i''the last rain? 11615 Is_ William''s_ a proper or common noun?"
11615Is_ what_ ever used as three kinds of a pronoun?
11615It has been often asked, what is Latin and Greek?
11615It is choosing such letters to compose words,& c.--_Ibid._"What is Parsing?
11615It should seem then the grand question was, What is good?
11615King Agrippa,_ believest thou_ the prophets?
11615Know ye not that there is a prince and a great man fallen this day in Israel?
11615Know ye not your own selves, how that Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?
11615Know ye not your_ own selves_, how that Jesus Christ is in you?
11615Know ye not, that_ so many_ of us_ as_ were baptized into Jesus Christ, were baptized into his death?
11615Learned they their pieces perfectly?
11615Learnest thou thy lesson?
11615Look next on Greatness; say where Greatness lies: Where, but among the Heroes and the Wise?
11615Love sounds| the alarm, And fear| is a- fly~ ing; When beau|-ty''s the prize, What mor|-tal fears dy|-~ing? 11615 Mark, and perform it: seest thou?
11615Master,_ what_ shall we do?
11615May I, unblam''d, express thee? 11615 May not four feet be as poetick as five; or fifteen feet, as poetick as fifty?"
11615Meeting a friend the other day, he said to me,''Where are you going?''
11615N''avez vous pas des maisons pour manger et pour boire?
11615Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God? 11615 Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God?
11615Nay but, O man, who art thou that repliest against God?
11615Nay, what evidence can be brought to show, that the Inflection of the Classic tongues were not originally formed out of obsolete auxiliary words?
11615Never adventure on too near an approach to what is evil?
11615Never| wedding,| ever| wooing, Still| lovelorn| heart pur|-suing, Read you| not the| wrong you''re| doing, In my| cheek''s pale| hue? 11615 Nor foes nor fortune_ take_ this power away; And is my Abelard less kind than_ they_?"
11615Now who would dote upon things hurryed down the stream thus fast?
11615Now, Who is not Discouraged, and Fears Want, when he has no money?
11615Now, if it be an evil to do any thing out of strife; then such things that are seen so to be done, are they not to be avoided and forsaken?
11615O gentle sleep, Nature''s soft nurse, how have I frighted thee?
11615O,_ says I_, Jacky, are you at that work?
11615O_ Death!_ where is thy sting? 11615 O_ thou sword_ of the Lord, how long will it be ere_ thou_ be quiet?"
11615Of Godlike pow''r? 11615 Of whom hast thou been afraid or feared?"
11615Of_ what number are_ the expressions_,''these boys,''''these pictures,''& c.?
11615Oh let me escape thither,( is it not a little one?) 11615 Oh, let me escape thither,( is it not a little one?)
11615Oh? 11615 Or if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?"
11615Or if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion?
11615Or if he was, was there no spiritual men then?
11615Or saith he it altogether for our sakes?
11615Or what man is there of you, whom if his son ask bread, will he give him a stone?
11615Or, if he shall ask an egg, will he offer him a scorpion?
11615Or_ I_ only and_ Barnabas_, have not we power to forbear working?
11615Or_ hear''st_ thou rather pure ethereal stream?
11615Our fathers, where are they, and the prophets, do they live forever?
11615Parthenia,_ rise_.--What voice alarms my ear? 11615 Permit that I share in thy woe, The privilege can you refuse?"
11615Prepositions, you recollect, connect words as well as conjunctions: how, then, can you tell the one from the other?
11615Que veut dire ce bruit de la ville qui est ainsi à © mue?
11615Quomodo differunt grammaticus et grammatista? 11615 Rather than thus be overtopt, Would you not wish their laurels cropt?"
11615Remember Handel? 11615 Richard of York, how_ fares_ our dearest_ brother_?"
11615Say, dost thou know Tectidius?--Who, the wretch Whose lands beyond the Sabines largely stretch?
11615Shall I hide from Abraham that thing_ which_ I do?
11615Shall I hide from Abraham_ what_ I am going to do?
11615Shall any_ teach God knowledge_?
11615Shall he alone, whom rational we call, Be pleased with nothing if not blessed with all?
11615Shall not myself be_ kindlier_ mov''d than thou art?
11615Shall not their cattle, and their substance, and every beast of their''s be ours?
11615Shall the intellect alone feel no pleasures in its energy, when we allow them to the grossest energies of appetite and sense?
11615Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the Father of Spirits, and live?
11615Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the father of spirits, and live?
11615Shalt thou build me an house for me to dwell in?
11615Simon, son of Jonas, lovest thou me more than these?
11615So after he had washed their feet, and had taken his garments, and was set down again, he said unto them, Know ye what I have done to you?
11615So saucy with the hand of she here-- What''s her name?
11615Spake_ I not_ also to thy messengers?
11615St. Paul asked king Agrippa if he believed the prophets? 11615 Stay, my| charmer,| can you| leave me?
11615Tell me, Alciphron, is not_ distance_ a_ line_ turned endwise to the eye?
11615Tell me, if in any of these such an union can be found?
11615The Indicative Mood simply indicates or declares a thing: as,''He_ loves_, he is_ loved_:''or it asks a question: as,''Does he love?'' 11615 The Indicative mood simply declares a thing; as, He_ loves_; He is_ loved_; Or, it asks a question; as,_ Lovest_ thou me?"
11615The Interrogation Point(? 11615 The Panther smil''d at this; and when, said she, Were those first councils disallow''d by me?"
11615The following is a note of Interrogation, or asking a question(?).
11615The indicative mood sheweth or declareth; as,_ Ego amo_, I love: or else asketh a question; as,_ Amas tu_? 11615 The interrogator?"
11615The point of Interrogation,?
11615The question may then be put, What does he more than mean?
11615The question might be put, what more does he than only mean?
11615The whole must centre in the query, whether Tragedy or Comedy are hurtful and dangerous representations?
11615The_ Productive System_teaches thus:"What does the word_ singular_ mean?
11615They put their huge inarticulate question,''What do you mean to do with us?'' 11615 Thinkst thou that duty shall have dread to speak?"
11615This An|-na so fair, So talk''d| of by fame, Why do nt| she appear? 11615 Thy nature, immortality, who knowest?"
11615To be, or not to be?
11615To reason how can we be said to rise? 11615 To what purpose_ cometh_ there to me incense from Sheba,_ and_ the sweet cane from a far country?"
11615To who? 11615 Truths would you teach, or save a sinking land?
11615Was any person besides the mercer present? 11615 Was it Mirabeau, Mr. President, or what other master of the human passions, who has told us that words are things?
11615Was it thou that buildedst that house?
11615Was it thou, or the wind, who shut the door?
11615Wast_ thou born only for pleasure? 11615 Were Cain''s and Abel''s occupations the same?"
11615Were either of these meetings ever acknowledged or recognized?
11615Were you not affrighted, and mistook a spirit for a body?
11615Were_ Cain_ and Abel''s occupations the same?
11615Wert thou born only for pleasure? 11615 What Sort of a Noun is Man?
11615What am I and from whence? 11615 What am I, and whence?
11615What are become of so many productions?
11615What are become of those ages of abundance and of life?
11615What are thy rents? 11615 What are verbs?
11615What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus range the camp alone?
11615What avails the taking so much medicine, when you are so careless about taking cold?
11615What better reason_ needs_ be given?
11615What can be the cause of the_ parliament''s neglecting_ so important a business?
11615What can be the reason of the_ committee''s having delayed_ this business?
11615What can prevent this republick from soon raising a literary standard?
11615What can we expect, who come_ a gleaning_, not after the first reapers, but after the_ very_ beggars?
11615What cases are there in English? 11615 What do you call it?
11615What do_ ye_ more than_ others_?
11615What further need was there of an other priest rising?
11615What gender is_ woman_, and why?
11615What gender, then, is_ man_, and why?
11615What is Language? 11615 What is Number?
11615What is Rule III.?
11615What is Spelling? 11615 What is a Noun Substantive?
11615What is a noun? 11615 What is an Asserter?
11615What is emphasis? 11615 What is meant by_ Gender?_ The different sexes."
11615What is number? 11615 What is number?
11615What is quantity, as it respects syllables or words? 11615 What is said respecting sentences being inverted?"
11615What is spelling? 11615 What is the cause that nonsense so often escapes being detected, both by the writer and by the reader?"
11615What is the cause that the former days were better than these?
11615What is the gender, number, and person of those in the first?
11615What is the import of that command to love such an one as ourselves?
11615What is the meaning of the word_ to?_ Ans. 11615 What is the name of the river on which London stands?
11615What is the putting vowels and consonants together called?
11615What is the reason of our being often so frigid and unpersuasive in public discourse?
11615What is the reason that our language is less refined than that of France?
11615What is the reason that our language is less refined than that of Italy, Spain, or France?
11615What is vice and wickedness? 11615 What is vocal language?
11615What is vocal language? 11615 What is your opinion of truth, good- nature, and sobriety?
11615What is''t to thee, if he neglect thy urn, Or without spices lets thy body burn?
11615What is_ a verb_? 11615 What kind of Jesamine?
11615What kind of a book is this?
11615What kind of a noun is_ river_, and why?
11615What kind of an article, then, shall we call_ the_?
11615What may_ it_ be, the heavy_ sound_ That moans old Branksome''s turrets round?
11615What method_ had he best take_?
11615What need you be anxious about this event?
11615What noun do they describe or tell the kind?
11615What nouns are masculine gender? 11615 What nouns frequently succeed each other?"
11615What nouns frequently_ stand together_?
11615What number are these boys? 11615 What number is_ boy_?
11615What other means are there to attract love and esteem so effectual as a virtuous course of life? 11615 What rules apply in parsing personal pronouns of the second and third person?"
11615What rules apply in parsing personal pronouns of the second and third_ persons_?
11615What say you to such as these? 11615 What shall we say of noctambulos?"
11615What should we say of such an one? 11615 What sort of a charm do they possess?"
11615What sort of a thing is it?
11615What sounds have each of the vowels?
11615What striking lesson are we taught by the tenor of this history?
11615What tenses are formed on the perfect participle?
11615What tenses are formed_ from_ the perfect participle?
11615What thank have ye? 11615 What then can be more obviously true than that it should be made as just as we can?"
11615What think ye of Christ? 11615 What think ye of Christ?
11615What use can these words be, till their meaning is known?
11615What went ye out_ for to_ see?
11615What wilt thou_ have_ me_ to_ do?
11615What word, then, may_ and_ be called? 11615 What_ art thou doing_?"
11615What_ be_ these two olive branches?
11615What_ means_ this restless stir and commotion of mind?
11615What_ virtue_ or what mental_ grace_, But men unqualified and base Will boast_ it_ their possession?
11615What_ would_ this man? 11615 When is a dipthong called a proper dipthong?"
11615When the judge dare not act, where is the loser''s remedy?
11615When the perfect participle of an active- intransitive verb is annexed to the neuter verb_ to be_? 11615 When was it that Rome attracted most strongly the admiration of mankind?"
11615When will his ear delight in the sound of arms? 11615 When-- under what administration-- under what exigencies of war or peace-- did the Senate ever before deal with such a measure in such a manner?
11615Whence comes all the powers and prerogatives of rational beings?
11615Where is thy true treasure? 11615 Where now the rill melodious,[--] pure, and cool, And meads, with life, and mirth, and beauty crown''d?"
11615Where should he have this gold? 11615 Where thy true treasure?
11615Where thy true treasure? 11615 Where was you born?
11615Where_ thinkst thou_ he is now? 11615 Where_ were_ you born?
11615Whereto serves mercy, but_ to confront_ the visage of offence?
11615Which of the two brothers are graduates?
11615Which of these two kinds of vice are more criminal?
11615Which of you convinceth me of sin?
11615Which road takest thou here?
11615Which tense is formed on the present?
11615Whither art going, pretty Annette? 11615 Whither,_ O!_ whither shall_ I_ fly?
11615Who bade the mud from Dives''wheel To spurn the rags of Lazarus? 11615 Who calls the council, states the certain day?
11615Who can ever be easy, who is reproached with his own ill conduct?
11615Who can unpitying see the flowery race, Shed by the morn, their new- flush''d bloom resign, Before th''unbating beam? 11615 Who can, either in opposition, or in the ministry, act alone?"
11615Who dare, at the present day, avow himself equal to the task?
11615Who do you dine with?
11615Who do you think me to be?
11615Who else can he be?
11615Who finds the partridge in the puttock''s nest, But may imagine how the bird was dead?
11615Who gave you that book which you prize so much?
11615Who goeth_ a_ warfare any time at his own charges?
11615Who is here so base, that would be a bondman?
11615Who is here so rude, that would not be a Roman?
11615Who is my mother, or my brethren?
11615Who is she who comes clothed in a robe of green?
11615Who is there? 11615 Who knows not, how the trembling judge beheld The peaceful court with arm''d legions fill''d?"
11615Who knows what resources are in store, and what the power of God may do for thee?
11615Who knows what resources are in store? 11615 Who was it from?
11615Who was the agent, and whom the object struck or kissed?
11615Who who has either sense or civility, does not perceive the vileness of profanity?
11615Who would not guess there might be hopes, The fear of_ gallowses_ and ropes, Before their eyes, might reconcile Their animosities a while?
11615Who would not say,''If it be_ I_,''rather than,''If it be_ me_?
11615Who would not say,''If it be_ me_,''rather than, If it be_ I_?
11615Who would not sing for Lycidas? 11615 Who, in the fullness of unequalled power, would not believe himself the favourite of heaven?"
11615Who_ art thou_?
11615Whom do men say that I, the Son of man, am?
11615Whom do they say it is?
11615Whom hast thou then or_ what t''accuse_?
11615Whose prerogative is it? 11615 Why are nouns divided into genders?
11615Why are you vext, Lady? 11615 Why call ye me lord, lord, and do not the things which I say?"
11615Why call ye me,_ Lord, Lord_, and do not the things which I say?
11615Why did not the Greeks and Romans abound in auxiliary words as much as we?
11615Why do lexicographers spell_ thinnish_ and_ mannish_ with two Ens, and_ dimish_ and_ ramish_ with one Em, each?
11615Why do you keep_ teasing_ me?
11615Why do you plead so much for it? 11615 Why does_ began_ change its ending; as, I began, Thou beganest?"
11615Why dost thou then suggest to me distrust, Knowing who I am, as I know who thou art?
11615Why is_ our language less refined than_ the French_?
11615Why should we doubt of that, whereof our sense Finds demonstration from experience? 11615 Why so sagacious in your guesses?
11615Why so sagacious in your guesses? 11615 Why then cite thou a Scripture which is so plain and clear for it?"
11615Why_ satst_ thou like an enemy in wait?
11615Will Henry call on me, while he shall be journeying south?
11615Will John return to- morrow?
11615Will all great Neptune''s ocean wash this blood Clean from my hand? 11615 Will any able writer authorise other men to revise his works?"
11615Will he esteem thy riches? 11615 Will he thence dare to say the apostle held another Christ than he that died?"
11615Will it be urged, that the four gospels are as old_ as tradition, and even_ older?
11615Will it not be receiv''d that they have done''t? 11615 Will martial flames forever fire thy mind, And never, never be to Heaven resign''d?"
11615Will martial flames forever fire thy mind, And_ wilt thou_ never be to Heaven resign''d?
11615Will not a look of disdain cast upon you, throw you into a foment?
11615Will you let me alone, or no?
11615Wilt thou condemn him that is_ most just_?
11615Without you, what were man? 11615 Would it not be making the students judges of the professors?"
11615Would you_ have_ them_ let go_ then? 11615 You inquire,''What is number?''
11615Young stranger, whither wand''rest thou?
11615_ Are they_ Israelites? 11615 _ Can not I_ do with you as this potter?"
11615_ Can_ there_ need to_ be argument to prove so plain a point?
11615_ Canst thou thunder_ with a voice like him?
11615_ Dare_ I_ to_ leave of humble prose the shore?
11615_ Did_ he_ love_?
11615_ Do_ I not yet_ grieve_?
11615_ Do_ you_ dare to prosecute_ such a creature as Vaughan?
11615_ Hath the Lord said it? 11615 _ Is_ the gospel or glad tidings of this salvation brought nigh unto all?"
11615_ Know ye not_ that a little leaven_ leaveneth_ the whole lump?
11615_ Needst_ thou--_need_ any one on earth-- despair?
11615_ Oh me!_ all the horse have got over the river, what shall we do?
11615_ Q._ What do you mean by_ Accent_? 11615 _ Q._ What is a tripthong?
11615_ Q._ What is the_ Proportion_ between a long and a short Syllable? 11615 _ Return?
11615_ Think ye_ that we excuse ourselves?
11615_ Was_ not Demosthenes''s style, and his master Plato''s, perfectly Attic; and yet none more lofty?
11615_ What!_ are you so ambitious of a man''s good word, who perhaps in an hour''s time shall curse himself to the pit of hell?
11615_ What!_ know ye not that your body is the temple of the Holy Ghost which is in you, which ye have of God?
11615_ What_ advantageth it me?
11615_ What_ is_ truth_?
11615_ What_ were we?
11615_ Which_ of the prophets have not your fathers persecuted?
11615_ Who_ art_ thou_?
11615_ Who_ do men say that I, the Son of man, am?
11615_ Who_ taught that heav''n- directed spire to rise? 11615 _ Who_ touched me?
11615_ William_ is a noun.--why? 11615 _ Would_ its compiler_ dare to affront_ the Deity?"
11615_Is this| a Fast,| to keep The lard|-er lean And clean From fat| of neats| and sheep?
11615_--Your_ fathers_, where are they?
11615and why not also of understanding and explaining?
11615& c._?
11615''Burns he?
11615''Do you ride to town to- day?''
11615''Do you think, sir, I may venture to alter it?
11615''Hast thou, spirit, perform''d_ to point_ the tempest?''
11615''He hath not told his thought to the king?''
11615''He hath not told his thought to the king?''
11615''Is it possible he should know what he is, and be_ that_ he is?''
11615''Oh?
11615''Sir,''asks the boy,''does not_ to run_ imply action, for it always makes me perspire?''"
11615''Tis the land| of the East-|''t is the clime| of the Sun-- Can he smile| on such deeds| as his chil|-dren have done?
11615''Well,''replies the merchant, and are not you afraid of being drowned too?''"
11615''Well,''replies the merchant,''and are not you afraid of being drowned too?''"
11615''What kind of stone?''
11615''What kind of way?''
11615''What_ has become_ of national liberty?''
11615''Wheat sells well,''sells_ what_?
11615( could sleep do more?)
11615);_ Interrogation_(?
11615--"''Pat, how did you carry that quarter of beef?''
11615--"Am I not an apostle?"
11615--"As 2_ is_ to 4, so_ is_ 6 to 12;"or,"As two_ are_ to four, so_ are_ six to twelve?"
11615--"Do you say so,_ and_ can you prove it?"
11615--"How many[_ kinds of_] substantives are there?
11615--"Jesus answered them, Is it not written in your law, I said, Ye are gods?"
11615--"Seven times three_ make_, or_ makes_, twenty- one?"
11615--"Three quarters of the men were discharged; and three quarters of the money_ was_, or_ were_, sent back?"
11615--"Three times four_ is_, or_ are_, twelve?"
11615--"Three times his age_ do_ not, or_ does_ not, equal mine?"
11615--"Three times naught_ is_, or_ are_, naught?"
11615--"Three times one_ is_, or_ are_, three?"
11615--"Three times the quantity_ is_ not, or_ are_ not, sufficient?"
11615--"Thrice one_ is_ or_ are_, three?"
11615--"Thrice three_ is_, or_ are_, nine?"
11615--"Twice two_ is_ four,"or,"Twice two_ are_ four?"
11615--"Two times one_ is_ two,"or,"Two times one_ are_ two?"
11615--"What has she done,_ except rock_ herself?"
11615--"What_ is_ become of decency and virtue?"
11615--"Where is he_ at?
11615--"_Did_ she not_ die_?"
11615--"_Do you not know_ that a little leaven_ leavens_ the whole lump?"
11615--"_Do you think_ that we excuse ourselves?"
11615--"_So justly as was never_,"is a positive degree that is not imaginable; and what is this but an absurdity?
11615--"_Which_ man of you all?"
11615--"_Who_ did you say_ it_ was?"
11615--"_Whom_ did you suppose me to be?"
11615--''Shall I come to you with a rod,_ or_ in love?''
11615--''What need was_ there_ of it?''"
11615-----------------------------"Wilt thou fly With laughing Autumn to_ the Atlantic isles_, And range with him th''_ Hesperian field_?"
11615--I know_ whom_?
11615--SHAK:_ ib._"For what else is a redhot iron than fire?
11615--_ Coar cor._"We say,''_ If it rain,''''Suppose it rain?''
11615--_ Lempriere''s Dict._"For who could be so hard- hearted to be severe?"
11615--_Abbott cor._"But if you ca n''t help it,_ whom_ do you complain of?"
11615--_Addison cor._"How_ do_ this man''s definitions stand affected?"
11615--_Allen cor._"Shall not the_ Judge_ of all the earth do right?"
11615--_Bacon cor._"Did ever man struggle more earnestly in a cause_ in which_ both his honour and_ his_ life_ were_ concerned?"
11615--_Balbi cor._"Shall we not much rather be in subjection unto the_ Father_ of spirits, and live?"
11615--_Barclay cor._"How many of your own church members were never heard_ to_ pray?"
11615--_Barclay cor._"Will he thence dare to say, the apostle held_ an other_ Christ than_ him_ that died?"
11615--_Barnes cor._"And canst thou expect to behold the resplendent glow of the Creator?
11615--_Barrett cor._"Where else can he go?"
11615--_Barrett cor._"Will not John return to- morrow?"
11615--_Bible cor._"Are not health and strength of body desirable for their own_ sake_?"
11615--_Bible cor._"Art thou the man of God, that_ came_ from Judah?"
11615--_Bible cor._"But_ who_ say ye that I am?"
11615--_Bible cor._"Did he not fear the Lord, and_ beseech_ the Lord, and_ did not_ the Lord_ repent_ of the evil which he had pronounced?"
11615--_Bible cor._"If David then_ calleth_( or_ calls_) him Lord, how is he his son?"
11615--_Bible cor._"What is vice,_ or_ wickedness?
11615--_Bible cor._"Who is my mother?
11615--_Bible cor._"Why do you plead so much for it?
11615--_Blair and L. Murray cor._"_ Jul._ Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?
11615--_Blair cor._"What is''t to thee, if he_ neglect_ thy urn, Or without spices_ let_ thy body burn?"
11615--_Blair cor._"What_ has_ become of so many productions?"
11615--_Blair cor._"_ Dares_ he assume the name of a popular magistrate?"
11615--_Brevard''s Digest._"Now what is become of thy former wit and humour?"
11615--_Brownlee cor._"And is there a heart of parent or of child, that does not beat and burn within_ him_?"
11615--_Buchanan cor._"Is_ what_ ever used as three kinds of_ pronoun_?
11615--_Bucke cor._"Prepositions, you recollect, connect words,_ and so do_ conjunctions: how, then, can you tell_ a conjunction_ from_ a preposition_?"
11615--_Bucke cor._"What sort of_ noun_ is_ man_?
11615--_Bullions cor._"How do you know that love is_ of_ the first person?
11615--_Bullions cor._"Why labours reason?
11615--_Bullions, E. Gram._"Why labours reason?
11615--_Burgh cor._"And who was Enoch''s Saviour, and the_ prophets''_?"
11615--_Bush cor._"What further need was there_ that_ an other priest_ should rise_?"
11615--_Byron cor._"Or saith he it altogether for our_ sake_?"
11615--_Campbell cor._"Art thou so bare, and full of wretchedness, And_ fearst_ to die?
11615--_Campbell cor._"Where lies the fault, that boys of eight or ten years_ of age_ are with great difficulty made to understand any of its principles?"
11615--_Churchill cor._"But may it not be retorted, that_ this gratification itself_, is that which excites our resentment?"
11615--_Clark cor._"Without you, what were man?
11615--_Cobbeti cor._"What_ thanks_ have ye?
11615--_Collier cor._"Whence_ come_ all the powers and prerogatives of rational beings?"
11615--_Collier cor._"_ Whom_ was it from?
11615--_Day cor._"Or, if he ask a fish, will he for a fish give him a serpent?"
11615--_Day cor._"What kind of_ jessamine_?
11615--_Dickens cor._"Dear gentle youth, is''t none but_ thou_?"
11615--_Dorset cor._"Who do they say it is?"
11615--_Drummond cor._"Who_ dares_, at the present day, avow himself equal to the task?"
11615--_Editor of Waller cor._"Did they ever bear a testimony against_ the_ writing_ of_ books?"
11615--_Farnum cor._"Can you tell me_ why_ his father_ made_ that remark?"
11615--_Felton cor._"O who of man the story will unfold?"
11615--_Felton cor._"Which of the two brothers_ is a graduate_?"
11615--_Foster cor._"_ Has_ the legislature power to prohibit assemblies?"
11615--_Gardiner cor._"_ Dares_ he deny_ that_ there are some of his fraternity guilty?"
11615--_Gay cor._"Permit that I share in thy wo, The privilege_ canst thou_ refuse?"
11615--_Goldsmith cor._"Are you not ashamed to have no other thoughts than_ those_ of amassing wealth, and of acquiring glory, credit, and dignities?"
11615--_Gould cor._"Was any person_ present besides_ the mercer?
11615--_Gratton cor._"And what can be better than_ he_ that made it?"
11615--_Greenleaf cor._"What is language?
11615--_Hall and Baker cor._"The following is a note of Interrogation, or_ of a_ question:(?)."--_Inf.
11615--_Hallock cor._"How_ are_ the agent of a passive and the object of an active verb often left?"
11615--_Hallock cor._"Those adverbs which answer to the question_ where_?
11615--_Hart cor._"How is Rule III violated?"
11615--_Hart''s E. Gram._, p. 40, Why say,"_ distinction_;"the numbers, or_ distinctions_, being two?
11615--_Hiley cor._"What sort of charm do they possess?"
11615--_Holmes''s Rhetoric?_, Part II, p. 14.
11615--_Ib._ Better:"Who can act alone, either in opposition, or in the ministry?"
11615--_Ib._ But how can any idiom be violated by a mode of parsing, which merely expounds its_ true meaning_?
11615--_Ib._"Couldest not thou write without blotting thy book?"
11615--_Ib._"Do we sound_ gases_ and_ gaseous_ like_ cases_ and_ caseous?_ No: they are more like_ glasses_ and_ osseous_."--_G.
11615--_Ib._"Doth not your cousin intend to visit you?"
11615--_Ib._"Of whom_ speaketh_ the prophet this?"
11615--_Ib._"The child is lost; and me, whither shall I go?"
11615--_Ib._"The child is lost; and_ I_, whither shall I go?"
11615--_Ib._"Thinkest thou not it will rain to- day?"
11615--_Ib._"Was it James, or thou, that didst let him in?"
11615--_Ib._"Was it James, or thou, that_ let_ him in?"
11615--_Ib._"Was it thou that spreadest the hay?"
11615--_Ib._"Was it thou that_ spread_ the hay?"
11615--_Ib._"Were Cain and Abel''s occupation the same?"
11615--_Ib._"What are the_ Jupiters_ and_ Junos_ of the heathens to such a God?"
11615--_Ib._"What was Simon''s and Andrew''s employment?"
11615--_Ib._"_ Understandest thou_ what thou readest?"
11615--_Ib._, xvi, 15.--"Whom think ye that I am?
11615--_Id., ib._"This priest has no pride in him?"
11615--_Id._"And dost thou open thine eyes upon such_ a_ one, and_ bring_ me into judgement with thee?"
11615--_Id._"And must I ravel out my_ weaved- up_ follies?"
11615--_Id._"And the governor asked him, saying, Art thou the_ king_ of the Jews?"
11615--_Id._"And when I say,''_ Two men walk_,''is it not equally apparent, that_ walk_ is plural because it_ agrees with men_?"
11615--_Id._"Are not these schools of the highest importance?
11615--_Id._"Are some verbs used both transitively and intransitively?"
11615--_Id._"Are these the houses you were speaking of?
11615--_Id._"But if I say,''Will_ a_ man be able to carry this burden?''
11615--_Id._"But what_ say_ the Scriptures as to respect of persons among Christians?"
11615--_Id._"But_ will_ our sage writers on law forever think by tradition?"
11615--_Id._"Canst thou by searching find out God?
11615--_Id._"Do we sound gasses and_ gasseous_ like_ cases_ and_ caseous_?
11615--_Id._"Do you remember_ to have spoken_ on this subject in school?"
11615--_Id._"Does the present accident hinder_ you from_ being honest and brave?"
11615--_Id._"Doth not the Scripture, which can not lie, give_ some_ of the saints this testimony?"
11615--_Id._"For is not this, to set nature_ at_ work?"
11615--_Id._"Have the_ greatest_ men always been the most popular?
11615--_Id._"How can it choose but wither in a long and sharp winter?"
11615--_Id._"How do you parse_ letter_ in the sentence,''James writes a letter?''
11615--_Id._"How long_ were_ you going?
11615--_Id._"How many cases?
11615--_Id._"How_ many_ are seven times nine?"
11615--_Id._"I will say unto God my Rock, Why hast thou forgotten me?"
11615--_Id._"I will say unto God my_ rock_, Why hast thou forgotten me?"
11615--_Id._"If he_ dares_ not say they are, as I know he_ dares_ not, how must I then distinguish?"
11615--_Id._"If_ mea_, which means_ my_, is an adjective in Latin, why may not_ my_ be so called in English?
11615--_Id._"Is it such a fast that I have chosen, that a man should afflict his soul for a day, and bow down his head like a bulrush?"
11615--_Id._"May not four feet be as_ poetic_ as five; or fifteen feet as_ poetic_ as fifty?"
11615--_Id._"Now who would dote upon things_ hurried_ down the stream thus fast?"
11615--_Id._"Now, if it be an evil, to do any thing out of strife; then such things_ as_ are seen so to be done, are they not to be avoided and forsaken?"
11615--_Id._"Shall the intellect alone feel no pleasures in its energy, when we allow_ pleasures_ to the grossest energies of appetite and sense?"
11615--_Id._"Should we render service equally to a friend,_ a_ neighbour, and an enemy?"
11615--_Id._"Suits my complexion--_hey_, gal?
11615--_Id._"Thus the declarative mood[ i.e., the indicative mood] may be used in asking a question: as,''_ What_ man_ is_ frail?''"
11615--_Id._"To reason how can we be said to rise?
11615--_Id._"What can prevent this_ republic_ from soon raising a literary standard?"
11615--_Id._"What connection has motive, wish, or supposition, with the the term_ subjunctive_?"
11615--_Id._"What is Brown''s Rule in relation to this matter?"
11615--_Id._"What is Rule III?"
11615--_Id._"What is emphasis?
11615--_Id._"What kind of article, then, shall we call_ the_?"
11615--_Id._"What nouns are_ of the_ masculine gender?
11615--_Id._"What say you to such as these?
11615--_Id._"What shall we say of_ noctambuloes?_ It is the regular English plural."--_G.
11615--_Id._"What then may AND be called?
11615--_Id._"What was_ Simon_ and Andrew''s employment?"
11615--_Id._"Who can tell us who they are?"
11615--_Id._"Who gave you that book, which you prize so much?"
11615--_Id._"Whose prerogative is it?
11615--_Id._"Why are you_ vexed_, Lady?
11615--_Id._"Why then_ citest_ thou a scripture which is so plain and clear for it?"
11615--_Id._"_ Did_ they_ learn_ their pieces perfectly?"
11615--_Id._"_ I_ meeting a friend the other day, he said to me,''Where are you going?''"
11615--_Id._"_ Mr._ Smith,_ you_ say, on page 11th,''_ The_ objective case denotes the object''"--_Id._"Gentlemen, will you always speak as you mean?"
11615--_Id._"_ Of_ what number is_ pens_?
11615--_Id._"_ Seems?_ madam; nay, it is: I know not_ seems_-- For I have that within which passes show."--_Hamlet_.
11615--_Id._"_ Who_ think ye that I am?
11615--_Id._"_ Why are we so often_ frigid and unpersuasive in public discourse?"
11615--_Id._"_ Why does_ our teacher_ detain_ us so long?"
11615--_Id._"_ Why were_ the former days better than these?"
11615--_Id._"_ Why_ need you be anxious about this event?"
11615--_Id._"_ Yet here, Laertes?
11615--_Id._"_ Your_ fathers, where are they?
11615--_Infant School Gram._, p. v."Do not they say, every true believer has the Spirit of God in them?"
11615--_Ingersoll cor._"Which tense is formed_ from_ the_ present_, or root of the verb?"
11615--_Ingersoll cor._"_ Dost_ thou_ learn_ thy lesson?"
11615--_Jamieson cor._"What is the name of the river on which London stands?
11615--_Jaudon cor._"Does the conjunction_ ever_ join words together?
11615--_Job._"_ What_ have I offended thee?"
11615--_John Flint cor._"_ Of_ what number is_ boy_?
11615--_Josephus cor._"What is quantity, as it respects syllables or words?
11615--_Kames cor._"Or, if he was,_ were_ there no spiritual men then?"
11615--_Kirkham cor._"How_ are_ vocal and written language understood?"
11615--_Kirkham cor._"What are verbs?
11615--_L''Estrange cor._"How comes this to be never heard of, nor in the least questioned, whether the Law was undoubtedly of Moses''s writing or_ not_?"
11615--_Lempriere cor._"Good_ Master_, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?"
11615--_Lempriere''s Dict., n. Chilo._"Good master, what good thing shall I do, that I may have eternal life?"
11615--_Lennie and Bullions cor._"Who calls the council, states the certain day, Who forms the phalanx, and who points the way?"
11615--_Lennie cor._"When the perfect participle of an active- intransitive verb is annexed to the neuter verb_ to be_, what does the combination form?"
11615--_Lieber cor._"Would it not be_ to make_ the students judges of the professors?"
11615--_Locke cor._"What do you call it?
11615--_Locke cor._"Will not a look of disdain cast upon you throw you into a_ ferment_?"
11615--_Lowth cor._"Which road_ dost_ thou take here?"
11615--_Mack cor._"What sort of thing is it?"
11615--_Mathews cor._"Why should not we their ancient rites restore, And be what Rome or Athens_ was_ before?"
11615--_Merchant cor._"Or what man is there of you,_ who_, if his son ask bread, will give him a stone?"
11615--_Merchant cor._"Shalt thou build me_ a_ house to dwell in?"
11615--_Milton cor._"What art thou, speak, that on designs unknown, While others sleep, thus_ roamst_ the camp alone?"
11615--_Milton cor._"Who finds the partridge in the puttock''s nest, But may imagine how the bird was_ killed?_"--_Shak.
11615--_Milton._"_ Wherein_ have you been galled by the king?"
11615--_New Gram._, p. 337, Why not?
11615--_Nutting cor._"Why did not the Greeks and Romans abound in auxiliary words as much as we_ do_?"
11615--_Peirce cor._"Am I_ to be_ instructed?"
11615--_Peirce cor._"An Interrogative Pronoun is one that is used in asking a question; as,''_ Who_ is he?
11615--_Peirce cor._"Why do you tolerate your own inconsistency, by calling it the present tense?"
11615--_Pierpont cor._"_ Is then_ one chaste, one last embrace_ denied_?
11615--_Priestley cor._"Who is there?
11615--_Rev._, xii, 5.--"Why have ye done this, and saved the_ men- children_ alive?"
11615--_Rowe cor._"Who knows not how the trembling judge beheld The peaceful court with_ arm~ ed_ legions fill''d?"
11615--_Rush cor._"Is not the bare fact,_ that_ God_ is_ the witness of it, sufficient ground for its credibility to rest upon?"
11615--_Russell cor._"Is that ornament in good taste?"
11615--_Shak._"Can hearts, not free, be try''d whether they serve Willing or no, who will but what they must?"
11615--_Sheridan cor._"_ Are you not ashamed_ to affirm that the best works of the Spirit of Christ in his saints are as filthy rags?"
11615--_Sir W. Scott, L. L._"_ Seems he not_, Malise, like a ghost?"
11615--_Sketch cor._"_ Was_ it I or he,_ that_ you requested to go?"
11615--_Smart cor._"_ Do_ WILL and GO express but_ one_ action?"
11615--_Smith cor._"Have they ascertained who gave the information?"
11615--_Stuart cor._"If the crew rail at the master of the vessel,_ whom_ will they mind?"
11615--_Swift cor._"Who bade the mud from Dives''wheel_ Bedash_ the rags of Lazarus?
11615--_Tooke''s Annotator cor._"I, nor your plan, nor book condemn; But why your name?
11615--_Volney cor._"What_ has_ become of those ages of abundance and of life?"
11615--_Walker cor._"Wilt thou kill me, as thou_ didst_ the Egyptian yesterday?"
11615--_Webster cor._"Are we to welcome the loathsome harlot, and introduce_ her_ to our children?"
11615--_Webster cor._"_ Of_ what use can these words be, till their meaning is known?"
11615--_Webster''s Dict._"What, then, was the moral worth of these renouned leaders?"
11615--_Webster''s Dict._,"I only mean to suggest a doubt, whether nature has enlisted herself as a Cis or Trans- Atlantic partisan?"
11615--_Who_ runs?
11615--_Wilson cor._"What should we say of such_ a_ one?
11615--he asked,''Did I say_ penetrate_, sir, when I preached, it?''
11615--or even the possessive; as,"Whose sobs do I hear?
11615--or,"Proper_ seasons for_ retirement should be allotted?"
11615--or,"Seasons_ proper for_ retirement should be alloted?"
1161510 When an infinitive phrase is made the subject of a verb, do the words remain adjuncts, or are they abstract?
1161510.--to Rule 10th?
1161511.--to Rule 11th?
1161512.--to Rule 12th?
1161512th of the first chapter?
1161513.--to Rule 13th?
1161514.--to Rule 14th?
1161515.--to Rule 15th?
1161516.--to Rule 16th?
1161516th, of the plan of mixing syntax with etymology?
1161517.--to Rule 17th?
116152.--to Rule 2d?
1161522, at p. 555;) as,"For is there aught in sleep can charm the wise?"
1161525?
116153.--In interrogative sentences, the terms are usually transposed,[359] or both are placed after the verb; as,"Am_ I_ a_ Jew_?"
116153.--to Rule 3d?
1161531st on Rule 4th?
1161539. Who invented the doctrine, that a participle and its adjuncts may be used as"_ one name_"and in that capacity govern the possessive?
116154.--In negative questions, the adverb_ not_ is sometimes placed before the nominative, and sometimes after it: as,"Told_ not I_ thee?"
116154.--to Rule 4th?
116155.--Generic names, even when construed as masculine or feminine, often virtually include both sexes; as,"Hast thou given_ the horse_ strength?
116155.--to Rule 5th?
1161557. Who says,"the verb agrees with_ the last nominative_?"
116156,) that,''Language is established by reason, antiquity, authority, and custom?''
116156.--to Rule 6th?
116157.--to Rule 7th?
116157th of the first chapter?
116158.--to Rule 8th?
116159.--to Rule 9th?
11615: Can you tell me the reason of his father''s making that remark?"
11615: What is the reason of our_ teacher''s_ detaining us so long?"
11615A Noun or a Pronoun is put absolute in the nominative, when its case depends on no other word: as,_"He failing, who shall meet success?
11615A cardinal number answers to the question,"_ How many_?"
11615A compiler of grammar first observes these habits, and then makes his rules: but if a person is himself familiar with the habits, why study the rules?
11615A worse_ what_?
11615ANALYSIS.--What is the general sense of this passage?
11615According to Allen''s rule, this question is ambiguous; but the learned author explains it in Latin thus:"Placet igitur eos_ dimitti_?
11615According to Churchill,"To use_ ought_ or_ cause_ in this manner, is a Scotticism:[ as,]''Wo n''t you_ cause_ them_ remove_ the hares?''
11615According to Johnson and Tooke, what is_ worth_, in such phrases as,"Wo_ worth_ the day?"
11615According to this, must we not suppose verbs to be often transitive, when_ not made so_ by the author''s_ definition_?
11615Adverbs of decree are those which answer to the question,_ How much?
11615Adverbs of degree are those which answer to the question,_ How much?
11615Adverbs of manner are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded.
11615Adverbs of manner are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded.
11615Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When?
11615Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When?
11615Adverbs of time are those which answer to the question,_ When?
11615Adverbs of_ degree_ are those which answer to the question,_ How much?
11615Adverbs of_ manner_ are those which answer to the question,_ How?_ or, by affirming, denying, or doubting, show_ how_ a subject is regarded.
11615Adverbs of_ place_ are those which answer to the question,_ Where?
11615After making this application of the name_ modes_, was it not improper for the learned author to call the moods also"_ modes_?"
11615After the antecedent_ who_; as,"Who that is a sincere friend to it, can look with indifference upon attempts to shake the foundation of the fabric?"
11615After verbs of_ giving, paying_, and the like, what ellipsis is apt to occur?
11615After what manner should pauses be made?
11615Again, Barnard approves of the question,"What do you think of my_ horse''s running to- day_?"
11615Again, what sense is there in making the"liberty"of publishing one''s"private observations"to depend on the presumed absence of rivals?
11615Again, with what truth can it be said, that nouns have_ no cases_ in English?
11615Again:"_ Who_ betrayed_ her_ companion?
11615All this is regular, with the exception of one foot; but who can make any thing but_ prose_ of the following?
11615Am I not related, in this view, to the very earth itself?--_to_ the distant sun, from whose beams I derive vigour?"
11615An ordinal number answers to the question,"_ Which one_?"
11615An''twas yesterday?
11615An_ interrogative pronoun_ is a pronoun with which a question is asked; as,"_ Who_ touched my clothes?"
11615And again, Are they all wrong?
11615And again, is not a simplification of the verb as necessary and proper in the familiar use of the second person singular, as in that of the third?
11615And also this:"Why are we brought into the world_ less perfect_ in respect to our nature?"
11615And even here an auxiliary is usually preferred in questions and negations; as,"_ Do_ you love?"
11615And even if they were so, and the difference were nothing, would it not be better to adhere, where we can, to the analogy of General Grammar?
11615And how can the_ first person_ be"the_ person_ WHO_ speaks_,"when every word of this phrase is of the_ third_ person?
11615And how can"_ largest_"be wrong, if"_ first_"is right?
11615And how do feelings differ from thoughts?
11615And how does_ the_ commonly limit the sense?
11615And how is it in the Latin phrases,"_ Dulcior melle_, sweeter than honey,"--"_Prà ¦ stantior auro_, better than gold?"
11615And if infinitives and other mere_ adjuncts_ may be the objects which make verbs transitive, how shall a transitive verb be known?
11615And if so, have we not reason to conclude that the adoption of participles in such instances is erroneous and ungrammatical?
11615And if so, what is that rule?
11615And if some would be found less so than others, may there not be an insufficiency in the very nature of them all?
11615And if such they had, what Scripture taught them?
11615And if we depart from the common scheme, where shall we stop?
11615And if we follow not ours, when or how shall the English scholar ever know why we spell as we do?
11615And if_ to_, without government, is not an_ adverb_, what is?
11615And if_"see"_ is here transitive, would not other forms, such as_ are told, have been told_, or_ are aware_, be just as much so, if put in its place?
11615And is it arrogant to say there is much?
11615And is it not plain, that the old verb"THE,"as used by More, is from Theon,_ to thrive_, rather than from Thicgan,_ to take_?
11615And is not this the situation of every transitive participle that is made either the_ subject_ or the_ object_ of a verb?
11615And must| it shine| to light| a world| of war|-fare and| of tears?
11615And since Murray''s phrases are both entirely too long for common use, what better name can be given them than this very simple one,_ the Curves_?
11615And the expression in English should rather have been,"Lovest thou me more than_ do_ these?"
11615And the swift| charger sweep, In full| career, Trampling thy| place of sleep-- Why cam''st| thou here?
11615And what advantage has it, even where it is least objectionable?
11615And what becomes of syllables that end with vowels or liquids and are not accented?
11615And what can be made of rules and examples like the following?
11615And what do his twenty pages amount to?
11615And what else can be meant by"_ the division of thought_,"than our notion of objects, as existing severally, or as being distinguishable into parts?
11615And what is one singular irregular preterit, compared with all the verbs in the language?
11615And what then?
11615And what would this mean?
11615And where shall we find a more blamable one than this?
11615And which is that?
11615And who does not know, that to call the adjuncts of any thing"an_ essential part_ of it,"is a flat absurdity?
11615And who will deny that every degree of improvement in literary taste tends to brighten and embellish the whole intellectual nature?
11615And who will undertake such a task but he that is personally interested?
11615And who, but some sciolist in grammar, would, in all such instances, prefer the passive voice?
11615And why not?
11615And yet are there some prepositions which govern nothing, precede nothing?
11615And yet what truth is there in the passage?
11615And, again,"a worse"_ than_ what?
11615And, if so, what is a"silent letter?"
11615And, indeed, why should we write,"I_ can not_ go, Thou_ canst not_ go, He_ can not_ go?"
11615And, of the quackery which is now so prevalent, what can be a more natural effect, than a very general contempt for the study of grammar?
11615And, why should we_ wish_ to write bad grammar, if we can express our meaning in good grammar?"
11615And, with such an interpretation, what must be the meaning of_ more bookish_ or_ most foolish_?
11615Are Letters Sounds?
11615Are all interjections to be parsed as being put absolute?
11615Are all literary works divided exactly in this way?
11615Are all long syllables equally long, and all short ones equally short?
11615Are all the conjunctive adverbs included in the first four classes?
11615Are authors apt to undervalue their own performances?
11615Are not these expressions much better English than the foregoing quotations?
11615Are not"_ three or more persons_"here compared by"the comparative"_ wiser_?
11615Are proper triphthongs numerous in our language?
11615Are rules of government to be applied to the governing words, or to the governed?
11615Are sentences often elliptical?
11615Are such expressions as,"the_ then_ ministry,""the_ above_ discourse,"good English, or bad-- well authorized, or not?
11615Are such pauses essential to verse?
11615Are the countless examples of this exception truly elliptical?
11615Are the different forms of false construction as numerous as these notes?
11615Are the distinctions of voice and of time as much regarded in participial nouns as in participles?
11615Are the interrogative pronouns declined like the simple relatives?
11615Are the just powers of the letters in any degree variable?
11615Are the kinds of composite verse numerous?
11615Are the methods of science to be accounted mere hinderances to instruction?
11615Are the person, number, and gender of a pronoun always determined by an antecedent?
11615Are the prepositions divided into classes?
11615Are the principles or doctrines which are applied in these different exercises usually the same, or are they different?
11615Are the sounds of a language fewer than its words?
11615Are the words to be divided thus,_ ri- ver, fe- ver_?
11615Are there any exceptions or objections to the old rule,"Active verbs govern the objective case?"
11615Are there any exceptions to this rule?
11615Are there any of our passive verbs that can properly govern the objective case?
11615Are there any verbs that sometimes connect like cases, and sometimes govern the objective?
11615Are there different methods of analysis, which may be useful?
11615Are there exceptions in reference to all the parts of speech, or to how many of the ten?
11615Are there exceptions to all the rules, or to how many?
11615Are these kinds to be kept separate?
11615Are these the Gods they worship?
11615Are they Hebrews?
11615Are they Israelites?
11615Are they friends to learning?
11615Are they ministers of Christ?
11615Are they not loved?
11615Are they the seed of Abraham?
11615Are verbs often connected without agreeing in mood, tense, and form?
11615Are words in apposition always supposed to be in the same case?
11615Are words in apposition always to be parsed separately?
11615Are_ an_ and_ a_ different articles, or the same?
11615Art thou not Romeo, and a Montague?
11615As?_ 21.
11615Author make new words when he pleases?
11615Author make new words when he pleases?
11615Ay, truly; but must we not also, in the latter case, use_ and_, and not_ with_?
11615B. Peirce about the name and place of the interjection?
11615B. Peirce cor._"It is_ the_ choosing_ of_ such letters to compose words,"& c.--_Id._"What is parsing?
11615B. Peirce''s Grammar, with reference to his manner of parsing words after_ than_ or_ as_?
11615B. cor._"Thy nature, Immortality, who_ knows_?"
11615B.--is not the infinitive in Latin_ the same_ as in_ the English?_ Thus, I desire_ to teach Latin_--Ego Cupio_ docere_.
11615Bat what says the Bible?
11615Besides the rules and their examples, what sorts of matters are introduced into these chapters?
11615Better English:"What means this noise_ with which the city rings_?"
11615Better:"What means this restless stir,_ this_ commotion of mind?"
11615Between what other related terms can_ as_ be employed?
11615Between what parts of speech, as terms of the relation, can a preposition be used?
11615Blair cor._"Do we for this the gods and conscience brave, That one may rule and_ all_ the rest_ enslave_?"
11615Blair cor._"The question might be put, What more does he than mean?"
11615Bullions cor._"What striking lesson_ is taught_ by the tenor of this history?"
11615But after all, what does it mean?
11615But are not many teachers too careless here?
11615But are not"TRUTH, NATURE, and REALITY,"worthy to be preferred to any instructions that contradict them?
11615But are there not_ other_ faults in the version?
11615But can a boy learn by such means what it is,_ to speak and write grammatically_?
11615But can they give a_ reason_ for their preference?
11615But can we change this well known name?
11615But did not the wit consist in adroitly excusing himself, by an illusory comparison?
11615But do not its"simplicity and facility"appear greatest to those who know least about it?--i.e., least of its grammar, and least of its history?
11615But does the text specify a_ particular_"deeper well"or"clearer water?"
11615But how can one indivisible word be consistently made two different parts of speech at once?
11615But how can the metre which predominates by two to one, be called, in such a case, an occasional diversification of that which is less frequent?
11615But how does_ an_ or_ a_ commonly limit the sense?
11615But how far is analogy alone a justification?
11615But how shall, or can, this readiness be acquired?
11615But in what a posture does the grammarian place himself, who condemns, as_ bad English_, that phraseology which he constantly and purposely uses?
11615But is it not a_ fact_, that such words as_ cuttest, stopping, rapid, rugged_, are_ trochees_, in verse?
11615But is it not plain that_ heiress''s, abbess''s, peeress''s, countess''s_, and many other words of the same form, are as good English as_ witness''s_?
11615But is it not preferable to the hyphened form, with three Ells, which has authority?
11615But is it true, that,"We all know_ what light is_?"
11615But is the fourth case of these authors_ the same_ as his?
11615But is this all that Webster meant?
11615But it is more dignified, and in general more graceful, to place the preposition before the pronoun; as,"_ To whom_ did he speak?"
11615But let a scornful expression be addressed to a passionate man, will not the words"call internal feelings"into action?
11615But of_ what_ ideas are the words of our language significant?
11615But shall it be allowed, in the present state of things, to confound our conjugations and overturn our grammar?
11615But still the definition would not be true, nor would it answer the question, What is a letter?
11615But the reader may ask,"What have all these things to do with English Grammar?"
11615But the true question is, would it be right to say,"He expressed the pleasure he had in the_ philosopher''s_ hearing_ him_?"
11615But varied how?
11615But what ambiguity of construction, or what diversity of interpretation, proceeding from the same hand, can these admissions be supposed to warrant?
11615But what apology is this, for that authorship which has produced so many grammars without originality?
11615But what do they mean by"_ their substantives_,"or"_ their nouns_?"
11615But what does such a thinker know about correctness?
11615But what etymology?
11615But what has the doubling of_ c_ by_ k_, in our native monosyllables and their derivatives, to do with all these words of foreign origin?
11615But what have these to do with the monstrous absurdity of supposing objective adjuncts to be"parts of the actual nominative?"
11615But what if all these authors do prefer,"_ but him_,"and"_ save him_,"where ten times as many would say,"_ but he_,""_ save he_?"
11615But what is any opinion worth, if further knowledge of facts can confute it?
11615But what is it?
11615But what is the familiar form of expression for the texts cited before?
11615But what property has_ unity_ in common with_ plurality_, on which a definition of_ number_ may be founded?
11615But when or where, since the building of Babel, has this ever happened?
11615But when, or where?
11615But when?
11615But who can hope to prevail on nations to change their practice, and make all their old books useless?
11615But who can not perceive, that without the colon, the semicolon becomes an absurdity?
11615But who shall determine whether the doctrines contained in any given treatise are, or are not, based upon such authority?
11615But who will suppose that_ foolish_ denotes but a slight degree of folly, or_ bookish_ but a slight fondness for books?
11615But why is it, that so much of what is spoken or written, is spoken or written in vain?
11615But why make the classes so numerous as four?
11615But why should any principle of grammar be the less intelligible on account of the extent of its application?
11615But why was this text admired?
11615But"_ Shall_ I go?"
11615But, if_ four_ be taken as only one thing, how can_ three_ multiply this one thing into_ twelve_?
11615But, when this command was uttered to the dark waves of primeval chaos, it must have meant,"_ Do ye let light be there._"What else could it mean?
11615But, without other exceptions, what shall be done with the following texts from Murray himself?
11615But_ n_ too is a letter; and is_ n_ the first principle?
11615By a repetition of the article before two or more adjectives, what other repetition is implied?
11615By observing that it answers to the question,_ When?
11615By what is the possessive case governed?
11615C. Smith cor._"How many persons?
11615C. Smith cor._"Is WILLIAM''S a proper or_ a_ common noun?"
11615C. Smith cor._"Of whom hast thou been afraid, or_ whom hast thou_ feared?"
11615C. Smith cor._"_ Of_ what gender, then, is_ man_, and why?"
11615Can a collective noun, as such, take a plural adjective before it?
11615Can a participle which is governed by a preposition, have a case after it which is governed by neither?
11615Can a preposition ever govern any thing else than a noun or a pronoun?
11615Can a preposition, in English, govern any other case than the objective?
11615Can a pronoun agree with its antecedent in one sense and not in an other?
11615Can a single foot be a line?
11615Can a theory which turns topsyturvy the whole plan of syllabication, fail to affect"the_ natural quantities_ of syllables?"
11615Can a uniform series of good grammars, Latin, Greek, English,& c., be produced by a mere revising of one defective book for each language?
11615Can a verb or participle not transitive take any other case after it than that which precedes it?
11615Can a zeugma of the verb be proved to be right, in spite of these authorities?
11615Can all sentences be divided into clauses?
11615Can an active- transitive verb govern any other case than the objective?
11615Can an adjective ever be substituted for its kindred abstract noun?
11615Can an adjective ever be used without relation to any noun, pronoun, or other subject?
11615Can an adjective ever relate to any thing else than a noun or pronoun?
11615Can an objective before the infinitive become"the subject of the affirmation?"
11615Can any grammarian forget that, in speaking of brute animals, male or female, we commonly use_ which_, and never_ who_?
11615Can any of the definitives which preclude_ an_ or_ a_, be used with the adjective_ one_?
11615Can any thing but the governing of an objective noun or pronoun make an active verb transitive?
11615Can any word have the secondary accent, and not the primary?
11615Can any words agree, or disagree, except in something that belongs to each of them?
11615Can articles ever be used when we mean to speak of a whole species?
11615Can different antecedents connected by_ or_ be accurately represented by differing pronouns connected in the same way?
11615Can he be a competent grammarian, who does not know the meaning of_ between_; or who, knowing it, misapplies so very plain a word?
11615Can he conceive how the number_ five_ can be a_ unit_?
11615Can infinitives, participles, phrases, sentences, and parts of sentences, be really"in the objective case?"
11615Can it be anything else than their_ similarity_ in some common property or modification?
11615Can it be right, to regard as hypermeter the long rhyming syllables of a line?
11615Can it be shown, on good authority, that_ O_ in Latin may be followed by the nominative of the first person or the accusative of the second?
11615Can it be, though, that you are not dead?"
11615Can monosyllables have either?
11615Can not my opponents see in these examples an argument against the distinction which they attempt to draw between_ to_ and_ to_?
11615Can nouns without_ and_ be taken jointly, as if they had it?
11615Can one article relate to more than one noun?
11615Can one noun have more than one article?
11615Can one read with too many emphases?
11615Can our| eyes Reach thy| size?
11615Can praise and success entitle to critical notice works in themselves unworthy of it?
11615Can singular antecedents be so suggested as to require a plural pronoun, when only one of them is uttered?
11615Can such pronouns as stand for things not named, be said to agree with the nouns for which they are substituted?
11615Can the article in English, ever be placed after its noun?
11615Can the explanatory word ever be placed first?
11615Can the insertion or omission of an article greatly affect the import of a sentence?
11615Can the parsing of words be affected by the parser''s notion of what constitutes a simple sentence?
11615Can the parsing of words be varied by any transposition which does not change their import?
11615Can the possessive sign be ever rightly added to a separate adjective?
11615Can the preposition_ to_ govern or precede any other mood than the infinitive?
11615Can the relative position of the article and adjective be a matter of indifference?
11615Can the subject of a finite verb be in any other case than the nominative?
11615Can the syllables of a word be perceived by the ear?
11615Can there be a syntactical relation of words without either agreement or government?
11615Can there be an inelegant use of prepositions which is not positively ungrammatical?
11615Can there ever be an implied repetition of the noun when no article is used?
11615Can this, in general, be literally imitated in English?
11615Can we consistently take for our present standard, a style which does not allow us to use_ you_ in the nominative case, or_ its_ for the possessive?
11615Can we help| loving him-- Loving ex|-ceedingly?
11615Can words connected by_ with_ be properly used as joint nominatives?
11615Can words differing in number be in apposition with each other?
11615Can words having the form of the first participle be nouns, and clearly known to be such, when they have no adjuncts?
11615Can words that agree with the same collective noun, be of different numbers?
11615Can you form a word upon each by means of an_ f_?
11615Can you give examples?
11615Can you mention the principal exceptions to this rule?
11615Can you repeat the alphabet, with_ an_ or_ a_ before the name of each letter?
11615Can you specify some that appear to be faulty?
11615Can"the case absolute,"in English, be any other than the nominative?
11615Canst thou make_ him_ afraid as a grasshopper?
11615Common Version:"Art thou he that_ should come_, or do we look for another?"
11615Could we| soar to| your proud| eyries| fleeing, In our| hearts, would| haunting|_ m= em~ or~ ies_| die?"
11615Cruel| charmer,| can you| go?
11615Dict., w. Human._"How much more grievous would our lives appear, To reach th''eighth hundred, than the eightieth year?"
11615Dict._ Now is it not plain, that the action expressed by"_ read_"is"that_ towards_ which"the affection signified by"_ loves_"is directed?
11615Dict._"Tell me, in sadness, whom is she you love?"
11615Did Adam give names to all the creatures about him, and then allow those names to be immediately forgotten?
11615Did I lose heaven for this?"
11615Did his praisers think so too?
11615Did n''t they do it?
11615Did not Jane West write justly,"She made an attempt to look in at the dear_ dutchess''s_?"
11615Did not both he and his family continually use his original nouns in their social intercourse?
11615Did the writer mean,"Proper seasons should be_ allotted to_ retirement?"
11615Did these authors_ know_ the words, or did they not?
11615Do I not write?
11615Do I write?
11615Do any English authors adopt the Latin doctrine of the accusative( or objective) before the infinitive?
11615Do any imagine these fashionable substitutions to be morally objectionable?
11615Do any of these virtues stand in need of a good word; or are they the worse for a bad one?
11615Do any other verbs, besides these eight, take the infinitive after them without_ to_?
11615Do any reputable writers allow passive verbs to govern the objective case?
11615Do articles always relate to nouns?
11615Do collective nouns generally admit of being made literally plural?
11615Do compounds embracing the possessive case appear to be written with sufficient uniformity?
11615Do figures of rhetoric often occur?
11615Do n''t they do it?
11615Do not adverbs sometimes relate to participial nouns?
11615Do not the principles of etymology affect those of syntax?
11615Do other adverbs come between the article and the adjective?
11615Do the Latin grammarians agree in their enumeration of the concords in Latin?
11615Do the Latin grammars teach the same doctrine as the English, concerning nominatives or antecedents connected disjunctively?
11615Do the simple orders admit any diversity?
11615Do the teachers of this doctrine agree among themselves?
11615Do these ten heads embrace all the uses of the infinitive?
11615Do those who speak of syntax as being divided into two parts, Concord and Government, commonly adhere to such division?
11615Do we ever compare by adverbs those adjectives which can be compared by_ er_ and_ est_?
11615Do we ever find the subjunctive mood put after a relative pronoun?
11615Do we ever lay two equal accents on one word?
11615Do we learn to articulate in learning to speak or read?
11615Do we often put proper nouns in apposition with appellatives?
11615Do we put the sign of possession always and only where the two terms of the possessive relation meet?
11615Do what?
11615Do_ we, our_, and_ us_, become actually singular, as often as a king or a critic applies them to himself?
11615Do_ who, which_, and_ what_, all ask the same question?
11615Does Lowth agree with Murray in the anomaly of supposing_ to_ a preposition that governs nothing?
11615Does Mr. Bevil know your history particularly?"
11615Does Murray acknowledge or furnish any exceptions to this doctrine?
11615Does Murray''s notion, that collective nouns are of different sorts, appear to be consistent or warrantable?
11615Does a collective noun with a singular definitive before it ever admit of a plural verb or pronoun?
11615Does a singular antecedent ever admit of a plural pronoun?
11615Does an ellipsis of the verb or participle change this construction into apposition?
11615Does any verb in English ever govern two objectives that are not coupled?
11615Does apposition require any other agreement than that of case?
11615Does emphasis ever affect accent?
11615Does every adjective"belong to a substantive, expressed or understood,"as Murray avers?
11615Does every possessive sign imply a separate governing noun?
11615Does he mean"_ a worse vocabulary_?"
11615Does he positively determine, that the participle should_ never_ be allowed to govern the possessive case?
11615Does it appear that nouns before participles are less frequently subjected to their government than pronouns?
11615Does not every body know it was current four hundred years ago, or more?
11615Does not the verb_ make_ agree with_ constitution_ and_ laws_, taken conjointly?
11615Does our rule for the verb and disjunct nominatives derive confirmation from the Latin and Greek syntax?
11615Does syllabic quantity always follow the quality of the vowels?
11615Does the adjective frequently relate to what is not uttered with it?
11615Does the adverb"_ frequently_"qualify the verb"_ will depend_"expressed in the sentence?
11615Does the analogy of other languages with ours prove any thing on this point?
11615Does the composite order demand any uniformity?
11615Does the compounding of words necessarily preclude their separate use?
11615Does the mere being of a thing demand the use of articles?
11615Does the possessive case admit of any abstract sense or construction?
11615Does the possessive case before a real participle denote the possessor of something?
11615Does the preposition_ to_ before the infinitive always govern the verb?
11615Does this author appear to have gained"a_ clear idea_ of the nature of a collective noun?"
11615Does this construction admit of any variety in the position of the words?
11615Does this list contain all the words that are ever used in English as prepositions?
11615Does this work contain specimens of different kinds of composite verse?
11615Does_ than_ as well as_ as_ usually take the same case after it that occurs before it?
11615Dost thou love?"
11615Dost thou love?"
11615Doth_ the eagle_ mount up at thy command, and make_ her_ nest on high?"
11615E. Day cor._"_ Who_ is generally used when we would inquire_ about_ some unknown person or persons; as,''_ Who_ is that man?''"
11615Else what_ is_ agreement?
11615Example of error:"What is_ Person_?
11615Example:"For dost thou sit as judging me_ according to_ the law, and_ contrary_ to law command me to be smitten?"
11615Examples:"In the grave,_ who_ shall give thee thanks?"
11615Examples:"Whence hath_ this_ man_ this_ wisdom, and_ these_ mighty works?"
11615Expression?
11615Fall whither?
11615Fisk has it in the following form:"What is the reason of this_ person''s dismissing his servant_ so hastily?"
11615Flint cor._"In the sentence,''This is the pen which John made,''what word_ expresses the object of_ MADE?"
11615For example: Is it not a disgrace to a man of letters, to be unable to tell accurately what a letter is?
11615For example: is it better to say,"Twice one_ is_ two,"or,"Twice one_ are_ two?"
11615For how can they be right, while reason, usage, and the prevailing opinion, are still against them?
11615For instance,_ does_ the_ v_ in_ river_ and the_ v_ in_ fever_ belong to the first or to the second syllable?
11615For instance:"What is the meaning of the word_ number_?
11615For seeing_ time_ and_ person_ be, as it were, the right and left hand of a verb, what can the maiming bring else, but a lameness to the whole body?"
11615For the correcting of false syntax, we have a hundred and fifty- two_ notes_; can these be used also in parsing?
11615For what purpose are_ Italics_ chiefly used?
11615For what sense could be made of parsing, without supposing an objective case to nouns?
11615For why stop at a limited number, when in all subjects, susceptible of intension, the intermediate excesses are in a manner infinite?
11615For, what is requisite to the performance?
11615For,"_ As he attends_,& c.,"means,"As_ he_ attends_ to your studies!_"And what good sense is there in this?
11615Forms adapted to the Common or Familiar Style._"Was it thou[538] that_ built_ that house?"
11615From such an instructor, who can find out what is good English, and what is not?
11615Gildon ah!_ what ill- starr''d rage Divides a friendship long confirm''d by age?"
11615Ha?"
11615Had Adam, Abel, Enoch, Noah, and Abraham, then, no such knowledge?
11615Had I loved?
11615Had he loved?
11615Had he meant,"Would you have them_ to_ let go then?"
11615Had n''t they done it?
11615Had she a| brother?
11615Had she a| sister?
11615Had they not been loved?
11615Had thou loved?
11615Had we not loved?
11615Had you not seen?
11615Hadst thou loved?
11615Has Murray written any thing which goes to show whether_ as follows_ can be right or not, when the preceding noun is plural?
11615Has grammar really been made easy by this confounding of its parts?
11615Has he loved?
11615Has the regular method of comparison any degrees of this kind?
11615Hast thou loved?
11615Hast thou loved?
11615Hast thou so crack''d and_ splitted_ my poor tongue?"
11615Hath he said it?
11615Hath he spoken it?
11615Hath he spoken it?
11615Have I loved?
11615Have any popular authors adopted this doctrine?
11615Have n''t they done it?
11615Have plagiarism and quackery become the only means of success in philology?
11615Have prepositions any grammatical modifications?
11615Have the compound relative pronouns any declension?
11615Have they not been loved?
11615Have we any connective words besides the conjunctions?
11615Have we more than one sort of accent?
11615Have we not loved?
11615Have ye| chosen,| O my| people,| on whose| party| ye shall| stand, Ere the| Doom from|_ its_ worn| sandals| shakes the| dust a|-gainst our| land?
11615Have you not seen?
11615He saith unto him, Which?
11615He saith unto them, How then doth David in Spirit call him Lord?"
11615He saith unto them, How then doth David in_ spirit_ call him Lord?"
11615He that teacheth man knowledge, shall not he know?"
11615He?
11615Hear no| sound of| sabbath| bell?''"
11615Hear ye| not his|_ chariot_| wheels, As the| mighty| thunder| rolls?
11615Here the idea is,"_ What person_ hath first given_ any thing_ to_ the Lord_, so that it ought to be repaid_ him_?"
11615Here_ it_ represents_ the word"Jane"_ and not_ the person Jane._"What mark or sign is put after_ master_ to show that_ he_ is in the possessive case?
11615Here_ what_, means_ in what degree?
11615Herself?
11615Himself?
11615Honour hath no skill in surgery then?
11615How able is that writer who is chargeable with the_ greatest want_ of taste and discernment?
11615How are adjectives regularly compared?
11615How are adjectives regularly compared?
11615How are adverbs to be parsed in such expressions as,"_ Away with him?_"9.
11615How are different vowel sounds produced?
11615How are participles placed?
11615How are passive verbs formed?
11615How are poetic quantities denominated?
11615How are pronouns divided?
11615How are relative and interrogative pronouns placed?
11615How are such questions asked in the familiar style?
11615How are the conjunctions divided?
11615How are the consonants divided?
11615How are the degrees of diminution, or inferiority, expressed?
11615How are the following sentences analyzed by this method?
11615How are the harmonic pauses divided?
11615How are the interjections arranged in the list?
11615How are the leading principles of syntax presented?
11615How are the person and number of a verb ascertained, where no peculiar ending is employed to mark them?
11615How are the prepositions arranged in the list?
11615How are the second and third persons singular distinctively formed?
11615How are the two articles distinguished in grammar?
11615How are these inflections exemplified?
11615How are these learned?
11615How are they proportioned?
11615How are they used in asking questions?
11615How are verbs divided, with respect to their form?
11615How are verbs divided, with respect to their signification?
11615How are words distinguished in regard to_ species_ and_ figure_?
11615How can a noun be, or seem to be, in apposition with a possessive pronoun?
11615How can he be a man of refined literary taste, who can not speak and write his native language grammatically?
11615How can it be proved that_ to_ before the infinitive is a preposition?
11615How can it be said, that_ good_ and_ bad_ are here substantives, since they have a plural meaning and refuse the plural form?
11615How can one avoid the ambiguity which Dr. Priestley notices in the use of the adjective_ no_?
11615How can one determine whether an adjective or an adverb is required?
11615How can one''s notion of_ ellipsis_ affect his mode of parsing, and his distinction of sentences as simple or compound?
11615How can references be otherwise made?
11615How can that be"_ a part_ of the verb,"which is_ a word_ used_ before_ it?
11615How can the terms of relation which pertain to the preposition be ascertained?
11615How can we distinguish a CONJUNCTION?
11615How can we distinguish a NOUN?
11615How can we distinguish a PARTICIPLE?
11615How can we distinguish a PREPOSITION?
11615How can we distinguish a PRONOUN?
11615How can we distinguish a VERB?
11615How can we distinguish an ADJECTIVE?
11615How can we distinguish an ADVERB?
11615How can we distinguish an INTERJECTION?
11615How can we introduce a noun or pronoun before the infinitive, and still make the whole phrase the subject of a finite verb?
11615How can we know to what class, or part of speech, any word belongs?
11615How can_ it_ be quiet, seeing the Lord hath given_ it_ a charge against Askelon, and against the sea- shore?
11615How can_ to_ be a"_ preposition_"in the phrase,"_ He was listened to_,"and not so at all in"_ to be listened to_?"
11615How could the man who saw all this, insist on adding_ st_ for the second person, where not even the_ d_ of the past tense could he articulated?
11615How could"good writers"indite"much"bad English by_ dropping_ from the subjunctive an indicative ending which never belonged to it?
11615How do Dr. Adam and others suppose"the gerund in English"to become a"substantive,"or noun?
11615How do Ingersoll, Kirkham, and Smith, agree with their master Murray, concerning such examples as,"_ Let me go_?"
11615How do Nutting, Kirkham, Nixon, Cooper, and Sanborn, agree with Murray, or with one an other, in pointing out what governs the infinitive?
11615How do Priestley and others pretend to distinguish between the participial and the substantive use of verbals in_ ing_?
11615How do compounds take the sign of possession?
11615How do conjunctions differ from other connectives?
11615How do conjunctive adverbs differ from other connectives?
11615How do our grammarians now dispose of what remains to us of the old Saxon dative case?
11615How do permanent compounds differ from others?
11615How do prepositions differ from other connectives?
11615How do relative pronouns differ from other connectives?
11615How do we compare_ well, badly_ or_ ill, little, much, far_, and_ forth_?
11615How do we mark a quotation within a quotation?
11615How do we sometimes avoid such repetition?
11615How do you compare_ far?
11615How do you compare_ good?
11615How do you decline the nouns,_ friend, man, fox_, and_ fly?_ LESSON VII-- PARSING.
11615How do you decline the pronoun_ I?
11615How do you decline the pronoun_ Myself?
11615How do you decline_ Who?
11615How do you decline_ Whoever?
11615How do you form a synopsis of the verb BE LOVED, with the nominative_ I?
11615How do you form a synopsis of the verb BE READING, with the nominative_ I?
11615How do you form a synopsis of the verb_ be_, with the nominative_ I?
11615How do you form a synopsis of the verb_ see_, with the pronoun_ I?
11615How do you_ know_ long and short Syllables?
11615How does Bolles define articulation?
11615How does Brown review these criticisms, and attempt to settle the question?
11615How does Churchill differ from Lowth respecting the phrase,"_ ever so wisely_,"or"_ never so wisely?_"23.
11615How does Churchill treat the matter?
11615How does Comstock define it?
11615How does Dr. Ash parse_ to_ before the infinitive?
11615How does Hiley treat the English participle?
11615How does John Burn propose to settle this dispute?
11615How does L. Murray connect emphasis with quantity?
11615How does a finite verb agree with its subject, or nominative?
11615How does a pronoun agree with a collective noun?
11615How does a pronoun agree with disjunct antecedents?
11615How does a pronoun agree with its antecedent?
11615How does a pronoun agree with joint antecedents?
11615How does a verb agree with a collective noun?
11615How does a verb agree with disjunctive nominatives?
11615How does a verb agree with joint nominatives?
11615How does articulation differ from pronunciation?
11615How does the English fashion of putting_ you_ for_ thou_, compare with the usage of the French, and of other nations?
11615How does the English participle compare with the Latin gerund?
11615How does the French construction of participles and infinitives compare with the English?
11615How does the author of this work dispose of the example?
11615How does the author of this work generally dispose of such government?
11615How does the infinitive"express an action or state_ indefinitely_,"if it"_ usually relates to some noun or pronoun_?"
11615How does the passage here cited comport with this hint of Pope?
11615How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of metaphor?
11615How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of metonymy?
11615How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of personification?
11615How does the pronoun agree with its noun in cases of synecdoche?
11615How does this accord with the views of Murray, Lowth, Adam, and Brown?.
11615How is Grammar divided?
11615How is a verb conjugated interrogatively and negatively?
11615How is a verb conjugated negatively?
11615How is an adverb to be parsed, when it seems to be put for a verb?
11615How is grammar to be taught, and by what means are its principles to be made known?
11615How is the distinguishing of the participle from the verbal noun inculcated by Allen, and their difference of meaning by Murray?
11615How is the first or imperfect participle formed?
11615How is the following example analyzed by this method?
11615How is the following example analyzed by this method?
11615How is the following example analyzed by this method?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example parsed?
11615How is the following example to be parsed?
11615How is the following long example parsed in Praxis XII?
11615How is the form of negation exemplified by the verb_ love_ in the first person singular?
11615How is the infinitive used after_ bid_?
11615How is the infinitive used after_ have, help_, and_ find_?
11615How is the like synopsis formed in the third person plural?
11615How is the negative question exemplified in the first person plural?
11615How is the negative question exemplified in the second person plural?
11615How is the passive verb BE LOVED conjugated throughout?
11615How is the plural number of nouns regularly formed?
11615How is the possessive case of nouns formed?
11615How is the regular plural formed when the word gains a syllable?
11615How is the regular plural formed without increase of syllables?
11615How is the second or perfect participle formed?
11615How is the sense of nouns commonly made indefinitely partitive?
11615How is the third or preperfect participle formed?
11615How is the verb BE conjugated?
11615How is the verb READ conjugated in the compound form?
11615How is the verb SEE conjugated throughout?
11615How is the verb conjugated interrogatively?
11615How is the word_ man_ to be parsed in the following example?
11615How is this art to be acquired?
11615How little?_ or to the idea of_ more or less_.
11615How little?_ or to the idea of_ more or less_.
11615How little?_ or, to the idea of_ more or less_.
11615How long?
11615How long?
11615How long?
11615How long?
11615How many agreements, or concords, are there in English syntax?
11615How many and what are the compound personal pronouns?
11615How many and what are the consonant sounds in English?
11615How many and what are the degrees of comparison?
11615How many and what are the diphthongs in English?
11615How many and what are the figures of etymology?
11615How many and what are the figures of syntax?
11615How many and what are the governments in English syntax?
11615How many and what are the improper diphthongs?
11615How many and what are the improper triphthongs?
11615How many and what are the parts of speech?
11615How many and what are the principal figures of rhetoric?
11615How many and what are the principles of syntax which belong to the head of simple relation?
11615How many and what are the proper diphthongs?
11615How many and what are the simple personal pronouns?
11615How many and what are the_ principal parts_ of a sentence?
11615How many and what exceptions are there to rule 20th, concerning participles?
11615How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for adverbs?
11615How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for conjunctions?
11615How many and what exceptions are there to the rule for prepositions?
11615How many and what kinds of pauses are there?
11615How many and what parts of speech are concerned in government?
11615How many and what parts of speech are usually parsed by such rules only?
11615How many and what secondary feet are explained in this code?
11615How many and what tenses has the_ infinitive_ mood?--the_ indicative_?--the_ potential_?--the_ subjunctive_?--the_ imperative_?
11615How many and which of the ten have but one rule apiece?
11615How many and which of these are so variable in sound that they may be either proper or improper diphthongs?
11615How many are there for infinitives, and which are they?
11615How many are there of the general or critical notes?
11615How many cases are there, and what are they called?
11615How many definitions are here given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many definitions are here to be given for each part of speech?
11615How many exceptions, or forms of exception, are there to Rule 1st for the comma?
11615How many feet do prosodists recognize?
11615How many genders are there, and what are they called?
11615How many kinds of figures are there?
11615How many kinds of participles are there, and what are they called?
11615How many kinds of sentences are there?
11615How many letters are in the alphabet?
11615How many letters are there in English?
11615How many moods are there, and what are they called?
11615How many numbers are there, and what are they called?
11615How many of the rules have no such notes under them?
11615How many of the ten parts of speech in English are in general incapable of any agreement?
11615How many of the twenty- four rules of syntax are used both in parsing and in correcting?
11615How many of them are under the rule for_ articles_?
11615How many of them belong to the syntax of_ adjectives_?
11615How many of them expose errors in the use of_ prepositions_?
11615How many of them pertain to the syntax of_ participles_?
11615How many of them refer to the construction of_ nouns_?
11615How many of them regard the use of_ verbs_?
11615How many of them relate to the construction of_ adverbs_?
11615How many of them show the application of_ conjunctions_?
11615How many of them speak of_ interjections_?
11615How many of them treat of_ pronouns_?
11615How many of these seventeen speak of_ cases_, and therefore apply equally to nouns and pronouns?
11615How many persons and numbers belong to verbs?
11615How many persons are there, and what are they called?
11615How many pronouns are there?
11615How many redundant verbs are there?
11615How many rules are there for finite verbs, and which are they?
11615How many rules are there for the Colon?
11615How many rules are there for the Curves?
11615How many rules are there for the Dash?
11615How many rules are there for the Period?
11615How many rules are there for the Semicolon?
11615How many rules are there for the agreement of pronouns with their antecedents, and which are they?
11615How many rules are there for this mark?
11615How many rules are there for this mark?
11615How many rules for capitals are given in this book?
11615How many rules for spelling are given in this book?
11615How many rules for the Comma are there, and what are their heads?
11615How many rules for the figure of words are given in this book?
11615How many rules of government are there in the best Latin grammars?
11615How many simple irregular verbs are there?
11615How many special rules of syllabication are given in this book?
11615How many such rules are there among the twenty- four?
11615How many syllables are found in the longest?
11615How many tenses are there, and what are they called?
11615How may an interjection generally be known?
11615How may the adverbs of degree be subdivided?
11615How may the adverbs of manner be subdivided?
11615How may the adverbs of place be subdivided?
11615How may the adverbs of time be subdivided?
11615How may the vowel sounds be written?
11615How may these sounds be modified in the formation of syllables?
11615How much?
11615How much?_ or_ How_?--or serves to ask it; as,"He spoke fluently."
11615How shall we parse the word_ that_ in the foregoing sentences?
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How soon?_ or,_ How often?_ including these which ask.
11615How then can the mere addition of this mood make_ any_ verb transitive?
11615How was the infinitive expressed in the Anglo- Saxon of the eleventh century?
11615How, after_ dare_?
11615How, after_ feel_?
11615How, after_ hear_?
11615How, after_ let_?
11615How, after_ make_?
11615How, after_ need_?
11615Hundreds?
11615I allude to those who would prefer the possessive case in a text like the following:"Wherefore is this noise of the_ city being_ in an uproar?"''
11615I do not see that the copulative_ and_ is here ungrammatical; but if we prefer a disjunctive, ought it not to be_ or_ rather than_ nor_?
11615I fear for life,''_ which words_ here appear to be thrown in_ between the sentences_, to express passion or feeling?
11615I pray thee,_ with whom_ doth he trot withal?"
11615I suppose the author to speak of_ good persons_ and_ bad persons_; and, if he does, is there not an ellipsis in his language?
11615I. Adverbs of_ time_ are those which answer to the question,_ When?
11615If an adverbial word relates directly to a noun or pronoun, does not that fact constitute it an adjective?
11615If any body can boast of being"_ the first person in grammar_,"I pray,_ Who_ is it?
11615If difficult, wherein does the difficulty lie?
11615If easy, why do so few pretend to know their number?
11615If ever one of Father Hall''s nouns shall speak for itself, or answer when"spoken to,"will it not reprove him?
11615If it is said,''What think you of my_ horse running_ to- day?''
11615If it were_ true_, a few quotations might easily prove it; but when, and by whom, have any such words as_ lovedest, turnedest_, ever been used?
11615If not, what else is it?
11615If participial nouns retain the power of participles, why is it wrong to say,"A superficial reading books is useless?"
11615If reputation has been raised upon the mist of ignorance, who but the builder shall lament its overthrow?
11615If so, what sense has"_ vocabulary_?"
11615If so, whose?
11615If the Doctor designed to ask,"Do you think my horse ran well to- day?"
11615If the antecedent is a collective noun conveying the idea of plurality, must the pronoun always be plural?
11615If the errors of some have long been tolerated, what right of the critic has been lost by nonuser?
11615If the interests of Science have been sacrificed to Mammon, what rebuke can do injustice to the craft?
11615If the nominative is a collective noun conveying the idea of plurality, must the verb always be plural?
11615If the second person singular of this verb be used familiarly, how should it be formed?
11615If the works of grammarians are often ungrammatical, whose fault is this but their own?
11615If there are antecedents connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, is the pronoun always to take them separately?
11615If there are nominatives connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, is the verb always to refer to them separately?
11615If there are two or more antecedents connected by_ and_, must the pronoun always be plural?
11615If there are two or more nominatives connected by_ and_, must the verb always be plural?
11615If this is to be taken for a grammatical definition, what definition shall grammar itself bear?
11615If we take neither of these assumptions, must we not say, they are of different genders?
11615If when a participle becomes an adjective it drops its regimen, should it not also drop it on becoming a noun?
11615If"_ a_ participle refers to_ nouns_ or_ pronouns_,"_ how many_ of these are required by the relation?
11615If"a_ participle_ is called an_ adjective_,"which is it, an adjective, or a participle?
11615If, in the following example,_ gold_ and_ diamond_ are neuter, so is the pronoun_ me_; and, if not neuter, of what gender are they?
11615If_ all_ grammatical fame is little in itself, how can the abatement of what is undeserved of it be much?
11615In Flint''s Murray it stands thus:"An adverb may generally be known by its answering the question, How?
11615In either form of it,_ two_ nominatives are idly imagined between_ as_ and its verb; and, I ask, of what is the first one the subject?
11615In etymological parsing, we use about seventy_ definitions_; can these be used also in the correcting of errors?
11615In extended compositions, what is the order of the parts, upwards from a sentence?
11615In how many and what ways does the relation of prepositions admit of complexity?
11615In how many different ways can the letters of the alphabet be combined?
11615In how many different ways can the nominative case be used?
11615In how many ways are the sexes distinguished in grammar?
11615In how many ways can nouns of the second person be employed?
11615In how many ways is the nominative case put absolute?
11615In law,| what plea| so taint|-ed and| corrupt, But, be|-ing sea|-son''d with| a gra|-cious voice, Obscures| the show| of e|-vil?
11615In making a phrase the subject of a verb, do we produce an exception to Rule 14th?
11615In preparing a manuscript, how do we mark these things for the printer?
11615In respect to collective nouns, how is it generally determined, whether they convey the idea of plurality or not?
11615In scansion, why are the principal feet to be preferred to the secondary?
11615In such expressions as,"I give it up_ for lost_,"--"I take it_ for granted_,"how is the participle to be parsed?
11615In such phrases as,_ at once, from thence, till now_, how is the latter word to be parsed?
11615In such phrases as_ in vain, at first, in particular_, how is the adjective to be parsed?
11615In such sentences as,"I paid_ him_ the_ money_,"--"He asked_ them_ the_ question_,"how are the two objectives to be parsed?
11615In the expression,"_ I, thou, or he, may affirm_,"of what person and number is the verb?
11615In the phrase,"For_ David_ my servant''s sake,"which word is governed by_ sake_, and which is to be parsed by the rule of apposition?
11615In the sentence,"And_ Simon_ he surnamed_ Peter_", how are_ Simon_ and_ Peter_ to be parsed?
11615In the sentence,"I_ know that_ Messias cometh,"how are_ know_ and_ that_ to be parsed?
11615In the sentence,"I_ know why_ she blushed,"how is_ know_ to be parsed?
11615In the sentence,"It is certainly as easy to be a_ scholar_, as a_ gamester_,"what is the case of_ scholar_ and_ gamester_, and why?
11615In the sentence,"It is_ man''s_ to err,"what is supposed to govern_ man''s_?
11615In the sentence,"What_ have_ I to_ do_ with thee?"
11615In the sentence,"_ It_ is useless to complain,"what does_ it_ represent?
11615In the sentence,''William hastens away,''the active intransitive verb_ hastens_ has indeed an_ agent_,''William,''but where is the_ object_?
11615In this perplexity, is not the pronunciation of the words the best guide?
11615In what chapter are the rules of syntax first presented?
11615In what does a knowledge of the letters consist?
11615In what exercise can there be occasion to cite and apply the_ Exceptions_ to the rules of syntax?
11615In what instances is the adjective placed after its noun?
11615In what instances is the first participle equivalent to the infinitive?
11615In what instances may the adjective either precede or follow the noun?
11615In what kinds of examples do we meet with a doubtful case after a participle?
11615In what manner, or in what respect, does an article point out substantives?
11615In what order are the rules of syntax arranged in this work?
11615In what other form can the meaning of the possessive case be expressed?
11615In what place are the rules, exceptions, notes, and observations, in the foregoing system of syntax, enumerated and described?
11615In what praxis are these rules first applied in parsing?
11615In what series of words may all these sounds be heard?
11615In what series of words may each of them be heard two or three times?
11615Interrogatively and negatively; as, Write I not?
11615Interrogatively; as, Write I?
11615Into what classes may adjectives be divided?
11615Into what general classes are nouns divided?
11615Into what general classes are the letters divided?
11615Is a good articulation important?
11615Is dactylic verse very common?
11615Is either of them right in his argument?
11615Is every thing that a preposition governs, necessarily supposed to have cases, and to be in the objective?
11615Is every word accented?
11615Is he the only man who has ever had a right notion of its_ meaning_?
11615Is it agreed among grammarians, that the Latin gerund may govern the genitive of the agent?
11615Is it clear, that they ought to be called adverbs?
11615Is it common to find in grammars, the rules of syntax well adapted to their purpose?
11615Is it compatible with apposition to supply between the words a relative and a verb; as,"At Mr. Smith''s[_ who is_] the bookseller?"
11615Is it demonstrable that verbs often agree with relatives?
11615Is it easy to distinguish an ARTICLE?
11615Is it ever convenient to have one and the same rule applicable to different parts of speech?
11615Is it ever convenient to have rules divided into parts, so as to be double or triple in their form?
11615Is it ever indifferent, which word be called the principal, and which the explanatory term?
11615Is it ever right to put both terms before the verb?
11615Is it ever uniform?
11615Is it not a pity, that"more than one hundred thousand children and youth"should be daily poring over language and logic like this?
11615Is it not plain, that twice two things, of any sort, are four things of that same sort, and only so?
11615Is it not rather true, that we know nothing at all about it, but what it is just as easy to tell as to think?
11615Is it not strange, is it not incredible, that the same hand should have written the two following lines, in the same sentence?
11615Is it not this;--that, like_ English, French_,& c., they are always_ adjectives_; except, perhaps, when they denote_ languages_?
11615Is it not_ I_, even_ I_?
11615Is it often expedient to join in the same rule such principles as must always be applied separately?
11615Is it proper to teach, in general terms, that the noun or pronoun which limits the meaning of a participle should be put in the possessive case?
11615Is it right to introduce it into our paradigms, as the only form of the second person singular, that modern usage acknowledges?
11615Is it right to say with Smith,"Every hundred_ years constitutes_ a century?"
11615Is it right without the_ of_, though contrary to the author''s rule for elegance?
11615Is it some"_ vocabulary_"both"English and parliamentary?"
11615Is it that of one and one, the_ positive_ and the_ comparative_ added numerically?
11615Is it the_ authors_, or their_ figure_, that becomes tedious and intricate?
11615Is it then any disgrace to spell words erroneously?
11615Is it therefore difficult to determine which party is right?
11615Is it they_?"
11615Is it thou?
11615Is it| to fast| an hour, Or ragg''d| to go, Or show A down|-cast look| and sour?
11615Is it| to quit| the dish Of flesh,| yet still To fill The plat|-ter high| with fish?
11615Is language impotent?
11615Is not our language like the Latin, in respect to verbs governing two cases, and passives retaining the latter?
11615Is not the former as good English as the latter?
11615Is not this because there is an_ ellipsis_ in the sentence, and such a one as may be variously conceived and supplied?
11615Is not this better English than to say,"of_ his_ being the only person?"
11615Is that a correct rule which says,"Two negatives, in English, destroy each other, or are equivalent to an affirmative?"
11615Is the Greek or Latin construction of the latter term in a comparison usually such as ours?
11615Is the anapest adapted to single rhyme?
11615Is the article_ an_ or_ a_ always supposed to imply unity?
11615Is the author himself to be disbelieved, that the extravagant praises bestowed upon him may be justified?
11615Is the case after the verb reckoned doubtful, when the subject going before is a sentence, or something not declinable by cases?
11615Is the common rule for interjections, as requiring certain cases after them, sustained by any analogy from the Latin syntax?
11615Is the connecting of verbs elliptically, or by parts, anything peculiar to our language?
11615Is the devil in you?
11615Is the distinction between the participial noun and the participle well preserved by Murray and his amenders?
11615Is the doctrine well sustained by its adopters, or is it consistent with the analogy of general grammar?
11615Is the infinitive ever governed by a preposition in French, Spanish, or Italian?
11615Is the infinitive ever liable to be misplaced?
11615Is the mere relation of words according to the sense an element of much importance in English syntax?
11615Is the number of feet in a line to be generally counted by that of the long syllables?
11615Is the objective, when it occurs before the infinitive in English, usually governed by some verb, participle, or preposition?
11615Is the possessive case always governed by the name of the thing possessed?
11615Is the possessive often governed by what is not expressed?
11615Is the preposition_ to_"understood"after_ bid, dare, feel_, and so forth, where it is"superfluous and improper?"
11615Is the pronoun_ we_ singular when it is used in lieu of_ I_?
11615Is the pronoun_ you_ singular when used in lieu of_ thou_ or_ thee_?
11615Is the syntactical parsing of a noun to be precisely the same as the etymological?
11615Is the voice to be varied for variety''s sake?
11615Is there a construction of like cases, that is not apposition?
11615Is there any argument from analogy for taking_ each other_ and_ one an other_ for compounds?
11615Is there any exception to the 24th rule, concerning interjections?
11615Is there any other method of expressing the degrees of comparison?
11615Is there any question about the true mode of parsing"_ only_"and"_ also_"here?
11615Is there anywhere, in print, viler pedantry than this?
11615Is there ever any needful agreement between unrelated words?
11615Is there not an amplification that is at once novel, disagreeable, unauthorized, and unnecessary?
11615Is there not contradiction in these instructions?
11615Is there not truth, is there not power, in the appeal?
11615Is there| peace where| ye are| borne, on| high?
11615Is this doctrine consistent either with itself or with Wilson''s?
11615Is this frequent?
11615Is this the conduct of the duellist?
11615Is this the true ratio of the merit of these authors, or of the wisdom of the different ages in which they lived?
11615Is this the woman you saw?"
11615Is this their"common mode of expression?"
11615Is"_ O thee_"good English, because"_ O te_"is good Latin?
11615Is_ a_ the first principle?
11615Is_ an_ Unit of one, a Number?
11615Is_ m_ the first principle of this word?
11615Is_ need_ ever an auxiliary?
11615Is_ than_ supposed by Murray to be capable of governing any other objective than_ whom_?
11615Is_ to"in every other case a preposition_,"and not such before a verb or a participle?
11615Is_ to_ a preposition when it is placed_ after_ a verb, and_ not_ a preposition when it is placed_ before_ it?
11615Is_ to_ before the infinitive to be parsed just as any other preposition?
11615It is as high as heaven; what canst thou do?
11615It is indeed so much more common, as to seem the only proper mode of expression: as,"_ Do I say_ these things as a man?"
11615It is true, we occasionally meet with such fulsome phraseology as this; but the question is, how is it to be explained?
11615It might be set down under Critical Note 9th, among examples of_ Words Needless_; for the author''s question is,"Why is the verb so called?"
11615It ought to be,"Is it_ her_ honour or_ his_, that is tarnished?"
11615It?_ 17.
11615Itself?_ 19.
11615Johnson cor._"How_ are_ the gender and number of the relative known?"
11615Keith cor._"Who is so mad, that, on inspecting the heavens,_ he_ is insensible of a God?"
11615Lewis sighs| for the sake Of her charms,| as they say; What excuse| can she make For not com|-ing away?
11615Literally:"What means this noise of the_ city which is so moved_?"
11615Literally:"What[_ means_] the clamour of the_ city resounding_?"
11615Loop up her| tresses, Escaped from the comb,-- Her fair auburn tresses; Whilst wonderment guesses, Where was her| home?
11615Lov''st thou?
11615Love I?
11615Love we not?
11615Loved I?
11615Loved he?
11615Loved thou?
11615Loved we not?
11615Lovedst thou?
11615Loves he?
11615Lovest thou?
11615Low lies the| stately head, Earth- bound| the free: How gave those| haughty dead A place| to thee?
11615M''Cartee._"Shall I tell you_ why?_ Ay, sir, and_ wherefore_; for, they say, every_ why_ hath a_ wherefore._"--_Shak._( 2.)
11615M.?"
11615MIXED EXAMPLES OF ERROR"If to accommodate man and beast, heaven and earth; if this be beyond me,''tis not possible.--What consequence then follows?
11615Many such examples may be cited, but are they not examples of false syntax?
11615May I not_ call_ them what they_ are_?"
11615May a surplus ever make up for a deficiency?
11615May n''t, ca n''t,_ or_ must n''t they do it?
11615May n''t, ca n''t,_ or_ must n''t they have done it?
11615May, can,_ or_ must I have loved?
11615May, can,_ or_ must I love?
11615May, can,_ or_ must he have loved?
11615May, can,_ or_ must he love?
11615May, can,_ or_ must they not be loved?
11615May, can,_ or_ must they not have been loved?
11615May, can,_ or_ must thou have loved?
11615May, can,_ or_ must thou love?
11615May, can,_ or_ must we not have loved?
11615May, can,_ or_ must we not love?
11615May, can,_ or_ must you not have seen?
11615May, can,_ or_ must you not see?
11615May_ we not_ say?
11615Mayst, canst,_ or_ must thou have loved?
11615Mayst, canst,_ or_ must thou love?
11615Might n''t, could n''t, would n''t,_ or_ should n''t they do it?
11615Might n''t, could n''t, would n''t,_ or_ should n''t they have done it?
11615Might not Quintilian or Varro have obliged many, by recording these?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should I have loved?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should I love?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should he have loved?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should he love?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should they not be loved?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should they not have been loved?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should thou have loved?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should thou love?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should we not have loved?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should we not love?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should you not have seen?
11615Might, could, would,_ or_ should you not see?
11615Mightst, couldst, wouldst,_ or_ shouldst thou have loved?
11615Mightst, couldst, wouldst,_ or_ shouldst thou love?
11615Murray cor._"If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what_ has_ become of decency and virtue?
11615Murray cor._"Know ye not that there is[542] a prince, a great man, fallen this day in Israel?"
11615Murray cor._"Know ye not your own selves,_ that_ Jesus Christ is in you, except ye be reprobates?"
11615Murray cor._"Was it thou, or the wind,_ that_ shut the door?"
11615Murray cor._"Why does_ began_ change its ending; as, I began, Thou_ begannest_ or_ beganst_?"
11615Must a finite verb always agree with its nominative in number and person?
11615Must composites have rhythm?
11615Must every preposition govern some"_ noun or pronoun_?"
11615Nay, docs he not make man the contriver of that"natural language"which he possesses"in common with the brutes?"
11615Neither does_ oh_ or_ ah_: for, if a governing word be suggested, the objective may be proper; as,"Whom did he injure?
11615Now are not,"_ I only spoke three words_,"and,"_ He only bared his arm_,"analogous expressions?
11615Now can any one suppose that words are not here, in some true sense, the instruments of thought, or of the intellectual process thus carried on?
11615Now do not_ my, thy, his, her, our, your, their_, and_ mine, thine, hers, its, ours, yours, theirs_, all equally denote possession?
11615Now the question to find the subject of the verb_ are_, is,"My_ what_ are to come?"
11615Now then to| find a name;-- Where shall we| search for it?
11615Now who can show that this is not the case in general with the numerals of multiplication?
11615Now would not this"useful improvement"give us such a word as_ allejjable_?
11615Now, has the boy been instructed, or only puzzled?
11615Now, if this is not_ government_, what is?
11615Now, if"participles are adjectives,"to which of these five classes do they belong?
11615Now, if_ many_ is here a singular nominative, and the only subject of the verb, what shall we do with_ are_?
11615Now, in parsing an_ article_, why should the learner have to tell all this story about_ adjectives_?
11615Now, is this good English, or is it not?
11615Now, to what extent do these questions apply to the verbs in our language?
11615Now, what was it that_ freezed_ so hard?"
11615O where is now your bloom?"
11615Of how many different constructions is the objective case susceptible?
11615Of interrogating;_ eh?
11615Of the seven rules for cases, how many are applicable to relatives and interrogatives?
11615Of the twenty- four rules in this work, how many are applicable to pronouns?
11615Of what degree is the adverb_ rather_?
11615Of what does Etymology treat?
11615Of what does Etymology treat?
11615Of what does Orthography treat?
11615Of what does Orthography treat?
11615Of what does Prosody treat?
11615Of what does Prosody treat?
11615Of what does Syntax treat?
11615Of what does Syntax treat?
11615Of what does a poetic foot consist?
11615Of what does a verse consist?
11615Of what parts is syntax commonly said to consist?
11615Of what two kinds does the composition of language consist?
11615Of what use are those which can not be violated in practice?
11615On what are the different genders founded, and to what parts of speech do they belong?
11615On what are they founded?
11615On what but the vowel sound does quantity depend?
11615On what is the construction of_ same cases_ founded?
11615On what principle can one justify such an example as this:"_ All work and no play, makes_ Jack a dull boy?"
11615Or an arm?
11615Or because proprietors and publishers may profit by the credit of a book, shall it be thought illiberal to criticise it?
11615Or better:"What then shall we call the article_ the_?"
11615Or both wish''d here, where neither can be found?"
11615Or did Scott write inaccurately, whose guide"Led slowly through the_ pass''s_ jaws?"
11615Or does this adverb qualify the action of"_ reading_?"
11615Or even to adults, when they are spoken of without regard to a distinct personality or identity; as,"_ Which_ of you will go?"
11615Or is it certain that human languages used by perfect wisdom, would all be perfectly competent to their common purpose?
11615Or is it expedient to augment by it that multiplicity of other forms, which must either take this same place or be utterly rejected?
11615Or is it proper for a grammarian to name sundry authorities on both sides, excite doubt in the mind of his reader, and leave the matter_ unsettled_?
11615Or take away the grief of a wound?
11615Or this again?
11615Or this?
11615Or this?
11615Or this?
11615Or thus:"What is an_ assertor_?
11615Or thus:"What is an_ assertor_?
11615Or, as our common grammarians prompt me here to say,"May not the comparative degree increase or lessen_ the comparative_, in signification?"
11615Or, if it be supposed to mean,"above the amount of all other_ degrees_,"what is this amount?
11615Or, if none of them,_ what else_ is meant?
11615Or:"If such maxims and practices prevail, what_ will_ become of decency and virtue?"
11615Or:"Shalt thou build_ a_ house for me to dwell in?"
11615Or:"What need_ have_ you to be anxious about this event?"
11615Or:"What nouns_ are_ frequently_ used one after an other_?"
11615Or:"Why do_ ye_ plead so much for it?
11615Or:"_ Does_''_ will go_''express but_ one_ action?"
11615PRECEPT I.--Avoid a useless tautology, either of expression or of sentiment; as,"When will you return_ again_?"
11615PRONOUNS:"_ What_ am I eased?"
11615Respecting an English verb, what things are to be sought in the first place?
11615Respecting_ an_ or_ a_, how does present usage differ from the usage of ancient writers?
11615S. Journal cor._"Art thou a penitent?
11615Saw ye not?
11615Say rather:"Was this_ because there were_ twelve primary deities among the Gothic nations?"
11615Say, where greatness lies?
11615Say,"_ Why does the parliament neglect_ so important a business?"
11615Say,"_ Why have the committee_ delayed this business?"
11615See ye not?
11615See, in the original, these texts:"There was_ a man_ sent from God,"(_ John_, i, 6,) and,"What is_ man_, that thou art mindful of him?"
11615Sha n''t,_ or_ wo n''t they do it?
11615Shall I have loved?
11615Shall I love?
11615Shall I not lay me by his clay- cold side?"
11615Shall I not lay me by his clay- cold side?"
11615Shall all| the les|-sons time| has taught,| be so| long taught| in vain; And earth| be steeped| in hu|-man tears,| and groan| with hu|-man pain?"
11615Shall he who can not paint, retouch the canvass of Guido?
11615Shall he who can not write for himself, improve upon him who can?
11615Shall hu|-man pas|-sion ev|-er sway| this glo|_-rious world_| of God, And beau|-ty, wis|-dom, hap|-piness,| sleep with| the tram|-pled sod?
11615Shall man, endowed with reason, do, say, or contrive any thing, without design, and without understanding?
11615Shall modest ingenuity be allowed only to imitators and to thieves?
11615Shall now| that ho|-ly fire, In us,| that strong|-ly glow''d, In this| cold air,| expire?
11615Shall peace| ne''er lift| her ban|-ner up,| shall truth| and rea|-son cry, And men| oppress| them down| with worse| than an|-cient tyr|-anny?
11615Shall the better usage give place to the worse?
11615Shall the thing formed say to him that formed it, Why hast thou made me thus?"
11615Shall we en|-dow him with Title he|-roic, After some| warrior, Poet, or| stoic?
11615Shall we not have loved?
11615Shall we not love?
11615Shall we say that"_ place_,"in this sense, is not a noun of place?
11615Shall we then say, as he does, in the_ present tense_ conjugation of his passive verb,--''The criminal is bound?''
11615Shall we| not sing| an ode?
11615Shall_ or_ will he love?
11615Shall_ or_ will they not be loved?
11615She?
11615Should not every individual feel the deepest interest in their character and condition?"
11615Should not every individual feel_ a deep_ interest in their character and condition?"
11615Smith and Priestley cor._"Art thou proud yet?
11615So one might say,"Can a man arrive at excellence, who has no desire_ to_?"
11615So the interrogative_ who_ may be the antecedent to the relative_ that_; as,"_ Who that_ has any moral sense, dares tell lies?"
11615Sometimes we see it divided only by a comma, from the preceding question; as,"What dost thou think of this doctrine, Friend Gurth, ha?"
11615Sometimes, however, the sense forbids it to be put in the possessive case; thus, What do you think of my_ horse running_ to- day?
11615Son Louis soupire, Après ses appas; Que veut elle dire, Qu''elle ne vient pas?
11615Strephon, how can you despise Her who without thy pity dies?"
11615Strephon, how_ canst thou_ despise Her who, without thy pity,_ dies_?"
11615T. Smith''s_, 13. Who, but a child taught by language like this, would ever think of_ speaking to a noun_?
11615Ten''s?
11615That he is regenerate?
11615That is, What am I, and whence_ am I_?"
11615That is,"Ode is,_ literally_, the same_ thing that_ song or hymn_ is_?"
11615That is,"Would you have them_ dismissed_ then?
11615That is,"_ What act_, or_ thing_?"
11615That is,"_ Which man_ of you?"
11615That there must be some such relation, is obvious; but what is it?
11615That?
11615The Bible has many examples; as,"Who is_ like to_ thee in Israel?"
11615The Doctor absurdly says,"Not only things, but persons, may be the_ antecedent_ to this pronoun; as,_ Who is it_?
11615The French Bible has it:"Simon, fils de Jona, m''aimes- tu plus que_ ne font_ ceux- ci?"
11615The answer to the question,''How does he read?''
11615The double question is, Which of these forms ought to be approved and taught for that person and number?
11615The errors here committed might have been avoided thus:"What is_ a verb_?
11615The falling,"_ When_ will you_ gò_?"
11615The following are a few examples:--_ Example I.--Two ancient Stanzas, out of Many_,"This while| we are| abroad, Shall we| not touch| our lyre?
11615The meaning is,"Whose house is that house?"
11615The potential mood, like the indicative, may be used in asking a question; as,"_ Must_ I_ budge_?
11615The preposition_ till_, or_ until_, is sometimes found in use before an expression of_ times numbered_; as,"How oft shall I forgive?
11615The question which he asks, ought to have been,"_ Why did this person dismiss_ his servant so hastily?"
11615The rising,"Do you mean to_ gó_?"
11615The second person is that which denotes the hearer, or the person addressed; as,"_ Robert_, who did this?"
11615The word_ heathen_, too, makes the regular plural_ heathens_, and yet is often used in a plural sense without the_ s_; as,"Why do the_ heathen_ rage?"
11615The_ noun_ that is spoken to, is the second person; as,_ James_, were you present?
11615Then, of the twenty- four rules, how many remain for the other three parts,--nouns, pronouns, and verbs?
11615Therefore,"Dispenser"should here begin with a capital D.]"Shall not the judge of all the earth do right?"
11615Therefore,_ me_ should be_ I_; thus,"Who would not say,''If it be_ I_,''rather than,''If it be_ me_?''"]
11615These verbs are here transitive, but are they so above?
11615This also is plausible; but is the imperfection less, for being sometimes traceable to an ulterior source?
11615This author prefers"_ heardest_;"the other,"_ heardst_,"which I think better warranted:"And_ heardst_ thou why he drew his blade?
11615This is a very peculiar idiom of our language; and if we say,"Have ye not houses_ in which_ to eat and to drink?"
11615This may be supposed to mean,"_ I_, granting this to be true,_ ask_ what is to be inferred from it?"
11615This sentence, before it is parsed,_ should be transposed_; thus,''Whose is that house?''
11615This usage is now obsolete; and, in stead of it, we say,"_ Which_ is greater?"
11615This would, of course, double the_ l_ in nearly all the derivatives from_ metal, medal_,& c. But what says Custom?
11615Thou?
11615Through_ what?_ Ans.
11615Thus Milton:--"Thou following_ cry''dst_ aloud, Return, fair Eve; Whom_ fly''st_ thou?
11615Thus Webster:"We have some verbs which govern two words in the objective case; as,''Did I request thee, maker, from my clay To mold_ me man_?''
11615Thus a monosyllable, considered singly, rises from a lower to a higher tone in the question_ Nó?
11615Thus all his personal pronouns of the possessive case, he then made to be inflections of pronouns of_ a different class!_ What are they now?
11615Thus much, in this place, to those who so frequently ask,"Wherein does your book differ from Murray''s?"
11615Thus, Ã � sop''s viper and file are both personified, where it is recorded,"''What ails thee, fool?''
11615Thus:"How many times or tenses have verbs?
11615Thus_ who_ means_ what person_?
11615Thyself?
11615To explain the syntax of"_ Twice two are four_,"what can be more rational than to say,"The sense is,''Twice two_ units_, or_ things_, are four?''"
11615To the distant sun, from whose beams I derive vigour?"
11615To what adjectives is the regular method of comparison, by_ er_ and_ est_, applicable?
11615To what do adjectives relate?
11615To what do adverbs relate?
11615To what do articles relate?
11615To what does the adjective usually relate, when it stands alone after a finite verb?
11615To what general classes may adverbs be reduced?
11615To what other terms can the infinitive be connected?
11615To what part of speech is the greatest number of rules applied in parsing?
11615To what purpose can he_ transpose_ the words of a sentence, who does not first see what they mean, and how to explain or parse them as they stand?
11615To what style is the inflecting of_ shall, will, may, can, should, would, might_, and_ could_, now restricted?
11615To what then are the_ mortar_, the_ wheat_, and the_ pestle_, to be mentally subjoined?
11615To what then does_ the_ refer, but to the proportionate degree of_ deeper_ and_ clearer_?
11615To what| region| far a|-way, Bend thy| steps to| find a| home, In the| twilight| of thy| day?''
11615To which of the apposite terms is the rule for apposition to be applied?
11615Turn to his| ancestry, Or to the| church for it?
11615Twice two duads are how many?
11615Under what circumstances can a pronoun agree with either of two antecedents?
11615Under what circumstances is it common to disregard the distinction of sex?
11615Under what four heads are the apparent exceptions to this Rule noticed?
11615Under what names are words classed according to the number of their syllables?
11615Under what seven heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed?
11615Under what three heads are the apparent exceptions to this rule noticed?
11615Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed?
11615Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed?
11615Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed?
11615Under what three heads are the exceptions to this rule noticed?
11615Under what three heads are the exceptions, real or apparent, here noticed?
11615Under what three heads are the limits and exceptions to this rule noticed?
11615Under what_ figure_ of syntax did the old grammarians rank the plural construction of a noun of multitude?
11615Unit figure?
11615Upon what does distinctness depend?
11615Vainly,| vainly,| would my| steps pur|-sue: Chains of| care to| lower| earth en|-thrall me, Wherefore| thus my| weary| spirit| woo?
11615Was Murray less praiseworthy, less amiable, or less modest?
11615Was there a| dearer one Yet, than all| other?
11615Was this from a notion, that_ you_ and_ ye_, thus employed, were more analogous to_ thou_ and_ thee_ in the singular number?"
11615Was this, or something else, the desideratum of Beattie?
11615Was this_ owing to there being_ twelve primary_ deities_ among the Gothic nations?"
11615We may say,_ tenderer_ and_ tenderest, pleasanter_ and_ pleasantest, prettier_ and_ prettiest_; but who could endure_ delicater_ and_ delicatest_?"
11615We might ask in turn, when you say''the field ploughs well,''ploughs_ what_?
11615We might here, perhaps, say,"of_ Christ''s speaking_ in me,"but is not the other form better?
11615We often speak of"_ the same words_,"and of"_ different words_;"but wherein does the sameness or the difference of words consist?
11615We ought,_ therefore_, to introduce something explanatory; as,''What do you think_ of the propriety_ of my going to Niagara?"
11615Well you| know how| much you| grieve me: Cruel| charmer,| can you| go?
11615Were they not loved?
11615What actual ellipsis usually occurs with the imperative mood?
11615What adjectives are compared by means of adverbs?
11615What adjectives can not be compared?
11615What adjectives exclude, or supersede, the article?
11615What adjectives precede the article?
11615What agreement is required between words in apposition?
11615What am I?
11615What analogy is there between the things which he compares?
11615What are adverbs of degree?
11615What are adverbs of manner?
11615What are adverbs of place?
11615What are adverbs of time?
11615What are cases, in grammar?
11615What are conjunctive adverbs?
11615What are corresponsive conjunctions?
11615What are genders, in grammar?
11615What are gerundives?
11615What are inflections?
11615What are its participles?
11615What are pauses?
11615What are persons, in grammar?
11615What are the PRINCIPAL PARTS in the conjugation of a verb?
11615What are the chief constructional peculiarities of the relative pronouns?
11615What are the component parts of a sentence?
11615What are the construction and import of the phrases,_ in particular, in general_, and the like?
11615What are the faults opposite to it?
11615What are the inflections and uses of_ can_?
11615What are the inflections and uses of_ may_?
11615What are the inflections and uses of_ shall_ and_ will_?
11615What are the inflections of the verb_ be_, in its simple tenses?
11615What are the inflections of the verb_ do_, in its simple tenses?
11615What are the inflections of the verb_ have_, in its simple tenses?
11615What are the just powers of the letters?
11615What are the least parts of language?
11615What are the names of the letters in English?
11615What are the other parts called?
11615What are the principal feet in English?
11615What are the principal figures of orthography?
11615What are the principal kinds, or orders, of verse?
11615What are the principal parts of the simple verb READ?
11615What are the principal parts of the verb LOVE?
11615What are the principal parts?
11615What are the principal parts?
11615What are the principal points, or marks?
11615What are the several combinations that form dimeter, trimeter, tetrameter, pentameter, hexameter, heptameter, and octometer?
11615What are the several measures of anapestic verse?
11615What are the several measures of dactylic verse?
11615What are the several measures of iambic verse?
11615What are the several measures of trochaic verse?
11615What are the several titles, or subjects, of the twenty- four rules of syntax?
11615What are the six Marks of Reference in their usual order?
11615What are the uses of_ must_, which is uninflected?
11615What are the vowel sounds in English?
11615What are the_ Person_ and_ Number_ of a verb?
11615What are their heads?
11615What are their heads?
11615What are their heads?
11615What are their heads?
11615What are their heads?
11615What are their heads?
11615What are their names in both numbers, singular and plural?
11615What are their names?
11615What are their titles, or heads?
11615What are these_?"
11615What are thy_ comings- in_?
11615What are tones?
11615What are you a- seeking?
11615What are_ Cases_, in grammar?
11615What are_ Classes_, under the parts of speech?
11615What are_ Genders_, in grammar?
11615What are_ Modifications?_ 5.
11615What are_ Moods_, in grammar?
11615What are_ Numbers_, in grammar?
11615What are_ Persons_, in grammar?
11615What are_ Tenses_, in grammar?
11615What art thou?"
11615What art thou?"
11615What art thou?_"And, by analogy, this seems to be the case with all plurals; as,"_ Who are we?
11615What art thou?_"And, by analogy, this seems to be the case with all plurals; as,"_ Who are we?
11615What article may sometimes be used in lieu of a possessive pronoun?
11615What author declares it improper ever to connect by_ or_ or_ nor_ any nominatives that require different forms of the verb?
11615What authors deny the existence of"the case absolute?"
11615What authors prefer"_ the nearest person_,"and"_ the plural number_?"
11615What authors prefer"the_ nearest nominative_, whether singular or plural?"
11615What authors teach that interjections are put absolute, and have no government?
11615What becomes of the elongating power of e, without accent or emphasis, as in_ jun´cate, pal´ate, prel´ate_?
11615What benefit may be expected from the rules for spelling?
11615What besides a noun or a pronoun may be made the subject of a verb?
11615What can be hoped from an author who is ignorant enough to think"_ Thou walketh_"is good English?
11615What can be hoped from the grammarian who can not discern it?
11615What can be more fantastical than the following etymology, or more absurd than the following directions for parsing?
11615What can be more uncouth than to say,''What do you think of_ me_ going to Niagara?''
11615What can be transgressed, but a law, a limit, or_ something_ equivalent?
11615What can she more_ than_ tell us we are fools?"
11615What case do prepositions govern?
11615What case does an active- transitive verb or participle govern?
11615What case in Latin and Greek is reckoned_ the subject_ of the infinitive mood?
11615What case is employed as the subject of a finite verb?
11615What case is put after a verb or participle not transitive?
11615What causes the sign_ to_ to be expressed before_ study?_ Its being used in the passive voice after_ be made_."
11615What characters are employed in English?
11615What common property have the_ three cases_, by which we can clearly define_ case_?
11615What comparative view is taken of accent and emphasis?
11615What conjunction is frequently understood?
11615What constitutes a circumflex?
11615What constitutes a monotone, in elocution?
11615What constitutes the rising, and what the falling, circumflex?
11615What construction is produced by the_ repetition_ of a noun or pronoun?
11615What critic will not judge the following phraseology to be faulty?
11615What critical remark is made on the misuse of_ ever_ and_ never_?
11615What defect is observable in the common rules for"the case absolute,"or"the nominative independent?"
11615What did he say, when his fit partner, the fairest and loveliest work of God, was presented to him?
11615What difference does it make, whether we use the possessive case before words in_ ing_, or not?
11615What different sorts of types, or styles of letters, are used in English?
11615What distinction between the participial and the substantive use of verbals in_ ing_ do Crombie and others propose to make?
11615What distinction of form belongs to each of the letters?
11615What distinction, in respect to government, is to be observed between a participle and a participial noun?
11615What do Nixon and Kirkham erroneously teach about cases governed by interjections?
11615What do conjunctions connect?
11615What do our grammarians teach concerning the omission of_ to_ before the infinitive, after_ bid, dare, feel_,& c.?
11615What do we derive from these combinations of sounds and characters?
11615What do we mean by_ matter_?
11615What do you see now?
11615What do you see now?
11615What do you see?
11615What do you see?
11615What does Brown say of this doctrine?
11615What does Cobbett say about_ with_ put for_ and_?
11615What does Dr. Wilson say of the character and_ import_ of the infinitive?
11615What does Richard Johnson infer from the fact that the Latin infinitive is sometimes governed by a preposition?
11615What does elocution require?
11615What does he know of grammar, who can not directly and properly answer such questions as these?--"What are numbers, in grammar?
11615What does he say of the manner in which"the use of_ nor_ after_ not_ has been introduced?"
11615What does it include?
11615What does the combination form?"
11615What does the pronoun"_ they_"represent?
11615What does_ interjection_ mean?
11615What does_ preposition_ mean?
11615What else can the author have meant?
11615What erroneous remark have Priestley, Murray, and others, about two prepositions"in the same construction?"
11615What errors are taught by Greenleaf concerning_ dare_ and_ need_ or_ needs_?
11615What errors do Kirkham, Smith, and others, teach concerning the possessive singular?
11615What errors in the construction and punctuation of interjectional phrases are quoted from Fisk, Smith, and Kirkham?
11615What false doctrine have Lowth, Murray, and others, about the separating of the preposition from its noun?
11615What fault is found with the opinion of Priestley, Murray, Ingersoll, and Smith, that"either of them may be used with nearly equal propriety?"
11615What fault is there in the usual distribution of these rules?
11615What faults appear in the teaching of our grammarians concerning_ do_ used as a"substitute for other verbs?"
11615What faults are there in the rules given by_ Lowth, Murray, Smith_, and others, for the construction of_ like cases_?
11615What figures of rhetoric are liable to affect the agreement of pronouns with their antecedents?
11615What form of the article do the sounds of_ w_ and_ y_ require?
11615What four adverbs affect the position of the article and adjective?
11615What four things distinguish the elegant speaker?
11615What further is added concerning the terms which conjunctions connect?
11615What further is remarked concerning false teaching in relation to participles?
11615What governs the infinitive mood?
11615What grammarian approves of such expressions as,"Two and two_ is_ four?"
11615What grammarian supposes_ whom_ after_ than_ to be"in the objective case_ absolute_?"
11615What grammarians have taught that the preposition_ to_ governs the infinitive mood?
11615What great difficulty does Murray acknowledge concerning"nouns of multitude?"
11615What guide have we for dividing words into syllables?
11615What has discourse to do with sentences?
11615What has stress of voice to do with quantity?
11615What have the_ three persons_ in common, which, in a definition of_ person_, could be made evident to a child?
11615What inconsistency is found in Murray, with reference to his"_ nominative sentences_?"
11615What inferences have our grammarians made from the phrase_ than whom_?
11615What inflection of English nouns regularly changes their gender?
11615What is Antithesis?
11615What is Aphà ¦ resis?
11615What is Apocope?
11615What is Apophasis, or Paralipsis?
11615What is Apostrophe?
11615What is Climax?
11615What is Cobbett''s"_ clear principle_"on this head?
11615What is Dià ¦ resis?
11615What is Dr. Webster''s ninth rule of syntax?
11615What is Ecphonesis?
11615What is Ellipsis, in grammar?
11615What is Enallage?
11615What is English Grammar, in itself?
11615What is Erotesis?
11615What is Grammar?
11615What is Hyperbaton?
11615What is Hyperbole?
11615What is Irony?
11615What is Mimesis?
11615What is Nixon''s notion of the construction of the verb and collective noun?
11615What is Onomatopoeia?
11615What is Paragoge?
11615What is Personification?
11615What is Pleonasm?
11615What is Prosthesis?
11615What is Syllepsis?
11615What is Syncope?
11615What is Synecdoche?
11615What is Synà ¦ resis?
11615What is Tmesis?
11615What is Vision?
11615What is a Bacchy?
11615What is a CONJUNCTION, and what is the example given?
11615What is a CÃ ¦ sura?
11615What is a Dactyl?
11615What is a Metaphor?
11615What is a Metonymy?
11615What is a Moloss?
11615What is a NOUN, and what are the examples given?
11615What is a PARTICIPLE, and how is it generally formed?
11615What is a PREPOSITION, and what is the example given?
11615What is a PRONOUN, and what is the example given?
11615What is a Pyrrhic?
11615What is a Simile?
11615What is a Spondee?
11615What is a Tribrach?
11615What is a Trochee?
11615What is a VERB, and what are the examples given?
11615What is a collective noun?
11615What is a common adjective?
11615What is a common noun?
11615What is a compound adjective?
11615What is a compound word?
11615What is a conjunction?
11615What is a consonant?
11615What is a copulative conjunction?
11615What is a defective verb?
11615What is a defective verb?
11615What is a derivative word?
11615What is a diphthong?
11615What is a disjunctive conjunction?
11615What is a figure of etymology?
11615What is a figure of orthography?
11615What is a figure of rhetoric?
11615What is a figure of syntax?
11615What is a letter?
11615What is a mute?
11615What is a neuter verb?
11615What is a noun?
11615What is a numeral adjective?
11615What is a participial adjective?
11615What is a participle?
11615What is a passive verb?
11615What is a perfect definition?
11615What is a personal pronoun?
11615What is a preposition?
11615What is a primitive word?
11615What is a pronominal adjective?
11615What is a pronoun?
11615What is a proper adjective?
11615What is a proper diphthong?
11615What is a proper noun?
11615What is a proper triphthong?
11615What is a redundant verb?
11615What is a redundant verb?
11615What is a regular verb?
11615What is a relative pronoun?
11615What is a rule of grammar?
11615What is a semivowel?
11615What is a simple word?
11615What is a stanza?
11615What is a syllable?
11615What is a triphthong?
11615What is a verb called which wants some of these parts?
11615What is a verb?
11615What is a verbal or participial noun?
11615What is a vowel?
11615What is a word?
11615What is a_ Figure_ in grammar?
11615What is a_ Praxis?_ and what is said of the word?
11615What is a_ Praxis?_ and what is said of the word?
11615What is a_ clause_, or_ member_?
11615What is a_ compound sentence_?
11615What is a_ phrase_?
11615What is a_ sentence_?
11615What is a_ simple_ sentence?
11615What is a_ triphthong_?
11615What is accent?
11615What is affirmed of the difficulties of parsing the infinitive according to the code of Murray?
11615What is an ADJECTIVE, and what are the examples given?
11615What is an ADVERB, and what is the example given?
11615What is an ARTICLE?
11615What is an Allegory?
11615What is an Amphibrach?
11615What is an Amphimac?
11615What is an Anapest?
11615What is an Antibachy?
11615What is an Archaism?
11615What is an English Grammar?
11615What is an INTERJECTION, and what are the examples given?
11615What is an Iambus?
11615What is an abstract noun?
11615What is an active- intransitive verb?
11615What is an active- transitive verb?
11615What is an adjective?
11615What is an adverb?
11615What is an article?
11615What is an auxiliary, in grammar?
11615What is an elementary sound of human voice, or speech?
11615What is an example, as used in teaching?
11615What is an exercise?
11615What is an improper diphthong?
11615What is an improper triphthong?
11615What is an interjection?
11615What is an interrogative pronoun?
11615What is an irregular verb?
11615What is an irregular verb?
11615What is articulation?
11615What is blank verse?
11615What is cadence?
11615What is called the falling or downward inflection?
11615What is called the rising or upward inflection?
11615What is comparison, in grammar?
11615What is composite verse?
11615What is elocution?
11615What is emphasis?
11615What is it but an idle conjecture?
11615What is it that is called_ Orthoëpy?_ 3.
11615What is it,"to analyze a sentence?"
11615What is it,_ to read_?
11615What is it,_ to speak_?
11615What is it,_ to write_?
11615What is meant by the term,"_ Parts of Speech?_"3.
11615What is meant by_ scanning_ or_ scansion_?
11615What is meant, when we speak of the powers of the letters?
11615What is necessary to every finite verb?
11615What is noted in relation to the unamendable imperfections sometimes found in ancient writings?
11615What is noted of the ambiguous use of_ but_ or_ only_?
11615What is noted of the word_ which_, as applied to persons?
11615What is observed concerning the distinction of_ voice_ in the simple infinitive and the first participle?
11615What is observed concerning the further extension of this rule to nouns and pronouns of the third person?
11615What is observed concerning the place of the verb?
11615What is observed in relation to the exceptions to Rule 23d?
11615What is observed of Murray''s"_ infinitive made absolute_?"
11615What is observed of adjectives preceded by_ the_ and used elliptically?
11615What is observed of collective nouns used partitively?
11615What is observed of nouns of weight, measure, or time, coming immediately together?
11615What is observed of sentences like the following, in which there seems to be no nominative:"There_ are_ from eight to twelve professors?"
11615What is observed of such phrases as,"_ hand to hand_,"--"_face to face_?"
11615What is observed of the agreement of verbs in interrogative sentences?
11615What is observed of the expressions,_ these people, these gentry, these folk_?
11615What is observed of the frequent ellipses of the verb_ to be_, supposed by Allen and others?
11615What is observed of the multiplicity of uses to which the participle in_ ing_ may be turned?
11615What is observed of the nouns used in dates?
11615What is observed of the relation of conjunctive adverbs, and of the misuse of_ when_?
11615What is observed of the term_ not but_, and of the adverbial use of_ but_?
11615What is observed of the word_ worth_?
11615What is observed of the words_ like, near_, and_ nigh_?
11615What is observed of those rules which suppose every adjective to relate to some noun?
11615What is observed of verbs that agree with the nearest nominative, and are understood to the rest?
11615What is observed of_ never_ and_ ever_ as seeming to be adjectives, and being liable to contraction?
11615What is observed of_ this_ and_ that_ as referring to two nouns connected?
11615What is offered in refutation of Peirce''s doctrine?
11615What is our nearest approach to the Latin construction of the accusative before the infinitive?
11615What is pronunciation?
11615What is quantity?
11615What is remarked concerning the place of the pronoun of the first person singular?
11615What is remarked concerning the rhyming syllables?
11615What is remarked concerning the use of_ of, to, on_, and_ upon_?
11615What is remarked of different cases used indiscriminately before the participle or verbal noun?
11615What is remarked of instances like the following:"Prior''s_ Henry and Emma contains_ an other beautiful example?"
11615What is remarked of such examples as this:"The_ Pleasures_ of Memory_ was_ published in 1702?"
11615What is remarked of the difference between the indicative and the subjunctive mood, and of the limits of the latter?
11615What is remarked of the ellipsis or omission of the relative?
11615What is remarked of the faulty omission of the pronoun_ it_ before the verb?
11615What is remarked of the placing of two or more adjectives before one noun?
11615What is remarked of the possessive relation between time and action?
11615What is remarked of the use of adjectives for adverbs?
11615What is remarked of two or more conjunctions coming together?
11615What is remarked of two or more negatives in the same sentence?
11615What is remarked on the place and character of the critical notes and the general rule?
11615What is replied to Dr. Adam''s suggestion,"Adverbs sometimes qualify substantives?"
11615What is required of the pupil in syntactical parsing?
11615What is required of the pupil in the EIGHTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the ELEVENTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the FIFTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the FIRST PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the FOURTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the NINTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the SECOND PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the SEVENTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the SIXTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the TENTH PRAXIS?
11615What is required of the pupil in the THIRD PRAXIS?
11615What is rhyme?
11615What is said in regard to the placing of adverbs?
11615What is said of Dr. Adam''s"_ To_ taken_ absolutely_?"
11615What is said of Murray''s mode of treating this subject?
11615What is said of adjectives as agreeing or disagreeing with their nouns in number?
11615What is said of certain infinitives supposed to be erroneously put for participles?
11615What is said of ellipsis after_ than_ or_ as_?
11615What is said of needless articles?
11615What is said of nouns used in exclamations, or in mottoes and abbreviated sayings?
11615What is said of rhetorical pauses?
11615What is said of small letters?
11615What is said of the comparison of adverbs by_ more_ and_ most, less_ and_ least_?
11615What is said of the compound personal pronouns?
11615What is said of the correction of those examples in which a needless article or possessive is put before the participle?
11615What is said of the different parts of speech contained in the list of correspondents?
11615What is said of the distinguishing or confounding of different parts of speech, such as verbs, participles, and nouns?
11615What is said of the duration of pauses, and the taking of breath?
11615What is said of the ellipsis of one or the other of the terms?
11615What is said of the fifth method of analysis?
11615What is said of the gender of nouns of multitude?
11615What is said of the notation of them?
11615What is said of the omission of_ s_ from the possessive singular on account of its hissing sound?
11615What is said of the parsing of a preposition?
11615What is said of the participles which some suppose to be put absolute?
11615What is said of the place of the interjection?
11615What is said of the placing of prepositions?
11615What is said of the position of the adjective?
11615What is said of the position of the infinitive?
11615What is said of the prepositions which follow_ averse_ and_ aversion, except_ and_ exception_?
11615What is said of the secondary feet?
11615What is said of the sign_ to_ after_ than_ or_ as_?
11615What is said of the slanting strokes in Roman letters?
11615What is said of the sounds of_ c_ and_ g_?
11615What is said of the sounds of_ j_ and_ x_?
11615What is said of the suppression of the antecedent?
11615What is said of the suppression of the conjunction_ and_?
11615What is said of the suppression of_ to_ and the insertion of_ be_; as,"To make himself_ be_ heard?"
11615What is said of the teaching of Murray and others, that,"The participle with its adjuncts may be considered as a_ substantive phrase_?"
11615What is said of the transitive use of such words as_ unbecoming_?
11615What is said of the transposition of the two terms?
11615What is said of this figure?
11615What is said of those examples in which participles seem to be made the objects of verbs?
11615What is said of those sentences in which an interjection is followed by a preposition or the conjunction_ that_?
11615What is said of_ O_ and the vocative case?
11615What is said of_ an_ or_ a_ before an adjective of number?
11615What is said of_ and_ as supposed to be used to call attention?
11615What is said of_ sc_, or_ s_ before_ c_?
11615What is said of_ see_, as governing the infinitive?
11615What is shown of the later teaching to which Murray''s erroneous and unoriginal remark about"_ O, oh_, and_ ah_,"has given rise?
11615What is spelling?
11615What is stated of the retaining of adverbs with participial nouns?
11615What is stated of the rules of Adam, Lowth, Murray, and Kirkham, concerning collective nouns?
11615What is suggested concerning the character and import of_ than_ and_ as_?
11615What is the Rule for the pointing of_ Participles?_ 10.
11615What is the comparative degree?
11615What is the comparative degree?
11615What is the compound form of conjugating active or neuter verbs?
11615What is the conjugation of a verb?
11615What is the construction of a noun, when it emphatically repeats the idea suggested by a preceding sentence?
11615What is the construction of such expressions as this:"A torch,_ snuff_ and_ all, goes_ out in a moment?"
11615What is the construction of the pronoun in"_ Ah me!_""_ Ah him!_"or any similar exclamation?
11615What is the construction when two nominatives are connected by_ as well as, but_, or_ save_?
11615What is the declension of a noun?
11615What is the declension of a pronoun?
11615What is the difference between_ in_ and_ into_?
11615What is the dispute among grammarians concerning the adoption of_ or_ or_ nor_ after_ not_ or_ no_?
11615What is the effect of putting one article for the other, and how shall we know which to choose?
11615What is the effect of the word_ the_ before comparatives and superlatives?
11615What is the essential character of the_ Notes_ which are placed under the rules of syntax?
11615What is the feminine gender?
11615What is the feminine gender?
11615What is the fifth example of conjugation?
11615What is the first example of conjugation?
11615What is the first method of analysis, according to this code of syntax?
11615What is the first person?
11615What is the first person?
11615What is the first- future tense?
11615What is the form for the familiar style?
11615What is the form of negation for the solemn style, second person singular?
11615What is the form of question in the solemn style, with this verb in the second person singular?
11615What is the fourth example of conjugation?
11615What is the fourth method of analysis?
11615What is the general rule?
11615What is the general use of the Colon?
11615What is the general use of the Comma?
11615What is the general use of the Dash?
11615What is the general use of the Period?
11615What is the general use of the Semicolon?
11615What is the guide to a right emphasis?
11615What is the imperative mood?
11615What is the imperfect participle?
11615What is the imperfect tense?
11615What is the indicative mood?
11615What is the infinitive mood?
11615What is the infinitive, and for what things may it stand?
11615What is the interrogative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ I_?
11615What is the interrogative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ he_?
11615What is the kind, and what the degree, of originality, which are to be commended in works of this sort?
11615What is the masculine gender?
11615What is the masculine gender?
11615What is the name, or title, of this book?
11615What is the negative form of the verb_ love_ with the pronoun_ he_?
11615What is the neuter gender?
11615What is the neuter gender?
11615What is the nominative case?
11615What is the nominative case?
11615What is the object of a verb, participle, or preposition?
11615What is the objective case?
11615What is the objective case?"
11615What is the opinion of Nixon, and of Crombie?
11615What is the perfect participle?
11615What is the perfect tense?
11615What is the pluperfect tense?
11615What is the plural number?
11615What is the plural number?
11615What is the position of the article with respect to its noun?
11615What is the positive degree?
11615What is the possessive case?
11615What is the possessive case?
11615What is the potential mood?
11615What is the power, and what the position, of a conjunction that connects sentences or clauses?
11615What is the preperfect participle?
11615What is the present tense?
11615What is the quantity of a syllable?
11615What is the regular construction of participles, as such?
11615What is the result of a uniform mixture?
11615What is the rhythm of verse?
11615What is the rule which speaks of a finite_ Verb Understood?_ 8.
11615What is the second example of conjugation?
11615What is the second method of analysis?
11615What is the second person?
11615What is the second person?
11615What is the second- future tense?
11615What is the simplest form of an English conjugation?
11615What is the singular number?
11615What is the singular number?
11615What is the subject of a verb?
11615What is the subjunctive mood?
11615What is the superlative degree?
11615What is the superlative degree?
11615What is the syntax of interjections?
11615What is the syntax of the verb, when one of its nominatives is expressed, and an other or others implied?
11615What is the syntax of the verb, when there are nominatives connected by_ as_?
11615What is the third example of conjugation?
11615What is the third method of analysis?
11615What is the third person?
11615What is the third person?
11615What is the use of doing so?
11615What is the use of prepositions?
11615What is the use of the Acute Accent?
11615What is the use of the Apostrophe?
11615What is the use of the Asterism, or the Three Stars?
11615What is the use of the Brace?
11615What is the use of the Breve, or Stenotone?
11615What is the use of the Caret?
11615What is the use of the Cedilla?
11615What is the use of the Circumflex?
11615What is the use of the Crotchets, or Brackets?
11615What is the use of the Curves, or Marks of Parenthesis?
11615What is the use of the Dià ¦ resis, or Dialysis?
11615What is the use of the Ecphoneme, or Note of Exclamation?
11615What is the use of the Ellipsis, or Suppression?
11615What is the use of the Eroteme, or Note of Interrogation?
11615What is the use of the Grave Accent?
11615What is the use of the Guillemets, or Quotation Points?
11615What is the use of the Hyphen?
11615What is the use of the Index, or Hand?
11615What is the use of the Macron, or Macrotone?
11615What is the use of the Paragraph?
11615What is the use of the Section?
11615What is the usual construction of_ each other_ and_ one an other_?
11615What is the usual position of pronouns, and what exceptions are there?
11615What is the usual position of the article with respect to an adjective and a noun?
11615What is the usual position of the nominative and verb, and when is it varied?
11615What is the usual position of the objective case, and what exceptions are there?
11615What is the usual position of the possessive case, and what exceptions are there?
11615What is the_ Perfect Participle_?
11615What is the_ agreement_ of words?
11615What is the_ arrangement_ of words?
11615What is the_ government_ of words?
11615What is the_ relation_ of words?
11615What is there remarkable in the construction of_ ourself_ and_ yourself_?
11615What is there that_ can not be named or mentioned?_ Others again are restricted to one noun, or to a few; as,_ to transgress a law, or rule_.
11615What is this"vague sense?"
11615What is to be done with"_ Thinks I_ to myself,"and the like?
11615What is told of two prepositions coming together?
11615What is verse, as distinguished from prose?
11615What is"_ being builded_"or"_ being printed_,"but"an_ imperfect passive participle_?"
11615What is_ Parsing?_ and what relation does it bear to grammar?
11615What is_ Parsing?_ and what relation does it bear to grammar?
11615What is_ Punctuation?_ 3.
11615What is_ Utterance?_ 2.
11615What is_ Versification_?
11615What is_ apposition_, and from whom did it receive this name?
11615What is_ as_ when it is made the subject or the object of a verb?
11615What is_ the Imperfect Participle_?
11615What is_ the Present_?
11615What is_ the Preterit_?
11615What is_ to_ here?
11615What kind of a stone?
11615What kind of a way?
11615What kinds of words can take different cases after them?
11615What knowledge does pronunciation require?
11615What large exception to this rule has been recently discovered by Dr. Bullions?
11615What less pardonable misnomer, than for a great critic to call the sign of long quantity a"_ hyphen_"?
11615What letters are called liquids?
11615What letters are reckoned mutes?
11615What letters are reckoned semivowels?
11615What letters are vowels?
11615What made this vast difference, but this: That_ one was_ accustomed to have what_ they_ called or cried for;_ the other_ to go without it?"
11615What marvel then, that all his multifarious grammars of the English language are despised?
11615What marvel, then, that he falls into errors, both of doctrine and of practice?
11615What mean the technical words,_ catalectic, acatalectic_, and_ hypermeter_?
11615What modifications have adjectives?
11615What modifications have adverbs?
11615What modifications have nouns?
11615What modifications have pronouns?
11615What modifications have the articles?
11615What modifications have verbs?
11615What monosyllables, contrary to this rule, end with_ c_ only?
11615What name is given to the sound of a letter?
11615What needless ellipses both of nominatives and of verbs are commonly supposed by our grammarians?
11615What notice is taken of the application of the rule for"_ O, oh_, and_ ah_,"to nouns of the second person?
11615What notice is taken of the application of_ between, betwixt, among, amongst, amid, amidst_?
11615What notion had Dr. Adam of simple and compound sentences?
11615What notions are inculcated by different grammarians about the introductory word_ there_?
11615What notions have been entertained concerning the word_ to_ as used before the infinitive verb?
11615What nouns, then, are masculine?
11615What number is_ pens_?
11615What objections are there to the rule, with its exceptions,"One verb governs an other in the infinitive mood?"
11615What observation is made respecting exceptions to this rule?
11615What odd use is sometimes made of the pronoun_ your_?
11615What order is observed in the placing of these notes, if some rules have many, and others few or none?
11615What orders of verse arise from these?
11615What other common modes of expression are censured by this author under the same head?
11615What other orders are there?
11615What participle is often understood after nouns put absolute?
11615What particular classes are included among common nouns?
11615What particular convenience do we find in having most of our tenses composed of separable words?
11615What parts of speech can be omitted, by ellipsis?
11615What parts of speech have no other syntactical property than that of simple relation?
11615What pauses are denoted by the first four points?
11615What pauses are particularly ungraceful?
11615What pauses are required by the other four?
11615What peculiar meaning does this form convey?
11615What peculiar name have some of these?
11615What peculiarities are noticed in regard to the noun_ side_?
11615What peculiarities has the possessive case in regard to correlatives?
11615What peculiarity has the relative_ what_?
11615What peculiarity is there in the construction of nouns of time, measure, distance, or value?
11615What preposition is often put between nouns that signify the same thing?
11615What principle of universal grammar determines the gender when both sexes are taken together?
11615What principles of spelling must be observed in the comparing of adjectives?
11615What pronoun is sometimes an expletive, and sometimes used with reference to an infinitive following it?
11615What pronoun is sometimes applied to animals so as not to distinguish their sex?
11615What quantity coincides with accent or emphasis?
11615What questionable uses of participles are commonly admitted by grammarians?
11615What questions are raised among grammarians, about the construction of_ as follow_ or_ as follows_, and other similar phrases?
11615What reasons can be adduced to show that the infinitive is not a noun?
11615What regulates accent?
11615What relation of case occurs between nouns connected by_ as_?
11615What relative is applied to a proper noun taken merely as a name?
11615What rule does Dr. Webster give for such examples as the following:"There_ was_ more than a hundred and fifty thousand pounds?"
11615What rule speaks of the separation of_ Words in Apposition?_ 2.
11615What rules of relation are commonly found in grammars?
11615What say Crombie and others about this disputable phraseology?
11615What say Murray, Ingersoll, and Lennie, about interjections and cases?
11615What says Blair about tones?
11615What says Brown of this their teaching?
11615What says Churchill about the notion that certain conjunctions govern the subjunctive mood?
11615What says Comstock of rules for inflections?
11615What says Critical Note 1st of_ the parts of speech_?
11615What says Exception 1st to Rule 2d of_ Restrictive Relatives?_ 20.
11615What says Exception 1st to Rule 4th of_ Two Words with Adjuncts?_ 23.
11615What says Exception 1st to Rule 7th of_ Complex Names?_ 3.
11615What says Exception 2d to Rule 2d of_ Short Terms closely Connected?_ 21.
11615What says Exception 2d to Rule 4th of_ Two Terms Contrasted?_ 24.
11615What says Exception 2d to Rule 7th of_ Close Apposition?_ 4.
11615What says Exception 3d to Rule 2d of_ Elliptical Members United?_ 22.
11615What says Exception 3d to Rule 4th of a mere_ Alternative of Words?_ 25.
11615What says Exception 3d to Rule 7th of_ a Pronoun without a Pause?_ 5.
11615What says Exception 4th to Rule 4th of_ Conjunctions Understood?_ LESSON III.--OF THE COMMA.
11615What says Exception 4th to Rule 7th of_ Names Acquired?_ 6.
11615What says Hiley?
11615What says Lindley Murray about this passive government?
11615What says Murray?
11615What says Note 10th of_ improper omissions_?
11615What says Note 11th of_ literary blunders_?
11615What says Note 12th of_ literary perversions_?
11615What says Note 13th of_ literary awkwardness_?
11615What says Note 14th of_ literary ignorance_?
11615What says Note 15th of_ literary silliness_?
11615What says Note 16th of_ errors incorrigible_?
11615What says Note 2d of_ the doubtful reference_ of words?
11615What says Note 3d of_ definitions_?
11615What says Note 4th of_ comparisons_?
11615What says Note 5th of_ falsities_?
11615What says Note 6th of_ absurdities_?
11615What says Note 7th of_ self- contradiction_?
11615What says Note 8th of_ senseless jumbling_?
11615What says Note 9th of_ words needless_?
11615What says Rippingham about it?
11615What says Rule 10th of_ Infinitives?_ 18.
11615What says Rule 10th of_ Pronouns_?
11615What says Rule 10th of_ final e retained?_ 26.
11615What says Rule 10th of_ personifications_?
11615What says Rule 11th of_ Participles?_ 19.
11615What says Rule 11th of_ Pronouns_?
11615What says Rule 11th of_ derivatives_?
11615What says Rule 11th of_ final y changed?_ 28.
11615What says Rule 12th of_ Adverbs?_ 20.
11615What says Rule 12th of_ I and O_?
11615What says Rule 12th of_ Pronouns_?
11615What says Rule 12th of_ final y unchanged?_ 30.
11615What says Rule 13th of the terminations_ ize_ and_ ise?_ 32.
11615What says Rule 13th of_ Conjunctions?_ 21.
11615What says Rule 13th of_ Pronouns_?
11615What says Rule 13th of_ poetry_?
11615What says Rule 14th of_ Finite Verbs_?
11615What says Rule 14th of_ Prepositions?_ 22.
11615What says Rule 14th of_ compounds?_ 34.
11615What says Rule 14th of_ examples_?
11615What says Rule 15th of_ Finite Verbs_?
11615What says Rule 15th of_ Interjections?_ 23.
11615What says Rule 15th of_ chief words_?
11615What says Rule 15th of_ usage_, as a law of spelling?
11615What says Rule 16th of_ Finite Verbs_?
11615What says Rule 16th of_ Words Repeated?_ 24.
11615What says Rule 16th of_ needless capitals_?
11615What says Rule 17th of_ Dependent Quotations?_ LESSON II.--OF THE COMMA.
11615What says Rule 17th of_ Finite Verbs_?
11615What says Rule 18th of_ Infinitives_?
11615What says Rule 19th of_ Infinitives_?
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Abrupt Pauses?_ 5.
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Additional Remarks?_ 5.
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Articles_?
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Complex Members?_ 5.
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Distinct Sentences?_ 5.
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Interjections?_ 5.
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Questions Direct?_ 5.
11615What says Rule 1st of_ Simple Sentences?_ 9.
11615What says Rule 1st of_ books_?
11615What says Rule 1st of_ compounds_?
11615What says Rule 1st of_ consonants_?
11615What says Rule 1st of_ final f, l_, or_ s_?
11615What says Rule 1st of_ the Parenthesis?_ 5.
11615What says Rule 20th of_ Participles_?
11615What says Rule 21st of_ Adverbs_?
11615What says Rule 22d of_ Conjunctions_?
11615What says Rule 23d of_ Prepositions_?
11615What says Rule 24th of_ Interjections_?
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Allied Sentences?_ 6.
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Emphatic Pauses?_ 6.
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Greater Pauses?_ 6.
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Invocations?_ 6.
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Nominatives_?
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Questions United?_ 6.
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Simple Members?_ 10.
11615What says Rule 2d of_ Simple Members?_ 6.
11615What says Rule 2d of_ first words_?
11615What says Rule 2d of_ other finals_?
11615What says Rule 2d of_ simples_?
11615What says Rule 2d of_ vowels_?
11615What says Rule 3d of the_ doubling_ of consonants?
11615What says Rule 3d of_ Apposition_?
11615What says Rule 3d of_ More than Two Words?_ 11.
11615What says Rule 3d of_ names of Deity_?
11615What says Rule 3d of_ terminations_?
11615What says Rule 3d of_ the sense_?
11615What says Rule 4th of_ Only Two Words?_ 12.
11615What says Rule 4th of_ Possessives_?
11615What says Rule 4th of_ ellipses_?
11615What says Rule 4th of_ prefixes_?
11615What says Rule 4th of_ proper names_?
11615What says Rule 4th_ against the doubling_ of consonants?
11615What says Rule 5th of_ Objectives_?
11615What says Rule 5th of_ Words in Pairs?_ 13.
11615What says Rule 5th of_ compounds_?
11615What says Rule 5th of_ final ck_?
11615What says Rule 5th of_ the hyphen_?
11615What says Rule 5th of_ titles_?
11615What says Rule 6th of the_ retaining_ of double letters before affixes?
11615What says Rule 6th of_ Same Cases_?
11615What says Rule 6th of_ Words put Absolute?_ 14.
11615What says Rule 6th of_ lines full_?
11615What says Rule 6th of_ no hyphen_?
11615What says Rule 6th of_ one capital_?
11615What says Rule 7th of the_ retaining_ of double letters after prefixes?
11615What says Rule 7th of_ Objectives_?
11615What says Rule 7th of_ Words in Apposition?_ 15.
11615What says Rule 7th of_ two capitals_?
11615What says Rule 8th of the_ Nominative Absolute_?
11615What says Rule 8th of_ Adjectives?_ 16.
11615What says Rule 8th of_ compounds_?
11615What says Rule 8th of_ final ll_, and of_ final l single_?
11615What says Rule 9th of_ Adjectives_?
11615What says Rule 9th of_ Finite Verbs?_ 17.
11615What says Rule 9th of_ apposition_?
11615What says Rule 9th of_ final e omitted_?
11615What says Sheridan, of a good articulation?
11615What says the Exception to Rule 1st of a_ Long Simple Sentence?_ 19.
11615What says the Exception to Rule 8th of_ Adjectives Restrictive?_ 7.
11615What says the Exception to Rule 9th of a_ Very Slight Pause?_ 9.
11615What sense would there be in expounding this to mean,"And_ neither_ a true one?"
11615What shall I say to you?
11615What shall be said of the following?
11615What shall we do when_ of_ after the participial noun is objectionable?
11615What should regulate the inflections?
11615What signifies it, to object to his language as"_ unintelligible_"if it conveys his idea better than any other could?
11615What sort of scholarship is that in which_ fictitious examples_ mislead even their inventors?
11615What sounds has the consonant_ g_?
11615What strange error is taught by Cobbett, and by Wright, in regard to the relative and its verb?
11615What strictures are made on Murray, Lennie, and Bullions, with reference to examples in which an infinitive follows the participial noun?
11615What strictures are made on the classification and placing of the word_ only_?
11615What suggestions are made concerning the word_ no_?
11615What suggestions are made in relation to the number of rules or notes, and the completeness of the system?
11615What syllables have stress in a pure anapestic line?
11615What syllables have stress in a pure dactylic line?
11615What syllables have stress in a pure iambic line?
11615What syllables have stress in a pure trochaic line?
11615What ten chapters of the foregoing code of syntax treat of the ten parts of speech in their order?
11615What then becomes of the thousands of"adjectives"embraced in the"& c."quoted above?
11615What then is the middle ground for the true grammarian?
11615What then is the remedy?
11615What then is the_ agreement_ of words?
11615What then is"being built,"but"_ continuing to be built_,"the same, or nearly the same, as"_ building_"taken passively?
11615What then of the following example:"Which of_ those two persons_ has_ most_ distinguished himself?"
11615What then shall be thought of the explanations which our grammarians have given of this degree of comparison?
11615What then?
11615What then?
11615What things are commonly exhibited wholly in capitals?
11615What three modes of construction appear like exceptions to Rule 4th?
11615What two cases of nouns are alike in form, and how are they distinguished?
11615What two great authors differ in regard to the correctness of the phrases,"_ upon the rule''s being observed_,"and"_ of its being neglected_?"
11615What uniformity have stanzas?
11615What variation may occur in the first foot?
11615What variety have they?
11615What variety is there in the letters?
11615What verbs are defective?
11615What verbs are used as auxiliaries?
11615What verbs take the infinitive after them without the preposition_ to_?
11615What verbs take the participle after them, and not the infinitive?
11615What was language at first, and what is it now?
11615What whimsical account of the English infinitive is given by Nixon?
11615What words does this rule claim, which might seem to come under Rule 7th?
11615What words must be supplied in parsing?
11615What words want the comparative?
11615What words want the positive?
11615What would be the natural effect of the following sentence, which I quote from a late well- written religious homily?
11615What, for instance, would they substitute for the following very inaccurate expression from the critical belles- lettres of Dr. Blair?
11615What, in his view, is a good articulation?
11615What, of_ ce, ci_, and_ ch_?
11615What, then, are interjections?
11615What, then, is the common order of literary division, downwards, throughout?
11615What, then, is"THE PRODUCTIVE SYSTEM?"
11615What?
11615What?
11615What_ excess_ of skill, or what_ very high degree_ of acuteness, have the_ brightest_ and_ best_ of these grammarians exhibited?
11615Whatever?
11615Whatsoever?_ LESSON XI.--PARSING.
11615When Dr. Johnson was asked,"What is_ poetry_?"
11615When a noun is implied in an adjective of a different number, which word is regarded in the formation of the verb?
11615When a pronoun represents a phrase or sentence, of what person, number, and gender is it?
11615When a verb has nominatives of different persons or numbers, connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, with which of them does it_ commonly_ agree?
11615When are_ w_ and_ y_ consonants?
11615When do we employ the same relative in successive clauses?
11615When does a common noun not admit an article?
11615When does a_ participle_"admit the degrees of comparison?"
11615When does it agree with the remoter nominative?
11615When is an active verb followed by two words in apposition?
11615When is this figure allowable?
11615When is_ the_ required before adjectives?
11615When joint antecedents are of different persons, with which person does the pronoun agree?
11615When joint antecedents differ in gender, of what gender is the pronoun?
11615When one can condense several different principles into one rule, is it not expedient to do so?
11615When ought_ an_ to be used, and what are the examples?
11615When shall I, like Oscar, travel in the light of my steel?"
11615When should_ a_ be used, and what are the examples?
11615When the Bible was translated, either form appears to have been used before the letter_ h_; as,"Hath not_ my hand_ made all these things?"
11615When the adjective follows its noun, where stands the article?
11615When the confounding of such distinctions is begun, who knows where it will end?
11615When the gender is figurative, how is it indicated?
11615When the nominatives connected are of different persons, of what person is the verb?
11615When the noun is such as may be applied to either sex, how is the gender usually determined?
11615When the speaker changes his nominative, to take a stronger one, what concord has the verb?
11615When the verbs,_ say, answer, reply_, and the like, introduce the parts of a dialogue; as,"''Son of affliction,''_ said Omar_,''who art thou?''
11615When two declinable words are connected by a conjunction, why are they of the same case?
11615When two or more infinitives occur in the same construction, must_ to_ be used with each?
11615When two or more nominatives connected by_ and_ explain a preceding one, what agreement has the verb?
11615When verbs are connected by_ and, or_, or_ nor_, do they necessarily agree with the same nominative?
11615When will the cause of learning cease to have assailants and underminers among those who profess to serve it?
11615When words commonly used as adverbs assume the construction of nouns, how are they to be parsed?
11615When, and in what case, is a noun or pronoun put absolute in English?
11615When, or how often, should articles be inserted?
11615When?
11615Whence?_ or,_ Whereabout?_ including these which ask.
11615Whence?_ or,_ Whereabout?_ including these which ask.
11615Where and what is this"_ thing_"which is so bad that the leading Senator has"never heard a worse?"
11615Where are the positives which are here supposed to be"_ increased to the highest degree_?"
11615Where is quantity variable, and where fixed, in English?
11615Where is the noun or pronoun, when an adjective follows an infinitive or a participle?
11615Where is the| thatch- roofà © d| village, the| home of A|-cadian| farmers?"
11615Where must the sign of possession be put, when two or more possessives are in apposition?
11615Where the cit|-ron and ol|-ive are fair|-est of fruit, And the voice| of the night|-ingale nev|-er is mute?
11615Where the sense admits of a choice of construction in respect to the participle, is not attention due to the analogy of general grammar?
11615Where the vir|-gins are soft as the ros|-es they twine, And all,| save the spir|-it of man,| is divine?
11615Where then holds the anchor of his praise?
11615Where then is the propriety of their notion of infinitive government?
11615Where usage is utterly unsettled, what guidance should be sought?
11615Where, but among the heroes and the wise?"
11615Where?
11615Where?
11615Wherefore Beza expressed it differently:"Simon_ fili Jonà ¦_, diligis me plus_ quâm hi_?"
11615Wherein are the common rule and definition of apposition faulty?
11615Wherein consists_ the truth_ of grammatical doctrine, and how can one judge of what others teach?
11615Whether of them twain did the will of his father?
11615Which are the copulative conjunctions?
11615Which are the corresponsive conjunctions?
11615Which are the disjunctive conjunctions?
11615Which are the interrogative pronouns?
11615Which are the most apt to be taken plurally, collections of persons, or collections of things?
11615Which are the relative pronouns?
11615Which are these seven?
11615Which exercise brings into use the greater number of grammatical principles, parsing or correcting?
11615Which is the best adapted to strong emphasis?
11615Which is the definite article, and what does it denote?
11615Which is the indefinite article, and what does it denote?
11615Which kind of inflection is said to be most common?
11615Which number does_ the_ limit, the singular or the plural?
11615Which of the letters can form syllables of themselves?
11615Which of the ten parts of speech is left without any rule of syntax?
11615Which of the visors was it, that you wore?
11615Which of the vowel sounds form words?
11615Which of_ these_ are called_ Vowels_?"
11615Which, now, is"more judicious,"such confusion as this, or the arrangement which has been common from time immemorial?
11615Which, now, of all these did Charles the Second mean, when he gave the colony this name, with his charter, in 1663?
11615Which, then, of the two or three modifications or forms, do they mean, when they say,"Number is_ the distinction_"& c.?
11615Which?
11615Whichever?
11615Whichsoever?
11615Whither?
11615Who are they?
11615Who are you?
11615Who art thou?
11615Who breaks a butterfly upon a wheel?"
11615Who breaks a butterfly upon_ the_ wheel?"
11615Who does not know that such syllables as"_ at, bat_, and_ cur_"are often long in poetry?
11615Who is he that will pretend that the solemn style of the Bible may be used in familiar discourse, without a mouthing affectation?
11615Who shall decide whether the contributions which any individual may make to our grammatical code, are, or are not, consonant with the best usage?
11615Who shall say that_ Daleth, Delta_, and_ Dee_, are not three_ real words_, each equally important in the language to which it properly belongs?
11615Who that knows what it is, to name a letter, can think of naming_ w_ by double_ o_?
11615Who was her| father?
11615Who was her| mother?
11615Who, in common parlance, has ever said,"He_ was loving me_,"or any thing like it?
11615Who, then, are here the neologists, the innovators, the impairers of the language?
11615Whom did he copy when he said,"The phrases,_ more perfect_, and_ most perfect_, are improper?"
11615Whose are"The Principles of English Grammar"which Dr. Bullions has republished with alterations,"on the plan of Murray''s Grammar?"
11615Whose fault is that?
11615Whosoever?
11615Why are both parties wrong in this instance?
11615Why are interjections so called?
11615Why are not these things defined under the head of pronouns?
11615Why are not these things defined under the head of verbs?
11615Why are the anapestic measures few?
11615Why are these feet principal?
11615Why are verbs called by that name?
11615Why are we apt to use a plural pronoun after antecedents of different genders?
11615Why can not an omission of the possessive sign be accounted a true_ ellipsis_?
11615Why can not the omission of an article constitute a proper ellipsis?
11615Why can not two nouns, each having the possessive sign, be put in apposition with each other?
11615Why delayest thou thy coming?
11615Why delayest thou thy coming?
11615Why did Murray think all Webster''s examples under this rule bad English?
11615Why do collective nouns singular, when connected by_ or_ or_ nor_, admit of a plural verb?
11615Why do singular antecedents connected by_ or_ or_ nor_ appear to require a singular pronoun?
11615Why do they deserve particular attention?
11615Why do those teach just as inconsistently, who forbear to call the_ to_ a preposition?
11615Why does it vary?
11615Why does the author discard the two special rules commonly given for the construction of relatives?
11615Why does the author incline to condemn these peculiarities?
11615Why have we no exact enumeration of the measures of this order?
11615Why is Murray''s rule for the possessive case objectionable?
11615Why is it difficult to learn to spell accurately?
11615Why is it more objectionable to change_ pupillaris_ to_ pupilary_, than_ pupillus_ to_ pupil_?
11615Why is it necessary to observe_ the sense_, or_ meaning_, of what we parse?
11615Why is it necessary to use the sign_ to_ before an abstract infinitive, where it shows no relation?
11615Why is it not as proper, to write an order for"a bushel of_ peas_,"as for"a bushel of_ beans_?"
11615Why is it reasonable to limit the government of the possessive to nouns only, or to words taken substantive?
11615Why is it thought improper to put a noun in two cases at once?
11615Why is it wrong to say, with Dr. Ash,"The king and queen appearing in public_ was_ the cause of my going?"
11615Why is it wrong to say,"The first has a lenis,_ and_ the other an asper over_ them_?"
11615Why is just articulation better than mere loudness?
11615Why is the position,"Active verbs govern the objective case,"of no use to the composer?
11615Why is the thirteenth rule of the author''s Institutes and First Lines not retained as a rule in this work?
11615Why is_ an_ or_ a_ not applicable to plurals?
11615Why must a grammarian discriminate between idioms, or peculiarities, and the common mode of expression?
11615Why not suppose them all to be elliptical?
11615Why not?
11615Why or wherein is the common rule,"Prepositions govern the objective case,"defective or insufficient?
11615Why should the different sorts of letters be kept distinct?
11615Why then attempt instruction by a method which both ignorance and knowledge on the part of the pupil, must alike render useless?
11615Why then is the simplest solution imaginable still so frequently rejected for so much complexity and inconsistency?
11615Why were the general rule and the general or critical notes added to the foregoing code of syntax?
11615Why?
11615Why?"
11615Why?"
11615Why?"
11615Why_ must_ its_ agent_"be in the_ objective_ case,"if"_ to improve_ relates to the pronoun_ he_?"
11615Will a boy pretend that he can not understand a rule of English grammar, because he is told that it holds good in all languages?
11615Will any grammarian say,"I know well enough what the thing is, but I can not tell?"
11615Will any one say, that every such construction is_ bad English_?
11615Will any person pretend that the connective here joins different cases?"
11615Will he have loved?
11615Will it be pretended that the French names and the English do not differ?
11615Will it be said that the latter phrases are elliptical, for''ask_ of_ him his opinion?''
11615Will they not have been loved?
11615Will thou have loved?
11615Will thou love?
11615Will you name the ten parts of speech, with_ an_ or_ a_ before each name?
11615Will you not have seen?
11615Will you not see?
11615Will you try the series again with a_ p_?
11615Wilt thou have loved?
11615Wilt thou love?
11615With how many other parts of speech does W. Allen confound the participle?
11615With what does single- rhymed dactylic end?
11615With what does the relative agree when an other word is introduced by the pronoun_ it_?
11615With what nominatives of the second person, does the imperative verb agree?
11615Without you, what were man?
11615Wo n''t they have done it?
11615Would it not be better to say,"Ode is the same_ as_ song or hymn?"
11615Yet he does not fail to repeat, with some additional inaccuracy, the notion, that,"What do you think of my_ horse''s running_?
11615Your_ Effs_, and_ Tees_, and_ Ars_, and_ Esses_?"
11615[ 269]"Suppose a criminal to be_ enduring_ the operation of binding:--Shall we say, with Mr. Murray,--''The criminal is binding?''
11615[ 28]"Except ye utter by the tongue words easy to be understood, how shall it be known what is spoken?
11615[ 331] ANALYSIS.--What is the general structure of this passage?
11615[ 354] To these examples, Webster adds_ two others_, of a_ different sort_, with a comment, thus:"''Ask_ him_ his_ opinion_?''
11615[ 359]"''Whose house is that?''
11615[ 430] Should not the Doctor have said,"_ are_ there_ more_,"since"_ more than one_"must needs be plural?
11615[ 550]"If such maxims, and such practices prevail, what_ has become_ of national liberty?"
11615[ 89] What, but the greater care of earlier writers, has made the Greek names better known or more important than the Latin?
11615[ EXAMPLES:]''May_ not we_ here say with Lucretius?''
11615[?]
11615[?]"
11615], the Dash[--], the Eroteme, or Note of Interrogation[?
11615], the Note of Interrogation[?
11615],_ the Note of_ Interrogation[?
11615_ Ail, irk_, and_ behoove_, are regular verbs and transitive; but they are used only in the third person singular: as,"What_ ails_ you?"
11615_ Being built_ signifies action_ finished_; and how can,_ Is being built_, signify an_ action unfinished?"
11615_ But_ what are goose- eyes in grammar?"
11615_ Example VI.--"A Good Name?"
11615_ Heardst_ thou that shameful word and blow Brought Roderick''s vengeance on his foe?"
11615_ How_ did he speak?
11615_ Hundreds_''?
11615_ I_ know_ thou_ sayst it: says thy_ life_ the same?"
11615_ Is it not Thomas_?
11615_ Prodest_ is a Latin verb, which signifies"_ is profitable to_;"but who will thence infer, that_ profitable to_ is a verb?
11615_ Siccine ais Parmenó?_ Voss.
11615_ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?"
11615_ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?"
11615_ Stands he_, or_ sits he?_ Or_ does he walk?_ or_ is he_ on his horse?"
11615_ Tens_''?
11615_ Units_''figure?
11615_ What_ through?
11615_ What_ unto day?
11615_ What_ unto night?
11615_ Whereto_ serves mercy But to confront the visage of offence?"
11615_ Who are_ in the house?
11615_ Who strike_ the iron?
11615_ Who strikes_ the iron?
11615_ Who was_ in the street?
11615_ Who were_ in the street?"
11615_ Who_ fathers the foundlings?
11615_ Whom_, the wretch Whose lands beyond the Sabines largely stretch?"
11615_ Why is_ the sign_ to_ expressed before_ study_?
11615_ Why_?
11615_ Why_?
11615_ Why_?
11615_ Why_?"
11615_ Ye mountains_, that ye skipped like rams; and_ ye little hills_, like lambs?
11615_ a_ is an article.--why?
11615_ dead- eyes_ are in a ship, they are blocks, with holes in them, but what are goose- eyes in grammar?"
11615_ elles_] Other; one or something_ beside_; as, Who_ else_ is coming?"
11615_ heard ye not_ of lowland war?"
11615_ must_ I_ observe_ you?
11615_ or_ Did I love?
11615_ or_ Did he love?
11615_ or_ Did thou love?
11615_ or_ Did we not love?
11615_ or_ Did you not see?
11615_ or_ Didst thou love?
11615_ or_ Do I love?
11615_ or_ Do we not love?
11615_ or_ Do you not see?
11615_ or_ Does he love?
11615_ or_ Dost thou love?
11615_ or_ Dost thou love?
11615_ or_ a vine, figs?"
11615_ that is_,''What is the reason of this person,_ in_ dismissing his servant so hastily?''
11615_ thee_, my boy?"
11615_ thine_, my child?"
11615_ thou Jordan_, that thou wast driven back?
11615_ till_ seven times?
11615_ to leave_[ town] to- day:''''They tried( What?)
11615_ very_ is an adverb.--why?"
11615_ was_ is a verb.--why?
11615_ wast thou_ never to do any thing?"
11615_ whither_?
11615a language"_ The meaning of which_,"he says,"_ all the different animals perfectly understand_?"
11615ah, whither dost thou run?
11615am_ I_ not_ free_?
11615and Priestley cor._"Say, dost thou know Vectidius?
11615and adds,"Between this form of expression and the following,''What do you think of my_ horse running_ to- day?''
11615and have they not in the other sentence, a relation similar to what is seen here?
11615and how are they always the same?
11615and how could they use them, without other parts of speech to form them into sentences?
11615and how do they differ?
11615and how is it to be known?
11615and how many of these are aspirates?
11615and how many sounds do they represent?
11615and how shall he who knows not what and how many they are, think himself capable of reforming our system of their alphabetic signs?
11615and how uttered when they are not words?
11615and if it is a plural adjective, what shall we do with_ a_ and_ great?_ Taken in either of these ways, the construction is anomalous.
11615and if it is, do they not make"common"what is no better English than the Doctor''s?
11615and if my is an adjective, why not_ Barrett''s_?"
11615and in depriving the poor of a benefactor?
11615and is it not a_ perversion_ of the sentence to interpret it otherwise?
11615and is not_ unlock_ an_ iambus_?
11615and of those who do pretend to this knowledge, why are there so few that agree?
11615and shall he not do it?
11615and shall he not do it?
11615and shall he not make it good?"
11615and shall he not make it good_?"
11615and the prophets, do they live forever?"
11615and the_ prophets_, do they live forever?"
11615and to whom must our appeal be made?
11615and what are their titles, or subjects?
11615and what are their titles, or subjects?
11615and what are their titles, or subjects?
11615and what are their titles?
11615and what by_ mind_?
11615and what else is a burning coal than redhot wood?"
11615and what else is a burning coal than_ red- hot_ wood?"
11615and what epithet, to a letter not sounded?
11615and what is it, that is"indeterminate?"
11615and what knowledge does it imply?
11615and what of the rest?
11615and what the power of God may do for thee?"
11615and what was it about?"
11615and what, consonants?
11615and what, neuter?
11615and what, the chain of connexion between the words_ Swift_ and_ putrefaction_?
11615and what, the chain of connexion"between the words_ away_ and_ is?
11615and when, vowels?
11615and where is the place of understanding?
11615and which can not?
11615and which of them are imperfect mutes?
11615and which of them ought to be censured and rejected as bad English?
11615and who does it belong to?"
11615and who is thy companion?"
11615and who is thy companion?"
11615and why are capitals used?
11615and why have_ Greene, Bullions, Hiley, Hart_, and others, also copied it?
11615and why so?
11615and why?
11615and why?
11615and why?
11615and with whom did it originate?
11615and with_ what_ body do they come?"
11615and would not one such monster be more offensive than all our present exceptions to Rule 9th?
11615and, if this be done, with respect to the infinitive, why not also with respect to the objective case?
11615and_ to whom_ does it belong?"
11615are not_ ye_ my_ work_ in the Lord?
11615are there not two kinds of sentences?
11615as, in the phrase,''He reads_ correctly_,''the answer to the question, How does he read?
11615bad, evil_, or_ ill?
11615but, What do you think of my_ horse''s running_?
11615but,''Does the sentence ask a question?''"
11615can Sporus feel?
11615can Sporus feel?
11615canst thou find out the Almighty unto perfection?
11615canst thou not forbear me_ half an hour_?
11615cor._"And will you_ rend_ our ancient love asunder?"
11615cor._"Are we not lazy in our duties, or_ do we not_ make a Christ of them?"
11615cor._"By what code of morals_ is the right or privilege denied me_?"
11615cor._"Can hearts not free, be_ tried_ whether they serve Willing or_ not_, who will but what they must?"
11615cor._"Can our_ solicitude_ alter the course, or unravel the intricacy, of human events?"
11615cor._"Can the fig- tree, my brethren, bear olive berries?
11615cor._"Do not they say,_ that_ every true believer has the Spirit of God in_ him_?"
11615cor._"Does continuity,_ or_ connexion, create sympathy and relation in the parts of the body?"
11615cor._"Has this word, which represents an action, an object after it, on which_ the action_ terminates?"
11615cor._"How many numbers do nouns appear to have?
11615cor._"How many numbers have pronouns?
11615cor._"How many_ Esses_ would_ goodness''_ then end with?
11615cor._"How many_ Esses_ would_ the word_ then end with?
11615cor._"In what other,_ consistently_ with reason and common sense, can you go about to explain it to him?"
11615cor._"May I_ express thee''unblam''d?
11615cor._"To_ whom_?
11615cor._"What is the_ putting- together of_ vowels and consonants called?"
11615cor._"When the judge_ dares_ not act, where is the loser''s remedy?"
11615cor._"Who is here so rude,_ he_ would not be a_ Roman_?"
11615cor._"Young stranger, whither_ wanderst_ thou?"
11615cor._"_ Questions asked by_ a principal verb_ only_--as,_''Teach I?''
11615cor._"_ Was_ either of these meetings ever acknowledged or recognized?"
11615deeper than hell, what canst thou know?"
11615deeper than hell; what canst thou know?"
11615does every body take their morning draught of this liquor?"
11615either a vine, figs?"
11615for_ whether_ is greater, the gold, or the temple that sanctifieth the gold?"
11615fore?
11615ha?
11615hast thou clothed_ his_ neck with thunder?
11615hath he spoken it, and shall he not make it good?"
11615have I not seen Jesus Christ our Lord?
11615have ye not houses to eat and to drink in?
11615have ye not houses to eat and to drink_ in_?"
11615he that formed the eye, shall he not see?"
11615he?
11615he?
11615he?
11615he?
11615hind?
11615how are_ have_ and_ do_ to be parsed?
11615how his thoughts adore That painted coat which Joseph never wore?"
11615how long will it be ere_ thou_ be quiet?
11615how much?
11615how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?"
11615how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?"
11615how much?_ or_ wherein?_"For_ what_ knowest thou, O wife, whether thou shalt save thy husband?"
11615i. e._ Who is the person_?
11615if the latter, how are they governed?
11615in filling the orphan''s eyes with tears?"
11615in ill thoughts again?
11615in relation to this matter?"
11615in?
11615instead of--_wilt thou_ walk?
11615is Moscow in flames?"
11615is different_ to_[ say_ from_,] What do you think of my_ horse running_?"
11615is this the consequence of thy generosity?"
11615is thy_ servant_ a_ dog_?"
11615is_ different_ from, What are you seeking?
11615its chief use--declined--to what creatures may be applied--put for the distance,("_ How far do you call_ IT?"
11615late?_ 26.
11615little?
11615low?
11615many?_ 25.
11615me_, how fared it with me then?"
11615means, Do you think I should let him run?
11615means, he_ has_ run, do you think he ran well?"
11615mild and_ gall- less_ dove, Which dost the pure and candid dwellings love, Canst thou in Albion still delight?"
11615much?
11615near?
11615nor in preferring the lessons of conscience to the impulses of passion?
11615of whom do the kings of the earth take taxes and tribute?''"
11615or Where?
11615or both?
11615or both?
11615or came it unto you only?"
11615or canst thou thunder with a voice like him?"
11615or despise ye the church of God, and shame them that have not?
11615or from one who does not know that_ you_ is never a_ nominative_ in the style of the Bible?
11615or from one who tells us, that"_ It walks_"is of the solemn style?
11615or hath he spoken, and shall he not make it good?"
11615or how is_ to_"joined to the verb,"or made a part of it, in the phrase,"_ to_ ride?"
11615or how knowest_ thou_, O_ man_, whether_ thou_ shalt save_ thy wife_?"
11615or how the word_ five_, the figure 5, or the numeral letter V, is"the designation of a_ unit_?"
11615or is he not rather at fault in his interpretations?
11615or is it the sum of all the quantities which these may indicate?
11615or neither?
11615or neither?
11615or sentences, with points?
11615or that"a_ more reddish_ tinge,"--"a_ more saltish_ taste,"are not correct phrases?
11615or the action of"_ composing_?"
11615or thus,_ riv- er_,_ fev- er_?"
11615or what advantage would a new orthography procure equivalent to the confusion and perplexity of such an alteration?"
11615or what propriety could there be in making the words,_ of_, and_ to_, and_ from_, govern or compose three different cases?
11615or what reason can be assigned for making more than three?
11615or where, on such a principle, can the line of distinction for transitive verbs be drawn?
11615or where?
11615or where?
11615or why an emphasis alone, will not sufficiently distinguish the members of sentences from each other, without pauses, as accent does words?
11615or"_ will depend_"understood after_ more_?
11615or, Am I not writing?
11615or, Am I writing?
11615or, in the order of a declarative sentence,"That house is whose house?"
11615or, that a noun can not be put in the_ first person_, so as to agree with_ I_ or_ we_?
11615or, that a noun of the second person_ could not be spoken of_?
11615or, to change_ tranquillitas_ to_ tranquility_, than_ tranquillus_ to_ tranquil_?
11615or,"Do you think it proper for my horse to run to- day?"
11615or,"_ What one_?"
11615or_ whence_?
11615or_ who are_ my brethren?"
11615our own, or that which is foreign?
11615out?
11615says a bright boy;"pray, what are they?
11615says a bright boy;"pray, what are they?
11615shall I praise you in this?
11615tell, Tell, if ye saw, how came I thus, how here?
11615that a doctrine so pure as the Gospel should be the work of an uncommissioned pretender?
11615that he is regenerate?
11615that is,"so that_ the gift_ ought to be recompensed from Heaven to_ the giver_?"
11615that so perfect a system of morals should be established on blasphemy?"
11615that the proudest and the most ambitious of mankind should be the great master and accomplished pattern of humility?
11615that the verb should be made plural?
11615the boy?
11615the boys?_ LESSON XIX.--VERBS.
11615the child?
11615the children?_ LESSON XX.--VERBS.
11615the man?
11615the men?_ LESSON XVIII.--VERBS.
11615the note of interrogation(?)
11615these pictures?
11615they?
11615they?
11615they?
11615they?_ LESSON XVII.--VERBS.
11615thou?
11615thou?
11615thou?
11615thou?
11615to thee?
11615to thee?
11615up?
11615violated?"
11615we?
11615we?
11615we?
11615we?
11615were you never to do any thing?"
11615what am I, and from whence_ am_ I?"
11615what an one was he?"
11615what answer will he get?
11615what visor?
11615what, feminine?
11615when?
11615when?
11615where art thou?
11615where is thy blush?"
11615where is thy blush?"
11615where is thy blush?"
11615where is thy sting?
11615where is thy sting?
11615where is thy victory?"
11615where is thy victory?"
11615where?
11615where| are the charms That sa|-ges have seen| in thy face?
11615which way shall I fly Infinite wrath, and infinite despair?
11615whith-- erstraysth''--immort-- almind?"
11615whither hast thou fled?"
11615whither hast thou fled?"
11615whither shall I fly?"
11615whither shall i fly?
11615whither strays the immortal mind?''
11615who fathers the foundlings?
11615who hath warned you to flee from the wrath_ to come_?"
11615whose Son is he?
11615whose_ son_ is he?
11615who| would inhab|-_it_ This bleak| world alone?"
11615why demand you this?"
11615why do frown?"
11615why do frown?"
11615why do ye preach it up?"
11615why do_ ye_ preach it up?"
11615why do_ you_ preach it up?"
11615why was this concealed?"
11615why was this concealed?"
11615will it support him in preparing affliction for the widow''s heart?
11615will justice support him in robbing the community of an able and useful member?
11615would not such a sight annihilate_ thee_?"
11615you?
11615you?
11615you?
11615you?
11615| But why| complain?
11615| Who knows| not Cir_c~ e_, The daugh|-ter of| the sun?
11615| m= y s= oul''s| f~ ar b= et|-t~ er p= art,_ Wh= y w~ ith_| untime|-ly| sor|-rows heaves| thy heart?
11615| whither| are you| going?
11615| whither| do ye| call me?
11615Ã   Kempis cor._"Who is she_ that_ comes clothed in a robe of green?"
5400''A ricommindation is it, sorr? 5400 ''An American, Mr. Walpole, and from Maryland?''
5400''And when did you change your mind?'' 5400 ''D you see Heth, Cynthy?"
5400''Have you a recommendation, Terence?'' 5400 ''Is it true that Richard Carvel was in love with Miss Swain?''
5400''Is this Miss Marcy?''
5400''Ods, have you no invention? 5400 ''Slife, then, what have you been doing,"he cries,"seeing her every day and not asking her to marry you, my master of Carvel Hall?"
5400''Tain''t a letter from Jethro, is it?
5400''Toinette, where is Madame Clive?
5400''Twahn''t charity, Cynthy-- was it? 5400 ''What did you say to Bertin, Mademoiselle?''
5400''What is the accomplishment she lacks?'' 5400 ''What shall we do with the Rebels?''
5400''What''s Richard been at now?'' 5400 ''What''s all this to- do, gentlemen?''
5400''When?'' 5400 ''Will your Grace spare me a minute in the drawing- room?''
5400A Colfax of St. Louis in butternuts and rawhide boots?
5400A beautiful time, is it? 5400 A bill?"
5400A camp-- deserted?
5400A dummy company?
5400A fear of what?
5400A gatekeeper?
5400A great treat to see Washington and New York, is n''t it?
5400A high ideal?
5400A history?
5400A lady-- eh-- what?
5400A lawyer?
5400A little fresh caviar and a clear soup, and then a fish--?
5400A man like you, Hugh?
5400A meaning?
5400A particular reason?
5400A picture?
5400A relief?
5400A surprise?
5400A ten- strike?
5400A threat?
5400A turn? 5400 A what?"
5400A what?
5400A year,he said,"lookin''after property I won rattle- an''-shnap-- you remember?"
5400A- Alvy introduce me to Cassandry sometime will you?
5400A- Alvy, that give you an idea?
5400A- about me?
5400A- any legal objection to my bein''app''inted?
5400A- any other kind of objection?
5400A- arranged it, hev You-- a- arranged it?
5400A-- a special occasion there-- a bishop or something?
5400About Cynthia?
5400About Mr. Ditmar? 5400 Abstemious, be you?
5400Admitting?
5400Afraid of putting up too much of a front, are you?
5400After me? 5400 Again this week?
5400Ah, Madame,he cried, still looking at Honora,"will you have the kindness to permit me to walk about ever so little?"
5400Ah, Monsieur, is it not a face to love, to adore?
5400Ah, Vane,he said, in his most affable tones,"how are you?"
5400Ah, madame, what would you?
5400Ah, what''s eatin''you?
5400Ah, you know him, then?
5400Ah,he cried, breathing hard in the manner of stout people,"I remember you came down with Monsieur Vigo, Monsieur, did you not?"
5400Ah,he said, with another keen glance,"I met you this morning, did I not?"
5400Ah,said Bedloe Hubbell,"how is it possible to predict it?
5400Ai n''t any relation to old Hilary, be you?
5400Ai n''t it possible?
5400Ai n''t yo''be''n raised better''n to stan''theh wif yo''mouf open?
5400Ai n''t you afeerd to go, Davy?
5400Ai n''t you going to invite me to have some supper?
5400Ai n''t you never been to Boston?
5400Ai n''t you never read Darwin?
5400Ai n''t you the son of Hilary Vane?
5400Ain''you gwineter''low Hester an''me to wuk fo''you?
5400Air the Legislatur''behavin''themselves?
5400Air you goin'', Will?
5400Airley Gibbs, hain''t it? 5400 Alf,"demanded the Colonel,"what do you know of this fellow Krebs?"
5400Algiers, for one place, and whom do you think I saw there, in the lobby of a hotel?
5400Alison?
5400All alone to- night, Colonel?
5400All right, it''s talk, then? 5400 All right?"
5400All the way to Mercer?
5400All?
5400Allen?
5400Allen?
5400Alone?
5400Always?
5400Am I being silly?
5400Am I false to my own father? 5400 Am I late?
5400Am I not a gentleman in all but birth, Richard? 5400 Am I really beautiful, Mathilde?"
5400Am I to be ruled by this headstrong boy? 5400 Am I to understand that you wish me to do my part in concealing your identity?"
5400Ambition-- for what, my son?
5400An attack?
5400An enemy of ze cause?
5400An old master?
5400An''hae ye murder''t MacMuir, John Paul, an''gien''s claw to a Buckskin gowk?
5400An''wha are ye, Jamie Darrell,said the captain,"to be bangin''yere betters?
5400An''what did ye say?
5400An''will ye be aff to the wars?
5400And Adolf?
5400And Colonel Tipton?
5400And Detroit, sir?
5400And Dorothy? 5400 And Dorothy?"
5400And Gignoux?
5400And Grafton?
5400And Howard approves of these mixed lunches, my dear? 5400 And I?"
5400And I?
5400And Jason agrees?
5400And Miss Manners? 5400 And Monsieur le Vicomte-- Henri?"
5400And Mr. Temple will remain?
5400And Mrs. Holt brought you to this country?
5400And Mrs. Pomfret tells me they play many detestable tricks on you-- yes?
5400And Mrs. Temple has never suspected you?
5400And Sam Price,continued Bijah, in pretended astonishment,"wahn''t he settin''on the edge of the stoop when I drove up?"
5400And Sevier?
5400And Tom?
5400And a child?
5400And afterward--"And afterward?
5400And all this has been going on without my knowledge, when you knew my sentiments towards the man?
5400And am I never to see you again?
5400And am I the only one in all Brampton, Harwich, and Coniston who knows this?
5400And any little ewe- lambs?
5400And are n''t you going to say good- by to your host and hostess?
5400And are there, then, no''over- beliefs''?
5400And are they not here?
5400And are we to keep it?
5400And are you not, then, to see London now you are here?
5400And are you still learning things about our country, Vicomte?
5400And as for your other authority, your ordinary man, when he reads modern philosophy, says to himself, this does not conflict with science? 5400 And came here to arrest him?"
5400And can you account for his coming to Asquith?
5400And can you expect a man to like a book which admits that women are the more constant?
5400And can you not-- still?
5400And country folks? 5400 And did I speak of aught else?"
5400And did he not ask you anything more?
5400And did he speak of the bargain he tried to make with our old friend, his Grace of Chartersea?
5400And did he stand in need of much persuasion, captain?
5400And did you know that Mr. Brice had gone out, with letters, when the Judge was better?
5400And did you talk to Trixy about children, too?
5400And did you tell Zeb?
5400And did you think I would care, dear?
5400And do n''t you condemn him for those acts?
5400And do n''t you consider yourself a good lawyer?
5400And do n''t you think,asked Cynthia,"that a woman ought to know what becomes her best?"
5400And do n''t you want it to?
5400And do you believe what they say about-- about Jethro Bass?
5400And do you mean to say in soberness, Uncle Fenelon, that you believe the author of The Sybarites to be a defaulter?
5400And do you reckon I could hit you fust?
5400And do you remember how she used to play under the maple there, with her dolls?
5400And do you think that she-- that Nancy found out--?
5400And do you think that the good Congress will ever repay me, Davy?
5400And do you think,she asked,"that I would allow you to go the rest of the way alone?"
5400And do you, sir?
5400And does he seem to rejoice that you are of the King''s party?
5400And does my Lord feel better after-- after his excitement to- day?
5400And does n''t Congress make money, sir?
5400And even if there were a personal God, what reason have you to think that man would be his especial concern, or any concern of his whatever? 5400 And for me?"
5400And has Mr. Lloyd said nothing of my uncle?
5400And has there been any news of the Vicomte of late?
5400And have you a better name for it, Miss Carvel?
5400And he gave you something?
5400And he gave you the impression,she continued slowly,"that he was deceitful, and dishonourable, and a coward?
5400And he had ambition, did n''t he, Aunt Mary?
5400And he hates me?
5400And he is going to France?
5400And he is not suspected?
5400And he means to stay here in the heat and go through, the campaign?
5400And he''s on Mister Moultrie''s side?
5400And he?
5400And her husband--?
5400And her husband?
5400And her name?
5400And his Excellency?
5400And how about Amos Ricketts? 5400 And how about Grant?
5400And how about dinner?
5400And how about me?
5400And how about my ready- made clothes?
5400And how about your Christian view of the world as a vale of tears?
5400And how came you in such a place?
5400And how did he strike you?
5400And how did such a thing get into Kentucky, Madame?
5400And how did you know that I had left it?
5400And how do you feel, sir?
5400And how do you happen to be here?
5400And how do you know?
5400And how is it to- day, Zeb?
5400And how is it you are so far from home, and alone, my little one?
5400And how is one to know whether it would be-- permanent?
5400And how is she now, Comyn?
5400And how is the learning, Cynthia?
5400And how is the woman now?
5400And how many had the courage to do that?
5400And how old is the tree?
5400And how the devil are we to know it?
5400And how the devil did Mr. Dix know?
5400And how the devil did you track me to the Widow Brown''s?
5400And how was that?
5400And how went it, Miss Manners?
5400And hungry? 5400 And if Congress lose, and not pay, where am I, mon petit maitre de la haute finance?"
5400And if it had been?
5400And if there''s anything more I can do, Miss Janet, you''ll be letting me know-- you''ll call on Johnny Tiernan, wo n''t you?
5400And if we let go, what would happen to the country?
5400And if you postpone the fight now that you have begun it? 5400 And is he any worse,"she asked slowly,"than many others who might be mentioned?"
5400And is he come along, also?
5400And is it impossible for me to get out alone, if I wished to?
5400And is it not truth you tremple the coackade, what I hear from Philadelphe?
5400And is n''t Mrs. Grainger worried?
5400And is n''t this philanthropic mood a little new to you?
5400And is that your idea of marriage, Monsieur?
5400And is the commodore still at the Texel?
5400And is the resemblance so close as that?
5400And is there nothing-- for me?
5400And is this Honora? 5400 And it makes your blood boil as an American citizen, do n''t it?
5400And leave Kentucky?
5400And leave all this,he said incredulously,"for trolley rides and Forest Park and-- and me?"
5400And leave here?
5400And may I ask your name, young lady?
5400And may I not come to Coniston?
5400And mother?
5400And mother?
5400And must he go to Temple Bow?
5400And my grandfather?
5400And never of Dolly?
5400And not a shot fired?
5400And not a shot fired?
5400And nothing since?
5400And now that you know what she is,cried Mr. Worthington, rising and smiting the pile of letters on his desk,"why do you keep her there an instant?"
5400And now what do you intend to do?
5400And now what has happened? 5400 And now what will happen?"
5400And now, Mr. Allen,I said,"to what do I owe the pain of this visit?"
5400And now, Mr. Ritchie,he said,"will you tell me who you are, and how I can serve you?"
5400And now, Mr. Temple,she added,"may we trust you to stay here with Lamarque until you have word from us?"
5400And now, my friends, why was she dismissed? 5400 And now, what?"
5400And now, will you go to Maryland and be a fool?
5400And now, with his Municipal League, he''s going to clean up the city, is he? 5400 And now,"said Cynthia,"do n''t you think you had better go?"
5400And now,said Mr. Satterlee,"what will you do, Cynthia?
5400And now,said Stephen,"why do they not keep their hold?"
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And pray where did you get your learning?
5400And pray, Richard, why not''?
5400And pray, how did he discover I was in London, sir?
5400And proof?
5400And shall I see that race at Kaskaskia?
5400And she is happy-- where she is?
5400And she is with you now, Monsieur?
5400And she knew it was from Commodore Jones?
5400And she refused you?
5400And since then?
5400And so he thinks he has found a divinity, does: he?
5400And so they are going into the house?
5400And so you are now an American?
5400And so you are turned Jew?
5400And so you wish me to stop drawing? 5400 And suppose he should n''t go in?"
5400And suppose,he asked,"I were unable to come to any conclusion?
5400And the Atonement? 5400 And the Chippering?"
5400And the Judge, Mr. Brinsmade-- how is he?
5400And the extraordinary looking man on my right?
5400And the gentlemen are gone north, sir?
5400And the governor?
5400And the handkerchief?
5400And the horse blanket?
5400And the house? 5400 And the labour unions, have they aided you?
5400And the lady?
5400And the moral?
5400And the practices are-- bad?
5400And the redskins?
5400And the roses?
5400And the spark,she demanded,"is not Socialism-- their nightmare?"
5400And the twenty prominent citizens-- do you know any of''em, Tom?
5400And the wife? 5400 And the woman on the other side of him?"
5400And the woman you speak of was-- rehabilitated?
5400And the-- lady?
5400And their name?
5400And then you will marry me, Jinny?
5400And then,added his Lordship, facing me with absolute fierceness,"and then, Richard, why the devil did she weep?
5400And then-- you''ll be ready for me? 5400 And then--"Janet spoke with difficulty,"and then you came down here?"
5400And then?
5400And then?
5400And then?
5400And then?
5400And then?
5400And then?
5400And then?
5400And then?
5400And these?
5400And they be grand folks, ye say?
5400And they told you nothing else, sir?
5400And they''re telling me he was on Bear Island with ye? 5400 And think you that gentlemen of such spirit and resources will lack either for long?"
5400And this consent is to be given when the bill becomes a law?
5400And this is dear Richard?
5400And this is young Mr. Carvel, whom I hear wins every hunt in the colony?
5400And to what is this an introduction?
5400And vich citizen are you since you are ours? 5400 And was it not hard to leave?"
5400And we''ve got to get workers, have n''t we? 5400 And whar be you from?"
5400And what I preach,he asked,"has tended to confirm you in such a mean conception of Christianity?"
5400And what about it?
5400And what am I to pay for this information?
5400And what are you doing here?
5400And what are you doing here?
5400And what are you going to do?
5400And what are you here?
5400And what brings you here?
5400And what conclusions have you come to? 5400 And what deviltry was that?"
5400And what did Polly Ann say to that?
5400And what did he say?
5400And what did she say?
5400And what did you bring, my girl?
5400And what did you do with him?
5400And what did you say?
5400And what did your man say?
5400And what difference does it make? 5400 And what do they tell you?"
5400And what do you get?
5400And what do you intend to do with her?
5400And what do you suppose my family would say if I told them Mr. Ditmar had given it to me?
5400And what doing, pray?
5400And what else have you been doing?
5400And what had happened? 5400 And what has all this to do with your coming here?"
5400And what has happened to- day?
5400And what if I tell you that I made friends with his Grace of Grafton, and Lord Sandwich, and was invited to Hichinbroke, his Lordship''s seat?
5400And what is that essential?
5400And what is that you have under your arm?
5400And what is that, sir?
5400And what is that?
5400And what is that?
5400And what is that?
5400And what is the result,he cried,"of the senseless insistence on the letter instead of the spirit of the poetry of religion?
5400And what is this momentous statement?
5400And what leads you to suppose,he inquired,"that I am responsible in this matter?
5400And what made you call yourself an errand boy?
5400And what mischief,he demanded,"have you been up to?"
5400And what name, please?
5400And what news do you hear from London?
5400And what of this miniature, Monsieur?
5400And what say you of the Jay?
5400And what say you, Richard?
5400And what shall I do?
5400And what then?
5400And what then?
5400And what then?
5400And what then?
5400And what think you lies beneath the wealth and power of England, Philip?
5400And what were they saying?
5400And what will she think if I stay here?
5400And what will you have me do?
5400And what would Aunt Mary say to me?
5400And what would you like best to be when you grow up, Davy?
5400And what you do, Davy?
5400And what you say, Davy?
5400And what''ll ye think of it, Davy?
5400And what''s Mr. Ditmar''s goodness got to do with it? 5400 And what''s SHE like?"
5400And what''s that?
5400And what,inquired Mrs. Holt,"have you been teaching Mademoiselle?"
5400And when I got there, what do you think? 5400 And when Mr. Temple comes in will you kindly say that I am waiting for him in his room?"
5400And when did I ever talk to you about the quality, you scalawag?
5400And when do you sail?
5400And when they do?
5400And when you get married, Hugh?
5400And whensaid Honora,"when Mrs. Dwyer has dinner- parties for celebrated people who come here, why does she invite you in to see the table?"
5400And where have you been all these years, Alec?
5400And where have you been these days gone, Miss Will- o''the- Wisp, since the doctor has given me back my tongue?
5400And where in those dominions?
5400And where is Sevier now?
5400And where is he? 5400 And where is the tail of this comet?"
5400And where is your father?
5400And where the deuce were you?
5400And where then? 5400 And where were you before you went to Nashville?"
5400And who are you?
5400And who else, Polly Ann?
5400And who is that?
5400And who may Whipple be?
5400And who may he be?
5400And who should be the last to leave, but the captain? 5400 And who was the locket for, Uncle Jethro?"
5400And who''s in command here?
5400And who,asked Mr. Crewe,"is to introduce me?"
5400And who,asked the painter,"is the bullet- headed little fellow, with freckles and short red hair, behind the bat?"
5400And who-- par exemple-- is to protect me against-- you, Monsieur?
5400And whom mean you by Indian partisans?
5400And whose loss would that be?
5400And why are they here?
5400And why did n''t Varney get hold of him and make him listen to reason?
5400And why did n''t you let me know you were in Nashville?
5400And why did n''t you think I meant to leave?
5400And why did you always fight the aristocrats?
5400And why did you not?
5400And why did you send it?
5400And why did you think me married?
5400And why do you get indignant now?
5400And why has he come back before the Legislature''s over?
5400And why is it?
5400And why is n''t the master there?
5400And why not, Monsieur?
5400And why not?
5400And why not?
5400And why not?
5400And why should he be made to, Captain Lyon? 5400 And why should he dirty himself with politics?"
5400And why should n''t we have the best?
5400And why were the wages too low?
5400And why were you going?
5400And why worse, sir?
5400And why would n''t you?
5400And why, did you go then?
5400And why?
5400And why?
5400And why?
5400And why?
5400And will you give me some account of this last prodigious turn you have done her?
5400And will you not have my chestnuts, sir, for your kindness?
5400And wo n''t they succeed? 5400 And would you go-- anywhere with me?"
5400And yet you are a Tory?
5400And yet you still believed that it had a mission?
5400And yet,he persisted,"from the manner in which you spoke at the table--""Oh, do n''t imagine I have n''t thought?
5400And yet--"Yes?
5400And you agreed to marry him, Dolly?
5400And you are a Federalist?
5400And you are aware, my friend,said Mr. Judson,"that my clerk has given you the wrong price?"
5400And you are from New England?
5400And you are going back?
5400And you are of Scotch descent?
5400And you are still sailing at the ebb?
5400And you are to spend it upon an actress?
5400And you believe that, by taking thought, you can get the kind of a wife you want?
5400And you call that worse than losing my dearest friend on earth?
5400And you did n''t look ahead to find out?
5400And you did not see fit to follow your Colonel to Louisiana?
5400And you do not mind the heat?
5400And you feared the consequences upon your grandfather''s health?
5400And you have come out-- convinced?
5400And you have forgiven me, Richard?
5400And you have taken a fancy to this girl?
5400And you hear of her? 5400 And you heard rumours of me, Dorothy?"
5400And you never set eyes on the Brice house, opposite the Common, with the swelled front? 5400 And you really love Mademoiselle Antoinette?"
5400And you refused?
5400And you risked your life and stayed here without her?
5400And you say he''s gone off again with Sevier?
5400And you spoke of Mr. Ditmar''s death?
5400And you stayed,I went on,"when all the others ran away?
5400And you still intend to go?
5400And you tell me he has not done these things?
5400And you think it right to teach things to your children which you do not yourself believe?
5400And you think the expedition will not get here?
5400And you think, now, that you are made for the law?
5400And you thought,she asked slowly,"that I was that kind of a woman?"
5400And you were there, Hans?
5400And you will take my note for the amount?
5400And you would n''t tell me, Lige? 5400 And you''ll come and see me?"
5400And you''re going after Kaskasky? 5400 And you''ve come to stay, sir?"
5400And you, David?
5400And you, Jack,I asked,"how is it that you are not in arms for the King, and commanding one of his frigates?"
5400And you, Lige?
5400And you, Mademoiselle,said the Vicomte to Honora, you will come-- yes?
5400And you, Monsieur?
5400And you, Tom?
5400And you, and-- other ladies will go around to the public meetings?
5400And you, sir?
5400And you,she asked,"where are you going?"
5400And you,--you never married, did you?
5400And you-- were you amusing yourself?
5400And you? 5400 And you?"
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And you?
5400And your conscience?
5400And your family?
5400And your father-- did he paint beautiful pictures, too?
5400And your father?
5400And your friends in Arlington Street?
5400And your word to me?
5400And yours?
5400And, Jinny?
5400And-- Clarence?
5400And-- am I not to see you again before you go?
5400And-- and do you think the city is safe?
5400And-- and has she accepted?
5400And-- and what did he say?
5400And-- he wo n''t be back?
5400And-- it was full?
5400And-- others?
5400And-- was that his wife?
5400And-- we shall be friends?
5400And-- we shall turn?
5400And-- weren''t you ever-- sorry?
5400And-- what became of him?
5400And-- what he said?
5400And-- what makes you think that I''m not content?
5400And-- where do you come from, if I may ask?
5400And-- why?
5400And-- won''t he see you?
5400And-- would you like to go to Congress, Hugh?
5400And-- you like it, Hugh?
5400And-- you will send word to me, Helene?
5400Any more epithets?
5400Any more what?
5400Any news, Flint?
5400Any one with him?
5400Any place where we can talk?
5400Anyone been here?
5400Anything I can get you?
5400Anything else?
5400Anything else?
5400Anything happened-- what do you mean? 5400 Anything happened?"
5400Anything more?
5400Anything the matter?
5400Anywhere?
5400Are George and Sally here?
5400Are all men simpletons?
5400Are many of the places here like that?
5400Are n''t there any cabs in Paris?
5400Are n''t there enough girls here to satisfy you?
5400Are n''t they nice?
5400Are n''t those rather modern sentiments, for you, Maude?
5400Are n''t we darned idiots,he asked,"to get fighting over something we do n''t know anything about?"
5400Are n''t we going to have a tree, father?
5400Are n''t you afraid of ghosts?
5400Are n''t you afraid of missing yours, Hugh?
5400Are n''t you afraid of nervous prostration, Ham?
5400Are n''t you coming back-- ever?
5400Are n''t you coming with us?
5400Are n''t you coming?
5400Are n''t you equally out of place?
5400Are n''t you glad to be home?
5400Are n''t you glad to see me?
5400Are n''t you going to bring them along?
5400Are n''t you going to finish your letters?
5400Are n''t you going to say goodby to Uncle Jethro?
5400Are n''t you going to take it?
5400Are n''t you pleased?
5400Are n''t you rather severe in your judgments?
5400Are n''t you the son of Matthew Paret?
5400Are n''t you the young man who made the Union speech in Mercantile Library Hall?
5400Are n''t you too ambitious?
5400Are n''t you well, Dad?
5400Are n''t you yourself suggesting,said Mr. Bentley,"the course which will permit you to remain?"
5400Are our Millionaires entering Politics?
5400Are the Yankees beaten?
5400Are the holes very deep?
5400Are there any gentlemen from St. Louis here?
5400Are there any stores near here?
5400Are there not better methods for obtaining what you wish than those you practise?
5400Are these Boston ways, Steve?
5400Are these children connected with his church?
5400Are these harsh words the reward for my charity? 5400 Are these the articles you read?"
5400Are they all like you?
5400Are they any worse?
5400Are they going to put glass on the walls?
5400Are they your enemies?
5400Are things any worse than in any other manufacturing city?
5400Are ye hurt, Davy?
5400Are you Colonel Carvel?
5400Are you Horace Bentley?
5400Are you Jack Carvel''s son, or are you an impostor?
5400Are you a member of--of the menagerie?
5400Are you a painter, too?
5400Are you a slave- owner, sir?
5400Are you afraid I''ll run off with you?
5400Are you afraid of the Indians?
5400Are you angry with me still? 5400 Are you angry?"
5400Are you better, Dorothy?
5400Are you busy, Hugh?
5400Are you cold?
5400Are you comfortable?
5400Are you doing this for a reward?
5400Are you given over to idle pursuits, to leading young men from their occupations and duties?
5400Are you glad to go?
5400Are you going away?
5400Are you going away?
5400Are you going to be in Washington long?
5400Are you going to be in town this winter?
5400Are you going to be long in Newport?
5400Are you going to do it?
5400Are you going to lie down under that?
5400Are you going to speak in the tows hall to- night?
5400Are you going to take him with you?
5400Are you going to take it?
5400Are you going to the meeting?
5400Are you going to the war-- to leave us, Richard?
5400Are you going?
5400Are you happy, Dolly?
5400Are you happy?
5400Are you hurt, McChesney?
5400Are you hurt, Miss Flint?
5400Are you ill, Uncle Jethro?
5400Are you ill, Vicomte?
5400Are you in a hurry, sir,she asked at length, turning on me with a smile,"are you in a hurry to join my Lord March or his Grace of Grafton?
5400Are you in much pain?
5400Are you in politics?
5400Are you in trouble, Honora?
5400Are you lonely, sometimes?
5400Are you mad?
5400Are you never coming back, Dolly?
5400Are you not happy, Dolly?
5400Are you not well, Richard?
5400Are you one of them flip Chicagy reporters?
5400Are you or are you not to give me the money?
5400Are you prepared to ride with Antoinette and me to Les Iles, Monsieur?
5400Are you really?
5400Are you sick?
5400Are you stopping here?
5400Are you sure I''m worth it?
5400Are you sure he had one?
5400Are you sure my father saw you?
5400Are you sure that that is all?
5400Are you sure that you know him?
5400Are you sure they are all disappointed and discontented, father?
5400Are you sure you can afford them, Hugh?
5400Are you sure you can spare the time?
5400Are you sure you have done right?
5400Are you sure-- he is the best, Hugh?
5400Are you sure?
5400Are you the ferryman?
5400Are you the reporter?
5400Are you tired of the trip?
5400Are you vain and frivolous?
5400Are you warm enough?
5400Are you wicked?
5400Are you willing,he asked, after a moment,"to make the supreme renunciation?
5400Are you?
5400Arrah, and beant he a man all but two feet,said Terence,"wid more brain than me an''Bill Cowan and Poulsson togither?
5400Arrah,he said,"what ails ye, darlin''?"
5400Art thou a master of Israel, and knowest not these things?
5400As old as that?
5400Ask Mr. Wading what he thinks of it?
5400At both ends?
5400At what time shall I order the carriage to take you to Bellegarde?
5400Austen Vane was n''t here to- night?
5400Avast,says he, with an oath,"what''s this come among us?"
5400Away and you let her go away? 5400 Ay?"
5400Ay?
5400B- be''n havin''some fun with Heth, Cynthy?
5400B- better keep it-- hadn''t you?
5400B- better wait till you get the bill-- hadn''t you? 5400 Bass,"began the senator,"what''s the row up in your state?"
5400Be they good folks?
5400Be ye a Tory?
5400Be you Clark?
5400Be you Rebels?
5400Be you asked to Virginia Carvel''s party?
5400Be you tellin''the truth, Warner McChesney?
5400Be you the agent?
5400Because this Penniman woman has stirred people up-- is that what you mean? 5400 Because why?"
5400Because you ai n''t had no education: What does a rail- sputter like Abe know about this government? 5400 Before I begin on the somewhat lengthy list of your qualities,"he replied, smiling,"may I ask why you''d like to know?"
5400Before we go any farther,he said,"would you mind telling me who your informant is on this point?"
5400Belief?
5400Benjy,I said,"do you know any of the servants here?"
5400Blodgett? 5400 Bob, how can you ask?"
5400Bob,said Cynthia, nerving herself for the ordeal,"did you tell Cousin Ephraim you had seen me?"
5400Bob,said Mr. Lincoln,"can you elucidate the problem of the three bodies?"
5400Bob,she said, turning to him,"Bob, would your father want you to come?"
5400Bob,she said,"do you love me?"
5400Bob-- hain''t you pretty young-- pretty young?
5400Bowman,said he, kindly,"has Davy fed you yet?"
5400Boys,he asked,"did I ever tell you about Sam''l, the old Quaker''s apprentice?"
5400Boys,said he,"did you ever hear the story of farmer Bell, down in Egypt?
5400Break loose?
5400Bribe you?
5400Brice, Graves, and Erwin,said Peter;"it sounds very grand, does n''t it?
5400Brice,said the General, returning his salute,"been celebrating this glorious Fourth with some of our Rebel friends?"
5400Brice?
5400Brinsmade, you fellows did have a session with Fremont, did n''t you? 5400 Brinsmade,"he said,"do you remember this room in May,''46?"
5400Broadswords?
5400Building it for the people, is he?
5400Business careers?
5400But I shall understand them some day, because I am your daughter-- now that-- now that I have only you, I am your daughter, am I not?
5400But Jack? 5400 But Mr. Krebs?
5400But Mr. Parr, too--?
5400But ca n''t they make you resign?
5400But ca n''t we work out our beliefs together?
5400But ca n''t you send word to Mr. Ditmar, and tell him I want to see him?
5400But can he hurt you, Phil-- either of you?
5400But come now, most young men would rather be a railroad president than a bishop,--wouldn''t they?
5400But did n''t Allen tell you any more?
5400But did you no''meet the Indians?
5400But did you not meet him, Monsieur?
5400But did you think I would require of you the sacrifice of leaving London now?
5400But for me?
5400But has n''t he had-- a victory?
5400But he shall be rewarded nevertheless, eh, Richard? 5400 But he''s an Italian?"
5400But how are you working girls ever going to raise wages unless you get the vote? 5400 But how did he happen to come here to Hampton-- to be doing this?"
5400But how do you know, Jinny?
5400But how if we are stamped against law and his Lordship''s government? 5400 But how in thunder did you get rid of him?"
5400But how?
5400But if I give you my word they will be written and sent to you to- morrow afternoon?
5400But if I think it wise?
5400But if he should send for you?
5400But if he''s become a socialist?
5400But if the food gives out?
5400But if the force drawing us together, that has always drawn us together, is God?
5400But if the mill people wanted him, George, how could it be prevented?
5400But if you care for me--?
5400But is n''t Tom your best friend?
5400But is n''t it rather a bad time?
5400But is n''t it your business as a voter to think?
5400But is n''t that inconsistent with what you said awhile ago as to a new civilization?
5400But is n''t that just where most so- called Christians make their mistake?
5400But is n''t true Christianity incendiary, in your meaning of the word?
5400But it is like him?
5400But look at me, was n''t I born in Meriden, Connecticut? 5400 But love?"
5400But may there not be a meaning in this very desire we have to struggle against the order of things as it appears to us?
5400But my husband-- my children? 5400 But see here, Abe,"said Mr. Medill, as soon as ever he got his breath,"what have we got to show for it?
5400But suppose you do n''t get what you want?
5400But surely you did not think, in those days, that he would be as big as he has become? 5400 But the Church,"I was moved by some untraced thought to ask,"you believe there is a future for the Church?"
5400But the doctrines of the Church, which we were taught from childhood to believe? 5400 But the father?"
5400But the gun?
5400But the land?
5400But the law?
5400But the sentiment-- come now-- the sentiment? 5400 But the slave, sir?
5400But their own planes?
5400But there was a chance, Mr. Whipple--"A chance of what?
5400But there''s something unusual about her-- where did you find her?
5400But to- morrow?
5400But we sha n''t tell her yet, shall we, Howard? 5400 But what I came to ask you is this-- what are we to teach our children?"
5400But what about Temple?
5400But what am I to think?
5400But what are they shooting at?
5400But what are we to do?
5400But what are you doing at home in the middle of the morning?
5400But what can I do?
5400But what does it prove? 5400 But what in mystery are you doing there?"
5400But what is our point of view, Nell?
5400But what kind of liberty?
5400But what made you think of it now?
5400But what of it? 5400 But what shall we do with the lad?"
5400But what will become of us?
5400But what''s to be done?
5400But what--?
5400But when am I to see you?
5400But when you get to a point where private affairs become a public menace?
5400But where did you come from?
5400But where did you see him?
5400But where do you intend to go in Europe?
5400But where is the gallant seaman who saved you, Richard?
5400But where? 5400 But where?"
5400But while stronger men are honest,she objected,"are not your ancient vows and ancient Creeds continually making weaker men casuists?"
5400But who is going to decree how much property, a man should have?
5400But who is to go for the militia?
5400But why are you going?
5400But why did he come out here?
5400But why did n''t you drop me a line, let me know when you were coming?
5400But why have you waited all these years if you did not mean to marry a man of ability, a man who has made something of himself?
5400But why not? 5400 But why,"she cried,"do you insist on what you cell authority?
5400But why-- why are you doing this?
5400But why?
5400But why?
5400But why?
5400But you admired him?
5400But you are accusing me--"Of what?
5400But you come a little mite late, hain''t you, Jethro?
5400But you have seen her?
5400But you have seen him?
5400But you''ll show me her letters, wo n''t you?
5400But you''re not sorry?
5400But you, Captain Paul,I said,"is-- is there no one?"
5400But you,I said, bending to her ear,"is it Fitzhugh, Dorothy?"
5400But you-- aren''t you working?
5400But you? 5400 But you?"
5400But your clothes? 5400 But your friends, Hugh-- and mine?"
5400But, John, you didn''t--?
5400But,I exclaimed, a little exasperated,"you did n''t expect to live here always, did you?
5400But,I interrupted, when I was somewhat recovered,"why should you think me in love with Patty?
5400But,--but why did you give up chewing?
5400But-- Howard,she protested,"why did n''t you talk it over with me?"
5400But-- being a reporter?
5400But-- do you think I could cultivate the rest?
5400But-- do you think we can afford it?...
5400But-- do you want me to bury myself in domesticity?
5400But-- dreadful thought!--suppose I should lack an essential?
5400But-- have you considered that it may interfere with my prospects?
5400But-- have you time?
5400But-- how?
5400But-- is it his habit to bring them out here?
5400But-- what is to become of the other four hundred and ninety- nine? 5400 But-- what shall I say to Mr. Wing?
5400But-- when the law goes into effect? 5400 But-- where did you see him?"
5400But-- why did you come?
5400But-- you loved him?
5400But--cried Miss Lucretia, in amazement and apprehension,"but what are you going to do?"
5400But--?
5400But--?
5400But--?
5400By George, why not, Fowndes?
5400By Job, what did we come out for? 5400 By glory, but he''s even better than I thought him, Did you see a black powder mark on his face?"
5400By the way, Davy, you have n''t happened by any chance to meet him?
5400By the way, Lige, how''s that boy, Tato? 5400 By the way, what''s become of the Colonel?"
5400By the way,he asked,"have you seen Cecil Grainger since the Quicksands game?"
5400C- Cassandry?
5400C- Cynthy well?
5400C- Cynthy,said Jethro, apologetically,"d- don''t you think you ought to have a nice city dress for that supper party?"
5400C- call to mind the first book you read to me, Cynthy?
5400C- callate to git the steeple done before frost?
5400C- callatin''to set up a mill some day?
5400C- carry me down to the road, Chester-- c- carry me down to the road?
5400C- cast her off?
5400C- coloring? 5400 C- come and read to me-- won''t you-- come and read?"
5400C- come down at last, Will?
5400C- come over for the drive-- c- come over for the drive?
5400C- come up here from Brampton to see your father-- did he?
5400C- comin''by the tannery after town meetin''?
5400C- conquered the world, did you say? 5400 C- couldn''t dig up the Common and plant flowers-- could you?"
5400C- couldn''t pick flowers in the Common and go barefoot-- e-- couldn''t go barefoot, Cynthy?
5400C- court''ll hev to app''int an agent?
5400Ca n''t somebody move''em round to see the cows and what''s in the house and the automobile and the horses? 5400 Ca n''t somebody stir''em up?"
5400Ca n''t the vestry make him resign?
5400Ca n''t we see the cows?
5400Ca n''t we take you home, Alison? 5400 Ca n''t you come over to my box for lunch?
5400Ca n''t you come to the house for supper and stay for the fireworks?
5400Ca n''t you feel that you are an individual, a personality, a force that might be put to great uses? 5400 Ca n''t you say it to- morrow?"
5400Ca n''t you see it''s a climax? 5400 Ca n''t you see that I love you?"
5400Ca n''t you see that folks are curious? 5400 Ca n''t you see what such a decision lets them in for?"
5400Ca n''t you talk to me standing up?
5400Ca n''t you tell me something bad about him? 5400 Call this to mind, Cynthy?"
5400Callate Si paid to git in there, did n''t he, Peleg?
5400Callatin''to go to work?
5400Callatin''to live in Brampton-- be you?
5400Called a meetin''?
5400Came in here to find out-- didn''t you, Whitredge?
5400Can Christianity really mean that-- renunciation of the world? 5400 Can I do anything for you?"
5400Can I do anything for you?
5400Can it be possible that you misunderstand me? 5400 Can it be possible,"he said,"can it be possible that this is my friend from the country?"
5400Can not I do something?
5400Can not I help?
5400Can not you, too, believe to that extent?
5400Can we see the President?
5400Can you blame me for wishing to see you before I leave, Dolly?
5400Can you direct me to Mr. Daniel Clark''s?
5400Can you get tickets for ten?
5400Can you give us some breakfast?
5400Can you not see that Mr. Allen desires to do us-- to do you-- a service?
5400Can you not take from other human beings what you have accepted from this woman who has just left?
5400Can you put it in to- morrow morning?
5400Can you see the frigate, Stanwix?
5400Can you tell me something of the circumstances?
5400Can you tell me that?
5400Can you tell me where Mr. Lincoln lives?
5400Can you tell me where he is now?
5400Can you walk an hundred miles without food, Davy?
5400Can you walk?
5400Can-- can I do anything?
5400Candidate for representative, be you?
5400Canst walk, Mechlin?
5400Captain Paul,I said, sitting down beside him,"have I deserved this from you?
5400Care for him?
5400Care for-- for Uncle Jethro?
5400Carvel, have n''t you and I quarrelled enough on that subject?
5400Carvel, what the devil''s the matter with you, sir?
5400Castles in Spain?
5400Caucus-- caucus? 5400 Caught a good many fish, have n''t you?"
5400Certainly,he replied;"does that strike you as strange?"
5400Certainly,replied Mr. Crewe;"you do n''t think we''re going to drop the fight here, do you?
5400Ch- charitable organization?
5400Changed?
5400Citizen Reetchie, is it? 5400 Clarence Colfax, have you known and loved me all my life that you might accuse me of this?
5400Clarence, after what you have done for the South?
5400Classified?
5400Closer?
5400Coincidence?
5400Collecting credentials?
5400Colonel Carvel hires you, does n''t he? 5400 Colonel,"remarked Captain Lige,"what''s this I heard on the levee just now about your shootin''at a man named Babcock on the steps here?"
5400Colonel,replied Brent,"do you recall the rough and uncouth young citizen who came over here from Cincinnati, as clerk on the Vicksburg?"
5400Colonel,said Mr. Whipple,"is that true?"
5400Come at last, have you?
5400Come in and see us again,said Insall, and Janet, promising, took her leave...."Who is she, Brooks?"
5400Come in on the''Louisiana''?
5400Come, Lige, would you take him?
5400Come, Mr. Stephen,said Mr. Lincoln, presently,"where do you hail from?"
5400Come,he insisted,"what have they been doing to my girl?"
5400Comin''back?
5400Comyn, what are you doing here? 5400 Congress money?"
5400Congress money?
5400Convert him to the saintly life I lead?
5400Conviction?
5400Could n''t do anything with her, could you? 5400 Could n''t they do better for you than a second- lieutenancy?"
5400Could n''t we take her to our little hospital at Silliston, doctor? 5400 Could n''t you contrive to come?"
5400Could n''t you pass away a few hours shopping this morning, my dear?
5400Could n''t you see I was very angry with you?
5400Could n''t you see-- can''t you see now what you did? 5400 Could not Mr. Watling or Mr. Fowndes come?"
5400Could you be induced,he said,"for the sake of your aunt and uncle, if not for your own, to consider a legal separation?"
5400Could you be up here at Mis''Peasley''s about eight to- night?
5400Could you not see that I have been trying to get a word with you for ever so long?
5400Courtenay?
5400Cousin Ephraim,she said, taking off his corded hat,"what in the world''s the matter with you?"
5400Crocker,he said,"how far is it to the Canadian Pacific?"
5400Crocker,said he,"it''s the very deuce to be famous, is n''t it?"
5400Crocker,said our host,"do you happen to have met the author of that book?
5400Cynthia Wetherell? 5400 Cynthia, what in the world are you doing?"
5400Cynthia,he said,"how can I leave you?
5400Cynthia,he said,"may n''t I come in?"
5400Cynthia,said Bob, in a strange voice as he leaned toward her,"do you-- do you care for him as much as all that?"
5400Cynthia,said Mr. Worthington, sitting down on the beach and facing her,"do you think you''ve treated me just right?"
5400Cynthia,said her husband, when Mr. Judson was gone,"did you know any one in Coniston named Jethro Bass?"
5400Cynthy,he called out abruptly,"h- how''d you like to go to Washington?"
5400Cynthy?
5400D''ye ken me, Alec?
5400D''you want to wake''em up? 5400 D- Democrat-- hain''t ye-- D- Democrat?"
5400D- didn''t end?
5400D- didn''t mention the post- office, did you, Ephraim?
5400D- doctor-- if Wetherell had n''t b''en to the capital would he have lived-- if he had n''t been to the capital?
5400D- doctor?
5400D- don''t hate me, Cynthy-- don''t hate me?
5400D- don''t like Red Brook Seedlings, Sam? 5400 D- don''t like her, Cynthy?"
5400D- done all the payin''without consultin''me, hain''t you, Ed?
5400D- done it if I had n''t b''en here, would n''t you?
5400Dad, do you think you ought to see him? 5400 Dad,"said Cynthia, as she gazed,"do n''t you love it better than any other place in the world?"
5400Daddy, why do n''t you ask Uncle Jethro to help you?
5400Daddy?
5400Dalton Street?
5400Damn it, why did n''t they let me know yesterday?
5400Damn you, you''re a lawyer, ai n''t you?
5400Davee,said a voice( it was Monsieur Vigo''s),"do you know what is un coup d''e''tat?"
5400David, do you think that Nick still loves her?
5400David, does he hate me?
5400David,said Mr. Marshall, sharply,"what the devil is this I hear of your carrying a torch in a Jacobin procession?"
5400David,she said,"could you not tell that I loved you, that you were he who has been in my mind for so many years, and in my heart since I saw you?"
5400Davy dear,she said,"are ye hurt?"
5400Davy, do you know what day this is?
5400Davy, how you like to be trader?
5400Davy, is it true that she has yellow fever? 5400 Davy, we may run across--""Who?"
5400Davy,he asked,"do you remember what I said when you had that miniature here?"
5400Davy,he said,"do you want to go back to Kentucky?"
5400Davy,he said,"what are you doing here?"
5400Davy,said he, pinching me,"do you know what you are?"
5400Davy,said he, then,"how old are you?"
5400Davy,she said softly,"do you reckon he''s gone to Kaintuckee?"
5400Davy,she said,"Davy, how be ye?"
5400Davy,whispered Tom again,"how''d ye like to see the little feller to home?"
5400Dead?
5400Democrat-- hain''t ye-- Democrat?
5400Did Hilary Vane tell you he would go to the convention?
5400Did Humphrey actually send for you to take up the injured horse case?
5400Did I ever deny you that, Hugh?
5400Did I mean what?
5400Did I not know the lad?
5400Did I not write you to stay where you were? 5400 Did I think of them?"
5400Did I, Hugh? 5400 Did I?
5400Did I?
5400Did Krebs say that?
5400Did Tom give you them sculps?
5400Did Worthy know you were here?
5400Did any one else come?
5400Did grandfather send''em?
5400Did he ever get a divorce?
5400Did he ever pretend to like the other side?
5400Did he say anything about it to you?
5400Did he seem disturbed about anything?
5400Did he send you with the message?
5400Did he tell you?
5400Did he write The Sybarites?
5400Did n''t I tell you I was sick of him? 5400 Did n''t I tell you when you came''round that time that you were n''t like the rest of''em?
5400Did n''t I? 5400 Did n''t I?"
5400Did n''t Uncle Jethro tell you about it?
5400Did n''t any of you fellows strike a cave, or a hollow tree, or something of that sort, knocking around this morning?
5400Did n''t come home? 5400 Did n''t he get my telegram day before yesterday?
5400Did n''t he just naturally lambaste''em?
5400Did n''t he say where he was going?
5400Did n''t know Hilary Vane''s be''n here?
5400Did n''t say it was from me-- didn''t say so-- did they--"No,said Mr. Crewe,"but--""Told Ball you wanted to have me see you, did n''t you?"
5400Did n''t say nothin''about Jake?
5400Did n''t say so-- d- didn''t say so, did I?
5400Did n''t see fit to mention it to me first-- did you? 5400 Did n''t the Judge get Mr, Lincoln''s message?"
5400Did n''t the newspaper come, Stephen?
5400Did n''t they tell you?
5400Did n''t we, Abby? 5400 Did n''t you expect me to be, when you said it?"
5400Did n''t you hear Isaac D. Worthington''s virtuous appeal to the people at Brampton?
5400Did n''t you know Jethro Bass was rich?
5400Did n''t you know that, before the strike, she was Ditmar''s private stenographer?
5400Did n''t you know who it was?
5400Did n''t you see him, either, before he left?
5400Did n''t you see him, my dear? 5400 Did n''t you suppose there were any gentlewomen there?"
5400Did not Mr. Wright give you my name?
5400Did she answer your letter?
5400Did she mention Stephen?
5400Did she say that?
5400Did she say that?
5400Did she say-- anything more?
5400Did she scold you-- Phrasie?
5400Did she speak of him?
5400Did that old fool Hammer stumble on to this?
5400Did the boys get back?
5400Did the masters themselves ever respect it, or any other decrees of God they preached to the slaves? 5400 Did they hurt ye, Davy?"
5400Did ye ever know Dan''l Boone?
5400Did ye tell''em they was cowards to want to settle lands, and not fight for''em? 5400 Did you catch your man?"
5400Did you come here to tell me that?
5400Did you come up here with orders for me to get out?
5400Did you ever find out anything about her family?
5400Did you ever hear the story of Mr. Wallace''s Irish gardener?
5400Did you ever know George Wrottlesey, of the Suffolk branch?
5400Did you ever miss bringing her a present, Lige?
5400Did you ever see a duel, Breed?
5400Did you have a good sermon?
5400Did you have a good trip, Hugh?
5400Did you hear any whistle or any bell?
5400Did you hear what he said about the Brampton postoffice?
5400Did you imagine I would let him escape so easily? 5400 Did you know her well?"
5400Did you know my uncle?
5400Did you know them?
5400Did you like it?
5400Did you like it?
5400Did you lose it?
5400Did you make it for Mrs. Maturin? 5400 Did you mean it?
5400Did you mean the Judge?
5400Did you mean to see me there?
5400Did you miss me?
5400Did you not know you had friends in London, sir?
5400Did you notice that fellow who went up to the desk a moment ago?
5400Did you notice the skirt of that suit Abby Kame had on? 5400 Did you put all that nonsense in the New York Flare?"
5400Did you put that there, Mathilde?
5400Did you really believe that?
5400Did you receive my letter?
5400Did you rent our house at Glencoe?
5400Did you see the First Citizen of Grenoble?
5400Did you seriously think, dear, that we could have deceived Mr. Bentley? 5400 Did you take in that man?"
5400Did you tell Gaylord this?
5400Did you tell Tom Gaylord that?
5400Did you tell old Tom so when he sent for you to take hold?
5400Did you tell old Tom so?
5400Did you think I meant to leave Kaskaskia, Davy?
5400Did you think I should be jealous?
5400Did you think that I''d be jealous?
5400Did you think you''d married just a dry old lawyer?
5400Did you wish anything more this evening?
5400Did you wish anything more, sir?
5400Did you wish to look at the house, madam?
5400Did you?
5400Did, you tell your father that you had seen me?
5400Did-- did that case against the railroad make him so popular?
5400Did-- did they tell you to come?
5400Die?
5400Dig up?
5400Disease?
5400Do I look it?
5400Do I really seem to you like that?
5400Do I understand? 5400 Do I?"
5400Do I?
5400Do about what?
5400Do all the women cheat in America too?
5400Do bluejackets make speeches in your country?
5400Do n''t be banal.... What is the colour?
5400Do n''t dare to?
5400Do n''t much blame him, do you? 5400 Do n''t one- twenty a day suit you?"
5400Do n''t remember me, do you?
5400Do n''t smoke, eh?
5400Do n''t that beat all?
5400Do n''t think the bill will be judged on its merits, do you?
5400Do n''t understand what?
5400Do n''t you care for me a little?
5400Do n''t you feel well?
5400Do n''t you intend to answer your letters?
5400Do n''t you know that that is wrong?
5400Do n''t you know that?
5400Do n''t you know who''Bije''is? 5400 Do n''t you know?"
5400Do n''t you know?
5400Do n''t you love me?
5400Do n''t you remember me, Major?
5400Do n''t you remember we''re going to Westchester to the Faunces''to spend the night and play bridge? 5400 Do n''t you see that I could n''t wear it, Uncle Jethro?"
5400Do n''t you see that I''m ruined if we''re caught?
5400Do n''t you see, dear, that it is just because your future as obscure that I can do this? 5400 Do n''t you see,"she continued pleadingly,"do n''t you see that we are growing apart?
5400Do n''t you sympathize with the strikers?
5400Do n''t you take rather a-- prejudiced view of this, Krebs?
5400Do n''t you think I''m entitled to one holiday?
5400Do n''t you think they''ll be safe here?
5400Do n''t you think this a little uncalled for?
5400Do n''t you think this is a little-- marked?
5400Do n''t you think we had better leave them alone?
5400Do n''t you think we should be going back?
5400Do n''t you think you''ve overdrawn things, Maude exaggerated them? 5400 Do n''t you think,"asked Victoria, summoning her courage,"that Austen Vane ought to be told?"
5400Do n''t you think,she asked bravely,"that Mr. Austen Vane ought to be told that his father is-- in this condition?"
5400Do n''t you?
5400Do n''t you?
5400Do n''t you?
5400Do they in any manner affect your conduct?
5400Do we lack leaders?
5400Do what?
5400Do you always beat people if they do wrong?
5400Do you believe in them yourself?
5400Do you believe it now?
5400Do you believe that, Honora?
5400Do you believe that? 5400 Do you believe you and I could get along, Judge?
5400Do you blame me?
5400Do you cal''late,said he,--that I could work for your father, and wish ruin to his country?"
5400Do you call him Trixy to his face?
5400Do you call that progress?
5400Do you care?
5400Do you come from St. Louis, sir?
5400Do you deserve one?
5400Do you ever get back to Cambridge in these days?
5400Do you ever run into it outside of the movies? 5400 Do you expect me to take down all my mirrors, Eleanor?
5400Do you feel it?
5400Do you feel strong enough for a journey, Richard?
5400Do you feel that?
5400Do you guess we can keep off the subject, Comyn?
5400Do you happen to know why she went?
5400Do you hear me? 5400 Do you hear that, Davy?"
5400Do you hear us?
5400Do you hear?
5400Do you hear?
5400Do you honestly believe that?
5400Do you intend to go sir?
5400Do you know Bob very well?
5400Do you know a dish- cloth when you see one?
5400Do you know a man named Krebs in the House?
5400Do you know a place called Clam Shell, down on the river bank, Nick?
5400Do you know any better now?
5400Do you know anything about that man, Miss Trevor?
5400Do you know her? 5400 Do you know him?"
5400Do you know him?
5400Do you know him?
5400Do you know him?
5400Do you know him?
5400Do you know how I feel sometimes? 5400 Do you know if Clarence Colfax has gone home?"
5400Do you know it?
5400Do you know me now?
5400Do you know what I told him when he married me? 5400 Do you know what I''ve been wondering all evening?"
5400Do you know what he wishes, Dorothy?
5400Do you know what is in there?
5400Do you know what was in that note? 5400 Do you know where Brampton is?"
5400Do you know where General Daniel Carvel lives?
5400Do you know where you are?
5400Do you know who that is, Davy?
5400Do you know who this is?
5400Do you know whom he took for Desmond, Mr. Allen? 5400 Do you know why I stayed?"
5400Do you know?
5400Do you like him, Daddy?
5400Do you like interviewing?
5400Do you like to see women smoke?
5400Do you like your work here?
5400Do you live down here, in this part of the city?
5400Do you live here all the year round?
5400Do you live in New York?
5400Do you love him? 5400 Do you love him?"
5400Do you love him?
5400Do you love me, Mathilde?
5400Do you love me?--will you love me always-- always?
5400Do you mean Mr. Grafton, fellow?
5400Do you mean he buys their votes?
5400Do you mean that Grafton has got possession of the estate? 5400 Do you mean that fat, tow- headed boy that used to come up here and eat melons and ride my pony?"
5400Do you mean that he has deserted us?
5400Do you mean that they are being paid to remain in their seats?
5400Do you mean the house or the park?
5400Do you mean to say Mr. Temple has been here-- Nicholas Temple?
5400Do you mean to say he has a chance for the nomination?
5400Do you mean to say that I am not-- myself?
5400Do you mean to say that Miss Lucretia is in Brampton and spoke at the mass meeting?
5400Do you mean to say that you, my own daughter, are defending these charlatans?
5400Do you mean to say this Blodgett tried to kill you?
5400Do you mean to say this two- for- a- cent town has a boss?
5400Do you mean to say you do n''t want the house?
5400Do you mean to say you keep such an exact account of all the milk you get?
5400Do you mean to say you never heard of Miller Gorse?
5400Do you mean to say you remembered me from that?
5400Do you mean to say you''ve fixed it?
5400Do you mean to say--such was the question that sprang to Eldon Parr''s lips--"that you take the Bible literally?
5400Do you mean to say, George,asked Mrs. Waring, with a note of pain in her voice,"that the Apostolic Succession can not be historically proved?"
5400Do you mean to say?
5400Do you mean to tell me that you were the general of this hoax-- you?
5400Do you mean war?
5400Do you mean,I managed to say,"that after all these months you do n''t like me a little?"
5400Do you mean,he demanded, when he had caught his breath,"that you intend to attack us publicly?"
5400Do you mean-- do you mean that you wish me to give you the reasons why I felt justified in leaving my husband?
5400Do you mean-- that we should renounce?
5400Do you mean--?
5400Do you mind going?
5400Do you mind how you once asked the favour of inviting her in the place of a present? 5400 Do you mind if I go a bit farther, Miss Flint?"
5400Do you not remember me, Mademoiselle? 5400 Do you object if I stand a moment?"
5400Do you play?
5400Do you realize what it means if we lose control? 5400 Do you realize-- can you ever realize what your faith in me has been to me?"
5400Do you really believe that?
5400Do you really think so?
5400Do you really think that Tom is with the Yankees?
5400Do you really want it so much as all that, Uncle Jethro?
5400Do you really want me, sir?
5400Do you really wish to?
5400Do you recall the day you left your Harvard, and your Boston, my friend?
5400Do you reckon you could hit me if you shot?
5400Do you reckon your Polly Ann would give me a little mite to eat?
5400Do you refuse to say anything in the face of such evidence as that?
5400Do you remember how stiff they were, Tom?
5400Do you remember the night she came,I asked,"and we sat with her on the Florentine porch, and Charles Wrexell recognized her and came up?"
5400Do you remember the place where I used to play fairy godmother, and wind the flowers into my hair?
5400Do you remember the story of the Prodigal Son?
5400Do you remember what good times we had in the farmhouse, when you and I used to go off for whole days together?
5400Do you remember when I was here that evening about two months ago I said I should like to be your friend? 5400 Do you remember when we were here together, the day I met Mr. Bentley?
5400Do you remember, one morning some five years ago, when I took in at the store a Yankee named Hopper? 5400 Do you ride?"
5400Do you see much of-- of these people, Susan?
5400Do you see that bottle? 5400 Do you see that stream which comes foaming down the notch into the lake in front of us?"
5400Do you see this Braden once in a while?
5400Do you suppose I am going to desert him, Miss Lucretia?
5400Do you suppose we''re going to let the mob run this country?
5400Do you take much interest in politics?
5400Do you tell me this to my face?
5400Do you tell me, Jethro, that you want me to appoint you agent to fix that road?
5400Do you think I can stay here while my people are shot down by a lot of damned Dutchman?
5400Do you think I care for that?
5400Do you think I could be deceived?
5400Do you think I could have prevented it?
5400Do you think I could see him-- for a moment?
5400Do you think I have n''t suffered, too? 5400 Do you think I have no eyes?"
5400Do you think I want anybody to take care of me? 5400 Do you think I want them from you?"
5400Do you think I want to be taken care of?
5400Do you think I would have him in my house?
5400Do you think I''d change it? 5400 Do you think I''m after-- what you can give me?"
5400Do you think I''m going to let you butt into this? 5400 Do you think I''m in danger of sinking?"
5400Do you think Melisse would do something for you if you asked her?
5400Do you think Mr. Worthington will get it?
5400Do you think he can be saved?
5400Do you think he will tell you?
5400Do you think he would come to me--?
5400Do you think he would see me?
5400Do you think he''s at home, Tom?
5400Do you think his principles contagious?
5400Do you think it very wrong, Monsieur?
5400Do you think me a very wicked girl?
5400Do you think old Hilary does n''t know what he''s about?
5400Do you think so, Jinny?
5400Do you think so?
5400Do you think that I am foolish enough to believe that Fletcher Bartlett or Sam Price planned this thing? 5400 Do you think that Lincoln would make a good President?"
5400Do you think that she is unhappy?
5400Do you think the house will hold you both?
5400Do you think there is a chance?
5400Do you think they increase your value to me, Hugh?
5400Do you think this Jethro Bass a proper guardian for Cynthia Wetherell?
5400Do you think we had better go?
5400Do you think you can find her?
5400Do you think you can find your uncle''s house?
5400Do you think you deserve to, after the shameful manner in which you have behaved?
5400Do you think you''ve got-- any chance?
5400Do you think your father will take you there, David, when he comes for you?
5400Do you think,she asked, glancing at him,"do you think you have money enough to go abroad-- just for a little while?"
5400Do you understand what you have done?
5400Do you want me to go with you?
5400Do you want me to ruin her utterly?
5400Do you want to get rid of me?
5400Do you want to go, Ned?
5400Do you want to go, Ned?
5400Do you want to see him act?
5400Do you want to see me, Judge?
5400Do you want to see?
5400Do you want to take the appointment along with you to- night?
5400Do you wish me to go away?
5400Do you work here?
5400Do you, now?
5400Do you-- remember the verse?
5400Do you?
5400Do you?
5400Do you?
5400Do you?
5400Do-- Do you know what they quarreled about?
5400Do-- do people dislike the railroad?
5400Do?
5400Do?
5400Doctor, could this man''s life be saved if I took him to my home?
5400Does General Carvel live here?
5400Does Hilary Vane defend him?
5400Does Monsieur de St. Gre accept?
5400Does Mr. Vane acknowledge the acquaintance?
5400Does Nick-- know that you are here?
5400Does he bring them here,--or you?
5400Does he give you a remedy?
5400Does he often call this early?
5400Does he really intend to go into politics?
5400Does he think that the-- the Rebellion can be put down?
5400Does he? 5400 Does it belong to that man over there?"
5400Does it bring you luck?
5400Does it make any difference what Mr. Wing thinks?
5400Does it make any difference who made it, Honora?
5400Does it seem longer than that to you?
5400Does mother know-- about the boat?
5400Does n''t Mr. Allen remind you a little of Desmond?
5400Does n''t he look pleased with himself?
5400Does n''t it make you wish to dance?
5400Does n''t that reduce the Church somewhere to the level of the police force?
5400Does n''t the Bible say, somewhere,she inquired,"that the Sabbath was made for man?
5400Does she appear to be in,--ah,--in good spirits?
5400Does that cause you to like it any less, Honora?
5400Does that mean Camp Jackson?
5400Does that surprise you?
5400Does the penalty,he inquired,"seem to you a little severe?"
5400Does the study of law eliminate humanity?
5400Does you want to see folks, Marse Comyn?
5400Does your aunt''s health mend?
5400Does your grandfather know you are here, lad?
5400Does your trouble feel any better?
5400Doing what?
5400Dolly had n''t told you?
5400Drat you, Lige, why do n''t you kiss the girl? 5400 Dreaming, Victoria?"
5400Drew, of course,I said;"who else?"
5400Drop anything, Miss?
5400Drury Lane, sir,he replied, giving me just the corner of a glance;"shall I fetch a coach, sir?"
5400Dudley Worthington?
5400Dump it where?
5400Earn your livin''by paintin'', do n''t you-- earn your livin''?
5400Eddie,said Ditmar,"have you got a nice little table for us?"
5400Egad, Charles, is this he the Beauty rescued from Castle Yard?
5400Egad, Richard,said my Lord, when we had got to my lodgings,"I made him change colour, did I not?
5400Egad,he cried,"do you mean to say, Madame, that you will go to the Baron on my behalf?"
5400Eh bien?
5400Eh, mon Dieu, have you not heard?
5400Eh?
5400Eh?
5400Eh?
5400Eh?
5400Eldon Parr''s church?
5400Engaged to you?
5400England?
5400Enjoy in''yourself?
5400Enjoy the speech- makin'', Steve?
5400Er- er, Cynthia-- not Cynthy?
5400Er- this one is a little shinier than that one?
5400Er- what''s that?
5400Er-- Alvy,said Jethro presently,"what''s the name of your gal?"
5400Er-- Alvy?
5400Er-- Bob?
5400Er-- Cynthy,he said presently,"hain''t fond of that Painter- man, be you?"
5400Er-- Cynthy,said Jethro, slyly,"w- what''d you say to me once about interferin''with women''s fixin''s?"
5400Er-- Ephraim, how''d you like to, be postmaster? 5400 Er-- Ephraim,"said Jethro,"how long since you b''en away from Coniston-- how long?"
5400Er-- Grant ever pay any attention to an old soldier on the street?
5400Er-- Heth Sutton did n''t sign his receipt-- er-- did he?
5400Er-- Senator-- when can I see the President?
5400Er-- Senator?
5400Er-- Steve,said Jethro,"what would your wife say if I was to drink coffee out of my saucer?"
5400Er-- Wetherell?
5400Er-- Will,said Jethro, presently,"you know Heth Sutton-- Speaker Heth Sutton?"
5400Er-- Will-- held Duncan pretty tight-- didn''t you? 5400 Er-- appealed to Heth in the name of the farmers and merchants?"
5400Er-- come to appeal, have you-- come to appeal?
5400Er-- didn''t laugh-- did he, Will? 5400 Er-- er-- Cynthia?"
5400Er-- glad to see me, Heth-- glad to see me?
5400Er-- go back to Harvard, Bob?
5400Er-- goin''to Clovelly after wool this week, Jake?
5400Er-- goin''to Clovelly after wool this week, Jake?
5400Er-- how long shall you be here, Alison?
5400Er-- interested in roads,--Will,--interested in roads?
5400Er-- like to go to Washington with us to- morrow like to go to Washington?
5400Er-- painter- man, be you? 5400 Er-- principal stockholder-- ain''t you?"
5400Er-- read it to me?
5400Er-- still got that appointment p- practically in your pocket?
5400Er-- suppose an old soldier was in front of the White House at eleven o''clock-- an old soldier with a gal suppose?
5400Er-- that Painter- man hain''t such a bad fellow-- w- why did n''t you ask him in to supper?
5400Er-- to- morrow-- at one-- to- morrow-- like to go to Boston?
5400Er-- what figure do you allow it comes to with the frame?
5400Er-- what''s your name, little gal-- what''s your name?
5400Er-- who''s b''en talkin''about mortgages, Cynthy?
5400Er-- why?
5400Er-- why?
5400Er-- won''t you come in and-- and sit down?
5400Er-- wouldn''t mind askin''him to step in and see me before the session-- if he was comin''by-- would you?
5400Er-- you a candidate-- Sam-- you a candidate?
5400Erwin? 5400 Escaped?"
5400Et pourquoi non?
5400Et quoi donc?
5400Eustace? 5400 Even golf?"
5400Even to such a doleful place as this?
5400Even with me?
5400Ever been in Elkington before?
5400Ever hear of the Liberator?
5400Ever read Carlyle''s''French Revolution''?
5400Everything going all right up at the mills, Colonel?
5400Everything went through according to schedule, eh? 5400 Everything?"
5400Except what?
5400Exguse me, your honour,said the person,"but haf you seen Mister Fox?"
5400Extraordinary? 5400 F- feelin''some better to- day, Will?"
5400F- fit to teach-- wahn''t she-- fit to teach?
5400F- found strawberries?
5400Faith, and why not, sir? 5400 Father,"said Victoria,"do n''t you think you ought to stay up here at least a week, and rest?
5400Feel about what?
5400Fenelon,said Mrs. Cooke, gravely,"do you realize what you are saying?"
5400Find it pretty hard?
5400Find ourselves?
5400Fit to teach-- wahn''t fit to marry your son-- was she?
5400Flint''s daughter?
5400Flippantly Miss Carvel?
5400Folks live here, sonny?
5400Foolish?
5400For God''s sake, Brush,cries the Honourable Elisha,"has n''t this thing gone far enough?
5400For God''s sake, what do you mean?
5400For God''s sake, why ca n''t you trust me?
5400For God''s sake, why?
5400For God''s sake-- you''re killing me-- don''t you know it? 5400 For Heaven''s sake, Humphrey,"she cried,"shut off your power?
5400For an old woman? 5400 For heaven''s sake, what is the matter, Honora?"
5400For how long?
5400For how much are these gentlemen in your books?
5400For my sake?
5400For shame, Xavier,cried Nick;"and you are balked by such things?"
5400For the future?
5400For the summer?
5400For what else?
5400For what hate man of all his labour, and of the vexation of his heart, wherein he hath laboured under the sun?
5400For what you have done?
5400For what?
5400Found that out long ago,he replied with conviction, and added:"Then you think I need not anticipate any trouble from her?"
5400Free from care and despair, What care we? 5400 Friends in town?"
5400Friendship,he repeated,"y- you said friendship?"
5400From Cecil?
5400From Elkington? 5400 From the miniature?"
5400Fun?
5400Funny thing, chance,he remarked;"who''d a thought I should have owned that there hoss, and he should have come around here to ride it?"
5400Funny? 5400 G- gettin''posted-- hain''t you, Will?"
5400G- goin''to Harwich-- hain''t you?
5400G- goin''to do all you can to stop it hain''t you?
5400G- goin''to do it anyway-- was you?
5400G- goin''to read it, Cynthy?
5400G- goin''to the show, be you, Amos?
5400G- goin''to town meetin'', Eben?
5400G- goin''to town meetin'', Eben?
5400G- goin''to town meetin''Tuesday-- g- goin''to town meetin''Tuesday-- Sam''l?
5400G- got any candidates?
5400G- got the honey?
5400G- got through?
5400Game rare?
5400General, could you hold Colonel Colfax until I see you again?
5400General,said Ephraim,"Mr. President,"he added, correcting himself,"how be you?"
5400Gentlemen, are you ready for the question?
5400Get out of what?
5400Get the names of witnesses?
5400Give me my hat, will you?
5400Give me up? 5400 Give orders?"
5400Give you up? 5400 Given to book- l''arnin''then, wahn''t you?"
5400Giving me a chance?
5400Go on with your story,said Marian;"what did he do?"
5400Go, my dear?
5400God have mercy on us,I heard him mutter,"what''s that?
5400God help me,said the poor man, searching for his handkerchief, and utterly confounded,"why is it you have come to me, then?
5400Godfrey, Will,exclaimed Rigs, breathlessly,"you hain''t a- goin''to throw up a chance to stay a hull week at the Pelican, be you?"
5400Goin''down to the capital soon?
5400Goin''in, be you, Peleg?
5400Goin''to invite Democrats, too?
5400Goin''to take a real vacation, be you?
5400Going away?
5400Going in to see Jerry?
5400Going to Springfield?
5400Going to handle the case yourself, are you?
5400Going where?
5400Goliah,said Mr. Dodd, at last,"did you ever hear such talk?
5400Gone where?
5400Gone where?
5400Gone where?
5400Gone?
5400Good Lord,said Colonel Carvel,"if the conservative people of the North act this way when they see a slave sale, what will the Abolitionists do?
5400Good morning, Sam,he said;"is Mr. Bentley in?"
5400Good- by?
5400Got left,--didn''t he?
5400Got them vouchers?
5400Got your themes done?
5400Grafton Carvel in London?
5400Grant did n''t say anything about Worthington or Duncan, did he?
5400Grant, did you ever see my little sweetheart, Jinny Carvel?
5400Great Lord, what are you talking about?
5400Great Scott, Jethro, what do you mean?
5400Great Scott, do you mean to say you''ve got Bixby?
5400Grinding it out? 5400 Guess you can help him some-- you understand?"
5400Gut morning, poy,he said, wiping his red face with his sleeve;"what you do here?"
5400Gwendolen, you''re not going up already?
5400H- Heth in the charitable organization, too?
5400H- had her dismissed by the prudential committee had her dismissed-- didn''t you?
5400H- hain''t paid for it yet-- hev you?
5400H- hain''t under any obligations to you, Ed-- am I?
5400H- haow was it here?
5400H- have to be justified, do you-- have to be justified?
5400H- haven''t took that Worthington cuss?
5400H- haven''t took''Moses-- have you?
5400H- haven''t took-- Moses, have you?
5400H- hear things, do n''t you-- hear things in the store?
5400H- heerd the ticket?
5400H- how about Worthington?
5400H- how be you, Cynthy?
5400H- how be you, Jock?
5400H- how did it happen?
5400H- how did ye find out, Cynthy?
5400H- how do they treat me?
5400H- how do they treat you, Cynthy?
5400H- how is it written,said Jethro, leaning over it,"h- how is it written?"
5400H- how long since you''ve b''en in foreign parts?
5400H- how much did you git for your wool, Chester-- h- how much?
5400H- how much do they git for that noise-- h- how much do they git?
5400H- how much do they git for that noise?
5400H- how much for a good picture? 5400 H- how much for that?"
5400H- how old be you, Cynthy?
5400H- how''d you know it-- how''d you know it, Cynthy?
5400H- how''d you like it?
5400H- how''d you like to be postmaster at Brampton?
5400H- how''s Cynthy?
5400H- how''s that, Sam-- how''s that?
5400Ha, ha,said Xavier, shaking with unseemly mirth,"you have never heard ze alligator sing, Michie?"
5400Had n''t you better go after her?
5400Had n''t you better see her?
5400Had n''t you better write him?
5400Hain''t got the money, have you?
5400Hain''t had so much stomach trouble lately, Will?
5400Hain''t lonely here, Cynthy-- hain''t lonely here?
5400Hain''t made a great deal out of life, hev you? 5400 Hain''t never mixed any in politics-- hev you n- never mixed any?"
5400Hain''t none of you folks got spunk enough to carry me over to see the jedge?
5400Hain''t seed you for some time, Will,remarked Mr. Bixby;"goin''over to the exercises?
5400Hain''t the Congress got authority here?
5400Hain''t underdone it, and hain''t overdone it a mite hev you? 5400 Hain''t you b''en sent for yet, Jake?"
5400Hain''t you enjoyin''yourself, Cynthy?
5400Hain''t you guessin''a little mite too much; Cynthy?
5400Halloo, Davy, how the deuce did you get there?
5400Ham, why did you do it?
5400Ham,said Austen,"are you sure you have the names and addresses of those twenty prominent citizens right, so that any voter may go out and find''em?"
5400Hannah?
5400Harry,she said,"do you remember all our contrivances?
5400Has Colonel Washington spoken in my favour, sir?
5400Has Jenney been putting such things into your head?
5400Has Jethro Bass ever been a member of the Legislature?
5400Has Miss Victoria retired?
5400Has Mr. Grainger been at Quicksands since?
5400Has anything happened?
5400Has everybody read them?
5400Has he come here to practice?
5400Has he given you the points of Water Witch and Netty Boone?
5400Has he gone down to see Clarence?
5400Has he told you what a jockey Ned used to be before he weighed one hundred and a quarter?
5400Has he treated you badly, Ephum?
5400Has he?
5400Has he?
5400Has my reputation gone before me?
5400Has n''t Miss Bumpus come yet?
5400Has n''t she been home?
5400Has not my grandfather written of my disappearance?
5400Has the risk you ran getting me into England ever occurred to you, Jack?
5400Has your Uncle Grafton called to express his sympathies, Richard?
5400Hastings, do n''t you see that poor old woman over there? 5400 Hate you?"
5400Have I done something to offend you?
5400Have I made you angry?
5400Have I not been caned for this, sir?
5400Have I not exhausted the language?
5400Have I not made it plain that I can not live without her?
5400Have I not seen him look at you like the great animal of Joshua when he wants his supper? 5400 Have I received much encouragement to do so?"
5400Have I?
5400Have come to what?
5400Have n''t I been charitable to you?
5400Have n''t I done enough for the town? 5400 Have n''t I good friends in Boston?"
5400Have n''t I seen her in Brampton?
5400Have n''t I seen you before?
5400Have n''t I seen you some- wheres?
5400Have n''t I spent the days of my active life in the service of that road--and is this my reward? 5400 Have n''t I?"
5400Have n''t they the right,he asked, somewhat lamely to demand the kind of religion they pay for?"
5400Have n''t we enough Black Republican friends?
5400Have n''t we met before?
5400Have n''t you a costume?
5400Have n''t you a pin?
5400Have n''t you a theory?
5400Have n''t you found out yet that man created God, Hughie?
5400Have n''t you read the Pilot and the Mail and State?
5400Have n''t you seen it?
5400Have some lemonade, Mr. Jenney? 5400 Have they ever heard of her?"
5400Have they got a case?
5400Have they run out of champagne?
5400Have they scented Lamothe or Maisonville?
5400Have ye--?
5400Have you a doctor aboard, Charley?
5400Have you a new suit to wear to- night, to see the New Year in, Master Sober?
5400Have you always felt like this?
5400Have you any new mares to surprise us with this year, Harvey?
5400Have you any objection to stating, Hugh, in plain English, that you made it?
5400Have you any other suggestions to make?
5400Have you asked him?
5400Have you been away?
5400Have you been interested in what I thought about you?
5400Have you been lonesome, Davy?
5400Have you been to the Metropolitan Museum lately?
5400Have you been waiting long?
5400Have you been working to- day, Hugh?
5400Have you changed them?
5400Have you come to help us?
5400Have you confronted this rector with his perfidy, Richard?
5400Have you ever acted, Captain Paul?
5400Have you ever been in one?
5400Have you ever definitely and sincerely tried to put what the Church teaches into practice?
5400Have you ever read anything of Monsieur Rousseau''s, Richard?
5400Have you ever seen the sunrise from its peak?
5400Have you ever tasted my Pippins?
5400Have you ever thought much of the men we have in the colonies?
5400Have you ever tried it?
5400Have you ever tried to stand on your feet for nine hours, where you could n''t sit down for a minute? 5400 Have you ever,"he inquired, lapsing a little into his lecture- room manner,"seriously thought of literature as a career?
5400Have you finished it?
5400Have you finished?
5400Have you finished?
5400Have you forgotten already,she asked, smilingly, as she poured out her coffee,"that we are going to town together?"
5400Have you forgotten me, Richard?
5400Have you found happiness?
5400Have you found one?
5400Have you found the new one?
5400Have you got an appointment?
5400Have you got orders to sit down there?
5400Have you got rheumatism, too, like Cousin Eph? 5400 Have you had many tete- a- tetes?"
5400Have you heard anything more?
5400Have you heard of the thousands of innocents who are slaughtered, of the women and children who are butchered in the streets in the name of Liberty? 5400 Have you heard the news from abroad, Richard?"
5400Have you heard what''s up?
5400Have you hit on a palace you like better?
5400Have you met the Duke of Chartersea? 5400 Have you missed your way?"
5400Have you nightmare?
5400Have you no compassion?
5400Have you no family to support?
5400Have you no other friends in London?
5400Have you not enough to wish you good- by, Dolly?
5400Have you not friends enough at home to care for you, sir?
5400Have you now?
5400Have you ordered your uniform yet, Ham?
5400Have you put this man on the roll, Harrod?
5400Have you read The Sybarites?
5400Have you read his books?
5400Have you read the President''s message to Congress, sir? 5400 Have you read the pronunciamento?"
5400Have you read them?
5400Have you room enough?
5400Have you seen Phil?
5400Have you seen her in The Orphan? 5400 Have you seen much of it?"
5400Have you seen my father in town?
5400Have you seen my husband, sir? 5400 Have you seen the Guardian?"
5400Have you seen this?
5400Have you sent word to the Colonel?
5400Have you struck, sir?
5400Have you taken the paper money?
5400Have you talked of this to any one else?
5400Have you the exact date about you, mother?
5400Have you the right to tell Austen?
5400Have you written him?
5400Have you, too, been up before Miss Crane''s Commission?
5400Have you-- have you accepted him?
5400He ai n''t lost money, has he?
5400He came to her?
5400He did n''t tell you he was a- goin''?
5400He did n''t tell you why his daughter had joined the strikers?
5400He does n''t say whar he''s going?
5400He expects me?
5400He has gone to Jefferson City, to see the Governor.."And you came alone?
5400He has such a splendid,` out- door''look do n''t you think? 5400 He is great, I grant you,"Chris would admit,"but vat is he if the vimmen leave him alone?
5400He is no more crazy than I am,said Stephen, warmly--"Is he not?"
5400He is not coming?
5400He knew we were coming?
5400He resigned three days ago?
5400He said he''d give it to him, did he?
5400He said that?
5400He talks to them plainly, does he, so that they understand? 5400 He that hath seen me hath seen the Father;"and"Why callest thou me good?
5400He thinks he''s got the nomination cinched, do n''t he?
5400He tried to sell her again?
5400He was very handsome, was n''t he?
5400He will recover?
5400He would have murdered you-- you, Richard?
5400He''d come to see me, would n''t he?
5400He''s a bachelor,said Virginia; what use has he got for it?"
5400He''s a young man, is n''t he?
5400He''s been ridden?
5400He''s had to talk about it once or twice in court-- eh, Hugh? 5400 He''s made a killing of some sort,--haven''t you, Hugh?"...
5400He''s the man Mr. Jenney said wanted you to be a senator, is n''t he?
5400He''s the richest man in the state, is n''t he?
5400Heard what?
5400Hearing things?
5400Heigho, parson,said the gentleman on the horse- block, without moving,"are you to preach against loo or lansquenet to- morrow?"
5400Helene,I said at last,"will you give me the miniature?"
5400Hello, Austen,he said,"since when have you took to comin''here?"
5400Hello, Crocker, old man,shouted my client,"did you think I was never coming back?
5400Hello, Honora,he said;"are you still at it?
5400Hello, Hugh,she said indifferently, looking back over her shoulder;"have you turned up again?"
5400Hello, Paret,he said"how is that telephone business getting along?"
5400Hello, Victoria, what did you think of my speech?
5400Hello, Victoria,he said,"you do n''t know anything about gardens, do you?"
5400Help us?
5400Henderson?
5400Her pa do n''t ruin her I eh, Ephum? 5400 Her sufferings?"
5400Here? 5400 Here?"
5400Hev any of ye seen a feller named Colfax?
5400Hev the land?
5400Hev ye no sperrit, Tom McChesney?
5400Hev you took him, Cynthy?
5400Hev''they be''n tamperin''with you?
5400Hi, Jem, have ye seen the General''s man? 5400 His daughter?"
5400His name, Fred?
5400His name,said Cynthia,"is Bob Worthington:""Isaac Worthington''s son?"
5400His what?
5400Hodder, how would you like to live in this house-- alone?
5400Hodder,he demanded abruptly, leaning forward over his desk,"how did this thing happen?"
5400Hold on, Phrasie,said Austen, seizing her by the apron- strings,"how about the Judge?"
5400Hold on,said the Celebrity,"who told you to do that?"
5400Home from church?
5400Home,answered Honora, a little breathlessly, and added for his deception,"the game''s over, is n''t it?
5400Honest to God?
5400Honey,said Virginia, as they stood in the deep recess of the window,"would n''t it be nice if we could live here always, away from the world?
5400Honora, what do you say to going back to Grenoble?
5400Honora, why do you think I came over here?
5400Honora, wilt thou have this man to thy wedded husband, to live together after God''s ordinance in the holy state of Matrimony? 5400 Honora,"demanded Mrs. Dallam, ignoring his bravado,"why do n''t you take a house at Quicksands?
5400Honora,he said,"why do n''t you tell me the truth?"
5400Honora,said Lily Dallam, when the women were back in the drawing- room,"what did you do to Sid?
5400Honora?
5400Honora?
5400Horrible?
5400Horses?
5400Hostess?
5400How about Blodgett?
5400How about Judge Whipple?
5400How about Mrs. Chandos? 5400 How about automobiling?"
5400How about his honour with whom you supped at Windsor? 5400 How about hoisting the spinnaker, mate?"
5400How about it, little girl?
5400How about it, old man?
5400How about my case?
5400How about the boys?
5400How about the penitentiary?
5400How about the thousands of families who do n''t earn enough to live decently even in times of prosperity?
5400How am I going to pay a lawyer, with a mortgage on my farm?
5400How am I to decide?
5400How am I to get along without the friendship of Brush Bascom?
5400How am I to piece words enough together to thank you for this supreme act of charity?
5400How are the apples this year?
5400How are the children?
5400How are we going to better it, Hugh, this way? 5400 How are you getting on?"
5400How are you going to get your folks out there?
5400How are you going to prove it?
5400How are you this evening, now? 5400 How are you this morning?"
5400How are you, Crewe?
5400How are you, General?
5400How are you, Governor?
5400How are you, Hilary?
5400How are you, Hilary?
5400How are you, Hodder? 5400 How are you, Hugh?"
5400How are you, Judge?
5400How are you, Mr. Giddings? 5400 How are you, Mr. Hodder?
5400How are you, Senator?
5400How are you, old man?
5400How are you?
5400How are you?
5400How are you?
5400How are you?
5400How be you, Comrade?
5400How be you, Cynthy?
5400How be you, Heth?
5400How be you, Heth?
5400How be you, Jethro?
5400How be you, Jethro?
5400How be you, Jethro?
5400How be you, Jethro?
5400How be you, Peleg? 5400 How be you, Will?
5400How be you? 5400 How be you?"
5400How be you?
5400How be you?
5400How be you?
5400How can I serve you, messieurs?
5400How can I tell when these idiots will give me any rest?
5400How can I tell? 5400 How can I thank you, Monsieur?"
5400How can Mr. Watling help you?
5400How can madame ask?
5400How can you ask? 5400 How can you ask?
5400How can you be so reckless?
5400How can you expect me to be-- now?
5400How can you say that? 5400 How car, you expect them to do it right the first day, and in this wind?"
5400How come she recommembered, Marse Comyn? 5400 How could I help you?"
5400How could I support myself in Coniston?
5400How could I, Alison?
5400How could I? 5400 How could I?"
5400How could he have been so blind? 5400 How could he help it?"
5400How could you be so cruel, Howard?
5400How could you ever have left it?
5400How could you know what I wanted, Peter?
5400How could you, Gran''pa?
5400How d''ye do?
5400How d''you like my new toque? 5400 How dare you say that?"
5400How dare you speak flippantly of such things?
5400How dare you, sir?
5400How decent?
5400How did he make the money?
5400How did she take it?
5400How did they run up against Uncle Jethro?
5400How did they take it?
5400How did this-- this affair start?
5400How did you burn our sap- rollers?
5400How did you come?
5400How did you escape?
5400How did you find it out?
5400How did you find out I was at Miss Sadler''s?
5400How did you get here?
5400How did you get into the city?
5400How did you get to this house?
5400How did you guess it?
5400How did you guess?
5400How did you hear that?
5400How did you know I was looking at you?
5400How did you know I wrote this article?
5400How did you know that?
5400How did you know?
5400How did you know?
5400How did you know?
5400How did you know?
5400How did you leave Uncle Tom and Aunt Mary?
5400How did you like those speeches, Jethro?
5400How did you work it?
5400How do I feel? 5400 How do I stand over there?"
5400How do these good people live, who helped us when we were starving?
5400How do you define''the fittest?''
5400How do you do, Comrade?
5400How do you do, Cynthia?
5400How do you do, Jennie?
5400How do you do, Jethro?
5400How do you do, Judge?
5400How do you do, Mary?
5400How do you do, Miss Wetherell? 5400 How do you do, Miss Wetherell?"
5400How do you do, Mr. Vane? 5400 How do you do, Starling?"
5400How do you do, sir?
5400How do you do, sir?
5400How do you do? 5400 How do you do?"
5400How do you feel about these things yourself?
5400How do you feel, Richard?
5400How do you happen to be in the East?
5400How do you know you would get your money again, Banks?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you know?
5400How do you like Mohair?
5400How do you manage to do it?
5400How do you mean that he steals money from the girls?
5400How do you mean-- you understand?
5400How do you propose to support her?
5400How do you suppose Jethro Bass knew you were going to indict the town?
5400How do you, Richard?
5400How do you, cousin?
5400How do you?
5400How does it limit the power of God, mother,her son- in- law asked,"to discover that he chooses to work by laws?
5400How does she seem? 5400 How does the idea strike you?"
5400How far is it?
5400How free have you been?
5400How general is this sentiment?
5400How has he built up the church?
5400How hungry children eat, for instance?
5400How in Jehoshaphat did you work it?...
5400How in the name of lineage did she come to have such a father?
5400How is Cousin Eph?
5400How is Judah B. to- day, Hughie?
5400How is Mr. Parr? 5400 How is my elderly dove- coloured friend this morning?"
5400How is my father, sir?
5400How is she?
5400How is the Duke of Putnam this morning?
5400How is the railroad mixed up in it?
5400How is the rheumatism?
5400How is the tannery business in these parts?
5400How is this thing going, Paret?
5400How is this, Davy?
5400How is your father this afternoon?
5400How is your mistress?
5400How know you I am a gentleman, Captain Paul?
5400How long ago did you come from France, Monsieur?
5400How long am I to be made a butt of for the amusement of a lot of imbeciles?
5400How long could the woman stand it?....
5400How long do you think you could stand it?
5400How long have I known you?
5400How long have you been away from Louisville?
5400How long have you been home? 5400 How long have you been in Nashville, Nick?"
5400How long have you cared, Victoria?
5400How long hev you ben in town?
5400How long is this little game of yours to continue,--this bull- baiting?
5400How long will it take you to dress?
5400How long will your father be in New Orleans, Mademoiselle?
5400How long-- would it take to make out that app''intment-- how long?
5400How many do you think you can muster for that entertainment of mine? 5400 How many do you think?"
5400How many friends has he?
5400How many generations?
5400How many gowns believe in their own sermons? 5400 How many inhabitants do you require?"
5400How many more of those bills have you got?
5400How many people are in there?
5400How many times have you spoken with Austen Vane?
5400How may you be directed to?
5400How much are you fellows equal to?
5400How much did you git out of it, Bije?
5400How much did you say you''d spent, Adam?
5400How much do they cost? 5400 How much do you think Mrs. Farnham-- or Mrs. Rindge-- is worth?"
5400How much do you want?
5400How much does it cost?
5400How much have you spent?
5400How much is gasoline by the gallon?
5400How much is it?
5400How much store do ye set by that hide?
5400How much time has gone away? 5400 How much wages do they git?"
5400How much would you take, my friend, to let us in at the back way this evening?
5400How much, I say?
5400How near are they, old man?
5400How now, Colfax?
5400How now, Master Richard?
5400How now, my man of mysterious affairs?
5400How now, sir?
5400How old did you believe me?
5400How old did you say you were?
5400How old did you think I was?
5400How old is he?
5400How old you pe,--twelve, yes?
5400How shall I get along, I wonder, with that simple and unsophisticated lady when she appears?
5400How should she?
5400How soon may I come?
5400How soon will your business let you?
5400How the deuce did you manage it?
5400How the deuce should I know?
5400How was I to know you were sensitive on the subject? 5400 How was I to suspect that you loved a provincial booby like me, when you had the choice of so many accomplished gentlemen with titles and estates?"
5400How was Judge Whipple to- day?
5400How was she shocked, then?
5400How was that, Jethro?
5400How was that?
5400How was the dance?
5400How were you to perceive, indeed, that you had qualities which they lacked?
5400How will that suit you?
5400How will ye do it?
5400How would I The Transformation of Mr. Chiltern''do, Elsie?
5400How would a thousand dollars strike you? 5400 How would nine o''clock do?
5400How would you know? 5400 How would you like to see your husband president of a trust company?"
5400How''d they git notice to''em?
5400How''decent''do you wish me to be?
5400How''s Hilary?
5400How''s Mr. Bumpus this evening?
5400How''s everything else going?
5400How''s my little sweetheart, Ephum?
5400How''s that, Alonzho, b''gosh?
5400How''s that?
5400How''s your mother feeling?
5400How,asked Honora,"how did you make it?"
5400How? 5400 How?"
5400How?
5400How?
5400How?
5400How?
5400How?
5400How?
5400How?
5400How?
5400How?
5400Howard Spence?
5400Howard, ca n''t you see that it is making us-- grow apart? 5400 Howard, do you really mean to say you''ve never heard of Reggie Farwell?
5400Howard,she asked presently,"why do you come to Newport at all?"
5400Howard,she asked unexpectedly one evening, as he sat smoking beside the blue tiled mantel,"have you got on your winter flannels?"
5400Howard,she cried, brushing his ashes from the table,"how can you be so untidy when you are so good- looking dressed up?
5400Howard,she said,"were n''t you worried?"
5400Howdy, Austen?
5400Howdy, Mac; be they tryin''to git your land, too?
5400Howdy, Mis''McChesney?
5400Howdy, neighbor?
5400However they come?
5400Hugh, are you in your right senses?
5400Hugh, where have you been?
5400Hugh, you will always love me-- to the very end, wo n''t you?
5400Hugh, you will get up, wo n''t you? 5400 Hugh,"she asked,"what do you believe?
5400Hugh,she said at length,"how could you be so cruel?
5400Hugh-- what are you going to do?
5400Hugh-- you will care for me?
5400Hughie, wo n''t you let me in? 5400 Hullo, my man,"said he,"are you a friend to Congress?"
5400Hullo, where are you going now?
5400Hunt had been promised the governorship for a long time, and when Ridout became out of the question--"Why did Ridout become out of the question?
5400I am a thousan''times gret''ful,he cried; and added, as though with an afterthought,"Monsieur, would you be so kin''as to borrow me fif''dollars?"
5400I am going away to- morrow, but--"Away?
5400I am his cousin,--is it not honor enough?
5400I beg pardon, madam,the butler was saying,"perhaps I shouldn''t--?"
5400I believe you''re a partner of Theodore Watling''s now are n''t you? 5400 I cal''late you despise me, do n''t you?"
5400I did n''t mean nothin'', I was only kiddie''you-- what''s the use of gettin''nutty over a jest?
5400I do n''t blame you-- why should n''t you?
5400I do n''t look as if I had an eye for business-- do I? 5400 I do n''t set up for a prophet,"said Mr. Cooke,"but I did predict that I would start a ripple here, did n''t I?"
5400I do n''t wish to pry, my dear, but does he-- does he realize? 5400 I gave you a pretty straight tip, did n''t I, that young Tom Gaylord was goin''to have somebody make that motion to- day?
5400I guess that''s what you''ve come for, is n''t it?
5400I guess you do n''t think much of me, do you?
5400I guess you never knew of his ruining anybody, did you?
5400I handed him the mit-- do you get me?
5400I have heard of him,he cried;"Madame knows where he is?"
5400I have just come from Dr. Perrin''s, David,--he added,"May I call you so?
5400I have n''t been very hospitable, have I?
5400I have n''t run over one yet,--have I?
5400I hear you are what they call reform in America?
5400I imagine you would n''t care to go over beyond Lexington Avenue, would you? 5400 I made a pretty good guess at the size-- didn''t I, Janet?"
5400I mean, do you see him often?
5400I might have been a useful man,he said;"she ruined my life--""And you will allow her to ruin the rest of it?"
5400I might have known it you never make a get- away until after six, do you?
5400I received a letter this morning, Mr. Flint, enclosing me an annual pass--"Did Upjohn send you one?
5400I s''y, carn''t yer stand back and let a chap''ave a charnst?
5400I so want you should be happy, Janet,said Hannah.... Was it so?
5400I thought it was the Dutch coming to murder us all, What have they done to Clarence?
5400I told you I was going to Brampton before the term begins just to see you, did n''t I?
5400I told you that we stayed with a real lord in England, did n''t I?
5400I took lunch at Delmomico''s with Mr. Grainger, and Mr. Brent, and Mrs. Kame--"Cecil Grainger?
5400I treat you pretty well, do n''t I, Honora?
5400I was just sayin''to Lem Hallowell,began the judge, at last,"that I thought he was a little mite hasty--""Er-- indicted us, Judge?"
5400I wonder how she will get along with the Ten?
5400I wonder if he really is going?
5400I wonder if he thinks to outride me on that beast? 5400 I wonder if you know, Mr. Hodder, what an admirer Mr. Hubbell is of yours?"
5400I wonder what they want?
5400I wonder whether you''d mind if I put on my old suit again, and carried this?
5400I wonder why it is,she said,"that we are so luke- warm about church in these days?
5400I''ll see you to- morrow?
5400I''m going away to Virginia, Davy,he said;"will you not go with me?
5400I''m here now,he said,"what''s the good of going away?
5400I''m so sorry, my dear,she would say, and add reproachfully:"why did n''t you telephone me you were coming?
5400I''m sure you love children, do n''t you?
5400I? 5400 I?"
5400If I foreclose it, what will you do?
5400If I had money, I''d know that the best way to use it is for the people,--ain''t that so?
5400If I love you, Maude?
5400If he tells you?
5400If it is possible for the workingman to rise under a capitalistic system, why do you not rise, then? 5400 If there was a God, a nice, kind, all- powerful God, would he permit what happened in one of the loom- rooms last week?
5400If we should take a wherry, Richard,said Dolly,"who would know of it?
5400If you are not ambassador, what are you?
5400If you do n''t believe in it,demanded Mr. Plimpton, why the deuce do n''t you drop it?"
5400If you find one party wrong, can your state force it to do right? 5400 If you had made up your mind to do it, why did you tell me?"
5400If you were I, would you go?
5400If you were-- if you could really understand those who are driven to work in order to keep alive?
5400If you will forgive my curiosity,I said,"what has he told you?"
5400If you would but agree to stay angry for a day,she went on, in a low tone,"perhaps--""Perhaps?"
5400If, in the future years,thought Cynthia, as she sealed the envelope,"he persists in his determination, what then?"
5400In Arlington Street?
5400In English, Monsieur, you call it-- a gallant?
5400In Heaven''s name, what is it?
5400In taking that attitude, George, are n''t you limiting the power of God?
5400In the meantime--"What can your committee do?
5400In the morning?
5400In the new house?
5400In the rain?
5400In their own languages?
5400In what terrible place do you think I''ll end up?
5400Inefficiency?
5400Invite themselves?
5400Irene,said Mr. Trevor,"can it be possible that you have stolen away for the express purpose of visiting this criminal?"
5400Is Captain Colfax here?
5400Is Crewe engaged to Miss Pomfret?
5400Is Dickinson in?
5400Is Frear wanted?
5400Is Major Brice here?
5400Is Mr. Bass your uncle?
5400Is Mr. Carvel dead? 5400 Is Mr. Hilary Vane here?"
5400Is Mr. White at home?
5400Is Sevier there?
5400Is Temple at your house?
5400Is Tim in?
5400Is Victoria home?
5400Is a clergyman ever satisfied?
5400Is a woman necessary,she asked,"for the transformation?"
5400Is all the world turning virtuous? 5400 Is any of it news to you, Hughie, old boy?"
5400Is he a Charlestown Temple?
5400Is he a delegate?
5400Is he a good man?
5400Is he a man of honor or is n''t he?
5400Is he coming here to- night?
5400Is he handsome? 5400 Is he handsome?"
5400Is he in the city?
5400Is he interested in them?
5400Is he likely to make a fuss?
5400Is he married?
5400Is he really serious about the biography?
5400Is he the judge-- before whom-- the case is to be tried?
5400Is he thinking of doing all that?
5400Is he to have his portion?
5400Is he very sick?
5400Is he worth it? 5400 Is he-- dead?"
5400Is he-- full grown?
5400Is it Anthony, the conqueror of Egypt and the East? 5400 Is it Davy?
5400Is it Richard?
5400Is it a game?
5400Is it any wonder that Auguste has fallen in love with his cousin, Monsieur? 5400 Is it because you are married?"
5400Is it because you''re a lawyer, or because you''ve been out West and seen so much of life and shot so many people?
5400Is it home ye are? 5400 Is it likely that your Mr. Temple will be reconciled with his mother?
5400Is it not a fact,said Austen to this witness,"that Mr. Brush Bascom has a mortgage on your farm?"
5400Is it not for the Union?
5400Is it not so?
5400Is it possible that you have seen him and still ask that?
5400Is it possible you have n''t heard something about Hugh Chiltern?
5400Is it somebody else''s?
5400Is it something I''ve done?
5400Is it such lamentable ignorance?
5400Is it the earrings?
5400Is it the truth you''re saying, sir?
5400Is it too much to ask what you were thinking of?
5400Is it true,Miss Trevor asked,"that a story must contain the element of love in order to find favor with the public?"
5400Is it you, Johnny?
5400Is it, then, such a matter of importance? 5400 Is it-- is it all over?"
5400Is it?
5400Is it?
5400Is money so despised in France?
5400Is mother sick?
5400Is my bag packed?
5400Is n''t Clarence enough of a fire- eater to suit you?
5400Is n''t Harvard the oldest and best seat of learning in America?
5400Is n''t he in his office?
5400Is n''t he irrepressible?
5400Is n''t he working as hard as he can to send you to school, and give you a chance?
5400Is n''t he your friend?
5400Is n''t he?
5400Is n''t it a good deal like Professor Bridges'', only we''re not quite so learned? 5400 Is n''t it a wonderful, spot?"
5400Is n''t it awful? 5400 Is n''t it because these people want to live that way?"
5400Is n''t it cosy?
5400Is n''t it enough,he asked,"to know that a force is at work combating evil,--even if you are not yet convinced that it is a prevailing force?
5400Is n''t it fairly definite?
5400Is n''t it for a higher ideal of marriage that we are searching?
5400Is n''t it high time to be thinking of the winter?
5400Is n''t it natural that I should wish to have my judgment vindicated?
5400Is n''t it rather a big deal to risk me on?
5400Is n''t it the braver thing?
5400Is n''t it there?
5400Is n''t it,she said,"rather the power that is so hard to relinquish?"
5400Is n''t she beautiful?
5400Is n''t she the finest girl in the world?
5400Is n''t she to marry him?
5400Is n''t she, grandfather?
5400Is n''t that Hugh Chiltern?
5400Is n''t that Mr. Putter, who keeps a livery- stable here?
5400Is n''t that a pretty good reason for sympathizing with them?
5400Is n''t that a rather one- sided view, too?
5400Is n''t that an unnecessary question?
5400Is n''t that borrowing trouble, Victoria?
5400Is n''t that polygamy, Hugh?
5400Is n''t that pretty? 5400 Is n''t that rather natural?"
5400Is n''t that what you want-- you who are striking?
5400Is n''t the Guardian the chief paper in that state?
5400Is n''t the man?
5400Is n''t there a Davis Avenue?
5400Is n''t there another place,he asked,"where I might lose my way?"
5400Is n''t there any other way but that? 5400 Is n''t there something else you could take?
5400Is n''t this enough? 5400 Is n''t this-- victory enough?"
5400Is n''t your name Mary?
5400Is not what so, my dear young lady?
5400Is not your father the stout gentleman whom I saw with you on the levee last evening?
5400Is she going to marry that old man?
5400Is she gone? 5400 Is she leaking?"
5400Is tea ready?
5400Is that Mr. Cooke''s yacht, the Maria? 5400 Is that Polly Ann?"
5400Is that a threat?
5400Is that about right for the performance?
5400Is that all he objects to?
5400Is that all, Jinny?
5400Is that all?
5400Is that his name? 5400 Is that it?"
5400Is that on the level?
5400Is that so?
5400Is that so?
5400Is that straight?
5400Is that straight?
5400Is that strong enough, gentlemen?
5400Is that the end?
5400Is that the only punishment you can conceive of?
5400Is that the waiter?
5400Is that the way you spend your time in office hours,--throwing people out of the windows?
5400Is that what you think I want?
5400Is that why you are striking?
5400Is that why you came to Hampton?
5400Is that why you were working over that map of the city last night?
5400Is that you, Hugh?
5400Is that you, Janet? 5400 Is that you, Judge?"
5400Is that you, Mr. Paret? 5400 Is that you, Vicomte?"
5400Is that you, Victoria?
5400Is that your price?
5400Is that-- all you do?
5400Is the Alcalde waiting?
5400Is the Colonel at home?
5400Is the Judge a friend of yours, sir?
5400Is the Judge the same old criss- cross, contrary, violent fool that he always was?
5400Is the Legislature still in session?
5400Is the Major going back into the army?
5400Is the fellow drunk?
5400Is the judge locked up, old man?
5400Is the supper for the guests ready?
5400Is there a window here?
5400Is there another way to get to Washington?
5400Is there anything I can get for you in New York? 5400 Is there anything else?"
5400Is there danger?
5400Is there no such thing as expiation, Monsieur?
5400Is there no way but that?
5400Is this Colonel Carvel''s house?
5400Is this Mr. Brent''s? 5400 Is this so?"
5400Is this so?
5400Is this the way you affect everybody whom you meet?
5400Is this whar they take a man''s land away?
5400Is this your manor, Mr. Carvel? 5400 Is to- morrow Christmas?"
5400Is you got all you need, suh?
5400Is your grandfather worse?
5400Is your master at home?
5400Is your master leaving?
5400Is your mistress here?
5400Is your nation to overrun the earth?
5400Is-- Is that your faith, Alison?
5400Is-- is he so much?
5400Is-- is it Dorothy?
5400Is-- is not the Vicomtesse going with you?
5400Is-- is the General a nice man?
5400It ai n''t going to spoil your happiness?
5400It did n''t hurt much, did it?
5400It do n''t take much gumption to run a store, does it, William? 5400 It does not make any difference to you what my politics are, does it?"
5400It is because I do not wish to care that I tell you to go--"And you refuse happiness?
5400It is n''t bad, is it?
5400It is n''t pleasant to think that there are such people as the politicians, is it?
5400It is n''t the trips, Jinny There are duties, my dear, pleasant duties--Jinny--"Yes?
5400It is natural for men to love power, is n''t it?
5400It is so pleasant to see you here, Mr.--Mr.--"How be you?
5400It is the Jew''s price,he answered;"mais pardieu, what will you?"
5400It must have stood you in a little money, eh? 5400 It was I who stopped you,"she said;"I was waiting for--""For whom?"
5400It was nothing-- more serious, then? 5400 It was quite a hot- headed business for one of the staid Brices, was n''t it?"
5400It was there you first met Brooks, was n''t it?
5400It''s Grierson, ai n''t it?
5400It''s all right now, is n''t it? 5400 It''s all very well to talk about competition and monopolies and lobbies,"said young Tom,"but how about the Gaylord Lumber Company?
5400It''s because you like the hills, is n''t it?
5400It''s funny how I ran across you again, ai n''t it?
5400It''s kind of me to warn you, is n''t it?
5400It''s meant to be Rome, is n''t it?
5400It''s not Chauncey Dike again?
5400It''s useless to expect you to understand.... Do you remember what I said to you about her? 5400 It''s very beautiful, is n''t it?
5400It''s-- some one else?
5400Its effect,--on what?
5400J- Jacksonian Democrat?
5400J- just friends with Worthington?
5400Janet, do you calculate he means anything wrong?
5400Janet, what has happened? 5400 Janet-- aren''t you happy?"
5400Jethro Bass did not know that you-- that you had used me?
5400Jethro Bass home?
5400Jethro Bass?
5400Jethro got a mortgage on you, too?
5400Jethro hain''t lookin''for you by any chance, be he? 5400 Jethro,"she said,"do you know why I came here-- why I came to you?"
5400Jim voted for Bill 709 all right-- didn''t he?
5400Jim,asked the Colonel, gently,"did n''t I always take care of you?"
5400Jinny, ai n''t I nussed you always? 5400 Jinny, ca n''t you say something bright?
5400Jinny, did he--?
5400Jinny, do you mean it?
5400Jinny, do you remember saying so many years ago that our ruin would come of our not being able to work? 5400 Jinny, would you like to blow the whistle?"
5400Jinny,cried that lady, frantically,"are you to go or stay?
5400Jinny,he said slowly,"Jinny, do you mean to marry Clarence?"
5400Jinny,he said,"what is the matter?"
5400Jinny,said the Captain,"did you ever know why cabins are called staterooms?"
5400Jinny,she cried,"how can you be so cruel as to read me that, when you know that I am in a state of frenzy now?
5400Jinny?
5400Joe,said Mr. Lincoln,"did you ever hear Warfield''s definition of an Old Line Whig?"
5400John,said Marian to me, a suspicion of the truth crossing her mind,"John, can it be the bicycle man?"
5400John,said my father,"can we talk here?"
5400Jolly old house, is n''t it?
5400Joshua, you remember my telling you last spring that Martha Spence''s son called on me?
5400Judge,he asked,"is Mr. Flint up at his place this week?"
5400Judge,he said slowly, with an attempt to control his voice, would n''t it have been fairer to wait awhile, before you made a remark like that?
5400Judge,said Mr. Watling, sitting down again,"do you recall that time we all went up to Mr. Paret''s house and tried to induce him to run for mayor?
5400Just arrived?
5400Just friends with him?
5400K- kind of mixin''up in politics, hain''t you, Cynthy? 5400 Kin you?"
5400Kind of slow work, is n''t it?
5400Kn- know anything against her?
5400Know Cynthy Wetherell?
5400Know it?
5400Know somewhat about Jacksonian principles, do n''t ye-- know somewhat?
5400Know that little man, Gibbs, do n''t ye?
5400Know the Judge?
5400Know who that was last night, Cynthy?
5400Knowed it-- did you?
5400Knows what?
5400L- left it to me-- didn''t you? 5400 L- like Mr. Merrill, do n''t you?"
5400L- like Mrs. Merrill-- like the gals-- don''t you?
5400L- like it, Cynthy-- l- like it?
5400L- like the country, Cynthy-- like the country better than the city?
5400L- like to go, Cynthy?
5400L- love me, Cynthy-- love me, do n''t you?
5400Lan''sakes, is you Marse Dave?
5400Land sakes alive, be you Mr. Flint''s daughter? 5400 Langmaid,"Holder asked,"do n''t you ever get tired and disgusted with the Juggernaut car?"
5400Leave me alone-- can''t you?
5400Legislatur''through?
5400Let me see,said Miss Crane, innocently;"who was it one of them Salters girls married, and lived across the way from the meetin''-house?"
5400Let me see,said Mr. Crewe,"is n''t your father the chief attorney in this State for the Northeastern?
5400Let me see-- did I advise larkspur?
5400Let me see-- where is Coniston?
5400Let''s see, where was I?
5400Let''s see, where were we? 5400 Let''s see,"says Mr. Jenney,"there''s five hundred in the House, ai n''t there?"
5400Lige, did n''t I raise you? 5400 Lige, is that you?
5400Lige, why do n''t you give up steamboating and come along to Europe? 5400 Lige, you''re not such a fool as to vote against the Union?"
5400Lige,he said,"is n''t it about time you got married?"
5400Lige,said the Colonel, putting up his feet,"do you remember the French toys you used to bring up here from New Orleans?"
5400Lige,she said,--are you sure that this is not-- a kindness?"
5400Like Washington, Heth-- like Washington?
5400Like fiction?
5400Like storekeepin''?
5400Like what?
5400Like what?
5400Like what?
5400Like what?
5400Like''em enough to-- to live with''em a winter?
5400Lindy, are you sure?
5400Lindy,she said,"what have you done?"
5400Lise, has anything happened to you?
5400Lise, why do n''t you say something to your sister? 5400 Lise?"
5400Listen,I said;"do you know a place called Clam Shell?"
5400Listen,she said in a tone of authority,"I myself have been to his Excellency to- day concerning this gentleman--""You, Madame la Vicomtesse?"
5400Listening, were you, Ham?
5400Listening?
5400Literary talk, Judge?
5400Little early yet, hain''t it? 5400 Little mite hasty, wahn''t it?"
5400Look out,she said;"what d''ye see near the mill?"
5400Looking over the ground?
5400Looks bad, does it?
5400Lord,said he,"is it time to go to New Orleans?"
5400Love me-- a little?
5400Loves''em-- does he-- loves''em?
5400M- may I call you Cynthy-- Cynthy?
5400M- meant friendship?
5400M-- made all them bills out before you was chose?
5400Madame de Montmery?
5400Madame will see monsieur?
5400Madame,I asked,"is it too early to present myself to Monsieur de Saint- Gre?"
5400Made up your mind to take him, Cynthy? 5400 Mademoiselle?"
5400Major Brice, do you know this gentleman?
5400Making a case, Brice?
5400Mamma,said the boy,"where has father gone?
5400Mammy, what is all this noise about?
5400Marse Comyn, won''you give Ephum a pass down, river, ter fotch Cap''n Lige?
5400Marse Comyn, you know what I done promise young MISS long time ago, befo''--befo''she done left us?
5400Marse Comyn?
5400Marse Dave, how you feel dis mawnin''? 5400 Marse Dave,"--it was the first time I had been called that,--"Marse Dave, you ai n''t gwineter tell?"
5400Marse Dave,she cried,"is you feelin''well, honey?"
5400Marse Dave,she said,"doan yo''know better''n dat?
5400Mary, how old are you?
5400Matthew,demanded his sister,"why did he want to go fighting with all those people?"
5400Max, ca n''t you understand? 5400 Max, you are going to stay here?"
5400Max,said she, all at once,"why do n''t you settle down to something?
5400May I ask you how you heard of it?
5400May I ask you something?
5400May I ask, Mr. Hodder,he said, in an unemotional voice,"what you are doing in this house?"
5400May I ask,said Austen, innocently,"who has been chairman of that particular committee in the lower House for the last five sessions?"
5400May I come in?
5400May I come to see you again?
5400May I come to your room for a moment?
5400May I go in the coach?
5400May I go, sir?
5400May I have one of Howard''s cigarettes?
5400May I have the pleasure,said that gentleman,"of accompanying you home?"
5400May I look at the title?
5400May I make so bold as to ask, sir, whether you are a patron of literature?
5400May I present to you, Madame, Mr. Nicholas Temple?
5400May I speak to him, General?
5400May I speak to your Grace alone?
5400May I, too, bid you welcome, Richard,said he, in his manly way;"and rejoice that I have got such a neighbour?"
5400May it not be true, in order to compete with other department stores, that Mr. Ferguson has to pay the same wages?
5400May n''t I come?
5400May we not at least remain friends?
5400McCann,I asked sternly,"what have you had on the, tug?"
5400McCann,said I,"what made you come back to- day?"
5400McCrae,he asked,"have you ever tried to do anything with Dalton Street?"
5400Me? 5400 Might I be so bold as to ask the reason?"
5400Might I not linger-- a few minutes?
5400Might I propose myself for dinner?
5400Mis''Darwin?
5400Miss Bumpus-- would you mind coming into my room a moment, before you leave?
5400Miss Carvel was here, you say?
5400Miss Carvel?
5400Miss Cynthia, darlin'',said Ellen,"if it was made of flint I was, would n''t he bring the tears out of me with his wheedlin''an''coaxin''?
5400Miss Jinny, you ai n''t gwineter leave yo''ol mammy?
5400Miss Jinny,said he, precipitately,"did I ever strike you as a marrying man?"
5400Miss Jinny?
5400Miss Lise?
5400Miss Lucretia, do you believe what it says about Jethro Bass?
5400Miss Sally, honey, doan you know Lindy? 5400 Miss Thorn?"
5400Mistah Ephum Prescott?
5400Mon Dieu,said Xavier,"and who is to pay Michie Gratiot for his fur?
5400Mon dieu?
5400Money?
5400Money?
5400Monsieur Auguste?
5400Monsieur,he cried,"you seek your friend?
5400Monsieur,said Colonel Chouteau, slyly,"do you have many such escapes?"
5400Monsieur,said the Vicomtesse,"have you ever considered her sufferings?"
5400Monsieur,she said with great dignity,"do you mind telling me where you obtained this?"
5400Monsieur?
5400Mornin'', Dudley,said the head,"busy?"
5400Moses,said the girl, when they came in sight of the elms that, shaded the gable of the parsonage,"what do you think of Jethro Bass?"
5400Most through the Legislature?
5400Most women could have done it better than that--couldn''t they?
5400Mountain passes, Lish? 5400 Mr. Allen consents to that, sir?"
5400Mr. Bass,he said at last,"did Cynthia ever mention me to you?"
5400Mr. Brice, did you, or did you not, buy a woman at auction to- day?
5400Mr. Cooke, do you happen to have any handcuffs on the Maria?
5400Mr. Cooke,said the senator,"may I suggest something which seems pertinent to me, though it does not appear to have occurred to you?"
5400Mr. Crocker, do you think there is any danger that he will lose his way?
5400Mr. Crocker,he cried,"are you, as attorney of this district, going to aid and abet in the escape of a fugitive from justice?"
5400Mr. Crocker,she began again, when she had regained her speech,"shall I tell you of a great misfortune which might happen to a girl?"
5400Mr. Crocker,she called,"would you like to make yourself useful?"
5400Mr. David Trimble- from- the- mountains, who the devil am I?
5400Mr. Dodd,cried the first citizen,"what do you mean by--?"
5400Mr. Fox,I said, when he had paused,"before God, do you believe what you are saying?"
5400Mr. Hopper fight? 5400 Mr. Hopper,"he said,"these Eastern notes are due this week, are they not?"
5400Mr. Humphrey Crewe?
5400Mr. Jenney live here?
5400Mr. Paret, is it?
5400Mr. Parr and our host are coming down handsomely, eh? 5400 Mr. President,"said the senator, who stood by wonderingly while General Grant had lost himself in this conversation,"do you realize what time it is?"
5400Mr. Richard Carvel?
5400Mr. Satterlee,said Cynthia,"would you mind if we went first to see Cousin Ephraim?"
5400Mr. Stephen,said he,"would you like to come to Freeport with me to- morrow and hear the debate?"
5400Mr. Wharton,I said, rising,"did you come here to tell me this?"
5400Mr. Worthington holds a note of yours, do n''t he, Jonathan?
5400Mr. Worthington is going to try to change these things?
5400Mr. Worthington,said Cynthia, with an indignation that made him quail,"do you think it right to ask a doorkeeper to spy on my movements?"
5400Mr. and Mrs. Perley Wright, eh? 5400 Mrs. Brice is ill?"
5400Mrs. Clive, wo n''t you speak to me?
5400Mrs. Clive,she said softly, though her voice was shaken by a prescience,"wo n''t you tell me what has happened?
5400Mrs. Durrett is an old friend of yours?
5400Mrs. Leffingwell is only giving the child the advantages which her companions have-- Emily has French, has n''t she?
5400Mrs. Leffingwell, I presume? 5400 Music lessons?"
5400Must everything be reduced to terms?
5400Must not? 5400 Must you come?"
5400My God, Adele,he exclaimed,"why do n''t you speak?"
5400My God, Colonel,exclaimed the other, passionately,"how could I?
5400My God, what''s the trouble now? 5400 My God-- won''t you trust me?"
5400My conduct?
5400My dear Fanny,Mrs. Flint had cried, lifting herself from the lace pillows,"what do you expect me to do especially when I have nervous prostration?
5400My dear Honora,cried Mrs. Holt, who had hurried after her daughter,"you''re not going?"
5400My dear Lula,he replied,"if there''s any other carriage you prefer--?"
5400My dear Miss Wetherell,--Circumstances( over which I have no control?)
5400My dear young lady,he exclaimed,"up so early?"
5400My dear, do n''t you ever come to Banbury?
5400My dear, do n''t you think life tremendously interesting? 5400 My dear, what do you think of Sid and Howard making twenty thousand dollars apiece in Sassafras Copper?
5400My dear, what will Mr. Brice think of us?
5400My dear, why did n''t you let me know last night? 5400 My dear,"she cried,"my dear, what are we to do?
5400My dear,she exclaimed,"did you go to Sutcliffe?
5400My dear?
5400My opinion?
5400Myself? 5400 N- never spoke to you about anything there-- n- never spoke to you, Cynthia?"
5400N- never told you to buy anything, did I-- Ed?
5400N- not to please me, Cynthy?
5400Near- sighted, be you?
5400Ned, whaffor you hidin''yonder? 5400 Ned,"said Virginia, sternly,"do you want to go back to cooking?"
5400Ned,she demanded suddenly,"would you like to be free?"
5400Need he know? 5400 Need you ask, Mademoiselle?"
5400Neighbor,said he,"kin you keep me over night?"
5400Never b''en to a show-- hev you-- never b''en to a show?
5400Never writ anything-- did you-- never writ anything?
5400Nicholas Temple?
5400Nineteen twenty- six Fowler Street?
5400No new row?
5400No speaka Portugueso?
5400No, no,he stammered,"I did n''t mean--""What did you mean?"
5400No,said Austen,"but--"Would have told you if I had n''t wanted you-- wouldn''t I?"
5400No-- but--"If I needed money, d''ye suppose I''d bought the mortgage?
5400No-- no flaw in his-- record?
5400No-- why should I?
5400Not black,came from the crowd again and again, and once a man: shouted,"Could n''t you modify it and call it brown?"
5400Not even Cassandra Hopkins?
5400Not in my nature?
5400Not one,he retorted fiercely;"do you think there is any sense in the damnable French custom?
5400Not till then?
5400Not tommyrot?
5400Not very profitable to be a minute- man, eh?
5400Nothing''s worrying you, Hugh?
5400Now by Saint Andrew,exclaimed he,"are ye kelpie or pirate?"
5400Now do you believe I can take him home?
5400Now do you feel better-- you little Puritan?
5400Now how in thunder did that get into my right- hand pocket? 5400 Now how the deuce should I know?"
5400Now may I tell these rogues begone, Richard?
5400Now tell me, why did you refuse to be their candidate? 5400 Now that Dr. Hilliard is gone, father, what do you purpose concerning Richard''s schooling?"
5400Now that Preston has come home--"Your brother?
5400Now that is over, we wo n''t discuss it again, do you understand? 5400 Now the question is, what are we going to do?
5400Now what can I be doing to serve you?
5400Now what does all this mean?
5400Now where a- deuce were you, Richard?
5400Now where the devil has your captain flown to?
5400Now you''re down here, what have you got to propose?
5400Now, sir, the pleadings?
5400Now, sir,asked Farrar,"what do you propose to do with Allen?"
5400Now, sir?
5400Now, sirs, whereaway?
5400Now, what can I do for you?
5400Now, what do you think of it?
5400Now, what do you want?
5400Now, what does this mean?
5400Now,he said,"there have been many to claim this land-- who will follow me to defend it?"
5400Now,he went on,"what has Patty done?"
5400Now- what do I mean by I trusting? 5400 Now?
5400Now?
5400Now?
5400O Jinny,murmured that lady, who had revived,"ca n''t you do something?
5400O Lord, Mr. Carvel, what has happened, sir?
5400Obstinate?
5400Of seeing?
5400Of the Charlestown Temples?
5400Of what use is tact to a woman if not for just such occasions?
5400Of who, then?
5400Off to the hills, Austen? 5400 Oh Eda,"she cried,"do you remember, we saw them being picked-- in the movies?
5400Oh Miss Jinny, ai n''t you gwineter Glencoe? 5400 Oh, Aunt Mary, is it really true that I am going?"
5400Oh, Brooks, what is it-- what''s happened to her?
5400Oh, Cousin Eph,exclaimed Cynthia, excitedly,"why do n''t you open it?
5400Oh, Cousin Eph,said Cynthia, laughing in spite of herself, and glancing at Bob,"is that all you can say?"
5400Oh, Davy, have ye seen him? 5400 Oh, God, what would I do if-- if he was n''t there?"
5400Oh, Howard,she exclaimed, after a moment''s pause for breath,"how can you say such a thing, when I save you so much?"
5400Oh, Hugh, does n''t your father mean to put you in business?
5400Oh, I know that my father and the others will try to put him out-- but can they?
5400Oh, Jinny,sobbed the lady, in tears again,"how can you be so cruel at such a time, when my nerves are all in pieces?"
5400Oh, Miss Lucretia, why did you come?
5400Oh, Mr. Hodder,she cried impulsively,"was it necessary to go so far?
5400Oh, Mrs. Holt,she sobbed,"how can you ask?"
5400Oh, Mrs. Maturin, you''ll believe me-- won''t you?
5400Oh, Mrs. Maturin-- if you really want me-- still?
5400Oh, Pa, do you think you are safe here?
5400Oh, Pa,she cried, in alarm,"what did he mean?"
5400Oh, Peter, do you care so much as that? 5400 Oh, Puss,"cried Anne, that evening, for Miss Russell had come to spend the night,"how could you have talked to him so?
5400Oh, Richard, is, there not something you can do?
5400Oh, Stephen,she cried,"what are you going to say to her?"
5400Oh, Trixy, did you really? 5400 Oh, Uncle Jethro, do you think we can go?"
5400Oh, are you sure it''s Captain Brent?
5400Oh, ca n''t you do something?
5400Oh, ca n''t you see I''m not that kind of a woman? 5400 Oh, could n''t I see them?"
5400Oh, dad,she cried,"why are you so- late?
5400Oh, did you?
5400Oh, do n''t you believe me?
5400Oh, do you think I believe that?
5400Oh, do you think so?
5400Oh, father, why did n''t you take it?
5400Oh, have n''t you heard?
5400Oh, he ca n''t have anymore; do you want to kill him?
5400Oh, how could you let any one get on a horse like that?
5400Oh, how dare you?
5400Oh, is that all?
5400Oh, is that why?
5400Oh, it''s Christmas, Cathy, is n''t it? 5400 Oh, my dear,"she cried, staring hard at the hat and the veil,"have you seen Clara Trowbridge anywhere?"
5400Oh, she went through, did she?
5400Oh, what have you heard?
5400Oh, why are we always having misunderstandings? 5400 Oh, why do you ask that?"
5400Oh, why should I say so if it were not?
5400Oh, why should n''t I?
5400Oh, yes, how are you?
5400Oh, you know Austen Vane, do n''t you?
5400Oh,cried Honora,"do n''t you want to be?
5400Oh,cried Honora,"if you''re going to- night may n''t I go with you?
5400Oh,said Victoria; and she added,"Is he ashamed of it?"
5400Oh,said she,"are you employed here?"
5400Oh,said she,"it was meant for a compliment, was it?"
5400Oh,she cried,"do you think I came here to speak of such a thing as that?"
5400Oh,she laughed,"that would n''t be so terrible, would it?"
5400Oh-- did I seem so? 5400 Oh-- might I?
5400Old Tom going in for reform?
5400Old Tom ought to have his railroad, ought n''t he?
5400On June the 7th General So- and- so proceeded with his whole army--where?
5400On ninety dollars a month?
5400On the rampage agin, Chet?
5400On the way?
5400On what do you base your opinion?
5400On what grounds? 5400 One hundred and fifty dollars-- er-- one hundred and fifty?"
5400One of those Quicksands people?
5400One of-- those houses?
5400Only--"Only, what?
5400Or is it because you do n''t like me?
5400Or perhaps Mrs. Larrabbee would make room for them?
5400Or that it was intended for a row- boat?
5400Or with Allen?
5400Or-- are you on the other side, the side of the capitalists?
5400Or-- can I be mistaken?
5400Orcutt, what''s the matter with the opener in Cooney''s room?
5400Orthodox Christianity? 5400 Others?"
5400Ought n''t he to be told-- at once?
5400Our barrister is come, mother,we heard her exclaiming,"and whom do you think he has brought?"
5400Out of Holland?
5400Over a lass, was it?
5400P- paid for everything-- everything to- night?
5400P- painter- man gay?
5400P- plant''em out there?
5400Pa said something about them to- night,she answered; why?"
5400Pa, are you ill?
5400Pa, will you forbid him to come here-- now?
5400Pa,said Virginia,"did you volunteer?"
5400Pa,she began,"Pa, did you ever see the pearls Dorothy Carvel wore on her wedding day?
5400Pa,she cried,"do you think he is coming here?"
5400Pa,she said,"do you think it would be possible to get them to let us take that Arkansan into our house?"
5400Pa,she said,"is it true that you have borrowed money from this man?"
5400Pa,she said,"is it--?"
5400Paret, have you ever read any serious books on what you call socialism?
5400Paret,he asked,"have you time to come over to my rooms for a few minutes this evening?"
5400Partly?
5400Pass?
5400Pay for what?
5400Perhaps-- if it were not too much to ask-- perhaps you might come to see him, sometime? 5400 Peter, ca n''t you see that I''m serious?
5400Peter,asked Honora,"ca n''t you get Judge Brice to send you on to New York this winter on law business?
5400Peter,she demanded,"why do you dress like that?"
5400Peter,she exclaimed,"why do you bother with me?
5400Pierrot,he cried, turning to one of the boatmen,"il y a des belles demoiselles la, n''est- ce pas?"
5400Pigeons? 5400 Please, sir,"I said,"if I might take my drum?"
5400Pleasure?
5400Plotting?
5400Polly Ann,I said,"did I ever do anything but good to you?"
5400Polly Ann,said he,"what be you about now?"
5400Por Dios,he cried,"whoever hear of one man and fifty militia subduing the northern tribes without a piastre?"
5400Postilion,he called,"which inn here is most favoured by gentlemen?"
5400Pray, how did you know?
5400Pray, ma''am,he said,"what have you done with your slave?"
5400Pray, my dear, whom have you invited to- day?
5400Pray, my good Goble, why all this fol- de- rol about admitting a gentleman to your house?
5400Precisely,said his father, dryly,"for Mr. Ritchie tells me he found it-- at Madame Bouvet''s, was it not, Monsieur?"
5400Preparing? 5400 President of the Orange Trust Company at forty is n''t so bad, eh?"
5400President of the''Northwestern''Railroad?
5400Presumption multiplies tenfold in a woman, does n''t it?
5400Pretty, ai n''t she?
5400Pretty-- hain''t she-- pretty?
5400Professional?
5400Promised him?
5400Protected her? 5400 Push me into the gutter?"
5400Qu''est- ce- qu''il- y- a la dedans?
5400Qu''est- ce- que c''est, Monsieur Auguste?
5400R- read to me sometimes, Cynthy-- r- read to me?
5400R- remember when you saw him makin''a ship?
5400Railroad Room?
5400Randolph again?
5400Rather hev somethin''else?
5400Reading them?
5400Ready, Will?
5400Reckon you do n''t come from anywhere round here?
5400Records?
5400Reformers?
5400Remember him? 5400 Resignation?
5400Rias as indoostrious as ever, Mose?
5400Richard, Richard, will you never learn prudence? 5400 Richard, do you love me?"
5400Richard, will you ever learn sense? 5400 Richard,"she said sadly,"why, why did you ever tell me?
5400Road do n''t pay-- r- road do n''t pay, does it?
5400Rocheblave?
5400Rode down to look at the scrap- heap,--did he?
5400Rolfe converted you? 5400 S- said you liked books-- didn''t you?
5400S- seen your gal-- Alvy-- seen your gal?
5400S- sell things here,asked the countryman,"s- sell things here?"
5400S- still got the same office in the depot-- hain''t you, Ed, s- same office?
5400S-- some in Noo York-- hain''t you?
5400Sad?
5400Sambo, where''s your mistress?
5400Say, Aust, what''s up between you and Redbrook?
5400Say, Beau,Johnny Hedges would ask, when I appeared of a morning,"what happened in the great world last night?"
5400Say, Colonel, ai n''t we always treated the Railroad on the level?
5400Say, Colonel,he demanded,"what''s this bill that went into the judiciary this morning?"
5400Say, Grant, what kind of appearing fellow was he?
5400Say, Hugh, do you know who that was?
5400Say, Hughie, if you did n''t drop it, who on earth did?
5400Say, Peleg, where was Al Lovejoy?
5400Say, Victoria, who is that man?
5400Say, did I wake you?
5400Say, did you ever get to a place where you just had to have something happen? 5400 Say, do YOU?"
5400Say, do you remember that tall fellow we met at Humphrey''s party, Austen Vane?
5400Say, how did you get in here?
5400Say, is this your heap?
5400Say, they march in in this kind of a church, do n''t they?
5400Say, what are you going to do?
5400Say, what church do you come from?
5400Say, what did you come in here for, honest injun?
5400Say, what did you?
5400Say, what else is it but a game? 5400 Say, what is love?"
5400Say, why do you think the Northeastern crowd-- why do you think Hilary Vane is pushing your bills down the sidings? 5400 Say, you ai n''t going to put up any Wild West tricks on me, are you?
5400Say, you would n''t take me for a sentimental man, now, would you?
5400Say, you''re not a- goin''to preach, are you?
5400Say,demanded Mr. Meader,"do n''t you know?"
5400Say,exclaimed Mr. Tooting, with a vexed laugh,"why are you always jollying me?
5400Say,she asked him once,"why are you doing this?"
5400Say- isn''t he?
5400Say-- you''re in trouble yourself, ai n''t you?
5400Say?
5400Scared you?
5400Schlager fights?
5400Scipio,she cries,"why are we not served?"
5400See dat boat?
5400See here, Farrar,said I,"what is your opinion of Miss Thorn?"
5400See here, Judge,he said,"what are you driving at?
5400See here, Mr. Korner,said he,"how did Richter come by that scar?
5400Sell out?
5400Sent you an annual, has he? 5400 Seriously, why did you come down here?"
5400Shades? 5400 Shall I call him?"
5400Shall I drive you back to the Club, sir?
5400Shall I give you my notion of a love match, Mademoiselle?
5400Shall I light the fire, sir?
5400Shall I tell them?
5400Shall I tell you a secret?
5400Shall I tell you who has planned and carried out this plot?
5400Shall any of us presume to?
5400She ai n''t married?
5400She did n''t happen to mention where she was going, did she, Janet?
5400She did n''t say anything?
5400She didn''t-- she did n''t mention--?
5400She has yellow fever, then?
5400She is dying, you say? 5400 She is not really ill, Monsieur, but depressed-- is not that the word?
5400She is pretty, that Mrs. Durrett, and clever,--is it not so?
5400She is very ill?
5400She thanked you?
5400She was in the garden-- shall I get her?
5400She was not ill?
5400She would n''t come home?
5400She''s not going to marry that chap, is she, Miss Chillingham?
5400She''s not playin''with you?
5400She?
5400Sherman,said Mr. Lincoln,"you do n''t want the Major right away, do you?
5400Shoes?
5400Should n''t we be getting back?
5400Sid, the Alfred Fern house is for rent, is n''t it?
5400Siddons?
5400Silverdale?
5400Since when did Monsieur assume this intimate position in my family?
5400Since when did you begin to feel this?
5400Since when did you take such interest in gowns?
5400Sir?
5400Sir?
5400Sit down, Mr. Brice,he said;"mild weather for November, eh?
5400Slipping away?
5400So Ben ordered you out, Mammy?
5400So he''s back, is he?
5400So ho, my little gamecock, my little schooner with a swivel,said he who had called himself Jack Ball,"and where can this valiant butcher be found?"
5400So ho, you are risen from the dead, are you, my fine buck? 5400 So it was only on Mr. Duncan''s account that you did n''t ask me to come down to the parlor?"
5400So the Cap''n be still harpin''on that?
5400So the forts be still in trouble?
5400So they''re coming here?
5400So was mine,she replied, and suddenly demanded:"What did you think of Humphrey''s speech?"
5400So you are Mrs. Hambleton Durrett?
5400So you are the young barrister''s daughter?
5400So you bought yourself free?
5400So you do love me?
5400So you have been given the idea that my sermon was socialistic?
5400So you have heard of it? 5400 So you like my surprise, girl?"
5400So you looked for her to be angry?
5400So you refused to be governor? 5400 So you taught her, Amanda?
5400So you think Austen''s in love?
5400So you think I ai n''t on?
5400So you want me to board you?
5400So you were contracted to murder me, Captain Griggs?
5400So you were in the Wilderness?
5400So you were not caught?
5400So you were on to me?
5400So you were with Clark in Illinois?
5400So you wish me to go away?
5400So you wo n''t have him?
5400So you would limit Lucifer to dinners? 5400 So you''re ashamed of my country clothes, are you?"
5400So you''re bent upon going-- downhill?
5400So you''re going to take up lobbying, are you? 5400 So you''re going to the show, Amos?"
5400So you''re not too tony for the grocery business, eh?
5400So you''re the spy, are you?
5400So you''ve dropped the preacher business, have you? 5400 So you''ve heard of me since we met, sir?"
5400So you''ve taken to farming,she said,-"isn''t it about haying time?"
5400Somethin''like consumption, William?
5400Something compromising?
5400Something you''ve written?
5400Sonny,he said,"did you want to see me?"
5400Sonny,said Mr. Lincoln again,"did you want to see me?"
5400Sooner than he looked for?
5400Sowed enough wild oats, have n''t you?
5400Speaking of St. Louis, General,said Mr. Brinsmade, presently,"have you ever heard of Stephen Brice?
5400Speculations?
5400Spoiled what?
5400Stand back a little, ca n''t you?
5400Stand back, carn''t yer? 5400 Stay to oblige me-- stay to oblige me?"
5400Stephen Brice, did you say?
5400Stephen Brice? 5400 Stephen, do you remember that fearful afternoon of the panic, when you came over from Anne Brinsmade''s to reassure me?"
5400Stephen,he said suddenly,"you do not share the prejudice against us here?"
5400Stephen,said his wife,"do you mean to say that Jethro Bass will try to defeat this consolidation simply to keep his power?"
5400Stephen,said the Judge( here the surprise came in),"Stephen, what do you think of Mr. Lincoln''s chances for the Republican nomination?"
5400Stephen,she began,"do you mean to say--?"
5400Still running the state?
5400Struck you as a mill owner, has it?
5400Studying what?
5400Superannuated-- unfit for duty--unable to cope with the situation ready to be superseded? 5400 Suppose Crewe goes into the convention with enough delegates to lock it up, so that none of the three has a majority?"
5400Suppose I acknowledge, which I do not, your preposterous charge, how would you propose to do this thing?
5400Suppose I did tell you so,said Victoria,"would you believe me?
5400Suppose he does answer yes, that slavery can be excluded?
5400Suppose he tells you they are true? 5400 Suppose it comes too late?"
5400Suppose we go to Monsieur de St. Gre''s house and write him a letter?
5400Suppose,she added gently,"suppose that the kind of wife you''d want would n''t want you?"
5400Sure of what?
5400Sure, Mr. Crocker,he said,"what would you be doing in such company as I''m hunting for?
5400Surely you did n''t expect to stay in Quicksands all winter?
5400Surely you have n''t been here all summer?
5400Surely, Mrs. Constable, once I have arrived at what I believe to be the truth, you would not have me temporize?
5400Susan, what''s this?
5400Swimmin'', is it?
5400T- thinkin''of it, be you?
5400T- to- morrow afternoon-- t- to- morrow afternoon?
5400T- told Levi Dodd to dismiss her-- didn''t you?
5400T- told Worthington you got that app''intment for Wheelock-- t- told Worthington?
5400T- town meetin''?
5400T- tried to get a franchise, did you?
5400T- twenty dollars?
5400T- two dollars? 5400 Take the helm until I get my mackintosh, will you, Farrar?"
5400Tell me about your cousin,he said;"are you going to marry him?"
5400Tell me, MacMuir,said I,"is not the captain in some trouble?"
5400Tell me, Mr. Trevor,said he,"why I should sit before you as a tribunal?
5400Tell me, Richard, who has influenced you to this way of thinking?
5400Tell me, Xavier,he said, with a look not to be resisted,"do you think I shall find some beauties there?"
5400Tell me, did you do this thing?
5400Tell me, do you know this woman?
5400Tell me, is it, or is it not, true?
5400Tell me,he added with a penetration we both remarked,"tell me, does your Captain Stanwix follow the times?
5400Tell me,he inquired, after a while,"are you not Alison Parr?"
5400Tell me,she said,"is he dead?"
5400Tell me-- what is his life?
5400Tell what?
5400Tenez, Monsieur,she added, stepping closer to me,"you will tell his father that you bought it from Monsieur Auguste?"
5400Thank you, Cynthia,he said;"I hope I may now be allowed to call you Cynthia?"
5400That bridle bust again?
5400That has a horribly dissipated sound-- hasn''t it? 5400 That he has left us here defenceless,--at the mercy of the Dutch, that they may wreak their vengeance upon us women?
5400That is you, Richard?
5400That sounds more natural,said the President, and then to Ephraim,"Your daughter?"
5400That was a fine stop you made, Mr. Worthington,he said;"was n''t it, Cynthia?"
5400That will be all right, then?
5400That you are going away, sir?
5400That''s Flint''s daughter, ai n''t it?
5400That''s all very well, Fred,Dickinson objected presently,"but how are your prospective householders going to get out there?"
5400That''s just it,he agreed,"why do n''t we?
5400That''s just it,she wondered intimately,"where?
5400That''s natural ai n''t it?
5400That''s part of my business, is n''t it?
5400That''s rather a big order, is n''t it?
5400That?
5400The American merchant and banker, the friend and associate of the great General Wilkinson whom you sent down to us last year? 5400 The Baron pardoned him?"
5400The Brampton post- office?
5400The Consolidation Bill is to become a law?
5400The Edisto, the Broad, the Catawba, the Pedee, and--?
5400The Leffingwells used to be great once upon a time, did n''t they, Aunt Mary?
5400The Metropolitan Museum?
5400The Orange Trust Company? 5400 The Turner Halls?"
5400The Vicomte is dead?
5400The agent of the Chippering Mill?
5400The architect?
5400The commission?
5400The cotton cards--?
5400The dear old home?
5400The devil of a man,said Nick;"do you remember him, with the cracked voice and fat calves?"
5400The doctor has been here?
5400The end?
5400The engine has lost its governor?
5400The first of October?
5400The flowers you gave me on your birthday,--the lilies of the valley, do you remember? 5400 The foxes?"
5400The friend?
5400The game?
5400The gentleman was aboard your boat, sir, when you left that country place of yours,--what d''ye call it? 5400 The kid''s sick-- that''s on the level, is it?
5400The occasion?
5400The proletariat?
5400The war does n''t seem to make any difference in your business, Mr. Hopper,his landlady remarked,"where have you been so late?"
5400The young fellow in the grey suit? 5400 The young ladies are beautiful, you say?"
5400Then I may look upon the matter as settled?
5400Then Mr. Carvel died without knowing that I was safe?
5400Then he appears to be a landowner?
5400Then he has broken it?
5400Then he knew?
5400Then how did you happen to be lunching with her husband? 5400 Then how did you know he was n''t just buggy- ridin''?"
5400Then it is n''t his change of religious opinions they would care about?
5400Then it is n''t the physical miracle you object to, especially?
5400Then the Germans are not moving on the city?
5400Then the scientific point of view in your opinion has n''t done away with religion?
5400Then there is nothing to be got by contesting the will?
5400Then there''s no hope?
5400Then what are you doing here?
5400Then what in h-- l did you bring him in here for?
5400Then what''s the matter?
5400Then what''s the use of asking me?
5400Then what?
5400Then why am I dismissed?
5400Then why are you a fugitive from justice if you were acting in self- defence?
5400Then why are you here?
5400Then why did he wish to see you?
5400Then why did n''t you?
5400Then why do n''t you give it back to them, Daddy?
5400Then why do n''t you give it up?
5400Then why do you accept it, if it is n''t you?
5400Then why do you ask for my advice?
5400Then why do you do it?
5400Then why does n''t he get the Committee to report it and put it through?
5400Then why in thunder does n''t he come in?
5400Then why is n''t he rich, as my father was?
5400Then why not go to the Barracks? 5400 Then why should you call him an idiot?"
5400Then why, in God''s name, did you do it? 5400 Then why, in heaven''s name, are you going to marry him?"
5400Then why,cried his Lordship, hotly,"why before refusing me did she demand to know whether you had been in love with Patty Swain?
5400Then you believe they''re after us?
5400Then you did intend to bring up the subject-- some day?
5400Then you do n''t believe in marriage?
5400Then you hain''t a- goin''to marry the Painter- man?
5400Then you have n''t heard any of the speakers? 5400 Then you have n''t joined the ranks of the grumblers?
5400Then you have n''t read it? 5400 Then you wo n''t take hold?"
5400Then you wo n''t tell me?
5400Then you wo n''t tell me?
5400Then,I said,"you admit of no other faculty than reason?"
5400Then,said I,"no matter how much I believed in God, he would n''t save me if I jumped into the big kettle for his sake?"
5400Then-- then you wo n''t marry me?
5400Then-- why are you doing it?
5400Then-- why did you come?
5400Then--?
5400Then?
5400Theodore Watling?
5400There ai n''t anything troubling you-- is there, Janet?
5400There goes Jethro Bass,and some were bold enough to say,"Howdy, Jethro?"
5400There is my hand,he said,--"will you take it?"
5400There is no chance of touching in the colonies?
5400There is no-- younger man to take your place? 5400 There is something I can do for you, my dear?"
5400There was nothing said about passion,I answered"Then why the deuce did you buy it?"
5400There''s not much choice, is there?
5400There''s nothing wrong in going to the Adirondacks-- is there, Cecil?
5400These two pieces same kind of goods?
5400They did n''t do a thing to this place, did they?
5400They do n''t often have governors that young, do they?
5400They have dared to nominate that dirty Lincoln,he said.--"Do you think that we will submit to nigger equality rule?
5400They talk about monopoly, those Populist senators, but I ask you what is a man in my place to do? 5400 They tried to kill ye?
5400They were people of quality?
5400Think we''ll have rain, Jake?
5400Thinkin''of it?
5400Thinkin''of upsettin''Jethro, be you? 5400 This brings back the fairy books,"she said,"and all those wonderful and never- to- be- forgotten sensations of the truant, does n''t it?
5400This city?
5400This hain''t England-- is it? 5400 This is a nice place, ai n''t it?"
5400This is a splendid trip for you, eh, Cynthia?
5400This is kind of mysterious, ai n''t it, Hilary?
5400This is too much, Jennison,came from the bed a voice that was pitifully weak;"why do you bring Yankees in here?"
5400This is your land, is n''t it?
5400This morning?
5400This place-- it''s not connected with any organization?
5400This stuff ai n''t no use to you, is it?
5400This woman sued a man named Ferris-- is that it?
5400Thou pardoned Auguste, as I commanded?
5400Thought ye was goin''to eat''i m up, Hump?
5400Through with him?
5400Through?
5400Tidings, sir?
5400Tim,he says,"where can we sit down?
5400To Camp Jackson?
5400To New York?
5400To Paris?
5400To Paris?
5400To boarding- school, Aunt Mary?
5400To catch Hamilton?
5400To do what?
5400To dress for what?
5400To judge you?
5400To me?
5400To save me from the Duke of Chartersea?
5400To the country?
5400To what happy circumstance do I owe the honor of this visit, Madame la Vicomtesse?
5400To what?
5400To- morrow night?
5400To- morrow-- why? 5400 To- morrow?"
5400Tom, what does this mean?
5400Tom,he asked,"has it struck you that this is written in the same inimitable style as a part of the message of the Honourable Asa Gray?"
5400Tom,he said,"can you come in to- morrow about this time?
5400Tom,said Austen,"where did you say that livery- stable was?"
5400Too heavy for you?
5400Took you for a greenhorn, did he?
5400Towers, who was that?
5400Towers,he said, when the butler appeared,"is Mr. Freeman still in my room?
5400Town house?
5400Tractable?
5400Train late? 5400 Trixy, what does she remind you of?"
5400Trouble?
5400True,I said;"why do you ask?"
5400Turned reformer, Ham?
5400Two days after you saw me?
5400Two, sir?
5400Uncle Jethro taking you and Mr. Prescott on a little pleasure trip?
5400Uncle Jethro, do you really want it so much?
5400Uncle Jethro, do you think I''ll be away from you, except-- except when I have to?
5400Uncle Jethro, shall we still be in Boston to- morrow morning?
5400Uncle Jethro,Cynthia asked, abruptly,"did you ever know my mother?"
5400Uncle Jethro,asked Cynthia, presently,"what is a mortgage?"
5400Uncle Jethro,she asked suddenly,"why do they treat me as they do?"
5400Uncle Jethro,she said solemnly,"when you make a senator or a judge, I do n''t interfere, do I?"
5400Uncle Jethro,she said,"I thought you told Mr. Sutton to give Cousin Eph the Brampton post- office?
5400Uncle Jethro?
5400Uncle Silas,she said,"are n''t you coming to dinner any more?"
5400Und you like schwimmin'', yes?
5400Unemployed?
5400Unkind?
5400Until next summer, I believe,replied Aunt Mary, gently;"June is a summer month- isn''t it, Tom?"
5400Until the Judge came?
5400Up to some game?
5400Upon whom?
5400Vat are you, choost? 5400 Vat can I do?"
5400Vat is money?
5400Vat you do?
5400Very good, Master Nick,said the man;"but who''s to get him in his cabin?"
5400Very much?
5400Victoria, can you guess who that friend is?
5400Victoria, what do you mean?
5400Vill you mention one great man-- yoost one-- who is not greater if the vimmen leave him alone?
5400Virginia, did you dream of me?
5400Virginia, where are we going?
5400Virginia, will you marry me?
5400Virginia,he whispered earnestly, almost fiercely, Virginia, who invited him here?"
5400Vous etes Americain, monsieur?
5400W- wahn''t that the price you fixed?
5400W- wahn''t that the price you fixed?
5400W- wahn''t that the price you fixed?
5400W- want the bill to pass-- don''t you?
5400W- want the consolidation-- don''t you? 5400 W- want to stop this consolidation, do n''t you-- want''to stop it?"
5400W- what d''ye get for that?
5400W- what did you say her name was, Alvy?
5400W- what difference does that make?
5400W- what do you know about her?
5400W- what is it?
5400W- what other time?
5400W- what time-- two?
5400W- what was it you took?
5400W- what would you call it?
5400W- what''d Grant say?
5400W- what''s the matter, Cynthy?
5400W- when are you going to see the President again?
5400W- where''s Cynthy?
5400W- who''s the agent?
5400W- who''s to get in the hay?
5400W- why do they wear their best clothes-- why do they wear their best clothes?
5400W- why, Cynthy?
5400W- won''t say nothin''about it, will you, Eph?
5400W- worth somethin''to the farmers and merchants to get that road through-- w- worth somethin'', ai n''t it?
5400W- would pay if it went to Brampton and Harwich?
5400W- wouldn''t make much difference to you if I was n''t here-- would it?
5400W- wouldn''t make much odds if I did-- would it, Ed?
5400W-- want the Speaker?
5400Wa- wahn''t the woman to blame any?
5400Wahn''t much need of telling me, was there?
5400Wal, Mr. Brice, this is an interesting show now, ai n''t it? 5400 Wal, Polly Ann, are ye tired of hanging out fer Tom?"
5400Wal, young man,said he,"who be you lookin''for here?"
5400Want me, Colonel?
5400Want to draw money?
5400Want to go to Harwich, Will?
5400Want to move-- do YOU? 5400 Was Cousin Randolph handsome?"
5400Was I?
5400Was Krebs here?
5400Was he an admirer of yours, Cynthia, that strange, uncouth countryman? 5400 Was it bad?"
5400Was myself? 5400 Was n''t I a good friend of your father''s?
5400Was n''t it fortunate, Mr. Brent, that Mrs. Spence happened to find me?
5400Was n''t that Mrs. Dallam you were with? 5400 Was n''t that how it happened?"
5400Was she, now, my Lord?
5400Was that Jethro, Mose?
5400Was that all?
5400Was that reticence?
5400Was there a good audience?
5400Was there a special service at Calvary yesterday?
5400Was there a woman in the case?
5400Was there any one with him?
5400Was there no one at the Coffee House with character enough to stop the lads?
5400Was yours-- easily mended?
5400Watling send you over here?
5400We go to church for something else besides the sermon-- don''t we?
5400We hain''t agoin''to hev a post- office at Coniston-- air we?
5400We''re flattered-- aren''t we, Beatrice?
5400We?
5400We?
5400Weill,he said gently,"suppose it had been your little girl?"
5400Well, Colonel Carvel, what can I do for you this morning?
5400Well, Cynthia, you should have come to the concert,she said;"it was fine, was n''t it, Jane?
5400Well, Honora,he asked,"how do you like-- the whirl of fashion?"
5400Well, Honora,he remarked,"you have a sort of a P. T. Barnum way of doing things once in a while-- haven''t you?
5400Well, Hugh, are you home?
5400Well, Hugh, were you dreaming?
5400Well, Hugh, you''ve decided to honour us, have you?
5400Well, Hugh,he would say,"how are you getting along?
5400Well, I guessed about right, did n''t I?
5400Well, Jethro,said the gentleman,"I''ve got to come into the Throne Room once a day anyhow, just to make sure you do n''t forget me-- eh?"
5400Well, Mr. Paret,he asked softly,"what''s up?"
5400Well, Nancy?
5400Well, Sally, what''s the news?
5400Well, Vic, what is it now?
5400Well, Victoria,said her father, kindly if resignedly,"what is it now?"
5400Well, Victoria?
5400Well, Whipple,he said,"this nation is going to the devil; eh?"
5400Well, dreams never come up to expectations, do they?
5400Well, father?
5400Well, gentlemen, what can I do for you?
5400Well, grandmother,said Phil Goodrich, who was the favourite son- in- law,"how was the new rector to- day?"
5400Well, has he taken a pass as a member of the legislature?
5400Well, have you found a way out?
5400Well, have you?
5400Well, how are you getting along?
5400Well, how did you get along with Hilda?
5400Well, how does it feel to be sent for by the great sultan?
5400Well, if I am who''s going to blame me?
5400Well, is there?
5400Well, my dear, why should we complain? 5400 Well, my dear,"asked the lady, at length,"what do you think of it all?"
5400Well, my dear?
5400Well, sir, well, sir,he said,"you''ve turned up at last, have you?
5400Well, sir,demanded Mr. Judson,"what have you to say?"
5400Well, sir,he said sharply,"what can I do for you?"
5400Well, sir,he said,"what were his views, then?"
5400Well, so you have, hain''t you? 5400 Well, sonny, scared of mules, are you?"
5400Well, suppose something has happened?
5400Well, that''s too bad,said Jethro;"g- got it all fixed, hev you?"
5400Well, then,she said,"why do n''t you?"
5400Well, this is cosy, is n''t it?
5400Well, we''ve got to eat, have n''t we?
5400Well, we''ve had a pretty good time, have n''t we?
5400Well, well, this is fortunate,said Mr. Merrill;"how are you, Duncan?
5400Well, well,he said, kissing her,"thought you''d surprise me, eh, Jinny?"
5400Well, well,said Mr. Merrill, staring at her,"you''ll have to look out for her some day-- keep the boys away from her-- eh?
5400Well, what about Bill 709?
5400Well, what am I to do about it?
5400Well, what can we do for you?
5400Well, what can you do?
5400Well, what do you think I did after he''d gone? 5400 Well, what do you think of the nerve of a man like that?"
5400Well, what if it was?
5400Well, what is it now, Waters?
5400Well, what is it?
5400Well, what of it?
5400Well, what would you be doing by yourself-- a young lady? 5400 Well, what''s the matter with breakfast?"
5400Well, what?
5400Well, whose fault is it?....
5400Well, wo n''t you sit down and stay awhile?
5400Well, you did n''t get square, did you?
5400Well, you''ve got one hundred and twenty- seven other ancestors of Ebenezer''s time, have n''t you?
5400Well, young ladies,said a voice,"come to pay a call on your relations-- have ye?"
5400Well, your campaign against Ennerly and Jackson fell through, did n''t it?
5400Well,I said,"how are you?"
5400Well,Mr. Flint interrupted, smiling somewhat blandly,"how much money do you think that pass would save an active young lawyer in a year?
5400Well,exclaimed the senator, with a touch of eagerness he did not often betray,"did you see Grant?
5400Well,he asked,"what do you think of it?"
5400Well,he asked,"what''s the trouble now?"
5400Well,he said, with one of his glances that were like flashes,"what you got up your sleeve?"
5400Well,he said,"was I right?"
5400Well,he was able to answer,"we''re as good as married, are n''t we, Janet?"
5400Well,said Mr. Flint, impatiently,"well, what of it?"
5400Well,said Mr. Jenney, the same Mr. Jenney of the apple orchard, but holding out a horny hand with unmistakable warmth,"how be you, Austen?"
5400Well,said Mr. Meader, apologetically,"that was stupid of me-- wahn''t it?
5400Well,said Mr. Pardriff,"you know they tried to get Austen Vane to run for State senator, do n''t you?"
5400Well,said Mr. Watling,"mow that you''re a member of the royal council, what do you think of the King?"
5400Well-- Hodder did n''t give you any intimation as to what he intended to do about that sort of thing, did he?
5400Well-- what difference does it make-- now? 5400 Well-- what''s the trouble with it?
5400Well-- what?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Well?
5400Were n''t you a little hard on him?
5400Were n''t you surprised?
5400Were you there?
5400Were you thinking of going shopping?
5400Were you waiting for Miss Merrill?
5400Were you wounded?
5400Were you-- were you coming to the office?
5400Were you? 5400 Were you?"
5400Wetherell, hain''t it?
5400Wetherell,Mr. Duncan was saying, staring at Cynthia through his spectacles,"where have I heard that name?"
5400Wetherell? 5400 Wh- what''s the matter, Cynthy?"
5400Wh- what?
5400Wh- what?
5400Whaffor you stannin''dere, Hester?
5400Whah is you, Marse Nick? 5400 Whah, suh?"
5400Whah? 5400 Whar be they?"
5400Whar be they?
5400Whar be ye from?
5400Whar be you from?
5400Whar did ye come from?
5400Whar hev they gone?
5400Whar is he?
5400Whar''s Chester?
5400Whar''s Jethro?
5400Whar? 5400 What I did?"
5400What I gwineter answer? 5400 What I meant was, are you interested in the problems they have to face?"
5400What I wish you to tell me, Mrs. Merrill, is this: how much of that article is true, and how much of it is false?
5400What Israelite brickmaker of Pharaoh''s dreamed of Solomon''s temple? 5400 What about fox and geese, Jock?"
5400What about him? 5400 What about him?"
5400What about him?
5400What about him?
5400What about him?
5400What about him?
5400What about it?
5400What about it?
5400What about?
5400What action do you mean?
5400What ails you, Richard?
5400What am I to say to you, Jack?
5400What appearance does the man make?
5400What are friends for, Janet,she asked,"if not to share sorrow with?
5400What are friends for?
5400What are serious things?
5400What are the facts? 5400 What are the grounds one can get divorced on?"
5400What are those two Harvard men doing here?
5400What are we doing this for?
5400What are ye a- doing?
5400What are you about, sir?
5400What are you doing down here, Brush?
5400What are you doing here, Hugh?
5400What are you doing here?
5400What are you doing here?
5400What are you doing here?
5400What are you doing here?
5400What are you doing herein the marts of trade? 5400 What are you doing in the governor''s room?"
5400What are you doing over there, Honora?
5400What are you doing, Cathy?
5400What are you doing, Gratton?
5400What are you givin''us? 5400 What are you giving me?"
5400What are you giving us?
5400What are you going to do about it?
5400What are you going to do after the game?
5400What are you going to do this afternoon?
5400What are you going to do?
5400What are you going to do?
5400What are you going to do?
5400What are you kidding about, Aust?
5400What are you laughing at?
5400What are you leading up to?
5400What are you looking for, Hugh?
5400What are you saying, Richard? 5400 What are you saying?
5400What are you thinking about?
5400What are you thinking about?
5400What are you thinking of?
5400What are you thinking of?
5400What are you thinking?
5400What are you thinking?
5400What are you trying to do?
5400What are you trying to do?
5400What are you trying to get at, Hilary,he inquired, sending for me to meet you out here in the woods in this curious way?
5400What are you waiting for?
5400What are you waiting for?
5400What are you working for?
5400What baggage is this I hear of that you quarrelled over at the assembly? 5400 What be you a- goin''to do about it?"
5400What be you a- goin''to do about that Four Corners road?
5400What be you a- goin''to do, Lem?
5400What be you doin'', Cynthy?
5400What became of all the hopes, Words and song and lute as well? 5400 What became of it after you restored it to its rightful owner?"
5400What became of it?
5400What bill?
5400What brings you here, then?
5400What business have you got coming in here and straightening up? 5400 What business was you callatin''to grapple with?"
5400What can I do for you, Mr. Bass? 5400 What can I do?"
5400What can I do?
5400What can he say?
5400What can it mean?
5400What can they do? 5400 What can we give that is worth it?"
5400What can you be thinking of, my dear? 5400 What can you do to stop it?"
5400What can you do, sonny?
5400What can you do?
5400What can you expect when a railroad owns a State? 5400 What can you mean?"
5400What chance have I got, against him?
5400What cheer, Richard?
5400What could I do?
5400What date, Stephen?
5400What devil inhabits you?
5400What devil- haunted place is this?
5400What deviltry have you been up to, Davy?
5400What did Mr. Wing want?
5400What did Perry do?
5400What did Zeb say?
5400What did he do?
5400What did he do?
5400What did he say to that?
5400What did he say to you?
5400What did he say, Daddy?
5400What did he say?
5400What did he say?
5400What did he tell you?
5400What did he want?
5400What did he want?
5400What did it come to?
5400What did she want to know?
5400What did they say?
5400What did they want? 5400 What did you ask him for, when you know?"
5400What did you come for?
5400What did you come to Washington for?
5400What did you come to Washington for?
5400What did you do with this person?
5400What did you do?
5400What did you do?
5400What did you expect, Phrasie?
5400What did you have for your breakfast?
5400What did you like about it, Janet?
5400What did you mean by''fox and geese''Jock?
5400What did you pay him?
5400What did you put in?
5400What did you say to them?
5400What did you say, Richard?
5400What did you say?
5400What did you say?
5400What did you think of Humphrey''s speech?
5400What did you think of me, when you first knew me?
5400What did you want to come here for?
5400What difference does it make what they say?
5400What difference does that make when you love a woman?
5400What difference does that make? 5400 What difference does that make?"
5400What difference does that make?
5400What difference does that make?
5400What do I believe?
5400What do the boys call the General?
5400What do these sudden, virtuous resolutions mean?
5400What do they say?
5400What do they suppose? 5400 What do we mean by human, unless it is the distinguishing mark of something within us that the natural world does n''t possess?
5400What do you call him?
5400What do you do now?
5400What do you expect me to say, Hugh?
5400What do you hear from the Senator?
5400What do you intend to do?
5400What do you intend to try to do?
5400What do you know about her?
5400What do you know about him?
5400What do you know of this France for which you are to fight?
5400What do you mean by Christianity being incendiary?
5400What do you mean by a man of modern ideas, Eleanor?
5400What do you mean by coming out of the yard? 5400 What do you mean by interrupting the court?"
5400What do you mean by letting them interfere with these workers?
5400What do you mean by makin''me promise such a thing, Austen?
5400What do you mean by nonsense?
5400What do you mean by putting a bath- tub into my house with the tin loose, so that I cut my leg on it?
5400What do you mean by that, Victoria?
5400What do you mean by that?
5400What do you mean by that?
5400What do you mean by that?
5400What do you mean by that?
5400What do you mean by''too much''?
5400What do you mean, Brooks?
5400What do you mean, Dolly?
5400What do you mean, Honora?
5400What do you mean, Howard?
5400What do you mean, Hugh?
5400What do you mean, Nick?
5400What do you mean, Vicomte?
5400What do you mean, sir?
5400What do you mean, sir?
5400What do you mean? 5400 What do you mean?"
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you reckon Sam''l said, Judge?
5400What do you say to a drive behind those chestnuts of mine, for a breath of air? 5400 What do you take me for?
5400What do you thick it means?
5400What do you think Cynthia''s done, Mother?
5400What do you think my life has been? 5400 What do you think of him?"
5400What do you think of him?
5400What do you think of it?
5400What do you think of me as?
5400What do you think of my turnout? 5400 What do you think of that?
5400What do you think of that?
5400What do you think of the soar our Pandora hath taken, Miss Betty?
5400What do you think of this, Colonel?
5400What do you think of this?
5400What do you think the property holders on Maplewood Avenue would say? 5400 What do you think?"
5400What do you want for him?
5400What do you want me to do with him?
5400What do you want me to do?
5400What do you want me to do?
5400What do you want to say?
5400What do you want to say?
5400What do you want to say?
5400What do you want with your hat?
5400What do you wish to say?
5400What does Madame know of Gignoux?
5400What does Watling think?
5400What does he expect us to do,--allow our real estate to remain unproductive merely for sentimental reasons? 5400 What does he look like, Irene?"
5400What does he say?
5400What does he want?
5400What does he write about?
5400What does it cost?
5400What does it feel like to be famous, and have editorials about one''s self in the New York newspapers?
5400What does the doctor say?
5400What does this mean, Sutton?
5400What does this mean?
5400What doing?
5400What else can you do?
5400What else did Mr. Vane say?
5400What else did he say?
5400What else did he say?
5400What evidence?
5400What excuse, Monsieur?
5400What foolishness is this?
5400What for?
5400What for?
5400What for?
5400What for?
5400What good will you accomplish?
5400What great man hain''t?
5400What happened to him-- do you know? 5400 What happened, mother?"
5400What harm can it do?
5400What harm is there in that?
5400What has Mr. Mason been putting into your head?
5400What has North Carolina done for Franklin?
5400What has father said?
5400What has happened?
5400What has he done to you, Virginia?
5400What has that to do with it?
5400What has your life been?
5400What have I done for her?
5400What have I done that I should be publicly insulted?
5400What have I done to deserve so priceless a thing?
5400What have I done to you, Janet? 5400 What have I done?"
5400What have I got?
5400What have I to do with it?
5400What have I to do with your staying?
5400What have they said?
5400What have we harboured, father?
5400What have you been doing since I saw you last?
5400What have you been doing since you arrived here on this ridiculous mission?
5400What have you been doing to my father?
5400What have you done to her, Jethro? 5400 What have you done to him?"
5400What have you got there, angel face?
5400What have you got to sell?
5400What have you heard?
5400What have you there, Richard?
5400What have you thought about me?
5400What horse?
5400What hotel?
5400What if he does?
5400What if the other man should happen along?
5400What if we ca n''t believe?
5400What in God''s name do you want? 5400 What in Halifax are you doing, Bass?"
5400What in hell do you make of that, Crocker?
5400What in hell is this fellow driving at, Paret?
5400What in the devil''s name now?
5400What in the world are we going to do with all these things?
5400What in the world are you doing here?
5400What in the world happened to you, Janet?
5400What in the world is he starin''at me for?
5400What in the world''s the matter with you?
5400What in the world''s the matter?
5400What inscription do you wish put into it?
5400What interpretation do you put on it?
5400What is going forward to- day?
5400What is he like?
5400What is he, a Socialist?
5400What is his name?
5400What is his number in Dalton Street?
5400What is it in particular,he asked, troubled,"that you can not accept?
5400What is it now?
5400What is it you know about this queer but gifted genius who is here so mysteriously?
5400What is it you object to about the Maplewood franchise?
5400What is it, Davy?
5400What is it, Davy?
5400What is it, Davy?
5400What is it, Harry?
5400What is it, Miss Cynthia?
5400What is it, Richard?
5400What is it, Uncle Jethro?
5400What is it, ma cherie?
5400What is it, mother?
5400What is it, my dear?
5400What is it, my friends?
5400What is it, then?
5400What is it,he asked,"that brought you here to me, to- day?"
5400What is it,he exclaimed,"but the survival of the system of property?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is right?
5400What is she doing here?
5400What is she doing here?
5400What is she?
5400What is socialism, then?
5400What is that?
5400What is that?
5400What is the Alcalde doing here?
5400What is the Christian religion?
5400What is the age of the lady?
5400What is the excitement?
5400What is the matter with you, Richard?
5400What is the matter, Lindy?
5400What is the matter?
5400What is the place?
5400What is the trouble, Ryan?
5400What is their business?
5400What is there in it? 5400 What is this disease you''ve got?"
5400What is this man doing here, Virginia?
5400What is this?
5400What is your name?
5400What is your name?
5400What is-- the trouble?
5400What is?
5400What kind did you think I was?
5400What kind of a dress do you want, sir?
5400What kind of a man are you?
5400What kind of ambition do you mean, Honora?
5400What kind of ambition, Hugh?
5400What kind of friendship would that be? 5400 What kind of fruits?"
5400What kind of law does Hilary Vane practise?
5400What kind of machinery would you put in?
5400What kind of woman do you think I am?
5400What kind of work would you like to do?
5400What kind, sir?
5400What made you change your mind?
5400What made you come back?
5400What made you jump in the mill- pond?
5400What made you sneak off when Bije Bixby come?
5400What makes him think he ai n''t going to get it?
5400What makes you imagine that he thought of you at all, my dear?
5400What makes you say that?
5400What makes you so late?
5400What makes you so sober, Davy?
5400What makes you think he has ability?
5400What makes you think so?
5400What makes you think so?
5400What makes you think so?
5400What makes you think that?
5400What man?
5400What might they be?
5400What name shall I say?
5400What news have you?
5400What nonsense has Comyn put into your head?
5400What now?
5400What office was you going into?
5400What on earth do you mean?
5400What on earth is the matter with you, Woods?
5400What other can I give you?
5400What other thing?
5400What other things?
5400What other things?
5400What other time?
5400What others?
5400What others?
5400What ought I to have been?
5400What part of it?
5400What plan would you pursue, sir?
5400What prejudices, sir?
5400What premises?
5400What preparations have you made to go?
5400What prevented you?
5400What proof have I that you have it to sell?
5400What put him into your head, Cynthia?
5400What put that into your head, Cynthy?
5400What quarrel is this, Richard?
5400What railroad? 5400 What regiment stayed under the bank?"
5400What right have these people to let their children play on the streets? 5400 What right?
5400What said I say?
5400What said I, Henry?
5400What say you to a game of billiards, Philip?
5400What say you to that, gentlemen?
5400What shades of silk would you like, sir?
5400What shall I tell you?
5400What shall we do to- day,she asked,"if it snows?"
5400What shall we do with them?
5400What shall we do?
5400What ship is that?
5400What should we gain by a week''s or a fortnight''s delay,he was saying,"except so much misery?"
5400What size is she?
5400What sort of thing?
5400What sort of things did they say?
5400What sort was he?
5400What strikes you to- day?
5400What the deuce ails you, Davy?
5400What the deuce do you expect?
5400What the deuce do you mean?
5400What the deuce does he intend to do?
5400What the devil ails you, Davy?
5400What the devil do you mean by coming here?
5400What the devil do you mean by interfering with my business, sir?
5400What the devil do you mean, Hugo?
5400What the devil do you mean, Sevier?
5400What the-- what brought you here?
5400What then, in Heaven''s name?
5400What then? 5400 What then?"
5400What then?
5400What then?
5400What then?
5400What things?
5400What think you of the rector as a representative of heaven, Harvey?
5400What think you of this paragon, General Wilkinson?
5400What time is it?
5400What time-- w- what time?
5400What time?
5400What was he like?
5400What was he? 5400 What was his name, sir?"
5400What was it like?
5400What was it, Betty?
5400What was it, then?
5400What was my prediction, Miss Dolly, when you stepped your first dance at Carvel Hall?
5400What was she like?
5400What was that firing?
5400What was that?
5400What was the discussion about?
5400What was the matter with me?
5400What was the matter with your own horse, Victoria?
5400What way?
5400What were they?
5400What were you about, moping off alone, with a party in your honour, sir?
5400What were you doing there?
5400What were you doing there?
5400What will Mr. Worthington say when he hears the young man has been coming to our house to see her?
5400What will they think?
5400What will you be when you are thirty?
5400What will you give me,he said,"if I can induce Howard to like it?"
5400What will you give me?
5400What will you have, sir?
5400What woman worth her salt does n''t regret it, does n''t want to live, even if she has to suffer for it? 5400 What would I have done, all alone, in the new house?"
5400What would you call me, at a venture, Davy?
5400What would you do with it?
5400What would you do?
5400What would you have had me do?
5400What would you have me do?
5400What would you have thought of me if I had not come?
5400What would you like best to do, my son?
5400What would you like to happen?
5400What would you publish, sir? 5400 What yo''want, Marse?"
5400What you can buy for me?
5400What you goin''to do then?
5400What''d they do?--what''d they do?
5400What''d you come down for?
5400What''d you say if Jethro was Chairman of the next Board of Selectmen?
5400What''ll ye be afther now?
5400What''ll ye be doing now, Dickie lad?
5400What''ll you give me?
5400What''ll your Uncle Crawford say?
5400What''re you tryin''to do? 5400 What''s all this nonsense, Ned?"
5400What''s chewin''you now?
5400What''s come?
5400What''s going to defeat him?
5400What''s got into the women these days? 5400 What''s got into you?"
5400What''s got into you?
5400What''s happened to you?
5400What''s happened?
5400What''s he doin''here?
5400What''s he doing there?
5400What''s he up to?
5400What''s he wanted for?
5400What''s his name?
5400What''s his name?
5400What''s indecorous about it? 5400 What''s it to you?
5400What''s that got to do with it?
5400What''s that, Governor?
5400What''s that, sir?
5400What''s that? 5400 What''s that?"
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s the Ashuela willing to do?
5400What''s the best livery- stable in town?
5400What''s the difference about the table? 5400 What''s the difference?
5400What''s the difference?
5400What''s the matter now, Tom?
5400What''s the matter with her?
5400What''s the matter with him?
5400What''s the matter with him?
5400What''s the matter with it? 5400 What''s the matter with it?"
5400What''s the matter with it?
5400What''s the matter with seeing him now?
5400What''s the matter with these fellers?
5400What''s the matter with you to- day, Honora?
5400What''s the matter with you, Ephum?
5400What''s the matter with you, Vane? 5400 What''s the matter with you?"
5400What''s the matter, Clarence?
5400What''s the matter, Davy? 5400 What''s the matter, Honora?"
5400What''s the matter, Hugh? 5400 What''s the matter, Jinny?"
5400What''s the matter, Wallis?
5400What''s the matter, dear?
5400What''s the matter? 5400 What''s the matter?"
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the occasion to- day?
5400What''s the pay?
5400What''s the punishment for that in my house? 5400 What''s the railroad got to do with it?"
5400What''s the railrud got to do with anything in this State?
5400What''s the trouble, Hodder?
5400What''s the trouble, Stepan-- swallowed your spoon?
5400What''s the trouble, then?
5400What''s the trouble?
5400What''s the trouble?
5400What''s the use of State sovereignty if you ca n''t have a glittering army to follow the governor round?
5400What''s the use of being so damned precipitate?
5400What''s the use of both of us knowing the language?
5400What''s the use of making an impression if you ca n''t follow it up?
5400What''s the use of moving about?
5400What''s the use of reaching them, only to touch them? 5400 What''s this I hear about giving the girls the vote, Chris?"
5400What''s this I hear about your moving out of Hamilton Place, Mr. Waring? 5400 What''s this for?"
5400What''s this they tell me about your saving a man''s life?
5400What''s this, Kate?
5400What''s this, Starling?
5400What''s this?
5400What''s this?
5400What''s this?
5400What''s this?
5400What''s this?
5400What''s this?
5400What''s to do here?
5400What''s to do now?
5400What''s to do now?
5400What''s to do, boy?
5400What''s to prevent us-- Maude?
5400What''s up? 5400 What''s yere name?"
5400What''s your diagnosis?
5400What''s your hurry?
5400What''s your husband like?
5400What''s your name, lad?
5400What''s your name?
5400What''s your name?
5400What''s your name?
5400What''s your price? 5400 What''s yours?"
5400What, now, would you take this gentleman to be?
5400What, skeered on''em?
5400What, then?
5400What, then?
5400What, you will not eat, either, Richard?
5400What,I exclaimed,"Colonel Sevier?"
5400What,I exclaimed;"you know the story?"
5400What,asked Mrs. Waring,"do they say about the Apostolic Succession?"
5400What,asked Trixton Brent, flashing an amused glance at Honora,"are the symptoms of gout, Lula?
5400What,asked Victoria, with her eyes on the river,"what are the wages?"
5400What,exclaimed Mr. Flint,"you ask me that question?
5400What,he said gayly,"still here?"
5400What,he sputtered,"what?
5400What,says he,"Mr. Carvel hath sent you to Mr. Allen on your uncle''s advice?"
5400What,says my uncle,"you dare to refuse me?"
5400What,she flashed,"has n''t any one a right to see the President?
5400What-- for instance?
5400What-- what for?
5400What-- what is it?
5400What-- what''s he done?
5400What? 5400 What?
5400What? 5400 What?"
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400When are you coming over, father?
5400When are you going away?
5400When are you going home?
5400When are you leaving?
5400When are you to be married?
5400When are you-- going back West?
5400When can I see you?
5400When did he go away?
5400When did they stop?
5400When did you arrive?
5400When did you arrive?
5400When did you come to life?
5400When did you come up?
5400When did you leave Brampton?
5400When do you leave?
5400When do you move to town?
5400When do you think of leaving?
5400When have we ever sought for virtue, Sarah?
5400When is that woman going away?
5400When my friend Mr. Watling is United States Senator,--eh?
5400When shall I come?
5400When so many people are clamouring for you?
5400When the railrud is represented by the kind of politicians we have in Putnam, it''s natural I should hain''t it?
5400When was it?
5400When was this?
5400When we turn to John, what do we find? 5400 When will you give it to me?"
5400When you consider all the harm you have done me, and all the double- dealing I may lay at your door, can you blame me for my feelings?
5400When you married me,he went on,"you had an idea that you were going to live in a house on Fifth Avenue with a ballroom, did n''t you?"
5400When you was in college?
5400When''ll you have it done?
5400When?
5400When?
5400When?
5400When?
5400When?
5400Where am I, Lindy?
5400Where am de young Marsa?
5400Where are the dresses?
5400Where are we now?
5400Where are we?
5400Where are you from?
5400Where are you from?
5400Where are you going, Cousin Eph?
5400Where are you going, Cynthia?
5400Where are you going, Hugh?
5400Where are you going, Jinny?
5400Where are you going, Lige?
5400Where are you going, Ma''am, may I ask?
5400Where are you going, sir?
5400Where are you going? 5400 Where are you going?"
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you off to, Lige?
5400Where are you taking us, Hugh?
5400Where are you, Joshua?
5400Where are your wits, Mr. Ritchie? 5400 Where away?"
5400Where be you goin''?
5400Where can we talk private?
5400Where did he live?
5400Where did she go?
5400Where did you get all these ideas?
5400Where did you get all this?
5400Where did you get that brute, Hugh?
5400Where did you get that disreputable sheet?
5400Where did you hear all this?
5400Where did you hear him say that?
5400Where did you hit him?
5400Where did you learn French, Nick?
5400Where did you learn it?
5400Where did you look?
5400Where did you see the duke?
5400Where do you come from?
5400Where do you keep yourself? 5400 Where do you live?"
5400Where do you live?
5400Where does Cynthia- live?
5400Where does he live? 5400 Where does she live?"
5400Where does the minister live?
5400Where else have the children to play?
5400Where has he gone?
5400Where have you been all this time?
5400Where have you been of late, sir? 5400 Where have you been seeing him again?"
5400Where have you been, Davy?
5400Where have you been, Jim?
5400Where have you been?
5400Where have you been?
5400Where have you been?--where were you this morning? 5400 Where have your eyes been to- night, my friends?
5400Where in the world is Josh?
5400Where is Clarence?
5400Where is Comyn?
5400Where is Doctor Vane now?
5400Where is Miss Dolly?
5400Where is Riddle?
5400Where is Uncle Comyn?
5400Where is he now?
5400Where is he, David?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is my hat, Davy?
5400Where is our gallantry? 5400 Where is she?"
5400Where is she?
5400Where is she?
5400Where is she?
5400Where is that?
5400Where is the Captain?
5400Where is the Hungry Wolf, who speaks English?
5400Where is the memorandum I made last week for Percy and Company?
5400Where is the place?
5400Where is your master?
5400Where shall I go?
5400Where the devil did you get this money, sir?
5400Where the devil is Allen?
5400Where was Stephen Brice last night, Jack?
5400Where would any of us be were it not for trade? 5400 Where''d you get the new boy, Sandy?"
5400Where''ll I go?
5400Where''s Aunt Lillian?
5400Where''s Austen?
5400Where''s Bessie to- day, Cecil-- or do you know?
5400Where''s Clarence?
5400Where''s Clark?
5400Where''s Daddy?
5400Where''s Jethro?
5400Where''s Lise?
5400Where''s McChesney?
5400Where''s Mr. Chiltern, Starling?
5400Where''s Mr. Clarence? 5400 Where''s Susan?"
5400Where''s Uncle Jethro going?
5400Where''s brother?
5400Where''s father? 5400 Where''s he gone?"
5400Where''s his Confederate uniform? 5400 Where''s my hat?"
5400Where''s my man?
5400Where''s room number twelve?
5400Where''s that?
5400Where, in India? 5400 Where, may I ask, did you find it?"
5400Where-- where is Miss Dolly?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Whereinell were you, Hughie?
5400Which army?
5400Which doctrines?
5400Which doctrines?
5400Which one did you hear about?
5400Which question?
5400Which trace did he take?
5400Which way did that young lady go?
5400Which way were you going?
5400Which would you rather be, Richard,said Dolly to me, under her breath,"Horace Walpole or Captain John Paul?
5400Which''ll be the easier to prove?
5400While you have the chance?
5400Whither away?
5400Whither now, my conquistador?
5400Whitredge told you to come to me, did n''t he?
5400Who am I to accept?
5400Who are on that committee?
5400Who are the honest ones?
5400Who are you for?
5400Who are you?
5400Who are you?
5400Who are you?
5400Who are you?
5400Who be you thinkin''of for next governor, Jethro?
5400Who brought it, mother?
5400Who commands at Kaskaskia?
5400Who could have informed?
5400Who d''ye callate to vote for, Sam''l?
5400Who do you love best in all the world?
5400Who do you think I am, at my age? 5400 Who do you think was here this afternoon?"
5400Who do you want to see?
5400Who does own it?
5400Who done freed her?
5400Who else would get the post- office?
5400Who else? 5400 Who has been putting such things in your head, my dear?"
5400Who have you picked?
5400Who hev ye brought with ye?
5400Who in hell are you?
5400Who is Master Nick?
5400Who is Polly Ann?
5400Who is he in love with?
5400Who is he?
5400Who is he?
5400Who is it owns your shop, my man?
5400Who is it?
5400Who is it?
5400Who is it?
5400Who is playing with them?
5400Who is she?
5400Who is speaking?
5400Who is that beautiful girl he is dancing with?
5400Who is that man?
5400Who is that with Reggie Farwell?
5400Who is that?
5400Who is the dark horse?
5400Who is the man whose name is signed to that message?
5400Who is the town? 5400 Who is this man Krebs?"
5400Who is this, Richard?
5400Who is to mend my waistcoats now?
5400Who keeps house?
5400Who lives here?
5400Who makes this offer?
5400Who put those frightful skulls upon Temple Bar?
5400Who said I was busy?
5400Who said I was going to the show?
5400Who said anything about going to town?
5400Who shall I say, sir?
5400Who spoils her, Lige?
5400Who spoils you, Jinny?
5400Who teach you that?
5400Who the deuce is he?
5400Who the devil are you, sir?
5400Who the devil are you?
5400Who the devil is he?
5400Who the devil is this Tom McChesney?
5400Who the devil is this?
5400Who the hell is he?
5400Who told him?
5400Who told you of this, Dolly?
5400Who told you this?
5400Who told you where I was? 5400 Who told you?"
5400Who wants to climb the walls?
5400Who was be?
5400Who was he?
5400Who was in the audience? 5400 Who was that, my dear?"
5400Who was that?
5400Who was the lawyer?
5400Who was''Charles''?
5400Who will blame you?
5400Who would have shown me Paris?
5400Who''s Chauncey Dike?
5400Who''s Reggie Farwell?
5400Who''s Siddons?
5400Who''s afraid of the Dutch?
5400Who''s b''en talkin''to you, Cynthia?
5400Who''s gone?
5400Who''s he?
5400Who''s in the office?
5400Who''s man enough in Washington to shake his fist in a rebel''s face? 5400 Who''s publishing this?"
5400Who''s that?
5400Who''s that?
5400Who''s the leader here?
5400Who''s this?
5400Who''s your friend, Honora?
5400Who''ve you been calling on now?
5400Who? 5400 Who?
5400Who? 5400 Who?"
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Who?
5400Whom I rejected?
5400Whom did he mean, Jinny?
5400Whom have I the pleasure of speaking to?
5400Whom have you found-- a school friend?
5400Whom have you invited, Anne?
5400Whom would she believe?
5400Whom would you suggest to see''em?
5400Whose gold but George''s, by the grace of God King of Great Britain and Ireland? 5400 Whose little gal be you?"
5400Whose side have you heard?
5400Why Canada?
5400Why I all alone?
5400Why I call you Gumbo de St. Gre? 5400 Why are n''t women made generals and governors?"
5400Why are n''t you angry?
5400Why are you evading?
5400Why are you in New Orleans?
5400Why are you keeping him away? 5400 Why are you so anxious to get away?"
5400Why are you so cold, Cynthia?
5400Why are you so proud of Ebenezer?
5400Why are you so surprised that I should possess such modest accomplishments?
5400Why bother over matters that are past and gone? 5400 Why by not?"
5400Why ca n''t we let well enough alone?
5400Why ca n''t we, as Laury suggests, just continue to trust?
5400Why ca n''t you be as you used to be? 5400 Why ca n''t you leave me alone?"
5400Why ca n''t you marry him?
5400Why could n''t things remain as they were?
5400Why could n''t you have held fast to your faith? 5400 Why did I not send him to Eton last fall?
5400Why did Uncle Comyn not come?
5400Why did he come back?
5400Why did he leave his father?
5400Why did it terrify you?
5400Why did n''t Miller Gorse let me know about it, instead of licking up a fuss after it''s all over?...
5400Why did n''t he come with you?
5400Why did n''t he understand her? 5400 Why did n''t somebody tell me?"
5400Why did n''t somebody try it before?
5400Why did n''t you be a senator?
5400Why did n''t you come to lunch?
5400Why did n''t you come to me earlier?
5400Why did n''t you come to see the play?
5400Why did n''t you go home with your captain?
5400Why did n''t you go?
5400Why did n''t you let me know that you were coming home?
5400Why did n''t you let me know you were in Boston?
5400Why did n''t you let me see that you still cared?
5400Why did n''t you say something about this before?
5400Why did n''t you say something about this before?
5400Why did n''t you stop?
5400Why did n''t you telephone me? 5400 Why did n''t you tell me about it before?"
5400Why did n''t you tell me you were coming to this place?
5400Why did n''t you tell me?
5400Why did n''t you tell me?
5400Why did n''t you tell us, my son?
5400Why did n''t your mother let me know that she was coming?
5400Why did not some one tell me this, when I was young?
5400Why did you come here?
5400Why did you come to me?
5400Why did you come with me?
5400Why did you come? 5400 Why did you come?"
5400Why did you do it?
5400Why did you have trouble?
5400Why did you let the holes get so deep?
5400Why did you lie, I say?
5400Why did you pretend it was the view?
5400Why did you run away from me last night?
5400Why did you run away from that baseball game in Brampton? 5400 Why did you tell them?"
5400Why did you think that?
5400Why did you walk out?
5400Why did you want to kill me?
5400Why divorce?
5400Why do I come to Newport?
5400Why do I speak of him? 5400 Why do n''t they?"
5400Why do n''t we?
5400Why do n''t you ask her?
5400Why do n''t you assert yourself, Richard? 5400 Why do n''t you believe me?"
5400Why do n''t you come over to see us oftener?
5400Why do n''t you congratulate me?
5400Why do n''t you drive''round to the stables?
5400Why do n''t you ever talk to me about my father, Aunt Mary? 5400 Why do n''t you folks quit railin''against Jethro and do somethin''?"
5400Why do n''t you get after Ralph?
5400Why do n''t you go as far as old Catherine, and call her a princess?
5400Why do n''t you go to bed?
5400Why do n''t you let him die, you and your church people?
5400Why do n''t you make me jealous?
5400Why do n''t you open it, and see?
5400Why do n''t you put it on your watch chain?
5400Why do n''t you put that on paper?
5400Why do n''t you read the book, Jethro?
5400Why do n''t you read the book?
5400Why do n''t you?
5400Why do n''t you?
5400Why do you ask me? 5400 Why do you ask such a question?"
5400Why do you ask?
5400Why do you ask?
5400Why do you bury yourself in Coniston?
5400Why do you call him my friend?
5400Why do you call him''Uncle Jethro''?
5400Why do you come up here every week?
5400Why do you doubt me?
5400Why do you feel badly about it?
5400Why do you go in this afternoon?
5400Why do you go over?
5400Why do you go to Kaintuckee, McChesney?
5400Why do you listen to Clarence''s horse talk?
5400Why do you look like that?
5400Why do you make me laugh,she reproached him,"when the matter is so serious?
5400Why do you not coarse over, as you used to?
5400Why do you resist me?
5400Why do you risk your life in this way? 5400 Why do you say I''ll never come back?"
5400Why do you say that? 5400 Why do you say that?"
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you say you''re not going to get well, Janet? 5400 Why do you stop?"
5400Why do you suppose I came out?
5400Why do you suppose that you were sent to Springfield?
5400Why do you take it for granted that I have dropped?
5400Why do you think it''s interesting?
5400Why do you want a tree?
5400Why do you want me to do this?
5400Why do you want me to sit down?
5400Why do you want to deal with them when we''ve always been straight with you, when we''re ready to meet them and go one better? 5400 Why do you want to go over?"
5400Why do you want to go thar?
5400Why does he think you came?
5400Why does n''t she invite you to the dinners?
5400Why does n''t she marry him without my consent?
5400Why does n''t the government take him over?
5400Why have I always come to you, when it was possible?
5400Why have n''t I the right?
5400Why have n''t you been in to see me since my tea, Honora? 5400 Why have n''t you ever told me about her?"
5400Why have n''t you tried it, Phrasie?
5400Why have you come here?
5400Why hurry back to Hampton?
5400Why in hell do n''t you do your duty?
5400Why in hell were n''t those gates bolted tight?
5400Why in the name of all the sages,he would demand,"could n''t you have done this well at school?
5400Why is it that I do n''t interfere?
5400Why is it you never ask me?
5400Why is it,she demanded,"that after all these centuries of certainty we should have to start out to find him again?
5400Why is it?
5400Why is n''t he coming?
5400Why let the little cur stand in the way?
5400Why not Paret?
5400Why not judge this bill by its face, without heeding a cock and bull story as to how it may have originated? 5400 Why not right away?"
5400Why not settle down?
5400Why not to- day-- now?
5400Why not, Colonel Carvel?
5400Why not, Lige?
5400Why not, father?
5400Why not, if I feel it?
5400Why not, my friend; if Mr. Crewe has no objection? 5400 Why not-- you''re mine-- aren''t you?
5400Why not? 5400 Why not?
5400Why not? 5400 Why not?
5400Why not? 5400 Why not?
5400Why not? 5400 Why not?
5400Why not? 5400 Why not?"
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why should I defend him?
5400Why should I desire what I can not have, my dear? 5400 Why should I set him upon a pedestal?"
5400Why should I tell-- you?
5400Why should I think it strange?
5400Why should I want another man''s wife when I do n''t want one of my own?
5400Why should I?
5400Why should I?
5400Why should I?
5400Why should I?
5400Why should I?
5400Why should I?
5400Why should an affair with him ruin it?
5400Why should any sensible man, a member of the legislature, take stock in that kind of gossip?
5400Why should it? 5400 Why should n''t I be?
5400Why should n''t I be?
5400Why should n''t I marry him?
5400Why should n''t he go?
5400Why should n''t she let you?
5400Why should n''t they, if they want to?
5400Why should n''t we?
5400Why should n''t ye? 5400 Why should n''t ye?"
5400Why should n''t you be here?
5400Why should n''t you tell me, Hugh, if it''s so?
5400Why should not our soldiers have them, too?
5400Why should you be-- even if there were anything to be jealous about? 5400 Why should you get me talked about?"
5400Why should you have qualms?
5400Why should you think that I have been ill?
5400Why should you want me? 5400 Why the deuce did she furnish it, since she''s gone to Paris to live with Rindge?"
5400Why the deuce should she marry Ham? 5400 Why the devil should I see the man, Clark?"
5400Why the devil was you not in Brook Street yesterday to tell me that your uncle had swindled you? 5400 Why this sudden change of mind?"
5400Why was he here?
5400Why was n''t he popular?
5400Why were you doing it?
5400Why were you-- down there?
5400Why wo n''t you be a candidate,she asked, in a low voice,"if such men as that want you?"
5400Why would I be going out there?
5400Why would n''t it be possible to draw up a bill to fit the situation?
5400Why would you care?
5400Why wuddent ye be doin''the like, Davy?
5400Why you ax me dat, Jinny?
5400Why, Breed?
5400Why, Captain Lige,cried the Colonel, without ceremony,"and how do you find yourself to- day, suh?
5400Why, Daddy,said Cynthia, coming in from the garden,"where did you get all that money?
5400Why, Jack, what are you doing here?
5400Why, Jack,said I,"what have we there?
5400Why, Jinny,cried Mr. Brinsmade,"what does this mean?
5400Why, Jinny,he cried,"what''s the matter?"
5400Why, Milly, what''s the matter?
5400Why, Peter,Uncle Tom had said slyly,"why do n''t you kiss her?"
5400Why, Richard,says the dog,"what do you think some wag has done now?
5400Why, Stephen?
5400Why, Tim, it''s you, is it?
5400Why, how be you, Austen?
5400Why, how do you do, Cary? 5400 Why, if I got out--""What then?"
5400Why, my dear, do you mean to say you have n''t heard of Brooks Insall?
5400Why, my dear,she said,"where have you been all afternoon?"
5400Why, my masters, why so glum?
5400Why, then, does she accept and return the attentions of the Celebrity?
5400Why, what''s the matter, Honora?
5400Why, where''s Tom?
5400Why, yes, Pa."Are you going to marry Clarence?
5400Why, yes,said Cynthia,"are n''t you?"
5400Why, yes,said he;"I would have given my head to see you anywhere, only--""Only what?"
5400Why,exclaimed the Speaker,"how are you, Mr. Crewe, how are you?
5400Why,he exclaimed, looking around him,"you have been busy, have n''t you?"
5400Why,he exclaimed, with a masculine lack of delicacy,"he may be in love--""That''s struck you, has it?"
5400Why,he said, why did you have nothing but cruelty in your heart, and contempt for her?
5400Why-- what are you doing here?
5400Why-- why did he''back out''?
5400Why? 5400 Why?
5400Why? 5400 Why?
5400Why? 5400 Why?
5400Why? 5400 Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Will Flint put up a bond of one hundred thousand dollars that I''ll be nominated and elected next year? 5400 Will Wetherell,"said Chester,"you be a gentleman and a student, hain''t you?
5400Will You?
5400Will a little lemonade hurt him? 5400 Will he succeed?"
5400Will not Virginia and the Congress send you men, sir?
5400Will ye bleed to death, Davy?
5400Will ye pull, ye damned Dutchman? 5400 Will ye wait a minute, Mr. Durrett, sir?"
5400Will ye, darlint? 5400 Will you avenge him?
5400Will you be dining here, sir?
5400Will you be good enough to let Mr: Parr know that I will see him at his house, to- night?
5400Will you come in for a moment, Richard?
5400Will you come into my quarters and have a bottle of beer with Tiefel?
5400Will you come up for tea?
5400Will you do me the kindness, gentlemen,said she,"to leave me with my brother?"
5400Will you enter, citizens?
5400Will you ever change?
5400Will you follow me?
5400Will you forgive me?
5400Will you go driving with me?
5400Will you go to sleep right away if I do, Sid?
5400Will you have supper afterwards?
5400Will you have tea?
5400Will you join us at catch and swing?
5400Will you kindly explain, if you can, why the town of Grenoble has ignored us?
5400Will you leave me here a little while-- alone?
5400Will you let me drive you home?
5400Will you let me ride him this afternoon?
5400Will you let me share expenses, Cousin Eph?
5400Will you let me try to help you?
5400Will you look at them before you go?
5400Will you miss me a little?
5400Will you not do as I say?
5400Will you not tell me something of it?
5400Will you not, my dear?
5400Will you put the franchise through?
5400Will you read the rest of that speech?
5400Will you rescue him?
5400Will you see a visitor, Richard?
5400Will you sit, sir?
5400Will you sit?
5400Will you swear to it?
5400Will you take me to Brampton, Uncle Jethro?
5400Will you take me?
5400Will you take my card to Miss Parr,the rector said,"if she has not retired, and tell her I have a message?"
5400Will you take the oath of allegiance to Virginia and the Continental Congress?
5400Will you tell Miss Flint that Mr. Vane has called for her, and that I can not leave the horse?
5400Will you tell me the amount of my bill?
5400Will you tell my fortune?
5400Will you? 5400 Will your Excellency confess likewise?"
5400Will, are the flannels in your knapsack? 5400 Will-- you hear somethin''?"
5400William,said the young lady, roguishly,"how is the eye, location, and memory?"
5400Willingly, willingly, my Lord,said Mr. Dix, and added immediately:"Your Lordship will not object to putting that in writing?
5400Win a thousand pounds every night at Brooks''s, or improve your time and do your duty, and get Miss Manners out of his Grace''s clutches? 5400 With Sevier?"
5400With me?
5400With the capitalists?
5400With-- with her former husband?
5400Wo n''t he-- listen to reason?
5400Wo n''t mention what?
5400Wo n''t you come in?
5400Wo n''t you come in?
5400Wo n''t you come, too, Miss Leffingwell?
5400Wo n''t you explain to me the way you look at it? 5400 Wo n''t you get out and look at it?"
5400Wo n''t you let me go?
5400Wo n''t you please go without me, Pa?
5400Wo n''t you sit down and stay,she begged,"you have n''t seen Miss Lucretia for how many years,--thirty, is n''t it?"
5400Wo n''t you sit down, General?
5400Wo n''t you sit down?
5400Wo n''t you sit down?
5400Wo n''t you sit down?
5400Wo n''t you speak to me?
5400Wo n''t you stay this once? 5400 Wo n''t you take my taxicab?"
5400Wo n''t you tell me that they are not true?
5400Wo n''t you tell me that they are not true?
5400Wo n''t you tell me?
5400Wo n''t you trust me, trust our love for one another?
5400Work for it, Hugh?
5400Work to- morrow?
5400Working to- day?
5400Working?
5400Worried? 5400 Worse?"
5400Worth your while?
5400Worthy said that you were up here, but I thought he was crazy the way he talked-- I did n''t think--"Think what?
5400Would it be impertinent to ask your business-- and perhaps your name?
5400Would it be so dreadful a thing,asked Hodder,"To run the risk of making a few mistakes?
5400Would it have done any good?
5400Would it have made any difference to him where you had been?
5400Would it have made any difference, Plimpton?
5400Would n''t engage in lobbying, would you?
5400Would n''t go?
5400Would n''t it be better to let her hear?
5400Would n''t think I cared for such things, would you?
5400Would n''t you be accomplishing more,I inquired,"if you had n''t antagonized the Hutchinses?"
5400Would n''t you gain some time if you left by the window?
5400Would n''t you like a runabout?
5400Would n''t you like to see the letter?
5400Would ye put Jimmy Flanagan and Otto Bauer and Tony Baldassaro in Mr. Parr''s pew?
5400Would you be content to stop then?
5400Would you be good enough to step into the library?
5400Would you be so kind as to tell him-- when he''s well enough-- that I came to see him, and that I''m sorry?
5400Would you believe that a man who''s been in this mill twenty- five years could be such a fool?
5400Would you fight him?
5400Would you go along, Davy?
5400Would you go to see him, if he were to ask you?
5400Would you have Terence, sir?
5400Would you have agreed with me any better than you do now? 5400 Would you have been content to see me in the parlor?"
5400Would you have cared?
5400Would you have me desert him-- after all these years?
5400Would you know a heretic if you saw one?
5400Would you like work here?
5400Would you mind staying a little while longer this evening, Miss Bumpus?
5400Would you miss me if I went away, Richard?
5400Would you not like to see a clergyman, Judge?
5400Would you prefer,he asked,"to see my soul destroyed?
5400Would you really like to go, my dear?
5400Would you take Tom?
5400Would you take a cheque, Adam?
5400Would you?
5400Would you?
5400Xavier,said Nick, looking at the rolling flood of the river,"suppose this levee should break?"
5400Y- you read it, Cynthy?
5400Y- you''ll come sometime?
5400Yarns?
5400Ye say ye''ll not help the Congress?
5400Ye wished to see me?
5400Ye''ll git jedgment ag''in me, ye Caroliny splinter, will ye?
5400Ye''ll tell him to his face?
5400Ye''re going to preach all this?
5400Ye''re not a- going to sell yereself for seven year, my lad?
5400Yes, Lem,she answered,"wo n''t you congratulate me?"
5400Yes, Marse Dick?
5400Yes, Nancy?
5400Yes, Pa."Virginia, are you happy?
5400Yes, there are stores, in the village,he went on,"but is n''t it a holiday, or Sunday-- perhaps-- or something of the kind?"
5400Yes, what of it?
5400Yes,I answered, and hesitated...."Is Mr. Krebs in?"
5400Yes,retorted Ditmar,"and what then?
5400Yes,she answered,"why?"
5400Yes,she answered;"--why did you come?"
5400Yes- me,cried Janet.--"And what are you going to do about it?
5400Yes-- I''m sorry--"Have you app''inted one?
5400Yes-- but are n''t you confusing--?
5400Yes-- what?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400Yes?
5400You American-- you comrade, you come to help?
5400You a business man?
5400You a politician, Will?
5400You admire writers? 5400 You advise me to sell out?"
5400You ai n''t agwineter tell dat, Marse Dave?
5400You ai n''t exactly what they call a tyro, are you?
5400You ai n''t fooling?
5400You ai n''t goin''in, Brent?
5400You ai n''t gwine away, Marse Judge?
5400You ai n''t leavin''him because of this trouble, are you, Austen?
5400You allow this-- this woman to come here to Brampton and teach school in a place where she can further her designs? 5400 You allow visitors?"
5400You always were the soul of generosity, Trixy, but why the victoria?
5400You and I are getting to be friends, are n''t we, Pepper?
5400You and I will have an old- fashioned time here together,--a deal of talk, and perhaps a little piquet,--who knows?
5400You and me? 5400 You are English, Messieurs-- yes?"
5400You are Mrs. Thomas Leffingwell?
5400You are a little behind the times-- ain''t you?
5400You are a little behind your time, my friend,said he,"What has happened you?"
5400You are all kings in America are you not? 5400 You are drilling now?"
5400You are engaged-- to-- Howard Spence?
5400You are getting what you have always wanted, are n''t you?
5400You are going to London with me?
5400You are going to take the captain to Maryland, Richard?
5400You are his sister?
5400You are my prisoners?
5400You are not going away soon?
5400You are not going?
5400You are not one of the men who would not wish a woman to know, are you?
5400You are quite beyond me, Miss Trevor,I answered;"may I request you to put that remark in other words?"
5400You are right to come back to business, and after awhile you can have another honeymoon, eh? 5400 You are so-- high- strung,"she said,"I was afraid you would--""I would--?"
5400You are well- born?
5400You be from Willesden, eh?
5400You believe that an influence is at work, an influence that impels us against our reason?
5400You brought these-- for me?
5400You ca n''t be in love with any one else?
5400You ca n''t?
5400You called?
5400You came to tell me where he is? 5400 You can not?"
5400You can trust this young man?
5400You certainly do n''t imagine that I am going to be left behind?
5400You chose it for me?
5400You did n''t expect to find a greenhorn behind a jewellery counter, did you?
5400You did n''t happen to attend the nigger auction this morning when you were at the court?
5400You did n''t know what to make of him, did you?
5400You did n''t see in the papers that he was nominated,--did you, Paret?
5400You did n''t suspect that I loved you?
5400You did n''t take it seriously? 5400 You did n''t think seriously that I smoked?"
5400You did n''t want to be seen with me on Second Street, did you? 5400 You did not go back to court?"
5400You did not know where he had gone?
5400You did not wish me to come?
5400You did what?
5400You do believe in the future life after-- after what you have been through?
5400You do like her?
5400You do love me, do n''t you?
5400You do n''t call that green-- do you? 5400 You do n''t care for all this, do you, Victoria?"
5400You do n''t care to see him?
5400You do n''t intend to change this?
5400You do n''t intend to-- to travel around with the I. W. W. people, do you?
5400You do n''t know nothin''about him, you say?
5400You do n''t know what it costs to run this house?
5400You do n''t love me?
5400You do n''t mean by any chance James Wing?
5400You do n''t mean that you made him pay you for the boat?
5400You do n''t mean to say you agree with that kind of talk?
5400You do n''t mean to say you are Susan''s age?
5400You do n''t mean to say you like this kind of work?
5400You do n''t mean to tell me that you listened to that silly speech of Sutton''s?
5400You do n''t object to my listening to criticism of you?
5400You do n''t pay no attention to what they say?
5400You do n''t say?
5400You do n''t smoke, do you?
5400You do n''t suppose I think you fool enough to risk this comedy if the man were guilty, do you? 5400 You do n''t sympathize with the workers?"
5400You do n''t tell me-- where''d you get it? 5400 You do n''t think she has done anything-- desperate?"
5400You do n''t think that crowd''s going to win, do you?
5400You do n''t think young Vane is going to get into the race?
5400You do n''t think--"Do n''t think what?
5400You do n''t want a check, do you?
5400You do n''t want to take it back?
5400You do n''t?
5400You do not care for Patty?
5400You do not care for me as I am?
5400You do not know what you are doing?
5400You do not work in the mills?
5400You ever tell folks what you hear other people say?
5400You expected it?
5400You feel better?
5400You feel no ill effects from your moving, David?
5400You forgive me-- you understand, Janet?
5400You fought me this way once?
5400You found it? 5400 You found where?"
5400You found?
5400You had no dinner?
5400You hain''t afeard, be you?
5400You hain''t wavered, Jonathan?
5400You have been here before?
5400You have been in America long-- your family?
5400You have broken the engagement, then?
5400You have come to stay awhile?
5400You have commanded men?
5400You have finished?
5400You have heard from Maryland?
5400You have heard?
5400You have missed me, a little?
5400You have n''t seen Austen since he left his father?
5400You have news?
5400You have not heard how Sevier got off?
5400You have not yet finished the garden?
5400You have promised to make other visits? 5400 You have seen my father?"
5400You have this money?
5400You have tried?
5400You hear from him?
5400You here, Crocker?
5400You here?
5400You hitch up, Rias?
5400You imagined me out of the Church,--but where?
5400You killed him, Polly Ann,I murmured,"you?"
5400You knew?
5400You know Mr. Allen, then, Miss Thorn?
5400You know him, Monsieur?
5400You know somethin''about history and the Constitootion, do n''t ye?
5400You know the Sieur de St. Gre, Davy?
5400You know where Headquarters is, in the Franco- Belgian Hall?
5400You know why I am here?
5400You left her there, in that place? 5400 You lika the olives?"
5400You like flowers?
5400You like gardens?
5400You like them as much as that, Janet?
5400You little rascal,said he, shaking me,"how am I to look out for an army and you besides?
5400You look for some one, yes? 5400 You looked for us?"
5400You love the place?
5400You may remember a night at my uncle''s, Colonel Carvel''s, on the occasion of my cousin''s birthday?
5400You mean Garvin?
5400You mean civilization?
5400You mean keeping the operatives out of the mills?
5400You mean my son?
5400You mean pay for it?
5400You mean that he''s in the employ of the Ribblevale people?
5400You mean that she is going to leave you?
5400You mean that this white trash Lincoln may be President?
5400You mean that you can not accept what the Church teaches about his life?
5400You mean that-- that Maude loves me? 5400 You mean the I.W.W.?"
5400You mean they fight with the fist-- so? 5400 You mean to follow them?"
5400You mean to say you do n''t want anything for your for your time and your services if the bill is defeated?
5400You mean to say, as the candidate of the Republican party, you do n''t care whether you get to the Senate?
5400You mean you are actually going?
5400You mean, do I believe in votes for women? 5400 You mean, instead of his mines and railroads and other properties?"
5400You mean,said Janet, trembling,"that what happens to us makes us inclined to believe certain things?"
5400You mean-- about this afternoon?
5400You mean-- social work?
5400You mean-- what was my motive?
5400You mean--?
5400You mean--?
5400You mean--?
5400You missed me? 5400 You must never doubt it-- do you understand?"
5400You never learned how to enjoy life, did you, Judge?
5400You once mentioned a name to me--"Yes?
5400You ordered them, did n''t you? 5400 You own a slave?
5400You ran away?
5400You refuse business?
5400You regret it?
5400You rely on something else besides reason?
5400You remember las''time we meet?
5400You remember when you dropped in that night, when the kid was sick?
5400You said he was a poor boy?
5400You saw me on the levee?
5400You say he was here in October?
5400You say she''s in the strike?
5400You say that Patty has been ill?
5400You say that we are at Les Iles?
5400You say that you are an Abolitionist?
5400You say the woman wahn''t any to blame-- wahn''t any to blame?
5400You say two dollars is their price?
5400You say you are employed by Mr. Carvel, and refuse to do what I ask?
5400You say you''ve got to app''int an agent?
5400You see a few people?
5400You see it, too?
5400You see what I have let you in for?
5400You see?
5400You silly boy,said she,"ca n''t you see that she herself has prescribed for you?
5400You still love me?
5400You surely do n''t expect me to stay in Quicksands all winter?
5400You talk to them?
5400You taught yourself to play?
5400You tek ze air, Monsieur Reetchie?
5400You think Greenhalge has a chance of being elected?
5400You think all the girls are in love with you, do n''t you?
5400You think he''ll get elected-- do you?
5400You think it ridiculous at my time of life? 5400 You think it will come to war?"
5400You think it''s funny,--don''t you? 5400 You think so?"
5400You think that you can find your uncle''s house, my dear?
5400You think they will blow up?
5400You think we''ll have more trouble?
5400You think you have a chance, Miss Grower?
5400You thought I was vain, did n''t you?
5400You thought I''d come to it?
5400You tink I dunno whaffor you come? 5400 You understand, Will?
5400You understood--?
5400You used to think of that?
5400You want a vote?
5400You want beautiful things, do you? 5400 You want to join us?"
5400You want to marry me?
5400You want to postpone it?
5400You wanted him to go?
5400You wanted me for a friend?
5400You wanted once to go to Kentucky; why not come with me?
5400You wanted to see me, Judge?
5400You went back to the war after your leg healed?
5400You went there?
5400You went to his house?
5400You were all what?
5400You were going away? 5400 You were going into the law, were n''t you?"
5400You were jealous-- were you-- jealous of the mill?
5400You were taught to believe them?
5400You will come to me again, Hodder? 5400 You will come, Richard?"
5400You will do what I ask?
5400You will have a feast, my good man?
5400You will love me, always no matter what happens?
5400You will not do what I ask-- now?
5400You will not tell? 5400 You will not worry over that senseless speech of Tom''s?"
5400You will remain in the house this summer, as usual, I suppose?
5400You will remember me to your father?
5400You will write me to- morrow,she said,"after you have seen the bishop?"
5400You will-- protect me?
5400You wish to know?
5400You wo n''t be wanting her now, your honour?
5400You wo n''t marry me?
5400You wo n''t stay and have dinner with me?
5400You wo n''t tell anyone who I am, will you?
5400You wo n''t tell?
5400You worked in the Chippering, like me-- yes?
5400You would n''t blame him if he did that,--would you?
5400You would n''t care to stay in Newport all the time?
5400You would n''t know me, would you?
5400You would n''t leave me in the lurch now, Hilary,Mr. Flint continued,"when all this nonsense is in the air?
5400You would n''t object to my remaining a few days more?
5400You would n''t think he was listenin'', would you, Will?
5400You would not have me to go against my conscience?
5400You would take possession of the mills?
5400You young devil,cried Mr. Riddle, angrily, striding forward,"what are you doing?"
5400You''d better make it to- morrow night, had n''t you?
5400You''d have done it for anybody along the road, would you?
5400You''d like me to go, would n''t you, Hugh?
5400You''d never guess what the inside was like, would you, Hugh?
5400You''d ought to know better, Lem,cried the enraged Chester;"hain''t the hull road by the Four Corners ready to drop into the brook?
5400You''ll come back to me?
5400You''ll come to Headquarters?
5400You''ll come to- morrow?
5400You''ll come- sometime, Cynthy-- sometime?
5400You''ll drop in and see the old people once in a while, Janet, you wo n''t forget us?
5400You''ll forgive me for talking about it, wo n''t you? 5400 You''ll give them-- a good account of me?"
5400You''ll make him give the post- office to Cousin Eph, wo n''t you, Uncle Jethro?
5400You''ll promise?
5400You''ll see her?
5400You''ll smoke it?
5400You''ll stay?
5400You''re a minister, ai n''t you?
5400You''re a- goin''to stick by what you agreed-- by your principles?
5400You''re acquainted with Colonel Varney?
5400You''re all right, sir?
5400You''re coming to lunch, Hodder?
5400You''re going to stay, father?
5400You''re going, Tom?
5400You''re going?
5400You''re his wife, ai n''t you?
5400You''re not going-- now?
5400You''re not going?
5400You''re not helping Humphrey Crewe, are you?
5400You''re not offended, Brice?
5400You''re railroad, ai n''t ye?
5400You''re sure there were no other letters, Starling, besides these bills?
5400You''re sure, miss, it''s life and death?
5400You''re willing to take me as I am,--to try?
5400You''ve been wishing to talk to me?
5400You''ve given up the idiotic notion of wishing to be an author?
5400You''ve got a good brain, Austen, and what''s the use of wasting it chasing cattle and practising with a pistol on your fellow- beings? 5400 You''ve had military training of some sort?"
5400You''ve inquired there?
5400You''ve kept in touch with her?
5400You''ve known him a good while, have n''t you, Tom?
5400You''ve made a list of the newspapers that printed it?
5400You''ve never been through?
5400You''ve never regretted going into law?
5400You''ve never seen my clothing store, have you?
5400You''ve no right to talk to me in this way,she said, and added, the words seeming to slip of themselves from her lips,"Why do you do it?"
5400You''ve read the Pingsquit bill?
5400You''ve really liked Paris?
5400You''ve thought of me?
5400You''ve wanted to marry me all along?
5400You, do n''t suppose Pugh would want to admit his situation, do you?
5400You-- won''t-- marry me?
5400You-- you can not go? 5400 You-- you ever pay any attention to an old soldier on the street?"
5400You-- you love him?
5400You-- you make that noise, Bob, you-- you make that?
5400You-- you''ve been talking to him?
5400You? 5400 You?"
5400You?
5400You?
5400You?
5400You?
5400You?
5400Young Masr? 5400 Your Ladyship believes me versed in no other subject?"
5400Your bets?
5400Your business?
5400Your conscience a little finer than your father''s-- is it?
5400Your husband committed no-- flagrant offence against you?
5400Your husband''s feeling tiptop, is n''t he?
5400Your interest in-- in plutocrats is charitable, then?
5400Your mother''s charity?
5400Your name Chiltern?
5400Your name is Rolfe, is n''t it?
5400Your name?
5400Your orders? 5400 Your son?
5400Your tongue, you sot,the captain went on, drawing his sword in his anger,"is it true you have made use of a gentleman''s son for your low purposes?"
5400` What''s this for, Mister Ditmar?'' 5400 ''Ai n''t your name Tooting?'' 5400 ''And was this McChesney''s mill?'' 5400 ''And you dare to come in here? 5400 ''By what means?''
5400''Diomedes,''says I, waking up,''what''s this damnable racket on the landing?
5400''Do n''t write- send,''eh?
5400''Eloi, Eloi, lama sabachthani?''
5400''Great God?''
5400''Have you heard of Asquith?''
5400''He said that to Colonel Carvel?"
5400''How many do you want?''
5400''How now?
5400''May I ask you what price you got for it?''
5400''Mon cher Auguste,''he cry,''you want to be of officier in gardes de corps?
5400''My dear fellow,''he cried,''how long are you to be in town?''
5400''My dear fellow,''said he,''you did me the turn of my life.--How can I ever repay you?''
5400''N''then we all went to the Red Heifer--""What the deuce is the Red Heifer?"
5400''Tell me why he has changed?''
5400''Thomas McChesney?''
5400''Twahn''t charity?"
5400''What are you here for?''
5400''What d''ye think I met at Windsor, Miss Manners?''
5400''What is it ye''d like to be, my son?''
5400''Where is he?''
5400''Why not go West?''
5400''Why not?''
5400''You do n''t think Fremont''ll see you, do you?''
5400( How about the last ballot, Senator, which showed 1011?)
5400( It was well named, that prudential committee?)
5400( To DR. JONATHAN) What do you think of that?
5400( Who, indeed, would not?)
5400*******"Where did they go, Polly Ann?"
5400--"Mr. Allen, who was the rector of St. Anne''s?
5400--Mohair?
5400--Wasn''t that like Atterbury?"
5400--What are you in town for?''
5400--ought he not to call her Cynthia?
5400A case of nerves-- eh, Honora?
5400A chance, said I?"
5400A famous one was headed"Shall Wool and Cotton Kings Rule the Nation?"
5400A feeling of helplessness, of utter desolation crept over Janet; powerless to comfort herself, how could she comfort her sister?
5400A fish?
5400A good many of your friends have enlisted, have n''t they?
5400A good trip from Orleans?
5400A little brandy--?
5400A man would lose his self- respect if he did n''t let out his mind at them hoss thieves, would n''t he?
5400A new railroad commission that we ca n''t talk to, and lower dividends-- lower dividends, do you understand?
5400A note?
5400A paragraph which made a profound impression on Hodder at that time occurs in James''s essay,"Is life worth living?"
5400A persistent and terrifying rumour goes the rounds, where''s Tom Gaylord?
5400A person who commanded by nature and yet( dare I venture the thought?)
5400A police commissioner?"
5400A scab, is it?
5400A scientist,--isn''t he?
5400A smile quivered on her lips,--or was it a smile?
5400A smile?
5400A successful lawyer, a respected and trusted citizen, was he lacking somewhat in virility, vitality?
5400A telegram?
5400A very funny picture-- it is in fun, yes?"
5400A voice cried out:--"Is Manning here?
5400A voice-- Mrs. Kame''s-- cried out,"What is it?"
5400A whimsical question, that shocked her, irresistibly presented itself: was it not Prosperity that she had promised to love, honour, and obey?
5400A wonderful virgin faith had to be shattered, and was she to be the executioner?
5400ASHER, You mean that there will be a scarcity of labour?
5400Abandonment of the whole campaign?"
5400Above all, is it desirable?
5400Above him a sash screamed as it opened, and he heard Mr. Renault''s voice say, to some person below:"Is that you, Capitaine Grant?"
5400Abraham Lincoln would not have blushed between honest clerks and farmers Why should Stephen Brice?
5400Adams''widow done well to trust their liberality, did n''t she?
5400Admiral, did the Rebs put a bullet through your rum casks?
5400After a while:"Is Uncle Silas dying?"
5400After all these years have you dropped from the weight of a blow?"
5400After all, he did not realize how could she expect him to realize?
5400After all, she reflected, why should she not see him-- once?
5400After all, was not I the hero of this triumphal procession?
5400After all, what could they prove?
5400After all, what did it matter what she thought,--Madame la Vicomtesse d''Ivry- le- Tour?
5400After that I become a lawyer-- lawyer, do you understand?"
5400Again came the hail:"What ship is that?"
5400Again he whispered, to what purpose had I gained my liberty, if now I renounced it?
5400Again, what kind of democracy?
5400Against his Majesty?"
5400Against what was Mr. Randlett protesting?
5400Ah, London Town, by what subtleties are you tied to the hearts of those born across the sea?
5400Ah, Virginia, who had thought to hear that argument from your lips?
5400Ah, but had the time ever been when, in the depths of her being, she had felt the real security of a wife?
5400Ah, do you think I do not see it-- cannot feel it?
5400Ah, mon Dieu, can you afford to miss it?"
5400Ai n''t I come upstairs to quiet you when yo''mammy ai n''t had no power ovah yo''?
5400Ai n''t I cooked fo''yo'', and ai n''t I followed you everywheres since I quit ridin''yo''pa''s bosses to vict''ry?
5400Ai n''t I one of de fambly?
5400Ai n''t he carryin''it magnificent?
5400Ai n''t he the best man in the State to make a winner?
5400Ai n''t that Yankee enough for you?"
5400Ai n''t that a disgrace to the State?
5400Ai n''t that a handsome steel- engravin''of the gentleman?"
5400Ai n''t that about it, Brush?"
5400Ai n''t that luck for you?
5400Ai n''t that right?
5400Ai n''t the employers just as much traitors as we?
5400Ai n''t there anything I can do?"
5400Ai n''t you eating anything?"
5400Ai n''t you glad she''s got the place?"
5400Ai n''t you gwineter flee away?
5400Ai n''t you had no supper?
5400Ai n''t you the man that shot a feller out West?
5400Al must be pretty near my age, ai n''t he?
5400All those old trees on the side of a hill?"
5400Allen?"
5400Allen?"
5400Allen?"
5400Allen?"
5400Allen?"
5400Allen?"
5400Alone?
5400Already, sir?
5400Although Victoria had a memory( what woman worth her salt has not?
5400Am I bid twenty livres?"
5400Am I hurting you?"
5400Am I not right?"
5400Am I to be confronted with that Yankee everywhere I go?
5400Am I to be sent to France, too?"
5400Am I to get that part of you I love, and are you to get what you crave in me?
5400An embarrassed silence, and then from Mammy,"Whaffor you laffin at?"
5400An hour and a half, did you say, sir?
5400An'', Jamie, ye''ll see that nae harm cams to her when I''m far awa''?"
5400An''who is to tell you how far he run under ze yellow water, Michie?
5400An''yit yo''ax me to call yo''Miss Jinny?"
5400And Chris would as invariably reply:--"You have the dandruffs-- yes?
5400And Colonel Clark?
5400And Comyn,--of what was he thinking?
5400And Cynthia?
5400And Davy, did you mark the gentle, rounded arm?
5400And Davy, do you think you can sing that song you gave us the other night?"
5400And Giles Henderson is nominated-- Hilary?"
5400And I am afraid--""Of what?"
5400And I let her come in, will you give me your honour as a gentleman not to speak more than two words to her?"
5400And Janet retorted, with almost equal vehemence:--"Somebody had to do it-- didn''t they?
5400And Lucy Hayden, that doll- like darling of the gods?
5400And Mis''Binney?''
5400And Miss Thorn?
5400And Mr. Brinsmade tells me you were useful in many ways What was your rank in the Home Guards?"
5400And Mr. Clive, a man of fashion, ill content too, and pining for the life of a capital?"
5400And Mr. Marmaduke?
5400And Mr. Worthington being still silent,"How do you like being a big frog in a little pond?"
5400And after a moment''s silence she inquired:"Who''s this man that''s payin''her attention now?"
5400And after all this time would n''t it seem like an intrusion?"
5400And after all, when we have good appetites and are fairly happy, why should we complain?"
5400And after lunch we all went out in Mr. Brent''s automobile to the Faunces''in Westchester--""The Paul Jones Faunces?"
5400And after that, have you any idea where you will go?"
5400And again, where are Mr. Temple and your estimable cousin?
5400And all this mercy that I have heard about means nothing-- nothing--"Why did she falter and stop?
5400And am I any different from her?
5400And are n''t these conditions a disgrace to Hampton and America?"
5400And are the worst wages paid in these mills anything short of death?
5400And are they here?"
5400And are they not quite as important in government, if not more important, than material interests?
5400And are you not content with the name you bear, sir?"
5400And at that moment perceiving me she added,"Why so disconsolate, my dear nephew?
5400And at times I thought he was grave and moody,--didn''t you?"
5400And at what time do you breakfast?"
5400And beautiful Mrs. Hayden what has become of her?
5400And ca n''t we begin it, in a modest way, by making a little model of the big house right here in Foxon Falls?
5400And catching sight of me in the doorway, over her shoulder,"Has he followed me here too?"
5400And could a man with a broken heart still fight on?
5400And could it be a Truth, after all, a truth only to be grasped by one who had experienced it?
5400And could it be that she was to inherit all this, with him?
5400And could you think I did n''t understand, from the beginning, that it meant this?"
5400And did Maude suspect the closeness of that relationship?
5400And did not parthenogenesis occur in the silk moth?
5400And did the bees still give the same bonnie hiney, and were the red apples still in the far orchard?
5400And did you seriously suppose that I was in earnest when we spoke about your assistance in persuading him to take the house?"
5400And do n''t you remember the letter Maude had from George?
5400And do you quite do justice to-- to some of these men?
5400And do you recall the teamster we met by the Park, and how he arrested his salute when he saw who it was?
5400And do you remember the time when you made the boat, and we went to Logan''s Pond, and you sank in her?"
5400And do you suppose there''s any place, however bright, where sorrow has not come?
5400And does Austen Vane desire it?
5400And does the gentleman, may I ask, ever read the pages of the Hibbert Journal?
5400And even if we do not win at once, it is better to suffer and die fighting than to have the life ground out of us-- is it not?"
5400And had Victoria defended him?
5400And had it not been one of my dreams of marriage, this preparing for the children''s Christmas, remembering the fierce desires of my own childhood?
5400And had you not strength enough to lift a knocker, sir,--you who can raise a man from the ground with one hand?"
5400And has she shown any sign of repentance?
5400And have n''t we both discovered the world, and renounced it?
5400And have you any right to keep the news from him?
5400And have you not manhood enough to make your own life for yourself?"
5400And have you writ Captain Clapsaddle and your Whig friends at home of your new intimacies, of Mr. Fox and my Lord Sandwich?"
5400And he added in a confidential tone,"Are n''t we?"
5400And he added, outs of force of habit,"Can you give me a room?"
5400And he began to sing a song of Xavier''s own:--"''Marianson, dame jolie, Ou est alle votre mari?''"
5400And he looked at me in his keen way, through and through"You saved his life once before, did n''t you?"
5400And he ran away?"
5400And he stammered out, as he stood over her:--"What''s the matter?"
5400And he stood gazing down into it, with an odd expression she had never seen before...."What''s the matter?"
5400And he''ll force us, will he?
5400And he''s gone, you say?"
5400And he-- would he, too, be denied it?
5400And here he is tryin''to put us out--ain''t that the limit?"
5400And how about Ireland?
5400And how are you called, my son?"
5400And how could she explain the motives that led to it?
5400And how could they have foreseen that a detective was on his way to the island?"
5400And how give an account of yourself to Anne Brinsmade?
5400And how had he come to take me over the mountains, and to put me in the way of studying law?
5400And how jealous Jack Temple used to get?"
5400And how long do you think was my first?
5400And how many of our university and high school graduates today are in any sense disciplined?
5400And how much of that money do you suppose I get, sir?
5400And how much was she capable of grasping?
5400And how often, during the summer days and nights, had she listened to the chimes of the Pilgrim Church near by?
5400And how shall I describe the splendor of that city?
5400And how the deuce did you happen to pick her up?"
5400And how was I to repay them?
5400And how was he to meet Jethro Bass again with no money to pay even the interest on the note?
5400And how, in truth, could she tell him these things?
5400And how, indeed, was I to make good my claim?
5400And how-- why?
5400And how?
5400And if a bear should devour the author of The Sybarites, would the world ever forgive me?
5400And if it was n''t"conscience,"what was it?
5400And if sleeping, would he awake?
5400And if so, was it sin or sorrow, or both?
5400And if so, where was the salvation he had preached?
5400And if there were a God who did interfere, why had n''t he interfered before this thing happened?
5400And if there were a God, would he comfort her now, convey to her some message of his sympathy and love?
5400And if this government proves a failure, how long do you think the material interests of which you are so solicitous will endure?
5400And if true, would Chiltern resist, even as she, Honora, had resisted, loyally?
5400And in the Coffee House, and in every drawing- room in town, prophesy for her a career of conquest such as few could boast?
5400And is it not so of your redemptioners?"
5400And is n''t it by his very individuality that we are able to recognize Jesus to- day?"
5400And is n''t it the most exciting play you''ve ever read?
5400And is n''t marriage truer and higher when man and wife start with difficulties and problems to solve together?
5400And is that any reason why he should not come here as a guest?
5400And is there no such thing as conscience-- even though it be only an intuition of happiness or unhappiness?
5400And it costs money to move''em round, do n''t it?
5400And it wo n''t be for long-- will it?
5400And just how were they facing the future?
5400And just what was the iron grating?
5400And let Colfax have the girl?
5400And many the time have I heard the query, at the Cross- Roads and elsewhere,"Whar Alec Trimble got his larnin''?"
5400And must she go on all her life hearing praises of him?
5400And my father?
5400And my reply,--what was that to be?
5400And now do you know what you are?
5400And now how about gettin''an adjournment to- morrow night for''Uncle Tom''s Cabin''?
5400And now that the strike''s on, whatever will I do?
5400And now you give me Red Brook Seedlings?''"
5400And now,"he added, wheeling on the Colonel when each had a glass in his hand,"who was in command of that company on the right, in the swamp?
5400And now--""And now?"
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And now?
5400And oh, sir,"I cried,"can you tell me whether Mister Moultrie beat the British?"
5400And once it crossed her mind-- what would she think of another woman who did this?
5400And over what?
5400And pray, how did this pretty subject come up?"
5400And religion must be idealism-- mustn''t it?
5400And say, did you ever stop to think what one day of a working girl''s life was like?
5400And seeing me silent, he insisted,"Tell me, is it not so, Davy?"
5400And shall I, who have longed to see her these many years, leave her now?"
5400And she added, a little lamely for her,"Spiritual matters in these days are so difficult, are n''t they?"
5400And she?
5400And so you want me to pardon this Colfax?"
5400And so you want to become a lawyer?"
5400And suddenly I heard you cry:''Patty, when I return will you be my wife?''
5400And suddenly the suggestion flashed into her mind, why should n''t she buy it?
5400And suppose I had followed the advice of my Christian friends and remained here, where they insisted my duty was, what would have happened to me?
5400And suppose you fail?
5400And that night he asked his mother if his Aunt Grace were really alive, after all?
5400And that obscure Event on which he had staked his hopes?
5400And that reminds me, Richard,"said he, looking straight at me with his clear, dark eyes:"have you made any plans for your future?"
5400And that she''d written letters in return?
5400And that they can continue to blackmail us into paying these outrageous wages?
5400And that''s the fastest sail- boat he could hire there, is n''t it?"
5400And the cause?
5400And the ever- recurring question presented itself-- was he prepared to go that length?
5400And the man behind the house twice whispered with extreme caution,"How near is she?"
5400And the question occurred to her-- did she really wish to?
5400And then I added irresistibly:"Nancy, you''re not sorry?
5400And then afterwards--?"
5400And then there is another question: is it going to continue to be profitable?
5400And then to his servant:"Colomb, is my writing- tablet unpacked?"
5400And then, as if he expected Hopper to reply:"Shall I kill you?"
5400And then, as though an afterthought( which it really was not), he added,"How be ye for salt, Mis''McChesney?"
5400And then, evidently impressed by the young lady''s looks, he added hospitably,"Kin I do anything fo''you, miss?"
5400And then, sir,"cried the General, excitedly,"what do you think he did?
5400And then, with some vehemence,"What is he doing in Vicksburg?"
5400And then,"What is it, my lad?"
5400And then,"What was it?"
5400And then,"Where are you from?"
5400And then,"You want me to go to Kaintuckee with you?"
5400And then,"You will return the portrait to Monsieur de Saint- Gre?"
5400And then?"
5400And this most embarrassing young woman demanded presently:"How did it happen, Marian?
5400And those who held it might well demand, with Nicodemus and the rulers of the earth,"How can these things be?"
5400And to her?
5400And to what end were his labours in that smoky, western city, with its heedless Dalton Streets, which went their inevitable ways?
5400And turning to Nick, he added quite simply,"So, Monsieur, you did not run off with her, after all?"
5400And was Nancy, the cow, still i''the byre?
5400And was he the rock?
5400And was it fair for her, Janet, to permit Mrs. Maturin to bestow her friendship without revealing this?
5400And was it not as a mistress rather than a wife that, in their isolation, she watched his moods so jealously?
5400And was it not just this sustenance she could give that I needed?
5400And was it not the strangest of fates which had impelled him to join this madcap expedition of this other man I loved, George Rogers Clark?
5400And was it true that she belonged there, securely infolded within those peaceful walls?
5400And was n''t it a remarkable offer for a Southern woman to make?
5400And was n''t it yerself, Miss Mary, that dressed her like a princess?"
5400And was she not Hugh Chiltern''s wife, entitled to his seat in the place of worship of his fathers?
5400And was there one to feel it?
5400And we''ll play again to- morrow, wo n''t we?"
5400And were his opponents charlatans, or dupes, or idealists who could never be effective?
5400And what are your objections, Minnie?
5400And what became of them?"
5400And what could he have told her?
5400And what did Coniston think?
5400And what do you expect us to do?
5400And what do you hear from Gignoux?"
5400And what do you mean when you say you were in that mob?
5400And what do you suppose they are fighting for?
5400And what do you think George Pindar is fighting for?
5400And what do you think was the subject?
5400And what does Tommy think about it-- this war?
5400And what effect would it have on the conflict for the mastery of a state which was to be waged from now on?
5400And what explanations can I make which can be printed in a public report?"
5400And what good is it to me?
5400And what has that government done for you, Colonel?"
5400And what have you?"
5400And what is the result?
5400And what is there left to hand over to him if he lives?
5400And what may that be?"
5400And what minions distribute it?
5400And what mystery was it that sent him here this night of all nights?
5400And what name is written on them?
5400And what now?
5400And what says Mr. Congreve?
5400And what shall be said of the Captain in this moment of peril?
5400And what should be said of the vast and ever increasing numbers of those not connected with the Church, who had left it or were leaving it?
5400And what should we be able to do without their figures?
5400And what was Gignoux doing in New Orleans?
5400And what was he really like, that she should put her whole trust in him?
5400And what was it within me that had lured me away from these?
5400And what was this system which he had built up among these rural communities?
5400And what was to be done about it?
5400And what was to restrain him from reaching out his hand to pluck the fruit which he desired?
5400And what we''ve got to decide is whether the old house will do-- for democracy-- industrial democracy?
5400And what would Cousin Eleanor''s yard have been without Honora?
5400And what would become of her, Janet?...
5400And what''ll be his name?"
5400And what''s that?
5400And what''s your answer, George?
5400And what, after all, was this girl to him?
5400And what, my dears, do you think he said to him?
5400And when are you coming back?"
5400And when that attraction ceases, what is left?
5400And when the workers were in possession of all, would not they be as badly off as Mrs. Brocklehurst or Ditmar?
5400And when, let me ask you, could you find in the world''s history more splendid charities than are around us to- day?
5400And when?"
5400And where are you bound now, Davy?"
5400And where are your jewels?
5400And where did Mr. Price learn of these principles?
5400And where is Monsieur your companion?
5400And where the devil did you run to?"
5400And where the-- the other one is?"
5400And where was Jethro?
5400And where was the saving in that?
5400And where would I come in?
5400And where''s Jamesy?
5400And which among them would declare that Abraham Lincoln, like Stephen, had not seen his Master in the sky?
5400And while I do not expect to be able to delay its passage much longer than the time I shall be on my feet--""Then why not sit down?"
5400And who among you will falter at such a call?"
5400And who builds them?
5400And who can say what emotions it awoke in Jethro''s heart?
5400And who got me into it?
5400And who have we got to put in his place?
5400And who shall blame him if Miss Virginia''s replies to his sallies enchained him?
5400And who shall say he did not meet it squarely and honestly?
5400And who should come bursting in at the door but my Lord Comyn?
5400And who so well as Matthew, sensitive yet brave, would respond to it?
5400And who the devil are you, sir, that you know my name?"
5400And who was I, David Ritchie, a lawyer of the little town of Louisville, to aspire to the love of such a creature?
5400And who was he, that stood so straight upon the quarter- deck, to instil this scum with love and worship and fervour to blind them to such odds?
5400And who was responsible for all this luxury and laxity?
5400And who''s the dark horse?"
5400And who, I ask you, is to blame for this hideous war?
5400And whom do they send?
5400And why are we always getting glimpses of things when it is too late?
5400And why are we spending our time and money on you?"
5400And why could n''t this feeling last?
5400And why could n''t you have answered my letter yesterday, if it were only a line?
5400And why had Mr. Worthington turned hid back on Jethro, and sent for Bob when he was talking to them?
5400And why had he insisted, before showing it to her, upon waiting until afternoon?
5400And why have I been made a fool of by two people whom I had every cause to suppose my friends?"
5400And why have you avoided me here in Washington?"
5400And why should he interpret her interest in him in other terms than those in which it was written?
5400And why should paradise regained be a paradox?
5400And why should you want to know me and see me outside of the office?
5400And why was the hair now of a whiteness with the lace of the cap?
5400And why would n''t the men have the right to organize, sir, the way that they''d have a word to say about what they''d be doing?
5400And why?"
5400And why?"
5400And will it stand the strain now that the once remote haven of the oppressed has become a world- power?
5400And will they not always continue to exist?
5400And will you tell me that story of your adventures which I long to learn?"
5400And with all our works, our expenditure and toil, how many have we lifted up?"
5400And would n''t he lunch with her on Thursday?
5400And would she accept this accident of Ham''s as such?
5400And would she agree with my point of view if she did permit me to stay?
5400And would they desert him?
5400And would you break our commander of her rank?
5400And ye''ll sit at hame, in this hovel ye''ve made yeresel"( and he glanced about disdainfully)"and no help the King?"
5400And yet what did it matter whether Lise knew or only suspected, if her words were true, if men were all alike?
5400And yet why should he let his pride and his feelings stand in the way of the health-- perhaps of the life-- of Judge Whipple?
5400And yet, I reflected secondly, why not?
5400And yet, if Mr. Bentley and Sally Grower had been unable to foresee and prevent this, what could he have done?
5400And yet, would the eagle attempt the great flights if contentment were on the plain?
5400And yet-- how account for his recklessness?
5400And yet-- suppose Mr. Colfax did not get her?
5400And yet-- was not that smile in derision of herself-- of her friends who were running away?
5400And you approve of this, Timothy?
5400And you claim to be he?"
5400And you know what you are doing?"
5400And you meant-- alone?"
5400And you saved it, Davy,--you, a little gamecock, a little worldly- wise hop- o''-my- thumb, eh?
5400And you think every man and woman in this country is reasonably free?
5400And you understand about Alvy?"
5400And you''ll forgive me, wo n''t you, for being so horrid to- day, of all days?
5400And you''ve never heard tell of the Brice homestead, at Westbury, that was Colonel Wilton Brice''s, who fought in the Revolution?
5400And you, why do you strike?"
5400And you?
5400And you?"
5400And your cousin,--what shall we call him?"
5400And your own?"
5400And"gentlemen"?
5400And, by the way, what was it?"
5400And, instead of a discussion of the campaign with the other gentlemen, Mr. Lincoln was defending what do you think?
5400And, secondarily, how would Virginia treat him if he came?
5400And, since the Almighty did not limit the latter, why should man attempt to limit the former?
5400And, will you believe me, sir?
5400And-- well, we''ve taken the baubles, can we reach out our hands and take-- this?
5400And-- what will Uncle Tom and Aunt Mary do-- without you?"
5400And-- what would they say if they knew what had happened to her this day?
5400And--""And what?"
5400And--will you hear more, sir?
5400Angry?
5400Another prize?"
5400Any gals down Boston- way to beat her?
5400Any room for me?"
5400Any statement to make?"
5400Anything happened?"
5400Anything?"
5400Are all merchantmen so clean?"
5400Are all young gentlemen from Maryland so fiery?
5400Are n''t we descended from him?"
5400Are n''t you at the Law School?"
5400Are n''t you glad to see me?"
5400Are n''t you glad?
5400Are n''t you going to kiss me?"
5400Are not the very pews in which they sit as closed to us as their houses?"
5400Are the supporters of the People''s Champion crest- fallen, think you?
5400Are their churches for the poor?
5400Are there no gods for those who ca n''t be supermen?
5400Are there no remote places where He will not seek me out?
5400Are there no such things as moral interests, Mr. Flint?
5400Are they likely to be pacified now that we have taken off all except the tea?
5400Are they not all alike, mother?"
5400Are we fools that we should worry about kings?
5400Are we not at the mercy of any and all unscrupulous men who build up a power of their own, and start again the blackmail of the old days?"
5400Are we to fail now?
5400Are ye, too, a Rebel, Alec Ritchie?"
5400Are you North or South?"
5400Are you acquainted by any chance with Mrs. Boutwell, who married a fellow named Waterford?"
5400Are you alone?"
5400Are you coming down to Leith in a few days?"
5400Are you coming to Silverdale with me, Honora?"
5400Are you coming, mammy?"
5400Are you enjoying London, Richard?
5400Are you fellows willing to take your share in the experiment?
5400Are you going away without a word for me?"
5400Are you going to Coniston for the holidays?"
5400Are you going to fight for me, for the workmens and their childrens?
5400Are you going to pay?"
5400Are you going to stand in the way of it?
5400Are you going to the Club?"
5400Are you ill?"
5400Are you losing your sanity?
5400Are you married?"
5400Are you shocked, sir?"
5400Are you sick?"
5400Are you staying in that dear little house?"
5400Are you still willing?
5400Are you sure it''s sentimentalism, dad?
5400Are you sure of that?
5400Are you that boy?"
5400Are you to be contented with four log walls?
5400Are you to depend for excitement upon the chances of having the hair neatly cut from your head by red fiends?
5400Are you-- are you Dr. Jonathan?
5400Are you?...
5400Are-- are you a Socialist?
5400As I contemplated the Brecks odd questions suggested themselves: did honesty and warm- heartedness necessarily accompany a lack of artistic taste?
5400As soon as it happened I sent him a note?
5400As the friend of Mr. Nicholas Temple, as the relation and( may I say?)
5400As the rector turned, mechanically, to pick up his hat, Mr. Bentley added"You will come back, Hodder?"
5400As we see her this morning, could she indeed ever have had a love affair?
5400Ask Hughie here if there ever was a law put on the statute books that his friend Watling could n''t get''round''?
5400At last she said:"Ought n''t we to be going home?"
5400At what time shall I order the carriage?"
5400At what time will you be ready?"
5400Austen, ai n''t you going to see her?"
5400Austen, are you feeling poorly?"
5400Austen?"
5400Back where?
5400Bank in Brampton holds it-- hain''t that so?
5400Bass?"
5400Bass?"
5400Bass?"
5400Bass?"
5400Be a pity to disappoint her-- eh?"
5400Be you married?"
5400Beauty, is n''t he?
5400Because a clergyman should choose to be quixotic, fanatical?
5400Because a man who happens to be my double commits a crime, is it right that I, whose reputation is without a mark, should be made to suffer?
5400Because the world has been a wicked place of oppression since Noah''s day, is that any reason why it should so continue until the day of Judgment?"
5400Because they will be victories-- don''t you see?
5400Because you''re a part of it, do n''t you see?
5400Because, forsooth, my hair is white now, does Bess flatter herself I do not know her secret?
5400Before one of these she paused, retaining Janet by the arm, exclaiming wistfully:"Would n''t you like to live there?
5400Bentley?"
5400Bentley?"
5400Bentley?"
5400Bentley?"
5400Between sensible and humane men, was n''t that the obvious way?
5400Bill Jenks said:''Are you plum crazy, Brent?
5400Blodgett?"
5400Boone?"
5400Brent?"
5400Brent?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brice?"
5400Brinsmade, have you got such a thing as a map?"
5400Brinsmade?"
5400Brocklehurst?"
5400Brocklehurst?"
5400Bueno Dios, did Madame understand what it meant to wake his Excellency?
5400Business must be pretty good, eh, Hugh?"
5400But Ditmar was strong, he was powerful, he was a Fact, why not go back to him and let him absorb and destroy her?
5400But I''m not that any more,--I''m simply recalling that, do n''t you see?
5400But Mammy showed no inclination to go, and he was too polite to shut the door:"How you like Glencoe, Mistah Bride?"
5400But Mr. Carvel chose rather( wisely or not, who can judge?)
5400But a little relaxation-- eh?
5400But after all, what labour is after is more money, is n''t it?
5400But are n''t they damned handsome?"
5400But as to gettin''him a house like this-- kind of royal, ai n''t it?
5400But can we find it this way, my dear?"
5400But could I go back?
5400But could he remove it?
5400But could she pass the station?
5400But do you know what I had under my arm-- what I was saving of all the things I owned?"
5400But drink too much, talk too much-- is it not so, Monsieur?
5400But father could n''t run the mills at a loss-- could he?"
5400But for me?
5400But had he not merely arrested her?
5400But had not the others truckled more to its conventions?
5400But had she not lightened it for him a little by choosing this way of telling him that she could not eat his bread or partake of his bounty?
5400But had she spared him?
5400But have you, in your secret soul, any religion at all?
5400But he had got so far as to ask himself the question,--Cui bono?
5400But he has n''t quite the manner for politics, has he?"
5400But he( or I?)
5400But he?
5400But here-- have you ever felt,"she demanded,"that you craved a particular locality at a certain time?"
5400But hold,"he cried, glancing around him,"where is Captain Temple?
5400But how about Syndicalism and all the mysticism that goes with it?
5400But how about the hat and veil?
5400But how about the woman to whom he has not given his word?
5400But how about this here appeal?"
5400But how can we get a bill on this evidence?
5400But how shall we chronicle Bijah''s rank and precedence in the Jethro army, in which there are neither shoulder- straps nor annual registers?
5400But how to act?
5400But how to choose between fifty severe and imposing mansions?
5400But how to get her to Logan''s mill- pond?
5400But how to reach it?
5400But how was I to communicate with her?
5400But how was Mr. Ware to know that?
5400But how was he to gain by it?
5400But how was his Lordship to know that he was dealing with no common sea- captain?
5400But how?
5400But how?"
5400But if I told you that you might harm Dr. Pindar by staying here, interfere with his career, would you be willing to leave?
5400But if he''s so poor, how''s he going to live?
5400But if it came to recognizing the union, or shutting down?
5400But if you will not listen to Moses and the prophets, how will you listen to Christ?
5400But is n''t this rather sudden, with Mr. Pindar in Washington?
5400But is the war our private affair, dad?
5400But it''s common sense to make''em as comfortable and happy as possible-- isn''t it?
5400But let me ask you something: did you ever yet know a woman who was not inconsistent?"
5400But now I was suddenly possessed by an embarrassment, and( shall I say it?)
5400But now she asked herself again, was she worth it?
5400But now, with a duke to refuse or accept, could she care to hear from her old playmate?
5400But now-- now that her god had turned to clay, what would happen?
5400But now--""But now?"
5400But now?
5400But now?
5400But now?"
5400But of what use were such riches as his when his religion and morality compelled him to banish from him all the joys in the power of riches to bring?
5400But ought n''t we to begin at both ends?"
5400But perceiving his host still contemplating him, he was emboldened to say:"Has Mr. Lincoln gone to bed?"
5400But quick,--to the Question, How was the Little Giant, artful in debate as he was, to get over that without offence to the great South?
5400But say,"the girl added,"it ai n''t right to cut our pay, either, is it?
5400But she could n''t.... Where was Lise now?...
5400But she?
5400But should I ever have had the courage to propose a separation?
5400But should we return?
5400But should we, for that reason, return to the leading- strings of authority?
5400But stay, what is this wagon with the high sapling flagstaff in the middle, and the leaves still on it?
5400But suppose he has addressed fifty Lincoln meetings, as they say, is that any reason for making much of him?
5400But surely you can not remember me, Alison?"
5400But the alternative-- was not that heavier?
5400But the cause of this trouble is mental-- can''t you see it?
5400But the next time I went to the Cross- Roads, the woman asked me:--"Is your Pa for the Congress?"
5400But the point is"and here he cocked his nose--"the point is, where is he?
5400But the question tortured me: would Maude wish it?
5400But then, you seemed in such a hurry to go, did n''t you?
5400But they?...
5400But this other-- what is he like?"
5400But to take that which supposedly had been renounced-- virtue, sobriety, security, respect--would this be endured?
5400But to whom had he promised his allegiance?
5400But was I?
5400But was it not Mr. Henderson''s duty?
5400But was it not from the novelty of these episodes, rather than from their special characters, that she received the stimulus?
5400But was n''t there,--mayn''t there still be a way to deal with this fearful situation?
5400But we are-- aren''t we?
5400But we had a good time while it lasted,--didn''t we, George?
5400But weapons imply warfare,--don''t they?
5400But were n''t you getting along all right here, except your wife''s illness?
5400But were they not, he asked himself, franker than many of these others, the so- called pillars of the spiritual structure?
5400But what answer should I give to Dickinson and Gorse?
5400But what are these goings- on?"
5400But what are they?
5400But what are you doing, back in Foxon Falls?
5400But what are you going to charge?"
5400But what can I do, Fanny?
5400But what d''ye think of him for a real Southern gentleman?"
5400But what did it mean?
5400But what did she say?"
5400But what did they come back to?
5400But what do you expect me to do?"
5400But what good does it do him?
5400But what is it they do for me?
5400But what is it?
5400But what is the new?
5400But what is the use of regrets?"
5400But what of it?
5400But what of the long nights when husband and wife have lain side by side?
5400But what reward had it for the lonely, embittered, stricken man whose genius and courage had gained for it the great Northwest territory?
5400But what shall we say of Mr. Cluyme, and of a few others whose wealth alone enabled them to be Directors of the Fair?
5400But what shall we say of Stephen Brice?
5400But what so natural( to one who had lived the life of Austen Vane) as that she should marry amongst those whose ways of life were her ways?
5400But what the devil do you do in such clothes?
5400But what was he to say of the defence of Jethro Bass?
5400But what was he to say to Cynthia?
5400But what was she to say to Virginia?
5400But what was this feeling that gradually crept over him?
5400But what was this?
5400But what was"right,"or"wrong?"
5400But what will the miserable men, who do n''t sit in, be doing while we''re squabbling to see who''ll have the best rooms?
5400But what would be the sound of his voice-- after such an age of disuse?
5400But what would you do about it, Asher?
5400But what''s the difference?"
5400But what''s the use of wasting time over this business?"
5400But what, he asked himself, was he resisting?
5400But what, she asked herself shamefully, would be its effect upon Chiltern?
5400But when we think calmly of those days, can we escape without a little pity for the aristocrats?
5400But whence-- it might be demanded by the cynical were the prophets to come?
5400But where are the tears of the sad women who stitched the red and the white and the blue together?
5400But where are you to stop?
5400But where had Tom gone?
5400But where is the reason in all this?
5400But where is this Mr. Temple of whom the letter speaks?
5400But where is your captain?"
5400But where to go?
5400But where was Hamilton?
5400But where was Mr. Ives?
5400But where was the channel?
5400But who and what is this?
5400But who can say?
5400But who has written out these others that are being so assiduously passed around?
5400But who is this officer breaking his sword to bits against the fence, rather than surrender it to a Yankee?
5400But who is this, erect, compact, aggressive, searching with a confident eye the wilderness of upturned faces?
5400But who is this, sitting beside him, who comes to William''s rescue, and demands that the lady repeat the bill of fare?
5400But who was he?
5400But who''d have thought he''d have the cheek to come out for governor?
5400But why are you not at the assembly, Richard?"
5400But why blame me for getting a franchise for a company in the only manner in which, under present conditions, a franchise can be got?
5400But why could not this issue have been announced in 1914 or 1915?
5400But why did it appear so old and sorrow- lined?
5400But why discuss it?
5400But why do n''t you speak to them?"
5400But why do you ask that question?"
5400But why do you do a thing like this when you must know I need every man here to help turn out these machines?
5400But why go farther?
5400But why had he been unable to apply it?
5400But why had she made me stay in London?
5400But why had the departure of the Irish, the coming of the Syrians made Dey Street dark, narrow, mysterious, oriental?
5400But why not?
5400But why should I be justifying myself?
5400But why should she?
5400But why the uneasiness of the past few years?
5400But why this politeness?
5400But why was Jethro going to Washington?
5400But will you not come into the house, Messieurs, and be presented to my mother?"
5400But with Established Church Coniston tight in the saddle( in the person of Moses Hatch, Senior), how was he to do it?
5400But would she have been happy?
5400But would she not be alarmed when Helene failed to return that night?
5400But would she remain docile?
5400But you could have knocked me down with a paper- knife when he came to me--""When did he come to you?"
5400But you have written him?"
5400But you have you been back to Silliston since I saw you?
5400But you know Austen Vane, do n''t you?"
5400But you listen every Sunday to Moses-- if it was Moses?
5400But you wo n''t ask me, now?"
5400But you''ll send it to her?"
5400But you''ll talk to Mr. Pindar, anyway?
5400But, after all, what would you?"
5400But, sir,"I continued curiously,"what do you know of John Paul''s abilities as an officer?"
5400But-- alas, that she should carry it out to a remorseless end-- would Clarence have been equal to keeping silence when Mr. Brinsmade came to him?
5400But-- did not he in his own person represent the triumph of that American creed of opportunity?
5400But-- how did you happen to be here-- in Foxon Falls?
5400But-- if I gave it to Matthew, what was there for Moreton?
5400But-- who is to enforce the men''s side of this contract?
5400But--""But what, Honora?"
5400Buy land and build flats for them?
5400By crushing him, had he not added to her trouble and her sorrow?
5400By his charming personality?"
5400By the bye, Mr. Crewe,"he added, coming dangerously near the varnish again, and drawing back,"you hain''t happened to have seen Job Braden, have you?"
5400By the way, Georgie, where''s my pocket- book?"
5400By the way, Nell, do you remember the verse the Professor quoted about the Pharisees, and cleansing the outside of the cup and platter?"
5400By the way, have you seen him since he got back?"
5400By the way, he''s the very deuce of a man, is n''t he?
5400By the way, my dear, what ever became of your maternal grandfather, old Mr. Allison-- wasn''t that his name?"
5400By the way, you would n''t object to telling him you were a friend of mine, would you?"
5400By the way,"he asked suddenly,"you have n''t seen your friend Austen Vane since you got back, have you?"
5400By the way,"he cried, turning suddenly,"did she say she''d have me now?"
5400By what right-- he seemed to ask-- had I nourished him all these years if now I meant to starve him?
5400CHAPTER III"H- have a good time, Cynthy?"
5400CHAPTER VI CLIO, OR THALIA?
5400CHAPTER VI"WATCHMAN, WHAT OF THE NIGHT?"
5400CHAPTER XVII"Crocker, old man, Crocker, what the devil does that mean?"
5400CHAPTER XXVII IN WHICH I AM SORE TEMPTED"Who the devil is this John Paul, and what is to become of him?"
5400CHAPTER XXX A CONSPIRACY"Banks, where is the captain?"
5400CLIO, OR THALIA?
5400Ca n''t he help you?"
5400Ca n''t something be done to punish those rowdies?"
5400Ca n''t this transformation, which you say is necessary and vital, come gradually?
5400Ca n''t we build a house big enough for all-- for a hundred million people and their descendants?
5400Ca n''t we go into the schoolroom?
5400Ca n''t we go,"she added, with an inspiration,"ca n''t we go into-- the kitchen?"
5400Ca n''t we, Tom?"...
5400Ca n''t ye speak, girl?
5400Ca n''t you feel it?
5400Ca n''t you get that through your head?"
5400Ca n''t you hear her?"
5400Ca n''t you make a plan for me, so that I may begin next spring?
5400Ca n''t you read, sir?''
5400Ca n''t you see how one sin leads to another, Carvel?
5400Ca n''t you see it for yourself?"
5400Ca n''t you see it''s impossible?"
5400Ca n''t you see it?
5400Ca n''t you see she''s waiting?"
5400Ca n''t you see that it has eaten into his soul?
5400Ca n''t you see that she does n''t care for the things that amuse me, that make my life?"
5400Ca n''t you see that what you ask is impossible?"
5400Ca n''t you see that-- that we ought to wait, Hugh?"
5400Ca n''t you suggest any way out of this, Flint?"
5400Ca n''t you think of any other way of getting her?
5400Caldwell?"
5400Callatin''to buy her?"
5400Can I get down to the village through the valley?"
5400Can I have the pleasure of the next maxixe, Miss Bumpus?"
5400Can a diamond brooch shine on a calico gown?
5400Can it be that ye''re helping to lift a criminal over the border?"
5400Can it be that you have at last returned in your allegiances to the flag for which your forefathers died?"
5400Can they sentence me for assisting Allen to get away, Crocker?
5400Can we just seize happiness?
5400Can we shore up the timbers-- or shall we have to begin to build a new house?
5400Can you bear it?"
5400Can you get a deal through between Giles Henderson and Adam Hunt?
5400Can you get your rights now, without obstructing the war?
5400Can you go?"
5400Can you legislators be impartial when you have not lived the bitter life of the workers?
5400Can you look on while our own states defy us, and not lift a hand?
5400Can you or can you not answer a simple question?"
5400Can you sit still while the Governor and all the secessionists in this state are plotting to take Missouri, too, out of the Union?
5400Can you start in half an hour?"
5400Can you?"
5400Cap''n,''ll you have a drink?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Carvel?"
5400Chairman?"
5400Chandos?"
5400Chipchase?"
5400Christianity?
5400Clarence?"
5400Cluyme?"
5400Colfax?"
5400Come back-- to what?
5400Come now, do you think me a tyrant?"
5400Come now, what world you have done, if your son had been in question?"
5400Come, Mr. Temple, how has Monsieur de St. Gre ever offended you?"
5400Come, now, is n''t it so?"
5400Commotion is perceived on the tavern porch,--Mr. Sherman, the proprietor, bustling out, Jake Wheeler beside him; a chorus of"How be you, Jethros?"
5400Compared, indeed, to what it had twenty years ago?
5400Comyn says they may release him, does he?
5400Conquer the United States?"
5400Conquered the world?"
5400Constable-- why?"
5400Continue to preach them for the sake of the lethargic peace of which you speak?
5400Costs you a little mite more to live in it, do n''t it?"
5400Could I ever repay the debt to the young women of these United States?
5400Could I rise now to the ideal that had once been mine, thrust henceforth evil out of my life?
5400Could Miss Wetherell start in at once, provided the committee agreed?
5400Could Mr. Walpole tell him of this club of both sexes just started at Almack''s?
5400Could Spain stop them?
5400Could Tom get back?
5400Could a union endure between so delicate a creature as the girl before him and Jethro Bass?
5400Could any cause survive it?
5400Could any coiffure or any gown be more appropriate for an entertainment at which Clio was to preside?
5400Could any good come of it all?
5400Could anything be gained by meddling?
5400Could he afford to risk his life in the war that was coming, and leave his mother dependent upon charity?
5400Could he control it, subdue it?
5400Could he do it or begin it?
5400Could he ever do it?
5400Could he have been removed from the barrels and the ledgers, and the debts and the cares and the implications, what might we have had from his pen?
5400Could he have saved his life if he had listened to that other Cynthia?
5400Could he not feel it, too?
5400Could he ride it?
5400Could he save her in spite of herself?
5400Could he speak at all?
5400Could he tell Bob that he had changed his mind and withdrawn his consent to the marriage?
5400Could he think that she would make advances to tempt his honour, and risk his good opinion and her own?
5400Could he, Isaac Worthington, humble his pride and ask her to keep her suspicions to herself?
5400Could it be Tipton and his men riding from Jonesboro to capture Sevier?
5400Could it be done?
5400Could it be one with his native New England?
5400Could it be possible after all that had happened that Maude still loved me?
5400Could it be possible that he belonged to her class?
5400Could it be possible that he was using this patronizingly kind tone to Jethro Bass?
5400Could it be possible that she loved me still?
5400Could it be possible?
5400Could it be reconstructed, redeemed?
5400Could it be right, in a position of power and responsibility, to acknowledge evil and deal with it as evil?
5400Could it be that Hilary felt remorse?
5400Could it be that I had n''t spoken?
5400Could it be that I, Hugh Paret, who had always been so positive, had made a mess of my life?
5400Could it be that he loved Austen in some peculiar manner all his own?
5400Could it be that it was only the night before I had made a speech against him and his associates?
5400Could it be that she were enjoying my discomfiture?
5400Could it be that the cane moved in the thicket?
5400Could it be that the district attorney was looking calmly on while Mr. Cooke wilfully corrupted the Far Harbor chief- of- police?
5400Could it be that there was a motive under all this plotting?
5400Could it be that this boy whom he had so often chastised took a clearer view of practical morality than himself?
5400Could it be true, be lasting, be binding for ever and ever?
5400Could it be true?
5400Could it have been of admiration for the fine old man who towered there glaring defiance at those about him?
5400Could it-- could it ever be developed now?
5400Could life and interest and enthusiasm be infused again in such as these?
5400Could love prevail against its dangers and pitfalls and-- duties?
5400Could my father have spoken of it to anyone?
5400Could n''t do justice to it on fifteen hundred a year, could he?
5400Could n''t you have managed to stick to religion instead of getting mixed up with socialism?"
5400Could she begin anew, and found it upon a rock?
5400Could she care?
5400Could she do it?
5400Could she ever live with her aunt after what she had said?
5400Could she expect more?
5400Could she face it-- even the murky grey light of this that revealed the ashes and litter of the back yard under the downpour?
5400Could she have borne to wait for him?
5400Could she really have meant it, after all?
5400Could she say whither the winds might blow, where the seed might be planted?
5400Could such a thing, after all, be possible?
5400Could the Federal government open the river?
5400Could the disintegration, in her case, be arrested?
5400Could the doctor find time?
5400Could the least particle of the least of these fearful insinuations be true?
5400Could the whole of this hideous structure, tier resting upon tier, have been reared without something of a foundation?
5400Could there be another meaning in life than the pursuit of pleasure, than the weary effort to keep the body alive?
5400Could there be another standard by which men and women were measured and judged?
5400Could this awkward, yellow man with his hands behind his back be he whom he had worshipped?
5400Could this be the State Tribune he held in his hand?
5400Could this be what the man meant?
5400Could this be, indeed, the authoress of the"Hymn to Coniston,"of whom Brampton was so proud?
5400Could this fantastically tall, stooping figure before her be that of the President of the United States?
5400Could this indeed be her figure, and this her face on which he watched the colour rise( so he remembered afterwards) like the slow flood of day?
5400Could this shrill falsetto be the same voice to which he had listened only that morning?
5400Could two more able and brilliant conversationalists be found than Philippe de St. Gre and Madame la Vicomtesse?
5400Could we if we would?
5400Could we wish for more?
5400Could you recommend a work on biology?"
5400Country folks, the Bonapartes-- country folks?"
5400Crazy, is it?
5400Crewe?"
5400Crewe?"
5400Crewe?"
5400Crewe?"
5400Crewe?"
5400Crewe?"
5400Crocker?"
5400Crocker?"
5400Crocker?"
5400Crocker?"
5400Crocker?"
5400Cynthia, will you leave us alone for a few minutes?"
5400Cynthy?"
5400D''ye ken him?"
5400D- Democrat-- hain''t you-- Democrat?"
5400D- don''t like''em?"
5400D- don''t you wish you had the red cloth to wear here?"
5400DR. JONATHAN( sitting down beside AUGUSTA) And what has Minnie done, Augusta?
5400Dad, why did you do this?
5400Damn it, sir, do n''t you see that it is you, and no one else, who has procured this commission?
5400Damn that fellow Eiffel, and did he thrust you into the Jerusalem Chamber?"
5400Davy, do I do you justice?"
5400Davy,"he cried,"is n''t she just the dearest, sweetest, most beautiful person in the world?"
5400Desire for what?
5400Despite the rigors and the dangers of my life here, should I ever again find such happiness and peace in the world?
5400Did Captain Paul know him?
5400Did Congress assemble from the Antipodes?
5400Did Eldon Purr, after all; have no sense of guilt?
5400Did Governor Hamilton know that a visit was imminent?
5400Did Hilary send you down here?"
5400Did Honora know it?
5400Did I ever tell you that story about the slide in Rickets Gulch?"
5400Did I feel that loyalty towards a single human being?
5400Did I know Wilkinson?
5400Did I not feel her near me, touching me?
5400Did I not pull you into the coffee- room of the Star and Garter years ago, and tell you that same?"
5400Did I not say so?
5400Did I not understand you to approve of Mr. Brice''s ownership?"
5400Did I really care for her?
5400Did I really want her?
5400Did Janet love him?
5400Did Janet reca''the simmer nights they had supped here, wi''the bumclocks bizzin''ower the candles?
5400Did Monsieur know that Mademoiselle Antoinette was an angel?
5400Did Monsieur take snuff?
5400Did Mr. Bentley tell you?"
5400Did Mr. Worthington still while away his evenings stealing barber poles and being chased around Cambridge by irate policemen?
5400Did Nancy still care for me?
5400Did any one of them, in his heart, care anything for the ideals and aspirations of the Church?
5400Did fate deal twice to those whom she had made novices?
5400Did he give you the locket?"
5400Did he guess?
5400Did he hope that Mr. Carvel, in a fit of anger, would disinherit me when he found I had deceived him?
5400Did he inquire what the party worker thought of Mr. Watling for the Senate?
5400Did he know she would be there?
5400Did he know who William Wetherell was?
5400Did he know, himself?
5400Did he know-- asked the sender of this-- could he know the consternation he had caused in so many persons, including herself?
5400Did he not confess, with his eyes shut, his sins every Sunday?
5400Did he not publicly acknowledge his soul?
5400Did he now?
5400Did he ring true, and it false?
5400Did he see her?
5400Did he send the flowers?
5400Did he show signs of a reversion to that other personality, the Chiltern she had not known, yet glimpses of whom she had had?
5400Did he think that the storekeeper at Coniston would be of use to him, politically?
5400Did he want to know whether she read the newspapers?
5400Did he, George?
5400Did his heart ache, did he bow his head as he thought of that supremacy, so hardly won, so superbly held, gone forever?
5400Did it electrify his hearers?
5400Did it ever strike you that the Celebrity had some exceedingly fine qualities?"
5400Did it possess the power to save me?
5400Did it seem long, Jinny?"
5400Did it, then, make any difference to her what he believed?
5400Did n''t I ask you to come here and go into my office?"
5400Did n''t I get''em rural free delivery?
5400Did n''t I raise your wages last January?
5400Did n''t I say so?
5400Did n''t I say that?
5400Did n''t I subscribe to the meeting- house and library, and do n''t I pay more taxes than anybody else?"
5400Did n''t I warn you fellows that Bedloe Hubbell meant business long before he started in?
5400Did n''t he save my life twice on our way out here?"
5400Did n''t he tell you about it?
5400Did n''t he tell you anything?"
5400Did n''t laugh once-- did he?"
5400Did n''t we, Cynthy?
5400Did n''t you break loose?--have a good time?
5400Did n''t you feel sorry for me last night?"
5400Did n''t you need me, just a little?"
5400Did n''t you run across Maria?
5400Did n''t you?
5400Did n''t you?"
5400Did not all Brampton point to the house which had held the Social Library as to a shrine?
5400Did not both lead to destruction?
5400Did not she still love Jethro Bass?
5400Did not the Vicomtesse mention it?
5400Did she feel a little the need of me as I felt the need of her?
5400Did she intend, ultimately, to get a divorce?
5400Did she love him?
5400Did she mean to differentiate him from out of the multitude?
5400Did she refuse to encourage Mr. Ditmar because it was wrong?
5400Did she understand by some instinctive power the riddle within me?
5400Did she wink?
5400Did the garden cast the spell by which she saw herself on the seat?
5400Did the whole delegation go up to Leith, or only a committee?"
5400Did the whole world, then, know of her shame?
5400Did their intercourse have that intangible quality of safety that belonged to married life?
5400Did they call names?"
5400Did they come here?"
5400Did they show you through the stables?
5400Did they tell you about it?"
5400Did they thank us?
5400Did they, too, need warmth?
5400Did this man hide, under his brusqueness and brevity of speech, the fund of wisdom and the wider sympathy and understanding he suspected?
5400Did we not campaign together?
5400Did we not-- shoot these very falls together on our way to Kaskaskia?"
5400Did you ask Minnie to leave Foxon Falls?
5400Did you bring some of those papers with you?"
5400Did you ever go down to that store?
5400Did you ever hear of Jennings Howe?"
5400Did you ever hear of Water Witch and Netty Boone?"
5400Did you ever hear of a stock called Consolidated Tractions?"
5400Did you ever hear of one General Sherman?
5400Did you ever hear of such tommyrot?"
5400Did you ever know any one to change so, since this military business has begun?
5400Did you ever see another house like it?"
5400Did you ever see anybody like her?"
5400Did you ever see him?
5400Did you ever see the cheap guys hanging around, and the young swells waiting to get a chance at the girls behind the counters?
5400Did you ever see them?"
5400Did you find the benches hard?
5400Did you know Miss Goddard, the lanky one with the glasses?"
5400Did you know that he actually believed you were doing your best to get married to the Celebrity?"
5400Did you like him?"
5400Did you make these for me?
5400Did you not tell her that you would bring him back?"
5400Did you notice how he avoided me?
5400Did you notice how he flared up when I mentioned the girl?"
5400Did you notice how some of them stared at us, as though they were but half awake in the heat, with that glow on their faces?
5400Did you notice, Janet, how beautifully clean those logs had been cut by their sharp teeth?"
5400Did you pick out Spence for an embryo lord of high finance?"
5400Did you propose to him?"
5400Did you say the Orange Trust Company?"
5400Did you see him at Camp Jackson-- was he hurt?"
5400Did you see it?"
5400Did you see my Minnie, doctor?
5400Did you see the boy?
5400Did you see the mate to the horse I lost?
5400Did you send all the way to New York for it?"
5400Did you tell him why you came to Boston to- day?"
5400Did you think I could sell it for that price?"
5400Did you think, did you wonder a little about me?"
5400Did you, Jinny?"
5400Did you, by any chance, happen to read it?"
5400Did you?
5400Dinna ye ken gentry when ye see''t?"
5400Dinner had been forgotten that day, but would I enter and partake?
5400Ditmar?"
5400Ditmar?"
5400Ditmar?"
5400Ditmar?"
5400Ditmar?"
5400Do I blame his bitterness?
5400Do I blame-- anything he does?
5400Do I have to listen to Clarence''s horse talk for another hour?
5400Do I like you?
5400Do I love him?
5400Do I smell gunpowder?
5400Do I understand your Lordship to question my courage?"
5400Do n''t sit there like an idiot-- do you think I''m doing this for pleasure?"
5400Do n''t that beat you?"
5400Do n''t want to get married yet awhile-- do you?"
5400Do n''t you ever think of that?"
5400Do n''t you know better than that?
5400Do n''t you like it?"
5400Do n''t you like me in this?
5400Do n''t you remember you said something of the kind the night of the election, years ago?
5400Do n''t you see we''d all be jugged and fined for assisting a criminal over the border?
5400Do n''t you think I''d better bid him in?"
5400Do n''t you think I''m kind?"
5400Do n''t you think it''s a good one?"
5400Do n''t you think so, Honora?"
5400Do n''t you think so?"
5400Do n''t you think so?"
5400Do n''t you think that he would come to his father if he knew?
5400Do n''t you think?
5400Do n''t you understand that I am demanding the great sacrifice?"
5400Do not they come to Paris and live in the great hotels and demand cocktails and read the stock reports and send cablegrams all the day long?
5400Do philosophies tend also to cast those who adopt them into a mould?
5400Do the Northeastern Railroads wrongfully govern this State for their own ends?"
5400Do the gods ever confer the rarest of gifts upon him to whom they have given pinions?
5400Do they invite me to their houses, to their parties?"
5400Do they mate him, ever, with another who soars as high as he, who circles higher that he may circle higher still?
5400Do you always preach as earnestly as that?"
5400Do you believe for a moment that, in your father''s absence, I would have allowed Antoinette to come here alone?
5400Do you believe that the politicians are owned by the railroad?"
5400Do you ever think about it?
5400Do you expect they can recover under that section?"
5400Do you follow me?"
5400Do you follow me?"
5400Do you forget the old days when I was the father and you the son?
5400Do you get me?
5400Do you happen to have such a thing?"
5400Do you have many such odd characters in Coniston, Miss Cynthia?
5400Do you hear?"
5400Do you investigate because conditions are bad?
5400Do you know him?"
5400Do you know how she may be directed to?"
5400Do you know how the little fool looks to me?
5400Do you know how we got percussion caps, seh?
5400Do you know how you struck me?
5400Do you know it?"
5400Do you know that feeling?"
5400Do you know that you have been very near to death?"
5400Do you know that you will probably never get to Vincennes alive?"
5400Do you know that you will ruin your father in another year and you continue?"
5400Do you know these other gentlemen, Crewe?
5400Do you know these people?"
5400Do you know what I am?"
5400Do you know what a caucus is?"
5400Do you know what a floorwalker is?
5400Do you know what an attractive wife you''ve got?
5400Do you know what her answer was, Dorothy?"
5400Do you know what picketing is?"
5400Do you know what you are doing?
5400Do you know where Dr. Latimer''s office is, on Tower Street?"
5400Do you know where I would put you, Mr. Trevor?
5400Do you know where Switzerland is, Davy?"
5400Do you know where the Boat Club is on the River Boulevard?
5400Do you know where you ought to be?
5400Do you know whether this gentleman is Charles Wrexell Allen, or whether he is the author?
5400Do you know who he is?"
5400Do you know why Alison is willing to marry me?
5400Do you know why?
5400Do you know, Euphrasia, there were two reasons why those were the best pies I ever ate?"
5400Do you like me?
5400Do you love me just a little, Honora?"
5400Do you love your country, sir?
5400Do you mean that you would let that man stand between you and happiness?"
5400Do you mean to say--?
5400Do you mind my telling Phil?"
5400Do you not realize that you can not take liberties with this climate?
5400Do you perceive any hint of emptiness-- despair?"
5400Do you realize how austere you are at times, how you have frightened me?"
5400Do you remember Mr. Benbow''s Hester, girls?
5400Do you remember him?"
5400Do you remember how I clung to you in my sleep?
5400Do you remember how long we tarried over this bit on Friday?"
5400Do you remember how you took hold of me that day, and begged me to stay?
5400Do you remember it, sir?"
5400Do you remember me?"
5400Do you remember me?"
5400Do you remember my asking you about God?--the first day this began?
5400Do you remember my telling you I did n''t agree with them?
5400Do you remember saying to me once that faith comes to us in some human form we love?
5400Do you remember that day last summer I was tinkering with the car by the canal and you came along?"
5400Do you remember that day when we were in the summer- house together at Glencoe, long ago?
5400Do you remember that talk we had at father''s, when he first came, and we likened him to a modern Savonarola?"
5400Do you remember that they offered us their house in Glencoe when the Judge was so ill?"
5400Do you remember the argument you used when you had got me out of the sponging- house?
5400Do you remember the blue, transparent substance that used to be on favours at children''s parties?"
5400Do you remember the cotillon, or whatever it was, that Cooke gave?
5400Do you remember the doe coming out of the forest, and how she ran screaming when I tried to kiss you?
5400Do you remember the last night you came to Jabe Jenney''s?
5400Do you remember the pineapples?"
5400Do you remember when you told me that I was good for nothing, that I lacked purpose?"
5400Do you see that fellow gettin''up to talk now?
5400Do you see that they are above the state flag?
5400Do you see the Southern delegates rising in their seats?
5400Do you see the bride in her high- waisted gown, and Mr. Calvin in his stock and his blue tail- coat and brass buttons?
5400Do you see this paper?
5400Do you see?"
5400Do you seriously suggest that I give labour a voice in my business?
5400Do you suppose I''d-- I''d do anything to insult you, Janet?"
5400Do you suppose Rigby was appointed Paymaster of the Forces because of his fitness?
5400Do you suppose it mattered to me whether you went to Harvard with the others?
5400Do you suppose that anyone-- that I-- think any the worse of you?"
5400Do you suppose, if I could have found fifteen years ago the woman to have made me happy, I should have spent so much time in seeking distraction?"
5400Do you think Clarence could spare you for a little while every day?
5400Do you think I could write any letters now?"
5400Do you think I ever can understand?"
5400Do you think I will allow the hope of all England to be staked for a pirate?
5400Do you think I would have had this thing happen to you?
5400Do you think I''ve not known it, too?
5400Do you think Nancy would like them?"
5400Do you think any gentleman would do that, Puss Russell?"
5400Do you think it''s wise to live in that old house of your father''s before it''s been thoroughly heated for a few days?
5400Do you think me shameless?"
5400Do you think that I have been your friend-- that I am your friend?"
5400Do you think that I''d love her, that I''d plead for her, if she did n''t?"
5400Do you think that business men are always infallible?
5400Do you think that many of them did not know hunger and want long before that cruel war was over?
5400Do you think that was fair to him or me?"
5400Do you think the boy is lying?"
5400Do you think the day will come when statesmanship will recognize this need?"
5400Do you think they will do so?"
5400Do you think they would undermine you, and to me, behind your back?"
5400Do you think this man will support you, stick to you?
5400Do you think we ever shall?
5400Do you think you can intimidate me?
5400Do you think you can prove that?"
5400Do you think you ought to dress her that way?"
5400Do you think you''d have time to drop in to see me, Minnie, before your train goes?
5400Do you understand, sir?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you understand?"
5400Do you want anything, Prag?
5400Do you want me to invite him to dinner?"
5400Do you want the city to stand still?
5400Do you wish a greater victory than this, or a sadder one?
5400Do you wish me to go?"
5400Do you wonder that we contend for our rights, tooth and nail?
5400Do you, Mr. Brice?
5400Do you?"
5400Doan''t you hear de carridges a- rattlin''off to de country?"
5400Doan''t you hear''em, Miss Jinny?
5400Dodd?"
5400Dodd?"
5400Does George write to you?
5400Does any one among you know the old French trail from Massacre to Kaskaskia?"
5400Does he know how to make love?"
5400Does he know what he''s about?
5400Does he manage to arouse enthusiasm for orthodox Christianity?"
5400Does it sound so incredible?"
5400Does n''t George suggest it, when he pleads for industrial democracy?
5400Does n''t he realize the danger?
5400Does n''t he, father?"
5400Does n''t that prove it?"
5400Does n''t your conscience smart?"
5400Does n''t your father take you around the state?"
5400Does that shock you?"
5400Does that suggest anything to you clergymen?"
5400Does the holy father praych to ye wid thim wurrds, ye haythens?
5400Dost thou know Monsieur Ritchie,''Toinette?"
5400Dost thou mind?''"
5400Drew near, did I say?
5400Drive a clergyman from my house gentlemen?''
5400Dwyer''s?"
5400Dynamite?
5400Easters where the deuce is that good- for- nothing husband of yours?"
5400Ecstasy, perhaps, she had found-- for was it delirium?
5400Eh, Courtenay?"
5400Eh, Courtenay?"
5400Eh, Davy?"
5400Eh, Lloyd?
5400Eh, Master Richard?
5400Eh, Ned?"
5400Eh, Rudolph?"
5400Eh, citizen?"
5400Eh, doctor?"
5400Eh, madam, must he not shut his eyes?"
5400Eh?
5400Eh?"
5400Eight hundred?"
5400Engel?"
5400Equal?
5400Er-- Cynthy-- will you do it for me?"
5400Er-- John?"
5400Er-- what do you think he said?"
5400Er-- why?"
5400Er-- you know Will?"
5400Er-- you say two dollars is their price?"
5400Et quel dessin, monsieur?''
5400Even if it had been the iniquitous, piratical transaction you suggest, why should I assume the responsibility for all who were concerned in it?"
5400Even my voice sounded in the distance as I continued:"Will you be the mistress of Carvel Hall, Dorothy?
5400Ever hear of Coniston?"
5400Ever heard of Buck, Miss Carvel?
5400Ever heard of him, Brinsmade?
5400Ever talked with Jethro?"
5400Ever tell you what Cameron did, Brinsmade?
5400Every day she asks,''When is Humphrey going to make his first speech?''
5400Everywhere in Leith I am met with the remark,''Have you seen Job Braden?''
5400Excuse me, Captain,--but what''s that?
5400F- folks keep pigeons in the city?"
5400Faith in-- what?
5400Family is a good thing, but of what use is a crest without the panels on which to paint it?
5400Far God''s sake, ca n''t you get''em out before they ruin the machines?"
5400Farrar?"
5400Fierce and tenacious, steel in the cruelty of his desires, fearful in the havoc he had wrought, could he be subdued?
5400Fifty?
5400Fine gal, hain''t she?
5400Fitch?"
5400Five thousand dollars?
5400Flint?"
5400For Dorothy had vowed it was her pleasure to see John Paul off, and who could stand in her way?
5400For a long time nothing more was written of the letter than"Dear Uncle Tom and Aunt Mary": what to say to them?
5400For example, Miss Arabella Pope of Norfolk, in Virginia,--and did I know her?
5400For had he not, indeed, overborne them?
5400For has she not written those beautiful lines which we all know by heart?
5400For his abilities?"
5400For is it not true, gentlemen, that the great masses of England are against the measures you impose upon us?
5400For me?
5400For some moments he stood dazed by what he had heard, the query ringing in his head: Why had Jethro Bass bought that note?
5400For what is hell if it is not hope dead and buried, and galling regret for what might have been?
5400Frederick T. Maitland, or the owner of the Brougham Building?"
5400From him?
5400From what authoritative source are we to draw our doctrines?
5400From what?
5400Full half an hour, wahn''t it, Cynthy?"
5400Funny is n''t it, that you should have come along?
5400Funny notion, wahn''t it?"
5400GEORGE: You mean Dr. Jonathan?
5400Gaming and fox- hunting, did I say?
5400Garrick,"Carlisle puts in, very solemn,"what have you done to offend the Terrible Unknown?
5400Garrick?"
5400Garrison?"
5400Gave Mr. Flint your pass did you?"
5400Gaylord?"
5400Gentlemen, are you ready for the question?
5400George, what are you going to France to fight for?
5400George, will you take this?
5400Glancing up at me over the glass of lemonade I had given her she went on:"Why have n''t you been to see me since I came home?
5400Godfrey, what''s this?"
5400Good God, have n''t you got enough, Hugh,--enough success and enough money, without going into a thing like this Riverside scheme?"
5400Gorse gave you a letter to the Governor, did n''t he?"
5400Grafton cried,"and why was I not informed at once of his illness?
5400Granting, indeed, that she had refused to marry me, was that any reason why I should desert my life- long friend and playmate?
5400Gre?"
5400Gre?"
5400Gre?"
5400Gre?"
5400Gre?"
5400Guess you could run a store, could n''t you?"
5400Guess you had more to do with that bill than came out in the newspapers-- eh?"
5400Guilty or not guilty?"
5400H- haven''t any objections to that kind of a job, hev you?"
5400Ha, Monsieur, you remember-- the miniature you were so kin''as to borrow me four hundred livres?"
5400Had Clarence?
5400Had Comyn Carvel been selfish?
5400Had Cynthia made the prohibition strong enough?
5400Had He, indeed, saved it for a People, a People to be drawn from all nations, from all classes?
5400Had Howard?
5400Had I been frightened?
5400Had I done the wisest thing after all?
5400Had I remained a child, since my idea of pleasure was still that of youth?
5400Had I seen him in London?
5400Had I, Hugh Paret, fallen to this, that I could stand by consenting to an act which was worse than assassination?
5400Had Monsieur not heard of the yellow fever?
5400Had Mr. Peter Pardriff seen the error of his way?
5400Had Nick indeed run away with his daughter?
5400Had Richter ever heard of Lincoln?
5400Had any dire calamities overtaken the modern Macbeths, of whose personal lives we happened to know something?
5400Had each been simultaneously inspired with the same high thought, and-- more amazing still-- with the idea of the same peerless leader?
5400Had he been confounded by the advent of the Honourable Giles?
5400Had he been in Coniston, he would have said,"How be you?"
5400Had he been tampered with overnight, and persuaded of the futility of rebellion?
5400Had he been wise in deciding before he had taught a glimpse of the accomplished Douglas, whose name end fame filled the land?
5400Had he come to the conclusion that it was just as well to submit to what seemed the inevitable and so enjoy the spice of revenge over me?
5400Had he continued to love her, in spite of the woman he had married and adorned?
5400Had he deserted them?
5400Had he dreamed, too, of the girl?
5400Had he ever forgotten himself?
5400Had he ever known these wild, destroying desires?
5400Had he forgotten her?
5400Had he given up the fight?
5400Had he loved my father more than I?
5400Had he neither heard nor seen?
5400Had he no memories of the terrors of that struggle?...
5400Had he not at least gained a signal victory?
5400Had he not given the highest proof that he had the people''s interests at heart?
5400Had he not made a treaty of peace with Captain Helm, who was even then a prisoner of the British general in the fort?
5400Had he not poured out to Honora, with a charming gayety and frankness, many of his financial troubles?
5400Had he not telephoned to Boston for the rooms, rehearsed in his own mind every detail of what had subsequently happened?
5400Had he not, after all, laboured largely for his own glory, and not Gods?
5400Had he not, she remembered, staked his career by disagreeing with his father?
5400Had he notions that girls ought not to read them?
5400Had he read them?
5400Had he seen the newspapers?
5400Had he suggested it?
5400Had he the courage, now, to submit the beliefs which had sustained him all these years to Truth''s inexorable inspection?
5400Had he, Hodder, outgrown the dean''s religion, or had it ever been his own?
5400Had he, as she expressed the matter,"chucked it"?
5400Had he, for instance, let fall any opinions, prognostications on the political and financial situation?
5400Had her existence been like that?
5400Had hers not been an attempt, on a gigantic scale, to cheat the fates?
5400Had his pain been the less because he had not loved her from childhood?
5400Had it been a dream?
5400Had it not been for her happiness do you imagine I would have picked you out of that crew of half- dead pirates in the Texel fort?"
5400Had it not been in order to relieve their anxiety-- especially her mother''s-- on the score of her recent absences from home?
5400Had it not called to me many times in my life before?
5400Had my fancy lied?
5400Had n''t she been foolish?
5400Had not Miss Wetherell heard the song wherein seniors were designated as grave and reverend?
5400Had not the honest Americans and Germans become foremen and even presidents of corporations?
5400Had not the tree been crooked from the beginning-- incapable of being straightened?
5400Had not these great ones broken with impunity all the laws of traditional morality?
5400Had remorse suddenly overtaken him in his old age?
5400Had she any right to treat such a man with contempt?
5400Had she been a dupe as well as Lise?
5400Had she been looking all along for a sign-- a sign of wrath?
5400Had she been to church again?
5400Had she done right?
5400Had she fallen in love with him, as was the common fate of all young women he met?
5400Had she fixed upon it?
5400Had she gone too far?
5400Had she had a presentiment, all along, that something would occur to separate us?
5400Had she heard how Madame Bouvet had begged me to buy the miniature?
5400Had she no curiosity?
5400Had she not come to visit Mr. Crewe, to listen to his piece de resistance, without knowing that he, Austen Vane, would be in the capital?
5400Had she not practised insincerity before?
5400Had she not praised him, and defended him, and become indignant when I spoke my mind about him?
5400Had she not read his avowal?
5400Had she really changed?
5400Had she seen her father and talked to him?
5400Had she sinned beyond the pardon of heaven, or had she committed a supreme act of right?
5400Had she smiled?
5400Had she taken my gift as a sign that my indifference was melting?
5400Had she?
5400Had something happened?
5400Had that been heaven, and this of Lise''s, hell?...
5400Had that personality suddenly lost its power over him?
5400Had the Lord ever before made and set over against each other two such different men?
5400Had the blow been so great that he would relinquish those practices which had become a lifelong habit with him?
5400Had the clipping that even then lay in her bosom effected this magic change?
5400Had the lady demanded admittance?
5400Had the librarian recognized, without confession on his part, the change in him?
5400Had the man been Gignoux?
5400Had the mill owners accepted their services?
5400Had the revelation which he had so long expected come at last?
5400Had they heard him at last?
5400Had they not been drawn hither by the renown of the Republic''s wealth?
5400Had this love which had come to her brought her any nearer to the unknown realm of light she craved?...
5400Had those peaceful and happy Saturdays and Sundays in Coniston passed away forever?
5400Had time changed her?
5400Hain''t England?"
5400Hain''t I carried you faithful, summer and winter, for a good many years?
5400Hain''t I seen''em run their dirty politics there under Brush Bascom for the last twenty- five years?
5400Hain''t that money good in Kaskasky?"
5400Hain''t that truth, boys?
5400Hain''t we a- goin''on to St. Vincent because he seen the Ha''r Buyer sculped on the Ohio?"
5400Hain''t we got to look out for the fair name of Brampton?"
5400Hain''t you, Cynthy?"
5400Harvard College failed up?"
5400Has Dr. Jonathan turned up?
5400Has Mr. Brinsmade come?
5400Has Mr. Hodder offended him?
5400Has anyone been in, Minnie?
5400Has he accepted a pass from the Railroad?"
5400Has he ever made a study of the other side of the question-- the competition side?
5400Has he got you?"
5400Has he no existence, no purpose in life outside of that perpetual gentleman in waiting?
5400Has he no shame that he should hold his head so high?
5400Has he run away?"
5400Has it got a new house ready to move into?
5400Has n''t anybody told you what''s going on?"
5400Has n''t he got the money, and the brains, and the get- up- and- git?
5400Has n''t it changed things already?
5400Has she come to me and asked my pardon for the way in which she treated me?
5400Has she ever denied it?
5400Has she gone to church and asked God''s forgiveness?
5400Has the interest been paid promptly?
5400Has there been a row?"
5400Has your imagination left you, captain?"
5400Has your union got the plans of a new house ready-- consulted an architect?
5400Have I done wrong in leading the Celebrity to the point where you saw him this morning?"
5400Have I ever been one to make pretences?"
5400Have I made myself clear?"
5400Have I made us out a pair of deliberate, calculating snobs?
5400Have I no friends?
5400Have I not paid the price of my sins?"
5400Have I not suffered enough?
5400Have I shown a desire to desert you now that my fortunes have changed?
5400Have I stated the case, gentlemen, or have I not?"
5400Have another, Senator?"
5400Have n''t I done what Flint wanted always?"
5400Have n''t I established a system of bonuses, to share my profits with the efficient and the industrious?
5400Have n''t I heard some story of your giving up other pursuits in Boston to come up here for your health?
5400Have n''t I taught you that my house was your home?
5400Have n''t they the power?"
5400Have n''t you any clew?
5400Have n''t you done anything?
5400Have our revised plans come yet?
5400Have the pipers warned the Honourable Adam of the rising tide against him?
5400Have they asked him to gird up his loins and hire halls and smite the upstart hip and thigh?
5400Have ye forgot how to talk?"
5400Have ye seen little Tom?
5400Have you a card?"
5400Have you a telephone?"
5400Have you a treaty with Spain in your pocket or a declaration of war?
5400Have you any idea why I came out here, this summer?
5400Have you any love for me?"
5400Have you any meal?"
5400Have you any objection to his dining with us?"
5400Have you any objections, sir?"
5400Have you any other plans?"
5400Have you any plan?"
5400Have you any right to decide what their vengeance shall be?"
5400Have you anyone else in mind?"
5400Have you been to London?"
5400Have you been to the office?
5400Have you discovered, too, the emptiness of it all?"
5400Have you enjoyed it?"
5400Have you ever been mobbed, Richard?"
5400Have you ever eaten a German dinner, Mr. Brice?
5400Have you ever felt that way about people?"
5400Have you ever heard of him?"
5400Have you ever thought of any career seriously?"
5400Have you got another raise out of Ditmar?"
5400Have you got orders to sit down there?"
5400Have you guessed of which woman Vivarce was the lover?
5400Have you had anything to eat?"
5400Have you heard about that?
5400Have you heard from him to- day, Carl?"
5400Have you heard the arguments?"
5400Have you lost your senses, to take a woman into Kentucky this year?"
5400Have you missed me-- a little?"
5400Have you money?"
5400Have you not heard of her among your tobacco- hills?
5400Have you not seen your newspaper this morning?"
5400Have you proof that Minnie is what you would call a bad one?
5400Have you read the Last of the Mohicans already?"
5400Have you reflected that there are some others who deserve to be consulted and considered beside Mr. Allen and yourself?"
5400Have you reflected that you are about to ruin your careers?"
5400Have you seen him lately?"
5400Have you seen him since you got home, Jinny?
5400Have you seen him, Clarence?"
5400Have you seen it?
5400Have you seen the people coming into these headquarters?
5400Have you seen''em pouring into any other headquarters?
5400Have you spoken of this?"
5400Have you the courage?"
5400Have-- have you ever heard, Sarah?"
5400He asked me why I went on eating the food bought with such money, living under his roof?
5400He checked himself abruptly as Eliphalet pulled off his hat,"Howdy, Colonel?"
5400He continued to look at her, and presently asked, in a gentler tone:--"Where did you wish to go, lady?"
5400He could not even decide which letter he was to write first: to his son, who had defied him and who( the father knew in his heart) condemned him?
5400He could retire to- morrow--but he keeps on-- why?
5400He did not mention me?
5400He did not smile, but stared at the square of light that was the doorway,"Judson''s jewellery store, wahn''t it?
5400He did not wait for me to reply, but continued,"Can you suggest any improvement?"
5400He do n''t know where George is, does he, Dr. Jonathan?
5400He entered the room with characteristic unconcern, as if he had just left it on a trivial errand, and without a"How do you do?"
5400He had a horse that could show heels to my Nancy, did he?
5400He had avenged her as well as himself; but had he avenged her, now that he held Isaac Worthington in his power?
5400He had begun to think.. What did he think of me?
5400He had never dared do such a thing before, What had got into the man?
5400He had never told her, and she respected his motives-- yet, what was his side?
5400He is n''t going to take charge of the hospital?
5400He is to be factor of Gordon''s Pride?"
5400He kept her waiting a moment, and then said, with apparent casualness:--"Is that you, Miss Bumpus?
5400He meditated awhile, and then said suddenly,"W- won''t speak about it-- will you, Cynthy?"
5400He must have thought me cursed ascetic, eh, Fitz?
5400He needed encouragement,--what young lawyer does not on his first important case?
5400He paused, suddenly glancing at my face, and added,"Why do you ask, Davy?"
5400He rose and walked to the window and looked out for a few moments over the flower garden before he replied:--"On what conditions?"
5400He says so himself, does n''t he?"
5400He seems the only calm man to be found in the hall-- but is the calm aberration?
5400He talks in his sleep, just as you do--""And what is he saying?"
5400He that they say is crazy?"
5400He was about to protest, but she went on, bravely,"Is it because he has quarrelled with Uncle Jethro?"
5400He was coming toward her, and how was she to prevent his taking her by storm?
5400He was in my class at Harvard.... Is he still here?"
5400He was nice to you-- wahn''t he, Will?"
5400He would know what my pursuits had been; for my father''s sake, what were my ambitions?
5400He''s out for cheap political preferment, too, is he?
5400He''s somebody, ai n''t he?
5400He''s the division superintendent, is n''t he?"
5400He''s the oldest friend I''ve got in St. Louis, honey and now-- now--""Pa, you''ve been in battle?"
5400He, at least, had no anxieties about the world, why should she?
5400He-- he has n''t mentioned me?
5400Hell''s here-- isn''t it?"
5400Hello, Bert,--how goes it?
5400Hello, what''s this?"
5400Henceforth you belong to me-- do you hear?"
5400Her head was hot, her temples throbbed.... Night had fallen, the electric arcs burned blue overhead, she was in another street-- was it Stanley?
5400Her voice sank:"Could it be God?"
5400Here the puzzled expression returned to his face,"But they are birds, are they not?"
5400Here with me?"
5400Here?"
5400Hessians?
5400Hillman?
5400His attitude of sympathy did not change, but he managed to ask her, in a business- like tone which she welcomed:--"On what grounds?"
5400His face was a study:"And-- And you think I am going to get in there?"
5400His name?
5400His permanence?
5400His punishment would still be heavy; but whence had come such a wondrous gift to mitigate it?
5400Hodder exclaimed sharply,"why do you say that?
5400Hodder exclaimed:"You knew then?"
5400Hodder?"
5400Hodder?"
5400Hodder?"
5400Hodder?"
5400Holden?"
5400Holt?"
5400Home, is it?
5400Honeymoons can wait-- eh?"
5400Honora?"
5400Hood?"
5400Hood?"
5400Hope grew again,--why had she left me in New Orleans?
5400Hopper?"
5400Hopper?"
5400Hopper?"
5400Hopper?"
5400Hopper?"
5400Hopper?"
5400Hopper?"
5400Hopper?"
5400How I appealed to you when you married to try to appreciate her?"
5400How I hated that man,"he cried,"how I hated him?"
5400How about Antoinette, alone at Les Iles?
5400How about a thousand apiece for five of us boys?"
5400How about it, Cynthy?"
5400How about it, Everett?"
5400How about it, Jim?"
5400How about it, Scherer?"
5400How about it, Tom?"
5400How about it?
5400How about the time you used the lobby, with Flint''s permission?
5400How about you?
5400How about your old soldier?
5400How are such things to be measured, put into words?
5400How are the boys up in Wheeler?"
5400How are the cows?
5400How are the redskins to be beaten if they are not cowed in their own country?"
5400How are you getting along, Bert?
5400How are you going to get rid of us?
5400How are you going to stop it?
5400How are you, Captain?
5400How are you?"
5400How be you?
5400How be you?"
5400How can a man in our time find out what he does want unless he takes something and gives it a trial?"
5400How can one be a factor in life unless one represents something which is the fruit of actual, personal experience?
5400How can she reach these wretched people who are the victims of the ruthless individualism and greed of those who control her?
5400How can we assert that-- this is not merely a continuation of it?"
5400How can we guess that our teachers laugh at our pranks after they have caned us for them?
5400How can we hope to compete with England on the sea?"
5400How can you be so cruel?"
5400How can you bear to part with them?"
5400How can you doubt it?"
5400How can you doubt their loyalty, and mine?
5400How can you sit still, Virginia?
5400How could I have known that you were just-- stupid?"
5400How could I tell him that my longings to do something, to be somebody in the world were never more keen than at that moment?
5400How could I tell?
5400How could I turn traitor?
5400How could a week or ten days with Jerry possibly affect my newborn, resolve?
5400How could he ask, seeing that she had been in his arms, and had not fled?
5400How could he attempt to refute it, with honesty?
5400How could he say to her that her father had ruined Mr. Bentley?
5400How could he tell her?
5400How could he--sitting under her in this manner?
5400How could her letters be otherwise when Jethro Bass, her benefactor, was at the capital working to defeat and perhaps to ruin Bob''s father?
5400How could it be otherwise?
5400How could it be slow amidst such beauty and magnificence?
5400How could she explain to Aunt Mary that the sight of beautiful things gave her a sort of pain-- when she did not yet know it herself?
5400How could she love him, when she did not realize him?
5400How could she wait until the dawn of another day?...
5400How could she wait until then?
5400How could you so have misunderstood me, Richard?"
5400How could you?
5400How could you?
5400How dare he march undaunted to within six paces of those eyes?
5400How dare you speak to me thus, Monsieur?"
5400How dare you?
5400How describe the noble figure of Mr. Crewe as it burst upon Austen when he rounded the corner of the house?
5400How did Ethel know what was like him?
5400How did He, or It, like to be trifled with in this way?
5400How did he come?
5400How did it happen?"
5400How did she know it, indeed?
5400How did the French- Canadian guides talk?
5400How did you do it, Cynthia?"
5400How did you do it, Mr. Hodder?
5400How did you get here?"
5400How did you happen to come here?"
5400How did you happen to go there?"
5400How did you hear I was going?
5400How did you know?"
5400How did you lose your job?
5400How do Republics go there?
5400How do you do, my dear?
5400How do you happen to be on the other side?"
5400How do you interpret it, sir?"
5400How do you know that he will get through the Dutch pickets to Price''s army?
5400How do you know?"
5400How do you like this dress?"
5400How do you suppose Wilkinson did it?
5400How does he seem?"
5400How does she look?"
5400How does that prospect sit?"
5400How does that relieve me?
5400How does that strike you for a demi saison, Mr. Buckskin?
5400How does your grandfather?
5400How else am I going to find out anything about him?"
5400How far have you got?
5400How far have you read?"
5400How give an idea of the libations poured out to Gad and the shekels laid aside for Meni in the Quicksands Temple?
5400How goes the crop, Richard?
5400How had he sustained the shock?
5400How had it eluded him?
5400How had it happened to an honest and virtuous man, the days of whose forebears had been long in the land which the Lord their God had given them?
5400How has Hodder changed?
5400How in blazes can you call the roll when you do n''t know who''s here?
5400How is he?"
5400How is it that you were in prison?"
5400How is it to be kept from her, indeed?"
5400How is one to handle an opponent who praises one with a delightful irony?
5400How is the baby?
5400How is the campaign looking?"
5400How is this thing going to end, Jonathan?
5400How is you, Miss Jinny?"
5400How long are you going to be in Washington?"
5400How long before they would overrun Louisiana itself, until a Frenchman or a Spaniard could scarce be found in the land?
5400How long could they hold out?
5400How long do they expect us to fawn at their feet for a word of recognition?
5400How long do you think it would last?"
5400How long has he held that mortgage?
5400How long has he known you?"
5400How long is it, Billy?"
5400How long would that beacon burn which flamed now in such prodigal waste?
5400How long would you put it off?
5400How long, O Lord?"
5400How many billions of blind, struggling creatures clung to them?
5400How many lawyers believe in their own arguments?"
5400How many men did he have, etc., etc.?
5400How many navigable rivers did he step across?"
5400How many of the throng hurrying by would not flee, if they could, back to the peaceful homes they had left?
5400How many others besides this girl had there been?
5400How many readers will smile before the rest of this true incident is told?
5400How much are you getting out of this?
5400How much did she know?
5400How much did this astounding young person know, whom he had thought so innocent?
5400How much do you get now?"
5400How much does Ditmar give you, sweetheart?"
5400How much is it?"
5400How much to- day?"
5400How much was it you paid Dr. Stickney, in New York, Adolf?
5400How now, Mr. Carvel?
5400How now, sir?
5400How old did you say this was?"
5400How old is the kid?"
5400How shall I describe him?
5400How shall I describe them as they crowded around us inside the gate?
5400How short those summer days?
5400How slavery is rapidly demoralizing a free people?"
5400How soon can you call your committee together?"
5400How the devil did he get a permit?
5400How then, sir?
5400How was I to divine what she felt?
5400How was I to know at first that they had you fooled?
5400How was I to know the highball was stiff?
5400How was I to know you was n''t in the game?"
5400How was I to tell them that in answer to my prayers for twenty- five cents, God had deemed five all that was good for me?
5400How was Wetherell to know, in his fright, that Mr. Bixby had for once indulged in an overabundance of zeal in Jethro''s behalf?
5400How was he or any man to estimate, to unravel the justice from the injustice, to pass upon the merit of this woman''s punishment?
5400How was he to come unscathed out of that?
5400How was he to confess to Richter, of all men?
5400How was he to conquer a woman of this type, who never took refuge in the conventional tactics of her sex, as he had known them?
5400How was he to explain that these degrees had been so gradual that his conscience had had but a passing wrench here and there?
5400How was he to know that thousands of his countrymen were to experience the same sensation?
5400How was he to speak at all of those perils?
5400How was he to tell her of the rocks upon which his love was built?
5400How was he to tell her the degrees by which he had been led into his present situation?
5400How was his enterprise of selling Kentucky products regarded at home?
5400How was it possible to be near madame, and not love her?
5400How was it possible when I did n''t know myself?
5400How was it that, a moment ago, she had appeared to him mysterious, inviting?
5400How was it with the garrison at Vincennes?
5400How was she ever to face the light again?
5400How was she to avoid those eyes?
5400How was she to tell him that it was to the tone of the note she objected-- to the hint of a clandestine meeting?
5400How was she to tell him the episode in the automobile in order that he might perceive something of its sinister significance?
5400How was the Governor, Trulease?"
5400How was the boy to know that there was no heart in the smile with which she greeted him?
5400How were you to foresee a certain day under the White Dome of the Capitol?
5400How will you find your sister?"
5400How worthless was this mighty power which he had gained, how hateful, when he could not bestow the smallest fragment of it upon one whom he loved?
5400How would Jethro treat him?
5400How would Mr. Flint take it?
5400How would the celebrity treat him?
5400How would these foreigners and the strange leaders who had come to organize them receive her, Ditmar''s stenographer?
5400How would you like to be a commodity?
5400How would you like to be clerk this winter to the Committee of Correspondence?"
5400How would you manage it?
5400How write of the sharpness of that pain to those who have never known it?
5400How you used to hold my hand in the garden under the table, while I talked brazenly to Mr. Mason?
5400How''m I going to stop''em when I want to?''
5400How''s your son, Mr. Pindar?
5400How, Monsieur?"
5400How, indeed, could he help doing so?
5400How, indeed, had life once appeared so distorted to him, a professed servant of humanity, as to lead him in the name of duty into that galley?
5400How, indeed, was she to help loving her?
5400How, indeed, was she to live with Jethro once her eyes were opened?
5400How, practically, do you deal with the Creeds?
5400How, she asked herself in her innocence, was any one, even Uncle Jethro, to struggle with a railroad?
5400How, she mused, would it affect him?
5400How-- how long have you been here?
5400How-- how many will there be at the table?"
5400How?"
5400Howard, who is Trixton Brent?"
5400Hugh, was there anything the matter?
5400Hugh?"
5400Human or divine?
5400Humphrey, just push the stable button, will you?"
5400Hundreds of years hence, would these great pleasure houses still be standing behind their screens and walls and hedges?
5400Hunt of Edmundton for the next governor?"
5400Hunt your votes?"
5400I am-- I am just like your daughter-- am I not, Uncle Jethro?"
5400I ask whether these stories in any way enter into your life, become part of you, and tend to make you a more useful woman?"
5400I ask you again, how much do you want for this Consolidation Bill?"
5400I ask you the question--will you yield your convictions?
5400I ask you, ai n''t she a splendid creature?"
5400I ask you, is it reasonable for him to state coolly after all this that he is another man?
5400I asked Easter where Jinny was, and I found her--""You found her--?"
5400I asked,"who''s she?"
5400I began to ask him questions: what were the trees like, for instance?
5400I believe he sent back one of our passes once, did n''t he?
5400I believe in the young men, and I have already seen something of you-- so?"...
5400I came back to Foxon Falls this morning happy in the hope that I was to do something to encourage what was good in labour-- and how have I been met?
5400I could n''t let our first citizen build a modern Rhine castle, could I?
5400I cried;"what was their name?"
5400I daresay you enjoy it, but what worries me is how you are going to live?
5400I did not know how he would act, but I went up to him and held out my hand, and said.--"How do you do, Colonel Colfax?"
5400I did not pause to reflect that the Colonel''s attitude, from his point of view( yes, and from mine,--had I not adopted it?)
5400I do care for you, I do love you--""Then why not let that suffice?"
5400I do n''t say he did n''t do right from his way of looking at things,--but say, it was n''t exactly Christian, was it?"
5400I do n''t see how he does it, do you, Alice?"
5400I do n''t wonder that she''s crazy about him, do you?
5400I exclaimed hotly;"you mean to say, sir, that you have brought me back for nothing?"
5400I exclaimed;"gone where?"
5400I guess it is, but what''s going to become of me?
5400I guess some of your ancestors must have come over with that Mayflower outfit-- first cabin, eh?
5400I guess you know what Galt House is?
5400I guess you''ll be wanting your supper, wo n''t you?
5400I had believed in divorce then-- why not now?
5400I had gained something, in truth, but had I not also missed something?
5400I had spent my days in mastering an inadequate and archaic code-- why?
5400I hain''t offered to give you a retainer-- have I?"
5400I have no right here-- it is too fine for me, yes?
5400I have not refused to help you,--but you have not told me the scheme?
5400I know it will be late in the season,--but do n''t you think you could take us, Alison?
5400I know why old Timothy Prescott fought in the Revolution-- it was to get rid of kings, was n''t it, and to let the people have a chance?
5400I lose my job, you do n''t hear?
5400I love you-- won''t you believe it?"
5400I made an effort to achieve the frame of mind she suggested: since she took it so calmly, why should I be tortured by the tragedy of it?
5400I mean it.--What are you thinking about, Cynthia?"
5400I never leave my good Democratic friends on the outside, do I?"
5400I never told you George wrote me a couple of letters, did I?
5400I read an article in the newspaper about you today-- Mr. Caldwell gave it to me--""Did you like it?"
5400I reckon he is useful down there in Washington, but say, do you know what he always reminded me of?
5400I repeated it fervently...."No matter what happens?"
5400I repeated;"what has the Federal government been doing?"
5400I said, holding him out,"now where the devil got you that?"
5400I said, if we tried to cut wages down to a fifty- four hour basis we''d have a strike on our hands in every mill in Hampton,--didn''t I?
5400I said:--"''Senator, you''re not going to ask me to turn loose all those at once?''
5400I said;"were you mad to defy the Baron and his police?"
5400I suppose you are not making your accusation without cause?"
5400I suppose you came through New York and saw the sights?"
5400I thank Heaven you are big and honest and clumsy and--""And what, Dorothy?"
5400I think of it?
5400I thought he was a little seedy in the spring--didn''t you?
5400I turned to go, but Clarence Colfax was on my mind"General?"
5400I want to know all of you-- all, do you understand?
5400I was almost crazy when I came back and found they''d been here in this mill-- can''t you understand?
5400I was blindly seeking some way of escape when she said softly:"Did you really care?"
5400I was boss of that ward myself when I was twenty- six.... How''d you like that cigar?"
5400I was going to ask you-- have you thought of Mr. Austen Vane?
5400I was sick of him-- ain''t that enough?
5400I whispered; for I feared Mr. Marmaduke might appear at any moment;"or do you wish to remain in England always?"
5400I whispered;"do you hear anything?"
5400I wonder if it has struck you?
5400I wonder whether she knew I was lying?
5400I wonder who sent it?"
5400I wonder why he did not follow me up?"
5400I''d come for you, to your house,"he added quickly,"but we do n''t want any one to know, yet-- do we?"
5400I''d like to show you the rest of them-- can''t you come around to- morrow afternoon?"
5400I''d rather have him die-- d''ye hear?
5400I''m going to Ripton-- do you understand?
5400I''m going to be in Washington a day or two-- will you go walking with me to- morrow morning, Miss Wetherell?"
5400I''m not so bad for an enginoo, am I?"
5400I''m the only man that ever guessed it is n''t that so?"
5400I''ve certain bills--""Yes, yes,"agreed the Honourable Hilary;"do you know Mr. Brush Bascom and Mr. Manning?
5400I?
5400II"Shall we have coffee in the garden?"
5400If God, for example, had cast down, out of his abundant store, manna and quail in the desert, why could n''t he fling me a little pocket money?
5400If Honora is a complicated mechanism now, what will she be at twenty?
5400If I recommend you, why not, sir?"
5400If I was the government do you know what I''d do with the likes of you-- striking in war time?
5400If I were an enigma to them, what must they have thought of him?
5400If Nancy Durrett symbolized aristocracy, established order and prestige, what did Mrs. Scherer represent?
5400If anything''s happened, it''s happened to me-- hasn''t it?"
5400If he closes the shops-- what then?
5400If he thinks so much of us, and the way we run the town, what''s he squawking about?"
5400If her figure grew stout, what was to become of her charm as an''enfant gate''?
5400If it were not for Mr. Brinsmade and you gentlemen who help him, where would our Western armies be?
5400If madame, suggested Monsieur Cadron, had but a little dress a la Marie Antoinette?
5400If marriage is to be a mere trial of compatibility, why go through a ceremony than which there is none more binding in human and divine institutions?
5400If not a literary lion, what was that Somebody to be?
5400If she affects you this way, what will she do to me?
5400If she had written to him once, if she had come to him once, would he have desisted?
5400If so, where are your witnesses?
5400If the girl were really"bad,"as you insist, would she say a thing like that?
5400If the old dogmas were false, why should he regret them?
5400If they are bad, why do n''t you go to him and tell him so?
5400If we clear all the cobwebs away, what is the real function of this church as at present constituted?
5400If we''d fixed the thing up between us it could n''t have been any neater, could it?
5400If you and she are taken away, what have I left in life?
5400If you ca n''t be landed this time, it''s common sense for you to get out, and wait-- isn''t it?
5400If you can buy one member of the lower house for ten dollars, how many members can you buy for fifty?
5400If you close down the Pindar Shops, wo n''t it mean that a few more of your friends will lose their lives?
5400If you do n''t eat, somebody eats you-- is it not so?
5400If you have something to suggest--?
5400If you wanted to see me, why did n''t you get me to go down to Ripton, or come up and sit on my porch?
5400If you was n''t ashamed, why did n''t you tell, her before?
5400If you will not yet listen to the Spirit which is trying to make you comprehend, how then will you listen to me?
5400If young men are cruel in their schools, what shall be written of young women?
5400In Boston?"
5400In Gloucester Street?"
5400In God''s name, whar is Clark?"
5400In Mr. Bentley''s soul?
5400In front of the Banner office she heard a man say to an acquaintance who had evidently just arrived in town:--"The Chippering?
5400In obeying it, would she not lose all life had to give?
5400In other words, is he a man who might predict out of his own heated imagination?"
5400In short, do you know who he is?"
5400In the absence of these, who were the opposition?
5400In the center, the soft red glow of the candles, the gleaming silver, the shining cloth, the Church on one side-- and what on the other?
5400In these wet days had he begun to brood a little?
5400In what way has he opposed the United States troops?"
5400In whose company had she become drunk?
5400In, de tois, Ca- ro- line, Quo fair t''-apes cri-- e ma chere?
5400In, de, tois, Ca- ro- line, Qui ci ca ye, comme ca ma chere?
5400Individual:"Do you want to come in and see the convention and vote?"
5400Insall?"
5400Institutions endowed for medical research, for the conquest of deadly diseases?
5400Introduce me to him, will you?"
5400Is Johnny Tiernan downstairs?"
5400Is Master Sid asleep?"
5400Is Mr. Flint your example of the fittest type to exist and survive, or Gladstone or Wilberforce or Emerson or Lincoln?"
5400Is Mr. Richard home?''
5400Is he a man to read his prints and pamphlets?
5400Is he dead?
5400Is he ever relaxed?"
5400Is he in trouble?"
5400Is he to live like a Lord of the Treasury upon a master''s savings?"
5400Is he turning Yankee, too?"
5400Is he your third or fourth cousin?"
5400Is it America?"
5400Is it King David ye mane?"
5400Is it a weed that will grow anywhere, in a crevice between two stones in the city?
5400Is it as profitable now as it was, say, twenty years ago?
5400Is it corked?"
5400Is it eight hundred?"
5400Is it finished yet?"
5400Is it likely that he is still in love with Antoinette?"
5400Is it marriage?"
5400Is it not a fact that Jethro Bass holds his mortgage?
5400Is it not enough to admit that the money I get for your instruction keeps me in champagne?"
5400Is it not noble cause?"
5400Is it not so in English?"
5400Is it not so, Miss Manners?"
5400Is it not so, Monsieur le Colonel?"
5400Is it not so, Monsieur?
5400Is it not so?
5400Is it not so?"
5400Is it not so?"
5400Is it not so?"
5400Is it not so?"
5400Is it not so?"
5400Is it of such importance?"
5400Is it possible that there is a split in the feudal system at last?
5400Is it possible?"
5400Is it the bliss you pictured?"
5400Is it the generations which decide?
5400Is it the prelude of a tragedy?
5400Is it true that you come from-- Coniston?"
5400Is it true what you say?"
5400Is it true?"
5400Is it true?"
5400Is it yours?"
5400Is it-- sacrilegious?"
5400Is n''t Mr. Tooting one of your right- hand men?"
5400Is n''t he a darling?"
5400Is n''t he silly?
5400Is n''t it a great compliment?"
5400Is n''t it because the control has been taken off?"
5400Is n''t it because you''re so much of an individual that one fails to classify you?
5400Is n''t it in the hope of freeing themselves ultimately from these very conditions?
5400Is n''t it in us, too,--in you?
5400Is n''t it like him?
5400Is n''t it odd that she should be in love with him?"
5400Is n''t it ridiculous, Clara?"
5400Is n''t it so?
5400Is n''t it strange,"she exclaimed wonderingly,"that he should have come into both our lives, with such an influence, at this time?"
5400Is n''t it, after all, the most sensible, the only way out of a situation that has become impossible?
5400Is n''t life more than that?
5400Is n''t she from Maryland?"
5400Is n''t she?
5400Is n''t that a letter from my son?
5400Is n''t that being rich?"
5400Is n''t that enough?
5400Is n''t that enough?
5400Is n''t that enough?"
5400Is n''t that sensible?"
5400Is n''t that so, Flint?"
5400Is n''t that so, sonny?"
5400Is n''t that so?"
5400Is n''t that what they object to?
5400Is n''t that what we are trying to do?
5400Is n''t there a sofa in--in the parlour?"
5400Is n''t there a-- house I could get that is a-- a little-- a little better furnished?
5400Is n''t there any voice in you, anywhere, deep down, that can tell me?
5400Is n''t this a matter which concerns us alone?
5400Is not that crazy?
5400Is she a friend of yours, too, Steve?"
5400Is she here?"
5400Is she well?"
5400Is that about it?"
5400Is that dinner, Waters?
5400Is that it?
5400Is that it?"
5400Is that it?"
5400Is that right?"
5400Is that so?
5400Is that so?"
5400Is that the price?
5400Is that thoroughly understood?"
5400Is that true?"
5400Is that what troubles you?"
5400Is that what you mean, sir?"
5400Is that what you mean?"
5400Is that what you''re thinking?"
5400Is that you, Miller?"
5400Is that your game?"
5400Is the Pale Face Chief''s son a prophet?"
5400Is the boy dead?
5400Is the doctor coming?"
5400Is the doctor in?
5400Is the millennium arrived?"
5400Is the old lady really tucked away for the night, or is she coming down to read us a sermon?
5400Is the word to carry with it license to define in detail an invisible world, and to authorize and excommunicate those whose trust is different?
5400Is their God a God who will lift us out of our misery and distress?
5400Is there a lecturer, or, a playwright, or a politician, who has not, at one time or another, been in the judge''s place?
5400Is there a man so dead as not to feel a thrill at this achievement?
5400Is there a place in the world that is not haunted?
5400Is there a possibility of any such document?"
5400Is there a strike on here?
5400Is there another conspiracy at Terre aux Boeufs, or-- does somebody live there who has never before lent Auguste money?"
5400Is there any news to- day?"
5400Is there anything--?"
5400Is there no god but the superman''s god, which is himself?
5400Is there no god, anywhere, but this force we feel, restlessly creating only to destroy?
5400Is there no one of your province in the town to attest your identity?"
5400Is there no room for a genius in our infant military establishment?"
5400Is there nothing we can do, Dr. Frye?
5400Is there- is there a strike in the shops?
5400Is there-- is there any hope?
5400Is this Dr. Jonathan Pindar?
5400Is this Mr. Worthington?
5400Is this man a friend of yours?"
5400Is this storekeeper a great friend of his?"
5400Is this the little Minnie Farrell who left Foxon Falls two years ago?
5400Is this the new postmaster?
5400Is three hundred dollars too much?
5400Is war a thing to stir the blood?
5400Is you ready?
5400Is your law business so onerous that you could not go to- morrow?"
5400Is yours Scotch anger?
5400It ai n''t broke off?"
5400It has a soothing effect, has n''t it?
5400It is a good bill, or a bad bill?
5400It is in the Bible that we must forgive our neighbour-- how many times?"
5400It is n''t as hard as it would be in some other places, is it?"
5400It is no harm, is it?
5400It is not like it was but where is it all leading, my friend?
5400It makes me wonder how it can be guided-- what will come of it?"
5400It may be asked why the Railroad should bother itself by lending its political organization to private corporations?
5400It naturally makes an awkward situation between you and her, does n''t it?"
5400It ought to be so-- oughtn''t it?
5400It was n''t because you were not likely to get elected, was it?"
5400It was sweeping them dizzily--whither?
5400It was very foolish in me to tumble off, was n''t it?"
5400It was written to you?
5400It''ll do a lot of good, but how in hell are you going to handle Judd?...."
5400It''s a man- sized job, but is n''t it worth tackling?
5400It''s an old story,"said Mr. Colfax, hotly,"and why the devil did we fight England if it was n''t that every man should have his rights?
5400It''s because they give me a certain protection,--do you see?
5400It''s because we want the morning stars, do n''t you see?"
5400It''s good looking, is n''t it?"
5400It''s human nature to want to get on top-- ain''t it?"
5400It''s my company, is n''t it?
5400It''s not a message ye have-- it''s not a message about Bert?
5400It''s pretty plain, is n''t it?
5400It''s pulled him down,--you''ve noticed that he looks badly?"
5400It''s terrible to fall in love, is n''t it?
5400It''s your sister you want, is n''t it?"
5400Jackson?"
5400Jackson?"
5400Jamesy, is it?
5400Janet''s problem was in truth, though she failed so to specialize it, the supreme problem of our time: what is the path to self- realization?
5400Janet, are n''t you happy?"
5400Jenney?"
5400Jenney?"
5400Jennison,"he cried,"Jennison, why in hell did you give up?"
5400Jethro, hain''t he?
5400Jinny, what''s the story I hear about Judge Whipple''s young man buying Hester?"
5400John''s?"
5400Jonathan Pindar?
5400Jones?"
5400Judson''s?"
5400Just a very, very little, you know?"
5400Just as soon as this is introduced we''ll have Gates and Armstrong down here-- they''re the Ribblevale attorneys, are n''t they?
5400Just because I might have helped to keep Mr. Pindar from being shot by a crazy man-- that did n''t change you, did it?
5400Kame?"
5400Kaskaskia was somewhere to the west and north; but how far?
5400Kin you lick him, Smally?
5400Kin you shoot a pistol?"
5400L-- like country folks better than city folks?"
5400Langmaid asked sympathetically,"Harrod''s?"
5400Langmaid demanded"How?
5400Leaning over in the saddle, he whispered:"I''ll be back in a quarter of an hour Will you wait?"
5400Legally?
5400Let''s see, where was I?
5400Light the fire and burn it-- frame and all?
5400Like to see Bill Jenks?"
5400Like what?"
5400Limited trains are wonderful enough; but what shall be said of the modern mind, that travels faster than light?
5400Lincoln?"
5400Lincoln?"
5400Lincoln?"
5400Lise''s ambition to be supported in idleness and luxury to be condemned because she had believed her own to be higher?
5400Lise, aroused from her visions, demanded vehemently"Ai n''t he a millionaire?"
5400Listening to who?"
5400Lloyd?"
5400Longing for what?
5400Looking at my array of pamphlets, eh?
5400Looking up and catching her eye just as she was about to withdraw, I was suddenly impelled to ask:--"Well, what did you think of it?"
5400Louis?"
5400Louis?"
5400Louis?"
5400Louis?"
5400Louis?"
5400Love and wisdom were one, then?
5400Love forever, live always in this sanctuary she had made for me?
5400M- made up your mind?"
5400Madame came from New York, without doubt?
5400Mais-- que voulez- vous?"
5400Man or God?
5400Manners was a blellum?"
5400Manners was forcing her to marry Chartersea?
5400Manners''s family?"
5400Manners?"
5400Manners?"
5400Manners?"
5400Manners?"
5400Manners?"
5400Manning?"
5400Marriage?
5400Marse Dave?"
5400Marse Dave?"
5400Maturity thought that this child which was coming to her was sacred, too?
5400May I ask your name, sir?"
5400May I bring my nigger?
5400May I come over and see you sometime?"
5400May I not see Dorothy?
5400May I present to your Excellency, Mr. David Ritchie of Kentucky?"
5400May I send it to your hotel?
5400May I wear it to Cousin Eleanor''s to- day?"
5400McChesney?''
5400McCrae hesitated, and then demanded abruptly,"Ye''ll not be visiting?"
5400Me doing Dr. Jonathan harm?
5400Me kiddin''you?
5400Me or the Wool Trust?"
5400Me stand in the way of it?
5400Me?
5400Me?
5400Meader?"
5400Merrill?"
5400Might he ever win that new name, eat of the hidden manna of a hidden power, become the possessor of the morning star?
5400Might it not be delayed a little while-- a week longer?
5400Might it not be merely a figment of the fertile imagination of man?
5400Might it not be that I was an embryonic literary genius?
5400Might it not prove that this woman had let fall into the turbid waters of his soul the drop that was to clear them forever?
5400Might not Jethro wish to take vengeance upon him?
5400Might not both, physical and social, be due to the influence of the same invisible, experimenting, creating Hand?
5400Might not the inherent goodness of the dean be one thing, and his theology quite another?
5400Might not the price of this little house be likewise a piece of the Brinsmade charity?
5400Might this love for her not be another of his mad caprices?
5400Milly''s gone out, has n''t she?"
5400Minnie, tell me, what made you come back to Foxon Falls today?
5400Minnie, what church do you attend in Newcastle?
5400Minnie, you''ll stay here now?
5400Minnie?
5400Monday?
5400Money gives him freedom, does n''t it?
5400Monsieur-- que voulez- vous?"
5400Monsieur?"
5400Mr. Allen in London, and here?"
5400Mr. Bass, have you ever done anything the pleasure of doing which was pay enough, and to spare?"
5400Mr. Brice, do you feel like walking?"
5400Mr. Carvel reached for another cigar asked,"My dear,"he asked,"how is the Judge?"
5400Mr. Crocker, will you be my attorney if he should offer any objections?"
5400Mr. Hodder would take them?
5400Mr. Tiernan suddenly looked very solemn:"Kidding, is it?
5400Mr. Vane unquestionably realized what he was doing, but-- was it not almost time to call in the two gentlemen and-- and come to some understanding?
5400Mrs. Brocklehurst continued to smile encouragingly, and murmured"Yes?"
5400Mrs. Flint, with a"Who is it?"
5400Much as a locomotive, do n''t they?"
5400Must I give her up?
5400Must I take orders from the likes o''him, sir?"
5400Must we take it in the drastic sense of the Church of the early centuries- the Church of the Martyrs?"
5400My God, Honora, how can you ask?
5400My God, Mr. Dix, do I look like a rogue?"
5400My God, Orcutt, do n''t you know enough not to come in here wasting my time talking about the I. W. W.?
5400My God, how can I do it?
5400My Marsa he say:''Whaffor you leave ma house to be ramsacked by de Dutch?''
5400My Minnie, is it?
5400My being cried out for it, and in the world in which I lived we took what we wanted-- why not this?
5400My brother and Bob Worthington went out there one night and serenaded you, did n''t they?"
5400My chicken woman is most apathetic, but do you wonder, with the life they lead?"
5400My dear, how much did little Harris charge you for that dress?
5400My dear,"she said leaning toward Cynthia,"who is he?"
5400My father was-- how shall I say what he was?
5400My invitation had this characteristic note tacked on the end of it"DEAR CROCKER: Where are you?
5400My part?
5400My thoughts ran on to other possibilities; would he see his mother?
5400Mystery of mysteries how can it be?
5400N''Jethro Bass do n''t hold your mortgage, does he?
5400N- not a great deal?"
5400Need I say that that woman is you, Dorothy?
5400Never suspected a mite, did he?
5400Never told you I did n''t want you here, did I?"
5400Nevertheless he said kindly:"Are n''t you going in, Grant?"
5400No entree, Lula?
5400No, it is nothings to you, and you go away to fight for liberty,--ain''t it?
5400No, why should I have been?
5400No?
5400No?
5400No?
5400No?
5400Nom de nom, of what does his conversation consist?
5400Not a bad speech, is it?"
5400Not dignified, eh, Whipple?
5400Not do any good!--What did the girl mean?
5400Nothing, I mean, directly affecting your prospects of remaining-- where you are?"
5400Noticing my silence, he demanded wickedly:--"Where are you going, Hugh?"
5400Now I have confessed myself, and what is the result?
5400Now I''ve often wanted to ask you, did you buy that bonnet with the trembly jet things for Mis''Bass?"
5400Now if that could have been handled otherwise--""Who told Hunt to go in?"
5400Now that he was here, where was he to stay?
5400Now that she is there, how shall we proceed to give the joys of her Elysium their full value?
5400Now that the days of suffering were as they had not been, insistent questions dinned in her ears: was she entitled to the joys to come?
5400Now that the ocean was to be between them, was it love that she felt for Clarence at last?
5400Now that you''ve got your union, what''s the good of it?
5400Now was n''t that queer?
5400Now was the psychological moment for Austen Vane, but who was to beard Hilary?
5400Now what are the inferences to which you object?"
5400Now what is the surprise?"
5400Now what''s the name of that new boat with everything on her from a cafe to a Stock Exchange?
5400Now who do you think stopped at the booth for a chat with Miss Jinny?
5400Now will ye rest aisy awhile, sir?"
5400Now, Augusta, I''d like to know what you make of that?
5400Now, I put it to you, why do n''t he sink some of that money where it belongs-- in living wages?
5400Now, Tom,"said he,"what is this fine tale about a hanging?"
5400Now, he asked himself, was it the dean, or the dean''s theology through which his regeneration had come?
5400Now, provided the conditions are not as good as they might be, how are you going to improve them if you find yourself isolated here, as you say?"
5400Now-- to- day?"
5400Now-- what colour would you paint it?"
5400Object to kindness?
5400Occasionally, somewhat to Edward''s alarm, Hannah demanded:"Where are you taking Lise this evening?"
5400Of Virginia?
5400Of some fair home set upon the downs across the sea, of some heroic English mother who had kept her tears until he was gone?
5400Of the price of railroads;--is it not so?
5400Of the remainder-- who can say?"
5400Of what avail was anger against it, or the puny rage of man?
5400Of what gratification now was the overthrow of Jethro Bass?
5400Of what use is it to doubt the eternal justice?"
5400Of what use to quarrel with the word Person if God be conscious?
5400Of what use to tell him?
5400Often Captain Harrod or Bowman or some of the others would pause in their arguments and say gravely,"What does Davy think of it?"
5400Oh, Cynthia,"he cried, carried away by the ecstasy of this dream which he had, summoned up,"why do you resist me?
5400Oh, Howard, why did you take it?"
5400Oh, Hugh, why are you so foolish and so proud?
5400Oh, Mary, ca n''t you see?
5400Oh, ca n''t you see that an authoritative statement is just what an ethical person does n''t want?
5400Oh, can you not see why you must go?"
5400Oh, how could you ever have doubted it?
5400Oh, my dear, if I had n''t had you to take me, what should I have done?
5400Oh, tell me, is Mr. Carvel dead?"
5400Oh, why did you change?"
5400Oh, why has life become such a problem?
5400Old Abe, at half- past ten?
5400Old friends?
5400On the seas?
5400On what Authority was it based?
5400On you, do you understand?"
5400One day?
5400One of the burning and unsolved questions of to- day is,--will it survive the twentieth century?
5400Only-- don''t you think you are a little too sensitive about yourself, when you are teased?"
5400Or any one?"
5400Or do I drink with you?"
5400Or do you care whether they endure beyond your lifetime?
5400Or do your ears burn?
5400Or does Comyn believe that these old eyes can see no farther than the spectacles before them?
5400Or had it been the knowledge of her own longing, and his desire to assuage it?
5400Or had my eyes deceived me?
5400Or have you a seat in Kent?"
5400Or is it a plant that requires tender care and the water of self- sacrifice?
5400Or is this merely commendable modesty on your part?"
5400Or perhaps you''d rather get married when you are eighteen?"
5400Or shall I read to you?"
5400Or shall we draw our conclusions as to what the Creeds may mean to us by pondering on the life of Christ, and striving to do his will?
5400Or unfortunately, which was it?
5400Or was her future to be cast among those who moved in the world and helped to sway it?
5400Or was it at one of those drawing- room shows where a medium holds conversation with your soul, while your body sleeps on the lounge?
5400Or was it something in Hodder''s voice that seemed to illumine the ancient words with a new meaning?
5400Or was it thunder?
5400Or were the lusts of greed and power to increase until in the end they had swallowed the leaven?
5400Or would the time come when she would be forced to take a side?
5400Or would they be men and bring from Harrodstown the company he asked for?
5400Or-- traitorous thought!--doesn''t he care?
5400Order and design?
5400Others took up the question,"How will ye do it, Major Cozby?"
5400Ought n''t we to be firing them, too?"
5400Ought not he, Stephen Brice, to ask this man with the cigar what he knew, and tell Judge Whipple?
5400Ought she not to have said,"If you do come, I will not see you?"
5400P- President say he''d give you the postmastership, Eph?"
5400Pa, will you let me?"
5400Paint Cynthy''s picture?"
5400Painter- man?"
5400Pardieu, what was he to do now?
5400Paret?"
5400Paret?"
5400Paret?"
5400Paret?"
5400Paret?"
5400Paret?"
5400Parr?"
5400Parr?"
5400Parr?"
5400Parr?"
5400Patty, if I return, will you be my wife?"
5400Perchance they had sunk,--who could tell?
5400Perhaps Mr. Paret would like to look about the grounds?"
5400Perhaps he thought-- but how can we tell what he thought?
5400Philippe?"
5400Pictures?
5400Pity, wahn''t it?"
5400Pledged to what?
5400Pomfret?"
5400Pomfret?"
5400Pomfret?"
5400Poor child,--what can have happened to her?
5400Poor devils, they do n''t get anything like what they ought to get, do they?
5400Pound''s church, and Mrs. Ewan taught us?
5400Pound''s sermons, and the intimation of my father that wickedness was within me, like an incurable disease,--was not mine the logical conclusion?
5400Pouvez- vous me diriger chez Monsieur Gratiot?"
5400Prairie grass, is it?"
5400Pray, how did the duke appear as he was going into the Serpentine?"
5400Prescott?"
5400Presently she burst out:"Mr. Crocker, why is it that you avoid Miss Thorn?
5400Presently she inquired curiously:"Are n''t you sorry?"
5400Pretty cosey, eh?
5400Put all the rates back because this upstart politician Crewe is making a noise?
5400Put up the kit-- hev you?"
5400Que fais- tu donc?
5400Que voulez- vous?"
5400Question before the Committee, undisposed of: Who nominated Samuel Price for Moderator?
5400Quicksands for life?
5400R- read it again, sometime, Cynthy?"
5400Rangely?"
5400Read history, hain''t you?"
5400Readin''the General''s bill, are ye?
5400Reasonable?
5400Rebellion?
5400Redbrook?"
5400Reetchie?"
5400Remarking the pain in my face, he added, with a concern which may have been comical:"And she is not married?"
5400Remember what?
5400Renault?"
5400Rench?
5400Repudiated her?
5400Responsible for what?
5400Richard, what have you done?"
5400Richard,"she said,"do you recall my asking you in the coach, on the way from Castle Yard, for the exact day you met my father in Arlington Street?"
5400Richard?"
5400Riddle?"
5400Ripley?"
5400Ritchie?"
5400Ritchie?"
5400Ritchie?"
5400Ritchie?"
5400Robertson?"
5400Rollins, where''s the cart?
5400Rossiter?"
5400S- said you liked books?"
5400S- said you would, did n''t you-- said you would?"
5400S- stick pretty close to business, do n''t you, since the people sent you to Congress?"
5400S-- something to have dreamed-- eh-- something to have dreamed?"
5400Sack it?
5400Said I was the man to see if you was a candidate, did n''t he?
5400Satterlee?"
5400Satterlee?"
5400Save me from what?
5400Say, I always told you Pardriff was n''t a reformer, did n''t I?"
5400Say, Mr. Hodder, ai n''t you going to have any sody?"
5400Say, did you see that smile?
5400Say, do you wonder I ai n''t got much use for your church people?
5400Say, had n''t you better let Minnie take it, and go home?"
5400Say, what was there in it for me?--packing tools in the Pindar shops, and you the son of my boss?
5400Say, who is he?
5400Say, you ai n''t going to tell''em at home?"
5400Say, young man, did you ever hear of Stephen Arnold Douglas, alias the Little Giant, alias the Idol of our State, sir?"
5400Say,"he demanded aggressively,"are Parr and Langmaid any better than Beatty, or any of the hold- up men Beatty covers?
5400Say-- you didn''t--?"
5400Scherer?"
5400Scherer?"
5400Scoundrels, is it?
5400See?"
5400Seeing Stephen standing there, he exclaimed:"Mistah Brice, if de Dutch take Camp Jackson, is we niggers gwinter be free?"
5400Seeing that my father did not answer, he asked:"Have you joined the Highlanders?
5400Seeming echoes of the hideous mockery of it rang in his ears: where is the God that this man proclaimed?
5400Seems to me I heard about some cutting up at Andover-- eh, Bob?"
5400Sh''ou hear,"he added relevantly,"th''Andy Jackson was married?"
5400Shall I destroy the mental image of the reader who has known her so long by trying to tell what she looked like?
5400Shall I make a complete confession?
5400Shall I speak of your career in France?
5400Shall I stand by selfishly and see him ruined, and thousands of others like him?"
5400Shall I telephone for the doctor?"
5400Shall I tell you about Colonel Clark?
5400Shall I tell you more?
5400Shall I tell you that I fell in love with him?
5400Shall I tell you the smartest thing you ever did?"
5400Shall I tell you what they were?"
5400Shall I tell you?
5400Shall all the happy shipmates then Stand singing brotherly?
5400Shall it be confessed that curiosity stepped into the breach?
5400Shall it be told crudely why he went that night?
5400Shall it be whispered that I regretted his belligerency?
5400Shall we be pioneers here in Foxon Falls in the new experiment?
5400Shall we be supine forever?
5400Shall we ever, I wonder, develop the enlightened education that will know how to take advantage of such initiative as was mine?
5400Shall we follow him?
5400Shall we interpret the Gospels by the Creeds, which in turn purport to be interpretations of the Gospels?
5400Shall we learn other things than those that have hitherto been contained in our philosophy?
5400Shall you be there?"
5400She did not appear to hear him, her eyes lingering on the room, until presently she asked:--"What''s the name of this hotel?"
5400She enters voluntarily into an agreement whereby she puts herself under the control of her husband: his interests, his career, his--""Comfort?"
5400She had been saving herself-- for what?
5400She had never been able to speak to him about his work and what did her opinion matter to him?
5400She had opened the door of the cage for what?
5400She had tasted it-- was it sweet?--that sense of being swept away, engulfed by an elemental power beyond them both, yet in them both?
5400She had wanted to kill him, yes, to kill herself-- but how could he ever have believed that she would stoop to another method of retaliation?
5400She had wished to kill him-- would she remain desperate enough to ruin him?
5400She has been watching with me?"
5400She herself appeared to acknowledge no bar to their further intimacy-- why should he?
5400She is a noble woman--""Her son?"
5400She is not married?"
5400She keeps her good looks, does n''t she?
5400She lives in that place you''ve been going to so much, lately,--doesn''t she?"
5400She looks like Ceres, does n''t she?
5400She looks like a Holbein-- doesn''t she?"
5400She took one, and put it in her mouth:"Oh,"she said,"how good they were-- Isn''t it strange how a taste brings back events?
5400She was aroused by hearing some one saying:--"Isn''t this Miss Wetherell?"
5400She was free now, indeed, but was she any nearer to me?
5400She was his-- what did it matter?
5400She was leaving them-- for what?
5400She was living-- what did it all matter?
5400She was not made for poverty-- and who so well as she was fitted for the social leadership of our community?
5400She was not one who shrank from self- knowledge, and the question put itself to her,"Whither was this matter tending?"
5400She was reading such and such a book-- had he read it?
5400She was silent a moment, and then she demanded:"Why did n''t you tell me who you were?
5400She wore--"but why destroy the picture?
5400She''s about the age of my girls, and she can live in my house: Ai n''t I right?"
5400She''s left Foxon Falls?
5400Shorter?"
5400Should I speak of having seen her?
5400Should I tell him?
5400Should I wake Tom?
5400Should he go in?
5400Should he go, or should he not?
5400Should he resign, or go away for a while to some quiet place before he made such a momentous decision?
5400Should he try first to see Alison?
5400Should she follow him to the capital and appeal to him?
5400Should she tell him?
5400Should she write and tell them the truth, as she had told Peter?
5400Should the letters be put in one volume, and the life in another?
5400Should we deliver these heirlooms to the mob?
5400Should we ever see them again?
5400Simpson?"
5400Simpson?"
5400Since entire concealment was now impossible, the question was,--how complete a confession would be necessary?
5400Since he went to France?
5400Sit down, wo n''t you?"
5400So I said:"Is this the Charlestown road?"
5400So it''s into the wather ye were?"
5400So much was given her, ought she not to be content?
5400So that when a fellow came aboard he''d say:''What state am I in, Cap?''
5400So you licked''em again, eh-- down in Washington?
5400So you love me like that, do you?"
5400So you think I''m going to fight for this-- for money?
5400So you want to see her?
5400So you''re going to send him to college, are you?
5400So you''re the spy, are you?"
5400Some jewellery?"
5400Some unaccountable impulse prompted her to ask:"And you?
5400Something of a sendoff, eh?"
5400Something troubling you?
5400Sometime?"
5400Sometimes they get one with the doctrinal type of mind--a Newman-- but how often?
5400Sorrow?
5400Speak, ca n''t you?"
5400Spence?"
5400Spence?"
5400Spence?"
5400Spence?"
5400Spence?"
5400Spence?"
5400Standing on your feet all day till you''re wore out for six dollars a week-- what''s there in it?"
5400Stay here with him in this filthy place until he gets tired of you and throws you out on the street?
5400Stephen did not answer, for the piano had started again,"If ever I consent to be married, And who could refuse a good mate?
5400Stephen tell him?
5400Stephen was determined to be affable and kind, and( shall we say it?)
5400Stephen''s?"
5400Stephen?"
5400Strange that I should have remembered your name, was n''t it?
5400Strange?
5400Stripped of the glamour of these, was not Rolfe''s doctrine just one of taking, taking?
5400Subject:"What would the State do without the Railroad?"
5400Suddenly she said:--"You saw Lise?"
5400Suddenly, from the back of the hall, a voice called out:--"How about House Bill 709?"
5400Supper, young man?
5400Suppose I fell in love with him?"
5400Suppose I told you that Austen Vane has avoided me, that he would not utter a word against you or in favour of himself?
5400Suppose I told you that Austen Vane was the soul of honour, that he saw your side and presented it as ably as you have presented it?
5400Suppose I told you that he was intriguing now, as he has been all along, to obtain the nomination for the governorship?
5400Suppose Maude could not help loving me, in spite of my weaknesses and faults, even as I loved Nancy in spite of hers?
5400Suppose Mr. Ritchie were to bring him to your Excellency, and he were to give you his word that he would leave the province at the first opportunity?
5400Suppose his hopes were blighted-- what would happen?
5400Suppose one does n''t become a superman?
5400Suppose one of them were to find the quarter which God had intended for me?
5400Suppose she did find out?
5400Suppose there were a God after all?
5400Suppose there''s a deadlock, as you say there will be, how are you going to handle it?
5400Surely you do n''t want me to dress like these Rivington women, do you?"
5400Surprise?
5400Susan only intended to stay a minute, but how was Bob to know that?
5400Sutton?"
5400Sutton?"
5400Sutton?"
5400Swain?"
5400T- takes your mind off things-- don''t it?"
5400T- told Levi Dodd to dismiss her, did n''t you?"
5400Take it, do you hear me?
5400Take pains over the smaller cases, and the larger cases will come of themselves, eh?"
5400Tell me if she is gone away?"
5400Tell me where you learned to be so silent?"
5400Tell me, Minnie, why did you run away from me two years ago?
5400Tell me, Mrs. Pindar,--have you heard anything more from George?
5400Tell me, Nick,"I asked, laying my hand upon his shoulder,"do you love this girl so much that you would let nothing come between you and her?"
5400Tell me, do they really mean to go as far as rebellion?"
5400Tell me, is it your Uncle Grafton?"
5400Tell me,"he adds contemptuously,"is genius honoured among you?"
5400Tell me,"said he, diving desperately at the root of it,"how does Miss Trevor feel about my getting out?
5400Tell me,"says she, pointing at the royal yard of a tall East Indiaman,"did you go as high as that when it was rough?"
5400Tell me,"she asked, choosing another of the beans which he still absently held,"do you get them for these?"
5400Tell me,"she implored,"what can I do?
5400Tell me-- a woman still beautiful, commanding, of perhaps eight and thirty?
5400Temple?"
5400Temple?"
5400Temple?"
5400Temple?"
5400Temple?"
5400Temple?"
5400Terrible suspicion for a Bostonian,--had he been carried away?
5400That evening, as Janet was wiping the dishes handed her by her mother, she was repeating to herself"Shall I go-- or sha n''t I?"
5400That he is a well- known author?
5400That hurts, does it?
5400That is like a woman, is n''t it?"
5400That is n''t so is it?"
5400That is the type we want-- eh?
5400That relieves, your aldermen of all responsibility, does n''t it?"
5400That she is jealous?"
5400That sounds like nonsense, do n''t it?"
5400That was all Dicky could think about at first-- would he be well enough to go with Mr. Bentley by Saturday?
5400That we''re going to pay''em for work they do n''t do?
5400That will be because you are open- minded, because there is room in you for growth and change?"
5400That you intend to assist him to escape from justice?
5400That''s Biblical, is n''t it?"
5400That''s a nice kind of business for a church member, ai n''t it?"
5400That''s democratic enough-- isn''t it?
5400That''s enough, ai n''t it?"
5400That''s fair, is n''t it?"
5400That''s love, is n''t it?
5400That''s what he said, is it?
5400That''s what they call syndicalism, is n''t it?"
5400That''s what you were having,--a good time with me,--wasn''t it?
5400That?
5400The Church has lost ground-- why?
5400The Colonel faced quickly about, and held out his gloved hand cordially,"Captain Ulysses Grant,"said he;"of the old army?"
5400The Colonel''s a man of honor, ai n''t he?"
5400The General was silent a moment: Then he said"Do you remember meeting me on the boat when I was leaving St. Louis, after the capture of Fort Henry?"
5400The Goddess of Liberty linked to-- what?"
5400The Petrel was sailing stern first.... Would any of us, indeed, ever see home again?
5400The State Tribune of Mr. Peter Pardriff, who had stood so staunchly for Mr. Crewe and better things?
5400The Tremont House, I suppose?"
5400The boys hain''t got no reason to suspicion you care anything about politics, have they?"
5400The brotherhood of man, cooperation-- all that is Socialism, is n''t it?
5400The captains over the tens and the captains over the hundreds would want little retainers-- and who was to pay these?
5400The crowd drew back, But did Miss Carvel retreat?
5400The desire in me to which my father had referred, which would brook no opposition, which twisted and squirmed until it found its way to its object?
5400The doctor turned again:"Yes?"
5400The dreaded voice repeated that word, and sent a thought that struck terror into her heart: Whence had come the substance of that charity?
5400The figures, to be of any use, ought to appeal to my imagination-- oughtn''t they?
5400The fog of Edward''s bewilderment never cleared, and the unformed question was ever clamouring for an answer-- how had it happened?
5400The girl clung to her bonnet Will you like her any the less when you know that it was a shovel bonnet, with long red ribbons that tied under her chin?
5400The hint had been somewhat superfluous; but the question remained, what was necessary?
5400The issue of what?
5400The legislature has shortened your hours,--but why?
5400The little street was deserted, but in Pall Mall the dark forms of busses could be made out scurrying for shelter, one wondered where?
5400The messenger--""Yes?"
5400The old porter recognized Paul by a mere shake of the head and the words,"Yere back, are ye?"
5400The people can always be trusted to do what is right, ca n''t they, Uncle Jethro?"
5400The question is, could you become reasonable?"
5400The question is, why are they so?
5400The question to be decided by the court was, What is a raft?
5400The quiet but firm note of faith was, not lost on the financier, and yet was not he quite sure what was to be made of it?
5400The rain from the roofs was splashing on the bricks of the passage.... What would Mr. Insall say, if he knew?
5400The reader very naturally demands some specific information-- how did Jethro do it?
5400The rear, is it?
5400The story''s so exciting, is n''t it, Matthew?"
5400The sweetness of her voice held Virginia as in a spell, and the sergeant stopped groaning that he might listen:"You have a wife?"
5400The thing must be said and who would say it?
5400The thought came to her-- was it that which sustained him now?
5400The thought came to him: was he indeed greater, more vital than the religion he professed?
5400Their lives were spared, but to what purpose, since the White Chief looked with disfavor upon them?
5400Then I heard the chauffeur ask:--"Where do you wish to go, sir?"
5400Then came a voice from beyond, calling:--"That you, Carvel?
5400Then find Mr. Carvel, wo n''t you, please?
5400Then he added uneasily,"C- can''t you get ready?"
5400Then he heard that the Judge was dying--""He has given his word to Mr. Brinsmade?
5400Then he heard the specialist say,"Hello, Mr. Hodder, what can I do for you?"
5400Then how did you know it was written by my son?
5400Then she added with a fair unconcern,"do you happen to know where Mr. Allen is this morning?"
5400Then she asked:--"Mrs. Maturin, do you believe in God?"
5400Then she said:"Do you think, in bidding against me, that he behaved, like a gentleman?"
5400Then she said:--"So Auguste sold it again?"
5400Then turning to Virginia, he said,"Will you dance, Miss Carvel?"
5400Then what were you doing with it?
5400Then why are you herewith us?"
5400Then why had she run away from him?
5400Then you know of Jonathan?
5400Then, as we sat talking in low tones, the door opened, and a hearty voice cried out:"Now where is this rebel, this traitor?
5400Then, by thunder, Cozby takes a step right up to the bar and cries out,''Judge, are n''t you about done with that man?''
5400There ai n''t nothin''to be afeard of, eh, stranger?"
5400There are those who demand the presence of a woman in order to be heroes...."Give us a chance, ca n''t you?"
5400There is n''t anything criminal in that, is there?"
5400There was a chorus of"No''s"and"Go ahead, Abe?"
5400There was always the excitement that the leash might break-- and then what?
5400There was anxiety on his face as he asked:--"There has n''t been any accident, has there, Euphrasia?"
5400There was but one disquieting question left: What was to become of the North Wind and his friends?
5400There was good in her still,--but what was"good"?
5400There was no chance, then, of Hamilton moving at present?
5400There was no need,"she exclaimed;"there was no need, do you hear?
5400There was one thought that drifted across the chaos like a blue light of the spirit: Could she control the storm?
5400There was the slightest unsteadiness in her voice as she replied:--"Is it necessary to go into that, Hugh?
5400There were twenty of us, and we were resistless, were n''t we, Brush?"
5400There''s a girl in it, is there?"
5400There''s a vacuum behind the small of your back, is n''t there?
5400There''s no reason why religion ought n''t to be fun, is there?
5400There''s plenty of time for that-- after things get settled a little-- isn''t there?"
5400There, do you believe me now?"
5400There, sir, was I not right to beg Sir John Fielding to put you in safe keeping until your grandfather can send for you?"
5400These had stood still, anchored to their traditions, while she--had she grown?
5400They ca n''t hold him a day-- can they, Lige?"
5400They called the architecture Tudor, did n''t they, Pa?"
5400They promenade themselves on the levee, they look down from ze gallerie, mais--""But what, Xavier?"
5400They said I had run off with Mr. Brent, did n''t they?"
5400They say he''s got Adam to cough up six thousand extra since five o''clock, but the question is-- ain''t he stringin''us?
5400They told me you''d arrived-- why did n''t you come to us?
5400They will have time to attend the ball before you send them down the river?"
5400They will try to put you out, as a heretic,--won''t they?"
5400They''re kind and neighbourly, are n''t they?"
5400Thinkin''of upsettin''Jethro?"
5400This is the best yet, is n''t it?
5400This is what you have been working on?
5400This morning?
5400This remark made him wonder seriously whether the lawyer''s mind were not giving away; and if so, to whom was he to turn at this eleventh hour?
5400This was done pretty slick, was n''t it?
5400Those guys?
5400Those jays do n''t know anything, do they?
5400Those were the good old days-- eh, Jethro?"
5400Thought he''d take you in the rear by going to Washington, did he?
5400Three hundred dollars is not an insignificant sum to a young man on the threshold of his practice, is it?"
5400Throwing myself away?
5400Tiernan?"
5400Timothy''s boy, Bert?
5400To Glencoe?
5400To Kirkwood or Webster?
5400To New Orleans?
5400To Rotherhithe-- Redriff?
5400To St. Louis, eh, and to New Orleans?
5400To escape?
5400To fight for somethings you would give your life for-- not so?
5400To have implored him to relinquish the place had been waste of breath; and then-- her reasons?
5400To how many of these girls would come such a love?
5400To my amazement the clergyman said quietly:--"Now what was the trouble, David?"
5400To take care of''em, eh?
5400To tell her father her suspicions?
5400To what particular deed of violence do you refer?"
5400To whom should I go now for a confirmation of my wavering beliefs?
5400Told you to talk to Job Braden, did n''t he?"
5400Tom McChesney?
5400Tom said:''Hain''t I always been a good beast, Jethro?
5400Too bran new for old St. Louis, eh?"
5400Too wicked and sophisticated down thar to suit ye?"
5400Turn you out?
5400Twice, during the afternoon and evening, he had spoken those words-- or was it three times?
5400Tyers?"
5400Und vat vill you say of Goethe?"
5400Und you are a soldier,--would you run away from your comrades to live safe and happy?
5400Under that damned new charter the franchise has got to be bid for-- hasn''t it?
5400Unless it is the desire and willingness to strive for a larger interest than the individual interest, work and suffer for others?
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vane?"
5400Vat is your name,--Tavid?
5400Virginia-- will you play my hymn-- once more-- once more?"
5400Visions of long- familiar homes and long- familiar friends?
5400W- what''s that feller''s name down to Ayer, Massachusetts, deals in all kinds of seeds?
5400W- what''s the next move?"
5400W-- wanted me, did n''t you?
5400W-- who is that?
5400WHAT''S IN HEREDITY?
5400Wahn''t she a lady?"
5400Wahn''t she capable?
5400Wahn''t she honest?
5400Wait just a minute-- won''t you?"
5400Wall up the universities?
5400Walpole?"
5400Walpole?"
5400Want it bad-- don''t you?"
5400Was Christ like that?
5400Was Ditmar ashamed of her?...
5400Was Ditmar there?
5400Was Hilary Vane in his right senses?
5400Was I not trying to do that very thing now?
5400Was I one of those who he had decreed before I was born must suffer the tortures of the flames of hell?
5400Was I sure that I wanted her-- for life?
5400Was I, as he had declared, utterly depraved and doomed in spite of myself to be one?
5400Was Jethro at meeting for any religious purpose?
5400Was Monsieur mad to remain out at night?
5400Was Washington so good a man?
5400Was any cause worth it?
5400Was ever stronghold taken thus?
5400Was ever such a refinement of cruelty practised before?
5400Was he crumbling?
5400Was he dead, or sleeping?
5400Was he doing right?
5400Was he going to put the story in a magazine?
5400Was he here?
5400Was he like that?...
5400Was he like them?
5400Was he not among his own Northern Democrats at Freeport?
5400Was he not her brand, and would she not get the credit of snatching him?
5400Was he not pleading for himself rather than for the human cause he professed?
5400Was he prepared to marry her, if he could obtain her in no other way?
5400Was he right in this?
5400Was he still of St. John''s, then?
5400Was he thinking of her?
5400Was he, after all, an utterly different man than what she had thought him?
5400Was her bitterness against the North not just?
5400Was her name really Chiltern?
5400Was his hero, after all, a homespun demagogue?
5400Was it Dorothy''s conduct that drove me?
5400Was it Polly Ann''s voice?
5400Was it a head that broke the line of the crest?
5400Was it a lack all women felt in men?
5400Was it a misinterpretation, after all-- what Lottie Myers had implied and feared to say?...
5400Was it a trick of the artist?
5400Was it a will- o''-the- wisp?
5400Was it as a husband-- that he loved her?
5400Was it because he could n''t satisfy her craving?
5400Was it because he had become a manager, and governed the business during her father''s frequent absences?
5400Was it because he knew that his hour was not yet come?
5400Was it because she was a country girl, and poor?
5400Was it because when he had once spoken so crudely of the University I had seen the reflection of her spirit in his eyes?
5400Was it because?
5400Was it compassion she read in them, on this that should be the happiest of her days?
5400Was it contentment?
5400Was it dancing?
5400Was it fancy that her husband''s physical attributes had changed since he had attained his new position of dignity?
5400Was it he who started the old rumor which made such havoc that afternoon?
5400Was it his power?
5400Was it honoured?
5400Was it in reality Nancy who had brought about this crisis?
5400Was it instinct or premonition that led them to accost the bonne?
5400Was it likely that Helene, Vicomtesse d''Ivry- le- Tour, would think twice of me?
5400Was it not a prophecy,--that drove which sent him into Mr. Carvel''s store?
5400Was it not a social library?
5400Was it not an assumption of Northern superiority, to be resented?
5400Was it not by grace of her association with him she was there, a spectator of the toil beneath?
5400Was it not courting destruction?
5400Was it not fair to fight a scoundrel with his own weapons?
5400Was it not he who had lifted her farther above all this?
5400Was it not just possible that I should have to revise my idea of him, acknowledge that he might become more formidable than I had thought?
5400Was it not she who had changed and redeemed him?
5400Was it not true, if she had been of that class, that Ditmar would not have dared to use and deceive her?
5400Was it not what I had desired?
5400Was it out of consideration for her that Mrs. Brice would turn the Judge from this topic which he seemed to love best?
5400Was it peace or war?
5400Was it possible that I, like Mr. Trevor, had been deprived of all the morals I had ever possessed?
5400Was it possible that Mr. Wharton meant to sue the General?
5400Was it possible that a lingering doubt remained in her mind that to postpone her happiness would perhaps be to lose it?
5400Was it possible that a woman lived who would even hesitate?
5400Was it possible that he had been supplanted?
5400Was it possible that he had no sense of guilt?
5400Was it possible that he, Hilary Vane, could have been one of those referred to by the Preacher?
5400Was it possible that he, too, did n''t love Nancy?
5400Was it possible that it was her own voice using very much the same words for which she had rebuked Mrs. Merrill?
5400Was it possible that she had felt nothing and I all?
5400Was it possible that she, Alison Parr, were going to church now?
5400Was it possible that these people were coming to a slave auction?
5400Was it possible that they did not read her terrible secret in her face?
5400Was it possible that they might not have come to New Orleans after all?
5400Was it possible, after all, that I had been right and my father wrong?
5400Was it possible, after all, that she had not come, or-- more agitating thought-- had gone back to New York?
5400Was it possible, indeed, for the simple- minded to come to the capital and not become involved in cabals?
5400Was it possible?
5400Was it strange that Dr. Courtenay should pride himself upon the discovery of a new beauty?
5400Was it surprising that the Gazette should contain a poem with the doctor''s well- known ear- marks upon it?
5400Was it the chivalry inherited from a long life of Colfaxes who were gentlemen?
5400Was it the coffee- houses?
5400Was it the glance cast in her direction that had caused him to delay his departure?
5400Was it the light falling from above that brought out the lines of his face so strongly?
5400Was it the light of faith?
5400Was it the slap on the back that opened Stephen''s eyes?
5400Was it the yacht?
5400Was it too late to make that effort?....
5400Was it true that she would marry Clarence?
5400Was it true that they had something in common?
5400Was it true, as the Vicomte had said, that she was destined to be loved amidst the play of drama?
5400Was it true?
5400Was it twenty minutes, or an hour, that we paraded?
5400Was it worth while now, I asked myself, to disturb the peace of that mind?
5400Was it''Auld Robin Gray''that she sang?
5400Was it, as she said, weakness, lack of courage to take life when it was offered her?....
5400Was it, indeed, possible that I could prevent her marriage with this man?
5400Was it?"
5400Was my horse fed?
5400Was n''t Clark even then on the Ohio raising a great army with authority from the Commonwealth of Virginia to rid them of the red scourge?
5400Was n''t I a little idiot not-- to know that you''d make for a place like this and dig a hole and stay in it, and let the world go hang?"
5400Was n''t Souther captured last week, and that rash letter of Puss Russell''s to Jack Brinsmade published in the Democrat?"
5400Was n''t it fortunate I had the proofs with me?
5400Was n''t it him gathered the Convintion here in Harrodstown last year that chose him and another to go to the Virginia legislatoor?
5400Was n''t it understood, when that avenue was laid out, that it was to form part of the system of boulevards?"
5400Was n''t my darter over there last month, and seen him?
5400Was n''t that one reason why she wanted the child?
5400Was n''t the great, ugly river and dirty city at the end of the earth, to be written about in Boston journals?
5400Was not Monsieur going to the country, to a paradise?
5400Was not perfection at war with the world''s scheme, and did not achievement spring from a void?
5400Was not that her hand in mine?
5400Was not the Captain hired to do a degrading service?
5400Was not the twist ingrained?
5400Was one standing on the ground looking at his double go to heaven?
5400Was she a traitor to that flag for which her people had fought in three wars?
5400Was she accusing him of a lack of frankness?
5400Was she different?
5400Was she fond of children?
5400Was she glad to see him?
5400Was she glad to see me?
5400Was she going to let pass what Auguste had hinted?
5400Was she in love with Ditmar?
5400Was she in love with him?
5400Was she indeed like that?
5400Was she not justified now in marrying him?
5400Was she shouting it, too?
5400Was she the divorced daughter, or was she not?
5400Was she thinking of the Englishman of whom she had spoken?
5400Was she to speak of the Duke of Chartersea?
5400Was she trying to make amends, or reminding me in this subtle way of the cause of our quarrel?
5400Was she waiting until he should have crossed the bar before she should pay some inexorable penalty of which he knew nothing?
5400Was she, also, like that, indifferent and self- absorbed?
5400Was she, as she seemed, taking all this as a matter of course?
5400Was she?
5400Was that the beat of the drums?
5400Was the Celebrity not undergoing the crucial test of a true sport?
5400Was the camp deserted?
5400Was the flag still there?
5400Was the fort taken?
5400Was the house empty, after all?
5400Was the place watched?
5400Was the principle of the Republic to prevail and spread and change the complexion of the world?
5400Was the unexpected to occur to her from now on?
5400Was the woman''s admiration cleverly feigned?
5400Was the world on that principle, then?
5400Was the younger Vane( known to be anti- railroad) to take up the Gaylords''war against his own father?
5400Was there a Law behind these actions of mother and son which he had persisted in denouncing as vagaries?
5400Was there a subtler relationship between our natures than I guessed?
5400Was there a time she had forgotten?
5400Was there any essential difference between the methods of Ditmar and Duval?
5400Was there any sorrow on earth to be felt like that?
5400Was there ever a morning or afternoon that somebody did n''t stray in here with their troubles?
5400Was there ever such a march of triumph as that of the Citizen Ambassador northward to the capital?
5400Was there ever such beauty, such archness, such coquetry,--such damned elusiveness?
5400Was there ever, in all this wide country, a good cook who was not a tyrant?
5400Was there in me a grain of doubt of my ability to respond to such a high call?
5400Was there in the whole range of life one easy topic which they might share in common?
5400Was there no way in which she could be propitiated, appeased?
5400Was there no way to save Ray?
5400Was there no word in the two languages to find its way to my lips?
5400Was there not somebody--God?
5400Was there something lacking in me?
5400Was there something within me that might eventually draw me to do likewise?
5400Was there to be a calf, or was there not?
5400Was there, after all, something in him that responded in spite of himself?
5400Was there, after all, such a thing as religion?
5400Was there, in fact, no change in her as the result of the events of those momentous ten months since she had seen him?
5400Was there?
5400Was this God''s tabernacle?
5400Was this Jethro Bass?
5400Was this New York, or Jerusalem?
5400Was this a hazard on Lise''s part, or did she speak from knowledge?
5400Was this a sudden resolution of mine, forced by events, precipitated by a failure to achieve what of all things on earth I had most desired?
5400Was this audacity or stupidity?
5400Was this but one more of those thousand voices, harsh and gentle, rough and tender, to which I had listened in vain this age past?
5400Was this cherished scheme a whim or a joke to be lightly cast aside?
5400Was this composure a controlled one or had she indeed attained to the self- sufficiency her manner and presence implied?
5400Was this disloyal?
5400Was this equivocating?
5400Was this knowledge acquired at such cost of labour and life and love by my fellow- men of so little worth to me that I could ignore it?
5400Was this strange, bronzed, quietly humorous young man his son?
5400Was this the Mr. Crewe the humble rural members had pictured to themselves?
5400Was this the Mr. Crewe who, at the beginning of the session, had told them roundly it was their duty to vote for his bills?
5400Was this the case?"
5400Was this the orthodox Mr. Hodder of St. John''s?
5400Was this too deep?
5400Was this woman, who begged so audibly to be delivered from pride, vainglory, and hypocrisy, in reality a Christian?
5400Was this, her art, the true expression of her baffling personality?
5400Was this, the spectacle presented by my Cousin Robert, the reward of earthly existence?
5400Was your mother Cynthia Ware, from Coniston?"
5400Watling?"
5400Watling?"
5400We always said we were going to Kentucky, did n''t we?
5400We are going to take him to the convention-- and if you''d care to go, Victoria--?"
5400We are the best of friends already,"she added, turning towards us,"are we not?"
5400We do n''t want anybody before then, do we, Honora?"
5400We have seen Honora surrounded by friends-- what has become of them?
5400We knew enough to begin all right, did n''t we?"...
5400We ought to be willing to spare her for-- how many months?"
5400We ought to break ground in November, ought n''t we?"
5400We shall have other talks,--yes?
5400We shall have to work together, perhaps, to that end-- who can say?
5400We strike for them, too, is it not so?"
5400We think there''s a chance for his salvation, do n''t we, Perry?"
5400We''re both a little hot- headed, I guess, and do things we''re sorry for,--but that''s all over now, is n''t it?
5400We''ve always been pretty good pals, have n''t we?
5400Well, Jethro,"said he, with a twinkle in his eye,"are you goin''to reform?
5400Well, Tooting, are the headquarters ready?
5400Well, Victoria, where have you been keeping yourself?
5400Well, dearie, how does the effect get you?"
5400Well, suppose there was such a treaty, what then?
5400Well, the man stood there in the door, and Georgie picked up his hand and made it hearts-- or was it diamonds, Georgie?"
5400Well, then, are you willing to try it out, on the level?
5400Well, well, bad storm, is n''t it?
5400Well, what is it?
5400Well, what''s the difference?
5400Well, what''s the outlay up to the present?
5400Well?
5400Were Messrs. Bascom and Botcher going to act the part of Samsons?
5400Were all men like that?
5400Were all the inhabitants of Silliston like him?
5400Were her own any less tawdry?
5400Were his sympathies with the daughter?
5400Were industry, persistency, and a capacity for taking advantage of a fair wind sufficient?
5400Were it not more simple to accept what life sent in its orderly course instead of striving for an impossible and shadowy ideal?
5400Were men so different?...
5400Were not influential friends necessary for the proper kind of career?
5400Were not she and Lise of the exploited, of those duped and tempted by the fair things the more fortunate enjoyed unscathed?
5400Were not the strange peoples of the earth flocking to Hampton?
5400Were not their standards the same?
5400Were such qualifications as Mr. Crewe possessed, he wondered, of a kind to sweep their possessor into high office?
5400Were the poor in London in the days of the Edwards as well off as our niggers are to- day?"
5400Were the standards of a long life to be suddenly reversed by a prodigal son?
5400Were the wonders of this journey never to cease?
5400Were there no other prizes save those known as greatness of character and depth of human affections?
5400Were there not other qualities?
5400Were there so many Victorias, that a new one-- and a strange one-- should confront him at every meeting?
5400Were these the streets through which she had driven and trod in her former life?
5400Were they contented?
5400Were they going to be able to keep it off?
5400Were they saying that we were lovers?
5400Were they to buy up all the mortgages?
5400Were they working for revenge and a new regime?
5400Were we near the fort?
5400Were we not king and queen returned to our summer palace?
5400Wetherell cried, suddenly goaded by another fear;"why did you buy that mortgage?"
5400Wetherell?"
5400Wetherell?"
5400Wetherell?"
5400Wetherell?"
5400Whah is you, honey?
5400Whar did ye find''em, Tom?"
5400Whar was you raised?"
5400Whar''d you hear that, Jethro?"
5400What I ask of you is a sacrifice-- will you make me happy?"
5400What I wish to know is, whether my taking the case would cause you any personal inconvenience or distress?
5400What Judge was to unravel them, and assign the exact amount of responsibility?
5400What Saint Louisan of the last generation does not remember Uhrig''s Cave?
5400What Southern lady, to the manner born, is not a cook from the cradle?
5400What ails you now?"
5400What am I bid?"
5400What am I bid?"
5400What am I bid?"
5400What am I saying?"
5400What am I saying?"
5400What am I to do about this young man of whom you speak-- whatever his name is?
5400What animated these persons who had struggled over her so desperately, Sally Grower, Mr. Bentley, and Hodder himself?
5400What are they about at Washington?"
5400What are they waiting for?
5400What are we here for?"
5400What are ye tom- foolin''about here for, Tom McChesney, when yere Ma''s breakin''her heart?
5400What are ye up to now?"
5400What are you doing here?
5400What are you doing in Washington?"
5400What are you doing, what are they doing to allow her to remain?
5400What are you doing?
5400What are you driving at?"
5400What are you going to do there?
5400What are you judge of?"
5400What are you saying?"
5400What are you trying to say?"
5400What are you waiting for?"
5400What be him and Mr. Grafton a- doing here, sir, plotting all kinds o''crime while the old gentleman''s nigh on his back?"
5400What be you a- goin''to do about it?"
5400What book?
5400What brigade were you in?"
5400What business have you got sleuthing''round after me like this?"
5400What business have you here watching a game between gentlemen?"
5400What business is it of theirs?
5400What but such could have commanded the unremitting labors of that morning?
5400What can be done?
5400What can he have done?"
5400What can they know about my profits?
5400What can trouble you?"
5400What can you do--?"
5400What cared I for"Arma virumque"at such a time?
5400What chance had a poor man against such a moloch as the railroad, even with a lawyer of such ability as had been exhibited by Hermann Krebs?
5400What changed you?
5400What church do you come from anyway?"
5400What coloring is she?"
5400What condition?
5400What contrariness has set you so intense against your own argument?
5400What could be more natural?
5400What could he do to show his appreciation?
5400What could he have meant when he had declared that she would not remain in Quicksands?
5400What could it mean?
5400What could she do?
5400What could she say to him?
5400What could such a fine Monsieur want with two yellow birds?
5400What could the Leader and Captain Lyon do without troops?
5400What could the Vicomtesse want?
5400What could these do, what could she accomplish against the mighty power of the mills?
5400What courage sublime is that which lets her wave at him?
5400What day is to- day?
5400What did Clark intend to do?
5400What did I care for the senatorship anyway-- if I had her?
5400What did I know of life?
5400What did I know of the insect and the flower, of the laws that moved the planets and made incandescent the suns?
5400What did I know?
5400What did I mean by this?
5400What did Jack do?"
5400What did Matthew and Moreton want?
5400What did Maude want?
5400What did McCrae think of him?
5400What did he know about her?
5400What did he know?
5400What did he mean by it?
5400What did he mean?
5400What did he say to you?"
5400What did he say?
5400What did he say?"
5400What did he send him down to Washington for?"
5400What did he want with you, Hugh?"
5400What did he wish?
5400What did it matter, if the essential Thing were present?
5400What did it matter-- whether he had made the sacrifice for the sake of his love for her?
5400What did it matter?
5400What did it mean, that look?
5400What did our instructors at Harvard know about the age that was dawning?
5400What did she know?
5400What did she mean?
5400What did she really know of Austen Vane?
5400What did she see?
5400What did that mean?
5400What did the inaccessible Man himself have in his mind?
5400What did the man mean?
5400What did the weather matter?
5400What did they do to him?
5400What did they think?
5400What did we talk about?
5400What did ye do?"
5400What did you come in here for, anyway?"
5400What did you think I would be doing?"
5400What did you think of me when you saw me to- night?"
5400What do folks say in the settlements?"
5400What do they care how many they starve and make miserable?
5400What do they think of our new Republican party?
5400What do we know about business and developing the resources of the country?
5400What do we see today in your business world?
5400What do you bother with me for?
5400What do you do so early?"
5400What do you hear from Minnie?
5400What do you intend to do when the strike is over?"
5400What do you know about him?"
5400What do you know about them?
5400What do you know?
5400What do you mean by forcing your way into this house?
5400What do you mean by happiness?
5400What do you mean by rise?
5400What do you mean by shades?"
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?
5400What do you mean?"
5400What do you propose to do now?"
5400What do you say, Honora?"
5400What do you say?"
5400What do you suppose I care, Janet?
5400What do you suppose they done last Friday morning, when there wahn''t but twenty men at the session?
5400What do you think of Mr. Scherer''s palace?"
5400What do you think of a man who deserts a woman under those conditions?"
5400What do you think of him?"
5400What do you think of it?"
5400What do you think of our headquarters?"
5400What do you think of that?"
5400What do you think of that?"
5400What do you think of the car?
5400What do you think she''d do, Cynthy?"
5400What do you think the Judge will do with that piano, Stephen?"
5400What do you think?"
5400What do you think?"
5400What do you want me to do?
5400What do you want to do here, Davy?"
5400What do you want?
5400What doctor have you?"
5400What does Jethro say to that?"
5400What does it amount to--luring people into the churches on one pretext or another, sugar- coating the pill?
5400What does it matter?
5400What does it matter?"
5400What does the newspaper say?"
5400What drew them?
5400What effect would it have on him when it should be revealed to him?....
5400What else are they?
5400What else do they say?
5400What else has he done to endear himself?"
5400What else is labour?
5400What else was there in the world more worth having than this conquering sense?
5400What else was there to be done?
5400What experiment''s that, Captain?
5400What for?"
5400What form will the social revolution take?
5400What future has the Pindar Shops,--which I have spent my life to build up?
5400What greater vindication for their philosophy could be desired?
5400What guarantee have they, other than a union organization, that you will keep faith?
5400What had Austen meant by that?
5400What had God in store for the vast land out of which the waters flowed?
5400What had I done?
5400What had Thalia been about to allow the message of that morning to creep into her comedy?
5400What had become of her?
5400What had become, they asked, of the expedition of Citizen General Clark preparing in the North?
5400What had been her misery and affliction compared to this?
5400What had happened to his daughter?
5400What had happened to stay her?
5400What had happened to the boy, to bring to naught the fair promise of this earlier presentment?
5400What had happened, during his absence, to alienate the most promising of all neophytes he had ever encountered?
5400What had he been doing?
5400What had he seen?
5400What had my father done?
5400What had she done above the others to deserve preservation?
5400What had she done to earn them?
5400What had she found out?
5400What had she meant by it?
5400What had the man done?
5400What had the tempest done to her?
5400What has Jethro Bass got to do with politics?
5400What has become of him?
5400What has got into the politicians, that they are indulging in such foolishness?"
5400What has he given George?
5400What have I done?"
5400What have they been saying?"
5400What have they got to do with a house-- except to sleep in it?
5400What have they got to do with it?"
5400What have we done that we should be outlawed in this way by the very people who may thank my family for their prosperity?
5400What have you and Monsieur de Toqueville been talking about?"
5400What have you b''en doin''to yourself?
5400What have you done to him, Honora, to put him in such a humour?"
5400What have you done with your coat?
5400What have you got against it?
5400What he actually said was:--"What time to- morrow?"
5400What headway do you expect to make at the assemblies?"
5400What if I went to her now?
5400What if Miss Thorn had warned me in order to save the Celebrity from humiliation?
5400What if ever so small a portion of this were true?
5400What if he had failed again?
5400What if he should come in and discover the party at the table?
5400What if she should not be in?
5400What if she should raise her eyes, and amid those vulgar stares discern his own?
5400What if she were flayed?
5400What if the South should win?
5400What if they do?
5400What in Halifax do I care for your divine- right- of- authors theory?
5400What in blazes are we comin''to in this country if we ca n''t git competition?
5400What in the name of sense possessed you to get such a man?"
5400What in the world are you thinking of, with your brow all puckered up, forbidding as an owl?"
5400What interest, you will say, could the pioneer lawyers and storekeepers and planters have in the French Revolution?
5400What interpretation might be put upon a score of little acts of hers that came a- flooding to mind, each a sacred treasure of memory?
5400What is Peter?
5400What is fifty cents to them?
5400What is going on?"
5400What is he like when he''s alone, and relaxed?
5400What is his attitude, George?
5400What is it Browning says?
5400What is it that leads us to a certain man or woman at a certain time, or to open a certain book?
5400What is it you desire?"
5400What is it you speak of?"
5400What is it, Minnie?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?
5400What is it?"
5400What is it?"
5400What is it?"
5400What is left for us, Paret?"
5400What is left?
5400What is she doing there?"
5400What is that but enterprise, and business foresight, and taking risks?
5400What is that you have, Soter''s book?"
5400What is the matter with the child?"
5400What is the name of the place you are to startle with your learning and calm by your example?"
5400What is the workmen''s vote against it?
5400What is your inference, when he fights a duel about a Miss with my Lord Comyn?"
5400What is your name?
5400What is your opinion, sir, on the subject of holding human beings in bondage?"
5400What is your point of view?
5400What kind do you use?"
5400What kind of beauty powder do they use in Coniston?"
5400What kind of democracy were the allies fighting for?
5400What kind of gentlemen had taken her sister to Gruber''s?
5400What kind of man is this Meagre?"
5400What kind of railroad service was Kingston getting compared to what it should have?
5400What kind of rot are you talking?"
5400What leads you to infer that the Consolidated Tractions Company was not organized in good faith?
5400What life ever worth living has been without its tender attachment?
5400What life?
5400What made you ask about him?"
5400What makes you jump like that?
5400What makes you say that?
5400What makes you think he wo n''t take his ideas about labour from the old man?
5400What makes you think so?
5400What man in a public position, however humble, has not political enemies?
5400What man, I thought resentfully, would not travel a thousand miles to be near her?
5400What man, even Peter, would not have married her if he could?
5400What manner of man was this?
5400What manner of young woman was this who fell off horses?
5400What mere man may write with any confidence of the delicacies which were prepared in Uncle''s kitchen that morning?
5400What might he not aspire to, if properly guided?
5400What might not its Barbarians do when roused?
5400What might she do?
5400What might they not do to the defenceless city under their victorious hand, whose citizens were nobly loyal to the South?
5400What more can I say?
5400What more could be wished for?
5400What more is there to say?"
5400What more natural than, with her cleverness, she had hit upon this means of terminating the author''s troubles by working upon my fears?
5400What more, may I ask, would you have me do?"
5400What must he think of her for coming again?
5400What need of religion, of faith in an unseen order when this existed?
5400What need to ask?
5400What noise?"
5400What obscure and passionate impulse had led her suddenly to defy and desert him, to cast in her lot with these insensate aliens?
5400What observer, however experienced, would have believed that such delicate tracings could herald a volcanic eruption?
5400What of his mother?
5400What of the children who ask piteously where their father is going, and who are gathered by a sobbing mother to her breast?
5400What of true value, what of peace and security was contained in her present existence?
5400What on earth is the matter?"
5400What other career is open to a woman?
5400What other career is open to a woman?
5400What parallels in history shall I quote to bring home the enormity of such a mesalliance?
5400What people of consequence have we here?
5400What place is this?"
5400What pleasure could it have been all through his illness to look upon this silent and cruel reminder of days gone by forever?
5400What principality in the world has the story to rival that of John Sevier and the State of Franklin?
5400What put Miss Thorn into your head?"
5400What rascality have you been in?"
5400What restless, fiendish element in me prevented my enjoying that?
5400What reward had the Republic for him who sat brooding in his house above the Falls-- for Citizen General Clark?
5400What right had he to be contented with life?
5400What right had he to pull down that flag, to die on the pavement before that house?
5400What right had he, in the eternal essence of things, to return?
5400What right had she to leave me?
5400What right had society to compel a child to be born to degradation and prostitution?
5400What right has a man to make you and me work for him just because he has capital?"
5400What right has he got to go nosing around Dalton Street?
5400What right has she got to be happy?"
5400What right have I to believe, after what has happened in my shops today, that he''ll come back?
5400What right have they to kick up a row now, with this war on?
5400What right have you to catechize me, Jonathan?
5400What say you, Philip?
5400What shall I do, Mr. Crocker?
5400What shall I do?
5400What shall I do?"
5400What shall I read?"
5400What shall we do when that is gone?
5400What shall we do?"
5400What shapes, when thy arriving tolls, Shall crowd the banks to see?
5400What she had felt indeed was not sadness,--but how could she describe it to him when she herself was amazed and dwarfed by it?
5400What should I say?
5400What should he do with it?
5400What should he say, now?
5400What should she do now, indeed?
5400What should she do now?
5400What should she do?
5400What should she say to Clarence now?
5400What the beauty and the warmth of those great, empty rooms to Eldon Parr?
5400What the deuce are those women doing here again?"
5400What the deuce did the rector know?
5400What the deuce has got into you?
5400What the deuce is competition, when you come down to it?
5400What the devil could I do with him?"
5400What the devil is that you have got in your hand, Davy?"
5400What the devil was it in her that made him so uncomfortable?
5400What then?
5400What then?
5400What then?
5400What then?
5400What then?"
5400What then?"
5400What things?
5400What time does Mr. Merrill get home?"
5400What traveller has not felt the depressing effect of it?
5400What treaty?
5400What was Germany then?
5400What was I going to do?
5400What was I to say?
5400What was Maude Hutchins to me?
5400What was Monsieur talking about?
5400What was all the power in the world compared to this priceless treasure he had lost?
5400What was behind her resistance?
5400What was beyond it to stop them?
5400What was coming?
5400What was happiness?
5400What was he about during those six weeks?
5400What was he going to say?
5400What was he like?
5400What was he there?
5400What was he to say?
5400What was he to say?
5400What was her duty in the matter?
5400What was her duty?
5400What was his life?
5400What was his side of it?
5400What was in it?
5400What was it I felt?
5400What was it about her that had attracted Ditmar?
5400What was it about him?
5400What was it he sought?
5400What was it he was talking about?
5400What was it in Silas Whipple''s nature that courted the pain of memories?
5400What was it in me that drove me from these sheltering walls out into the dark places?
5400What was it in me that would not break down?
5400What was it indeed?
5400What was it that compelled their talk about themselves, that made them refrain from asking those questions about Boston, and why she had come back?
5400What was it within me that pressed and pressed until I thought I could bear the pain of it no longer?
5400What was it-- four hundred and twenty miles in fifty days?
5400What was it?
5400What was it?
5400What was it?
5400What was left for them, after that, save a retreat?
5400What was mind, what spirit?
5400What was she beside it?
5400What was she doing at church?
5400What was she leaving so precipitately?
5400What was she searching for?
5400What was she struggling against?
5400What was she to believe?
5400What was she to say to him?
5400What was that upon the sleeper''s face from which they drew back?
5400What was the attendant doing now?
5400What was the cause of this longing to break the fetters and fly away?
5400What was the change, then?
5400What was the difference in her?
5400What was the essential difference between that woman and herself?
5400What was the girl, or her look, to him?
5400What was the matter last night?"
5400What was the matter that I could n''t get you on the telephone?"
5400What was the secret of its flavour?
5400What was the situation in this county and in that?
5400What was the source of that serenity which shone on the face of his friend?
5400What was the use of all the pomp and circumstance and ceremony to tie the knot if it could be cut in the routine of a day''s business?
5400What was the use of amassing money, when happiness was to be had so simply?
5400What was there to do?
5400What was this curious attraction that roused the interest of all who came in contact with him?
5400What was this strange, elusive happiness, that she had so pantingly pursued and never overtaken?
5400What was to be done about the calf?
5400What was to become of him, now that the very driving power of life was gone?
5400What was young Worthington doing in Brampton, and his father in the West on that railroad business?
5400What was your rank, Comrade?"
5400What were Mr. Crewe''s feelings when he read this drivel?
5400What were his beliefs?
5400What were his potentialities?
5400What were lawyers for, if not to win suits?
5400What were rain and cold, the inclemency of the elements to them?
5400What were the images they summoned up in the darkness?
5400What were these privations compared to that magic word Change?
5400What were they thinking of her?
5400What were we talking about?
5400What were you about?"
5400What will he think?"
5400What would Aunt Mary have said to such extravagance?
5400What would Barbour say?"
5400What would I be doing here?
5400What would John Paul say?
5400What would Monsieur le Colonel do now?
5400What would become of Lise?
5400What would become of her?
5400What would become of the Goddess of Liberty?
5400What would become of the clergyman?
5400What would frank Captain Lige say of the consistency of women, if he heard you now?
5400What would happen to her?...
5400What would he say?
5400What would he think,--this man who had fought and suffered and renounced his native land for his convictions?
5400What would he think?
5400What would her wedding have been without Peter?
5400What would his housekeeper say?
5400What would it be like always to be daintily served, to eat one''s meals in this leisurely and luxurious manner?
5400What would it be like to have a house of one''s own in New York?
5400What would it bring forth?
5400What would my great- great- great- great- grandfather say, who was such a stanch Royalist?
5400What would poor father do?
5400What would she think if it were Lise?
5400What would the Chief of the Pale Faces do?
5400What would the Mediterranean Sea and its adjoining countries be to us unless the wanderings of Ulysses and AEneas had made them real?
5400What would the bishop do?
5400What would their love have been, without that respect?
5400What would you do if a man who had gone a little out of his mind asked you for a gun to shoot himself with?
5400What would you do?"
5400What would you have me do, as a man?
5400What would you have thought of me?
5400What would you like?"
5400What would you say of those slanderers of Monsieur Cerre?"
5400What you reformers are actually driving at is that we should raise wages-- isn''t it?
5400What''d I do with a baby?"
5400What''d you go to Flint for?"
5400What''ll her husband say?"
5400What''ll you give, Alf?
5400What''s I done tole you, Miss Dolly?
5400What''s I done tole you, honey?"
5400What''s Mr. George got to do with it?
5400What''s a pipe and a trail of smoke?"
5400What''s all this mystery about Job Braden?
5400What''s all this trouble about a two- for- a- cent postmastership?"
5400What''s become of my horse?"
5400What''s happened to Rindge?"
5400What''s happened to change you?
5400What''s happened to him?"
5400What''s he to do?
5400What''s that fellow''s name?"
5400What''s that, Franklin?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s that?
5400What''s the difference?
5400What''s the matter with him?"
5400What''s the matter with his houses?"
5400What''s the matter with it?"
5400What''s the matter with the capital, Will?
5400What''s the matter with you?"
5400What''s the matter, Austen?
5400What''s the matter-- a hitch?"
5400What''s the matter?
5400What''s the matter?"
5400What''s the matter?"
5400What''s the matter?"
5400What''s the matter?"
5400What''s the matter?"
5400What''s the use of bucking when you''re saddled with a thing like that?"
5400What''s the use?
5400What''s this I hear about Clarence?"
5400What''s this?
5400What''s this?"
5400What''s this?--a full dress uniform?
5400What''s to be said about a government capable of such inefficiency?
5400What''s to become of the old pensioner, Cynthy?"
5400What''s to happen to one?
5400What''s to prevent my calling up the provost''s guard below?"
5400What''s to prevent my goin''south when the vouchers is cashed?"
5400What''s up now-- what do you want to see Grant about?"
5400What''s your name, my lad?"
5400What''s your name?"
5400What''s your name?"
5400What''s your reason?
5400What, for example, was the Tariff?
5400What, he asked himself, had Fate in store for Cynthia Wetherell?
5400What, indeed, could he say?
5400What, indeed, had these ladies to do with her?
5400What, indeed?
5400What, then, was the function, the mission of the Church Universal?
5400What, then, was the use of praying?...
5400What- do- they- call- you?"
5400What-- what is it?"
5400What-- what would Bob say when he heard of the meeting?
5400What-- what''s the matter, Davy?"
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?
5400What?"
5400What?"
5400What?"
5400What?"
5400Wheelock?"
5400When I am a general, will you marry me?"
5400When a building with dry rot catches fire, Rench, can you put limit to how much of it will burn?
5400When and where had he seen her?
5400When be you goin''to the capital, Will?
5400When can I see you for a few minutes this evening?
5400When can I see you?"
5400When can you come, Humphrey?"
5400When can you come?"
5400When did they come?
5400When do you break ground?"
5400When do you go?"
5400When do you wish to have them for dinner?"
5400When she had not always been dimly conscious of a desire to please him, of a struggle to keep him interested and contented?
5400When we had got within twenty feet or so of the landing, a dame in a red woollen kerchief called out:"What hae ye done wi''Mungo, John Paul?"
5400When will he get here?
5400When will you do it?"
5400When will you get over your provincial simplicity?"
5400When you are ambassador to France, you know, it would be humiliating to have to have an interpreter, would n''t it?"
5400When you could n''t stand bein''lonely night after night, when you went out on the streets and saw everybody on the way to a good time but you?
5400When you had come back from seeing him?"
5400When you saw how meekly she obeyed you, and agreed to go away, why did you not have pity?
5400When, indeed, had he not been thinking of her?
5400When-- when do you come?"
5400When?
5400Whence had the argument come?
5400Whenever he sees me at the state capital he says,''How be you, Bije?''
5400Where a deuce have you been, sir?"
5400Where are they all?
5400Where are those cigars Mr. Brinsmade was talking about?"
5400Where are we going in such a hurry?"
5400Where are you going, Jinny?"
5400Where are you going, Minnie?
5400Where are you going, my dear?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?
5400Where are you going?"
5400Where are you going?"
5400Where are you living now?"
5400Where are you staying?"
5400Where are you to find what are called the doctrines of the Church?
5400Where are you, Jock?
5400Where are your gods then?
5400Where be you goin''?"
5400Where did Mr. Todd learn anything about Jacksonian principles?
5400Where did ye find them, Bill Cowan?"
5400Where did you learn it all, Cynthia?"
5400Where did you learn it?"
5400Where did you meet him to- day?"
5400Where did you say that livery- stable was?
5400Where do reason and intelligence lead us?
5400Where do you come in?"
5400Where do you get such ideas?
5400Where does she live?"
5400Where does that spark come from?
5400Where during his busy life had he got this thing which others had sought in many voyages in vain?
5400Where had Lise been?
5400Where had he heard the name?
5400Where had he seen Colfax''s face before he came West?
5400Where had my fine nobleman been at the critical point of his friend''s misfortunes?
5400Where have you been hiding?
5400Where have you been keeping yourself lately?
5400Where have you been?"
5400Where in Jehoshaphat was I going to sail it if I ever got it made?
5400Where in the name of the Continental Congress did you get the lad?"
5400Where is Hilary Vane?
5400Where is he all this time?
5400Where is he, Robinson?"
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?
5400Where is he?"
5400Where is he?"
5400Where is she?
5400Where is that dog- fish of a Cockle?
5400Where is that tobacco now, gentlemen?"
5400Where is the house?"
5400Where is the judge?
5400Where is the picture of that last breakfast at home?
5400Where now was this pin- point of humanity, in the midst of an appalling spectacle of a grinding, remorseless nature?
5400Where now were the thousands of which he had dreamed, and which he was to have brought into the Church?
5400Where now were these arguments so wonderfully plausible?
5400Where should I speak of it, if not in this village, among those who knew her and among their children?
5400Where should she hide her love that it might not be seen of men?
5400Where the deuce did you blow in from?
5400Where the deuce did you go to?"
5400Where the deuce have you been, Cecil?"
5400Where was Clarence?
5400Where was Clark?
5400Where was Lamothe?
5400Where was Ray, indeed?
5400Where was Ray?
5400Where was he now, on this rainy night?
5400Where was he now?
5400Where was he?
5400Where was her home?
5400Where was it?
5400Where was it?
5400Where was reform now?
5400Where was she to begin?
5400Where was she to go to be saved from herself, if not to him?
5400Where was she to go, whither flee, now that his wrath was turned against her?
5400Where was she?
5400Where was that Gamaliel who had been such a warm partisan in the postoffice that morning?
5400Where was the Spirit that breathed in it of hope?
5400Where was the champion?
5400Where was the proof?
5400Where was this man leading them, this Clark who had come amongst them from the skies, as it were?
5400Where were Hamilton, Hamilton''s soldiers and savages?
5400Where were our white cockades then?
5400Where were the burning words of denunciation which came so easily to his tongue on other occasions?
5400Where were the police?
5400Where were the proprieties in these days?
5400Where were the refutations which he had made ready in case of a barely possible need?
5400Where were the skins?
5400Where were the whims of the quality to lead them next?
5400Where were you?
5400Where were you?"
5400Where were you?"
5400Where will he be tonight?"
5400Where will you be, now?"
5400Where would I be if it was n''t for fightin''?
5400Where would Israel Simpson be to- day if my father had not set him up in business?
5400Where would he go?
5400Where would it lead?
5400Where would you go in the meantime, and what would you do?"
5400Where''d you come down?"
5400Where''s Abby?
5400Where''s Dr. Jonathan?
5400Where''s Ephum?
5400Where''s Watling?"
5400Where''s he gone?"
5400Where''s he?"
5400Where''s me hat?
5400Where''s the life- preserving suit I sent for?
5400Where''s your leader?"
5400Where, he demanded of Mr. Tooting, did the common people come in?
5400Where, indeed, were the young men?
5400Where, it may be asked, were my ideals?
5400Where, she wondered, would it all end?
5400Where, then, would be your power?
5400Where-- has he gone?"
5400Where?
5400Where?
5400Whether by destiny or chance, whether by the wisdom of Jefferson or the necessity of Napoleon, who can say?
5400Whether he had seen the incident just past, who can tell?
5400Whether or no such characters make them one and the same, who can tell?
5400Whether she had read that part before, who shall say?
5400Which side are you on, anyway?"
5400Which was the quality in him that attracted her?
5400Which was the real, and which the false?
5400Which will it be?
5400Which would you rather have been, I say, William Shakespeare or Sir Francis?"
5400Which, for example, belonged to the lady whose soprano voice pervaded the neighbourhood?
5400Whipple?"
5400Whipple?"
5400Who am I now that I should inquire?
5400Who are left, except father- in- law Waring and myself?"
5400Who are on that committee?"
5400Who are these coming?
5400Who are you going to take out in a sleigh?
5400Who are you?"
5400Who asked him to run?"
5400Who be you?"
5400Who be you?"
5400Who bought her, sir?
5400Who can answer?
5400Who can blame them?
5400Who can not sympathize with him as he watched the thin and hesitating stream of people out of the corner of his eye as they came in at the door?
5400Who can say that the modern capitalist is not liberal, is not a public benefactor?
5400Who can say?
5400Who can say?
5400Who can speak or write with any certainty of the feminine character, or declare what unexpected twists perversity and curiosity may give to it?
5400Who composed this dauntless band, whose members had arisen with remarkable unanimity and martyr''s zeal in such widely scattered parts of the State?
5400Who could resist him?
5400Who could say?
5400Who could say?
5400Who do you think is here?
5400Who else is there?
5400Who else now was to be considered?
5400Who else was there?"
5400Who ever heard of a good Yankee family?"
5400Who had he been?
5400Who had he else in the world to bear him affection on his death- bed?
5400Who had not?
5400Who had turned it down?
5400Who has charge of the highways?
5400Who henceforth would receive her save those, unconformed and unconformable, sentenced to sin in this realm of blackness?
5400Who in this nobler allegiance was ready to die for them?
5400Who invites any one here?"
5400Who is Mr. Price?
5400Who is he?
5400Who is he?"
5400Who is he?"
5400Who made her blush as pink as her Paris gown?
5400Who made you the wristlets?
5400Who opened it?
5400Who said there was such a treaty?
5400Who sent the solid citizens to see Mr. Henderson?
5400Who shall criticise Mr. Cooke''s code of morality?
5400Who slipped into her hand the contribution for the church, and refused to take the cream candy she laughingly offered him as an equivalent?
5400Who the deuce was this man Krebs?
5400Who told you?"
5400Who was he to fling back an annual pass in the face of the president of the Northeastern Railroads?
5400Who was she?
5400Who was she?
5400Who was she?
5400Who was that person?
5400Who was this stranger?
5400Who was this woman?
5400Who was this young man of three and thirty to agitate him so?
5400Who was your father?"
5400Who were they to fight the bone and sinew of the King''s navy in a rotten ship of an age gone by?
5400Who were to be on this mysterious list of"Sixty"?
5400Who will blame him?
5400Who will buy?"
5400Who will judge him?
5400Who will pick a flaw in the character of the Honourable Giles Henderson?
5400Who will stop us?
5400Who will ye be talkin''about, Poulsson?
5400Who will you be?"
5400Who would be governor?
5400Who would be the new Captain- general?
5400Who''ll take the trail with me?"
5400Who''s Ajax?
5400Who''s a traitor?
5400Who''s at the bottom of this, Timothy?
5400Who''s been talking to you?
5400Who''s going to dig up that section?"
5400Who''s that?"
5400Who''s the candidates?"
5400Who, then, are left to frequent the Throne Room?
5400Who-- was it anyone in Brampton, Miss Lucretia?"
5400Whom, then, would he put forward?
5400Whose boat is this?"
5400Whose gold is it that buys guns and powder and lead to send the Shawnee and the Iroquois and Algonquin on the warpath?"
5400Whose sympathy could she be sure of, if not of his?
5400Whose will be the Arsenal now?
5400Why I should take the trouble to clear myself of a senseless charge?
5400Why are n''t you happy-- when we love each other?"
5400Why are you doing this, George?
5400Why are you keeping it from me?"
5400Why are you so sad to- night?"
5400Why ca n''t we?"
5400Why can we not always be playmates?"
5400Why could I not be content with them, thankful for them?
5400Why could I not have been, content with what it represented?
5400Why could it not remain there always, to comfort her, to be nearer her than any living thing?
5400Why could n''t I appreciate these joys when I had them?
5400Why could n''t he have remained in Elkington?
5400Why could n''t she?
5400Why could n''t she?
5400Why could not she feel the joys and desires of which Mrs. Holt had spoken?
5400Why could not the Captain see her?
5400Why could she not recall?
5400Why did I take him away from Jerry Whitely, anyhow?"
5400Why did he do that?"
5400Why did he have to follow me here, to make capital out of a case that might never have been heard of except for him?...
5400Why did he not tell her she was an egoist?
5400Why did he seem so particular about newspapers?
5400Why did n''t he come out on the platform?
5400Why did n''t he speak out, defend his faith, denounce her views as prejudiced and false?
5400Why did n''t that religion that she seemed outwardly to profess and accept without qualification-- the religion he taught set her at rest?
5400Why did n''t you come to me?
5400Why did n''t you do it?"
5400Why did n''t you send for me at once?"
5400Why did n''t you take her advice?
5400Why did n''t you tell me?
5400Why did n''t you write me you had been admitted to the firm?
5400Why did you come to St. Louis at all?"
5400Why did you come?
5400Why did you come?"
5400Why did you do it?"
5400Why did you leave New York with him when he was in this condition?
5400Why did you leave?
5400Why did you let him in?"
5400Why did you not come before the strike?"
5400Why did you not speak?"
5400Why did you think I left them at liberty?"
5400Why did you wake me up?"
5400Why did you?
5400Why do I not rise?
5400Why do n''t they come to these?"
5400Why do n''t they move?
5400Why do n''t you come down?"
5400Why do n''t you come up and talk to him again?"
5400Why do n''t you come up, Crocker?
5400Why do n''t you hand over your mill to the unions and go to work on a farm?
5400Why do n''t you retire, and live the rest of your life in peace?
5400Why do n''t you talk to him again?"
5400Why do n''t you work?"
5400Why do we read the Old Testament at all?
5400Why do you deny it?
5400Why do you say that?
5400Why do you suppose so many of''em take to the easy life?
5400Why do you think that now?
5400Why do you want to know?"
5400Why do you want to ruin my life?
5400Why do you waste your time?"
5400Why does Comyn put up with him?"
5400Why does God mock her with sunlight and with friends?
5400Why does n''t he come in?
5400Why does n''t he stick to his church?"
5400Why does the type run together?
5400Why had I not foreseen her question?
5400Why had I not thought of her?
5400Why had Mr. Bentley ceased coming to the house?
5400Why had Mrs. Constable supposed that she would care to hear the sermon praised?
5400Why had Patty sent him?
5400Why had he been so singled out?
5400Why had he come to Brampton?
5400Why had he destroyed Lise?
5400Why had he hesitated to initiate his son into many of the so- called duties of a railroad lawyer?
5400Why had he never noticed her before?
5400Why had he not been born, like Clarence Colfax, the owner of a large plantation, the believer in the divine right of his race to rule?
5400Why had he not returned?
5400Why had n''t I spoken of this before?
5400Why had n''t she guessed it?
5400Why had not some one discovered it before?
5400Why had she deserted?
5400Why had she done that?
5400Why had she let her in?
5400Why had she never felt it before?
5400Why had she never thought of these things before?...
5400Why had she not seen before that it was inevitable?
5400Why had she spoken so to Comyn?
5400Why had she taken her money with her that evening, if not with some deliberate though undefined purpose?
5400Why had she taken the child into outer darkness, to be born without a father,--when she loved Ditmar?
5400Why had she told me of it?
5400Why had they come?
5400Why had they ever taken her to London?
5400Why had they not thanked God on their knees for peace while they had it?
5400Why have to put up with all this useless expense and worry and waste of time?
5400Why have you been such a stranger?"
5400Why in the name of the law did n''t he make a move?
5400Why in the world did n''t you marry him?"
5400Why in the world did you have to go and make all this trouble?"
5400Why is it so difficult for all of us to know what to do?"
5400Why is it you join the army?
5400Why is it you wish to get Mr. Allen over the border, then?"
5400Why is it you''ll never give me a dance?"
5400Why is it, in this world, that realization is so difficult a thing?
5400Why is it, then, that you bore yourself by regarding Institutions and listening to sermons in your jeunesse?
5400Why is it,"Mr. Parr continued reflectively,"that ministers as a whole are by no means the men they were?
5400Why is it?
5400Why is it?"
5400Why is life so hard?
5400Why listen, to the rumblings in the South?
5400Why mention the dread possibility of the negro- worshiper Lincoln being elected the very next month?
5400Why not Russia?
5400Why not be practical, and become master of a situation which one had not made, and could not alter, instead of being overwhelmed by it?
5400Why not carry the thing farther?
5400Why not go to his little house in Clarksville when you get to Louisville and talk to him plainly, as I know you can?
5400Why not have one''s divorce sent, C.O.D., to one''s door, or establish a new branch of the Post- office Department?
5400Why not have socialism right now, and cut out the agony?
5400Why not he?
5400Why not include yourself?"
5400Why not say in spite of yours, Asher?
5400Why not take the world as it appears and live and feel, instead of beating against the currents?"
5400Why not the Ku Klux?
5400Why not the sea, indeed?
5400Why not wait until George Pindar comes back?
5400Why not yield to the enchantment?
5400Why not, and have done with sickening doubts?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?
5400Why not?"
5400Why not?"
5400Why not?"
5400Why paradise regained?
5400Why rebel, when nobody else complained?
5400Why should I?
5400Why should he have"stolen away"to see her?
5400Why should he refuse it to this woman?
5400Why should he, when he was innocent?
5400Why should he?
5400Why should n''t she go away?
5400Why should n''t you try to do with me what you''ve done with other women?
5400Why should n''t you?
5400Why should n''t you?
5400Why should n''t you?"
5400Why should n''t you?"
5400Why should she be happy, and other mothers miserable?
5400Why should she care if Stephen Brice had seen her in company with Mr, Hopper?
5400Why should she feel her body hot with shame, her cheeks afire?
5400Why should she have, in Lise, continually before her eyes a degraded caricature of her own aspirations and ideals?
5400Why should she not have that pleasure?
5400Why should she not live by herself amidst clean and tidy surroundings?
5400Why should such a natural longing be absent in her?
5400Why should the hour of departure from such a harbour of peace be celebrated?
5400Why should this woman have this extraordinary effect of making him dissatisfied with himself?
5400Why should we wish to know the rate of interest on those notes, or the time?
5400Why should you marry me?
5400Why should you so continually run away from me?"
5400Why should you wish to crush us?
5400Why should you?
5400Why so ceremonious, Perley?"
5400Why struggle, unless we struggle for something definite?
5400Why the-- why should Heth pay him?"
5400Why this heavy expenditure to maintain religious services for a handful of people?
5400Why this insatiate ambition on his part in an age of unbelief?
5400Why travel?
5400Why try to define it?"
5400Why was I flinging it all away?
5400Why was I not warned of this?
5400Why was North himself made Prime Minister?
5400Why was he in awe of her-- he, Lem Hallowell, who had never been in awe of any one?
5400Why was her own so unrealizable?
5400Why was it that doing wrong agreed with her, energized her, made her more alert, cleverer, keying up her faculties?
5400Why was it that everything she touched seemed to become contaminated?
5400Why was it that he feared my presence in London?
5400Why was it that he incited a perverse desire to utter heresies?
5400Why was it that he walked to the station with a heavy heart?
5400Why was it that mere words, and their arrangement in certain sequences, gave one a delicious, creepy feeling up and down the spine?
5400Why was it that she did not want children?
5400Why was it that she, too, to whom speech came so easily, had fallen dumb?
5400Why was it that, to Hodder, he should gradually have assumed something of the aspect of a Cerberus?
5400Why was it then, as I gazed upon his fine features in death, that I experienced no intensity of sorrow?
5400Why was it they could not be standing side by side, fighting the same fight?
5400Why was it?
5400Why was it?
5400Why was it?"
5400Why was n''t there a band?
5400Why was n''t there more track?
5400Why was not this Thing ever present, to chasten and sober me?
5400Why was she going?
5400Why was that abominable word"like"ever put into the English language?
5400Why waste your opportunities?"
5400Why were not her spirit and her hopes enclosed by the walls in which she sat?
5400Why were they drifting?
5400Why were they not all killed by the shot that fell like hail among them?
5400Why were you not here to see Miss Manners tread a minuet?
5400Why wo n''t you come back to Maryland?"
5400Why wo n''t you come to me?
5400Why wo n''t you tell me more of what you are doing?
5400Why would I be going home when I''ve been trying to break away for two years?
5400Why would n''t I have a good time?
5400Why would n''t I join the union?
5400Why would you?--with friends, and everything you want, only to buy it?
5400Why, Jonathan, what are you doing out in this storm?
5400Why, in the name of all his works, did he stay there?
5400Why, in the name of political strategy, has United States Senator Greene been chosen to nominate the Honourable Giles Henderson of Kingston?
5400Why, indeed, was I not mad about all three of them?
5400Why, indeed?
5400Why, otherwise, had she come to the sponging- house?
5400Why, pray, should the people complain, when they had everything done for them?
5400Why, then, did she allow the words of love to pass?
5400Why,"exclaimed Cynthia, indignantly,"why does Mr. Sutton say the people elected him when he owes everything to you?"
5400Why,"exclaimed Tom,"was n''t she one of those that got into Crewe''s sleigh?"
5400Why-- do you discuss this with me?
5400Why-- why are they striking?
5400Why-- why not?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?
5400Why?"
5400Why?"
5400Why?"
5400Wicked?
5400Will Madame la Vicomtesse pray explain?"
5400Will he ever come back to her?
5400Will he live?
5400Will he remain to fall fighting for his ship?
5400Will it not elude us just as much as though we believed firmly in the ten commandments?"
5400Will she ever see it again?
5400Will the Yankees murder him for treason, or send him North to languish the rest of his life?
5400Will ye listen to this?"
5400Will you avenge him, or will you sit down like cowards while they hang him for treason?"
5400Will you be as kin''and keep it for me again?"
5400Will you believe that?"
5400Will you come along?"
5400Will you come and have dinner with me?"
5400Will you come in?"
5400Will you come to me?"
5400Will you come with me?"
5400Will you come, Richard?
5400Will you dine with Lady Carlisle in St. James''s Place next Friday?"
5400Will you do me that honor, Father?"
5400Will you go with me, Jinny?"
5400Will you go?"
5400Will you have some gumbo soup?"
5400Will you have the grace to descen''?"
5400Will you kindly explain how you came by it?"
5400Will you kindly step into the liba''y, suh, and Miss Alison?
5400Will you marry me?"
5400Will you marry me?"
5400Will you not go-- if I ask it?"
5400Will you permit me to recommend to you certain books dealing with these questions in a modern way?"
5400Will you promise?"
5400Will you remember that?"
5400Will you say to Mr. Brent that Mrs. Spence would be greatly, obliged if he stopped a moment at her house before going to town?
5400Will you see him?"
5400Will you sit here while women and children are scalped, and those devils"( he called them worse names)"Stuart and Cameron go unpunished?"
5400Will you stay, as a favor to me?"
5400Will you take it?"
5400Will you take the gentlemen into the library?"
5400Will you tell him so for me, Dorothy?"
5400Will you tell me your name?"
5400Will you tell me your name?"
5400Will you try?"
5400Will you wear it?"
5400Will you wear''em, George?
5400Will you write to me, Minnie?
5400Will you?"
5400Will you?"
5400Will you?"
5400Will you?"
5400Will?"
5400William who?
5400William, do you hear that?"
5400William?
5400With Grenoble obdurate, what would become of the larger ambitions of Hugh Chiltern?
5400With his great shrewdness and business ability, why did he not take advantage of the many opportunities the war gave to make a fortune?
5400With the intellectual companionship of the McChesneys and their friends?
5400With the people in the pews?
5400Wo n''t we be punished for it, frightfully punished?"
5400Wo n''t you believe me and forgive me?"
5400Wo n''t you believe me?
5400Wo n''t you come in, Prag?
5400Wo n''t you come, too?"
5400Wo n''t you forgive me?"
5400Wo n''t you give me a chance to explain-- to put myself right?
5400Wo n''t you let me hold him?"
5400Wo n''t you set down?"
5400Wo n''t you sit down?"
5400Wo n''t you speak to me-- Antoinette?"
5400Wo n''t you tell me what you did to him?"
5400Wo n''t you tell me?
5400Wo n''t you trust me?
5400Womenkind get queer notions, which I cal''late we''ve got to respect and put up with all our lives-- eh?"
5400Worthington?"
5400Worthington?"
5400Worthington?"
5400Worthington?"
5400Worthington?"
5400Worthington?"
5400Would Ditmar do that sort of thing if he had a chance?
5400Would Flint guess?
5400Would General Lyon confer with the Governor of Missouri?
5400Would God give him the strength to fight his demon?
5400Would God withhold it?
5400Would Howard never come?
5400Would I be happy with Nancy, after all?
5400Would Jethro remember what happened there almost six and thirty years before?
5400Would Maude have relapsed into this senseless fit if she had realized how fortunate she was?
5400Would Monsieur call again when the Minister was less busy?
5400Would Mr. Farwell tell her who some of these people were?
5400Would Mr. Flint ever know?
5400Would Mr. Satterlee and Miss Wetherell make themselves at home in the parlor?
5400Would Mr. Wood persuade my father?
5400Would Peter, or George Hanbury, or any of the intimate friends of her childhood have said such a thing?
5400Would Riddle''s death mend matters?
5400Would She have waited for such a victory as you demand?
5400Would anybody guess?
5400Would he be duped by the Governor''s ruse of establishing a State Camp at this time?
5400Would he come again to Brampton?
5400Would he come to her?
5400Would he dare to come in the face of the mandate he had received?
5400Would he defend the prudential committee, or would he declare for the teacher?
5400Would he destroy, too, this clergyman?
5400Would he ever come back to it?
5400Would he have looked on her more kindly?
5400Would he hesitate for a moment to sacrifice her if it came to a choice between them?
5400Would he not fail to change, permanently, the texture of hers?
5400Would he not let her come and talk to him?
5400Would he remember how that other Cynthia had come to him there, and what her appeal had been?
5400Would he see her?
5400Would he succeed?
5400Would he suspect them of designs upon his hard won harp and halo?
5400Would his enemies be permitted to drive him out thus easily?
5400Would it be fair to her if she did not?
5400Would it crumble in pieces before Abraham Lincoln got to Washington?
5400Would it last?
5400Would it not be best to wait until I had ascertained in some way the identity of Mrs. Clive?
5400Would it not be better that Mr. Bordley or Mr. Lloyd should act?"
5400Would it not be better to let Mr. Ritchie go alone?
5400Would my honour not have Mrs. Marble cook my dinner, and be dressed for Lady Pembroke''s ball?
5400Would n''t I get more track?
5400Would n''t Uncle Tom ever be rich?
5400Would n''t it be useless as well as a little painful?
5400Would n''t that jar you?
5400Would n''t you go down to Quicksands with me and spend the night-- and pay us a little visit?
5400Would n''t your little plan, if your workmen accepted it, keep you in as a benevolent autocrat?
5400Would not God bless her marriage?
5400Would not the attempt to cut loose from the consequences of that mistake in my individual case have been futile?
5400Would not the very springs of it dry up?
5400Would others, the men with whom Jethro contended and the men he commanded, mark this change?
5400Would she always live in Coniston?
5400Would she die?
5400Would she ever have the courage to do it again?
5400Would she find Him if she went in there?
5400Would she mention Nancy?
5400Would she not presently disappear, leaving only in his life the scarlet thread which she had woven into it for all time?
5400Would she wear it, that in her absence she might think of him?
5400Would she, Honora, ever become like that?
5400Would that be justice?
5400Would that intimacy ever be renewed?
5400Would that relentless spirit with which he had been born make him, too, a wanderer forever?
5400Would that save Clarence?
5400Would the Constitution stand the strain?
5400Would the Constitution, made to meet the needs of the little confederacy of the seaboard, stretch over a Continent and an Empire?
5400Would the beauty be taken from it, too?
5400Would the day ever come when she, too, would depart for the bright places of the earth?
5400Would the mill owner speak to the boss?
5400Would the other things be in place?
5400Would the people at the theatre get back in time?
5400Would the public feel like that, if they only knew?...
5400Would the sound never end?...
5400Would the spirit of reckless adventure seize him again?
5400Would the tide-- which was somehow within me-- carry me out and out, in spite of all I could do?
5400Would the time come when I should feel a sense of bondage?...
5400Would the time come when we, too, should sit by the waters of Babylon and sigh for it?
5400Would the time not come when he would demand something more?
5400Would the wilds call him?
5400Would there be wisdom in flight?
5400Would they be able to hold out, to win?
5400Would they take the bloody belt or the white one?
5400Would this absorbed isolation, this marvellous wild love of theirs, be the end of it all?
5400Would you arbitrate a question of life and death?
5400Would you bar any gentleman from your house on account of his convictions?"
5400Would you believe me?"
5400Would you believe me?"
5400Would you believe that, Mr. Brice?
5400Would you care to go to the gallery?"
5400Would you care?"
5400Would you leave Polly Ann and go to Kaintuckee?"
5400Would you like any more?"
5400Would you like to go down with me?"
5400Would you like to try him?"
5400Would you marry me now-- with my sister there?
5400Would you mind closing the door?"
5400Would you mind showing me about a little?"
5400Would you mind showing me''round a bit?"
5400Would you object to waiting a little while, Miss Flint?
5400Would you stay, if there were something doing?
5400Would, he mention her?
5400Ye''ll not eat it for Polly Ann''s sake?"
5400Years had gone by since she had prayed, and even now she made no attempt to translate into words the intensity of her yearning-- for what?
5400Yes, and that spirit itself must have felt her own reaching out to it--who can, say?
5400Yes, and what has it all amounted to?
5400Yes, it was the song my father used to sing:--"I''ve faught on land?
5400Yes, the doctor was in would he speak to Mr. Hodder, of St. John''s?
5400Yet what to say to him if he came?
5400You admire them?"
5400You agree with me?"
5400You ai nt gwinter forget?
5400You are asked?"
5400You are going to marry him--?
5400You are going to return the portrait, Monsieur?"
5400You are interested in landscape?"
5400You are not afred?''"
5400You are surprised?"
5400You ask me that?
5400You belong to the American Federation of Labour, do n''t you?
5400You ca n''t understand-- how could you?
5400You call Cynthy to mind, do n''t ye?"
5400You call dat finance?"
5400You came here with the strikers?
5400You can fix that, Heth-- can''t you-- you can fix that?"
5400You complain that we employers are n''t thinking of you, but are you thinking of the millions of the unskilled who live from hand to mouth?
5400You could n''t come there-- don''t you see how impossible it is?
5400You deny her?"
5400You did n''t care yesterday-- why should you care today?
5400You did n''t come''round to see me?"
5400You did n''t do what-- I asked?
5400You did n''t let the Yankees frighten you-- But where is Jackson?"
5400You did n''t make her come home?"
5400You do n''t blame Crewe for comin''out, do you?"
5400You do n''t happen to have a pen about you?"
5400You do n''t know Mr. Crewe very well, do you?"
5400You do n''t know the Edmunds?
5400You do n''t mind my telling you you look stunning tonight, do you?"
5400You do n''t remember me, Timothy?
5400You do n''t think the man who owns these flats is in it for charity, do you?
5400You do n''t want Germany to win, Rench?
5400You do n''t, hate me?"
5400You do not feel-- the lack of anything, do you?"
5400You do see, do n''t you?"
5400You follow me?
5400You got a letter from me, did n''t you, congratulating you upon your election?
5400You hain''t afeard of Jethro like the rest on''em, be you?"
5400You hain''t seen anything of your father?"
5400You hain''t thinkin''of dyin''yourself, be ye, William?"
5400You hate music, do n''t you?
5400You have children, have n''t you?"
5400You have done so much for us, sir,--couldn''t you come to her for a little while?
5400You have made up your mind, have n''t you, that Minnie has broken the Commandment?
5400You have n''t been one of those who would have liked to try running this country for a day or two, just to show me how to do it?"
5400You have n''t been there?
5400You have n''t changed your mind?"
5400You have n''t seen Lise, have you?"
5400You have not forgotten that medicine for your cough?"
5400You have striven and striven, you have done extraordinary things, but have they made you any happier?
5400You hear it?"
5400You heard about that, did n''t you?"
5400You helped Clark to capture that country,"and he waved his hand towards the northern shore;"why the devil do n''t you tell me about it?"
5400You here, Augusta?
5400You know Bob Worthington, do n''t you?
5400You know der Proad River-- yes?"
5400You know how mashestic Jackson is when he-- wantshtobe?"
5400You know roast pig, Davy?
5400You know the way a child''s breath catches, Hodder?
5400You let your sister go away and be a-- a woman of the town?
5400You live with him, do n''t you-- Coniston?"
5400You love it-- do you ever feel that way?"
5400You mean it?"
5400You mean to practise medicine?
5400You mean to say that he will not see a woman in trouble?
5400You mean-- you care-- you care that much?
5400You must be on now, ai n''t you?
5400You never can tell, in these days, can you?"
5400You never made one in your life, Tell me,"I cried, shaking him until his teeth smote together,"was it not put up between you?"
5400You ought to know her well enough to understand how she''d feel if she discovered some of McAlery''s financial coups?
5400You read the papers?"
5400You refuse to help me, when I''m starting out on a liberal scheme which I thought you would be the first to endorse?
5400You remember that you said you would always be my friend?
5400You remember them woods, General?"
5400You remember, do you not, that the hero of that book sacrifices himself for the lady who adores him, but whom he has ceased to adore?"
5400You remember?
5400You say he got like this when he saw the crowd?
5400You say he''s right, when you know that I need every hand I can get to carry out this contract?
5400You say we''re obstructing the war by not giving in,--what''s the matter with you giving in?
5400You see how important it is, how much trouble an agitator might make by getting them stirred up?
5400You shot him, did n''t you?"
5400You speak of a young lady in Maryland?"
5400You speak of incompatibility--but is it in all cases such an insignificant matter?
5400You stayed on my account?"
5400You still work?
5400You tell me he will allow Mr. Carvel to see no one?"
5400You think Eldon Parr''s a big, noble man, do n''t you?
5400You think I was reading it?
5400You think he is wonderful, then?"
5400You think it wise?
5400You think so?
5400You think the Germans will come over here?
5400You trust me?"
5400You understand me?
5400You understand?"
5400You understand?"
5400You understand?"
5400You want to be somebody,--isn''t that it?
5400You wanted to speak to me, Jonathan?
5400You were about to do me the honour of a communication?"
5400You were engaged when you came here?"
5400You who toil miserably for nine hours and produce, let us say, nine dollars of wealth-- do you receive it?
5400You will come to supper?"
5400You will excuse me-- yes?"
5400You will forgive me for saying what I think to young men?"
5400You will not tell her?"
5400You will remember that?"
5400You will wait for, me?"
5400You wo n''t give me away?
5400You wo n''t mind stayin''awhile with the jedge while Jim and I go down town with the team?
5400You wo n''t miss the old folks after supper, will you, girls?
5400You wo n''t obey me?"
5400You wo n''t take a retainer?"
5400You wonder why I am of the King''s party?"
5400You would fight, Richter?
5400You would n''t believe I kept straight, would you?"
5400You would n''t believe I was good- looking once, would you?"
5400You would n''t believe it, would you?"
5400You would n''t believe it, would you?"
5400You would n''t have struck?
5400You would n''t like it in a husband, now, would you?"
5400You''d think a fellow that only had to cut coupons would n''t be lookin''for another job, would n''t you?
5400You''ll come-- yes?"
5400You''ll come?
5400You''ll excuse me?"
5400You''ll get a good man to write your life, and what you done for the town and State, and all them societies and bills, wo n''t you?
5400You''ll have some tea, wo n''t you?"
5400You''ll let us know in time, wo n''t you?"
5400You''ll marry me?"
5400You''ll tell her?
5400You''ll-- you''ll recognize the union?
5400You''re a farmer, ai n''t you?"
5400You''re all alone?
5400You''re not going?
5400You''re not going?"
5400You''re not sick, are you?"
5400You''re not working today, Bert?
5400You''re not working today?
5400You''re not-- sorry?
5400You''re poor, but I guess you do n''t know how poor you are,--eh?
5400You''re proud to run his church, ai n''t you?
5400You''ve been a truant-- haven''t you?"
5400You''ve been to see her?
5400You''ve forgiven me?"
5400You''ve got a notion that goin''downhill, as I''ve been doing, kills it, have n''t you?
5400You''ve got a right to look at his house, have n''t you?"
5400You''ve had these little attacks before, and they blow over-- don''t they?
5400You''ve heard nothing more of Mr. George?
5400You''ve heard the story of how he threw a man named Babcock out of his store, who tried to bribe him?"
5400You''ve never seen all of the house, have you?"
5400You''ve read over the bills I sent you by registered mail?"
5400You''ve seen that, have n''t you?"
5400You, a foreigner?"
5400You, a mere boy, have bought a negress?"
5400You, a minister, and me a woman on the town?"
5400You-- you are reconciled, are n''t you?"
5400You-- you ask me to sacrifice my principles and yield to men who are deliberately obstructing the war?
5400You-- you ask me to yield to them, when you have lost your son, when they''re willing to sacrifice-- to murder my son on the field of battle?
5400You-- you heard?"
5400You-- you ran away from him?
5400You-- you still--?"
5400You-- you will not tell him?"
5400Your cousin Robert Breck; and that son- in- law of his-- what''s his name?
5400Your grandfather''s coachman?
5400Your husband is in the shops?
5400Your name''s Cynthia Wetherell, is n''t it?
5400` Say, George,''I said,` I did n''t forget you this morning, did I?''
5400a man who would enter your house and seek out your daughter and secretly assail your character?"
5400a man who would say things behind your back that he dared not say to your face?
5400a new Caribbee?"
5400a week-- a month-- a year?
5400against your newspapers and your system?
5400an attenuated vapour of the all- pervading substance?
5400an autocrat?
5400an element refusing to be classified under the head of property, since it involved something he desired and could not buy?
5400and Mrs. Maturin?
5400and did she linger now only that she might inspire him in his charge?
5400and does n''t it promise-- all?"
5400and go to the Folies Bergeres, and yawn?
5400and had I not been a fool to accept the presentment she had given me?
5400and have you fallen out with my lady?"
5400and how draw the line between caresses?
5400and how had she taken it?
5400and how had they received the message?
5400and how many would be called upon to make such a renunciation as hers had been?
5400and how?
5400and if not beautiful-- alluring?
5400and little Biddy?
5400and suppose that something were denied?
5400and the garden?"
5400and those last lines:--''But thou, vast outbound ship of souls, What harbour town for thee?
5400and was it in her nature to take ultimately the position that was desirable for my wife?
5400and was virtue its own reward, after all?
5400and were these, even in supreme moments, merely the perplexed transmitters of life?--not life itself?
5400and what would be his attitude towards her?
5400and what would be the object?
5400and where were Krebs''s?
5400and whether you had a god?
5400and whither going?
5400and would He help her?
5400and would not Jethro have been as great as the Father of his Country if he had had the opportunities?
5400and"Ai n''t he wicked?"
5400and"Have you tasted his Majesty''s barley?"
5400and"What have you there?
5400anyone you ever heard of?"
5400are you, too, going to Maryland?"
5400asked Cynthia, and she could not resist adding,"Did n''t you find it out when you went to Brampton-- to see me?"
5400asked Mr. Medill, reflecting the sheer astonishment of the others;"then why the devil are you wearing yourself out?
5400at the Paris?"
5400because, if she acceded to his desires, and what were often her own, she would be punished in an after life?
5400changed the very aspect of its architecture?
5400could you go no higher?
5400cried Clarence,"do you know who he is?"
5400cried Fletcher Blount,"what''s that?"
5400cried Jennison, seizing Stephen''s rigid arm,"does he look as bad as that?
5400cried Jock,"what''s this game of fox and geese you''re a- playin''among the farmers?"
5400cried Mr. Flint,"Why did n''t you tell me?
5400cried Mr. Whipple,"what are we coming to?
5400cried Mr. Worthington again,"why was I not informed of this?
5400cried Polly Ann, in loud scorn,"ye''re a- goin''to desert?
5400cried Stephen, when they had reached their room after tea,"was n''t that meal a fearful experience?
5400cried Swein Poulsson, from the bottom of a flatboat, whence he was tossing out venison flitches,"four day, und vat is it ve eat then?"
5400cried mine host,"ye ken Ivie o''Maryland, Ivie my brither?"
5400cried my father,"it would n''t be Daniel?"
5400cried one;"what will he hatch?"
5400cried the Colonel, incredulously,"You?"
5400cried the General to me,"you know the Sieur de St. Gre, Davy?"
5400cried the Judge,"so far from Boston?"
5400cried the Vicomte;"have I not seen hundreds''like him?
5400cried the captain when I returned;"have you seen your friends?"
5400cried the captain;"what news is this, Richard?
5400cried the clergyman,"John Temple has run away?"
5400cried the commandant, when his lady''s breath was gone,"what does this mean?"
5400cried the porter,"you are Kentuckians, yes?
5400cried the railroad president, in genuine alarm;"you''re not going to pull out, are you?"
5400cried the spinster:"not Ezra Spauldin''?"
5400cut our heads off?"
5400declare that it had no significance for me?
5400did anyone really change?
5400divine through love the force that was driving me on she knew not whither, nor I?
5400divined his future intentions?
5400do they put up to keep the churches going?
5400does n''t that imply a sacrifice of propitiation?"
5400echoed Mr. Worthington,"through what?"
5400exclaimed Bob,"is he your uncle?"
5400exclaimed Comyn, astonished;"and pray, what are you now, sir?"
5400exclaimed Jinny,"why?"
5400exclaimed Mr. Fox,"now what the devil can the hound want?"
5400exclaimed Mr. Lincoln,"did n''t he tell you he was?"
5400exclaimed Victoria, leaping out of the runabout and hitching her horse,"are n''t you afraid some of those sharp iron things will fall on him?"
5400exclaimed honest Moses,"whatever put him into your head, Cynthy?"
5400exclaimed the President in real astonishment,"are you so rich as all that?"
5400exclaimed the disgusted German,"will nothing move you?
5400exclaimed the man of leisure,"depends on what?"
5400give her the solution for which-- he began to see-- she thirsted?
5400give me a hint?
5400grunted Mr. Whipple,"and what did you chink of that ruffian, Lincoln?"
5400had he seen what I saw, or thought I saw?
5400has the puppy told you?"
5400have I not always sworn that she loved you?
5400have you got what you want?"
5400he asked, and added in a tone of relief,"and how do you, nephew?"
5400he asked,"why?
5400he cried, standing up and tottering with the pain in his feet,"if I can get a Deckard--""Will you go back?"
5400he cried, ten paces away, while Tom grinned with pleasure at the recognition"But what have you here?"
5400he cried,"have you succumbed?
5400he cried,"what are you doing here with that big Congo for a dog?
5400he cried,"what have I done that my son should be a traitor, in arms against his own brother fighting for his people?
5400he cried,"will he die?"
5400he cried,"will you drink, Richard?
5400he cried,"ye do n''t mean that young daredevil that was with Sevier?"
5400he cried,"you trust them when they tell you to give your brother, who is starving and in peril of his life, eight hundred livres?
5400he cried;"did n''t you hear me calling after you?"
5400he cried;"for God''s sake, what''s the matter?
5400he cried;"since when did you begin to indulge in siestas?"
5400he cried;"what have they done for us, indeed?
5400he cried;"what the devil do you here, sir?"
5400he demanded of his son,"another d- d fool?"
5400he demanded, turning to Clark,"you who have won for them half of their territory?
5400he demanded;"go down and say I''m afraid to ride him?
5400he ejaculated,"what put the notion of a town house into your head?"
5400he exclaimed, halting in his steps,"you do n''t take that man seriously?"
5400he exclaimed, starting forward,"what do you mean?"
5400he exclaimed, with involuntary tribute;"you mean buy up the theatre?"
5400he exclaimed,"can this be true?"
5400he exclaimed,"you that have played with March and Fox?"
5400he exclaimed:"What can I have done?"
5400he exclaimed;"you have heard already?"
5400he faltered;"Mr. Allen a lying hypocrite?
5400he laughed;"the years are coming over us a little, are n''t they?
5400he repeated, and added inconsequently,"why not?"
5400he said at length,"Cynthia?"
5400he said hospitably;"we''re all friends here-- eh, Painter?
5400he said"is that about right?"
5400he said,"automobile going all right?"
5400he said,"well?"
5400he said;"you will leave her?"
5400his lawlessness, or his intellect and ambition?
5400how about the landlord you spun by the neck?
5400how achieve emancipation from the commonplace?
5400how has this come about?"
5400how was she to know it?
5400in order that I might learn how to evade it?
5400in the very ears of the law?"
5400insisted that lady;"who is to tell her what he is?
5400is Madame la Vicomtesse in the plot?"
5400is it that which disquiets thee?"
5400just a little one?"
5400just as the supreme tribunal of the land has been required, in later years, to decide, What is whiskey?
5400leave the church paralyzed, as I found it?"
5400libraries, hospitals, schools-- men giving their fortunes for these things, the fruits of a life''s work so laboriously acquired?
5400no bearing on my life and conduct?
5400nor look without regret upon the thing which has replaced it, called a Coliseum?
5400of the human body, of the human soul and its instincts?
5400of the shining universe that surrounded me?
5400of tradition, of custom,--of religion?
5400or a superwoman?
5400or because the workers broke loose and struck?
5400or could not there be a third and judicious mixture of both of these methods?
5400or did she really look different, distinguished?
5400or did she still remember Ditmar?
5400or even towards Nancy?
5400or for those who may refuse to be supermen?"
5400or influence?
5400or merely wandered?
5400or should the letters be inserted in the text of the life?
5400or that my wife does n''t want me to?
5400or the city?
5400or the market- place, and she at the tail of a cart?
5400or to cooperate with England in some undertaking for the world''s benefit because we contended that she ruled India with an iron hand?
5400or was Lise a mirror-- somewhat tarnished, indeed-- in which she read the truth about herself?
5400or was it Chiltern''s voice?
5400or was it a dream, a nightmare from which she had awakened at last?
5400or was it merely-- part of her price?
5400or was it that my marriage had failed to satisfy and absorb me?
5400or was it the inevitable result of the development of the Hugh Paret of earlier days, who was not meant for that kind of power?
5400or was this mere suspicion?
5400or whether any longer she felt at all?
5400or would it crush him remorselessly?
5400reading French literature?"
5400repeated Clarence,"Brice?
5400revenge?
5400said Amasa, still clinging on to Ephraim''s hand and incidentally to the cigar, which Ephraim had forgotten;"Beaver Creek, wahn''t it?"
5400said Bob,"with all the politicians?
5400said Brush, genially, lookin''for the Honourable Hilary?
5400said Ephraim;"this is a kind of a surprise, hain''t it?"
5400said Fletcher Blount,"be they Cricks?"
5400said Fox,"you refuse?
5400said Harry,"what if he does?
5400said Honora,"do n''t you think we ought to take the train, Mr. Brent?
5400said Jethro, without moving,"g- got through?"
5400said Mr. Jenney;"kind of lucky you happened along here, wahn''t it?
5400said Mr. Putter,"you did n''t shoot more''n one, did you?"
5400said Mrs. Colfax, laughing,"what could he do?"
5400said Mrs. Colfax, peevishly, one morning as they sat at breakfast,"why do you persist it wearing that old gown?
5400said Nick with a fine air,"who''s afraid of her?"
5400said Puss, with a thread in her mouth;"why should you all set him upon a pedestal?
5400said he, his voice falling,"is she sick?"
5400said he,"did you have a hand in this, too?"
5400said that gentleman;"you do n''t want it?"
5400said the Colonel,"what''s the trouble now?"
5400said the Englishman;"what a very entertaining chap he is, is he not?
5400said the President,"with the lame hip?"
5400said the bailiff when we were got in beside one of his men, and burning with the shame of it;"to the prison?
5400says he,"and did she insult you?
5400says he,''where are they to come from?''
5400says he;"and can this be Richard''s little playmate grown?
5400says my Lord, very serious;"do I jest, Carlisle?"
5400says she;"how can you, when''tis you and mother, and Richard here, who make me go into the world?
5400shades?
5400she asked, her words barely heard above the gust,"why do you want to know?"
5400she asked,"Howard?"
5400she cried, and her voice pierced me with pain,"are we to be lost, overpowered, engulfed, swept down its stream, to come up below drifting-- wreckage?
5400she cried, tapping the young man sharply on the shoulder,"es tu fou?"
5400she cried,"Davy, have ye seen Tom?"
5400she cried,"ca n''t you see that it is true?"
5400she cried,"ca n''t you understand?
5400she cried,"have you fetched the milk?"
5400she cried;"Augustus P. Flint''s daughter?"
5400she cried;"what have you done to him?
5400she demanded,"or must I get it out of him?"
5400she demanded;"is it true that you are engaged to marry Miss Trevor?"
5400she repeated, raising her eyebrows a trifle;"and Comyn and Mr. Fox?
5400she said, with a little catch of her breath,"is there no such thing as oblivion?
5400she said,"David, is it you?
5400she said,"are those butternuts the soldiers that Nick went to fetch?"
5400she said;"Austen''s coming home, is n''t he?"
5400she whispered, catching her breath;"what are you saying?"
5400shouts old Wright, flying''round in his chair,''what the devil does this mean?
5400show her the path?
5400sniffed the''ostler;"ride''i m is it, yere honour?
5400something a different home would have embodied?
5400taking advantage of her ignorance and desperation, of her craving for new experience and knowledge?
5400that Authority, spelled with a capital, was a thing of the past?
5400that I do n''t suffer?"
5400that I might yet be great in literature?
5400that conventions and institutions, laws and decrees crumble before the whirlwind of human passions?
5400that essence pure and unalloyed with baser things?
5400that he had refrained in many matters which might have been of advantage to him-- although I did not hear of them from him-- on account of his father?
5400that human instincts suppressed become explosives to displace the strata of civilization and change the face of the world?
5400that the two feudal chiefs( who could be named) are rebels against highest authority?
5400that their city was not of special, but of universal significance?
5400that will be on the watch for it, sympathize with it and guide it to fruition?
5400that your former beliefs seemed so-- unlike you?"
5400the national situation?
5400they shouted scornfully,"and do n''t you admit it?"
5400think I''se skeered o''him, honey?
5400this image she beheld an illusion?
5400to beget, perhaps, other children of suffering?
5400to face poverty, and perhaps disgrace, to save your soul and others?"
5400to imply a knowledge of herself?
5400to what might he turn his hand, since all were vanity and illusion?
5400towards Maude herself-- my wife?
5400turned life from a dull affair into a momentous one?
5400was there any real choice between the luxurious hotel to which Ditmar had taken her and this detestable house?
5400what did anybody know?
5400what did you say to that?"
5400what do you fear?"
5400what excuse for declining such an offer?
5400what is this man about whom you despise?
5400what?"
5400when Bob''s father had insulted and persecuted her?
5400when the operatives find out that they are not receiving their full wages-- as Mr. Holster said?"
5400whispered Alice,"what are you going to do?"
5400who believe the acquisition of wealth to be exempt from the practice of morality?
5400who desired reward for himself at any price, and in any manner?
5400why, even in her moments of passionate hatred she recalled having been surprised by some such yearning as now came over her?
5400would it embitter her?
5400yelled the captain,"you question my horsemanship, my Lord?
5400you deny me?"
5400you do n''t want me to turn these loose, too?''
5400you were with that mob?"